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A33525 A practical discourse of prayer wherein is handled the nature, the duty, the qualifications of prayer, the several sorts of prayer, viz. ejaculatory, publick, private and secret prayer : with the necessity of, and ingagements unto, prayer : together with sundry cases of conscience about it / by Thomas Cobbet. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1654 (1654) Wing C4780; ESTC R29965 290,377 588

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said Lord I undertook not the journey upon my own head but thou badest me goe and I have thy word for a good successe and therefore I look thou shouldst beare me harmlesse and blesse me in this undertaking So Moses David Daniel and others their prayers are full of holy pleas And that we may strengthen this by two or three reasons consider Reasons 1 It s an argument of familiarity with God acquaintance and friendship thus to plead with God in prayer and therefore most suitable to this holy talking with God As men use to plead with such as they are most intimate withall so is it here Hence the Saints which have been men inward with the Lord to whom he hath made himselfe most known and opened his mind and bosome to them and they theirs to him they ever use the most pleas with God in their prayers What meere men more intimate with God then Abraham Moses and David and who pleaded it more stoutly freely with him then they did This is a branch of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we have through Christ and it being so deare a bought priviledge we may wel improve it to the utmost Ephes 3. 12. By whom we have free accesse with confidence Heb. 10. 19. By the blood of Jesus we have accesse with boldness unto the holy place 2. It will be an argument of fervency 2 Of Fervency and holy seriousnesse in our spirits in prayer to back the same with prevailing pleas As it is in all petitioners amongst men suing for things they most strongly desire 3. It will be an argument of our careful and serious minding and recording of 3. Of holy minding of Gods word and works what the Lord holdeth forth in his word or works for our encouragement in our prayers Hence when the Ministers of the Church are wished to be Pleaders in the Churches Case they are called Remembrancers Recorders and therefore men fittest to plead yea persons called to plead with the Lord for his people Esa 62. 6 7. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence Give him no rest c. and the Hebrew Affix doth shew their eminency in it the Word Mazkir there mentioned is for such a one who by his office did note down al the memorable matters of the King and used to suggest to the King seasonable Items of things to be done accordingly Esa 36. 3. 2. Sam. 8 16. But three or four things may be objected against the necessity of such pleading Objections against pleading in prayer Obj. 1. Jesus Christ is the common pleader and Advocate for his people 1 John 2. 1. If we sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous What need they then do any more then barely present their requests unto God in his name Answ True Christs office is to present our requests to God which we bring before him but withall also to perfume those holy pleaes with the odour of his merit and mediation The Lord Christ meant to pray the Father for them but yet will have the Disciples in his name to ask more to purpose then ever they had done Ioh. 16 23. 24. Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name ask that is more freely and fully and strongly that your joy may be full yea he is an Advocate to sollicite and plead on our behalf as well our pleaes for what we sue for as the suits themselves Obj. 2. God is not as man hard but rather easie to be intreated as being much more merciful and wise then any of the sonnes of men whose wisedome from above is to be easie to be intreated Besides as men the more intire and sincere they are the more candid they are in ready answers to others desires which they may grant They will not assent to carry it otherwise then they intend no more will the Lord but as he is so will Mich. 7 18 Esa 65. 14 he shew himselfe to be ready to shew mercy and ready to forgive and therefore what need such a urging on pleading Answ True the Lord is thus ready to help and heare yet who more full of pleaes for his mercy then David the Pen-man of the Holy Ghost in ascribing this to God that he is ready to forgive and plenteous in his mercy to all that cal upon him Psal 86. 5. in that very place he pleadeth incline thine ear and hear why so for I am poor and needy vers 1. and preserve thou my soul why so for I am thy servant and trust in thee vers 2. c. Bee merciful to me O Lord why so for I cry to thee continually vers 3. And rejoyce the soul of thy servant why so for unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul Verse 4 which is backed with another argument from this very gracious disposition of God vers 5. For thou Lord art good and ready to shew mercy and rich in goodnesse to all that call upon thee This readinesse then to mercy must not hinder but further the Saints pleading in prayer and help to finde the more Argument whereby to plead with God therein Jesus Christ knew that his Father alwayes heard him Ioh. 11. 42. yet in that his solemne prayer recorded Ioh. 17. how many Arguments doth he use to strengthen his Petitions as to glorifie him verse 4. 5. Father glorifie thy Son why so The Houre or the Time is come Ibid And verse 4. 5. I have glorified thee on Earth And I have finished the work thou hast given me And now or therefore glorifie me c. V. 21. Let them be one in us why so That the world may know thou hast sent me V. 24. Let them be with me to behold my glory why so For thou lovedst me before the world was Surely God himself must needs be ready to do what himselfe willeth yet as one stirring up himselfe to act he argueth with himselfe Esay 51. 9. Awake Awake O Arme of the Lord why so Art not thou it that hast wounded the Dragon and verse 10. Art not thou it that hast dried up the Sea So Esay 63. 8. For he said Surely they are my people children that will not lye So he was their Saviour and Psal 12. 5. For the sighing of the poor and cry of the needy I will arise saith the Lord and set him at liberty from him that pusseth at him God glorifieth his readinesse to mercy in that we no sooner plead for it in our prayers but he sheweth mercy Esay 65. 14. Whilst they yet speake I will heare Psal 65. 2. O thou that art hearing prayers It is the Lord who prepareth our hearts in prayer and furnisheth them with holy pleas and it is the rather a pledge that he is ready to heare the pleas of his own spirit The Lord may and sometimes doth prevent his people with mercy Esay 61. 24. Before they call I will heare Yet ordinarily he will have us to
a little of the excellency The excellency of Ejaculatory Prayer and necessity of the duty of praying without ceasing in an ejaculatory way give Reasons for it and apply it The excellency hereof may appear both by the Nature and by the rise of it It is as I may say the first breath of a Regenerate man as soon as a It 's a Saints first breathing man is born again he thus at least cryeth Abba Father In that ye are the sons of God he hath sent out the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. And when his body breathes its last this is a gracious persons last breathing Hence such It is a Saints last breathing parting cryes of Gods children at the stake in the flames amidst the stones on a Cross c. Lord receive my spirit into thy hands I commend my spirit And such were Stephens who was stoned calling on the Lord and saying Lord Jesus receive my spirit Lord lay not this sin to their charge The last words of the Worthies of God we account to be most memorable and to have some spiritual excellency instamped upon them and these words are such like Ejaculations If it were possible to hear the last whispers of the Saints souls as ready to leave their bodies they would be found to be such like breathings of their desire to him to whom they are going Ejaculatory Prayer also is the first and last of set and solemne It is the α and ω of Solemn Prayer Prayer when rightly performed God prepareth the heart of the humble to pray acceptably even by these preparatory liftings up of the heart a prayer-wise Psal 10. 17. The heart is first thus prepared then the hand that way stretched out Job 11. 13 Look upon Solomon in that presidental prayer of his 1 Kings 8. 22. his hands spread to heaven before he spake shewed where his he art was lifted before hand The last also of Solemn prayer is issued in an Ejaculation an Ejaculatory Amen comprehending the closing desires and feeling motions of faith to all before pleaded for All the prayers of a gracious Suppliant are not ended with his continued speech in prayer no his heart is lifting and lifting as you see a bel-rope oft hoising up after you have done ringing the bell Many a long look and heart wish followeth such an ones desire to heaven and all together come before the Lord for mercy Hence the Lord as hee is nigh to them that call upon him so he fulfilleth the desires of them that fear him Psal 145. 18 19. Solomons heart was as well left in heaven after the end of his prayer whereof his fixed eyes there was a speaking sign 1 King 8. 54. as gotten thither before he began ver 22. Ejaculatory prayer It is the spirits of solemn prayer is the very quintessence of solemn praier it is the very spirit into which that is distilled and resolved When a gracious persons heart is left in heaven uttering its after-requests now praier was well carried on These shorter postscripts written after the other longer letter indited by the spirit and directed to the Lord they have ever something of note and worth This epitom● of praier how solid is it So much for a taste of the nature of it Let us withall consider of this holy duti● It is the eccho of the spirit of ejaculatory praier in the spring and rise thereof and namely those lively and forceable ●●bounds of the gracious spirit of a Saint of God moved by the hand of the spirit of God Ejaculatory praier is the harmonious sweet-sounding eccho of the spirit fore-speaking to the heart ●hen thou saidst Seek my face there is the Lords voice my heart answered thy face Lor● will I seek there is the eccho Psal 27. 8. David before he is solemnly praying as afterward he is v. 9 10. He turneth his speech to the Lord telling him what his heavenly desires say I will seek thy face or my hearts desires are so to doe Ejaculations It is the venting of a heart full of the spirit are the spiritual ventings and breathings of a gracious heart filled with the wine of the spirit Eph. 5. 19. very precious verie pleasant to the taste of the Lord. Sometimes the Saints hearts are so filled with a spirit of holy joy sometimes of praise sometimes of love to the Lord that variety of holy desires pressing fast on they are forced to give them vent by short ejaculations Ejaculations are the holy evaporations of a heart throughly warmed with some special workings of faith and love of Christ When Davids heart is thus boyling hot Psal 45. 1. he breaketh off his discourse from Christ verse 2. and breatheth out such holy desires unto Christ verse 3. gird thy sword upon thy thigh c. and verse 4. Ride prosperously And then on againe to his discourse verse 5 6 7 8 9 10. Ejaculations are the holy sparks ascending up one after another from the stirring of the fired coales of the Spirit in the heart From the holy admiration of God and his goodnesse power wisedome faithfulnesse c. proceed holy ejaculations From that transcendency of Gods dispensations to Asaphs reason who had his hearts fore-discourses about the same proceeds that Verily or neverthelesse God is good to Israel Psal 73. 1. From Micahs admiring at the unparallel'd grace of God Mic. 7. 18. Who is a God like unto thee verse 19. Hee telleth the Church what God will doe hee will turne againe and will subdue our iniquities and then maketh his Apostrophe to the Lord Thou wil t ca●t all their sinnes into the depth of the sea and verse 20. Thou wilt performe the truth to Jacob. God calleth for these holy Apostrophes from this ground of admiration at his marvellous providences Psal 66. 3. Say unto God how terrible art thou in thy works The excellency of this fruit must needs partake of the excellency of such a root as is an admiring frame Ejaculations arise from the spiritualizing of the heart upon any occasion As when It s the first fruit of a spiritualized heart David is spiritual in contemplation of the works of God Psal 8. 3 4. When I consider thy heavens c. his heart in ejaculatory wise saith Lord what is man that thou art thus mindfull of him So when he was in a lively manner musing upon the immensity of God Psal 139. 1. to 17 Hee thence breaketh out thus How precious are thy thoughts to me oh God! From the veiw taken of Gods justice or mercy or from any holy discourse with others about the same or from singing and sounding forth Gods praises wherein the Saints are spiritual ariseth some holy ejaculations or other In all these and each of these was Deborah so spiritual Judg. 5. from verse 1. to the last whence that ejaculatory praier of hers So let thine enemies perish oh Lord but let those that
love thee be like the Sun in its might If the Lord breath upon our hearts at his table or in his word the spirit of God draweth out our hearts to send some ejaculatory lift of praier either in way of petition or thanksgiving or the like When the Lord Jesus speakes effectually to Johns heart I come quickly thence springs his ejaculatory Amen even so come Lord Jesus come quickly Revel 22. 20. Christ effectually preaching that hard lesson of brotherly forgivenesse It caused that ejaculation from them Lord increase our faith Luk. 17. 1 2 3 4. with 5. If David hear that word twice that all power belongs to God Psal 62. 11. his spirit is elevated to make this short hearty speech verse 12. Also to thee O Lord belongeth mercy From the Angels lively discourse with Mary about Christ who was to be incarnate and to be formed in her her heart being warmed shee turneth her speech to the Lord who sent that his angel Be it to thy servant according to thy word Luke 1. 38. So then holy ejaculations are the very spirits of the spiritual workings of God or at the least wise from the Lords spiritualizing of his Saints in his providences or ordinances and therefore great in their excellency Let us add another infallible Argument of the excellency of this duty of ejaculatorie It s of choice respect with God praier and that is from the high esteem and real respects which God himselfe hath expressed thereof Habbacucks discourse chap. 3. though most what doctrinal and onely something mentioned in a short way of petition verse 2. and of praising God verse 18 19. yet as from the most excellent part in Gods account it is all called his prayer ver 1. The penitent thiefs ejaculation Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdome is graciously owned and answered by Jesus Christ This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luk. 23. 41 42. The Publican ejaculatorily praying Lord be mercifull to me a sinner goeth away justified Luk 18. 13 14. yea that ejaculatory Apostrophe of Moses to God Ex. 5. end Why hast thou so evilly intreated the people yet hath its gracious returne from the Lord chap. 6. 1. Then said the Lord Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharoah The Israelites at the red sea were so afraid with a distrustfull fear that Moses bids them not to feare Exod 14 13. yet being thus afraid they cryed unto the Lord verse 10. 12. and both Nehemiah chap. 9. 9. and Joshua chap. 24. 7. testifieth that God heard that crie of theirs and put darknesse betwixt them and the Egyptians and drowned the Egyptians in the red sea David when in such a hurry of distrust that he said to God I am cut off from thy sight yet saith neverthelesse thou heardest the voyce of my supplications Psal 31. 22. the many short prayers which he then made Ejaculations are but short breathings of the Saints spirits but being breathed once they scarce ever expire in respect of the efficacies and issues of them These short speeches are as I may say best remembred their memorials are of a very long date with the Lord. That grey-headed ejaculation of Noah God perswade Japhet to dwell in the tents of Shem hath had now hath and still will have its answer in the Gentiles of Japhets coming into the fellowship with the Church Gen. 9. 27. The day of judgement that day although not a season of praying yet of full answers of such like praiers made with respect to the day Pauls short prayer 2 Tim. 1. 18. The Lord shew mercy to the house of Onesiphorus at that day shall have then a full return At that day when the Saints treasures layd up in heaven shall bee opened these lesser peices shall have their weight worth and use when it shall bee said these and these have been the prayers of such and such of the Saints and these and these are the issues and fruits of them to such and such Thus much touching the excellency of The necessity of ejaculatory prayer by reason of Sudden straits such ejaculations now of the necessity thereof The Saints sudden straits require prayer but will not afford time for continued prayer Room now then for ejaculatory praier At this dead lift now Moses his cry will doe well Exod. 14. 15. Then Jehoshophat must hye to heaven when begirt with blood thirsty men in continued prayer hee cannot but by ejaculatory prayer he may 2 Chron. 18 31. Then Jehoshaphat cryed to the Lord. Scrabling is but a poore shift for David when known in the presence of the King of Gath 2 Sam. 21. 10 11 12 13. and when no place or space for solemne prayer then welfare ejaculatory prayer Psal 32. title with verse 4 6. I sought the Lord and he heared me this poore man cried and the Lord heard him and saved him Asa when to join battel thus cryed unto the Lord his God with marvellous successe 2 Chron. 14. 11. David in that strait prayeth against Achitophels counsels Lord turne Achitophels counsel into foolishnesse 2 Sam. 15. 31. and the issue sheweth it took 2 Sam. 17. 23. Moses among a company of murmurers Exod. 15 24. hath none fit to joyne in prayer in a more solemne way yet verse 25. though he spake nothing vocally hee cryed thus effectually he cryed to the Lord and he shewed him a tree to make the bitter waters sweet Philistins are upon the Israelites then is onely roome for Samuels ejaculatory crye 1 Sam. 8. 7 8 9. and Samue● cryed unto the Lord and he heard him Hezekiahs deadly sicknesse will onely give him leave to pray thus 2 King 20. 1 2 3 7. he● turned his face to the wall and prayed O● Lord remember me c. Sudden and strong tentations disable David to make such continued prayer but hee will then make man● Tentations of these ejaculatory requests Psal 30. 22 Neverthelesse thou heardest the crye of ●● supplications when I cryed to thee Great griefs and presages fill the Saints hearts and lay their speech but then their hearts burst forth into inutterable sighs groans whose meaning the Lord knoweth Rom. 8. 26. Surely Saints as men of tender consciences ever and anon offending indeed but Failings as frequently smitten in their hearts for it cannot but bee often put upon it in the interims of continued prayer to bespeak mercy and pardon whilest their hearts are thus afflicted 2 Sam. 24. 10. And Davids heart smote him for numbring the people and David said unto the Lord I have sinned c. I beseech thee take away the iniquity of thy servant And as sudden faults of ours so sudden stroaks of God put the Saints upon this 2 Sam. 24. When David saw the Angel smiting the people he said It is I that have sinned what have these sheep done Sudden injuries from men cause an injured Injuries Jepthah to make his short appeale to the Lord saying The
ver 18. Come now and let us reason together c. And then onely it is seasonable to pray when wee lift up our hands and hearts Psal 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayers Josh 7. 10 11. Wherefore lyest thou thus upon thy face Israel hath sinned Job 11. 13 14. If thou preparest thy heart and stretchest out thy hand toward heaven if iniquity be in thy hand put it far away else all that is to no purpose God heareth not sinners h. e. imponitent ones John 9. 31. It is no fit season for us to goe a wooing to Christ if not clear of privy leagues with any of our lusts not is it seasonable to trade with the Lord in prayer if we have any kind of traffique with his proclaimed enemies 3. When wee are under any special 3 When under special hurries of lusts power of passions and distempers and as then not seeing the sinne of them to lift up wrathfull hands is unacceptable and so unseasonable 1 Tim. 2. 3. Lift up pure hands without wrath It is not seasonable to offer up our sacrifice with such common yea wild-fire Such leaven of wrath and malice is apt to sowre our very Mincah and maketh it come as out of due season Such was the petition of James and John to Christ Lu. 9. 54 55. Wilt thou that wee command fire to come down from heaven to consume them Such were Jobs petitions Job 3. from verse 3. to verse 11. Such was that of Jonah chap. 4. 3. Take away my life from me Look as it is in a strong blustring time knocks at the doore are scarce heard if at all so is it here the noyse of our distempers outsoundeth the voice of our knocking 's in such like prayers It were better to pause a while till the blustering noise be abated And as Revel 9. 1 3. Silence was made a while before that the holy incense was offered so should it bee here 4. When our heads and hearts are over-full 4 When under hurries of occasions and even sore charged with carnal occasions and inordinate thoughts about them it is not so seasonable to go abruptly from such a crowd and throng into the holy presence of the Lord without some pause It is most unseasonable to enter upon so holy a discourse with God with so many batlers attending us when there should be but one speaker Eccles 5 1 2 3. Such rashnesse is irregular and therefore unseasonable such a foolish seekers prayer will be no better then a dreame arising from multitude of businesse stuffed with multiplicity of unseasonable impertinent and independent expressions 5. When we come to pray in remediless 5 When praying in remediless cases cases or for persons past recovery Jer. 11. 14 Pray not for this people for I will not hear them when they cry unto me for their trouble 1 Sam. 16. 1. How long wilt thou cry for Saul seeing I have rejected him 6. When wee will be praying at such 6 When praying whilst other ordinances cal for our attendance times wherein other ordinances doe call for our attendance As when we will be praying at home when we should rather bee in the publick assembly or praying in our closets when religious family-exercise requires our presence Now let us consider of prayer-seasons Most seasonable to pray offered by the Lord which hee requireth us to take These opportunities are either generall or special The general opportunity 1 When God is near us more generally by his word of prayer is that general Season of grace held forth in the offers of the dispensations of the Gospel Isa 1. 5 6. Seek him whilest he may be found Whilst God may be found it is a season to seek him Isai 21 12. If you will inquire returne come Whilst the Prophets incourage to come 't is a season to inquire Our calling and cry is but the echo of the Lords call Psal 27. 8. When thou saidst seek my face my heart answered thy face Lord will I seek Its the season of the echo to wait upon the voice a demand of grace upon a former offer of it it s very seasonable This blessed day work is most sutable to the day time of the Gospel and grace of God But besides this general opportunity there are some more special praying seasons Ps 31. 8. For this shal every one that is godly pray unto thee in a finding time as it is in the Hebrew As bountifull Princes have their so the Lord hath his special seasons for petitioners to come in with their suits and have each their dayes of audience Our blessed Father hath his set dayes of paying to each child his portion of mercy blessing upon demand and suit for it Now these special seasons of prayer are of three sorts 1. When God in special sort is near to us Or secondly we in special sort near to him Or thirdly in case of emergencies or special necessities calling for speedy help First when God in special is near to 1 When more specially God is near us ●A us then call upon him while he is near Is 55. 6. The Lord as our gracious king goeth his holy progresse and now he is nearer this people and such and such subjects and now againe he is nearer to others Let each accordingly take and observe their particular seasons of holy approaches to him with their suits If the loadstone be near the very iron moveth the approaches of the Lord to us have or should have this holy magnetical attractive vertue to draw us near to him in Prayer 1. Now the Lord is thus in special 2 By some special act of mercy sort near to us by some special mercy vouchsafed to us as when answering to former prayer or the like Psal 34. 18. The Lord is nigh to them that are of a broken heart Yea but wherein or whereby doth he shew that he is nigh to them It followeth He saveth such as be of a contrite spirit Gods ordering some special favour to his people by his providence is called his visiting of his people The Saints repairing to the Lord with earnest fervent Prayer is called their visiting of the Lord. Isai 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee how tbey have powred out a prayer to thee c. When God first beginneth to give us a gracious visit it is seasonable and sutable for us to give him prayer-visits Exod. 33. 17. And the Lord said unto Moses I will do this thing also which thou hast spoken verse 18. And Moses sayd I beseech thee shew me thy glory Moses made Gods time of giving to bee his opportunity of begging mercy If ever the Saints hearts are filled with love it is when they partake of manifest tokens of the Lords love to them and if ever it be a season of this friendly talking with God or praying 't is then when in such a friendly
2. 3. Thus did the Ninivites no body could tell they should bee delivered nor assure them of mercy if they did sue for it but yet none could tell the contrary none could say peremptorily they should perish without remedy If it be but a Who can tell it is a ground of mighty prayers and may cherish a spark of hope therein of successe Jonah 3. Isaiah must lift up his prayer albeit it be but a may be that God would hear the blasphemous speeches of Rabshekah against which he was to bend his prayers on Israels behalf 2 Kings 19. 4. A very peradventure of prevailing in prayer will set Moses a praying Exod. 32. 30. No Scripture telleth thee that thou art a cast-away many Scriptures give thee grounds of a may be at least of salvation Let that therefore raise thee though troubled sore to look and wait for a gracious answer of thy prayer 2. Labour to be stored with sutable Promises to your prayer cases it will bee our 2. Store up sutable promises to prayer cases wisdom to lay up such knowledge of such words of Grace Prov. 10. 14. Jehosaphat was not to seek of a Promise sutable to that he was to pray for 2 Chr. 20. Nehemiah had a like promise ready written on the table of his heart Nehem. 1. 8 9 10. And be we well acquainted with the Attributes of God which are vertually Promises and props to our faith in Prayer Moses in his prayer maketh use of them for that end Num. 14. 17 19. And the Saints oft elsewhere in the Scripture 3. Improve we former experiences both of our owne and others of the gratious 3 Improve former experiences dealings of God with us in way of prayer for meerly as well as otherwise they worke hope Psal 6. 9. The Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping he will heare my prayer Davids experience of Gods mercifull and faithfull performance of all the desires of his soul for him will make him cry to him with much confidence Psal 57. 1 2. Wee may not rest in mercies and blessings received but we may and must be incouraged from them to reach after and waite for more if we never had tasted of his goodness to us when we sought him yet were we to expect and waite for his gracious answer but tasting and seeing how good the Lord is by experience it is then a blessed thing to trust in him Ps 34. 4. 8. We may well trust him and rest on him as a God hearing prayers when we have tryed him to be such a one or else it will be a shame if speaking it in his word that he is such a one and then speaking it over sensibly in his workes that hee is such a one yet hee cannot be believed If any surely such as by experience know the name of God have proofe of that or any other title or Attribute or word of his wherein hee maketh himselfe knowne to us they will trust in him Psal 9. 10. Gratious answers of prayer given to the Saints are precious pledges of our interest in the covenant of grace and in God as our God and so we are to look at them and be encouraged by them Zach. 13. 9. We are also to quicken up our confident expectations of a gracious issue of our prayers from other experiences therein so the Saints used to do in their prayers mentioned in Scripture Psal 74. 1. 13 14. and oft elsewhere for indeed the Lord in giving answers of Grace to any of his children hath regard to the good and encouragement of them all that which the Lord did for and spake to supplicating wrestling Jacob Gen. 32. hee eyed others that were to come after him therein Hosea 12. 4. He had power over the Angel c. and there he that Angel the Lord himself spake with us not with him alone The regard which the Lord hath to the prayers of destitute ones is written and recorded for the generation to come to make a comfortable use thereof Psalm 102. 17 18. if one of Gods chosen ones fare well in their holy approaches to God the Prophet will put it plurally in the conclusion he draweth from thence Psal 65. 4. the former part of the verse compared with the latter part we shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house 4 Improve we conscionably the Intercession 4. Improve Christs Intercession of the Lord Jesus for us When he was on earth he prayed for us as you may see in John 17. To bee sanctified by his Truth to be kept from the evil of sin Apostasie we pray for union and communion with the Lord Jesus such as is very strong comfortable and constant whilst we are here and the eternal enjoyment of the Lord Jesus in another world but fear lest our sins might intercept and frustrate our prayers but Christ telleth us and for our comfort that our joy may be full Joh. 17. 13. what is the sum of what hee intercedeth with the Father for on the behalf as of his Apostles so of all Believers vers 20 c. We will and must needs confesse that Christs prayers were without exception and that the Father alwayes heard him John 11. How well is it then for us that the Lord Jesus hath with acceptance prevented us and these mercies are already begged by Christ and granted of God to our hands Surely the Lord hath heard Christ in the desires which hee as Mediatour expressed to the Lord that we and our services and so our prayers might be accepted of which that in Isaiah 49. 8. is prophetically spoken compared with 2 Cor. 6. 2. we may well expect that in our holy approaches and makings out to God for mercy we come in a time of acceptance since the Lord hath heard Christ bespeaking of it if the Lord the rather honour the Lord Jesus because in the dayes of his flesh he made intercession for Transgressours Isaiah 13. 12. therefore shall he divide the spoil c. because he did so surely we may well expect the success thereof and to share in those spoiles if wee are strong and earnest wrestlers with God in his name for the same Solomons request for the grant of their prayers in their several cases which are mentioned 1 Kings 8. and which are granted chap. 9. 3. were shadowing Types of what the Lord will condescend to in all his suppliants cases at the request of this our blessed Solomon Psalm 72. but especially improve his present Intercession and appearing before God for us now in Heaven Heb. 7. 25. Look as whilst the people were praying without the Priest was offering Incense within the Temple Luke 1. 9. 10. So is Christ in that glorious Temple above appearing before God for us whilst we are a praying That was a shadow of this Heb. 8. 5. the Saints Prayers are committed to him there as his charge according to his Office to which the Lord hath appointed him to offer them up
with the Incense of his own meritorious sufferings Rev 8. 1 3. they cannot then but succeed well At that time when the Lord should be corporally absent from his Disciples hee made account that was a special speeding time in their Prayers John 16. 26 27. 5 Contemplate and let your spirits dwel 5. Contemplation upon the eight following particulars 5. Consider that God is a God hearing praiers much upon these considerations 1 What a sutable name the Lord assumeth and by his own dictate writing and seal alloweth to be challenged namely A God hearing Prayers Psalm 65. 2. Hearing prayer shewing it is his usual work his constant exercise his inseparable property nor saith hee whose prayers as excluding thine or the prayers of any other poor soul which in truth desire to seek him It is recorded of Augustus That he never sent away any Petitioner sad from him and dost thou think that the Lord of bowels that is rich in mercy to all that call upon him Psal 86. 5 can or will 2 To whose requests the Lord hath given 2. Whose cries and praiers he doth hear at least some audience even to the rude moans of beasts and other dumb creatures Psalm 145 15 16. Job 38. 41. And as Christ reasoneth thence Luke 12. 14. God feedeth the Ravens and are not you much better then they So may I say here God heareth the Ravens cryes will he not hear the Righteous cryes It is but Righteous as well as an act of grace in him so to do Psal 145. 15 16 He filleth the desire of every living thing and ver 17. Is righteous in all his wayes No wonder then if as ver 18 19 he be nigh unto all such as call upon him to fulfil their desires The cryes of meer natural men as they are his creatures and in helplesse conditions look out to him for succor as many rude Mariners are so heard Psalm 107. 23 28 he will give some audience even to hypocrites prayers Psalm 78. 34 35 36 37 38. and surely he that out of his overflowing bounty will hear as far as he may such persons prayers they shall have that benefit of his common audience and providence albeit not of his peculiar and saving respects of grace He is not unwilling to hear his peoples requests when not so rightly principled as that noble Jew who would scarce believe without signes shewed yet was so heard in his requests for his son Joh. 4. 48 to 53. or if rightly yet not so throughly principled as Cornelius who yet was not so cleared in that great Article of faith then in question that that Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah hence that Acts 11. 13 14. with Acts 10. 2 3 4 5. or if so principled yet at present under much distemper of corruption and yet when praying even then God hath overlooked all that and judged of them by their better part and taken their prayers then made kindly Such was Davids secret prayer at that instant when changing his behaviour or favour as if he had not been the man he was yet accepted Psalm 34. title with ver 4. Those that in their affliction are so distempered with infirmities of distrust or discontent it may be that they cannot speak freely to God in prayer but sigh yet heard Rom. 8. 18 26 27. Moses when in such a pet yet the Lord picketh out what he would have craved and granteth it Exod. 5. 22 23. compared with chap. 6. 1. and Numb 11. 11 12 13 14 15. with ver 16 17. their cry was with much distemper as appears by their words to Moses Exod. 14. 10 11. yet heard and granted and God the rather shewed all those after signes and wonders on the Egyptians in answer even to that distempered cry to him by the Israelites many whereof were truly godly see Nehemiah 9. 9 10. halting Jacob yet wrestling in prayer though lamely is heard yea when too curious in his inquiry Gen. 32. 28 29. yet is blessed in regard of his prayer before Sparks of grace amongst an heap of ashes are acceptable 3. Consider what kind of prayers have 3. What kind of prayers hee heareth found special acceptance with God such as have been rather sighs and groans then expresse prayers he hears the prisoners groans Psal 102. 20. the needies sighs Psal 12. 5. Such as have been but Ejaculatory liftings up of the soul unto God in mental desires Psalm 145. 18 19. Jonah 2. 1. Such as have been but a poor chattering and muttering of something in the ears of God Isaiah 38. 5 14. Such which have been but an abrupt and broken expression or two from a truly broken spirit as the contrite Publicans Be propitious to me a sinner Luke 18. 13 14. The converted Thief 's Lord remember me in thy kingdom Luke 23. 42 43. but a long look of the body and soul towards God They looked to thee and were not ashamed Psa 34. 4 5 And Jonahs look towards God in Christ typed by the Temple Jonah 24. 7. that took well with God yea Prayers of the Saints in a dream as was that of Solomons have found good acceptance 1 Kings 3. 5 9 10 11 12. after that Solomon awoke ver 15. Not that any should think it enough to sigh or groan and not utter their souls in words to the Lord but if like the Shunamite the soul of any be troubled within them that they cannot utter their hearts 2 Kings 4. 27. or like David so troubled in spirit that they cannot speak Psal 77. then it is comfortable to consider that yet in such cases sighs are successful Neither may any abuse what we said of the Publican and the converted thief and to content themselves to speak some few words constantly and there rest as if all were well no but if we are younglings in Christianity babes in Christ know that our heavenly Father also as other fathers do in theirs he delighteth as much and sometimes more in the broken language and lispings of his little ones and of his sick ones though elder in prayers craving this or that in their broken fashion and rather making signes for what they would have then able fully and plainly to express their mind to him then he doth in the more fluent expressions of sundry others not but that he useth in his owne season to inable such stammerers also to speak more plainly Isai 32. 4. 4 Consider what account God doth 4. Consider what esteem God hath of prayer make of his people they are his choice allowed Suppliants Zeph. 3. 10 his royal Priests 1 Pet. 2. 9. persons sequestrated for such holy ends Psalm 4. 3. Zach. 13 9. his beloved ones Hence that strong expression of Christ encouraging to expect hearing of our prayers I say not that I will pray to the Father for you namely as now whilst on earth for the Father himself loveth you John 10 26 27. as if that were that strong motive which
and his people that pray are to humble themselves and then the Lord promiseth them hearing 2 Chron. 7. 14. But Humility in prayer consisteth for our better proceeding in handling this condition of prayer Let us consider 1. Wherein that Humility which is required in prayer doth consist 2. When Humility expressed in prayer may be discerned to be saving 3. Why this Humility is required to prayer 4. What are usefull helps and means furthering such humility in prayer To the first we say Humility required in prayer consisteth in these six or seven things 1. In low thoughts of our selves to attempt 1 In low thoughts of our selves as unmeet to pray or set about such a duty When wee are going about it we judge our selves most unmeet and unworthy in our selves to speak to the Lord as we are imployed in praying still the serious and sensible thoughts of our owne worthlesnesse dwells with us and works on us That justified suppliant mentioned Luke 13. 13 14. standeth a far off and would scarce lift up his eyes to heaven he thinks he is not worthy to come nearer let others goe as high as they please as for himselfe hee will take the lowest roome in Gods house It is more then he is worthy of to be admitted to come there at all and heaven is too glorious a place in a manner for him a wretch as hee hath been to be so bold he hath sinned against heaven it is better for him to look on the dust yea to kisse and lick the dust In the words which the wiseman speaketh prayer-wise unto Christ that Itheil he that was his God and that Vcall that mighty one Prov. 30. 1 7 8 9. You see how humbly hee prefaceth in his speech so far as directed to him in way of prayer as verse 2 3. hee professeth hee is more bruitish then any man and hath not the understanding of a man so unfit and unworthy doth he see himselfe to speak either of Christ in an instructive way as verse 4 5 6. or to Christ in a supplicating way ver 7 8 9. The Disciples having been at praier with Christ they see so much weight in the duty and so much excellency in the due exercise of the gift and grace of Christ in prayer that they look at themselves as most unfit to pray as they ought and therefore intreat his help and direction Lord teach us to pray Luke 11. 1. The Psalmist beginneth his prayer in a kind of expostulation with God Psal 22. 1 2. and pressing of God with examples of his mercy to others in like cases verse 4 5. But if thou think hee is too bold with God and keepeth not his due distance hee will professe that for his owne part he is a worm and no man verse 6 7. he judged himselfe as infinitely unworthy to stand upon termes with God so even unfit to make comparison with others verse 5 6. But I am a worm and no man what ever our fathers were yet I look at my selfe as fitter to creep on the earth and feed onely upon the dust in respect of the guilt of sinne laid upon me for if you apply it to Christ the antitype God laid upon him the iniquity of us all Isai 53. 6. but we intend it of the Psalmist rather himselfe then as a man to lift up my selfe to heaven and therefore am justly made the reproach of men ibid. No sooner do the Saints essay to draw near unto God but the beames of the glory of God reflect upon the faces of their souls which doe thus awe and abase them they see in the glasse of that excellency their owne vilenesse 2. In abased thoughts of our selves 2 In low thoughts of our selves when heard when we do get any thing of the Lord by prayer True it is humble ones do speed best of all others in prayer but yet as mercyes of prayer found them so they leave them humble When Abraham hath gained upon the Lord by prayer Gen. 18. 26. yet then nay then especially is Abraham lowest and vilest in his owne esteeme then verse 27. he saith and seeth he is dust and ashes He then considereth what he is in himselfe whence he came and whither he must notwithstanding the favour which hee findeth with the Lord he knoweth no cause which should move the Lord to give any answer of mercy to so meane an one as himselfe but his rich grace What is in dust to move respects in God to it and secretly presenteth it as a plea to continue such undeserved mercy to such an one from that which moved the Lord to begin to respect his prayer Thus David Psal 34. 4 when hee had gained by his prayer and God was found of him yet verse 6. hee putteth an humble Emphasis upon the matter this poore man cryed That they verse 5. even better men then he such as had walked worthy of God and of his grace looked unto the Lord in prayer and were incouraged by answers of favour was no wonder but that this poor man that he poor wretch as he esteemeth himselfe one that as in the title of the Psalm saith he changed his favour and was not like himselfe in that case at Gath 1 Sam. 21. 13 yet he to cry unto the Lord and be heard this is a wonder of grace to him After Ephraim hath prayed for turning grace from God Jer. 31. 18. and is answered v. 19. then is he abased yea more abased in his own sight then before When the Church upon her request is drawn unto her beloved Cant. 1. 4. then she cryeth out of her blacknesse verse 5. Humblest Christians are the soundest and healthiest in spirit and as showres and blasts of affliction and temptation doe not much annoy them so neither doe warming gleames and shines of mercy distemper them still they are humble they are square men nothing comes amisse to them they will fall right which way ever they are cast if lowly Look as vessells whose sayls are filled if well ballasted they run a more steady course so is it here with the Saints when they pray with full sayled joy of faith yet when this holy ballast of humility is in the hold of the heart and not meerly aloft in shew above decks appearing to men they are not soon lifted up with every good successe they meet with but keep low and deep and carry it evenly with the Lord as humbly if not more humbly then before The Saints know well they are but beggers and stand in need of much they prayse not their good prayers but their good Master for the almes of grace which they get Not unto us and because once was too little to set forth their owne unworthinesse of any mercy they repeat it againe not unto us but to thy Name give glory c. Psal 115. 1. Liitle cause to be proud of a trade or art of such holy begging albeit through the bounty of God it proves
gainfull 3. In affectionate amplifications of 3 In affectionate amplifications of our vilenesse and of Gods grace our owne vilenesse and Gods mercy and excellency As beggars which use to make very lamentable relations of their owne miseries but yet giving their benefactors all their titles to the full So those in Psal 115. 1. ingeminate the expression of their owne utter unworthinesse Not unto us not unto us And the Publican in his prayer speaks of himselfe as a sinner none else such a one as he Luke 18. 13 14. So the Prodigall in his request to his father acknowledgeth his extreame and unparallelled sinne and unworthinesse Luke 15. 18 19. So those converts Jer. 31. 18 19. Do the like such like amplifications being as so many forcible arguments in their prayer with themselves to further compunction and contrition in them and with God to further their participation of the benefit of his compassions Out of the abundant heart-abasement the mouth speaks As pride is large in speaking for selfe so is humility in declaring against selfe 4. In framing all our pleas in our petions formâ pauperum in the manner of poor 4 In framing all our petitions formâ pauperum undone persons and pleading for mercy in regard of our extreame misery That wee are under wofull captivity and oppression not of Turks and such like but even of spirituall enemies of our soules corruptions of nature temptations of Sathan c. which are far more grievous That we have sustained losses in soule that are almost inreparable lost the goodly patrimony in our first parents of Gods favour and image which never can be sufficiently bewailed yea haply have lost that little light and life and comfort of grace through some ill course we tooke since the Lord set us up againe and trusted us with a new stock of grace yea are strangely runne behind hand with God yea we are extreamely in debt by our sinne to divine justice yea we are afflicted with many spiritual diseases and distempers and sorely wounded in our spirits through some sad foils of the enemies of our souls and in all wee are utterly insufficient to recover our selves yea and helplesse and shiftlesse in the very use of such means as might tend thereunto Wee see indeed that if we could believe that would succour us but yet are not able if wee could so earnestly wrestle for and breath after help of God in Christ we might have relief but see also that of our selves wee cannot doe so much but as wee are able through the might of God Wee tell him of our grievances and plead our miseries and spread them before him and his people if they may move to mercy and so wait his gracious leisure for the same Jeremiah pleads for mercy to him and his people because their backslidings were many Jer. 14. 7. David pleads for pardon because his sin is great Psalm 25. 11. and craveth mercy because a poor shiftlesse stranger and sadly gone to decay Psal 39. 12 13. So Psal 38. 1 2. intreateth the Lord to forbear to go on to afflict him because his arrows stick fast in him he is sorely wounded already ver 2. he is sick in body and spirit ver 3. he is already fallen under a burden that is too heavy for him ver 4. and ver 6. his back is already ready to crack under his pressures and so on with such like sad pleas taken from his forlorn condition he presseth God for mercy in that Psalm 5 In much inward brokenness and relentings 5. In heart brokenness therein of spirit Hence that smiting upon the brest in the Publicans prayer Luk. 18. 13 14. There there lay his sin and misery there was his wound and burden little did men think what he felt and saw Ah that brest of his how had it harboured rebellion formerly against God! his heart within was smitten for it whereof his brest smiting was but a shadow Psal 51. 17. A broken and contrite spirit is the all of his Sacrifice and prayer Surely that heart is low in prayer and brought down to the dust which is broken as it were to dust What ever speech humble ones have in prayer it is sure they have sighes attending If the Dove-like Spirit of Christ breaths in them they will bee breathing out Dove-like moanes and groans in the ears of God The Psalmist speaketh not so much of Gods hearing of the words of the humble as the desires he heareth the desire of the humble If they do fall short at any time through some occasional impediments of expressions yet broken hearted desires expressed in groans are present and stirring and they are to God as prayers Psal 10. 17. The groanings of the prisoners are the prayers of the afflicted and destitute Psal 102. 17 20. in Gods account 6 In a meek and quiet submission and 6. In a quiet submitting to the Lord amidst discouragements bearing all discouragements without quarrelling against God nay awfully clearing the Lord therein If rated like beggars if rebuked if upbraided if delayed if denyed yet putting up all contentedly The reproachful name of a dog moveth not the humble suppliant she taketh it very well and maketh good use of it and doth not mutiny against the Lord Jesus for it Mat. 15. 27. They in Judges 10. hear and bear and take all that well which the Lord in a holy upbraiding way speaketh Judges 10. 11 12 13 14 15. They yeild to all as so and just if worse with them from the hands of God then it is but yet with the leave of his mercy they crave his favourable acceptance of their request ibid. If humble ones come to Christ in prayer or otherwise surely they come with holy dispositions to stoop to any yoak and burden of Christ which he will lay upon them as wel as desire to have their own burdens taken off by him Matth. 11. 28 29. They may indeed plead with God why he carryeth it so towards them as Psal 22. 1 2. but they are clear in it that he cannot but carry it well albeit the particular cause they know not So Psalm 22. 3. But thou art holy and however it cometh about that such divine forsakings are occasioned yet still thou art holy and spotlesse and pure in all thy dispensations 7 In a real preferring others prayers before 7. In a real preferring others prayers before ones own our own Thus the humble Centurion in his request he had to make to the Lord Jesus he thought better of the Jewes prayers then of his own as being in his own sight a most unworthy Gentile Luke 7. 3 7. Not that under this pretence men should in a way of voluntary humility repaire to deceased Saints that is idolatrous humility yea even the madnesse of persons then living So Hezekiah preferreth Isaiahs prayer before his own and therefore sends solemnely to him to lift up his prayer in the case of Judah Isaiah 37. 1 2
yet as one which seeth the emptinesse of his prayer even at the best he goeth out of that resteth not therein but as if he had not prayed in such sort he runneth to the Name of the Lord he looketh for nothing but from the rich and free grace of God in the Lord Jesus as Daniel Ch. 9. 3. 4. He is at it with God in such like humble prostrating his souls desires to him but in the close professeth the supplicaons which were presented though with much brokennesse of heart doubtlesse yet were not for any righteousnesse of their own whether of person or performances or prayers but for his mercies sake v. 18. And v. 17. desireth audience for the Lord sake for Christs sake And ver 19. for his name sake so Ezra albeit he had been weeping and casting himself down before God in praier Ch. 10. 1. yet ch 9. last he concludeth that he and the people in respect of themselves are before God in their trespasses and cannot stand before him by reason of the breach of covenant with God which he had then bewayled verse 14. Now touching the third thing propounded Humility required in prayer Because 1 Humble prayers speed best why this humility in prayer is required I answer briefly 1. Because prayers put up in and with such humility they doe ever speed best Mark 7. 29. For this saying go thy waies the divell is gone out of thy daughter for what saying namely that verse 26. wherein she taketh the name of a dog so quietly and meekly craveth the very portion of dogs in a manner the mercies slighted by the children The Lord will not look at what the proud bring to him but hath respect to the lowly to strengthen them with grace and peace in their soules Psal 138. 3. 6. to perfect all that concerns them verse 8. The lowly strangers see how the Lord welcomes them in prayer Isai 56. ver 6 7. The penitent Prodigall that speaks in such a vilifying way of himselfe to God his father Luke 15. 18 19. sees how royally and richly he is entertained by the Lord like as by that father verse 22 23. the costliest robes of grace and delicatest of mercy in Christ are readily brought forth to such greatest mercies are granted to such as pardon of sinne and the like Luke 18. 13 14. Yea in such a lively and convincing manner exhibited as that they shall carry it home with them the sight and light thereof shall stick by them he went home justified they shall in a holy triumphant wise carry home the garland of grace and peace for which they wrestled with God in praier wheras in defect of Humility no praiers nor tears of a proud Esau shal avail Heb. 12. 17. The Pharisees repair so diligently to pray to the temple is to little purpose whilst he doth not humble but rather exalt himself therein Luke 18. 10 14. God will not approve of any such mens persons or praiers and such a non-justified estate is a sad abasing of such ibid. as the gracious acceptance of the persons and prayers of humble ones in Christ Jesus is an high degree of honour and exalting to them 2. Because the servants of God are 2 Then are humble ones themselves never more themselves as such then when humble in a way of seeking the face of God When the converted Prodigall and Publican cometh to rights to himselfe then in that frame hee betaketh himselfe to this work Luke 15. 17 18 19. Assuredly penitent dispositions work then strongly zeal and holy indignation against sinne and our selves for it are then stirring then is faith and love doubtlesse active and putting forth themselves in our soules 3. Because an humble frame of heart 3 It putteth most honour upon God and Christ in prayer putteth most honour upon God and Christ and mercy and grace as all in all Aga● in that frame thinketh that it will put the largest heads and ripest wits in the world to it to conceive or express the glory of God in Christ Proverb 30. 2 3. compared with the 4 ●h And he wil magnifie the purity perfection and stability of his word verse 5. see verse 1 7 8 9. Asaph when in that frame of heart Psal 73. 22. then who but the Lord of heaven and earth with him and in his desire verse 25. and if such a poor soule get any mercy by praier of all others hee will use it best and give God the most glory of it and for it as might be shewed in divers instances 4 Because such a kind of spirit in 1. It fitteth us most for mercy prayer it doth fit us most for the mercies of prayer Hence it is compared to hunger which as it is good sawce to the body and prepareth it well for its meat so doth it fit the soul for its desired food of grace and mercy Hence is that opposition Luke 1. 53. betwixt the hungry and the rich and yet rich is rather opposed to poor because indeed the poorest in spirit the beggars in spirit are the most hungry Look as the emptying of a vessel fitteth it for being filled with precious liquor so humility by emptying the heart of all self-strength self-confidence self-sufficiency self-righteousnesse self-willednesse and self-conceit it fitteth the soul in prayer for what it doth pray for The heart of the humble is a prepared heart as to pray to God so likewise to receive and improve the mercies which it seeketh in prayer such an one is most flexible and ready both to use the best means to obtain the mercies desired and to walk worthy of them when obtained So Job 7. 20. I have sinned what shall I do to thee O thou Preserver of men As touching the last thing propounded Helps to humility in prayer namely What Helps and Means we should use to further such Humility required in prayer I answer 1. Set faith on work as we shewed at 1. Faith in the Lord. large the last Lecture Faith in Gods Promise and Providence made David pray so humbly as one not worthy to speak more to God or receive more from him 2 Sam. 7. 18 19 27. That made the Prodigal to throw down himself in such sort and humbly to seek his fathers favour considering in him a fathers bowels yea which possibly might move towards him he is apprehensive likewise that he hath all hee needeth and that moveth and furthereth him therein Luke 15. 17 18 19. So it is here the Publicans faith in that propitiatory merit and mercy causeth him so to speak as Luke 18. 13. It was faith that set the woman a begging in that humble and lowly as well as earnest manner Matth. 15. 26 27 28 The faith of that woman was the instrumental meanes of her salvation Luke 7. 50. that was the means of that her silent humble approach to the Lord ver 38. It is faith which taketh a true measure both of God and of
sins we are sensibly apprehensive of his Purity and Majesty offended thereby of his Goodnesse and Patience abused therby of his privity to them all in their circumstances of his sin-revenging Justice due thereto of his sole prerogative to pardon the same of his readinesse in Christ to do it We are seriously apprehensive of the vilenesse of such sins of our owne loathsom nature whence they did arise and our hearts rise up in holy indignation and detestation of them and our selves for them whilst we mention the same we bleed over them in our spirits could even tread upon our selves and take a holy revenge on our selves for the same and all the meltings and breathings of our spirits in the mention of our sins they are stil as to God When we mention such and such wants of such and such mercies we crave all is carried as to God We have sutable workings in our minds we eye him as full of all grace and mercy as treasuring up all that fulness in the Lord Jesus as willing and free to communicate the same as real in his Promises of the same and the like might be said in the rest Psalm 5. 3. David saith he will direct or orderly settle prepare and adress his prayer to the Lord. And Christ would have such as pray to pray to their Father which seeth in secret Matth. 6. 6. Job would order his cause before the Lord Job 23. 4. 2 In carrying on the whole business of 2. In doing it as from God prayer as from God as praying in the Spirit Eph. 6. 18. Praying in or by the dictate direction of the holy Ghost Jud. 20. Christians are to drive this holy trade with God but yet as with his owne talents and commodities Luke 19. 16. Lord thy pound hath gained ten pounds saith the good servant Wee should wrestle in and by prayer with God but as in and by his strength Hosea 12. 3. By the Lord will his people make mention of his name in prayer or any other ordinance of his Isai 26 13. 3. In carrying on the whole work of 3 In doing it as for God prayer as for God alone The Suppliants of God bring their prayer not as their offering so much as Gods offering Zeph. 3. 10. they do indeed lift up their prayer as did the Prophet Isai 37. 4. and their heart in prayer yet so as withal exalting God in both Hee is extolled with their tongue in their crying to God with their voyce Psal 66. 17. The Saints confesse their sins that God may be cleared in his proceedings Psalm 51. 4. Expresse his mercies in prayer not to set forth their owne praise and commendation as did the Pharisee Luke 18. 10 11 12. But that the Lord rather may be glorified and that the heart in the mention thereof may be awakened to give him glory and therefore they use in the mention thereof sensibly to immix the mention of their own vilenesse and wretchednesse If they request of God such and such mercies yet it is that the Lord may occasionally be the more honoured in granting the same to them whether the mercies bee of a spiritual or temporal nature Albeit the mercies they crave and immunitie from the miseries which they complaine of to the Lord bee the matter of their prayers yet not the sole motive Selfe is not the great wheel which setteth all the wheels of their hearts going nor is self the center in which those many lines of their spirits and prayers doe end and meet but rather the respect to the Lord and his name favour and presence these are all in all They are a generation not of falseseekers in their prayers but of seekers of the face of the God of Jacob. Psal 24. 6. and having pure hearts therein they doe not lift up their soules to vanity ver 4. The maine of their desires is that the Lord Jesus the man of Gods right hand may be glorified and that the mighty hand of God may be with him in his government and if he be exalted that shall and will ingage them the rather to bee thankfull to God for it Psal 80. 17 18. The making of the refused stone the head-stone of the corner is that wonder of grace in which they thankfully rejoyce Psal 118. 22 23 24. David wisheth that guilt removed not meerly because it lay as so sore and heavy a burden upon his conscience or that he would have ease of the terrours thereof but that in being eased and freed thereof he might bee the freer to sound forth the prayses of God Psal 51. 14. Hee would have his former joy againe not because he made any idol of his comforts and was all for comfort in his spirit for he is as earnest for a cleare and sound heart verse 10. But that he may be more active for God in giving some honour to him in other sinners conversion whom he had haply hardned by his sin c. verse 12 13. Hee would have his mouth opened verse 15. Not to bee more free and chearfull of speech but that his lips might set forth Gods praise The sons and daughters of God pray for preservation from or deliverance out of temptations and afflictions inward and outward as in the petition of the Lords Prayer but with a first and maine respect and desire that the name of God may bee hallowed sanctified honoured therein they pray for the remission of their sinnes and the comfortable manifestation thereof not meerly because they are damning but because detestable to them not because terrours to them simply but that God in his gracious and free pardon of them may have his name hallowed and for that cause doe they pray for all temporal blessings for them in their callings and conditions under the notion of dayly bread The Godly powre out prayers not so much as expressions of their desires of observance thereof from God as of obedience therein unto God Nor meerly as helping meanes of future but also as an homage of love for past mercy David will call upon God because hee loveth not himselfe but him Psal 116. 1 2. 4 In being as ready pressed to a serious 4 In like conscience of use of means use of all other meanes to obtain mercies prayed for and avoid miseries bewayled as to pray for the one and against the other Abel bringeth himselfe with his offering both are equally at the beck and service of God so did not Cain Gen. 4. 4. They offer themselves in with their prayers and such like service as the maine sacrifice willing to prove what is the holy and acceptable and perfect will of God Rom. 12. 1 2. And therefore no wonder they are pressed to use any holy meanes to further what they ask of God Their heart and hand is as I may say combined to and joyned with their tongues If they cry for wisedome they bring their instruments to dig and search for the precious mines thereof
any at any time dare to double with God in speaking to him making God like to man which might be mocked and deluded with goodly words and pretences and not to bee a searcher of their heart and reines else men durst not make so bold with him to baffle with him to his face David one that had made too bold to affirme that of his integrity of his hatred of Gods enemies Psal 139 22 23. qualifieth it with a plaine hearted motion to him whom he knew was privy to his spirit to search it and see whether there were any way of wickednesse in him and to steer his course for him in the right way Where faith is love will attend and shew it selfe love useth still to be candid and cordial and intire in all its speeches to him whom the soule loveth the more that aboundeth the more sincere When the Apostle prayeth that the Philppians may be sincere in all their words and walks respecting God themselves or others hee prayeth that their love may abound then will they approve the most excellent things The best way of praying to God serving of God and walking with God Philip. 1. 9. 10. Motives to sincerity in prayer may bee Motives to sincerity It will argue Gods effectual speaking to us and ours to him such as these In that it will be an argument of a saving and sound fruit of Gods speaking unto us and of our effectual speaking to him The former is evident when our prayer language is sincere surely God hath turned unto us some pure lip some soul-saving ministry Zeph 3. 9 10. Such of the Cities of Egypt as should bee converted savingly the Prophet saith they should as a fruit thereof speak the language of Canaan Isai 19. 18. Especially in worshipping God in prayer there they should not speak halfe the language of Ashdod as it were and halfe the Jews language like those Nehem. 13. 24. halfe carnal language natures sins the worlds language but at least in the desire and indeavour of their soules they speak the language of the holy Ghost pray in the holy Ghost And the latter is as evident truth in our seeking of God and mercy in Gods answers will surely meet together as in other cases they doe Psal 85. 10. The Lord himselfe maketh it an argument of his respect to his peoples desires in that they are children that will not lye Isai 63. 8. and giveth it as a pledg when they may expect infallibly that he will answer their prayers namely when they are cordial and intire in seeking of him when they seek him with all their heart Jer. 29. 11 12 13. And the Psalmist maketh his cordial and intire seeking of God to which his very conscience was privy and the Lord much rather as an argument with God to pray for respect to his desires Psal 119. 10 94. Sincerity and integrity in our speeches is amiable to men to all sorts of men Proverb 16. 13 and 24. 26. and the God of truth is not lesse but more delighted in the words of truth Hence it is that upright hearted Supplicants they are and well they may be freest and boldest of all others with the Lord. Such as come with true hearts come with much confidence Heb. 10. 21. they can and dare walk at liberty when conscious to their integrity that they seek the statutes of God Psal 119. 45. Consciousnesse of secret guile it will appall a man when to deale with an all-seeing God Hypocrites are afraid Isai 33. 14. but are perswaded that such as speak uprightly may come near to God boldly and converse with him safely albeit in respect of his justice a consuming fire verse 15. But amongst them who may or dare come near him with such stubble verse 14. and if they durst be fool-hardy as senslesse ones are yet it would be to no purpose salvation which they might desire would bee far from such persons as seeking not God but themselvs Ps 119. 155. 2 In that God will cover a great deal 2 Where this irs God wil cove many failings of weakness in their persons and in their Prayers where yet there is sincerity in the bent of their desires True it is that their sincerity in their prayers is a special preservation against any ruling evils in them They that seek God with their whole heart they do no iniquity Psalm 119. 2 3 God is engaged to protect and preserve them from such swervings Hence that plea Psalm 119. 10. 94. When Christians do not deale cordially and plainly with God and their own souls in the request they put up against their sins and for Gods grace they do but strengthen then the part of sin pretending to speak against it and not doing it cordially it provoketh God to leave them to such lusts and to receive a due recompence of such spiritual Treachery from such secret Traitors but as for the Saints that are cordial with God in Prayer albeit they escape that mischief of ruling evils yet are they perplexed and molested with indwelling distempers which haunt them and pursue them hard at heels even to the very door of Grace to which they repaire in prayer and herein is the kindnesse and compassion of God to them that he overlooketh these their distempers in prayer and owneth the meaning of his Spirit in theirs therein Rom. 8. 26. and Psal 34. Title with verse 45. God looketh at the bent of such a heart and by that measureth out to them mercy 1 Kings 8. 39. Do according to his wayes whose heart thou knowest God searcheth the heart both of sincere and false Christians in all their doings to give to every one according to his wayes Jerem. 17. 10. to the false heart indignation and wrath but to them that are sincere eye and aim at and seek for glory to them he giveth honour and immortality Rom. 2. 7. For of all others upright ones have the successful influences of all others prayers with them and with their prayers each sincere one prayeth that God would do good to them Psalm 125. 4. As for others they are left to be discovered and left to such courses at the length as shall declare them to bee evil doers verse 5. The Many are the evils of hypocrisie in praier continuance of Gods faithfulnesse to sincere ones is the joint request of all that are godly and the several Petitions of each of them Psal 36. 10. 3 Consider of the evils of hypocrisie in prayer God esteemeth basely of such prayers as but drosse of some Silver Prov. 26. 23. It is but as a stinking savour and steam rising from a dead rotten person Matth. 23. 27. He eyeth us then as speaking lies rather then uttering prayers because we pretend to pray and worship and serve God but do indeed therein but serve our own base lusts become Petitioners for them Hos 7. 13 14. and James 4 2 3. and that we speak against God rather then for God They lyed
Temple now is a time if ever for Solomon to make his long prayer there 1 Kings 8. 10 11 12. 22. when we are filled with the spirit we may well continue pouring out prayer 5. When we are not like to live long Christ knowing he had but few dayes to 5. Of death not far off live spent the more time in prayer Luke 21. 22. compared with 1 Pet. 4. 7. now the end of all things is at hand at least to us in particlar therefore be sober and watch unto prayer If Heavens pleaders have but a little while allotted them they had not need loose any of that little time to plead in When such spirituall Merchants are shortly to go out of this country of trading so by prayer they had need bestow themselves to purpose When these travailours are so shortly to take their long journey home they had need improve every sand of Times hour-glass for the dispatch of the remaining part of their prayer-businesse here Sicknesse alloweth but little respit and free space for prayer Other work of the poor soul is so various then and perplexing that it taketh up the whole man to dispatch that And indeed when sincere ones have not long to live they are the fitter for prayer When the Saints are neer the Ocean of Eternity then the Rivulets of Grace in their soules wax stronger Weakly persons which are Godly are so often minded of Eternity and Perpetuity as times successours that they bare an Image of Perpetuity it is deeply Instamped upon them in their Spirituals Obj. But some will say shall not Suppliants then wander and vanish into forbidden Repetitions if they are long in prayer Answ 1. The Saints are and may be Repetitions in prayer lawful helped with such holy variety that unlawful Repetitions may be avoyded as might be evinced by many Reasons if need were 2. We distinguish of Repetitions in prayer some are lawful some are unlawful The Scripture frequently giveth us instances of lawful Repetitions as Amos 7. 2. 5. It is twice repeated by whom shall Jacob arise for he is small And in Solomons prayer 1 Kings he oft repeateth this clause then hear thou in Heaven thy dwelling place and forgive c. vers 30. 39. c. of this sort of lawful Repetitions in prayer are these First such which are wrung from the strength of pinching necessities or temptations as when Christ was so hard bestead First which are wrought from extremities in the Garden he oft even a third time spake the same words Intreating his Father that if it were his will that the Cup might pass Mat. 26. 39. 42. 44. and chap. 27. 46. Eli Eli Lamasabachthani My God My God why hast thou forsaken me So Paul in a like sort besought God thrice in the same manner 2 Cor. 12. 7 8. For this thing I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me like children in great pain when they are to tell where it is they iterate and reiterate this cry O here here here O here or like men in a ditch or among thieves iterating this out cry help help help or as prisoners in straits crying bread bread for the Lords sake bread a little bread for Christs sake or as it is with men when their house is on fire in the night they cry fire fire fire Secondly such Repetitions wherein the heart is carried out with equall Secondly wherein the heart is lively strength of feeling and holy affections at a third as at a first time so was Christ in his Iterated cryes He made supplication with strong crying and teares So Dan. 9. 17 18 19. often Iterateth O Lord hear when there is in a gracious supplicant so much strength of love desire and esteem and sutable wreachings after mercies begged that the soul is not content to speak once but it must speak it over and over againe As friends when commending some business of greatest weight to their friends care they will be often repeating be sure you forget me not in such or such a thing So is it here in making known our requests to God Or as it is with a cry uttered with greatest strength it causeth the Iteration of a like Echo so is it here when repetitions in prayer are the Echoes of strong cryes of spirit as it is when a Ball is banded with great strength it maketh many rebounds so is it when the heart is carried out with great strength of holy affections it is apt to make these holy rebounds of such repetitions or as a Bell which having been but then ringing doubles and redoubles its knoles from the strength put forth in its ringing So will the gracious heart be giving many reiterated lifts and those sounding out in like expressions of the lips in prayer Hence that reiterated desire of the Saints Psal 72. 19. Amen and Amen 3. Such Repetitions in prayer are lawful 3. Which spring from saith exercised which spring from some strong workings of saith in the expectation of mercies such was that Iterated cry and prayer Amen even so which is the sence o● the same Come Lord Jesus come quickly as believing Christs word then mentioned Loe I come quickly Revel 22. 20. So Psal 89. 50 51. the Psalmist concluding that God had heard his prayer saith Blessed be the Lord Amen and Amen such was that frequent repetition of Davids in his prayer to God to blesse his house as building upon the truth of his promise for that end of which see 2 Sam. 7. 25 26 27 29 thus is faith letting down the same bucket into the well which is presented to it when the believing soule heareth assuredly that its friend the Lord is within hearing It knocketh thus again and again in the same sort as before 4. Such repetitions in prayer which 4 Which spring from love spring from love or are accompanied with speciall delight and spirituall stirring of heart in the very mention thereof such was their reiterated cry in solemn worship of God Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty Revel 4. 8. such straines of love and holy delight may often be reiterated in holy musicall divisions as I may call them albeit there be little variation Look as where a speech is pleasing a motion is wont to be made to heare that over again so here the spirit of Christ liking to hear us speak so very favourly and sincerely in this or that passage in prayer may bid us speak that again In sundry passages of the Saints prayers the holy Ghost in speciall manner spake in them and with them and such like double speeches of Gods Saints and Spirit speaking together may well be repeated But yet there are Repetitions in prayer Repetitions in prayer unlawfull 1 When affected which are unlawfull as 1. Such which are affected as streines of eloquence uttered in a Rhetoricall way Such were those of the Gentiles Matth. 6. 7 8. Vse not repetitions as the
without measure or whip them to death Potters doe not use to conceive so deep a distaste against a poore vessel of clay as to rage against the same without all respect to their own credit or to their own workmanship and therefore surely thou our heavenly Father and Potter canst not wilt not doe thus Thus David pleads his Fashioning by God Psal 119. 73. Thy hands have made and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandements God himselfe maketh it an argument to himselfe why he wil bear his people Esay 46. 3 4. I have made and I will beare even I will carry and will deliver you And it is a prevailing reason with God not to contend for ever lest the soule should faile before me saith he and the spirit which I have made Esay 57. 16. so would God have this an argument to help the weakest faith to expect its desires above all its feares Esay 43. 1 2. But now thus saith the Lord that created thee O Jacob and he that frmed thee O Israel Feare not And so V. 7. For I have created him for my glory I have formed him yea I have made him And therefore surely the Saints may wel urge this in any like case in prayer 2. We may plead the imbecillity and We are fraile creatures frailty of our natures So Iob pleadeth for the speeding of Gods manifesting of his pardoning and reconciling grace to him Iob 7. 21. Why dost thou not pardon my transgression and take away mine iniquitie for now shall I sleep in the dust c. As if he had said Lord if ever thou intendest as I am perswaded thou dost to renew the former beams of thy favour and pardoning mercy thou hadst not need to defer too long lest it come somewhat too late for ere long I shall returne to my dust This is Davids plea in the like case Psal 39. 12 13. Keep not silence at my teares for I am a stranger with thee Spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I goe hence and be no more So Iob pleadeth this Iob 13. 25. Wilt thou break a leafe driven to and fro and wilt thou pursue dry stubble What credit it is to so great a Majesty as thou art to shew thy power against a poor leafe or to runne after a poor leafe which every puffe of wind whisketh hither and thither or is it any honour so much as to a man to be cutting and hewing a poor leafe which can make no resistance Thus Abraham pleadeth for Audience and patience in hearing him because he is but dust and ashes of little substance short continuance before the Lord if the Lord please now to heare him whilst he is before him he is not like to trouble him long it is but a very little and he is gone he is but weak and it is not much discouragement in denial of requests which he is able to beare Gen. 18. 27. And the Lord hath sanctified this plea as an argument to himselfe to shew his servants mercy Psal 103. 13 14. He pittieth those that feare him for he knoweth our frame he remembreth that we are but dust So Esay 57. 16. I will not contend for ever for the spirit should faile before me This prevaileth with the Lord not to charge too hard upon his poore people 3. Plead we the extremities of our miseries We are in extremities inward or outward our extremities being Gods opportunities of hearing and helping us Psal 27. 16. Have mercy upon me O Lord why so for I am desolate And Psal 143. 7. Heare me speedily O Lord why so my spirit faileth I have but a little spirit left O Lord to breath after thee and speak to thee let me not spend that in waste Lord my soule is dying away speak Lord answer Lord before I faint quite away A gracious answer Lord would even fetch life in me again and nothing else but that wil recover me and therefore heare me speedily a poor dying sinking fainting spirit O Lord I intreat thee So Psal 69. 12. Save me O God for the waters are come even to my soule I sinke in the deep mire where is no standing This plea in effect is thus Lord I am ready to drown if ever thou wouldst save a poor perishing servant of thine save me my troubles and temptations are too deep for me I am ready to sinke over head and eares in them and therefore Lord reach hither thy gracious hand and beare up my head above water least otherwise I miscarry but especially if such extremities continue the continuance of them may be pleaded Such is Hemans plea Psa 88. 14 15. Lord why hidest thou thy face from me I am afflicted and ready to die from my youth up whilst I suffer thy terrours I am distracted and God maketh this an allowed plea to himselfe of shewing his people mercy in such a case Esay 42. 19 20. I have a long time holden my peace Now will I destroy and devoure at once And I will bring the blinde by a way they know not c. Christ the Angel useth this plea Zech. 1. 12. O Lord of Hosts how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem against which thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten yeers 4. Plead we our helplesnesse in our We are helples otherwise selves and in any other besides himselfe So Psal 22. 11. Be not far from me for trouble is neer for there is none to help So Ier. 14. 22. Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause raine or can the heavens give showres Art not thou he O Lord our God therefore we will wait upon thee for thou hast made all these things So 2 Chro. 20. 12. We have no might we know not what to doe but our eyes are unto thee Either then thou must help O Lord at this dead lift or else thine enemies will prevaile So Psal 60. 11. Give us help against trouble for vain is the help of man When people are in a perishing condition it must not keep them from making out to God but they must take this to bottom their requests upon for mercy their spirituall oppressours and oppressions must make them repaire to the Lord and that wil prevaile for succour from that great one the Lord Jesus They shall cry unto the Lord Esay 19. 20. because of the oppressours and he shall send them a Saviour and a great one and he shall deliver them Psal 72. 12. It is engaged concerning Christ the true Solomon He shall deliver the needy when he crieth the poore also and him that hath no helper He cannot forget the cry of his sucking shiftlesse babes that hang upon the breast and can no more shift for a living then a poore infant God himselfe urgeth his people to come to him with this plea in their mouthes Hos 14. 2 3. Take unto you words and say Take away all
audience Fourthly the integrity of our hearts The integrity of our hearts and waies and waies in former workings after God and service for God may by faith in Christ as all in our justification be also pleaded Esay 38. 3. Remember that I have walked before thee in sincerity c. Psal 71. 17 18. O Lord thou hast taught me from my youth and hitherto I have declared thy wondrous works Now also when I am old and gray headed O God forsake me not Psalm 119. 10. With my whole heart have I sought thee O let me not wander from thy Commandements The Lord himselfe maketh it to himselfe a motive to shew mercy to his people Esay 63. 8. They are children that will not lye so be became their deliverer Jer. 2. 2. I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth c. onely we must use this plea more rarely and sparingly in a self-denying way in faith in Christs righteousnesse as made ours The like also may be said of our integrity with men which in some cases as of reproach slander or injurious dealing from men may be by way of appeale pleaded before the Lord. Jer. 15. 15. Know O Lord that for thy sake I have suffered rebuke Psalm 26. 1. Judge me O Lord for I have walked in mine integrity Fifthly we may plead our sufferings Our sufferings especially those that are most directly and properly for God and his cause Other sufferings also may be pleaded as Nehem. 9. 32 33. Let not all the trouble seem little to thee which hath come upon us Howbeit thou art just in them Psalm 90. 15. Make us glad according to the daies wherein thou hast afflicted us But especially plead those which are undergone for the Lords sake Psalm 44. 22 23. For thy sake are we killed all the day long Awake why sleepest thou Sixthly our former experiences of mercy Our former experiences in like cases may be pleaded as Esay 63. 15. Where is the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies towards me are they restrained Which is as much as to say Lord thou hadst wont to be a compassionate God I have had experience in various conditions and cases of thy bowels how commeth it to passe that they are so shut up now So Psal 71. 17 18. Thou hast taught me from my youth up forsake me not now when I am old Psalm 61. 23. Lead me to the rock that is higher then I For thou hast been a shelter to me Lastly the great good which we might both get and doe may be also pleaded The good that we might get and doe God put that plea in their mouthes Hos 14. 2. Take away iniquity and receive us graciously why so so will we render the calves of our lips And Vers 3. We will no more say to the works of our hands ye are our Gods Psalm 119. 33. Teach me O Lord the way of thy Statutes and I will keep it to the end V. 34. Give me understanding and I shall keep thy law Psal 51. 12 13. Restore to me the joy of thy salvation Then will I teach sinners thy way And as the Saints may plead the good which they may do if answered so that good of inward quickning encouragement and enlargement which they may thereby receive Psal 90. 14. O satisfie us early with thy mercy why so so shall we rejoyce and be glad before thee all our daies A third sort of pleas are those respecting Pleas respecting others As their experience of a like help others which are these 1. Others experiences of the like mercy in like cases as Psal 119. 132. Be mercifull to me as thou usest to doe to those that love thy name Lord doe not change thy wont doe to me as thou hast ever done to others in my case Let not me be the first Anomalon 2. Others discouragements or encouragements Their discouragements or incouragements in ours in ours Psal 69. 6. Let not them that wait on thee be ashamed for my sake 29. Let thy salvation O God set me up on high why so vers 32. The humble shall see this and be glad If thou heare me others wil be encouraged or if not they wil be ashamed 3. The subtle and malicious desires of Enemies plots and desires ours and Gods enemies Ah Lord our miseries snares feares straits temptations and falls they are that for which they plot and wait and are ready to reproach us with and therefore the rather tender our case Thus may we plead as others have done Psal 27. 11. Make my way plain because of my enemies Ps 38. 16. I said hear me lest otherwise they rejoyce over me Psal 39. 8. Deliver me from all my transgressions make me not a reproach to the foolish Now touching the last thing propounded namely the rules which we are to attend to in pleading in prayer they are these 1. Look that we plead in faith yea with some strength of faith acted suitably Believingly to our pleas Esay 53. 15 16 17. Where are thy bowels towards me Doubtlesse thou are our Father Why hast thou hardned our hearts from thy fear 2. Look that we doe it with holy skil Improving those promises or Attributes Skilfully of God which are most suitable to our present cases which are most strongly speaking most apt to move at least our selves to believe and such as used to prevaile that way formerly So did the Church Esay 63. 15 16 17. 3. Look we be submissive in our pleas and not inordinate impatient or distempered Submissively Moses was somewhat distempered in those pleas Exod. 5. 22 23. Wherefore hast thou evil-entreated this people why hast thou sent me and Numb 11. 12 13 15. Whence should I have flesh for so many I am not able to beare the burden alone If thou deale thus with me kill me 4. Look that we be humble and self-denying Humbly therein and come not to God to stand upon terms with him or to chop Logick as we say with the holy one Job was too blame herein Iob 23. 4 5. and so were they Esay 58. 3. Wherefore have we fasted and thou regardest it not So Matth. 7. 21. Have not we prophesied in thy name and in thy name done wonderfull works 5. Look that we be sincere in our pleas Sincerely that there be nothing lurking with us and too well approved by us which may be counterpleaded against us and that justly by our own consciences As Esay 58. 3 4. Behold ye fast for strife So Matth. 7. 22 23. Depart from me ye workers of iniquity CHAP. VII About straitnings in Prayer and their Causes Cures and Differences HAving spoken of sundry cases of Conscience touching the incessant practice of this duty of prayer we come now to speak of the seventh Case considerable therein namely concerning straightnings incident to the Saints in prayer and therein we shall enquire of Quae. 7 About the Saints
holy serving of the Lord how awful is a suppliant hee serveth the Lord with feare and trembling whilest praying how humble is he he is carefull to keep his distance even in talking thus with the Lord Gen. 18. Abraham then telleth the Lord he is but dust Prayer also in the intents and desires of the suppliant it is serving the Lord all that which a true suppliant fetcheth of God in Prayer if you resolve it into its last end it is service He prayeth for outward things as Jacob Gen. 28. For parts and gifts as Solomon 1 King 3. For life and health for deliverance out of divers afflictions outward and inward as Hezekiah Esay 38. and David oft but in all it is that he might serve the Lord and glorfie him the more thereby he cometh with a servantly spirit for mercy from God ready pressed to doe any work of his to attend any command of his Psal 123. 1 2. A praying frame is an obediential frame a command of God bringeth a true suppliant upon his knees and on his knees he wayteth for a command from him Prayer is called knocking namely at the door of Gods grace and mercy in Christ 9 Prayer a spiritual knocking as 't is called in scripture Matth. 7. Knock and it shall be opened unto you Prayer is a holy approaching and repayring to the door of mercy for all manner of supplies of grace which the Saints stand in need of the saints rest not in this that there is a doo● of grace that there is mercy for sinner● to be had in Christ but they are conscionable in the use of this holy means of opening the same mercy is freely promised to th● people of God yet may none rush into the door of God under pretence that it i● open without knocking Ezek. 36. 25 26 27 c. The doore of grace is set very open I will poure clear water upon you c but verse 37. For this will I be sought by the house of Israel Prayer acknowledgeth the Lords prerogative royal In all thy wayes acknowledge him Prov. 3. True suppliants eye the Lord as a great God as well as gracious and therefore are willing to keep their due distances though the Saints be the friends of Christ and of God who may make in a holy wise bold with him yet it is holy manners to them not rudely to presse upon his favour or challenge this or that benefit of it without asking leave Indeed pinching extremities will make them put a good face upon it and not continue walking to and againe aloof off within some general veiw of mercy but to knock and knock again and again at mercyes doore to pray often for the opening thereof to them True suppliants are in haste of earnest and weighty affairs in their converses with the Lord they have much to do with him much to say to him much to receive from him and therefore they must they will knock they are sure that a gracious father of theirs is within yea within hearing and therefore they cannot but thus knock and pray True it is sometimes this door of grace seemeth to be shut against them in some displeasure but yet this maketh them the more earnest Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies Psal 77. 9. Luke 11 Trouble me not for I am in bed saith the friend within but yet see what prevailing importunity he useth so that for his importunity the friend riseth openeth and giveth what is desired What is Prayer but as spiritual knocking a special means of opening of the gate and door of Grace and so of all the lesser wickets as it were thereon depending Hence Psalm 119. 169. Let my cry come before thee saith the Psalmist and ver 170. Let my supplications come before thee as if he would say Open Lord to Prayer let it come in let not that stand without or as if it were a plea Lord Prayer is at the door therefore open So Psal 88. 2. Let my Prayer come before thee or come where thou art And Psal 55. 1. David prayeth that the Lord would not hide himself from his supplications Prayer it will come in where the Lord is will look him out as it were in all corners Psalm 66. 20. David blesseth the Lord that he had not turned away his Prayer Prayer standeth still at Gods door it will not away without its errand and answer Wisdomes out-doors even the Ordinances Prov. 8. 34. These are opened by Prayer Out-lary Gentiles fare the better this way for that Prayer Psalm 67. Let thy way be known among the people thy saving health among all Nations Matth. 9. end Pray the Lord of the Harvest that he would thrust out Labourers into his Harvest Prayer helpeth people to a fruitful Ministry Prayer helpeth to open the Ministers mouth openeth a door of utterance Colos 4. 3. Pray that God would open my mouth Prayer openeth a door of faith 1 Cor. 16. 8 9 The mystery of Salvation may be made known by it Ephes 6. 19. The Word may come to have an open and effectual passage into peoples hearts by it Hence that 2 Thes 3. 1 Pray that the Word may a have free course and be glorified c. The door of Liberty the Churches Liberties may be opened to the Prayer of the Saints as to Paul upon his Prayer Acts 11. Those strong and secret doors of death may be opened by Prayer Hence the Prophets raising of the dead child by Prayer 2 Kings 4. 32 33 34 35. So Jonah by Prayer had the belly of Hell the Whales belly and jawes opened to him to let him out Jonah 2. 9 10. By Prayer the doors of the womb as they are called Job 3. 10 are opened as in Hannahs case 1 Sam. 1. 15 16 20. and Rebecca's Gen. 25. 21. and Elizabeth's case Luke 1. 13 By prayer the doors of Heaven are opened If I shut heaven and my people pray c. I will hear c. 2 Chron. 6 26 and 7. 13 14. By prayer the Prison doors are opened as to Peter upon the Churches prayer Acts 12. 5 10. Secrets which otherwise are not to be opened yet are to be unfolded by prayer Dan. 2. 18 19. Then was the secret revealed upon prayer for the mercies of Heaven that way yea prayer will open even Hell gates as I may say as by Luthers Prayer one was recovered who had even given his soul to the Divel This kind of Divel goeth not out but by prayer and fasting Matth. 17 by fasting and prayer then even such a Divel is cast out and a poor man let go out of his possession As in other knocking there is a hand there are fingers which make a noise and help open the door so here there is a hand of faith which knocketh and that wil open that large gate and door of mercy and any of the lesser wickets depending Matth. 15. 28. O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as
thou wilt Come into all my Treasures of Grace and take even what thou desirest Godly desires knock and make a noise in Gods ears and he opens to them He heareth the desire of the humble Psa 10. 17. They will come in where the Lord is Psa 38. 9 Lord all my desire is before thee The Saints sighs make a noise at Heaven gates and God cometh forth to them For the sighing of the Prisoners I will arise saith the Lord. Psal 12. 5. and Psal 79. 11. Let the sighing of the prisoners come before thee room for the sighing of the prisoners Lord yea their very tears too make a loud noise at this door and they have their voice also in prayer Thou hast heard the voice of my weeping Psal 68. No wonder then that effectual prayer consisting of all these be indeed a knocking and meanes of opening of the gate and door of Mercy in Jesus Christ We pass by other names given to Prayer as that of seeking asking calling opening of the mouth wide running to the Lord for counsel referring ones case to him the like Come we now to give a description of Prayer Prayer is a spiritual and faithful opening of the heart to God in the name of Christ A general description of Prayer with an eye at seasonable help and relief from him By heart we mean thoughts desires affections these wants and weaknesses and sins to which the heart is privy and of which it is sensible We call it an opening of the heart in opposition to hypocritical covering and attempts to hide any thing from the Lord whereby their prayers become no prayers their Worship vaine whilst digging deep to hide the counsels of the heart from God Isaiah 29. 13 15. compared with Psal 119. 26. I have declared my wayes to thee that is prayed and thou heardst me Prayer is a shewing of God our waies or as the Hebrew word beareth a telling or counting them one by one as if we pray indeed when we do from our hearts deal plainly and punctually with God therein when we leave out nothing which we know by our selves untold before him even in a particular manner whether respecting our wants our sins or the like so Psal 38. 18. I have declared mine iniquity meaning all and each of his sins there were some more special sins sinnes which were chiefly his the Hebrew word signifieth a telling of some new thing Davids prayer and confession is not a high-way rode and some one track of confession but it is a telling him of any new fresh acts of sinne Jer. 20. 12 To thee have I opened my cause or prayed to thee Prayer is an opening of the souls causes and cases to the Lord the same word in another conjugation is used for uncovering making bare and naked Gen. 9. 21. The Saints in prayer do or should nakedly present their soules causes without all cover-shames or so much as a ragge of selfe or flesh cleaving to them All things are naked to him with whom Obs we have to doe he is privy to our secrets how is prayer an opening of the heart to him Suppliants are said in prayer to open Answ their hearts to God 1. In that they doe not dare not goe about to hide or desire that ought in their hearts should bee hid from the Lord. It is their desire he should and they are very glad that he doth know all their heart their hearts are ready to break when they through temptation or desertion want prayer vent 2. In that it is their desire and endeavour to present all within their hearts which God by a general eye of wisedome and omniscience seeth unto a more special energetical veiw of the eye of Gods compassion and love Psal 80. 14. Behold and visit this vine Psal 119. 132. Look upon mee as thou usest to doe on those that feare thy name Isay 63. 15 16. Looke downe from heaven c. where are the sounding of thy bowels c. 3. In that they doe thus in way of an ordinance of God which he doth eye and owne as opening of their heart to God Psal 62. 8. Poure out your heart to him or pray to him And albeit their hearts are open to God before yet not actually opened in this way of injoyned expressing the same till they do thus pray 4. In that when prayer is duly performed as their minds and hearts are uttered and poured out as before the Lords face Psal 62. 8. or before him so are they in lively manner quickned to behold Gods mercifull and energetical view of the same hence that perswasion of David All my desires are before thee Psal 38. 9. It is a spiritual opening Spiritual in respect of the efficient and working cause Gods spirit acteth and worketh therein It is prayer in the holy Ghost Rom. 8. 26. The spirit maketh intercession in us the spirit of praier is acted in it Zach. 12. 10. Prayer is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in-wrought our spirits also as acted and improved thereby are at work in it My God whom I serve with my spirit Rom. 1. 9. Our hearts are as water poured out to waft along each petition and confession or as oyle to anoint these messengers of the soul that they might flye the faster to Gods throne It is spiritual in the matter of it things of Gods Kingdome Matth. 6. 33. or if other things yet under a spiritual consideration as according to Gods will and for his glory Spiritual in the manner namely in a sublime and elevated manner of performance Isay 37. 4. Lift up thy prayer Spiritual in the end a calling upon God whereby he is exalted Esay 12. 4. Spirituall in the motive and ground-work a command of God requiring a promise in encouraging Thou saidst seek my face my heart answered Lord thy face will I seek Psal 27. 8. for thou revealedst to thy servant saying I will build thee a house therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer 2 Sam. 27. 27. Faithfull opening that is unfeigned without reservations c. Prayer from unfeigned lips Psal 17. 1. To God not to Saints and Angels which neither know our hearts nor can help us Isay 63. 16. Though Abraham know us not And it is to God not as into the aire or as at an uncertainty where or to whom In the name of Christ There is a holy renouncing of our selves and our owne worth and strength and a resting and trusting upon the Lord Jesus onely through whom we come to the throne of grace and for whose sake alone wee plead for and expect audience and acceptance yea and assistance With an eye to seasonable help Our Our eyes are unto the Lord until hee shew us mercy Psal 123. 1 2. Thus much concerning prayer in generall We might give sundry reasons to inforce Reasons why we must pray this duty Taken 1. From God absolutely and relatively 1 From God considered who is thereby
Trade God is rich in Mercy to all that call upon him in secret apart as wel as to others that pray together in Assemblies and Families Psal 86. 5. Gods Saints and Suppliants which often come alone to the door of Grace and most frequently doe thus knock by prayer speed best God alloweth them this private key that they may freely get in and take of all his precious Treasures of Grace as they need the same Knock and it shall be opened ask and it shall be given Matth. 7. Whatsoever ye ask the Father in my name I will do John 14. 13. be it publickly privately or secretly that you ask the same If others have not it is because they ask not 4 Prayer in secret by our selves as well It expediteth our other affairs as that with others it doth expedit our weightiest temporal affairs Jacob did more this way to issue his great affairs respecting his families welfare and safety when to meet his brother Esau with his warlike Troops then if he had an equal or greater warlike power or military skil to have managed the same Thou hast prevailed with God and with men thou shalt prevail Gen 32 82 c. it is the way to have the beauty or glorious blessing presence and protection of God upon us and the prospering of our handy work to set God thus on work for us by prayer whence it was that they of old were taught to pray for that end as Psalm 90. 17. Let thy beauty be upon us prosper thou the work of our hands This oyles the wheels for any work quickens and quieteth our spirits Philip. 4. 6 7. sanctifieth our works 1 Tim. 4. 4 5. If we can but pray well before hand we may be sure we shall study well or preach well or work well as our calling requireth yea and speed well afterward Some may object their condition as being Object 2 servants and so think themselves excused We are servants and exempted from this Duty of Closet Prayer The charge of the Text is indefinite not Answ 1 limited to any sort of persons no more This is the work of any servant of God as such than that verse 15. Render not evil for evil but ever follow that which is good or that verse 16. Rejoice evermore or that ver 18 In every thing give thanks c. in which godly servants also as well as others are concerned A godly servant considered as his Masters servant is faithfully to attend his Masters business but as he is the Lords servant so this is one part of his servantly businesse When David had said Psal 116 6. I am thy servant Lord thy servant c. verse 17. he addeth I will call upon the name of the Lord. 1 Cor. 1. 2. To them that are called to be Saints in Corinth with all such as call upon the Name of the Lord Jesus in every place that is the Saints character bee they of what calling or condition soever or where ever they call upon the Lord God is no respecter of persons every one who calleth him Father is to do this service and honour of a child to him Thou whoever thou art bond or free when thou prayest enter into thy closet or into some retired place and pray to thy Father which seeth in secret Matth. 6. 6. 2 Every one whether bond or free they have this part of the new man resembling Each Saint is this way gifted more or lesse Christ the Creator of it even this holy knowledg also Col. 3. 10 11. to know how to call upon God as a Father in secret as hee also did and to cry in solemne wise themselves alone Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. 3 Godly servants also who have the Godly servants also must bee Christs peculiar ones Grace of God which bringeth salvation appearing to them are as well as others to be peculiar ones unto the Lord zealous of all good works and so of this also wherein Gods choicest servants have been wont to be conscionably exercised Tit. 29 10 11 12 13 14. compared Other servants will go to praier with their Masters in publick and private yea but Godly ones must doe somewhat more they must improve their peculiar interests in the Lord in such a way of peculiar serving of him with their spirits 4 Bond as well as free being alike interested Their dignity is alike with others and so is this their duty in the dignity and priviledges of Saints as Saints Col. 3. 11. they are alike concerned in such Duties as these are which respect and lye upon the Saints as Saints in which respect also godly servants are the Lords freemen 1 Cor. 7. 22. they must not abridge themselves nor may be abridged by others of this liberty of retired repairs to the Throne of Grace as the Lord affordeth them opportunity To be meer servants of men so to attend their Masters commands as to neglect this or any other command of God they ought not verse 23. yea observe it that the Apostle speaketh of servants to infidel Masters also verse 21 22. Either then they must not pray at all which were to make them as profane as their infidel Masters which to them would bee matter of disdain or distaste or they must content themselves alone with publick prayer in the Congregation of Christians which none will affirm or they must as holy Priests to God offer as the Priests did theirs this holy Incense to God in a retired place from view of others Yea suppose forbidden by an Infidel Master to pray in secret yet they are no more to forbear then Daniel King Darius his servant did forbear it upon his Decree to inhibit the same Dan. 6. 10. 5 Be that child bond or free who prayeth Bond or free so praying are rewarded thus in secret and not before others to his Father he will reward him openly Matth. 6. 6. 6 Godly servants are to sanctifie their work by Prayer 1 Tim. 4. 4. Albeit Abraham Servants must sanctifie their work by prayer had prayed for his servants Eliczars good successe in his businesse about which he sent him Gen. 24. 7 8. yet Eliezar himself alone praieth for good successe that day ver 12. 7. The work which godly servants do Their work then speeds best sanctifie by prayer though more short is wont to speed best as did that business of Eliezar so sanctified Gen. 24. 12. as the issue declared And surely godly Masters which are to expresse special love to such servants will not refuse to encourage them to take some seasonable time to pray thus knowing how profitable such servants wil be to them Philem. 6 11. compared Some will object That they are apt to meet Object 3 with temptations when alone Tempted if alone 1. You may and will be annoyed with temptatious when not conscionably imploied Answ 1 in your general or particular callings as David No hurt by temptations if in Gods
no extraordinary inspired prayer he prayeth against blaspheming Senacharib 2 Kings 19. 5 16 c. and verse 20. God heard his prayer which appeared ver 35 by the strange hand of God against him and his Army of 185000. who are cut off by an unusual stroak or plague of the angel and he himselfe in an unheard of manner is killed by his owne sons whilst he is worshipping in the house of his God verse 37. 2. When God bringeth upon such enemies speedy and untimely deaths and 2 Speedy and sudden judgements come on them not long after imprecations of the Saints made against them as that night after Hezekiah had so prayed the angel wrought that unheard of slaughter of the Assyrians and soon after that parricide is committed upon Senacharib himselfe Doubtlesse the Saints which made such earnest request for Peter did not forget Herod that bloodyman to intreat God to convert him or else to cut him off if ripe for it and Acts 12. 5. 23. you see it is not long after that in that unwonted way he cometh to his end by the stroak of an angel when the very next day Arius dieth by voiding his bowels as he went to ease himselfe it is a sure token that the prayer of that godly Bishop of Alexandria which hee made against him the night before did speed him Theodoret. Eccles hist lib. 1. cap. 4. When within five or six dayes after that fasting and prayer of the Jews wicked Haman is unexpectedly brought to his end surely God hath respect to his peoples requests in their mournings and this their enemy came to fal before them Hester 4. 7. compared according as the very night after Hesters feast that unexpected way was made by God in the kings heart for Hamans fall Chap. 6. When Achitophel within a day or two after David had prayed Lord turne the counsell of Achitophel into foolishnesse 2 Sam. 15. 31. compared with chap. 17. 1. 23 cometh to his end it evidenceth the same to be an issue of Davids imprecation it s a sign that God heard that cry of Moses against the Egyptians when that very day the Lord in a wonderfull manner overthroweth them Exodus 14. 13 15. 33. compared So when Jehoshaphat and his people solemnly and humbly request the Lord to judge those inhumane ingratefull enemies of theirs 2 Chron. 20. 2 3 4 5 10 12 13. and the very morrow after Grd doth in an unwonted manner bring ruine upon those enemies verse 16 17 22 23 24 25. compared all may safely conclude that those prayers speed them 3. When the manner of the ends which God bringeth upon such enemies against 3 Reproachfull ends befall them which his pray is reproachfull and shamefull as when a wicked Haman which a little before was the greatest in the kingdome cometh to be hanged upon a gallows Esther 7. 9 10. When the great Oracle of the people and Counsellour of state Achitophel cometh to so shameful an end as to dye by an halter yea to hang himselfe When that deputy King or Governour Herod hee cometh to so base an end as to bee eaten of basest vermine of lice so when wretched Arius cometh to so base an end it argueth that some godly Alexander hath told his errand to the Lord. 4. When the judgements God bringeth 4 When the very same judgements prayed for follow upon his enemies are the very same which his people desired against them in their prayers God doth not indeed alwayes hear his people in the very particular but in something equivolent yet sometimes he doth and when he doth so it the rather argueth the same to be an answer of prayer As when not alone a Prophet extraordinarily inspired prayeth against Judas in another enemy like him and the things desired are inflicted as Psal 109. and Acts 12. 18 19 20 compared But Jotham an ordinary man hee prayeth that five may come from Abimelech and devoure the men of Sechem and againe that fire may come from the men of Sechem and devour Abimelech and the issue presently afterwards answereth the same for both were instruments of each others ruine it is a sign that Jothams prayer sped them both Judges 9. verse 56 57 compared 5. If when persons prayed against are 5 They perish without being desired swept away without any desiring even of their associates to the contrary even they pity them not there is none no not of their companions in evill to shew them mercy all blessing from any hand almost is far from them Psal 109. 12. 17. The very wicked which drew them which counselled them to such treacherous enemy-acts against God and Christ cast them off without pity as the Priests and Scribes did cursed Judas in his saddest out-cries and troubles What is that to us they will not owne him nor his acknowledgement look thou to it Matth. 27. 4. Nay such enemies prayed against if the prayers be effectual will like those Ammonites help forwards one anothers ruines 2 Chron. 20. 10 11 12. with verse 22. c. Such bloody Shechemites so prayed against will help forward murtherous Abimelechs death and misery as he did theirs Judges 9. 56 57. PART II. 1 Thess 5. 17. Pray without Ceasing CHAP. I. Touching the modification of the exercise of Prayer and therein of Importunity in Prayer HAving dispatched the Discourse about the nature sorts and parts of Prayer We come to consider of the modification of the exercise of Prayer injoined and implyed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which implyeth praying importunely opportunely and indesinently Some Interpreters make account that Paul hath reference herein unto that speech of Christ Luke 18. 1 that men ought to pray always and not to faint namely through spiritlesness sluggishness or slightnesse so here pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without giving out giving over leaving off or intermitting any space of time which must needs imply importunate praying as that of the widowes plying that unjust Judg with earnest Suites for Justice notwithstanding any seeming discouragements or denyals And indeed such as pray importunately earnestly and servently when they do pray they in Gods intent and account do pray continually or without ceasing Now for our better handling this Duty of praying importunately consider we 1. Wherein importunity of Prayer consisteth 2. The Qualifications of it 3. The Reasons inforcing it 4 Some Helps furthering it 5 Some Marks discovering that importunity of Prayer which the Lord meaneth Touching the first Quere Wherein importunity Importunity of praier consisteth 1. In the utmost improvement of mind heart and the gifts and graces of the Spirit therin in Prayer of Prayer consisteth I answer It consisteth 1. In the extensiveness and intensiveness of the mind and heart and of each praying Grace of a godly Suppliant in his prayer Our new Translation rendreth that in Acts 12. 5. by a like phrase as this in the Text Prayer was made without ceasing but the word
of it it is high time to draw a solemne petition to our gracious King to take some effectuall order to suppresse it 3. In case of some weighty service of God 3 Difficult service which we look at as above our strength Now must young Solomon that thinks himselfe but a child for such imployment ask of God 1 Kings 3. 5 6 7 c. 4. In case of greatest danger impendings 4 Danger impending as when Yet forty dayes and Niniveh shall be destroyed Jonah 3. 4. Now if ever poor Ninivites must call mightily to the Lord and verse 10. God saw their works and repented him of the evil Exod. 32. 10. Gods hand is up against Israel with his slaughtering weapon Now pray Moses or never and he did so v. 11 14. God repented of that evill also Touching the last particular that wee are bound to take these opportunities of prayer it is undenyable we are bound to pray without ceasing and therefore to bee taking all opportunities to pray And wherefore else doth the Lord put such a talent of opportunity of Motives prayer into our hands but that he expecteth the faithful and fruitful improvement thereof to be made by us or else he will assuredly take his time to expresse his displeasure against us for so grosse a neglect of his grace and of our own souls advantage But that we may be quickned up to pray opportunely or to take all opportunities of prayer Consider 1. That opportunity is the very cream and This Opportunity is the best and all of Time flower and spirits yea the very All of time Hence this Pray continually i. e. opportunely he that prayes as oft as he hath opportunity prayeth alwayes 2. That opportunity of asking offered 2 'T is an ingagement to the Lord to hear by the Lord doth as I may say ingage the Lord to answer Why should the Lord set out such almes-dayes and audiencedayes and some way signifie it to his people if hee meant not to heare and help them Friends in such a case stand upon their credit if they appoint times to meet and to entertaine a friendly discourse with their friends they are not wont to faile them so here opportunity of asking given us by the Lord it imboldneth us to ask and to expect a seasonable answer 3. That opportunity of Prayer it 3 It is the grace and beauty of prayer doth grace and beautifie our Prayers As every thing else is beautifull in its season Eccles 3. 11. So is Prayer in its season opportunity is a wheele to the chariot of prayer which safely strongly and swiftly carryeth it in before the Lord. A word spoken in season to men is in the Hebrew phrase a word spoken upon the wheeles Prov. 25. 11. So is it in these words spoken to the Lord in their season yea opportunity helpeth to carry our praier also in an holy state before the Lord as upon a royall Chariot-wheele Opportunity of Prayer greatly furthers their acceptance in Christ These fruits of our lips also are then best and most welcome to the Lord when brought forth in their season 4 It useth to succeed well 4. That seasonable prayer is ever speeding prayer Psal 5. 13. My voice shalt thou hear in the morning namely praying in the season of prayer 5. That opportunity of seeking and 5 It is beg'd for us by Christ getting grace by prayer and other means is begged for us by Christ In an acceptable time have I heard thee as saith the blessed Father to the Mediatour Isai 49. 8. And thence it is that the members of this head of the Church have any such time of acceptance 2 Cor. 6. 2. For hee saith in an acceptable time have I heard thee Now is the acceptable time 6. That great will bee our disadvantage by letting such holy opportunities of Prayer slip for besides the losse of such jewels and of what wee might have gained by trading with the same our spirits will come to bee very much straitned and hardned as sad experience in the Saints themselves witnesseth CHAP. III. Of Constancy in Prayer WE come now to the third and last thing held forth in the modification of the practise of this duty of prayer that it be without ceasing i. e. Indesinently or constantly It is then our duty to pray indesinently or constantly Now for this Consider 1. What it is to pray indesinently or T● pray constantly is 1. Not to give out from prayer constantly or what is implyed in it and why we must so pray and then make we one briefe Use of it Touching the first To pray indesinently or constantly is Not to give out from praying not to let God alone untill hee doe blesse us To pray and not to faint Luke 18. 1. Not to give God rest Esa 62. 61. To look to him in prayer untill he shew us mercy Psal 123. 1 2. Quest May any true childe of God give off prayer for a season Quest Answ Yea verily Gods own dear Saints may be weary in praying though Answ 1 not so weary of prayer The duty it selfe is to them very desirable in it selfe but the discouragements may be such in tempted times that they may be even afraid to goe to God to seek his face sometimes Psal 6. 6. I am weary with my groaning and 69. 3. Godly ones may give out from prayer for a little season I am weary of my crying yet hee gave not off wholly or not long verse 13. But as for me my prayer is unto thee If they give out for a spurt from solemn Prayer they cease not to be darting up ejaculatory prayers Jonah 2. 4. I sayd I am cast out of thy sight yet will I looke unto thy holy Temple When God in deserted times seemeth to turne his back upon his Saints or they through distrust and distempers are as if turning their back upon him yet they give many of these love-casts of the eyes of their souls towards God desires will be ever and anon stepping out of such a gracious heart to look after the Lord. That holy fire within the heart albeit it blazeth not out yet will be ever and anon sending out these sparks There are times wherein the Saints are so spiritually sick of sinne and of temptations that their very speech faileth them even they have their spiritual swounds and may lye a while speechlesse yet either they are making these holy signes in their fainting fits or some of this holy breath is stirring If Hezekiah cannot speak out in solemne prayer yet can he chatter and make these shorter holy mutterings of his heart and these dove like moanes of his spirit Isai 38. 14. I am oppressed O Lord undertake for me Quest How cometh it to passe that any Quest such sad silence or speechlesnesse in respect of solemn Prayer doth at any time or for any shorter space befall Gods owne people Answ Sometimes through some dangerous fall
to prayer then that lawfull working of heart which proceedeth from faith in Gods immensity And nothing more quickning to serious attention and intention to the duty and to comforble expectation of the issue then a lively apprehension that we speak not to an absent but to a present deity not to a friend out of hearing but to one that is with us and by us when we are praying 2. Faith in Gods omniscience is also 2 In Gods omniscience required in prayer Thus David in his and Jeremiah in his and Solomon in his prayer look at God as one that tryeth the heart and the reynes 1 Chron. 29. 17. Jer. 32. 16. 19. 1 King 8. And faith in prayer cometh not to bring light to God but rather to borrow light from him in all the businesse of praier It knowes his all-seeing eye as well as his all-hearing eare Faith maketh a sincere heart the more free and bold with God because it eyeth him as one who is privy to all it hath to think or speak in prayer Nothing more terrible to sinners thoughts in their wayes then that God seeth them But nothing more comfortable to godly ones then this perswasion that now they are before an all-seeing one they are glad that they serve such a Master and speak to such a father who doth throughly know them and watchfully eyeth them The suppliants of God have secret things in secret corners to commit to the eares of God and oh how well is it for them in their esteeme that they may pray to God which seeth in secret Matth. 6. 6. Pray to thy Father which is in secret saith Christ Suppliants are to seek Gods face about matters carryed on by Gods and their own enemies secretly and slyly and had need eye the Lord as one who seeth what is contrived and done in the dark yea sometimes they are so sorely assailed and charged by the wily enemies of their soules that they have no way left them but to appeale in prayer to the Lords all-seeing eye to judge of the false charges of men and divels and sometimes of their corrupted tempted consciences accusing them when they should excuse disquieted when they should rest in God Hence why art thou so sad O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me trust still in God Psal 42. 5. and verse 7. Deep calleth to deep and verse 8. My prayer shall bee to the God of my life That Tepilla or appeale prayerwise unto the Lord as one that heareth where the right lieth helped much Sometimes we know not what to ask as we ought but the spirit it self maketh intercession for us with sighs and groans that cannot be uttered Rō 8. 26 27. and he that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the mind of the spirit So said Pauls faith so saith the faith of each gracious suppliant 3. Faith in Gods all-sufficiency is requisite 3 In Gods all-sufficiency wherefore Christ teaching us to pray teacheth us to look at God as one whose is the kingdom and the power and the glory Mat. 6. 9 13. compared Hence the lowest room and one days residence in Gods house of prayer is desirable to David Ps 84. 10. He believed that God is a sun and a shield and would withhold no good thing from them that walk uprightly verse 11. Moses prayeth to the Lord for mercy as one whose mercy would fill all the desires and corners of their soules Psal 90. 14. O satisfie me early with thy mercy None are more selfe-empty and needy then true suppliants and therefore faith in Gods all sufficiency is most needfull to them None are more sensible of their utter inabilitie to withstand the force and guile of their soules enemies and so need such a faith the more yea the truth is true suppliants use not to seek of God this or that so much as God and Christ in that which they seek of him God in a spouse in a friend in liberty in health in ordinances in comforts and the like and therefore they must needs eye the Lord as all in all and all without him to be nothing yea in a barren land where no desirable comforts are and can then in seeking him by faith be satisfied with him as with marrow and fatnesse Psal 63. 1 2 3 5. c. 4. Faith in Gods Almightinesse is requisite in prayer Paul who bowed his knees 4 In Gods Almightiness or prayed unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes 3. 14. hee looketh on him as one who was able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think according to the power that worketh in us ver 20. So Jehoshaphat in his prayer argueth by faith with God thus 2 Chron. 20. 6. And in thy hand is not there power and might that is there is So Jeremy in his prayer Chap. 32. 16 17. I prayed unto the Lord saying Ah Lord behold thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy great power and outstretched arm and there is nothing too hard for thee Sometimes Gods suppliants are put hard to it in the course of their prayers the last grain of their faith and patience seemeth to be put into the scale their pressures are such that they even squeeze them to the last drop of their faith and patience there appeareth but some small spark thereof under the ashes they seem to cease in some fainting fits to be even departing onely some gasping panting symptomes left of life therein namely some workings of faith in Gods Almightinesse that he is yet able to help and succour them A may be a possibility in respect of Gods Almightinesse is eyed by faith and that carryeth them out in prayer Sometimes the very faith of Gods suppliants is at a stand at a non plus in regard of Gods will it is an if to them whether he will help yet they beleeve he can help and therefore pray as hee did Matth. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and such a faith in the Lords Almightinesse doth great things by prayer For hence that I will be thou clean saith Christ immediately his leprosie was clensed v. 3. He who prayeth in faith of Gods power shall have beyond his faith the benefit of his gracious and energetical will So the Centurion in his prayer to Christ believeth that if he but will his servants cure hee can work it he can even command it by his soveraigne word Matth. 8. 8. Speak the word onely and my servant shall be whole He is not sure that he will give out that energaticall word but if he would but speak the word he concludeth that hee hath power over all desirable blessings as servants at his command even as his souldiers were at his beck v. 9 10. And Christ approveth of this his faith in his soveraigne power saying Verily I have not found so great faith no not in Israel So the man mentioned Mark 9. 22 23
24 25 26. he maketh a request to Christ for his child but at first questioned Christs power saying If thou canst doe any thing help us and so long his request took not but being quickned up by Christs word to faith in his power that hee could doe any thing for them and to expect any thing from him in such a way of believing if thou canst believe namely that I can doe any thing for you all things are possible to him that so believeth then the man cryeth out with teares Lord I believe namely that thou canst do any thing for us and so getteth the blessing he prayed for where prayers are put up in faith believing all things are possible to the Lord believed in and attainable upon believing in him there all things are possible and attainable to such a faiths-request Sometimes the suppliants of God deale with God in prayer about intricacies where the determinations of the will of God seeme or are hid and obscure yea for such good things as come within the reach of his power and herein it were sad with them if faith in Gods power might not or did not relieve them Yea sometimes they deal with God about cases wherin the Lord cometh to expresse his will and mind to the contrary and yet faith in Gods Almightinesse putteth words into their mouthes and biddeth and incourageth them to speak and to pray to him and to try it out with him even in such cases When God telleth Moses that he will smite the people and disinherit them Num. 14. 11 12. Yet because Moses believed the greatnesse of Gods power which might else be dishonoured hee pleadeth that the nations will say that because the Lord was not able to bring them into the promised land therefore he slew them and then betaketh him to this hold Let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken the Lord is long suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity c. He looked at him as now able to fulfill the other part of his revealed will even to be a God pardoning his peoples sins This set the Ninivites a praying when yet God had said yet forty dayes and Niniveh shal be destroyed Jonah 3. 3 4 5. Yet for ought any knew to the contrary God might shew them mercy verse 8 9. who can tell if God may not turne and repent of his fierce anger that we perish not and their prayers tooke effect verse 10 God repented of the evill that he had said Besides true seekers of God are continually sensible of mighty adverse powers of darknesse against them so that if they had not faith in Gods almightiness overmatching those powers they would not pray without ceasing 5 Faith in the gracious nature and disposition of God as in his love mercy bounty compassion long-suffering goodnesse is required Nothing more usuall with the Saints in their prayers mentioned throughout the scripture then to set their faith on worke in prayer upon the gracious nature of God I need not mention the scriptures In this ocean faith can freely swim and bear up all the suppliants burdens and packets In this holy chancery court and court of grace it can have right in any cases which concerne the soule Nothing more sutable to the hungring and thirsting desires of suppliants and nothing more sweet and satisfying then the marrow and fatnesse of Gods loving kindnesse Psal 63. 1. to 5. The upright remember the love of the Lord more then wine Cant. 14. A poore suppliant seeeth here by an eye of faith the true riches which his soule needeth and that it is here ready for him that God is rich in mercy to all that call upon him So did David Psal 86. 41. This is a spirituall all-heale to the poore diseased wounded soule crying to God for cure therein it seeth and eyeth the particular salves that are most sutable to the severall sores of which it complaineth when the people of God are tossed with tempests of troubles and temptations as they were Isai 44. 11. yet they eye this as a sweet and safe harbour if they can but put in here they are sheltred in all weathers if they can but cast the anchor of faith and hope here they can ride it out securely and without hurt or losses from any windes which blow 6. Faith in Gods simplicity is required 6 In Gods simplicity Solomon in his prayer looketh at God as alwayes acting and all act one whose eyes were open night and day 1 King 8. 29 so the Psalmist Psal 65 2. and thou that art hearing ever hearing prayers to thee shall all flesh come The like faith in the eternity and immutability of God and in his faithfulnesse in what he is to his poore redeemed ones and in what he saith to them and doth for them in a way of grace and favour is needfull Habbakuk in his prayer maketh use of the eternity of God Hab. 1. 12. Art not thou from everlasting oh Lord my God my holy one wee shall not dye Nehemiah in his prayer improveth Gods faithfulnesse chap. 1. 4. O God that keepest Covenant and mercy for them that love him Those afflicted soules mentioned Psal 102. doe in their prayer improve by faith Gods unchangeablenesse Thou art the same and thy yeares have no end verse 24 25 26 27. The suppliants themselves and their cases vary much and suffer many changes but faith in these incourageth them to hold on in incessant prayer to the Lord. We might have instanced in the particulars of faiths improvements of the relative nature of God in prayer as that of a Father of a Saviour Redeemer and the like as is often mentioned in Scripture as Jer. 14. 8. Esa 63. 15 16 17. and 64. 8. c. but I shall forbear proceed we therefore 7. In the Lord Jesus to the second branch of faith required in prayer namely Faith in the Lord Jesus Heb. 7. 23. Christ is able to save such to the uttermost which come unto God by him Out of Christ God is a consuming fire and if we eye him as such a one only wee are driven from him rather than drawn to him Daniel craveth all things for the Lords sake Dan. 9. 17. David requesteth mercies of the Lord for his words sake or as in 1 Chron. 11. 9. for his servants sake the saints of old looked in their prayers towards the temple 1 King 8. 29 30. 35 38. So Jonah chap. 2. 4. Now the temple was a type of Christ Christ spake of the temple of his body Joh. 2. It was not enough for the Israelites to cry out of wounds nor for Moses to pray with them or for them but they must look to the brazen Serpent Numb 21. 7 8 9. which in Joh. 3. 13 14 15. is made a type of Christ Christ is the altar whereon wee offer all our spirituall sacrifices if acceptable Heb. 11. 12. And if we doe in offering them but touch this blessed altar
frequent and fervent 5. When most frequent and fervent in secret praier in secret prayers of all other prayers As it is said of grief so is it true of prayer He prayeth most truly and sincerely that prayeth most secretly Hence our Saviour doth oppose secret prayer to hypocritical praying Matth. 6 5 6. Slye false dealers will be careful and very exact in what they speak when witnesses are by but honest men will be as exact in what they speak to another all alone So is it here many it may be which carry it with much Zeal and circumspection before others yet in their Closets if they do pray at all it is so flatly so drouzily so curtly so carelessely that it is as good as no prayer at all Let such look to their spirits whether all be right within Whatsoever false hearted spouses may seem to speak so and so lovingly loyally to their Spouses before others that such as are by would take them to bee very chaste and faithful and kind yet if in secret they carry it otherwise their honesty may well be suspected So is it here if Christians should carry it in expressions in prayer with others as if very loyal to the Lord Jesus but in secret it is quite otherwise their hearts are not so intire and honest as becometh their profession Verily sincerity is plain and open hearted and surely never more then when alone with God its friend Sincerity in prayer is simplicity and singlenesse in prayer and therefore will be the same every where If praying with others striving still to speak with such life and power and holinesse as is meet and if alone praying it will put us upon the like seriousness of attentiveness and intentiveness in and on the duty in hand 6 When we can in prayer be as earnest 6 When as earnest in prayer for others 〈◊〉 for enemies as for our 〈◊〉 for others as for our selves yea we can be very serious in wrestling with God for such as have injured us and that not so much that we may be lesse molested by them as that the Lord Jesus may be magnified in them The very thoughts what a mighty conquest the Lord would work in their conversion what a glorious name he might get thereby what a foil it would be to the Divels kingdome power and policy c. this putteth spirits into their prayers for them David albeit he had many things lay heavy upon himself as appears in the whole 51. Psalm yet vers 18. he prayes for and is mindful of Zion and of the Churches good Self hath lesse ground work and foot hold in prayers for others then those which are for our selves The Lord Jesus maketh account that they had need be perfect as their heavenly Father is in their measure and proportion of perfection that love and wish so wel to their very enemies Mat. 5. 44 48. Lastly When we are as ready to praise 7. When as ready to praise God as to pray to him God for mercies received as to pray to him for what we want Godly Esther and Mordecai are as solicitous and careful that they and others with them may have their solemne Thanksgiving dayes for the gracious deliverance for which they had prayed and fasted as ever they were of the dayes of Prayer and Fasting Esther 9. 22 29 31. verses compared Self will be sometimes prayer full and so will hypocrise because its good and sutable to both satisfying the desires of both and furthering the ends and aimes of both may come in thereby But sincerity is that which is and will be praiseful and thankful An honest and poor man will scarce ever forget a speciall kindnesse shewed to him by another at his request in a time of his necessity when ever he meeteth his friend he will be thanking him a long time after and when he is with others he will be thankfully acknowledging the same to the great commendation of that his freind But a Counterfeit a Vagabond a Rogue for whom you do any office of love you shall hardly ever see or hear of him more when he hath gotten his penny-worths of you he is gone unlesse he need you again he returns not to acknowledge it albeit at the present he give you good language So is it here a Christians grace and sincerity thereof is more tried when he getteth prayer blessings then when he wanteth the same Self being empty prayeth but self when full looketh but to his own satiety but self-denyal the daughter and hand-maid of Sincerity will not be so circled within the compasse of selfe in his prayers Look as it is in a Prospective glass if you turne the wrong end formost great things will seem very small and things that are nearest will appear as a far off and small things will hardly be discerned So is it here when self and hypocrisie are to look upon mercies of prayer great ones are but little and small mercies none at all c. but sincerity taketh the truest survey of them all in their dimensions colours and therefore no wonder if it be thankful sincerity will bear such true and full witnesse to our extreme misery in our selves that the light and white of mercy compared with this darkness and black will prove very amiable and praise-worthy Sincerity will truly and faithfully compare our worthiness and utter unworthiness at our best with Christs glorious merit and worthinesse that the eye of the soul that looks on cannot but discerne praise worthy glory therein Greatness and absolute Soveraignty and independency in the Lord and unutterable nearness and dependency in us shall truly be presented and compared in a sincere hearted Suppliant and can he be other then very thankful Selfe which prompteth a false hearted Christian to speake for blessings will be Judge too of the same And there is little likelihood of right judgment to proceed from so bloody and ungrateful an Umpire and if not rightly judged of what thanks to be expected But sincerity judgeth of divine blessings by the Rules of the Spirit and Word of God The spring of Sincerity in Prayer riseth from God and therefore it will assuredly return to God in praises which are sutable Luke 17. 13 15 19. The sincere Samaritan Supplicant is as loud in his praises of God as ever he was in his prayers but so were not the other Let us now briefly speak to the two last things propounded first of the Means and Helps to further Sincerity in prayer and then of the Motives to stir us up to the same Helps to Sincerity and Purity in prayer H●lps to since●●● in prayer may be such as these 1 Labour to be sincere in other passages 1 Be sincere in 〈◊〉 other acts of our lives and practices of our life to Godward and to manward When Sincerity is interwoven in this whole piece of our lives and conversations it will shew it self in this part of it Sincerity
against me saith God Hos 7. 13. yet in pretence cryed to him but in truth they did not cry to him when they howled on their beds their ends were carnal ibid. and they make God a God that were as carnal as they a God that would further the desires of lusts else why do they petition him thereto and this is to bely the Lord and the Lord useth to answer such according to their heart desires according to their heart Idols and not their lip hypocrisies Ezek. 14. he giveth them up to their lusts they secretly chuse Delusions notwithstanding other pretences of sacrificing Isaiah 66. 3. and the Lord chuseth to let them have their choice verse 14. and at length taketh away that good that they seem to have and to prayer they become as speechlesse outed of all their ability to pray Math. 22. 11. CHAP. VII Of Watchfulness required to Prayer HAving handled three of the Conditions required to the incessant practice of this Duty of Prayer we come now to speak of the fourth and last Requisite thereto namely Watchfulnesse which is threefold 1. Watching unto prayer Ephes Praier watching threefold 6. 18. 2. Watching in prayer Coloss 4. 2. 3. Watching after prayer Psalm 130. 1 2 5. In which let us consider severally three things 1 The Nature of the Duty in the three forementioned branches thereof 2 The Reasons and Motives urging to the practice thereof 3 Some Helps furthering the performance of the same Watchfulnesse unto prayer consisteth Watching unto praier consists 1. In readiness to take all praier seasons in these four particulars 1 Being of a wakeful spirit ready and fit to take the due seasons of prayer as the Lord requireth Isaiah 55. 6. Call upon him while he is near as the Saints usual practice is and that is a part of their special priviledge for to do They call upon God in a time wherein he may be found Psalm 32. 6. There is a morning of opportunity which David will take for prayer Psalm 5. 3. True it is that God is up before us he is stirring early for his peoples help as soon as the face of the morning or season of shewing mercy to them appeareth he helpeth them Psalm 46. 5. but yet wee may not be up in our spirits we had need rowze up our hearts as being too oft drowsie at such times and not watching for the first day-break of a season of mercy So that look as David did when to praise God that are we to do when to pray to him Awake early Psal 57. 7 8. There is much spiritual sluggishnesse cleaveth to the spirits of the best in spiritual services as sometimes the eyes of their bodies were covered with sleep when they should have prayed Mat. 26. 4. so is it too oft with our spirits when they are not in wakeful plight That Godly Matron when to utter a Song of Praise to God see how she doubleth and redoubleth the word Awake Awake awake Deborah Awake awake utter a Song Judg. 5. 12. It is not a little calling that will awake our slumbring heavy eyed spirits Sometimes they call up a sleeping Jonah to arise and call upon his God Jonah 1. 6. Zachary must be rowsed out of his sleepinesse to observe the Vision by the Angel Zach. 4. 1. When the Lord Jesus would hear his Doves voice in prayer Cant. 2. 14. see how oft he calleth to her to arise and come away verse 10 13. Sometimes the Spirit of God in their consciences and spirits themselves calleth them up to attend this holy imployment if any morning light of approaching grace peepeth forth or season of doing the Lord service in prayer is observed as in Deborah and David and others of the Saints If ever our spirits had need be up and ready they had need be so when we are to pray A sleepy spirit will scarce speak sense as I may say to God in prayer It is burthensome to a friend to stand listning to a sleepy broken discourse consisting of half words and sentences indistinctly placed and uttered in his ears albeit it be by his friend So is it in a like spirituall disorderly drowsie praying and speaking to the Lord as men in a sleepy fit rather lose something they got in their hand then get more unto the same by craving it in such a drowsie sort So is it here we are losers and not gainers by prayers whereunto our spirits are not wakened to be fit to speak to the Lord as becometh him us 2 In heeding to make use of all holy and 2 In taking all prayer advantages special advantages unto prayer that Divine Providence offereth When Christians wait for such items of Providence such speaking invitations to Prayer then they watch unto prayer indeed As at other posts of the doors of Christ so at this are the Saints to watch and wait Prov. 8. 33. 34. Albeit the Lord in respect of his own disposition to mercy be alwayes ready to hear and help his people yet he is not alwayes to be spoken withal for that end neither are we so fit to speak to him At sometimes againe it is in our hearts to pray to the Lord as David said he found in his heart to pray that prayer to God 2 Sam. 7. 27. At other times that advantage was to seek It requireth much holy skill and care to espie and discern advantages to praier A wandring watchlesse spiritlesse sluggish eye observeth them not espieth them not discerneth not the same 3 In observing narrowly distinctly what In minding all praier occasions necessary weighty occasions of praier we have searching our wayes for that purpose and then lifting up heart and hand in praier Lam. 3. 40 41. Like Pleaders Saints ought to be good Students that they may bee the fitter to plead we are to study our hearts and lives and the cases of both before wee plead them Or look as Trades men do look over and set their marks upon their parcels ere they do retail them so in this case ought the Saints to look over the particulars of their hearts and lives before they do trade with God in prayer about the same 4 In observing wisely the frame of spirit In minding the plight of our spirits when to pray in which we are when wee are to addresse our selves to prayer how fit we are or unfit for prayer how far lively or listlesse or dead hearted how far tender or otherwise senselesse how far serious or slighty what faith is stirring or what distrusts doubts or temptations and like other Musicians which when they are to play as they are about to tune their Instruments they make use of their musical ear attending how far each string is in tune or no too high or too low too sharp or too flat So is it here in the Suppliants of God which are Harpers as wee have shewed it is their peculiar property and gift above other men they have
yet a little sleep c. 3 Such as notwithstanding which yet the heart is quiet Prov. 24. 31 33. it breaketh 3. When leaving the heart quiet not his sleep it molesteth not his ease nor is he so much as willing that such spiritual mischiefs and evils should disquiet him he is all for ease and will not have that disturbed ver 33. Yet a little sleep c. such a ones case is sad God regards not him nor any thing he saith but eyeth him as a loathsom sluggard fit for ruine 4 Such as overcome the soul and by degrees 4 When over-running the heart eat out the very motions and dispositions to prayer or any other good work ibid. compared with Prov. 21. 25. such a sluggard had his desires but even his desires too are overcome with such distempers The desire of the sluggard killeth him for his hands refuse to labour 2 There are some other distractions in prayer which may stand with hopeful Others not bindring answers of praier successes of the prayers annoyed by them As 1. Such distractions in prayer which are 1. If resisted strongly resisted prayed against and bewailed Albeit sometimes by their violence they captivate us so that as he said The good we would do we cannot because of that present evil Rom. 7. 21. And this part of the law of our members rebelleth against the law of our minds is quite crosse to the bent of our spirits as spiritual ver 23. whence with Paul as verse 24. we are ready to cry out Wretched men that we are who shall deliver us from the body of this death 2 Such as are frequently overcome so 2. If frequently overcome that notwithstanding that opposition of the Spirit in us by the flesh yet the flesh hath not its will of us Galat. 5. 19. The Spirit lusteth against the flesh namely so as to put it to the worst 3 Such which at the first arising of them do amaze and appall the heart and 3. If amazing the heart so Satanical and not ours 4 Such as are mainly occasioned from bodily distempers melancholy unwonted 4 If occasioned from bodily a●ls drowsinesse sicknesse paines c. in which case he pitieth us as a father his children remembring our frame that we are but dust Psal 102. 13 14. as in sick Hezekiahs chatterings c. Isai 33. 8. 5. Such which are occasioned by some 5 If occasioned by outward occurrents outward occurrents as the disturbance occasioned at that prayer and fasting 1 Sam. 7. 5 6 9 10 7 8. compared so by sudden outcries accidents c. CHAP. III. Touching good things suggested in prayer and how discerned to be or not to be delusions A Third case of conscience about prayer Quest 3 now to be considered of is touching things materially good which are suggested in prayer how they should bee discerned to be or not to be delusions Before we lay downe the marks of differencing Things materially good may be moved in prayer and not from a good principle cause these motions materially good from those which are so formally we must premise that such good things for the matter of the motions may bee suggested and raised up in the spirit of a Christian when praying to God and yet not spring from the spirit of God Even such like motions may be raised from our own natural spirits as far as they are carnal and likewise they may be cunningly propounded by Satan And because this to some may seem strange that good motions should be suggested to Gods people or to others whilst exercised in so good a work and yet the same not to come from a good spirit let us evince it a little from Scripture examples and grounds That such motions may come from our They may arise from mans deceitful heart own hearts as they are carnal will appear by the charactar of mans heart in its selfe considered and as far as natural Jer. 17. 9. The heart is deceitfull above all things and desperately wicked Surely if the heart could not play such a cheat as this that speech would bee too hyperbolical When David sought God in and about his soules cases hee had experience of such seemingly friendly counsels to doe this or that to take this course for his succour and that whereby the Lords displeasure might be removed but by his complaint of them it appeareth he found them deceitful counsels he is weary of such heart-counsels saying Psalm 13. 1 2. How long shall I take counsell in my selfe When David was in so sad a case as he mentioneth Psalm 42. 1 2 3 4. one might think sad musings and thoughts being so sutable to his case need not be suspected to be sinfull yet David perceived that those he had were tainted and therefore chideth his soul for them verse 5. Why art thou so sad O my soul when Asaph was crying to God in prayer in that sad condition Psalm 77. 1 2 c he had motions in his mind then propounding grounds of comfort whilst he sought God for he saith I sought God my soul refused to be comforted verse 2. Again at the same time he had other motions crossing the former and perswading that it was not for such a wretch as he who had lost Gods favour to take hold of comfort and these motions prevailed against the other for he saith I sought the Lord my sore ran and my soul refused to be comforted both motions had their probable grounds of equity and truth but could not be both from a good principle He had also in his prayer many thoughts of Gods past mercies to him yet other motions and inquisitions are made in and by his spirit which make him but the more troubled and overwhelmed amidst his complaints verse 3. I remembred God and was troubled I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed True it is that the thoughts of Gods mercies together with the serious musings of our vilenesse and unworthy walkings they work kindly when they humble us and break our hearts but it is never of God that they should overwhelme us as these did this good man The like might be said of such motions demanding will the Lord cast off for ever is his mercy cleane gone for ever Albeit he doth cast off and his mercy be gone to sense at present yet is it so for ever was there any hurt in these yea verily Asaphs owne conscience being Judge afterwards verse 10. And I said this is mine infirmity Psal 39. 3 4 5 6. David hath motions in his heart which put him upon that Lord make me to know mine end and it was materially a good thought which he expresseth man at his best estate is vanity yea but Davids heart was too hot within him it was distempered heat against the prosperity of the wicked at which he was troubled and these are but the sparklings of that wild-fire he doth as good as pray to hasten his
Thus saith the Lord it was not really so 2 Thess 2. 11. God sends in a judicial way strong delusions that they should believe a lye It were not a delusion if better things were not held forth yea but indeed and in truth it s nothing else but a very lie though backed possibly with the Scripture of truth wrested and abused The divels Imps to seduce the better pretend the liberty of Jesus Christ but indeed and in truth its servitude to the flesh 2 Pet. 2. 18 19. So Satan himself would be beguiling of Christians with his delusive shadowes of Gods grace counsels comforts but they who hearken to such lying vanities forsake their own mercy Jonah 2. 8. But such things which the Holy Ghost suggesteth they are realities regularities solidities The Spirits suggestions carry a real port of divine Majesty and Soveraignty and many times in the very mentioning of them doth he effect what he represented to the mind Psal 42. 8 The Lord will command his loving kindness in the day time and not barely hint it yea so effectually that a Song of praise for it followeth And my Song shall be with me c. 4 Such motions in shew possibly Scripture 4. When any way crosse Scripture yet really suggested to crosse other Scripture counsels reproofs comforts commands or threats or coming crosse to principles of Faith or light or peace and experience received from God such motions are delusive and Satanical Such were those suggested to Christ whilst spiritually exercised in the wildernesse Matth 4. 6 crossing that Scripture vers 7. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God It s a deluding spirit it setteth the blessed harmonious Scripture against it self When Scriptures are set on the divels rack by himself immediately or by his Instruments mediately it s still divellish 2 Pet. 3. 16. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They put them on the Rack as they do other Scriptures albeit to the perdition of such hucksters Thus the Divel by the false Prophet pretends divine Authority and Warrant for that which was directly contrary to Divine Authority Jerem. 28. 11 14. Hannaniah saith Babels yoak shall be broken in two years and that the Lord saith it but God by Jeremiah saith No and as Satan doth thus mediately by his Instruments so he useth to do more immediately by himself But as for the Spirit of God he being a Spirit of Truth can suggest nothing but what is consonant unto truth What he heareth saith Christ that he shall speak Joh. 16. 13. And being a Spirit of Wisdom he cannot speak contradictions to what himself indited and inspired as he did the Scriptures 2 Pet 1. 21. he is a witness 1 Joh. 5. A faithful witness speaking the truth the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth and the same constantly As it s said of the true witness Prov. 21. 28. He that heareth speaketh constantly I deny not but that in some extraordinary cases God may say to Abraham That in Isaak shall thy seed be called c. Gen. 21. and yet chap. 22. bids Abraham kill that his Isaak before Isaak had any child and so seemingly crossing his Promise yea and his Precept too Thou shalt not kill but this was for trial sake Heb. 11. 17. By faith Abraham when he was tryed offered up Isaak Nor do such extraordinary cases crosse the tenure of ordinary rules which wee are to attend and by which we are to judg of the regularity or irregularity of suggestions or actions 5 Such motions which leave no impression 5. When leaving no holy impression upon the soul upon the mind but are forthwith forgotten they are delusive Satan is sometimes compared to lightning Luke 10. what lightsome motions he maketh they are but flashes soon gone the Spirits motions are abiding reflexions of Sun-like beams Satan as a fowle will be present at Religious exercises Matth. 13 4 19. compared the fowles attending the Sower are interpreted the wicked one attending the Ministers in their preaching and hearers in their hearing the Word But whatsoever flatterings he maketh in mens minds they are but vagrant and transcient movings but it s otherwise with suggestions truly divine When such a motion and word is spoken from heaven to Christ Thou art my Son c. Luke 3. 21 22. and the Spirit abideth upon him too that argued that it was indeed a divine attestation John 1. 32. When in keeping the Commandments of Christ from love to him as that command of Christ for prayer John 16 23 24. or the like the Lord so sheweth himself and his gracious counsels to us that he abideth with us the suggestions of such comfortable things to our hearts in prayer are of God indeed Joh. 14. 21. 23. I will manifest my selfe to him wee will come and make our abode with him When a word is so spoken once to us inwardly or outwardly that it is heard twice by us verily God spake that word to us indeed Psal 62. 11. God hath spoken once twice have I heard it that power belongeth to God When Solomon is praying in his dreame and the while precious and sweet motions are suggested to him to ask what God shal give him when he asks wisedome it s said to him that hee hath that granted and more 1 Kings 3. 5 9 10 11 12. with ver 15. and this doth nor vanish as a dream but leaveth such an impression upon him that when he awoke the light heat and life thereof abideth so that he must to Jerusalem and offer sacrifice there in regard thereof this was indeed of God So in that Item of God to Paul whilst he was praying 1 Cor. 12. 8 9. He sayd to me my grace is sufficient for thee my strength is made perfect in weaknesse this so stuck with Paul and so warmed him that he breaketh out thus most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities c. he rightly therefore concluded that the Lord sayd thus unto him Whilst Jacob is wrestling with the Lord that is told him that he should prevail with men Gen 32. 28. and the motion clave to him and in confidence of the truth of it he now dareth to meet his brother Esau verse 32. of whom before he was so afraid 6. Such motions which leave the 6 When leaving the heart barren heart barren when yet they swim aloft in the braine plentifully are delusive as those lying Items suggested to the eare from Satans instruments they please but profit not Jer. 23. 32. Therefore they shall not profit this people at all So these of Satan leave the heart fruitlesse Satans sweet bits they nourish no more the soule then those of that dissembling Churle doe the bodies of his guests Prov. 27. 8. Like his sorcery of bringing a fair woman to anothers bed which in the morning proved a carcasse Satans flattering motions when ever suggested are but as other flatteries a pleasing song and chearing blaze but ending soon after in
consider what a disparagement it wil be to thy glory in the eyes of thy enemies to deale so strictly with thy people men are forbidden to lay a stumbling-block before the blind and wil God lay such an occasion of offence and falling in the way of blind Aegyptians The like plea is used in Psal 79. 9 10 11. Help us for the glory of thy name purge away our sins for thy names sake wherefore should the Heathen say where is there God Render to them the reproach wherewith they have reproached thee O Lord. So Psal 74. 18. 19 22. and in many other places to like purpose The cases wherein Gods name and glory is in any special sort engaged are of greatest weight and concernment and therefore none necd be afraid or ashamed to plead them in such sort before the Lord in such pleas truly if the Lord should deny his Saints he should deny himselfe And the self-deniall of the Suppliant shines forth the more in such pleas when he pleads the case not so much in reference to himselfe as to the Lord himselfe and to his name Secondly the suitablenesse of the relation His relation to us and fitnesse to help us betwixt God and us as Psal 79. 9. Help us O God of our salvation Deliver us for thy name sake As if they would say thou stilest thy selfe the God of our salvation we by thy grace doe eye and own thee as such a one wherefore shew that thou art such a one by saving of us let it appeare that it is no empty title And what is more suitable to a God of salvation then to save his people or wherein shall that Name of thine be more magnified then in thy delivering thy people So Esay 63. 16. Doubtlesse thou art our father our Redeemer c. As if they had said O Lord we have no other but thee of whom should children seek for reliefe or from whom should they expect succour but from their father Now we are resolved to own no other for our father but thee and can a father be curst to his poor desolate disconsolate sick or sad children when it is in his power to relieve them To this we may adde the suitablenesse of the mercies we ask of God unto him and unto us So Numb 11. 17 18 19. Let the power of my Lord be great as thou hast said the Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity c. pardon I beseech thee the iniquity of thy people As it is suitable to a sinning people to get a pardon so it is most suitable to a sin-pardoning God to give forth a pardon to them So Psal 130. 4. But there are forgivenesses with thee that thou maist be feared I need not speak more in this case or so much as scruple it that thou shouldst be strict upon a poore desolate tempted creature to mark what is done amisse and so to proceed to condemne or confound such a one as I am for there are Forgivenesses with thee the manifold pardons that I need for my manifold and multiplied sins are in readinesse in abundance with thee thou canst not deny the benefit thereof to me in my case I wil and do conclude it as a granted case there are forgivenesses with thee What then that thou maist be feared Thus the Faith of Heavens suppliants wil be coming within God and wil be framing good conceits of God and telling him how wel they are perswaded of him and of his generous nature that if he deny them he should disparage himselfe in their eyes who had better thoughts of him As Paul desiring Agrippa's becomming a Christian he windeth him in by his holy Rhetorick thus Believest thou the Prophets yea I know thou believest so that if Agrippa deny this he must in a manner weaken his own esteem so when the Saints in their prayers and pleas hold forth their faith in God as such or such an one in his gracious nature the Lord useth not to exercise himselfe short of their apprehensions but it is for his honour to make good the utmost of his peoples desires and expectations of Faith Thirdly the little gain that the Lord The little gain the Lord wil have by our ruines would have by denying his people in the mercies they request David beggeth his own life of God using this plea What profit is there in my blood Psal 30. 9. So did the captive Church plead Psal 44. 12. Thou sellest thy people for nought and dost not increase thy wealth thereby So then poor Saints of God when they come and tell the Lord in their prayers that indeed he may condemne or confound or cut or cast them off he may continue to frown upon them and to withdraw his spirit from them he may deny such and such requests of theirs for such and such just causes in them but what wil he gain thereby he may gain many praises c. by hearing them and helping them but what good wil it doe him to see them oppressed by the enemies of their soules or what delight would it be to him to see them sighing and sinking and fainting under sad pressures c. this is an allowed and a very succesfull kind of pleading We might instance in many other pleas respecting God as that Esay 63. 15. Where is thy zeale and thy strength the sounding of thy bowels and of thy mercies towards me are they restrained These are prevailing pleas since the Lord can as soon cease to be as cease to be zealous of his own glory in his peoples welfare since he neither wanteth power nor wil to help them in any needful case which concerneth them for he hath strength and therefore is able and bowels of compassion and tender mercies and therefore is willing to answer and succour his people Yea every Attribute and Title of God and every promise is a several plea which God cannot deny The second sort of pleas respect the Saints themselves which plead and they Pleas respecting us are of two sorts First some respect the dependency and needinesse of our condition As our needinesse as we are creatures Secondly others the good of grace shining forth in us Of the former sort let us instance in these 1. It may be and hath been pleaded that we are Gods creatures both considered as men and as Saints by calling we are the workmanship of his hands and as such plead for his gracious respects Job 10. 9. Thou hast made me as the clay and wilt thou bring me to dust again As if he should say thou hast been at such cost and paines to make me and now wilt thou altogether marre me by afflictions and temptations so the Church pleadeth Esay 64. 8 9. But now thou art our Father we are the clay thou art the potter be not wroth very sore Which is as much as to say Fathers doe not use to be irrevocably displeased with their children nor wil they correct them
iniquity and receive us graciously For in thee the fatherlesse finde mercy The like is done Jer. 3. 23. Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hils truly in the Lord our God is salvation So is the Lord himselfe moved hence to help his people Esay 63 5. And I looked and there was none to help and I wondred that there was none to uphold therefore mine own arm brought salvation to me And Deut. 32. 36. The Lord shal repent for his servants when he seeth their power is gone 5. Plead the greatnesse of our sinnes not to keep us from mercy but to prevaile Our sins have been many and great for it Psal 25. 11. Pardon my sin why so for it is great Psal 41. 4. Heale my soule for I have sinned against thee Jer. 14. 7. Doe thou it for thy names sake for our backeslidings are many we have sinned against thee This is a strong plea when sincerely urged by an humble and contrite spirit It glorifieth God as one that is abundant in goodnesse rich in mercy and one with whom are forgivenesses and plenteous redemption and it honoureth Christ as infinite in mercy Hence also the Lord himselfe when he would stir up himselfe to choice acts of mercy to his poore people he first aggravateth their sin against him to the highest and then expresseth his royall act of grace to them So Esay 43. 22 23 24 25. Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob but hast been weary of me O Israel thou hast not honoured me with thy Sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes and wearied me with thine iniquities I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for my names sake The latter sort of pleas respecting our The good of Gods grace as Gods stirring us up to plead with him selves or the good of grace in us are 1. Gods own stirring us up to pray for such mercies When a petitioner can plead with God Lord I come not to thy blessed Court without thy sending for It was thou which appointedst me to come to thy doore of grace else I had not come thy Spirit moved me thy promise encouraged me so to doe and therefore O Lord I expect the fruit of my comming and request So David pleadeth 2 Sam. 7. 27 28. Lord thou saidest this and that touching my house and therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer And so Psalm 27. 7 8. He pleadeth Thou saidest seek my face and my heart answered Thy face Lord will I seeke And well may this be pleaded in that God useth not so to stirre up and strengthen us to seek him but when he intendeth to be found of us Psalm 10. 17. Thou wilt prepare the heart thou wilt bow thine eare to heare Jerem. 29. 11 13. Then shall ye seek me and finde me when ye shall search for me with all your heart And God maketh it an argument to himselfe that if he say to any inwardly as wel as outwardly seek my face he that speaketh righteousnesse cannot speak thus to them and frustrate their prayers and so bid them seek his face in vain Esay 45. 19. I said not to any of the seed of Jacob seek my face in vaine I the Lord speak right things If Ahashuerus bid his Spouse to ask surely he wil not faile to grant her petition Esther 7. 1. so here And as when Christ called the blind man to come to him to tell him his grievance it was truly said to him by them Be of good comfort rise for he calleth thee Mark 10 49. so it is in this case Secondly our waitings and the expectations Our waiting upon him of Faith which the Lord wrought in us may be pleaded That a King should occasion a petitioners expectation of bounty and faile him were not seemly it were strange Hence Asahs plea in his prayer for help Help Lord why so for we rest on thee 2 Chron. 14. 11. So Psalm 119. 66. Teach me good judgement and knowledge for I have believed thy Commandements And Psalm 25. 2 3. My God I trust in thee let me not be confounded And Vers 5. Lead me forth in thy truth For on thee doe I wait all the day And Vers 20. Let me not be confounded for I trust in thee And Vers 21. Let uprightnesse preserve me for my hope is in thee And Psalm 143. 8. Let me heare thy loving kindnesse in the morning for in thee is my trust And it is an argument with men such a one doth depend upon me and I have passed my word to doe such or such a thing for him and he commeth to meet me according to my own appointment at such a time in expectation of what I promised and therefore I cannot may not must not faile him So it is with God Esay 26. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusted in thee And Psal 10. 14. The poore committeth himselfe to thee Thou art the helper of the fatherlesse Thirdly we may in all humility The breaking of our hearts before him plead our heart-breakings and weepings in sense of want of mercies which we crave and our pantings and faintings after the same As Psalm 39. 12. Hold not thy peace at my tears And Psalm 51. David who groundeth all his pleas onely upon the free grace of the Lord Vers 1. Have mercy upon me according to thy loving kindnesse c. yet Vers 17. he pleadeth the brokennesse of his heart The Sacrifices of God are a broken heart a broken and a contrite spirit O Lord thou wilt not despise It is a moving argument with a compassionate father when his child craveth this or that with teares from him not then to deny him In such a case a father wil be ready to say alas my deare child thou shalt not blubber thy cheekes any longer come doe not thus mar thy face with weeping thou shalt have what thou cravest so doubtlesse is it with the Lord towards his children When Ephraim smites upon his thigh is ashamed and even confounded because he bare the iniquity of his youth Jer. 31. 19. how this took with God we may perceive by what himselfe replieth Vers 20. Is Ephraim my deare sonne is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I earnestly remembred him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. So Esay 38. 5. Isaiah is bid to goe to weeping Hezekiah and tell him from God I have heard thy prayer I have seen thy teares As if he had said to Isaiah Goe runne to yonder childe of mine bid him not weep so sore tell him he shall have his request So Psalm 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping And V. 9. The Lord hath heard my petition His prayer and petition it selfe spake and his tears also spake aloud in Gods ears and prevailed for
no nor when in the most danger Matth. 26. 40 41. Yea albeit there were some stirrings in their spiritual part to the contrary fain they would have prayed but could not their spirit was willing the Lord gave leave to Satan to hamper them a little and to correct their former prefidence pride and carnalnesse Luke 22. 24. Matth. 26. 8 9 10 35. Sometimes the Saints are Just Captives under the hands of their spiritual enemy Esay 49. 24. Sometimes the divel layeth a snare for them and so they are entangled and straitned thereby namely by raising carnall fears or cares in them or by increasing or strengthning them being raised 1 Tim. 6. 9. Prov. 29. 25. or he doth peradventure hurry them into some slowes of temptation in which they sinke and stick fast and cannot scarce speak or stir Psal 69. 2 3. The Psalmist was so hampered and bemudded through temptation that he had no list to cry or pray I sink in the mire I am weary of my crying 3. Our selves and so our straitning in 3 Our selves prayer is caused 1. From some lust or sinne unto which by some lust our hearts are let out some deceit of sin causeth such benumming and stupifying of the sinews and spirits of the soule of a Christian that he cannot bestir himselfe in any such holy service as prayer is Heb. 3. 13. Lest any be hardned by the deceitfulness of sin And look as it is said of the wicked that he is bound by the cords of his own sin Prov. 5. 21. so is it true in part in the Saints themselves and as it was with Simon Magus he being under the bond of iniquity under the binding power of covetousnesse and pride he could not pray for his heart himselfe but beggeth Peters prayers Acts 8. 23 24. So is the same in part verified in respect of some degree of straitnings occasioned from like sins in them albeit not in like power such sinnes will bind both by their hardning power as before was said and by their terrifying perplexities which they may occasion in the soule for as legal terrours in the strength of them are imbondaging and binding to the spirits of men under the power of them hence that of the spirit of bondage to feare Rom. 8. 25. So any other feares occasioned by sin which are not so properly legal yet they are in this sense binding to the Saints ofttimes Hence Asaph is so troubled with perplexing feares in the sight and sense of his sinne that he cannot speak to God namely with that freedome and liberty of spirit and speech which formerly he did Psal 77. 4. 2. From some carnal distempered griefs which doe contract our spirits as spiritual as griefs doe the natural spirits as we are naturally such in sufferings we cannot utter our minds Rom. 8. 18 26. When a discouraging sinking fainting frame of spirit seizeth on us it is with us as it was with Daniel we are not able to speak to the Lord Dan. 10. 16 17 19. the Disciples under that frame could not pray although enjoyned by Christ Luke 22. 40 45. Aaron could neither speak nor doe ought before God that day when too much oppressed with griefe about his sons death Levit. 20. 19. 3 From our straitning of God and of his Saints or servants When we straiten 3 Straitning of God or of his Saints and servants the spirits motion in meditation or otherwise then cannot wee hold on either in praying to God or praysing of him they cannot pray indefinitely or in every thing give thanks which quench the spirit Hence when the Apostle exhorteth to these hee dehorteth from this 1 Thes 5. 17 18. as a bar thereto when the spirit is pent up in us then doth he leave us Hee is a free spirit and will be at liberty where he dwelleth and abideth and when wee allow not room to him he will be gone and then our spiritual liberty goeth away with him or if we are straitned toward Gods poor afflicted Saints truely God will leave us to straitnings in prayer Hence if those the Prophet spake to will inlarge their bowels to the poor draw out their souls to the needy he promiseth in the name of the Lord that their spirits shall be free and ready to pray and that the Lord will be as free and as ready to answer Isai 58. 9 10. else if otherwise with them no wonder that they set times apart to fast but are not inabled to pray sutably ver 3. They were like tonguelesse bulrushes in comparison of true Suppliants they could bow down the head but not sincerely open the mouth in prayer to the Lord verse 5. 4 From distrust and strength of unbeliefe 4 Distrust an unbelieving Zachariah shall bee dumb Luke 1. 22 20. Men under the power of unbeliefe are wholly shut up Rom. 11. 32. he hath shut them up in unbeliefe so is it partly manifest in this businesse of prayer None are so free to powre out their hearts upon all occasions in prayer as they that trust in God Psal 62. 8. Trust in the Lord at all times and powre your hearts to him when faith is not stirring in the soul to take hold of God a praying spirit is not stirring to call upon God Isai 64. 7. When a professed people of God through distrust secretly think that Gods hand is shortned it is no wonder then that even God by his spirits motions doth call on them and invite them to prayer or the like that they have no list to that nor are they free to make a sutable answer therein unto the spirit in their prayers whence that complaint and expostulation of God Isai 50. 2. Wherefore when I called was there none that answered Distrust doth limit confine and straiten the power mercy and truth of God the merit and mediaion of Christ the latitude and vertue of the covenant of grace which should bee the foundation of the souls inlargement in prayer Psal 78. 41. they limited the holy one of Israel It is by faith only that we comprehend those dimensions in the Lords love c. Eph. 13. 18 19. without which the soul cannot see or conceive any such height or length or breadth or depth and know the love of Christ as passing knowledge That hee may dwell in your hearts by faith that ye may comprehend with all Saints what is the height and length and breadth and depth and know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge 5 From an unsetled and unstable frame 5 An unsetled and unsutable spirit of spirit whether in respect of the practise of the duty or in respect of the place of our abode Proverb 17. 24. When a man is as it were upon journeying still his prayers are sutable to those travellers whose spirits use not to bee inlarged in prayer through the many occasional hurries of their spirits 6 From resting in former inlargements 6 Resting in former inlargements or present
meek or submissive to any course that God would take with them Isai 6. 1 2. And they make it the maine of their begging then then in a manner that they might be inlarged and free to speak to God especially to his prais in their freedom Open thou my mouth c. Psal 51. 15. 142. 7 But the other are in a manner wholly sottish and senselesse and speechlesse Mat. 22. 12. and therefore doomed to a place and state of weeping afterwards verse 13. 6. Those are prisoners of hope and 6 Is not finall now and then suffered to walk abroad yea to come into their Lords gracious presence Zech. 9. 12. But these are for ever thence forward excluded Gods gracious presence They are taken away cast out Mat. 22. 13. Heb. 10. 26 27. Those have sometimes some crevices and glimpses of light yea of the light of Gods countenance as through the grates at least Cant. 2. 9 But these are cast into utter darknesse therein to reside and abide Matth 22. 13. CHAP. VIII About inlargements in prayer when saving WE are God willing to dispatch the handling of some other cases in carrying on this weighty duty of prayer The eighth case now to be considered of is touching inlargements in prayer how Case 8. About inlargements in prayer which are saving when they are for the manner they are discerned to be from saving and peculiar principles of grace and differenced from those which are but from natural carnal or common causes In answer whereunto we must premise that persons may be strangely inlarged in prayer sometimes from principles that are not saving The Pharisees made long praiers Mat. 13. 14. But from a principle of hypocrisie ibid. From carnal and sinfull aymes ibid. And for a pretence make long prayers From pride as in those rhetorical ingeminations Matth. 6. 7. from errour as trusting to such inlargements thinking to bee heard for their much speaking ib. id And for those in Is 1 15. they made many prayers or multiplied petitions as the Hebrew phrase imports some from carnal emulation of some famous men in the Church will straine this way some from delusive raptures may be wonderfully inlarged in their expressions in prayer yet none of these in the right Now saving inlargements in prayer may be discerned from those that are common 1. They are free not forced or strained 1 Free Cant. 4. 11. As the droppings of the hony-comb not needing squeezing or as the powring out of water or oyle which runneth downe naturally and freely Isai 26. 16. They powred out a prayer to thee So Psal 102. the Title Not but that such inlargements doe ofttimes issue from foregoing struglings and conflictings with much opposition and many intervening lets yea and are not also without sundry present difficulties yet the spirit is free at such times and as far as it is spiritual it is delightfully drawne forth therein 2. They are sweet solid sappy lively 2 Lively strengthning inlargements as hony or milk Cant. 4. 11. and that not onely to us but to others that joyne with us The Churches lips when exercised in prayer as well as preaching run downe like the best wine causing the lips of those that are asleep to speak 3. They are seasonable inlargements 2 Seasonable As when God in his providence calleth to them in speciall sort whether in way of confession of sins or of Gods mercie or in a way of petition for mercies for our selves or others Thus Solomon Ezra Daniel and Christ were then in special wise inlarged These fruits of the lips of the Saints are brought forth in season Psal 1. 3. 4. They are most what secret closet-inlargements 4 Secret There David prayeth and cryeth aloud there doe they powre out largely their secret whispers Isai 26. 16. in the Hebrew the same word with 2 Sam. 12. 19. as hath been formerly shewed Zech. 12. 10 12 13. 5. They are contrite melting inlargements Zech. 12. 10. Not some few drops 5 Contrite of either but abundance of such a spirits influences it is powred out they are led as with supplications so with weepings adjoyned to their inlarged prayers such were those of Christ his strong cryes were with teares likewise Heb. 5. 7. His lips in praier dropped sweet smelling myrrhe betokening some holy bitternesse or brokennesse 6. They are obediential inlargements 6 Obediential David as he offereth a multiplied free-will offering Accept the free will offering of my mouth so he desired to be taught his further duty and teach me thy judgements Psal 119. 108. As he opens his mouth to expresse his inlarged desires largely so is it out of obediential longings to doe the will of God ver 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed for thy commandements Lastly they are thankfull inlargements 7 Thankfull Psal 51. 15. Open thou my lips that my mouth may shew forth thy praise if his mouth be opened it wil appear in his prayses and Psal 71. 8. the Psalmist's mouth is filled with prayse his prayse is a fruit and concomitant of the delivery of his imprisoned spirit Psal 142. 7. 2. By the matter of them 1. The most 2 By the matter 1 Respecting our sins acceptable inlargements being mostly and best seen in sensible aggravations of our own wretchednesse as in Ezra and Daniels examples Ezra 9. Daniel 9. Jer. 3. 21. the choice matter of their supplications and inlarged prayer is touching the perverting of their way and their forgetting of the Lord Oh how long will a contrite Suppliant be here in making sad commentaries upon his own wretched heart what large declamations will he make against his own sins 2. In sensible amplifications of Gods 2 Gods grace grace and mercy to us as in David of which his Psalmes are a plentifull proofe The love of God maketh him eloquent in setting out the beauty and excellency thereof to the life 3. In spiritual pleas especially for spi-spritual 3 Spiritual mercies mercies of which the prayers of David and of other Gods servants are full 4 In the cases of afflicted tempted ones especially of afflicted Churches Oh! 4 The afflicted or tempted ones cases how large and unwearied is a gracious Nehemiah in such a case hee will spend dayes in dilating upon so sad a theame in the ears of the Lord. Nehem. 1. 3 4. The substance of the largest prayer that is recorded to be made by Solomon concerneth most what the cases of afflicted ones in some kind or other 1 Kings from the 31. verse to 54. 3. By the occasionall rise of them 3 For the occasion of them The inlargement of the Saints in prayer being occasioned 1 By afflictions Afflicted Hannah 1 Afflictions was large and long in prayer insomuch that Eli observing her moving her lips so long saith how long wilt thou be drunken 1 Sa. 1. 14 15. When Davids spirit is so hard bestead then doth he powr
frame Psal 116. 1. I love the Lord because he hath heard my voice And verse 2. therefore will I call upon him or speak lovingly to him Words spoken to God in love or from love to him come the most seasonably for they are ever well taken they are taken in love by the Lord. When the Lord in his providence bestoweth upon his people something whereon the image of his special favour is instamped it is a time in special to acknowledge the Lord by prayer as praying is called Prov. 3. 6. In all thy ways acknowledge him even by prayer of faith Secondly the Lord is thus near to us by 2 By special motions of his spirit any special motions of the spirit especially such as put us upon prayer when the Lord doth inwardly speak even to our hearts such like words as Isai 43. 11. Ask of me touching my sons and daughters and concerning the work of my hands command ye me or when Christ by his spirit saith to our hearts as sometimes he did to them by word of mouth Joh. 16. 23 24. Hitherto yee have asked nothing Ask that your joy may bee full Or as hee said to his people Cant. 2. 14. Let me heare thy voice for it is sweet it is now a time to speak to the Lord that we seeme not to slight him When thou saidst namely by the spirit inwardly as well as by the word outwardly seek my Psal 27. 8. face my heart answered thy face Lord will I seek If that holy motion to Solomon 1 Kings 3. 5 9. Ask what I shall give to thee c. made even a sleeping-time a supplicating-time much more may holy motions of God this way make our waking-times our wrestling seasons Such drops of a spirit of prayer are handsells and pledges of large powring out of that spirit upon us if thankfully received and improved Zach. 12. Such solliciting directions given us from the Lord argue that assuredly it is both a praying and speeding time If the Lord prepare the heart if he fit it and put it upon prayer teach it how to pray He surely boweth the eare to heare Psal 10. 17. It is Esthers time to ask when King Ahasuerus himselfe putteth her upon it What is thy petition and it shall be granted thee and thy request it shall be performed Esther 7. 2. So is it here And let none abuse this to strengthen any fond Grindletonian conceit that we must never pray till wee find the spirit first moving us to it It is our opportunity indeed of prayer when the spirit moveth thereto but not the onely season of prayer as wee have in part shewed and must further mention other seasons thereof as well as that Wee must sometimes pray that we may pray and when as we are apt to judge our selves that wee are most unfit to pray then to pray that wee may become fit to pray As by speaking men are fitted to speak by running to runne by wrestling to wrestle by labouring to labour Thirdly he is thus near us by some special 2 By some special promises made ours word of his mouth especially by some gracious promise spoken and manifested to us and that also is a special season for prayer 2 Sam. 7. 27. For thou O Lord God hast revealed to thy servant saying I will build thee an house therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray unto thee It s a season of this holy talking with God when he first enters speech with us by some such words of his grace It s seasonable to open our mouths wide and receive grace and peace when the Lord setteth open any such golden pipe of both as is the Promise the Gospel is in every part of it the ministration of the spirit 2 Cor. 13. 8. and of life verse 6. and of faith Rom. 10 8. and of peace Esai 57. 19. The words of Gods grace pacifie and still the tumults in the soul and inlarge and quicken the heart Now if ever it bee a season to speak to the Lord in praier it is when unmannerly distempers which too often silence us at best retreat and are put to silence and when our hearts are set at an holy liberty to powre out themselves before the Lord. Fourthly the Lord is near his people 4 By some fatherly correction when he visits or afflicteth them What shal I answer him when he visits or afflicts Job 31. 14. and Job 7. 18. What is man that thou shouldest visit him The Lord is then near to us to try us to take an account of our wayes to correct our mis-doings to observe how we carry it under affliction to comfort and support us in affliction to sanctifie affliction to us and to save and deliver us out of the same and therefore in special sort it is seasonable to cry unto him and to ask a correcting father forgivenesse Jam. 5. 15. If any be afflicted let him pray Psal 50. 15. Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will heare thee and thou shalt glorifie me God doth then speak to us by his rods Micah 69. It is therefore seasonable then to answer him in our praiers If ever a gracious heart bee humble sensible serious and lively it is then when in affliction when in the fire Such a time of pangs is a time of crying out to the Lord when God visiteth Saints by affliction it is seasonable for them to visit him with prayers Isai 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they powred out a prayer to thee when thy chastning was upon them 5. The Lord is near to us by some special deliverance out of affliction this is 5 By some special deliverance likewise the Lords visiting time when hee cometh to see us Zeph. 2. 7. For the Lord their God shall visit them and save them from their captivity If God wil thus visit his vine the people of God look at themselves as ingaged to call upon him Psal 80. 14. 18. compared Behold visit this thy vine quicken us so will we call upon thee When the winter of the Churches afflictions and captivity is over Christ expecteth to heare his Churches voice in prayer Cant. 2. 10 14. Zach. 13. 9. I will bring that third part through fire and they shall call upon me A person newly delivered out of this pit Job 33. 24 36. Hee shall pray unto God and he will be favourable unto him Little do Christians sharing in a time of the Lords clemency and pity in their deliverance from sick-bed and other notable hazards of life and livelyhoods know what a fair opportunity they have now in their hands to speak for further mercy so as to speed and how much they lose if they grow slighty or negligent in improving such an importunity of praier when if ever praying dispositions stir afresh in them 6. God is thus near us when his time 6 By accomplishing his promises actually of special