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A43573 Closet-prayer a Christian duty, or, A treatise upon Mat. VI, VI. tending to prove that worship of God in secret is the indispensible duty of all Christians ... together with a severe rebuke of Christians for their neglect of, or negligence in, the duty of closet-prayer, and many directions for the managing thereof ... / by O. Heywood. Heywood, Oliver, 1629-1702. 1671 (1671) Wing H1762; ESTC R24371 90,506 148

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inform my mind conquer my will order my affections sweetly to comply with thy mind teach me to do thy will in obedience make me content with thy will concerning me in every providence beget in me those heavenly dispositions that are in the glorious Angels and glorified Saints that with humility chearfulnesse diligence and faithfulnesse zeal sincerity and constancy I may be actively and passively at thy dispose 4. For that Petition Give us this day our daily bread Say in this manner Heavenly Father I must confess that by my wretched apostacie in Adam I have lost my right to every morsel of bread and deserve not to breath in thy air or tread on thy earth my sin hath put a curse and sting into every comfort I can obtain nothing by my industrie yet am prone to desire get and use thy mercies unlawfully thy blessing is only the staff of my bread help me to wait on thy providence in a moderate use of lawful means give me a competencie of outward comforts thy blessing in the use thereof and contentment therewith and above all a right thereto in Christ and prevent needlesse cares and sensual delights 5. As to that petition Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters Thus plead it Lord I am wofully guilty of original and actual sin and am thereby a debter to divine justice I owe millions and cannot pay the least farthing therefore deserve to be cast into the dark dungeon of eternal torments but dear Lord thou hast found a ransome who stands in man's stead to be surety for him O accept me in thy beloved Son Jesus Christ wash away my sins in his blood cloath my naked soul with his glorious robes give me saving faith to embrace him upon his own terms free my soul from guilt and punishment of sin pardon my daily failings and seal an acquittance in my conscience which tells me I do freely forgive all offences against my self 6. The last petition And lead us not into temptation but deliver from evil you may render thus Lord it were righteous with thee to leave me to be assaulted and conquered by Satan my souls cruel enemie my heart is growing wanton proud and careless apt to thrust my self into temptations but unable to resist or overcome them thou maist justly bring me into occasions and leave me to my self therein but oh my God keep my soul from being tempted or assist me in the hour of temptation or recover me out of my foils and falls sanctifie my slips make my standing surer in thy strength tread Satan under my feet conquer the world for me crucifie me unto the world subdue my flesh within and in due time take my soul above all sins and snares into thine immediate presence And then shut up all with such like words as these on that conclusion For thine is the Kingdom the Power and the Glory for ever Amen Oh my God I am unworthy thou shouldst grant my petitions for any thing in my self all my arguments in Prayer and grounds of acceptance I fetch from thy self Thou hast a Kingdom of Grace and Throne of Grace from whence thou hearest prayers and dispensest blessings all the Power is in thine hands to give and forgive to kill or make alive and the Glory shall be thine if thou hear my Prayer and blessed be my God for all my mercies I ascribe to thee and thee alone eternal soveraigntie omnipotencie and glorious excellencie which as I desire all may be given to God so I am humbly emboldened by Faith to rest upon thy power and promise that in due time thou wilt hear my requests And as a token of that my desire and confidence my soul doth eccho forth Amen Even so be it Thus I have given you an hint from the Lords-Prayer of directions for the matter of our prayers I shall but propound another Scripture-Instance concerning Arguments in Prayer Sect. II. An example from Jacob of pleading with God GOD would have his people converse with him in a r●tional way and Gods children have made use of many pleas in Prayer which they have produced in vehement Expostulations as we may find sprinkled up and down in Scripture as Moses Nehemiah Ezra and Daniel in their approaches to God and above all David through the book of Psalms is exceeding full this way But I shall pass by the rest and fix only upon one Scripture-instance and the rather because it was a secret or solitary prayer of which we are now speaking and there are notable Pleas therein which may possibly suit our condition therefore I shall briefly touch the parts of it and recommend it to our imitation It is that of good Jacob who was trained up in this holy Art of wrestling with God in Gen. 32.9 10 11 12. His plea's there may be reduced to these ten Heads 1. He makes use of suitable Titles of God he calls him Lord or Jehovah which denotes Gods self-existence and giving Being or existence to the promises in first making them and then making them good Thus do you Sirs raise in your hearts suitable apprehensions of God and let your expressions be answerable tell God he is an infinite omniscient omnipotent Majesty able to do beyond what you can ask or think and that you neither need nor desire any more than what his almighty power can effect tell him if All-sufficiency cannot supply you you are content to go unsped but you question neither his hand nor heart you are sure he both can and will help his Children in their need he will make good with his hand what he hath spoken with his mouth for he is Jehovah 2. He pleads Covenant-relation to God O God of my Father Abraham and God of my Father Isaac and so my God! this is an admirable plea if God own a soul in a Covenant-relation he will certainly do it good though his grace be free yet when God hath chosen a soul to be his he hath as it were ingaged himself to own it now he hath laid his truth to pledge Thus then a soul may plead Lord thou hast been my Fathers God and wilt thou not be my God And wilt thou be my God and with-hold such a mercy from me My Ancestors found grace in thy sight and obtained those very good things I am craving and am not I under the very same Covenant with them Are not promises the same Is there not the same Mediator Lord I come to thee in a Covenant-relation for a Covenant-mercy and wilt thou deny me 3. He pleads a warrant for his undertaking appealing to God that he was in his way saying The Lord which saidst unto me Return unto thy Country Oh with what incouragement may the soul plead for assistance and protection that is in Gods way and work according to his own appointment Thus then plead Lord hast not thou set me about this work Hast thou not given me a charge to do what I do Have I not a plain
the word is necessary and so is this nor must the one justle out the other yea these secret duties help us to profit by publick Ordinances If dung be poured down on heaps in the field it doth no good it must be spread abroad before it make fruitful ground The plaister heals not except it be applyed so the Word must be spread on our hearts by serious and secret Meditation and Application or else it will never make our souls healthful and fruitful and then we must pray over it for the showers of divine grace to wash it and work it into our hearts Many Sermons are lost for want of souls taking them home to their Closets and turning them to Prayer I fear all will be little enough that Ministers can preach or write upon this theam I doubt still this work will be either totally neglected or negligently performed it s an hard work the spirit must travel in it and saith good Mr. Bains the Saints can indure better to hear an hour than to pray a quarter yea our trifling hearts will make any excuse to shift from this duty or shuffle it off nay though it be in exchange for another a sign the work is of God and tending much to the souls good or else Satan and our corrupt hearts would never so much hinder or oppose it P●or Soul it may be thou lookest abroad and seest much wickedness committed holiness persecuted thy God dishonoured many things out of order thou wantest a capacity to bring a remedy I must therefore say to thee as it 's reported Albertus Crantzius said to ●…her when he began to oppose the Pope Frater vade in cellam die Miserere mei Deus Brother go into thy cell and say God be merciful unto me so say I. Alas thy interest and influence reacheth but a little way to mend a wicked world though thou must seek to perform as far as thy place and calling extends but go thy way to thy God in thy Closet bewail thy sins and the sins of others plead with God for thine own soul Busie thy self about thyself set all straight at home take heed of that which the poor Church complains of Cant. 1.6 They made me the keeper of the vinyards but mine own vinyard have I not kept Oh leave other things undone rather than this great matter that concerns the affairs of thine own soul Mr. Fox tells us of one Peter Moyce a German Martyr being called before the Synod at Dornick Acts mon. 2. vol. lib. 8. fol. 1●2 they began to examine him in certain Articles of Religion to whom as he was about to answer boldly and expresly to every point they interrupting him bad him say in two words Yea or Nay Then said he If you will not suffer me to answer for my self in things of such importance send me to my Prison again among my Toads and Frogs which will not interrupt me while I talk with my Lord my God Oh Christian the time may come or is already when men may stop thy mouth and will not suffer thee to witness a good confession withdraw thy self from men and retire unto thy God who will make thee freely welcom to pour out thy soul to him in secret He 'l neither stop thy mouth nor stop his car he bids thee Open thy mouth wide Psal 81.10 And he tells thee His ear is open to thy cry Psal 34.15 That cast not ask such great things as he can and will give Only see thou beest a Child of God Naturalists tell of a precious Stone of an excellent vertue yet loseth all its efficacy when 't is put into a dead mans mouth so Prayer in the lips of a Saint or a righteous man availeth much but the Prayer of the wicked is not only ineffectual but abominable to God See to your states and then see that you pray aright for manner matter end many ask and receive not because they ask amiss Above all Soul in thy secret addresses to God take heed of a trifling spirit thou'lt find most ado with thy self herein our wanton spirits are loath to be pent up in the narrow room of a spiritual performance we love to take our liberty in ranging abroad to a thousand objects but Christian as thou lovest thy peace thy Soul thy God look to thy spirit in secret Prayer Do not trifle away thy time upon thy knees let not thy words freeze as they come from thee let no discouragements beat thee off the Woman of Canaan as one saith takes the Bullets that Christ shot at her and with an humble boldness of faith sends them back again in Prayer which indeed reach'd his heart and prevailed with God for mercy But I shall inlarge no more at present but refer thee to this small Treatise wherewith I have according to my poor talent laid before thee this great duty What effect it shall have I know not my God knows in whose hands the blessing of our endeavours lyes Get alone and pray over this Book and for the unworthy sinful Author as he desires to do for thee into whose hand this may come let our Prayers daily meet at the throne of Grace till our souls meet before the throne of God if thou receivest any good by this or any other work this poor worm hath handed to thee ascribe nothing to the instrument but all to the agent and efficient our good God from whom comes every good and perfect gift disdains not the work for the plainness of the stile it was purposely put in this dress for the vulgars benefit and if it or my self be exposed to censure for that 't is welcom I write not to please learned Scholars but to profit plain Christians whose spiritual good I prefer above any credit to my self I am sure there is none due there being few of my brethren but they transcend me in parts and learning But by the grace of God I am what I am 1 Cor. 15.10 Nor is that grace altogether in vain for as it hath helped me in labours so he hath in some measure blessed my labours though I be nothing the least of Saints not meet to be called a Minister Did those that read my labours know me they would be ready to despise my undertakings this I speak because my former book hath found such good acceptance and this is so much desired And that no man think of me above what he knoweth to be in me my heart hath been near fainting through discouragements from my great weakness had I not been supported many a time with that word in 2 Cor. 4.7 But we have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the Power may be of God and not of Man Whence I gather that God can make use of weak unlearned sinful instruments to do great works and he can use persons of mean abilities to accomplish his glorious ends in converting souls as well as the profoundest Clerks or wisest men on