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A51845 A practical exposition of the Lord's-Prayer by ... Thomas Manton. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M532; ESTC R30512 305,803 534

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him out of all his Troubles He doth not say this wise Man this eminent Saint but this poor Man This was the Doctrine of the Gentiles That the Divine Powers did only care for the great and weighty Concernments of the World but other things he left to their own Event and their own Chance as if God in the great throng of Business were not at leisure to attend every private Man's Request These were the fond Surmises the Gentiles had of God But we are taught better This poor Man cried unto the Lord and be heard him Poor Men in the World when they have any thing to do with great Persons they must look long wait pray and pay to seek their Face and Favour at length meet with a rough Answer and sour Look But God will not shut the Door the Throne of Grace lies open for every Comer You will say this would sweeten Mercies to the Poor Nay it concerns not only those that are actually poor but the great ones of the World for they are poor and shiftless in themselves if God did not provide for them others are but Glasses where they might see their own Misery If they did well weigh the Wants and Necessities of others they might see what would have been their own Case if the Lord had not been merciful to them As Austin when he saw a Beggar frisking and leaping after his Belly was fill'd the Spectacle wrought much upon him that he had not such rejoycing in God who tasted so much of his Abundance Saith Chrysostome If you are not thankful for Health go to the Spittles and Lazar-houses and see what might have been your own Case Thus if you are not thankful for abundance go to the Families where there are Children that want Bread It is the Lord's Mercy to the richest for they were miserable and indigent It is a great Mercy to relieve those from Hand to Mouth But you that have abundance it is a double Mercy to you for he prevents the Necessity before it was felt as Psal. 21. 3. Thou preventest him with the Blessings of Goodness David takes notice of the Goodness of God to him Before the need is felt and observed you are stored and this should be a great Indearment of the Lord's Mercy to you 2. It is Mercy if we consider not only our Want but our Forfeiture It is not only Mercy but pardoning Mercy at least a reprieving from Trouble for we deserved the contrary There is a kind of Temporary-Pardon which continueth all these Blessings It is as great a Curse as possibly David could thunder out against obstinate Sinners and God's implacable Enemies Psal. 28. 4. Give them according to their Deeds and according to the wickedness of their Endeavours Do we think this would be matter of Mischief only to David's Enemies No every one of us if we had our Deserts we should soon be shiftless harbourless begging from Door to Door yea howling for one drop of Mercy to cool our Tongues O then surely the Lord is to be praised and acknowledged in bestowing the good things of this present Life Well then As these Blessings come from God let them carry up your Heart to God again As all Rivers they run from the Sea and they discharge themselves into the Sea again so let all be returned to God with Thankfulness with acknowledgments that you have received them from God I shall urge it with one Example Jesus Christ though he were Heir Lord of all things Who thought it no Robbery to be equal with God yet you find him ever giving Thanks when he used the Creatures Mat. 15. 36. And it is the main thing Iohn taketh notice of and passeth by the Miracle Iohn 6. 23. Where they did eat Bread after that the Lord had given Thanks Nigh to Tiberias there was the place where our Lord fed many with five Loaves and two Fishes but he only saith this where they did eat Bread after that the Lord had given Thanks he saw this was a notable Circumstance so he doth but cursorily mention the Miracle only calls it eating Bread but expresly mentioneth Christ's blessing the Creature He would teach us that the blessing of all Injoyments is in God's Hand VSE 4. If the Lord be the Donor and Giver of all these outward things let us beware we do not abuse these Gifts of God as Occasions of sinning against the Giver that we fight not against him with his own Weapons Jesus Christ speaking to his own Disciples though they were trained up with him a Company chosen out and select Family who were to be his Heraulds and Ambassadors to the World yet he gives them this Caution Luke 21. 34. Take heed to your selves lest at any time your Hearts be over-charged with Surfeiting and Drunkenness and Cares of this Life and so that day come upon you unawares He saw it needful to warn his own Disciples We had two common Parents Ad●m and Noah and one miscarried by eating and the other by drinking these Sins are natural to us The Throat is a slippery place and had need well be looked unto Mark Christ there doth not mean Surfeiting and Drunkenness meerly in a gross Notion When we hear of Surfeiting and Drunkenness we think of spuing staggering reeling vomiting and the like but we are to consider it in a stricter Notion Take heed lest the Heart be over-charged The Heart may be over-charged when the Stomach is not that is when we are less apt to praise God grow more lumpish and heavy or rather when we settle into a sensual frame of Spirit and by an inordinate delight in our present Portion are taken off from minding better things Look as the Heart is over-charged with the Cares of the World so likewise with Creature-Delights and Comforts of this World when it is set for Ease and Vanity Many that would be loathers of the other Drunkenness yet are guilty of this kind of Surfeiting and Drunkenness the Heart is over-charged with an inordinate Affection to present things There cannot be a more heavy Judgment than when our Table is made our Snare Psal. 69. 22. A Snare it is God's spiritual Judgment when the Comforts of this Life serve not so much to lengthen and strengthen Life but when their Hearts are hardned in Sin and they grow neglectful of God and heavenly things Raining Snares is an Argument of God's Hatred First The Lord shall rain Snares and then Brimstone and an horrible Tempest shall be their Portion Psal. 11. 6. So it makes way for his eternal Anger VSE 5. Let us be contented with that Portion which God hath given us of worldly things if the Lord be the Donor Why 1. Because God stands upon his Sovereignty you must stand to God's Allowance though he gives to others more and to you less for God is supream and will not be controll'd in the disposal of what is his own The good Man of the House pleaded Mat. 20. 13
audiamus What Lungs and Sides must we have if we be heard to speak to Heaven by the Noise and Sound In some there is a natural vehemency and fierceness of Speech which is rather stirr'd up by the heat and agitation of the bodily Spirits than any vehemency of Affection There is a Contention of Speech which is very natural to some and differeth much from that holy Fervor the Life and Power of Prayer which is accompanied with Reverence and Child-like Dependance upon God It is not the loud Noise of Words which is best heard in Heaven but the fervent affectionate Cries of the Saints are those of the Heart rather than of the Tongue Exod. 14. 17. it is said Moses cried to the Lord We do not read of the Words he uttered his Cry was with the Heart There is a crying with the Soul and with the Heart to God Psal. 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the Desire of the Humble It is the Desires God hears Psal. 39. 9. Lord all my Desire is before thee and my Groaning i● not hid from thee The Lord needs not the Tongue to be an Interpreter between him and the Hearts of his Children He that hears without Ears can interpret Prayers tho not uttered by the Tongue Our Desires are Cries in the Ears of the Lord of Hosts the vehemency of the Affections may sometimes cause the extention of the Voice but Alas without this it is but a tinkling Cymbal 5. Popish Repetition and loose shreds of Prayer often repeated as they have in their Liturgy over and over again their Gloria Patri so often repeated their Lord have Mercy and in their Prayer made to Jesus Sweet Iesus Blessed Iesus and going over the Ave Maria and this to be tumbled over upon their Beads and continuing Prayer by tale and by number Surely these are but vain Repetitions and this is that much-speaking which our Lord aims at Thus I have dispatched the abuses of Prayer Vse 2. To give you direction in Prayer how to carry your selves in this holy Duty towards God in a comely manner I shall give you Directions 1. About our Words In Prayer 2. About our Thoughts 3. About our Affections First about our Words there is a use of them in Prayer to excite and convey and give vent to Affection Hos. 14. 2. Take with you Words and turn to the Lord and say Take away all Iniquity and receive us graciously Surely the Prophet doth not only prescribe that they should take Affections but take with them Words Words have an Interest in Prayer Now these may be considered either when we are alone or in Company 1. When we are alone Here take the advice of the Holy-Ghost Eccl. 5. 2. God is in Heaven and thou art upon Earth therefore let thy Words be few How few Few in Weight Conscience Reverence Few in Weight affecting rather to speak Matter than Words concisely and feelingly rather than with curiousness to express what you have to say to God Few in Conscience Superstition is a Bastard-Religion and is tyrannous and puts Men upon tedious Services and sometimes beyond their Strength therefore pray neither too short nor too long do it not meerly to lengthen out the Prayer or as counting it the better for being long the shortness and the length must be measured by the fervency of our Hearts our many necessities and as it tendeth to the inflaming our Zeal as it can get up the Heart let it still be subservient to that Few with Reverence and managed with that Gravity Awfulness and Seriousness as would become an Address to God As Abraham Gen. 18. 31. had been reasoning with God before therefore he saith Let not God be angry if I speak to him this once when he renewed the Suit Thus alone 2. In Company there our Words must be apt and orderly moving as much as may be not to God but to the Hearers managed with such Reverence and Seriousness as may suit with the Gravity of the Duty and not encrease but cure the Dulness of those with whom we join And what if we did in publick Duties choose out Words to reason with God as Iob saith Chap. 9. 14. Choose out my Words to reason with him If we did use Preparation and think a little before hand that we may go about the Duty with serious Advice and not with indigested Thoughts But this hath the smallest Interest in Prayer Secondly Our Thoughts That we may conceive aright of God in Prayer which is one of the greatest difficulties in the Duty 1. Of his Nature and Being 2. Of his Relation to us 3. Of his Attributes First Of the Nature and Being of God Every one that would come to God must fix this in his Mind That God is and that God is a Spirit And accordingly he must be worshipped as will suit with these two Notions Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that God is and then that God is a Spirit for it is said Ioh. 4. 24. God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and Truth O then when ever you come to pray to God fix these two Thoughts let them be strong in your Heart God is I do not speak to an Idol but to the living God And God is a Spirit and therefore not so much pleased with plausibleness of Speech or tuneable cadency of Words as with a right Temper of Heart Alas when we come to pray we little think God is or what God is much of our Religion is performed to an unknown God and like the Samaritans We worship we know not what It is not Speculations about the Divine Nature or high strain'd Conceptions which doth fit us for Prayer the discoursing of these things with some Singularity or Terms removed from common Understanding this is not that which I press you to but such a sight of God as prompteth us to a reverent and serious worshipping of him Then we have right Notions of God in Prayer when we are affected as Moses was when God shew'd him his Back-parts and proclaimed his Name Exod. 34. He made haste bowed his Head and worshipped when our Worship suiteth with the Nature of God 't is Spiritual and Holy not Pompous and Theatrical Well then these two things must be deeply imprinted in our Minds that God is and that He is a Spirit And then is our Worship right For Instance 1. For the first Notion God's Being Then is our Worship right when it doth proclaim to all that shall observe us or we that observe our selves there is a great an infinite eternal Power which sits at the upper end of Causes and governeth all according to his own Pleasure Alas the Worship of many is flat Atheism they say in their Hearts either there is no God or believe there is no God Therefore do you worship him as becomes such a glorious Being Is his Mercy seen in your Faith and Confidence His Majesty in your
wish himself to love Christ less or to be less beloved of him for these things we cannot part with them without Sin but in our enjoyment of Christ there is a happy part some personal Happiness which resulteth to us now all this he could lay at God's Feet How so What for others A regular Love begins at home and every Man is bound to look to his own Salvation first and then the Salvation of others But that was not the case it was not their Salvation and Paul's Salvation which was in Competition but the Glory of God and the common Salvation of the Iews and Paul's particular Salvation It was a mighty prejudice to the Gospel that the People from whom Christ's Messengers proceeded for the Law went out of Sion the Gospel came out from among the Iews that so many of them were prejudiced and a mighty Eclipse to the Glory of God Now he could lay down all his personal Happiness at God's Feet he speaks in Supposition if such a Case falls out But however this is a clear Rule the Glory of God must be preferred before our own Salvation In some Cases there will be need of this Rule For Instance there 's many a Man that possibly is convinced of a false Religion and the first Question Men make is if they can be saved in such a Religion but many Men are hardned in Popery When therefore a Man is contented to continue in a false Religion and dishonour God with his complyance there provided he may be saved he prefers his own Salvation before the Glory of God And in case of the delay of Repentance when Men dally with God and put off the work of returning to the Lord until another time or hereafter it is time enough to repent these Men prize their Salvation before the Glory of God If it were true upon that Supposition that if ever they shall be saved they are contented God shall be dishonoured a great deal longer and that if they be saved at length this will satisfy them Quest. But how may we discern that we make the Glory of God the first and chief thing we aim at in Prayer 1. Partly by the work of your own Thoughts The End is first in Intention tho last in Execution When you are praying for a publick Mercy against an Enemy what runs in your Thoughts Revenge Safety and your own personal Happiness or God's Glory What wilt thou do O Lord unto thy great Name Josh. 7. 9. Are you pleasing your selves with Suppositions of your Escape and Deliverance and reeking your Wrath upon your Adversaries So in Prayer for Strength and Quickning what is it that runs in your Mind Are you entertaining your Spirit with Dreams of Applause and feeding your Minds with the sweetness of popular Acclamation 2. By the manner of praying absolutely for God's Glory but for all other things with a sweet Submission to God's Will Joh. 12. 27. Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour Father glorify thy Name Then came there a Voice from Heaven saying I have both glorified it and will glorify it again Christ is absolute in the Request and he receives an Answer Is this enough Do you mainly press God with this that he might provide for his own glorious Name that his Name might not lye under Reproach But now carnal Aims do make Affection impetuous and impatient of check and denial Rachel must have Children or dye When the Heart is set upon earthly Success Pleasure or Comfort then they cannot brook a denial without Murmuring The Children of God only accept of God's Glory and in all other things they leave themselves to God's disposal and therefore this is the main thing 3. Partly too by the Disposition of your Hearts when your Prayers are accomplished and God hath given any Blessing you pray for we do not ask it for God's Glory if we do not use it for God's Glory The time of having Mercies is the time of Trial and therefore when we consume our Mercies upon our Lusts when they do not conduce to check our Sins it is a sign God's Glory is not the thing intended as it should be Thus for the Order of this Petition II. The Necessity of putting up such a Request to God 'T is his charge to us in the Third Commandment That we should sanctify his Name Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain The positive part of that Commandment is Thou shalt sanctify it Now here we make it matter of Prayer to God Hallowed be thy Name From whence let me observe Doct. Those that would have God's Name Hallowed and Glorified must seriously deal with God about it There are several Reasons why we must put up such Requests to God I might argue from the Utility and the Necessity of it First the Utility We put up these Requests to God 1. That we may more solemnly warn our selves of our own Duty In Prayer there is an implicit Vow or solemn Obligation that we take upon our selves to prosecute what we ask It is a Preaching to our selves in God's hearing So that every Word we speak to God is a Lesson to us and our Requests are as so many Exhortations to glorify his Holy Name With what Face can we ask that which we are wholly wretchless and neglectful of Then we shall certainly come under that Character Mat. 15. 7 8. This People draweth nigh unto me with their Mouth and honoureth me with their Lips but their Heart is far from me It is the greatest Mockage of God to ask unless we have a Mind to pursue and diligently to attend to this Work and Business that the Name of God may be glorified in us and upon us 2. That we may have a due Sense and Grief for God's Honour God's Children they are troubled to see God dishonoured Lot's righteous Soul was vexed not with Sodom's Injuries but with Sodom's Sins 2 Pet. 2. 8. And David saith Rivers of Tears run down mine Eyes because Men keep not thy Law Psal. 119. 136. Many will scarce weep for their own Sins where they have advantage of remorse of Conscience but when they are zealously affected with God's Glory they will weep for others Sins When his Name is torn and rent in pieces it is a grief of Heart to them Now God will have us ask this that this Holy Sense of Spiritual Grief may be kept up for when it is become the matter of our Requests then we are interested in the Glory of God We are loth to see things miscarry where we have petitioned and begged for others so when we have begged the Glory of his Name it will further this Spiritual Sense and Grief of Heart when his Name is dishonoured 3. That we may count it as great a Blessing when God is glorified as when we are saved Continue in Prayer saith the Apostle and watch thereunto with Thanksgiving When we have been instant
Grace which maketh us to do so It is his own Gift It is he must enable and incline us quicken and direct us So that in all Things he is Alpha and Omega we begin in him when ever we end in him And when we do most 〈◊〉 God we have all from him Vse 2. For Direction in the Matter of glorifying God in four Propositions 1. This Life is not to be valued but as it yieldeth us Opportunities for this End and Purpose to glorify God We were not sent into the World to live for our selves but for God If we could make our selves then we could live to our selves If we could be our own Cause then we might be our own End But God made us for himself and sent us into the World for himself Christ saith Iohn 17. 4. Father I have glorified thee on Earth c. It is not our Duty only to glorify God in Heaven to join in Consort with the Angels in their Hallelujahs above where we may glorify him without Distraction Weariness and Weakness but here on Earth in the midst of Difficulties and Temptations There are none sent into the World to be idle or to bring forth Fruit to themselves Hos. 10. 1. to improve their Pains and Strength to promote meerly their own Interest but God's Glory must be our chief Work and Aim while we are here upon Earth this must be the Purpose and Intent of our Lives 2. Every Man besides his general Calling hath his own Work and Course of Service whereby to glorify and honour God Iohn 17. 4. I have finished the Work which thou gavest me to do As in a great House one hath one Employment one another So God hath designed to every Man his Work he hath to do and the Calling he must be in some in one Calling and some in another but they all have their Service and Work given them to do for God's glory 3. In discharge of this Work as they must do all for God so they can do nothing without God Every morning we should revive the Sense of it upon our selves as the Care of our Work and Aim so the Sense of our Impotency This day I am to live with God but how unable am I and how easily shall I dishonour him The way of Man is not in himself Jer. 10. 23. When a Christian goeth abroad in the Morning he must remember he is at Christ's dispose he is not to do as he pleaseth but to be guided by Rule and act for God's glory and fetch in Strength from Christ. Col. 3. 17. Whatsoever ye do in Word or Deed do all in the Name of the Lord Iesus Not only in our Duties or immediate Converses with God but in our Sports Business Recreation What is it to do things in the Name of Christ That is to do it according to Christ's Will and Command He hath allowed us Time for Recreation for conversing with God and calling in Christ's Help and aiming at his Glory If we have any thing to do for God we must do it in his own strength in every Word and Deed. 4. You are directed again when the Glory of God and sanctifying of his Name either sticks with us or sticks abroad God must be specially consulted with in the Case When our Hearts are backward then Lord open thou my Lips Lord affect me with a sense of thy Kindness and Mercy When it sticks abroad when such Events fall out as for a while God's Name is obscured and seems to be clouded Lord what wilt thou do for thy great Name III. Having opened the Order of the Words and the Reasons of putting up such a Request to God I now come to the Sence of the Petition Hallowed be thy Name Four Things will come under Consideration 1. What is meant by the Name of God 2. What it is to hallow and sanctify it 3. I shall take notice of the Form of the Proposal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hallowed 4. The Note of Distinction Thy Name First What is meant by God's Name 1. God himself 2. Any Thing whereby he is made known 1. God himself Name by an Hebraism is put for the Person it self Thus Rev. 3. 4. Thou hast a few Names even in Sardis which have not defiled their Garments that is many Persons So Acts 1. 15. it is said there The Number of the Names together were abo●t one hundred and twenty that is of Persons So it is used in the present Case God's Name is put for God himself Psal. 20. 1. The Name of the God of Jacob defend thee That is God himself So Psal. 44. 5. Through thy Name will we tread them under that rise up against us that is by Thee And to believe in the Name of Christ is to believe in Christ himself Name is put for Person for the immediate Object of Faith is the Person of Christ. Iohn 1. 12. To as many as received him to them gave he Power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name 2. Any thing whereby he is made known to us Nomen quasi not ●men As a Man is known by his Name so God's Titles and Attributes his Ordinances his Works his Word are his Name chiefly the two latter For his Works they are a part of the Name of God Psal. 8. 1. the Burthen of that Psalm is twice repeated O Lord our Lord how great is thy Name in all the Earth By the Name there is meant God made known in his Works of Creation and Providence for he speaks there of Sun Moon and Stars which proclaim an Eternal Power to all the World and he speaks of such a Name as is in all the Earth And Psal. 117. 19 20. He hath not dealt so with any Nation and given them his Word Statutes and Ordinances every one hath not that Privilege But How great is thy Name in all the Earth That is how manifestly art thou made known by thy Works But above all by Name is meant his Word Psal. 138. 2. Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name There is more of God to be seen in his Word than in all the Creatures of the World and in all his other Works besides We understand more of God than can be taken up by the Creation It helps us to interpret the Book of Nature and Providence there we have his Titles Attributes Ordinances there we have his greatest Work in which he hath discovered so much of his Name the Mystery of Redemption which is not elsewhere to be known Thus by the Name of God is meant God himself as he hath made known himself in the Word We desire that he may be sanctified that he may with honour and reverence be received every where Secondly The second Thing to be explained What is meant by Hallowed In Scripture God is said sometimes to be magnified sometimes to be justified sometimes to be glorified and sometimes to be sanctified Now it is not here said
such a Right as sollicited Vengeance But the Right Christ purchased was a gracious Right that God might protect and preserve us Well then if Christ purchased Body and Soul he hath obtained not only that God should be gracious to our Souls but gracious to our Bodies then the Argument runs clearly for confirming the Faith of the Saints in expectation of temporal Benefits 2. God hath given us greater things therefore he will not stand upon the less when a Man hath been at great Cost he will not lose it The Lord hath given us his Christ Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own his Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all Things Can any Man be so illogical so ill-skilled in Consequences as not to conclude from thence if God give us Christ with him he will give us all things So Mat. 6. 33. Seek first the Kingdom of God and his Righteousness and all other Things shall be added to you 3. These things are dispensed to inferior yea to the worst of his Creatures Psal. 147. 9. He giveth to the Beast his Food and to the young Ravens which cry Will God maintain the Beasts of the Field and will he not maintain his Children It is monstrous and unnatural to think thus that God will not support you and bear you out in your Work This is Christ's own Argument Mat. 6. 34. Take therefore no thought for the Morrow for the Morrow shall take thought for the Things of it self Sufficient unto the Day is the Evil thereof Daily Bread is in your Father's Power and he gives it graciously to all his Creatures and therefore certainly he will give it to you Thus you may see with what Confidence you may expect daily Supplies Secondly It informs us that we may ask temporal Things if we ask them lawfully It is true Prayers to God for spiritual Things are more acceptable As your Child pleaseth you better when it comes to you to be taught its Book rather than when it comes for an Apple So it is more pleasing to God when you come for the Mediator's Blessing and spiritual Things Acts 3. 26. God hath sent him to bless you in turning away every one of you from his Iniquities But yet we may ask other Things why For they are good and useful to us in the Course of our Service and without them we are exposed to many Temptations And Prayer easeth you of a deal of carking about them Phil. 4. 6. Be careful for nothing but in every Thing by Prayer and Supplication with Thanksgiving let your Requests be made known unto God We may ask them but it must be lawfully and that for Order not in the first place That is howling when we come to God meerly for Corn Wine and Oil when we prefer these Things before his Favour and the Graces of his Spirit Then it must be lawful too as to the Manner a moderate Proportion not to set God a Task to maintain you at such a rate but to ask a moderate Allowance Christ teacheth us here to pray for Bread which is a necessary Allowance Prov. 30. 8. Feed me with Food convenient for me And 1 Tim. 6. 8. If we have Food and Raiment let us therewith be content And then ask them with Humility and Submission to the Will of God We ought to say as in Iam. 4. 15. If the Lord will we will go to such a Place and get Gain And then lawfully too as to the End not for an unlawful End for Ostentation and Riot that we may live at large and at ease Jam. 4. 3. Ye ask and receive not because ye ask amiss that ye may consume it upon your Lusts. But we must ask it for a good End Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give Glory for thy Mercy and for thy Truths sake Lord not for our Ease or our Plenty but that thy Name may be glorified that we may be supported in Service And then again lawfully as to the Plea We must not come and challenge it as if it were our Due we must not use the Plea of Merit but of Mercy Our Saviour doth not say Let this Bread come to us any how as he saith Let thy Will be done our Subjection to God is due but Give us this day our daily Bread acknowledging the Lord's Mercy Vse 2. Let us not place our Confidence in second Causes but in God by whose Goodness and Providence over us all temporal Things do come unto us for without him all our Carking and Labour is nothing and if we have our Wishes without Labour yet we shall not have our Comfort and Blessing without God Mat. 6. 27. Which of you by taking thought can add one Cubit unto his Stature By taking thought he meaneth anxious Care about Success We cannot change the Colour of a Hair by all our anxious Thoughts We cannot make our selves stronger or taller Many a Man is pierced through with worldly Cares and still the World frowns upon him so all his Care comes to nothing Prov. 10. 4. it is said The Hand of the Diligent maketh rich compare it with vers 22. and it is said The Blessing of the Lord it maketh rich and he addeth no Sorrow with it Most commonly they that are diligent they thrive with their Diligence yea but if that be all if they have not the Lord's Blessing they have not that Sweetness and Peace when they have gotten Abundance O therefore let us place our Confidence not in second Causes but in God Vse 3. Let us be thankful to God for these vvorldly Things that vve enjoy I urge this First Because of the Danger of Ingratitude Usually we never forget God more than when he remembreth us most When Men have what they would have then God is neglected they grow careless in Prayer or flat and cold in the performance of it There is a great deal of difference between Men poor and rich When poor they will seem to put a natural Fervency into their Prayers but when rich they grow cold and careless Mark what the Lord saith Hosea 13. 6. They were ●illed and their Heart was exalted therefore have they forgotten me O how frequent is this that many having been kept under a great Sense of God in a low Condition but when they have been well at ease then they bear it up as if they could live without God the Bucket comes to the River with an empty Mouth gaping to receive its Fulness as it were but when it is full the Bottom is turned towards it So it is very usual with Men to turn their Backs upon the Mercy-Seat and when the Lord hath given them great Increase in worldly Things and leased out a great Estate to them he hath very little Rent from them Now because this is usual therefore those whom God hath blessed with the Supplies of the present Life how
14 15. Friend I do thee no wrong is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own The fulness of the Earth and all is his and therefore though others have better trading and finer Apparel and be more amply provided for than we are God is Soveraign and will give according to his Pleasure and you must be content 2. Nothing is deserved and therefore certainly every thing should be kindly taken If a Man be kept at free-cost and maintain'd at your Expence you take it very ill if he murmur and dislike his Diet. Certainly we are all maintain'd at free-cost and therefore we should with all humble Contentation receive what ever God will put into our Hands 3. God knows what Proportion is best for us he is a God of Iudgment and knows what is most convenient for us for he is a wise God It is the Shepherd must chuse the Pasture not the Sheep Leave it to God to give you that which is convenient and suitable to your Condition of Life A Shoe may be too big for the Foot and a Garment too great for the Body as Saul's Armour was too large for little David 1 Sam. 17. God will give you that which is convenient that which is agreeable to you A Garment when too long proves a dirty Rag we may have too much and therefore God he carves out our Allowance with a wise Hand 4. God doth not only give suitable to your Condition but suitable to your Strength such a Portion as you are able to bear God layeth Affliction upon his People and he gives them Mercies as they are able to bear if they had more they would have more Snares more Temptations You find it hard for a rich Man to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 19. 24. A Man may take a larger Draught than he is able to bear so God proportioneth every Man's Condition acc●rding to his spiritual Strength every Man is not able to bear a very high prosperous Estate Heb. 13. 5. Let your Conversation be without Covetousness and be content with such things as ye have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor for sake thee then you will live upon the Promise But when Men set God a Task and he must maintain them at such a rate that ends in Mischief and Distrust Psal. 78. 19. Can God furnish a Table in the Wilderness c. 5. Contentation is one of God's Gifts that we ask in this Prayer Give us this day our daily Bread that is we ask to be contented with our Portion Contentment and quietness of Mind with what we do injoy it 's a great Blessing Ioel 2. 19. See what the Lord saith there by his Prophet I will send you Corn and Wine and Oil and ye shall be satisfied therewith The bare and simple Blessing doth not speak so much of God's Love as when we are satisfied when we have Contentment in it that 's the greater Blessing When our Minds are suited to our Condition then the Creature is more sweet more comfortable Your Happiness lies not in Abundance but in Contentment Luke 12. 15. This doth not make a Man happy that he hath much but this that he is contented he hath what God will give him All spiritual Miseries may be referred to these two things a War between a Man and his Conscience and a War between his Affections and his Condition 6. There may be as much Love in a lesser Portion as in a greater There 's the same Affection to a small younger Child though he hath not so large an Allowance as the elder Brother yet saith he my Father loves me as well as him not that I have a double Portion but I have as much of my Father's Love So a Child of God may say God loves me though he hath given another more and me less Be content with what falls to your share and with your Allowance by the wise Designation and Allotment of God's Providence Thus much for the first Point A Word of a second viz. Doct. 2. In asking temporal things Christ hath stinted us to a day Give us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this day our daily Bread God in an extraordinary manner fed his People in the Wilderness the Mannah stank if they had kept it another day they had it from day to day What 's the Reason Christ saith Give us this day 1. That every day we may pray to God Therefore it is not give us this Month or Year but Day because every day God will hear from us 1 Thess. 5. 17. Pray without ceasing God would not have us too long out of his Company but by a frequent Commerce he would have us acquainted and familiar with him This is required that you should not let a day pass over your Head but God must hear from you for your Patent lasts but for a day you have a Lease from God of your Comforts and Mercies but it is expired unless you renew it again by Prayer How much do they differ from the Heart of God's Children that could be contented like the High-Priest of old to come to the Mercy-seat but once a Year now the Lord would have us come every day to the Throne of Grace 2. Every day because there should be Family-Prayer for all that taketheir Meat together are to come and say to God Give us this day our daily Bread It is not said Give me but Give us Therefore you see how little of Love and Fear of God is there where Week after Week they call not upon God's Name 3. To make way for our Gratitude and Thankfulness Our Mercies they flow not from God all at once but some to day and some to morrow for we take them day by day alltogether they are too heavy for us to weild and manage Psal. 68. 19. Who daily loadeth us with Benefits Our Mercies they come in greater Number and a greater Measure then we are able to acknowledg make use of or be thankful for Therefore this is the burden of gracious Hearts that Mercies come so thick and fast they cannot be thankful enough for them but to help us God distributes them by Parcels who loadeth us daily some to day some to morrow and every day that we may not forget God but may have a new Argument to praise him 4. To shew us every day we should renew our Dependance upon God for temporal things There is no day but we stand in need of the Lord's Blessing of Sanctification of Comfort that they may not be a Snare that there is still need of new Strength new Grace and new Supplies 5. Again Give us this day that we may not burden our selves with over-much Thoughtfulness that we might not solicitously cark for to morrow Mat. 6. 34. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof Every day affords Business Trouble Care and Burden enough we need not anticipate and pre-occupy the Cares of the next day God would not have
us over-born with Sollicitude but look no further than this day 6. Christ would teach us that worldly things should be sought in a moderate Proportion if we have sufficient for a day for the present Want we should not grasp at too much Ships lightly loaden will pass through the Sea but when we take too great a burden the Ship will easily sink with every Storm We have sore Troubles to pass through in the World now when we are over-burdened with present things we have more Snares and Temptations 7. Christ would train us up with thoughts of our Lives Vncertainty Iames 4. 13. say not This and this I will do to day or to morrow What is your Life it is but a Vapor One being invited to Dinner the next day said for these many Years I have not had a to-morrow meaning he was providing every day for his last day We do not know whether we have another day but are apt to sing Lullabies to our Souls and say Soul take thine Ease thou hast Goods laid up for many Years Luke 12. 19. We are sottishly secure and dream of many Years whereas God tells us only of to day 8. To awaken us after heavenly things When we seek Bread for the present Life then give us this day but now come to me saith Christ and I will give you Bread that shall nourish you to eternal Life Bread that endureth for ever Iohn 6. 27. Labour not for the Meat which perisheth but for that Meat which endureth unto everlasting Life There is Meat that will endure for ever but for the present we beg only for this day 1 Pet. 1. 4. To an Inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for you That 's an eternal State this is but of a short and of a small continuance You see what need you have to go to God that he will most plentifully provide for you And forgive us our Debts as we forgive our Debto●s WE have now done with the Supplication of this Prayer and are come to the Deprecations The Supplications are those Petitions which we make to God for obtaining of that which is good The Deprecations are those Petitions we make to God for removing of that which is evil Now of this latter sort there are two 1. We pray for the Remission of Evil that is already committed 2. We pray for the prevention of the Evil which may be inflicted The first of these is the Petition we have now in hand Here 1. The Petition is proposed Forgive us our Debts 2. 'T is confirmed by an Argument As we forgive our Debtors In the first take notice 1. Of the Object or Matter of this Petition and that is Debts 2. The Subject or Persons praying Vs. 3. The Person to whom we pray our Heavenly Father who alone can forgive our Sins 4. The Act of God about this Object Forgive Then the Petition is confirmed by an Argument which is taken from our forgiving of others In which there 's an Argument 1. A Simili from a like Disposition in us Thus what is good in us was first in God for he is the Patern of all Perfection If we have such a Disposition planted in our Hearts and if it be a Vertue in us surely the same Disposition is in God for the first being wanteth no Perfection 2. The Argument may be taken à dispari or à minori ad majus from the less to the greater If we that have but a drop of Mercy can forgive the Offences done to us surely the infinite God that is Mercy it self he hath more Bowels and more Pity For his ways are above our ways as high as the Heaven is above the Earth Isa. 55. 9. So it seems the Argument is propounded Luke 11. 4. Forgive us our Sins for we also forgive every one that is indebted to us 3. The Argument may be taken from the Condition or the Qualification of those that are to expect Pardon They are such that out of a sense of God's Mercy to them and the Love of God shed abroad in their Hearts are inclined and disposed to shew Mercy to others So Christ explains it vers 14. making it a Condition or Qualification on our part If ye forgive Men their Trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you But this will be more abundantly clear when I come to examine that Clause Before we come to the Petition it self the Connection is to be considered for the Particle And links it to the former Petition After Hallowed be thy Name he doth not say And thy Kingdom come they are propounded as distinct Sentences but Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our Debts for three Reasons 1. Without Pardon all the good Things of this Life will do us no good They are but as a full Diet or as a rich Suit to a condemned Person they will not comfort him and allay his present Fears Until we are pardoned we are under a Sentence ready for Execution and therefore we cannot have that Comfort in outward Things until we have some Interest in God's fatherly Mercy A Man that is condemned hath the King's Allowance until Execution So it is the Indulgence of God to a wicked Man to give him many outward Things tho he is condemned already We should not satisfy our selves with daily Bread without a sense of some Interest in pardoning Mercy 2. To shew us our Unworthiness Our Sins are so many and grievous that we are not worthy of one Morsel of Bread to put in our Mouths When we say Give us this day c. we need presently to say Forgive us our Sins There is a Forfeiture even of these common Blessings Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the least of all the Mercies and of all the Truth which thou hast shewed unto thy Servant All that we have we have from Mercy and it is Mercy undeserved As we are Creatures there can be no common Right between God and us to engage him to give temporal Blessings for we owe our selves wholly to him as being created out of nothing Children cannot oblige their Parents But much more as we are guilty Creatures it is meerly of the Mercy of the Lord. 3. These are join'd together because Sin is the great Obstacle and Hindrance of all the Blessings which we expect from God Ier. 5. 25. Your Sins have with-held good Things from you When Mercy comes to us Sin stands in the way and turns it back again so that it cannot have so clear a Passage to us Therefore God must forgive before he can give that is bestow these outward Things as a Blessing on us Having spoken of this Connexion let me observe something from the Petition it self The first Thing I shall observe is the Notion by which Sin is set out Forgive us our Debts The Point is Doct. I. That Sins come under the Notion of Debts In Luke 11. 4. it is Forgive us our
and our pardoning of others whether we respect the Persons that are interrested in this Action or the S●bject Matter or Manner and way of doing or the Fruit and Issue of the Action First In the Persons pardoning what Proportion can there be between God and Men the Creator and the Creature God he is most free and bound to none of infinite Dignity and Perfection which can neither be increased or lessened by any Act of ours for him or against him but we live in perfect Dependance upon God's Pleasure are subject to his Command and bound to do his Will and therefore what is our forgiving our fellow Creatures made out of the same Dust animated by the same Soul and every way equal with us by Nature when they wrong us in our petty Interests what Proportion is there between this forgiving and God 's forgiving he that is of so infinite a Majesty his forgiving the Violations of his holy Law And 2ly To the subject Matter that which is forgiven there is no Proportion When we compare the Multitude or Magnitude the Greatness and the Number of Offences forgiven of the one side and the other we see there 's a mighty Disproportion we forgive Pence and God Talents we an hundred Pence he ten thousand Talents Mat. 18. So 3dly the manner of forgiving on God's part by discharging us freely and exacting a full Satisfaction from Christ therefore our forgiving can hold no Comparison with it which is an Act of Duty and Conformity to God's Law And 4thly As to the Fruit and Issue of the Action our Good and Evil doth not reach to God Though our forgiving of others be an Action of Profit to our selves yet no Fruit redounds to God And therefore there being no Proportion between finite and infinite there can be no such proportion between our forgiving and God 's forgiving as that this Act may be meritorious before God Thus it is not brought here as Merit as that which doth oblige and bind God meritoriously to forgive us 2. It is not a Patern or Rule We do not mean our forgiving should be a Patern of forgiving to God So as is taken indeed ver 10 Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven there it implies a Conformity to the Patern But when we say Forgive us as we forgive it doth not mean here a Patern or Rule We imitate God but God doth not imitate us in forgiving Offences And it would be ill with us if God should forgive us no better than we forgive one another God is matchless in all his Perfections there is no Work like his Psal. 86. 8. As God is matchless in other Things so in pardoning Mercy As the Heavens are above the Earth so are his Ways above our Ways and his Thoughts above our Thoughts Isa. 55. 9. And upon this very occasion the Lord will multiply to pardon As far as the Heavens c. This is the greatest Distance we can conceive The Heavens they are at such a vast distance from the Earth that the Stars tho they be great and glorious Luminaries yet they seem to be but like so many Spangles and Sparks This is the distance and disproportion which is made between God's Mercy and ours Hos. 11. 9. I will not return to destroy Ephraim for I am God and not Man If God should forgive but only as Man doth it would be ill for Ephraim if he had to do with revengeful Man God acteth according to the Infiniteness of his own Nature far above the Law and manner of all created Beings Therefore it is not put here as a Patern and Rule 3. It doth not import Priority of Order as if our Act had the precedency of God's or as if we did or could heartily forgive others before God hath shewed any Mercy to us No in all Acts of Love God is first his Mercy to us is the Cause of our Mercy to others As the Wall reflects and casts back the Heat upon the Stander-by when first warmed with the Beams of the Sun So when our Hearts are melted with a sense of God's Mercy his Love to us is the Cause of our Love and Kindness to others 1 Iohn 4. 19. We love him because he first loved us that is we love him and others for his sake For Love to God implies that why because he hath been first with us And then it is the Motive and Patern of it In that Parable Mat. 18. 32 33. God's forgiving is the Motive to our forgiving I forgave thee all thy Debt and shouldest not thou have compassion on thy Fellow-Servant In those that have true Pardon it causeth them to forgive others out of a sense of God's Mercy that is they are disposed and inclined to shew Mercy to others But in others that think themselves pardoned and have only a temporary Pardon and Reprieve such as is there spoken of it is a Motive which should prevail with them tho it doth not Nay it is the Patern of our Love to others Eph. 4. 32. Forgiving one another even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you in that manner and according to that Example 4. It doth not import an exact Equality but some kind of Resemblance As it is a Note of Similitude not Equality either of Measure or Manner it only implieth that there is some correspondent Action something like done on our part So Luke 6. 36. Be merciful as your heavenly Father is merciful As notes the certainty of the Truth tho not the exact proportion there will be something answerable to God 2. But positively to shew what respect it hath 1. It is a Condition or moral Qualification which is found in Persons pardoned Mat. 6. 14. For if ye forgive Men their Trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you But ver 15. If ye forgive not Men their Trespasses neither will your Father forgive your Trespasses These two are inseparably conjoin'd God's pardoning of us and our pardoning of others The Grant of a Pardon that 's given out at the same time when this Disposition is wrought in us but the Sense of a Pardon that 's a thing subsequent to this Disposition And when we find this Disposition in us we come to understand how we are pardoned of God 2. It is an Evidence a Sign or Note of a pardoned Sinner when a Man's Heart is entender'd by the Lord's Grace and inclined to shew Mercy here 's his Evidence Mat. 5. 7. Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain Mercy The Stamp or Impression shews that the Seal hath been there so this is an Evidence to us whereby we may make out our Title to the Lord's Mercy that we have received Mercy from the Lord. 3. It is a necessary Effect of God's pardoning Mercy shed abroad in our Hearts for Mercy begets Mercy as Heat doth Heat Titus 3. 2 3. Shew meekness to all Men for we our selves also were sometimes foolish disobedient c. There 's none
wicked Wretch takes advantage against David and rails at him yet David forgives him when restored to his Crown He shall not die 2 Sam. 19. 23. Nay he sware to him So his Estate When a Debtor is not able to pay and yet submits So Paul bids Philemon to forgive the Wrongs of Onesimus Put it on my Score Philem. Vers. 18. that is for my sake forgive this Wrong 3. We must be ready to perform all Offices of Love to them Luke 6. 27. Love your Enemies do good to them which hate you Mark do not only forbear to execute your Wrath and Revenge upon them but do good to them yea tho they be Enemies upon a religious ground tho Religion be made a Party in the Quarrel and so engage us to the greater Fury when that which should bridle our Passions is the Fuel of them Pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you Mat. 5. 44. Miriam when she had wronged Moses yet he falls a praying for her Numb 12. 13. that the Lord would forgive the Sin and heal her For the Reasons why those that would rightly pray to be forgiven of God must forgive others It should be so it will be so there is a Congruency and a Necessity 1. The Congruency it should be so It is fit that he that beggeth Mercy should shew Mercy it is exceedingly congruous For this is a general Rule That we should do as we would be done unto and therefore if we need Mercy from God we should shew Mercy to others and without it we can never pray in Faith He that doth not exercise Love can never pray in Faith why His own revengeful Disposition will still prejudice his Mind and make him conclude against the Audience of his Prayers for certainly we muse on others as we use our selves And that 's one reason of our Unbelief why we are so hardly brought to believe all that tender Mercy which is in God because 't is so irksom to us to forgive seven times a day we are apt to frame our Conclusions according to the Dispositions of our own Heart Can we think God will forgive when we our selves will not forgive A Man 's own Prayers will be confuted What is more equal than to do as we would be done unto And therefore it is but equal if he entreat Mercy for himself he should shew it unto others Look as the Centurion reasoned of God's Power from the Command that he had over his Souldiers Mat. 8. 9. I am a Man under Authority and I say to one Go and he goeth and to another Come and he cometh Those things we are accustomed to they are apt to run in our Minds when we come to think of God Now he that kept his Souldiers under Discipline that if he said Go they go he reasons thus of God Surely God hath Power to chase away Diseases So accordingly should we reason of God's Mercy according to the Mercy that we find in our selves Therefore it is very notable that when Christ had spoken of forgiving our Brethren not only seven times but seventy times seven the Disciples said unto the Lord Increase our Faith Luke 17. 5. How dot● this come in In the 4 th Verse Christ had spoken that they should forgive not only seven times but seventy times seven and they do not say Lord increase our Charity but our Faith implying that we cannot have such large thoughts of God when our own Hearts are so straitned by Revenge and our private Passions 2. In point of Necessity as it should be so so it will be so for God's Mercy will have an Influence upon us to make us merciful All God's Actions to us imprint their stamp in us his Election of us makes us to choose him and his ways his Love to us makes us love him again who hath loved us first so his forgiving of us makes us to forgive our Brethren There is an answerable Impression left upon the Soul to every act of God why for a true Believer is God's Image The new Man is created after God Eph. 4. 24. and therefore he acts as God Certainly if there be such a Disposition in our Heavenly Father it will be in us if we have an Interest in him Look as a Child hath Part for Part and Limb for Limb answerable to his Father tho not so big in Stature and Bulk so hath a Child of God which is created after God he hath all the Divine Perfections in some measure in his Soul And this Consideration is of more force because the New-Creature cannot be maimed and defective in every Part but is entire lacking nothing And therefore if God forgive others certainly the Godly will be inclinable to forgive too Vse 1. Here 's a ground of Tryal whether we are pardoned or no. Is our revengeful Disposition that is so natural and so pleasing to us mortified That 's one Trial or Evidence whether we are forgiven of God can we freely from the Heart forgive others Object But it may be objected against this Do you place so much in this property of forgiving others It doth not agree only to pardoned Sinners because we see some Carnal Men are of a weak and stupid Spirit not sensible of Injuries And on the other side many of God's Children find it hard to obtain to the perfect Oblivion of Injuries that is required of them Answ. As to the first part I answer We do not speak of this Disposition as proceeding from an easy Temper but as it proceedeth from Grace when in Conscience towards God and out of a Sense of his Love to us in Christ our Hearts being tendered and melted towards others to shew them such Mercy as we our selves have received from the Lord that 's the Evidence And again we do not press to judg by this Evidence single and alone but in Conjunction with others when they are humbly Penitent and confessing their Sins and turn to the Lord which is the great Evangelical Condition Job 33. 27. If any say I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profited me not Then will he restore light to him When a Man is soundly touched with remorse and seeth the folly of his former Courses and asketh Pardon of God then is God gracious to him But this is that we say that this Disposition of Pardon in Conjunction with the great Evangelical Condition of Faith and Repentance it helpeth to make the Evidence more clear 2. As to the other part of the Objection which was this it will be a great weakening of the Confidence of God's Children who cannot get such a perfect Oblivion of Injuries they have received but find their Minds working too much this way I answer As long as we live in the World there will be Flesh and Spirit Corruption as well as Grace there will be an intermixture of the Operations of each Carnal Nature is prone to Revenge but Grace prevaileth and inclineth to a Pardon
his Harness boast himself as he that putteth it off 1 Kings 20. 11. When a Field is won then they will rejoice But a Believer when he goes to fight is sure to have the best of it before-hand in Bello the War though not in Praelio the particular Conflict Why Because the Father and Jesus Christ are stronger than all his Enemies they cannot pluck the Believer out of his Hands John 10. 28 29. I give to them Eternal Life and they shall never perish neither shall any pluck them out of my Father's Hand My Father which gave them me is greater than all and none is able to pluck them out of my Father's Hand This is the Priviledg which Christ conferreth upon his Sheep upon those which have an Interest in him tho they have many shakings and tossings in their Condition yet their final perseverance is certain Christ is so unchangeable in the purposes of his Love I will give to them Eternal Life and so invincible in the Power of his Grace None shall pull them out of my Father's Hand nothing shall be able to hinder their perseverance Now though the Fight be long and troublesom yet this is one of God's Encouragements you are sure of Victory at last Therefore how much doth it concern us to get an Interest in Christ that we may keep on in this Way and in this Hope Secondly Let us be provided and prepared against Temptations And to this end I shall First Give some Directions how to resist Temptations in General Secondly What to do in a special Hour of Temptation which comes upon the World When there are Terrors without and we know not what Evil may be a coming and our Hearts are full of Doubt how we may support and bear up our selves First To direct you as to Temptations in General 1. You must be compleatly armed Ephes. 6. 11. Put on the whole Armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the Wiles of the Devil Not a piece only but the whole Armor of God otherwise you will never come off with Honour and Safety from the Spiritual Conflict The Poets feign of their Achilles that he was vulnerable only in the Heel and there he got his Death's Wound A Christian though he be never so well furnished in other parts yet if any part be left naked you are in danger Our first Parents were wounded in their Heel Who would have thought that they which had such vast knowledg of God and his Creatures that they should be inticed by Appetite And Solomon who had the upper part of his Soul so well guarded that he should be enticed by Women To see Men of great knowledg to be unmortified and miscarry by their sensual Appetite is sad A Christian must have no saving-Grace wanting 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your Faith Vertue and to Vertue Knowledg c. There 's all the Graces and they must come out in their turn We need Faith and Vertue Zeal and Holiness and Knowledg to guide it and Patience to arm it against the Troubles of the present Life and we need Temperance to moderate our Affections to our worldly Enjoyments and Godliness that we may be frequent in communion with God and Brotherly-kindness that we may preserve Peace among our Brethren and may not make Fractions and Ruptures in the Church and we need Charity that we may be useful to all that are about us There is use and work for all Graces one time or other Sometimes we shall be tempted to a neglect of God at other times we shall be tempted to make a breach upon Brotherly-kindness at other times there will be a breach of Charity Sometimes the Devil seeks to tempt us to fleshly wickedness therefore we need Temperance sometimes to spiritual Wickedness to Error therefore we need Knowledg sometimes to raging with despair then we need Faith We need the whole Armour of God for Satan hath his various ways of Battery and Assault sometimes through Ignorance we miscarry and run into Error sometimes for want of Faith we run into Despair and Discomfort sometimes for want of Temperance violent corrupt Lusts over-set the Soul 2. We must often pray to God for renewed Influences we must not only get habits of Grace but pray for a renewed Influence It is notable next to the Spiritual Armour the Apostle mentioneth Prayer Ephes. 6. 18. Praying always with all Prayer and Supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all Perseverance We never receive so much from God upon Earth as to stand in need of no more And therefore though you put on the whole Armour of God yet praying always with all supplication in the Spirit Why Because without the Lord 's special Assistance whereby he actuates those Graces we can never defend our selves nor offend the Adversaries or do any thing to purpose in the Spiritual Life Strength of Grace inherent will not bear us out against new Assaults Habitual Grace it needs Actual Influence partly that these Graces may be applied and excited to work Phil. 2. 13. He giveth to will and to do God giveth to do that is excites that strength you have and carrieth it out to work and then that it may be directed in work 2 Thess. 3. 5. And the Lord direct your Hearts into the Love of God and into the patient waiting for Christ. Every time we would make use of the Helmet of Salvation when we would lift up the Head and wait for the Mercy of God the Lord direct you we must be directed And not only so but that it may be supplied with new strength for it is said Isa. 40. 29. He giveth Power to the faint and to them that have no Power he increaseth strength And he doth continue it Luke 22. 32. I have prayed for thee that thy Faith fail not Thus will God keep us in dependance for those liberal Aids and constant Supplies of his Grace without which we cannot use the Grace that we have 3. You must resist 1 Pet. 5. 9. Whom resist stedfast in the Faith James 4. 7. Resist the Devil and he will flee from you Stand your Ground and then Satan falls In all those Assaults Satan hath only Weapons Offensive as fiery Darts none Defensive We have not only the Sword of the Spirit which is an Offensive Weapon but the Shield of Faith that 's a Defensive piece of Armour Therefore your Safety lieth in resisting Now this Resistance must be 1. Not faint and cold but strong and vehement 2. Thorow and total 3. Constant and perpetual 1. Not faint and cold Some kind of Resistance may be made by general and common Grace The Light of Nature will rise up in defiance of many Sins especially at first but this must be earnest and vehement it is against the Enemies of your Soul Paul's Resistance was with serious Dislikes and deep Groans Rom. 7. 15. 24. The Evil that I hate And O wretched Man how shall I be delivered In
the M●n that feareth the Lord. It is the Lord's praise t●at his Servants are the only and blessed People in the World And this is a wonderful ground of Confidence Think surely God's Glory he will be chary and tender of he will provide for the Glory of his great Name There is nothing God stands upon more than upon the Glory of his Name nothing prevaileth with God more than that If God were a loser by your Comforts if he could not ●ave or bless thee without wrong done to himself we might be discouraged But when you can come and plead with him as Abigail It will be no grief of Heart unto my Lord to forgive thy Servant So it will be no loss to God if he shew Mercy and Pity to such poor Creatures as we are you then may pray more freely and boldly If thy Comforts were inconsistent with his Glory or were not so greatly exalted by it then it were another matter but all makes for the Glory of his Name If our Good and Happiness were only concerned in it there might be some Suspicion but the Glory of God is concerned which is more worth than all the World We are unworthy to be heard and accepted but God is worthy to be honoured It is for the Honour of God to choose base mean and contemptible Things and to shew forth the Riches Goodness Power and Treasure of his Glory Much of our Trouble and Distrust comes only from reflecting upon our own Good in the Mercies that we ask as if God were not concerned in them whereas the Lord is concerned as well as you As the Ivy wrapt about the Tree cannot be hurt except you do hurt to the Tree So the Lord hath twisted our Concernment about his own Honour and Glory Thus the Saints plead God's Glory as an Argument Jer. 14. 7. O Lord tho our Iniquitie● testify against us do thou it for thy Names sake They do not tell him what he shall do but do thou that which shall be for thy Glory So Ezek. 36. 22. Thus saith the Lord God I do not this for your sakes O House of Israel but for mine holy Names sake So Isa. 48. 9. For my Names sake will I defer mine anger and for my Praise will I refrain for thee that I 〈…〉 4. The Duration For ever all Excellencies which are in God they are eternally in God God is an infinite simple independent Being the Cause of all things but caused by none therefore he was from Everlasting and will be to Everlasting Psal. 90. 2. Before the Mountains were brought forth or ever thou hadst formed the Earth and the World even from everlasting to everlasting thou art God If there were a time when God was not then there was a time when nothing was and then there would never have been any thing unless nothing could make all things therefore God is eternally glorious for whatever is in God is originally in himself and absolutely without dependance on any other to everlasting How loosely do Honours sit upon Men Every Disease shakes them out of their Kingdom Power and Glory and within a little while the State Show and all the Command of Earthly Kings will fade away and come to nothing Governours and Government may dye Principalities grow old and infirm and sicken and dye as well as Princes Kingdoms expire like Kings and they like us Psal. 82. 6 7. I have said ye are Gods and all of you are Children of the most High But ye shall dye like Men. But thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Psal. 45. 6. His Kingdom and Power and Glory they are without beginning and without end Now this is also a ground of Confidence and Dependance upon God Earthly Kings when they perish their Favourites are counted Offenders 1 Kings 1. 21. When my Lord the King shall sleep with his Fathers that I and my Son Solomon shall be counted Offenders When other Governours are set up they and their Children will be found Offenders But our King lives for ever therefore this should encourage us to be oftner in attendance upon God performing it with all Diligence and Seriousness rather than court the Humours and Lusts of earthly Potentates who die like one of the People and leave us exposed to the rage and wrath of others that do succeed them But God is the same that ever he was to all those that ever called upon his Name God is where he was at first I AM is his Name there is no wrinkle upon the Brow of Eternity His Arm is not short that it cannot save or his Ear heavy that it cannot hear Isa. 59. 1. Whatever he h●th been to his People that have called upon him in former Ages he is the same still So Isa. 51. 9. Awake awake put on strength O Arm of the Lord awake as in the ancient days in the Generations of old Art thou not it that hath cut 〈◊〉 and wound●d the Dragon God hath done great things for his People he smote Rahab and kill'd the Dragon meaning Pha●aoh and God is the same God still his Kingdom Power and Glory are for ever and God will be your God too for evermore Look as this doth encrease the terror of the damned in Hell that they fall into the Hands of the living God Heb. 10. 31. God lives for ever to see Vengeance executed upon his Enemies so it is a Comfort to have an interest in the living God that can and will keep you and bring you to Heaven where you shall be with him for evermore that will ever live to see his Friends rewarded Secondly It directeth and regulateth our Prayers 1. It directs us as to the Object of Prayer to whom should we pray but to him that is absolute and above controul To God and God alone not to Angels and Saints To whom should we go in our necessities but to him that hath Dominion over all things and Power to dispose of them for his own Glory Will you think it a boldness to go immediately to God It were so indeed if we had not a Mediator for a fallen Creature can never have the Impudence and wicked Men that have not got an Interest in Christ cannot expect Relief from God but it is no Impudence to come with a Mediator Heb. 4. 16. Let us therefore come boldly to the Throne of Grace that we may obtain Mercy and find Grace to help in time of need 2. It directs us how to conceive of God in Prayer Right Thoughts of God in Prayer are very necessary and very difficult no one thing troubleth the Saints so much as this how to fix their thoughts in the apprehensions of God when they pray to him Now here●s a direction how we should look upon God Look upon him as the eternal Being and first Cause to whom belong Kingdom Power and Glory We cannot see God's Essence and therefore we must conceive of him according to his Praises in the Word Now take
that we may know God doth all that he governeth all humane Affairs that we may live upon his Allowance and take our daily Bread from his hands and that we may see we hold all these Things from our great Landlord therefore we pray unto him We are Robbers and Thieves if we use the Creature without his Leave God is the great Owner of the World who gives us our daily Bread and all our Supplies therefore he will have it asked that we may acknowledg our dependance 2. It is most for our Profit Partly that our Faith should be exercised in pleading God's Promise for there we put the Promise in Suit Faith is begotten in the Word but it is exercised in Prayer therefore it is called the Prayer of Faith In the Word we take Christ from God in Prayer we present Christ to God That Prayer which is effectual it is an Exercise of Faith Rom. 10. 14. How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed And as it concerns our Faith so also our Love which is both acted and increased in Prayer It is acted for it is Delight in God which makes us so often converse with him Thus the Hypocrite Iob 27. 10. Will he always call upon the Lord Will he delight himself in the Almighty They that love God cannot be long from him they that delight in God will be often unbosoming themselves to him It doth also increase our Love for by Answers of Prayer we have new Fuel to keep in this holy Fire in our Bosoms We pray and then he gives direct Answers Psal. 116. 1. I love the Lord because he hath heard my Voice and my Supplication So our Hope is exercised in waiting for the Blessing pray'd for Psal. 5. 3. O Lord in the Morning will I direct my Prayer unto thee and will look up That looking up is the Work of Hope when we are looking and waiting to see what comes in from pleading Promises It is much too for our Peace of Conscience for it easeth us of our Burthens It is the Vent of the Soul like the opening of a Vein in a Fever When our Hearts swell with Cares and we have a Burthen upon us and know not what to do we may ease our selves with God Phil. 4. 6. Be careful for nothing but in every Thing by Prayer and Supplication with Thanksgiving let your Requests be made known to God And the Peace of God shall keep your Hearts O blessed Frame that can be troubled at nothing here in this World where there are so many Businesses Encounters Temptations What 's the way to get this Calmness of Heart Be much in opening your Hearts to God let your Requests be made known to God Look as in an Earthquake when the Wind is imprisoned in the Bowels of the Earth the Earth heaves and shakes and quakes until there be a Vent and the Wind be got out then all is quiet So we have many Tossings and Turmoilings in our Minds till we open and unbosom our selves to God and then all is quiet Also it prepareth us for the Improvement of Mercies when we have them out of the hands of God by Prayer For this Child I prayed said Hannah and I will lend him unto the Lord. 1 Sam. 1. 27 28. Those Mercies we expresly pray'd for we are more throughly obliged to improve for God What is won with Prayer is worn with Thankfulness APPLICATION VSE 1. To caution us against many Abuses in Prayer which may be disproved and taxed either formally or by just Consequence I shall instance in five 1. An idle and foolish Loquacity when Men take a liberty to prattle any thing in God's hearing and do not consider the Weight and Importance of Prayer and what a Sin it is to be hasty to utter any thing before God Eccles. 5. 2. It is a great Irreverence and Contempt of the Majesty of God when Men go hand over head about this Work and speak any thing that comes into their mind As Men take themselves to be despised when others speak unseemly in their presence Surely it is a lessening and a despising of God when we pour out raw tumultuous undigested Thoughts and never think of what we are to speak when we come to God Psal. 45. 1. My Heart is inditing a good Matter The Word signifieth it boils or fryes a good Matter It is an Allusion to the Mincah or Meat-Offering which was to be boil'd or fry'd in a Pan before it was to be presented to the Lord that they might not bring a Dough-bak'd Sacrifice and Offering to the Lord. Such ignorant dull sensless Praying it is a blaspheming of God and a lessening of the Majesty of God 2. A frothy Eloquence and an affected Language in Prayer this directly comes under Reproof As if the Prayer were more grateful to God and he were moved by Words and Strains of Rhetorick and did accept Men for their Parts rather than Graces Fine Phrases and quaint Speeches alas they do not carry it with the Lord They are but an empty Babble in his Ears rather than an humble Exercise of Faith Hope Love and Child-like Affections and holy Desires after God If we would speak with God we must speak with our Hearts to him rather than with our Words This is a Sin of Curiosity as the other was of Neglect 'T is not Words but the Spirit and Life which God looks after Prayer it is not a Work of Oratory the Product of Memory Invention and Parts but a filial Affection that we may come to him as to a Father with a Child-like Confidence Therefore too much Care of verbal Eloquence in Prayer and tunable Expressions is a Sin of the same nature with Babling Tho Men should have the Wit to avoid impertinent Expressions and Repetitions yet when Prayer smells so much of the Man rather than of the Spirit of God alas 't is but like the unsavoury Belches of a rotten Breath in the Nostrils of God We should attend to Matter to the Things we have to communicate to God to our Necessities rather than to Words 3. Heartless speaking filling up the Time with Words when the Tongue out-runs the Heart when Men pour their Breath into the Air but their Hearts are dead and sleepy or their Hearts keep not time and pace with their Expressions We oftner pray with our Tongues than with our Minds and from our Memories than our Consciences and from our Consciences than our Affections and from our Affections as presently stirred than from our Hearts renewed bended and inclined towards God Be the Prayer long or short the Heart must keep pace with our Tongues As the Poet said Disticha longa facit his Disticks were tedious so it is tedious and irksom to God unless we make Supplication in the Spirit Eph. 6. 18. Remember God will not be mocked 4. When Men rest in outward Vehemency and loud Speech Saith Tertullian Quibus Arteriis opus est si pro streno
Humility and Reverence His Goodness in your Soul 's rejoycing His Greatness and Iustice in your trembling before his Throne The Worship must be like the Worshipped it must have his Stamp upon it 2. For the other Notion God is a Spirit therefore the Soul must be the chief Agent in the Business not the Body or any Member of the Body Spirits they converse with Spirits The Body is but employed by the Soul and must not guide and lead it but be led by it Therefore see whether there be the Spirit otherwise that which is most Essential to the Worip is wanting To have nothing employed but the Tongue and the Heart about other Business is not to carry your selves as to a God and a God that is a Spirit Recollect your selves where 's my Soul in this Worship And how is it affected towards God Secondly As there must be Thoughts to direct us in his Being and Nature so also in his Relation as a Father As one that is inclinable to pardon pity and help you We have the Spirit of Adoption given us for this very end and purpose that we may cry Abba Father and Gal. 4. 16. Because you are Sons therefore he hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your Hearts crying Abba Father And Rom. 8. 15. We have received the Spirit of Adoption crying Abba Father that we may come to God in a Child-like manner dealing with him as with a Father acquainting him with our Wants Necessities Burdens with a hope of Relief and Supply Object Ay saith a distressed Soul if my Heart be thus carried up to God if I could discern such a Spirit of Adoption prompting me to go to God as a Father then it would be better with me To this I answer 1. Many times there is a Child-like Inclination where there is not a Child-like Familiarity and Boldness What 's that Child-like Inclination The Soul cannot keep away from God and that 's an implicite owning him as a Father Jer. 3. 19. Thou shalt call me My Father and shalt not turn away from me It is a Child-like act to look to him for all our Supplies and to recommend our Suit As when a Child wants any thing he goes to his Father 2. There 's a Child-like Reverence many times when there is not a Child-like Confidence the Soul hath an awe of God when it cannot explicitely own him as our God and Father yet it owns him in the humbling way Luk. 15. 18. I have sinned against Heaven and before thee and am not worthy to be called thy Son Tho we cannot confidently approach to God as our reconciled Father yet we come with Humility and Reverence Lord I would fain be but I deserve not to be called thy Child 3. There 's a Child-like dependance upon God's General Offer tho we have not an Evidence of the Sincerity of our particular Claim God offereth to be a Father in Christ to all penitent Believers Now when a broken-hearted Creature comes to God and looks for Mercy upon the account of the Covenant tho he cannot see his own Interest for then we come to God tho not as our Father yet as the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and that 's a Relief in Prayer as Eph. 1. 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ. And vers 17. The God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of Glory And Eph. 3. 14. I bow my Knees unto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ. Mark when we come to him as the Father of Christ we believe what God offereth in the Covenant of Grace namely that he will deal kindly with us as a Father with his Children that he will be good to those that come to him by Christ. The Term Father is not only to be considered with respect to the Disposition or Qualification of the Persons but the Dispensation they are under 'T is the New Covenant In the new Covenant God undertakes to be Fatherly that is to pitty our Miseries to pardon our Sins to heal our Natures to save our Persons Now all that come for refuge to take hold of this hope set before them may come to God as a Father if they believe the Gospel in general tho they are not assured of God's love to themselves 4. There may be a Child-like Love to God when yet we have not a Sense and Assurance of his Paternal Love to us God hath a Title to our choicest and dearest Love before we can make out a Title to his highest Benefits We owe our Hearts to him Prov. 23. 26. My Son give me thy Heart If you give him your Hearts you are Sons tho you know it not God may be owned as a Father either by our Sense of his Fatherly Love or by our Choice and Esteem of him Optando si non affirmando Come as Fatherless without him Hos. 14. 3. or to speak it in other Words the unutterable Groans of the Spirit do discover the Spirit of Adoption as well as the unspeakable Joys of the Spirit 1 Pet. 1. 8. There is an Option and Choice tho we be not assured of our special Relation 5. God is glorified by an Affiance and a resolute Adherence where there is no Assurance When you are resolved let him deal with you as an Enemy you will stick to him as a Father Job 13. 15. Tho he slay me yet will I trust in him Faith can take God as a Friend and Father and put a good construction upon his Dealings when he seems to come against us as an Enemy And we give Glory to God when we can adhere to him as our only Happiness and trust his Fatherly Kindness and Goodness tho he cover himself with Frowns and hide himself from our Prayers and you own him as the Father of Mercies tho it may be you have no Sense and Feeling of his Fatherly Love to you 6. There is a difference between the Gift it self and the Degree We cannot say we have not the Spirit of Adoption because we have not so much of the Spirit of Adoption as others have I mean as to the Effects We may have the Spirit as a Sanctifyer tho not as a Comforter tho he doth not calm our Hearts and rebuke our Fears yet if he doth sanctify us and incline us to God The Spirit was only given to Christ without measure but to Christians in a different Measure and Proportion and usually as you submit more to his gracious Conduct and overcome the Enemies of your Peace the Devil the World and the Flesh. The impression is left upon some in a smaller and upon others in a larger Character All are not of one growth and size some are more explicitely Christians others in a Riddle Much Grace doth more discover it self than a little Grace under a heap of Imperfection Some are more mortified and Heavenly-minded than others 7. When all other Helps fail Faith will make use of our common Relation
And all baptized Persons are baptized in the Name of the Son and Holy-Ghost as well as in the Name of the Father But usually Christian Worship is terminated upon God the Father as being chief in the Mystery of Redemption and so it is said Eph. 2. 18. Through him by one Spirit we have access to the Father We come to him through Christ as the meritorious Cause who hath procured Leave for us and by the Spirit as the efficient Cause who gives us an Heart to come and to the Father as the ultimate Object of Christian Worship Christ procureth us Leave to come and the Spirit gives us a Heart to come So that by the Spirit through Christ we have access to God So that now you may see what is meant by the Father Our Father But now let me distinguish again God is a Father to Mankind either 1. In a more general consideration and respect by Creation or 2. In a more special regard by Adoption First By Creation God is a Father At first he gave a Being to all Things but to Men and Angels he gave Reason Iohn 1. 4. And this Life was the Light of Man Other Things had Life but Man had such a Life as was Light and so by his original Constitution he became to be the Son of God To establish the Relation of a Father there must be a Communication of Life and Likeness A Painter that makes an Image or Picture like himself he is not the Father of it for tho there be Likeness yet no Life The Sun in propriety of Speech is not the Father of Frogs and putrid Creatures which are quickned by its heat tho there be Life yet there is no Likeness We keep this Relation for univocal Generations and rational Creatures Thus by Creation the Angels are said to be the Sons of God Iob 38. 7. When he was laying the Foundations of the Earth the Sons of God shouted for Ioy that is the Angels And thus Adam also was called the Son of God Luke 3. ult Thus by our first Creation and with respect to that all Men are the Sons of God Children of God And mark it in respect of God's continual concurrence to our Being tho we have deformed our selves and are not the same that we were when we were first created yet still in regard of some sorry Remains of God's Image and the Light of Reason all are Sons of God and God in a general Sence is a Father to us Yea more a Father than our natural Parents are For our Parents they concur to our Being but instrumentally God originally We had our Being under God from our Parents He hath the greatest hand and stroke in forming us in the Belly and making us to be what we are Which appeareth by this Parents they know not what the Child will be Male or Female beautiful or deformed they cannot tell the Number of Bones Muscles Veines Arteries and cannot restore any of these in case they should be lost and spoil'd So that he that framed us in the Womb and wonderfully fashioned us in the secret Parts he is our Father Psal. 139. 14. As the Writing is rather the Work of the Pen-man than of the Pen so we are rather the Workmanship of God than of our Parents They are but Instruments God is the Author and Fountain of that Life and Being which we still have And again consider The better Part of Man is of his immediate Creation and in this respect he is called the Father of Spirits Heb. 12. 19. They do not run in the Channel of carnal Generation or fleshly Descent but they are immediatly created by God And it is said Eccles. 12. 7. The Spirit returneth to God which gave it Well then you see how in a general Sence and with what good reason God may be called Our Father Those which we call Fathers they are but subordinate Instruments the most we have from them is our Corruption our being depraved but our Substance and the Frame and Fashion of it our Being and all that 's good in it that 's from the Lord. Now this is some Advantage in Prayer to look upon God as our Father by virtue of Creation that we can come to him as the Work of his Hands and beseech him that he will not destroy us and suffer us to perish Isa. 64. 8. But now O Lord thou art our Father we are the Clay and thou our Potter and we are all the Work of thine Hand There is a general Mercy that God hath for all his Creatures and therefore as he gave us rational Souls and fashioned us in the Womb we may come to him and say Lord thou art our Potter and we thy Clay do us good forsake us not What Advantage have we in Prayer from this common Interest or general Respect of God's being a Father by virtue of Creation 1. This common Relation binds us to pray to him All things which God hath made by a secret Instinct they are carried to God for their Supply Psal. 145. 15. The Eyes of all Things look up to thee In their way they pray to him and moan to him for their Supplies even very Beasts young Ravens and Fowls of the Air. But much more is this Man's Duty as we have Reason and can clearly own the first Cause And therefore upon these natural Grounds the Apostle reasons with them why they should seek after God Acts 14. 17. 2. As this common Relation binds us to pray so it draweth common Benefits after it Mat. 6. 25 26. Is not the Life more than Meat and the Body than Raiment Behold the Fowls of the Air for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into Barns yet your heavenly Father feedeth them Christ saith where God hath given a Life he will give Food and where he gives a Body he will give Raiment according to his good pleasure He doth not cast off the Care of any living Creature he hath made as long as he will preserve it for his Glory Beasts have their Food and Provision much more Men which are capable of knowing and enjoying God 3. It giveth us Confidence in the Power of God He which made us out of nothing is able to keep preserve and supply us when all things fail and in the midst of all Dangers Saints are able to make use of this common Relation And therefore it is said 1 Pet. 4. 19. That we should commit our Souls unto him in well-doing as unto a faithful Creator The Apostle speaks of such Times when they carried their Lives in their hands from day to day They did not know how soon they should be haled before Tribunals and cast into Prisons Remember you have a Creator which made you out of nothing and he can keep and preserve Life when you have nothing Thus this common Relation is not to be forgotten as he gives us our outward Life and Being Psal. 124. 8. Our Help is in the Name of
corrupt and wholly poisoned with Self-Love we prefer every base Interest and Trifle before God nay we prefer carnal Self before God Some are wholly brutish and so they may wallow in Ease and Pleasure and eat the Fat and drink the Sweet never think of God care not how God is dishonoured both by themselves and others And then some O how tender are they in matters of their own Concernment and affected with it more than for the Glory of God! Ioh. 12. 43. They are more affected with their own Honour and their own Loss and Reproach than with God's dishonour or God's Glory If their own Reputation be but hazarded a little O how it stings them to the Heart But if they be faulty towards God they can pass it over without Trouble A Word of Disgrace a little Contempt cast upon our Persons kindles the Coals and ●ills us with Rage but we can hear God's Name dishonoured and not be moved with it When they pray if they beg outward Blessings if they ask any thing it is for their Lusts not for God 't is but to feed their Pomp and Excess and that they may shine in the Pomp and Splendor of external Accommodations If they beg Quickning and Enlargment it is for their own Honour that their Lusts may be fed by the Contributions of Heaven So by a wicked Design they would even make God to serve the Devil The best of us when we come to pray what a deep Sense have we of our own Wants and no desire of the Glory of God If we beg daily Bread Maintenance and Protection we do not beg it as a Talent to be improved for our Master's use but as Fuel for our Lusts. If we beg Deliverance it is because we are in pain and ill at ease not that we may Honour and glorify God that Mercy and Truth may shine forth If we beg Pardon it is only to get rid of the Smart and enlarged out of the Stocks of Conscience If they beg Grace it is but a lazy Wish after Sanctification because they are convinced there is no other way to be happy If they beg eternal Glory they do not beg it for God it appears plainly because they can be content to dishonour God long provided they at length may be saved Most of us pray without a Heart set to glorify God and to bring Honour unto his great Name Tho a Man hath never so much sense and feeling in his Prayer yet if his H●art be not duly set as to the Glory of God his Prayer is turned into Sin It is not the manner of the Vehemency only for a Carnal Spring may send forth High-Tides of Affection and Motions that come from Lust may be earnest and very rapid Therefore it is not enough to have Fervour and Vehemency but when our aim is to honour and glorify God Zech. 7. 5 6. When ye fasted did ye at all fast unto me even to me And when ye did eat and when ye did drink did you not eat for your selves and drink for your selves Vse 2. For Exhortation to press us to seek the Glory of God above all things Take these Arguments 1. How necessary it is the Lord should have his Glory The World serves for no other purpose it is made and continued for this End Rev. 4. 11. Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Glory and Honour and Power For thou hast created all things and for thy Pleasure they are and were created All that God hath made it was for his own Glory And Rom. 11. 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things To whom be Glory for ever Amen Of him in a way of Creation Through him by way of Providential Influence and Supportation that they may be To him in their final tendency and result God did not make us for our selves but his own Glory 2. It is a singular Benefit to be admitted to sanctify God's Name O that poor Worms should come and put the Crown upon God's Head And that he will count any thing we can do to be a Glory to himself ● Chron. 29. 14. But who am I and what is my People that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort For all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee 3. Consider how much it concerneth us that we may make some Restitution for our former dishonouring of God therefore we should be more zealous in this Work How forward have we been to dishonour God in Thought Word and Deed before the Lord wrought upon us There is not a Mercy but we have abused it nor any thing we have medled with but one way or other we have turned it to the Lord's Reproach and Dishonour Now when the Lord hath put Grace in our Hearts When we are a People formed for his Praise Isa. 43. When he hath made us anew we should think of making some Restitution some amends to God and should zealously affect his Glory above all things Vse 3. For Trial. Do we prefer the Glory of God in the first place Take these Marks 1. Then we would be content with our own loss provided the Name of God may gain any respect in the World and so he may be magnified no matter what becomes of us and our Interest and Concernment Phil. 1. 20. The Apostle expresseth there a kind of Indifferency So Christ shall be magnified in my Body whether it be by Life or by Death O then it is a sign you make it your purpose drift and care when you are contented to do or be any thing that God will have you to be or do This holds good not only in temporal Concernments when you are content to want necessary Food c. But it holds also in Spiritual Concernments As to sense of Pardon tho God should suspend the Consolations of his Spirit yet if it be for the Glory of his Grace I am to be content Nay in some Cases God's Glory is more to be cared for than our own Salvation if they two could come in competition but that case never falls out with the Creature our Salvation is conjoyned with the Glory of God But yet in supposition if it should as Paul and Moses puts the Supposition Exod. 32. 32. Blot me I pray thee out of the Book which thou hast written So God might be honoured in saving that People So Rom. 9. 3. For I could wish that my self wer● accursed from Christ for my Brethren my Kinsmen according to the Flesh. It was not a rash Speech a thing spoken out of an unadvised Passion see but with what a serious Pre●ace it is ushered in vers 1. God is my Witness I lye not my Conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost He calls God to witness this was the real disposition of his Heart and he speaks advisedly and with good deliberation Object But is it lawful thus to wish to be accursed Certainly Paul could not
fruitful Seasons filling their Hearts with Food and Gladness that is gave them a comfortable use a Blessing upon the use of outward things And Levit. 26. you will find a Distinction between Bread and the Staff of Bread we may have Bread yet not the Staff of Bread Many have worldly Comforts but not with a natural Blessing Eccles. 3. 13. That every Man should eat and drink and enjoy the Good of all his Labour it is the Gift of God not only that he should have Increase by his Labour but enjoy Good to have the comfortable use of that Increase 8. Contentation is one of God's Blessings that we ask in this Prayer Give us this day our daily Bread That is such Provisions as are necessary for us Contentment and quiet of Mind in the Enjoyment Ioel 2. 19. Behold I will send you Corn and Wine and Oil and ye shall be satisfied therewith It is not only a Blessing we should look after but Contentment that our Minds may be suited to our Condition for then the Creature is more sweet and comfortable to us The Happiness of Man doth not lie in his Abundance but in the Suitableness of his Mind to his Estate Luk. 12. 15. A Man's Life consisteth not in the abundance of things which he possesseth There 's a twofold War within a Man both which must be taken up before a Man can have Comfort there 's a War between a Man and his Conscience and this breeds trouble of Mind and there 's a War between his Affections and his Condition and this breeds murmuring and envious repining Say Yea Lord and let us be contented with thy Gift This for the first thing how God is concerned in these outward Comforts Secondly That the Lord doth freely and graciously give these good things to us that is meerly out of his Bounty and Goodness It is not from his strict remunerative Iustice but out of his Grace The very Air we breath in the Bread we eat our common Blessings be they never so mean we have them all from Grace and all from the tender Mercy of the Lord. Psal. 136. 25. you have there the Story of the notable Effects of God's Mercy and he concludes it thus Who giveth Food to all Flesh for his Mercy endureth for ever Mark the Psalmist doth not only ascribe those mighty Victories those glorious Instances of his Love and Power to his unchangeable Mercy but our daily Bread In eminent Deliverances of the Church we will acknowledg Mercy Yea but we should do it in every bit of Meat we eat for the same Reason is rendred all along What 's the reason his People smote Sihon King of the Amorites and Og the King of Bashan and rescued his People so often out of danger For his Mercy endureth for ever And what 's the reason he giveth Food to all Flesh For his Mercy endureth for ever It 's not only Mercy which gives us Christ and Salvation by Christ and all those glorious Deliverances and Triumphs over the Enemies of the Church but it 's Mercy which furnisheth our Tables it is Mercy that we taste with our Mouths and wear at our Backs It is notable our Lord Jesus when there were but five Barley Loaves and two Fishes Iohn 6. 11. He lift up his Eyes and gave Thanks Though our Provision be never so homely and slender yet God's Grace and Mercy must be acknowledged But to evidence this by some Considerations that certainly it is of the Mercy of the Lord that he giveth Bread to the Creature God giveth these Mercies 1. To those that cannot return any Service to him 2. To those that will not return any Service to him 3. When we are at our best we cannot deserve them 4. We deserve the quite contrary 1. He giveth these Mercies to those that cannot return any Service to him The Beasts and Fowls of the Air the young Ravens Psal. 145. 16. Thou openest thy Hand and satisfiest the Desire of every living thing What can the Beasts or Fishes or Fowls of the Air deserve at God's Hand what Honour and Service can they bring to him only they have a bountiful Creator from whom they receive their Allowance So as to Infants alas what can they deserve at his Hand when God rocks their Cradles and nourisheth them from the Dug what Service can they do to God Isa. 46. 3 4. By me saith the Lord You are born from the Belly and carried from the Womb and even to your old Age I am he and even to hoare Hairs will I carry you Mark not only in Old Age when we have done God Service doth he maintain us but from the Womb the Belly before we could do any thing for him we were tenderly handled by him He alludeth to Parents and Nurses which carry their Younglings in their Arms. In Infancy we are not in a Capacity to know the God of our Mercies and look after him yet he looked after us then when we could not perform one act of Love and Kindness to him The Psalmist takes notice of this Psal. 22. 9. 10. Thou art he that took me out of the Womb thou didst make me hope when I was upon my Mother's Breast I was cast upon thee from the Womb thou art my God from my Mother's Belly Christians before ever you could do any thing for him or your selves before you could improve his Mercy when you could not know who was your Benefactor who it was that nourished and cherished you yet then God rocked your Cradles kept you from many Dangers nursed you and brought you up and carried you in the tender Arms of his Providence 2. God gives these Mercies to those that will not serve him when they can Isa. 1. 2. I have nourished and brought up Children and they have rebelled against me There are many in the World whom God protects supplies and provides them of all Necessaries yet they return nothing but Disobedience Contempt Rebellion and Unthankfulness The Sun doth not shine by chance but at God's disposal Mat. 5. 45. He makes his Sun to rise on the Evil and on the Good and sendeth Rain on the Iust and on the Vnjust Most of those which are fed at God's Table and maintained at his Expence and Care they are his Enemies and many times the more Men receive from him the worse they are Look as Beasts towards Man when they are in good plight they grow fierce and are ready to destroy those which nourish them so when 〈◊〉 are plentifully supplied we kick with the Heel wax wanton and forgetful of God Or as a froward Child scratcheth the Breast which suckles it so we rebel against God that nourished us and brought us up and dishonour our heavenly Father that provides these Blessings for us Parisiensis hath a saying They which hold the greatest Farms many times pay the least Rent so the great ones of the World they which have most of God's Bounty give him the least Acknowledgment
should they study Thankfulness Secondly Because of the Equity of it Consider what an Equity there is that we should be thankful for outward Blessings 1. They are good in themselves 2. They come from God 3. They come from the Lord's Grace and Mercy 1. They are good in themselves Food and Raiment is good and every Creature of God is good 1 Tim. 4. 4. They are good things tho not the best things They are good for our selves that we may serve God more chearfully The Lord would have the Levites and Priests have their Portion that they might be encouraged in the Law of the Lord. 2 Chron. 31. 4. Now these things are good to encourage us and support us in our Work Man consists of two parts of a Body and of a Soul Now whether we look to the one or the other you will have many Arguments to love and praise God not only for what he hath done for our Souls but likewise for our Bodies And they are good because they prevent many Snares and Temptations Prov. 30. 9. Lest I be poor and steal and take the Name of my God in vain Diseases which arise from Fulness are more common but Diseases which arise from Indigence and Emptiness they are more dangerous So Diseases of Prosperity they are more common it is a rank Soil and yields more Weeds but Diseases which arise from Poverty breed Atheism Irreligion and Rebellion against God They are good as they make us more useful for God and Man For God as having more Advantages for the honouring of God Prov. 3. 9. Honour the Lord with thy Substance and with the First-Fruits of all thine Increase And of doing good to others That we may have to distribute to them that need Eph. 4. 28. O we should all covet and affect mightily to have wherewith to relieve the Necessities of others 2. As they are Blessings so they are Blessings which do not come by Chance or by Man's Providence 1 Tim. 6. 17. The living God who giveth us richly all Things to enjoy The People of God are plentifully provided for Your Tables are well furnished Backs well cloathed it is God which gives you richly to enjoy them and he must be acknowledged as David doth 1 Chron. 29. 14. For all Things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee Then ver 16. O Lord our God all this Store that we have prepared to build thee an House for thine holy Name cometh of thine hand and is all thine own Tho you your selves have been Purchasers of your own Estate and Carvers of your own Fortune as Man is most apt to forget God there yea but tho you have prepared and brought together a great deal of Store yet Lord all comes from thee It sweetneth the Mercy When you are at the Table to be carved to by a great Person their Remembrance is counted a greater Favour than the Meal it self So it is not barely the Comfort we have by the Creature which sweetneth it but when we think of the Donor that the great God should think of us that it is God which spreads our Table for us that doth put this Meat and Drink before us It was he that gave Seed to the Sower and Bread for Food 2 Cor. 9. 10. When we take it immediately out of God's Hands it is much sweeter And not only so but also it is the more sanctified When we look to second Causes we shall surely abuse the Mercy Hos. 2. 8. For she did not know that I gave her Corn and Wine and Oil and multiplied her Silver and Gold what then Therefore she prepared it for Baal When God's Kindness is not taken notice of when we do not see God in our Mercies we shall not use them for God That Man will surely improve his Comforts ill that doth not see God in them Now that which comes from God leads the Heart to God again then the Creature is sanctified Therefore acknowledg God in these outward Things We should say of every Morsel of Bread this is God's Gift to me of every Nights Sleep this is the Lord's Goodness When God is acknowledged in these outward Things he takes it the more kindly and we are the better for it the Mercy is the sweeter and the more sanctified 3. They not only come from God but from the Lord 's free Grace and Mercy These are two distinct Notions by which God's Goodness is set out and they are both significant and expressive in the present Case Grace that doth all freely Mercy that pitieth the Miserable 1. Then we have them from Grace Grace is at liberty to give them to whom it will Well there is Grace in these outward Things for God gives them to whom he will to some not to others O when we consider the Distinction between us and others every one hath not such liberal Supplies nay many of those of whom the World is not worthy surely this is meerly the Lord's Goodness Prov. 22. 2. The Rich and the Poor meet together the Lord is the Maker of them all They had the same Maker that you had others which are destitute therefore why is it you have more than they It is meerly from Grace Why is one Vessel framed for an honourable Use and another for a baser Use So it pleased the Potter God as the great Master of the Scenes appointeth to every Man what part he shall act meerly out of his own Grace he is bound to none It was a good Speech of Tamberlain the great Conqueror of the East to Ba●azet What did God see in thee that art blind in one Eye and me that am lame of one Leg that he should make us passing by many others the Lords of so many opulent and mighty Kingdoms A savoury Speech from an Infidel What did God see in any of us to exalt cherish and supply us and let pass many others who for moral Excellencies and vertuous Endowments do far exceed us When we consider this Distinction then Even so Father because it pleased thee There is a kind of Election and Reprobation in these common Mercies that is God will dispense them to one and not to another he will be glorified in their Poverty and glorified in thy Wealth and therefore there 's Grace in it 2. There is Mercy in it that pitieth the miserable How doth it appear these good things come from Mercy because of our Want and because of our Forfeiture 1. Our Want and our Indigence O when we think what shiftless creatures we should have been if he had not provided for us Psal. 40. 17. I am poor and needy yet the Lord thinketh upon me If we were but sensible of our own Weakness and Emptiness and manifold Necessities we would admire that God should think of us such forlorn and wretched Creatures or that our Baseness and Poverty doth not make us contemptible to God Psal. 34. 6. This poor Man cried and the Lord heard him and saved
that was the intent of looking upon it that we might fix our Faith on Christ and come under the shelter of his Wing We beg upon a sense of our own unworthiness the Acceptance of Christ's Satisfaction for us 2. We pray for the Continuance of Pardon though we are already justified yet Forgive us our Sins As in daily Bread though we have it by us and God hath stored us with Blessings in our Houses yet we beg the continuance and use of it so what ever Right we have to pardoning Mercy yet we beg the continuance of it for two reasons Partly because Justification is not compleat until the day of Judgment but Mercy is still in fieri that is God is still a doing Acts 3. 19. That your Sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the Presence of the Lord. Then are our Sins blotted out then is this Priviledg compleat We read of Forgiveness in this World and Forgiveness in the World to come Matth. 12. 32. Forgiven in this World when accepted to Grace and Favour with God and forgiven in the World to come when this Priviledg is compleat and fully made up to the Elect. Some Effects of Sin remain till then as Death which came into the World by Sin remains upon the Body till then then our Sin is blotted out when all the Fruits of it are vanished and done away so that whilst any penal Evils that are introduced by Sin remain we ought to pray for Pardon that God would not repent of his Mercy Look as when we are in a state of Sanctification we pray for the continuance of Sanctification as well as the increase of it because of the Reliques of Sin though our perseverance in Grace and Sanctification be as much secured by God's Promise as our perseverance in God's Favour and the Gift of Justification So we pray for the continuance of Pardon because the Evils of Sin yet remain in part And partly because God for our Exercise will make us feel the smart of old Sins which are already pardoned As an old Bruise though it be healed yet ever and anon we may feel it upon change of Weather Accusations of Conscience may return for Sins already pardoned as Iob 13. 26. Thou makest me possess the Iniquities of my Youth Though a Man be reconciled to God and in favour with him yet the Sins of his Youth will trouble him after he hath obtained the Pardon of them God may make these return with a horrible and frightful appearance upon the Conscience their Visage may be terrible to look upon Tho these Sins are blotted out Satan may make the Remembrance of them very frightful and God in his holy wise Dispensation may permit it for our Humiliation Though this be no intrenching of the Pardon already past yet it may exceedingly terrify the Soul and over-cloud our Comfort and therefore we must beg the continuance of this Benefit Go to God as David did Psal. 25. 6 7. Remember O Lord thy tender Mercies and thy loving Kindness for they have been ever of old Remember not the Sins of my Youth nor my Transgressions He begs God's ancient Mercies would continue with him He acknowledged he had received Mercy of old he could run up to Eternity that had been for ever of old yet Lord remember not against me the Sins of my Youth When the sense of old Sins are renewed we must renew Petitions for the pardon of them It is usual with God when we are negligent to permit the Devil to make use of Affliction to revive old Sins that they may stare afresh in the view of the Eye of Conscience therefore we had need to beg the continuance of this Priviledg for it is not compleat Though the Pardon it self be not abrogated yet the Comfort of it may be much intrenched upon and old Sins may come and terrify the Soul with a very hideous Aspect 3. We beg here the Sense and Manifestation of Pardon though it be not the only thing we pray for Forgive us our Sins that is let us know it God may blot Sins out of his Book when he doth not blot them out of our Consciences There 's the Book of Conscience and the Book of God's Remembrance The Book of God's Remembrance may be cancell'd to speak after the manner of Men as soon as we believe and repent then the Hand-writing which was against us is torn but he blots it out of our Consciences when the Worm of Conscience is kill'd by the Application of the Blood of Christ through the Spirit when we are sprinkled from an evil Conscience as the Expression is Heb. 10. 22. And David is earnest with God for this Benefit the sense of his Pardon Psal. 51. 8 12. Make me to hear Ioy and Gladness that the Bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce and restore unto me the Ioy of thy Salvation Nathan had told him his Sins were pardoned yet he wanted the Joy of God's Salvation that ancient free Spirit that comforting inlarging Spirit he was wont to have God may forgive in Heaven when he doth not forgive in our sense and feeling therefore we beg the Manifestation of it by the Comforts of the Gospel 4. We beg the Increase of that Sense for this Sense is given out in a different Latitude Spiritual Sense is not in all alike quick and lively many have only a probable Certainty but have many Doubts Some have Comfort but never arrive to Peace Comfort you know is that thing which holds up it self against Encounters when we are confronted so there may be many doubts when the preponderating part of the Soul inclineth to Comfort Some have Peace for the present rest from Trouble of Conscience others have Ioy which is a degree above Peace and Comfort 5. We beg the Effects of Pardon or Freedom from those penal Evils which are continued upon God's Children and are the Fruits of Sin Clearly this is intended for we beg of God to pardon us as we pardon others that is fully intirely to forgive forget We beg of God to forgive us our Sins that is to mitigate those Troubles Evils and Afflictions which are the Fruits of Sin It is true when a Man is justified the State of his Person is altered yet Sin is the same in it self it deserves all manner of Evils therefore we beg not only a Release from Wrath to come but from those other temporal Evils that dog us at the Heels Sin is the same still though the Person is not the same It is still the Violation of a holy Law an Affront done to an holy God an Inconvenience upon the precious Soul it brings a Blot upon us an Inclination to sin again nay it brings eternal Death Though it do not bring eternal Death upon pardoned Persons yet it may occasion temporal Trouble God hath still reserved this Liberty in the Covenant That he will visit their Trangression with the Rod and their Iniquity
upon this Account He is known among his People not so much by acts of Power as acts of Grace and the greatness of his Mercy in pardoning Sins for Christ's sake 3. He is willing to dispence a Pardon Mi● 7. 18. He delighteth in Mercy God delighteth in himself and all his Attributes and the Manifestation of them in the World but above all in his Mercy Justice is his strange act Isa. 28. 21. There is not any thing more pleasing to him 'T is the Mercy of God that he hath drawn up a Petition for us he would never have taught us to have asked Mercy by Prayer if he had not been willing to shew us Mercy 4. God will do it for his own sake and not for any forreign Reasons Isa. 43. 25. I even I am he that blotteth out thy Transgressions for mine own sake and out of a respect to his own Honour See how God casts up his Accounts It is Mercy Jer. 3. 12. I am merciful saith the Lord and I will not keep Anger for ever So his Truth Psal. 106. 45. He remembred for them his Covenant and repented according to the Multitude of his Mercies Not from any desert of theirs who do so neglect him and wrong him God will do it upon his own Reasons 5. He will do it in such a way as Man doth not in a way of infinite Mercy Hos. 11. 9. I will not execute the fierceness of mine Anger for I am God and not Man 'T is the great Advantage of us Sinners that we have to do with God and not Man in our Miscarriages For Man's Pity and Mercy may be exhausted be it never so great What seven times a Day But God is Infinite Man may think it dishonourable to agree with an Inferior when he stoops not to him but God is so far above the Creature that we are below his Indignation Man is soon wearied but not God Isa. 55. 8 9. For my Thoughts are not your Thoughts neither are your Ways my Ways saith the Lord. For as the Heavens are higher than the Earth so are my Ways higher than your Ways and my Thoughts than your Thoughts I now come to the fourth and last Consideration IV. That Forgiveness of Sins is one great Benefit that we must ask of God in Prayer Here it will be needful to shew First The Necessity of treating with God about Forgiveness Secondly The Nature of this Benefit Thirdly The Terms how God dispenseth it First The Necessity will appear in these Propositions 1. Man hath a Conscience Rom. 2. 15. Thoughts accusing or excusing c. A Beast cannot reflect 2. A Conscience inferreth a Law 3. A Law inferreth a Sanction 4. A Sanction inferreth a Judgment 5. A Judgment a Condemnation to the fall'n Creature 6. There is no avoiding this Condemnation unless God set up a Chancery or another Court of Grace 7. If God set up another Court our Plea must be Grace Of this see more at large 20. Serm. 1 Serm. on Psal. 32. 1 2. Secondly The Nature of this Benefit or manner how God forgiveth 1. Freely 2. Fully 1. Freely and meerly upon the Impulsions of his own Grace Isa. 43. 25. I even I am he that forgiveth your Iniquities for my Name sake Nothing else could move him to it but his own Mercy and he could have chosen whether he would have done so yea or no For he spared not the Angels but offereth Pardon to Man and all Men are not actually pardoned And therefore the only reason why he sheweth us Mercy and not others is meerly his own Grace The Intervention of Christ's Merit doth not hinder the Freedom of it Tho dearly purchased by Christ yet freely bestowed on us For 't is said Rom. 3. 24. Iustified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Christ. Why partly because it was Mercy that he would not prosecute his Right against us Partly because he found out the way how to recompense the wrong done by Sin unto his Majesty and out of his Love sent his Son to make this Recompence for us Ioh. 3. 16. 'T was Love set all a-work And lastly not excited hereunto by any worth on our parts but the external moving cause was only our Misery and the internal moving cause his own Grace Nor is the Freedom of this Act infringed by requiring Faith and Repentance on our part because that only sheweth the way and order wherein this Grace is dispensed not the cause why 'T is not for the worth of our Repentance or as if there were any Merit in it A Malefactor that beggeth his Pardon on his Knees doth not deserve a Pardon only the Majesty of the Prince requireth that it should be submissively asked These are not Conditions of Merit but Order not the Cause but the way of Grace's working And these Conditions are wrought in us by Grace Acts 5. 31. not required only but given In all other Covenants the Party contracting is bound to perform what he promiseth by his own strength But in the Covenant of Grace God doth not only require that we should Believe and Repent but causeth it in us Conditions of the Covenant are Conditions in the Covenant God requireth Faith and Repentance and giveth Faith and Repentance compare Isa. 59. 20. with Rom. 11. 26. 'T is Christ's Gift as well as his Precept So that when we come about pardon of Sin we have only to do with Grace We beg Pardon and a Heart to receive it 'T is a Free Pardon 2. 'T is a Full Pardon 'T is Full in several respects 1. Because where the Party is forgiven he is accepted with God as if he had never sinned Psal. 103. 12. As far as the East is from the VVest so far hath he removed our Transgressions from us And Mich. 7. 19. Thou wilt cast all their Sins into the depth of the Sea Isa. 38. 17. Thou hast cast all my Sins behind thy Back It shall not be remembred nor laid to their charge any more 'T is true for a while after they may trouble the Conscience as when the Storm ceaseth the Waves rowl for a while afterwards So may Sin in the Consciences of God's Children work trouble after the fiducial Application of the Blood of Christ But the Storm ceaseth by degrees And 't is possible that the commitment of new Sins may revive old Guilt as a new Strain may make us sensible of an old Bruise Yet we must distinguish between the full Grant of a Pardon From the full sense of it when we are not Thankful Humble Fruitful former Sins may come into remembrance and God may permit it as matter of Humiliation to us and to quicken us to seek after new Confirmation of our Right and Interest Yet God's Pardon is never reversed nor will the Sin be charged again or put in suit against him to the final condemnation of the Person so pardoned Once more though the Sins of the Justified should be remembred at the Day
culpae but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 never but Evil of Fault And we need not anxiously dispute whether the one or the other for one cannot be understood without respect to the other Therefore I shall take it in a general sence That Evil which results from Temptations whether they arise from Satan the World or our own Hearts From the words thus opened the Points will be two First That while we are in this Valley of Tears and Snares we should with earnestness and confidence pray to be delivered from Evil. Secondly To be kept from the Evil of Sin is a greater Mercy than to be kept from the trouble of Temptation I observe the first Point because Christ thus directed us to pray to God The second Because the Evil of Sin is intended For the First We should pray with earnestness because of our Danger and with Confidence because of God's undertaking The Lord Jesus knows what Requests are most acceptable to his Father Now when he would give a perfect Pattern and Platform of Prayer he bids you pray thus Deliver us from Evil. Nay we have not only Christ's Direction but Christ's Example John 17. 15. I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the World but that thou shouldst keep them from the Evil. He did not absolutely pray for an exemption from Temptation though he knew the World would be a tempestuous Place that his People must expect strong Assaults Lord take them not out of the World but keep them from the Evil so here Deliver us from Evil. First We should pray with Earnestness because of our Danger from the Enemies of our Salvation which are the Devil the World and the Flesh In respect of all which we pray to be delivered from Evil. 1. From the Evil which the Devil designs against us Both bad and good Men have need to make this Prayer Bad Men have need Good Men will have a Heart certainly to pray thus to God if they consider their Danger 1. Natural and unconverted Men they are under the Power of the Devil if they were sensible of it for the Devils are said to be Rulers of the Darkness of this World Ephes. 6. 12. By which is meant the Wicked Ignorant and carnal part of the World whether they live in Gentilism or within the Pale and Line of Christ's Communion over all those that live in their unrenewed state of Sin and Ignorance over all these Satan hath an Empire and Dominion And mark when God carried on his Kingdom in in a way of sensible Manifestation by Visions Oracles and Miracles So did Satan visibly govern the Pagan World by Apparitions Oracles lying Wonders and sensible manifestations of himself But now when God's Kingdom is Spiritual The Kingdom of God is within you Luke 17. 21. So by proportion Satan's Kingdom is Spiritual too he rules in the Hearts of Men though they little think of it All natural Men whether they be Pagans or Christians though outwardly and apparently they may renounce the Devil's Kingdom and do not seem to have such open communion with him as the Gentiles that consult with his Oracl●s and were instructed by his Apparitions acted by his Power and offered Sacrifice to him But Spiritually all natural Men are under the Devil for 1 Io. 3. 8. He that committeth Sin is of the Devil that is he belongeth to him How is he of the Devil They are his Children Acts 13. 10. O thou Child of the Devil And they are his Subjects he ruleth in them he hath a Kingdom among Men which by all means he goeth about to maintain Mat. 12. 26. If Satan be divided against himself how then can his Kingdom stand And they are his Work-houses he worketh in them Ephes. 2. 2. The Spirit that worketh in the Children of Disobedience The Devil is hard at work in a wicked Man's Heart framing Evil Thoughts Carnal Motions urging them to break God's Laws drawing them on to more Sin and Villany fills their Hearts with lying and all manner of Sins Acts 5. 3. Why hath Satan filled thine Heart to lie to the Holy Ghost He binds them with Prejudices and will not suffer them to hearken to the Glorious Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. In whom the God of this World hath blinded the Minds of them which believe not lest the Light of the Glorious Gospel of Christ should shine unto them He blinds and holds them captive at his Will and Pleasure their Souls are fettered 2 Tim. 2. 26. And sometimes he oppresses their Bodies for Satan carrieth on his Kingdom by Force Tyranny Fears and Bondage and therefore it is said Acts 10. 38. That Christ went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil Yet further as God's Executioner he hath the Power over Death for their torment Heb. 2. 14. That through Death he might destroy him that had the power of Death that is the Devil And unless the Lord be merciful he never ceaseth carrying on wicked Men until both they and he are for ever in Hell Mat. 25. 41. Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting Fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels All this is spoken to shew Carnal Men their Condition O that they would seriously think of it When they do Evil when they slight the Motions of God's Grace they are under Satan and not only by force as a Child of God may be sometimes but they are willingly ignorant 2 Pet. 3. 5. The more willingly we commit Sin still the more we are under the Power of the Devil Well then if any have need to say Deliver us from Evil certainly unrenewed Carnal Men have need to go to God and say Lord pluck us out of Evil as the same Expression is used Col. 1. 13. Who hath delivered us from the power of Darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who hath delivered us with a strong hand O go to God in the Name of Christ there is no way of escape until God pluck you out by main force And mark this Power by which we are delivered God conveyeth by the preaching of the Word which was appointed to turn us from Darkness unto Light and from the Power of Satan unto God Act. 26. 18. and therefore hearken to God's Counsels before your Condition grow incurable and wait upon the Ordinances for the more you neglect and contemn the means of your Recovery your misery increaseth upon you for every day you are still more given up to Satan by the just Judgment of God and to be captivated and taken by him at his will and pleasure by the Snares he sets for you 2. Good Men or God's own Children though they are delivered from the Power of Satan and brought into the Kingdom of Christ yet they are not wholly free in this World but are sometimes caught by Satan's Wiles Ephes. 6. 11. sometimes wounded by his fiery Darts ver 16. Their Lusts and their Consciences are sometimes set a raging though he hath no allowed
Men Angels and Devils according to his Pleasure It is more absolute than any Superiority in the World and more universal as comprizing all Persons and Things God hath right to be King because he gave being to all things which no Earthly P●tentate can Therefore the Author must be owner All other Kings are liable to be called to account and reckoning by this great King for their Administration but God is Absolute and Supream Now this is a great incouragement to us that we go to a God that hath an absolute Right for which he is responsible to none We go not to a Servant or a subordinate Agent who may be controul'd by a higher Power and whose Act may be disanulled but to an absolute Lord to whom none can say What dost thou Job 9. 12. Here 's the Comfort of a Believer that he goes immediatly to the Fountain and Owner of all Things the Absolute Lord of all the World is his Father the soveraign and free disposing of all Things is in his Hand If we expect any thing from subordinate Instruments God's leave must first be asked or they can do nothing for us but he can do what he pleaseth 't is his own Mat. 20. 15. Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own None can call him to an account 2. His Relation to the Saints It is the Duty of a King to defend his Subjects and provide for their welfare So God being King will see that it be well with those that are under his Government It concerns you much to get an Interest to be under this King then to mention it in Prayer Psal. 44. 4. Thou art my King O God command deliverances for Jacob. If you want any thing for your selves or the Church put God in mind of his Relation to you Thou are my King Let not this Interest lie neglected or unpleaded All the Benefit which Subjects can expect from a potent King you may expect from God Again the word Command is notable and expresseth the Case to the full command Deliver ances All Things are at God's Command and Beck if he do but speak the word or give out Order to second Causes it is all done in a trice So Psal. 5. 2. Hearken unto the Voice of my Cry my King and my God for unto thee will I pray to thee and to none other Why should we go to Servants when we may go to the King himself So Psal. 74 12. For God is my King of old working Salvation in the midst of the Earth God will defend his Kingdom and right his injur'd Subjects Therefore if we would have any Blessing to be accomplished for our selves or for the Publick let us go to God Thine is the Kingdom And more especially if we would have any good thing to be done by those in Authority and subordinate Power over us do not so much treat with them as with God Let us beseech God to perswade and incline their Hearts for his is the Kingdom he can move them to do what shall be for the glory of his Name and the comfort and benefit of his afflicted People Let us go to God who is the sovereign King he can give you to live a quiet and peaceable Life in all Godliness and Honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. Or he can give you Favour dispose of their Hearts to do good to his People Nehem. 1. 11. Prosper I pray thee thy Servant this day and grant him Mercy in the sight of this Man For I was the King's Cup-bearer The soveraign disposal of all things is in the Hand of God 2. Thine is the Power This also is an Argument of Confidence that God hath not only ● Kingdom but Power to back it Titles without Power make Authority ridiculous and beget ●●orn n●t Reverence and Respect But now 〈◊〉 Kingdom is accompanied with Power and 〈…〉 He hath right to command all Kings no Creature can be too hard for him Earth●● 〈◊〉 when they have Authority and Power 〈◊〉 it is limited 2 Kings 6. 27. When the Wo●an came to the King of Israel Help my Lord O ●ing A●d he said If the Lord do not help 〈…〉 shall I help thee ●ut God's is an ●nlimited Power An absolute Right and an ●nlimited Power they meet fitly in God there●ore this is an encouragement to go to him Christians that Power of God which educed all things out of nothing which established the Heavens which fixed the Earth that Power of God it 's the ground of our Confidence Psal. 121. 2. My help cometh f●om the Lord which made Heaven and Earth This Power should we depend upon We can ask nothing but what God is able to give yea above our asking Eph. 3. 20. Now unto him that is able ●o do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think Our Thoughts are vast and our Desires very craving and yet beyond all that we can ask or think According to the mighty Power that ●ork●th in us We cannot empty the Ocean with a Nutshel nor comprehend the Infinite God and raise our Thoughts to the vast extent of his Power only we must go to some instances o● God's Power that Power which made the World out of nothing and that Power which wrought in you where there is such infinite Resistance We may go to God and say Mat. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean You need not trouble your selves about his Will he is so Good and Gracious prone and ready to do good so inclineable he is your heavenly Father But that which is most q●estioned is the Sufficiency of God can you believe his Power Now determine but that Lord thou canst and that 's a great relief to the Soul Our Wants are not so many but God is able to supply them our Enemies and Corruptions not so strong but God is able to subdue them surely your heavenly Father will do what is in the Power of his Hand A Beggar when he seeth an ordinary Man coming lets him pass without much Importunity but when he seeth a Man well habited well attended and with rich Accoutrements he runs close to him and will not let him alone but follows him with his Clamor knows it is in his power to help him So this should encourage us to go to the mighty God which made Heaven and Earth and all things out of nothing The third Argument which Christ propounds Thine is the Glory The Honour and Glory of all will redound to God as the Comfort accrueth to us it is for God's Honour to shew forth his P●wer in our Relief and to be as good as his Word Now this is a ground of Con●idence That he hath joyned his Glory and our Good tog●ther And that God's Praise waiteth while our d●liverance waiteth Psal. 65. 1. Praise waiteth for thee O God in Zion You think your Comfort stays and all this while God's Honour waits So Psal. 112. 1. Praise ye the Lord Blessed is
but the Preface and the Conclusion and then you have a full Description of God Look upon him as an Eternal Being whose is the Kingdom absolute Right to dispose of all things in the World backed with All sufficiency and Strength And look upon him as your Father that is in Heaven for Our Father which art in Heaven relates to Christ that is in the heavenly Sanctuary appearing before God for us This will help you in your Conceptions of God that you may not be puzled nor intangled in Prayer 3. It directs us as to the Manner of praying with Reverence with Self-abhorrency and with Submission 1. With Reverence for he is a great powerful and glorious King Thine is the Kingdom Power and Glory O shall we serve God then in a slight and careless Fashion Mal. 1. 8. If ye offer the Blind the Lame and Sick for Sacrifice is it not evil Offer it now unto thy Governour will he be pleased with thee or accept thy Person saith the Lord of Hosts Go to an Earthly King would you come to him with rude Addresses not thinking what to say tumbling out Words without Sence and Understanding And compare this with Vers. 14. saith God when they brought him a sickly Offering I am a great King implying it is a lessening of his Majesty You do as it were dethrone God you put him besides his Kingdom you do not treat him as he doth deserve if you do not come into his presence with a holy Trembling 2. With Self-abhorrency and a Sense of your own Nothingness I observe this because all the Arguments in Prayer are not taken from us but from what is in God from his Attributes Thine is the Kingdom Power and Glory It is a blessed thing to have God's Attributes on our side to take an Argument from God when we can take none from our selves Christ teacheth us to come with Self-denial The two first Words Kingdom and Power shew that all things come from God as the first Cause and the last Word Thine is the Glory shews all must be referred to God as the last End So that Self must be cast out So that all the Reasons of Audience and Acceptance are without us not from within us Dan. 9. 8 9. To us belongeth Confusion of Face to the Lord our God belong Mercies and Forgivenesses Therefore thus it directs us to place all our Confidence in God's fatherly Affection in his Power Goodness and Glory and in his absolute Authority nothing to move God from our selves 3. To come with Submission Thine is the Kingdom that is he hath an absolute Power to dispose of all Blessings therefore it is lawful for him to do with his own as he pleaseth We must come not murmuring or prescribing to God but expecting the fulfilling of our desires as it shall seem good to the Lord according to his Wisdom and Power by which he exercises his Kingdom over all Things as may be for the Glory of his Name Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give Glory for thy Mercy and for thy Truths sake Not to satisfy our Revenge not to gratify our private Interest and Passions but Lord for thy Name-sake as may be for manifesting thy Mercy and Truth so do it Not too passionate for our own Ends but confident that God who hath the Kingdom and Government of the World in his own hands will administer and carry on all Things for his own Glory 4. It directs us again what are the Duties of the Persons praying 1. Freely to resign up our selves to God's Service Otherwise we mock God when we acknowledge his Dominion over all the World and we our selves will not be made subject to God Therefore certainly a Man that useth this Prayer Thine is the Kingdom Power and Glory will also say I am thine save me Psal. 119. 94. Let us freely resign up our selves for him to reign over us Can you say with any face to God Thine is the Kingdom yet cherish rebellious Lusts in your own Hearts It 's the most unsuitable thing that can be Thine is the Power He is able to bear you out in his Work however the World rage And therefore we should not think scorn of his Service for his is the Glory The Service of such a King will put honour upon you 2. Another Duty of him that is to pray is to depend upon God's All-sufficiency Shall we speak thus of God and say Lord Thine is the Power and yet not rely upon him He that cannot rely upon him for this Life and the other doth but reproach God when he saith Thine is the Power Thine is the Power yet I will not trust thee but fly to base Shifts as if the Creature had Power and Man had Power as if they could better provide for us then God Therefore we are to live upon him and cast our selves into the Arms of his All-sufficiency 3. Another Duty of them that would pray this Prayer is sincerely to aim at and seek the Lord's Glory in all things Why for the Glory is thine Wilt thou say Thine is the Glory and yet give and take the Glory which is due to God to thy sel● All is due to him from whom we have received all things But he that prides himself in Gifts and Graces cannot be in good earnest Wilt thou rob God of the Honour and wear it thy self Did ●en believe all Glory belongs to God they would not take Vain-glory to themselves Hero● was eloquent and the People cried out The Voice of a God and not of a Man He did but receive this Applause and usurped the Glory due to God and God blasted him Therefore when we pride our selves in our Sufficiencies and abuse our Comforts to our own Lusts we cannot with a good Conscience say Thine is the Glory For●●ver Amen ALL this is seal'd up to us in the last Word Amen Which may signify either so be it so let it be or so it shall be The Word Amen sometimes is taken Nominally Rev. 3. 14. Thus saith the Amen the faithful and true Witness the beginning of the Creation of God Sometimes it is taken Adverbially and so it signifieth Verily and Truly and so either it may express a great Asseveration or an affectionate Desire Sometimes it expresseth a great and vehement Ass●veration John 6. 47. Amen Amen Verily Verily I say unto you In other places it is put for an affectionate Desire Ier. 28. 6. When the false Prophets prophesied Peace and Ieremiah pronounced War Amen! the Lord do so the Lord perform thy Words which thou hast prophesied Amen 't is not an Asseveration as confirming the Truth of their Prophecy but expressing his own hearty wish and desire if God saw it good Two things are required in Prayer a fervent Desire and Faith A fervent Desire therefore it is said James 5. 16. The effectual fervent Prayer of a righteous Man availeth much And then Faith James 1.
6. But let him ask in Faith nothing wavering What 's that Faith required in Prayer A Persuasion that those things we ask regularly according to God's Will that God will grant them for Christ's Sake Now both these Amen signifies our hearty desire that it may be so and our Faith that is our Acqu●●●scency in the Mercy and Power and Wisdom of God concerning the Event Christ would have us bind up this Prayer and conclude it thus Amen so let it be so it shall be Observe hence That it is good to conclude holy Exercises with some Vigour and Warmth Natural Motion is swifter in the end and close So should our spiritual Affections as we draw to a conclusion put forth the Efficacy of Faith and holy Desires and recollect as it were all the foregoing Affections that we may go out of the Presence of God with a sweet Savour and Relish and a renewed Confidence in his Mercy and Power Again This Amen relateth to all the foregoing Petitions not to one only Many when they hear Lord Give us this day our daily Bread will say Amen but when they come to the Petition Thy Will ●e done on Earth as it is in Heaven they are cold there and have not hearty Desires and earnest Affections Many beg pardon of Sin but to be kept from Evil to bridle and restrain their Souls from Sin they do not say Amen to that Many would have Defence Maintenance and Vi●tory over their Enemies but not with respect to God's Glory They forget that Petition Hallowed be thy Name but this should be subordinated to his Glory Nay we must say Amen to all the Clauses of this Prayer Many say Lord Forgive us our Debts but do not like that as we forgive our Debtors they are loth to forgive their Enemies but carry a rancorous Mind to them which have done them wrong But now we must say Amen to all that is specified in this Prayer Then Mark This Amen it is put in the close of the Doxology Observe hence There must be a hearty Amen to our Praises as well as our Prayers that we may shew zeal for God's Glory as well as Affection to our Profit Your Allelujahs should sound as loud as your Supplications and not only say Amen when you come with Prayers and Requests things you stand in need of but Amen when you are praising of God FINIS ERRATA PAge 19. line 14. after Lord read as our selves P. 18 l. 34. for like r unlike p. 42. l. 11. f. misprision r. misapprehension p. 47. l. ult r. a gr●at p 49. l. 28. r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 57. l. 13. r. to God p. 58. l. 4 5. r. that may hence either formally or by just Conseque●ce be taxed p. 64. l. 34. r. worship p. 65. l. 15. f. and r. he p. ●0 l. 30. dele thought l. 32. ast and add you p. 71. l 8. after and add is l. 17. r. spiritual Weaknesses are c. l ult r. without Fire p. 73. l. 4. f. digested r. indighted p. 76. l. 31. ● now r. and not only as p. 80. l. 6. r Heb. ●2 9. p. 81. l. 17. dele Christ saith p. 87. l. 10. r. 2 Cor. 6. 18. l. 18. r. in all comparisons p. 88. l. 22. r. Gal. 4. 6. p. 89 l. 37. r. Mal. 3. 17. p. 97. l. 9. dele when f. can r. may p. 93. l. 3. f. take r. think p. 105. l. 30. f. Look a● the Right was r. Or as any Israelite had l. 31. f. so we r. h● p. 110. l. 20. r. Mar. 13. 25. p. 112. l. 27. aft expansin dele of f. those r. the. p. 125. l. 18. r. which are a solid Body l. 19. r. as fluid p. 129. l. 10. f. warm r. warn p. 136. l. 20. aft serve dele the turn of l. 25. f. him r. i● l. 25. aft of r. it p. 141. l. 27. f. of r. or p. 164. l. 12. r. Psal. 147. p. 177. l. 34. r. 1 Sam. 6. 20. p. 200. l 6 7. r Th● they worship not by Pagan Rites p 202. l. 16. dele and. p. 206. l. 9. r. First The King of Glory himself and for than r. then l. 14 r. but where his Will is obeyed and his Laws observed p. 211. l. 33. f. Covenant r. Law p. 218. l. 21. r. Isa 34. 2. p. 220. l. 6. aft Soul add longeth p. 239. l. 10. r. a day of Veng●ance p. 240. l. 3. aft God add requireth p. 253. l. 25. r. few good Examples p. 254. l. 14. r. Prov. 16. 2. p. 255. l. 10. ● what r. which p. 280. l. 12. f. remove r. offer l. 16. aft give r. the Habits of Grace p. 283. l. ● f. Motions r. Notions p. 284. l. 15. f. to r. as l. 18. r. find him to be one p. 317. l. 20. dele not l. 21. r. it will not p. 354. l. 6. f. ou● r. their p. 359. l. 16. f. Inheritance r. Inherency p. 369. l. 23. f. of r. the. p. 408. l. 16. aft Hoasts r. if p 444. l. 23. f. by r. off p. 465. l. 33. r. a colour of Grac●
Prayer not a drousy Devotion not only that we hear but take heed how we hear not only that we serve him but serve him instantly not only run but so run The great thing that is put into the Ballance of the Sanctuary when God comes to weigh the Actions of Men what doth he consider He weighs the Spirits Prov. 16. 2. All the Ways of Man are right in his own Eyes but the Lord weigheth the Spirits That is he considers vvith vvhat frame of Heart and in vvhat manner vve go about any thing vve do for him And therefore this is the main thing vve should look after in what manner we serve him even as the Angels do in Heaven not in an ordinary but perfect manner But wherein doth the Resemblance hold How should we be as the Angels 1. In conformity to the Angels we must serve God readily The Angels are represented as with Wings Isa. 6. 2. And the Angel Gabriel is said to flie swiftly upon God's Message They are hearkning for God's Word and go on God's Errand So we should be ready and speedy in our Obedience Psal. 119. 60. I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments It is not enough to keep God's Commandments but vve must make haste that is before the strength of the present Impulsion be lost and those Fervors which are upon us be cool'd 2. Willingly and chearfully and without murmuring Angels are ready at God's beck they are ministring Spirits even to the meanest Saints God hath sent them abroad for the Heirs of Salvation they are as Guardians to them to look after them in all their Ways The Devils what Christ bids them do do it murmuringly the unclean Spirit would not come out without rending and tearing Mark 9. Christ's presence was a Burthen to them Mat. 8. When we do things with reluctancy murmuringly we are more like the Devil than the Angels When the Devils obey his Word they are forced to it by the absolute Power of Christ yet they do it not with Willingness and Freeness as the good Angels do But we are to do it freely I delight to do thy Will O my God Psal. 40. 8. And Iohn 4. 34. It is my Meat and Drink to do the Will of him that sent me That was the Dish Christ loved 3. Constantly and unweariedly Thus do the Angels in Heaven The Devils they abode not in the Truth but Angels they do it without weariness they rest not Day nor Night but are still lauding praising and serving God and are never weary God in Communion is ever new and fresh to them the Face of their heavenly Father is as lovely as at first moment no Weariness or Satiety creeps upon those good Spirits Thus should we do it without Weariness and then we shall reap if we faint not 4. Faithfully not picking and chusing They hearken to the Voice of his Word whatever it be be it to ascend or descend So we if it be to go backward for God tho it be against the Bent of our Hearts David is said to be a Man after God's Heart because he did all God's Will Acts 13. 22. All which should be a Patern for us and we should strive to come up to it Give us this day our daily Bread WE are now come to the second sort of Petitions that concern our selves as the former did more immediately concern God Now you may observe the Stile in the Prayer is altered It was before Thy Name Thy Kingdom Thy Will now it is Give us and forgive us c. Before our Lord had taught us to speak in a third Person Thy Will be done and now in a second Person Give us this day Which is not so to be understood as if we were not at all concern'd in the former part of the Lord's Prayer In those Petitions the Benefit is not God's but ours When his Name is sanctified his Kingdom cometh and his Will is done these Things do not only concern the Glory of God but also our Benefit It is our Advantage when God is honoured by the Coming of Christ's Kingdom and the Subjection of our Hearts unto himself But these latter Petitions do more immediatly concern us Now among these in the first place we pray for the necessary Provisions of the present Life Some make a scruple why such a Prayer should be put in the first place Surely not to shew the Value of these Things above Pardon and Grace but this is the last of the Supplications The Lord's Prayer may be divided into Supplications and Deprecations Among the Supplications there we pray'd first for the Glory of God next for the Kingdom of God next for our Subjection to that Kingdom and in the last place we pray for daily Bread or Sustentation of the present Life But the other two are Deprecations and that either of Evil already committed and so we pray for Pardon of Sin Forgive us our Trespasses Or Deprecation of Evil that is likely to be admitted and so we pray against Temptation Lead us not into Temptation So that this Request is put into a fit Order First we seek God's Glory as the End his Kingdom as the primary Means our Subjection to that Kingdom as the next Means and last of all our comfortable Subsistence in the World as a remote subservient Help that we may be in a capacity to serve and glorify God In this Petition there is I. The Thing asked and that is Bread by which is meant all Things necessary for the maintenance of this Life Now this is set forth 1. By a Note of Propriety Our Bread 2. By an Adjunct of Time Daily Brea● II. The Manner of asking Give we ask it as a Gift of God III. The Persons for whom we ask Give us as many as are supposed to be in a Family together Those that can call God Father by the Spirit they may come with most confidence to God about daily Supplies IV. The renewing of our Request 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This day There is very much in that we ask but from Morning till Night Give us this day our daily Bread Before I come to explain these Circumstances let me observe in general Doct. I. That it is the Lord which doth bestow upon us freely and graciously the good Things of this Life It is Bread we ask and we ask it of God and to God we say Give All which Circumstances do fully make out the Point This Point again must be made good by parts 1. That God giveth it 2. That he freely and graciously giveth it First I shall shew you how God is interested in the common Mercies we do enjoy and how every one high or low rich or poor full or in a mean Condition of what rank soever they be even those that have the greatest Store and Plenty of worldly Accommodations they must come from Morning to Morning and deal with God for daily Bread Those common Mercies which we do enjoy 1.
God gives us the Possession of them for he is the absolute Lord of all Things both in Heaven and in Earth and whatsoever is possessed by any Creature it is by his Indulgence for the primitive and original Right was in him Psal. 24. 1. The Earth is the Lord's and the Fulness thereof the World and they that dwell therein It is all God's we hold it in Fee from him for he is the great Landlord who hath leased out all these Blessings to the Sons of Men. The Earth is first the Lord's and then by a Grant he hath given it to Men to enjoy Psal. 115. 16. The Heaven even the Heavens are the Lord's but the Earth hath he given to the Children of Men. He hath given it to Men partly by a general Grant and Leave given to enjoy and occupy it as the Place of our Service But that is not all he doth not only give the Earth in general to Men but he makes a particular Allotment the particular Designation of every Man's Portion of what he shall enjoy in tho World it is of God And so it is said Act● 17. 26. He hath determined the Bounds of their Habitation God hath not only appointed in general the Earth to be the Place of our Service for a while but he hath determined how much every one shall possess what shall fall to his Share These Things come not by Chance or by the Gift of others or by our own Industry but by the peculiar Designation of God's Providence However they come to us God must be owned in the Possession whether they come to us by Donation Purchase Labour or by Inheritance yet they are originally by God who by these means bestoweth them upon us If they come by Donation or the Gift of others the Hearts of Men are in God's hands and he it was that disposed them to be bountiful to us that appoi●ted them to be Instruments of his Providence to nourish us He that sends a Present he is the Giver not the Servant which brings it So though others be imployed as Instruments it is the Lord which made them able and willing to do us good If they come to us by Inheritance it is the Providence of God that a Man is born of rich Friends and not of Beggars Prov. 22. 2. The rich and poor meet together the Lord is the Maker of them all He that hath cast the World first into Hills and Valleys it was he that disposed of Men some into a high and some into a low Condition If they come to us by our own Labour and Purchase still God gave it to us Deut. 8. 14 18. Take heed that thine Heart be not lifted up and thou forget the Lord thy God for it is he that giveth thee Power to get Wealth He doth not leave second Causes to their own Power and Force as if he were only an idle Spectator in the World No he gives the Skill and Industry to manage Affairs and success upon lawful Undertakings the Faculty and the use it is all from God Tho a Man hath never so many outward Advantages yet unless the Lord concur with his Blessing all would be to no purpose 2. As God gives us the Possession so he gives us a Right and Title to them There is a two-fold Right to these common Blessings a Provid●ntial and a Covenant-Right Dominium Politicum fundatur in Providentia our Civil Right to things is sounded upon God's Providence But Dominium Evangelicum fundatur in Gratia our Gospel-Right to things is founded upon God's Grace 1. He gives the Providential Right and thus all wicked Men possess outward things and the Plenty they enjoy is as the Fruits and Gifts of God's common Bounty it is their Portion he hath given it to them Psal. 17. 14. Which have their Portion in this Life whatever falleth to their share in a fair way and in the course of God's Providence they are not Usurpers meerly for possessing but for abusing what they have They have not only a Civil Right by the Laws of Men to prevent the Incroachment of others but a Providential Right before God and are not simply responsible for Possession but for their ill Use and Administration 2. There 's a Covenant-Right to these Blessings so only Believers have a Right to Creature-Comforts by God's special Love and so That a little that a righteous Man hath is better than the Treasures of many wicked Psal. 37. 16. as the mean Fare of a poor Subject is better then the large Allowance of a condemned Traitor Every wicked Man is a Traitor to God and hath only an Allowance until he be destroyed But that little which a Man hath seasoned with God's Love is better than all the mighty Increase of wicked Men. Now this Covenant Right we have by Christ who is Heir of all things Heb. 1. 2. Christ hath the Original-Right to them and we by him come to have a Covenant-Right So it is said 1 Cor. 3. 23. Things present and things to come all are yours As things to come the Day of Judgment is theirs so things present is theirs by a new Title from him So it is said 1 Tim. 4. 5. Marriage Meats and Drinks and all Creatures are made for them that believe They that believe have only a Gospel-Right to them To draw it to the present thing we do not only beg a Possession of these things but a Right not only a Providential but a Covenant-Right that we may enjoy them as the Gifts of God's fatherly Love and Compassion to us that we may take our Bread out of Christ's Hands that we may look upon it as swimming to us in his Blood and all our Mercies as wrapt up in his Bowels and then they will be sweet and relish much better with a gracious Soul because he cannot only taste the Creature but the Love of God in the Creature 3. He gives the Continuance of our Blessings that we may keep what we have for unless the Lord do daily support us we cannot keep our Comforts for one day How soon can God blast them It 's at his pleasure to do what he will with you He gave Satan Power over Iob ●s Estate Chap. 1. 12. Behold all that he hath is in thy Power Our Life it is continued to us by the Indulgence of God and by his providential Influence and Supportation For as the Beams of the Sun are no longer continued in the Air than the Sun shineth or as the Wa●er retains the Impress and Stamp no longer than the Seal is kept on it so when God takes off his providential Influence all vanisheth into nothing Thus he is said Heb. 1. 3. To uphold all things by the Word of his Power As a weighty thing is upheld in the Hand of a Man when he looseneth his Hand all falls to the Ground So it is said Iob 12. 10. In whose Hand is the Soul of every living Thing and the Breath of all