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

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prayer and supplication may be for a season totally withdrawn but though the Saints be seldom laid so low yet there may be a partial departure accompanied with many sad effects which may easily be discerned if we reflect upon the several fruits of the Spirit mentioned Part. 1. Chap. 9. and those infirmities which he helpeth and removeth if then 1. thou dost not so prepare thy heart to seek the Lord if 2. thy ends be not so pure and spieitual if 3. thou art unwillingly drawn as it were to the throne rather by the enforcement of conscience then out of love to the duty if 4. thou pray not so frequently nor 5. so fervently and feelingly nor 6. so confidently nor 7. with such complacency and delight if 8. thy communion with God in that ordinance hath not such influence upon thy heart to warm and quicken it and to engage it for the Lord and against sin as sometimes it hath had c. it is an argument that the Spirit hath in part withdrawn It s true the most watchfull and zealous Saints do not alwaies and without interruption enjoy the comforting quickning presence of the Spirit the wind doth not constantly blow after one the same maner upon the most fruitful garden therefore we must not measure our state by some present indisposition unless there be some notable considerable and abiding decay and abatement of our spiritual life but when that is observed we have reason to mourn and to lay to heart our loss and the greater and more eminent and longer continued we should be the more affected and sensible of this evil what a misery and sad judgment was it to Sampson and Saul to have but the common gifts and operations of the Spirit removed from them for as we may suppose Saul never to have had So Sampson never to have been totally deprived of the saving and sanctifying presence of the Spirit we may read their lamentation Jud. 16.28 30. 1 Sam. 28.15 And what is the chiefest measure of gifts and common priviledges and excellencies in respect of the least portion and degree of grace Ah! do not then sit down content when the breathings of the Almighty are withdrawn but go and cry to the (n) Cant. 4.16 north wind to awake and to the south wind to come and (o) If the wind blow not thy ship cannot come to the haven but being tossed to and fro by contrary tides is left to be a prey to pirats blow upon thy garden that the spices thereof may flow out go in faith ye have a promise for your encouragment the Father will give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Luk. 11.13 We will not insist on directions but reserving those in great part to the following Section let us now remember that if the unclean spirit return after he hath been cast out and find the house empty and swept he will enter in again and lay claim to his former possession Mat. 12.44 Nay though the house be not totally desolate yet so much room as he findeth empty he will seek to possess so far as the Spirit withdraweth so much the nearer Sathan approacheth if the Spirit withdraw his holy motions Sathan will improve the advantage and will fill the heart with vain idle impertinent and sinfull motions as Pirats may easily surprize the ship when the Pilot is gone So having entred it and finding it empty they will not fail to loaden and fill it with their trash and stoln wares Sect. 2. What may be the cause of that deadness and indisposition and these wandring thoughts that arise in the heart upon the Spirits departure and what course should be taken for removing this evil and for recovering and maintaining the presence of the Spirit and a praying frame and disposition Psa 81.11 12. But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me So I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels Hos 4.11 Whoredom and wine and new wine take away the heart IF the Sun be set and leave our hemisphere it must be night with us and darkness must cover the face of our earth if the soul be separated from the body the man must be dead and coldness must seize upon the liveless carrion So if the Spirit which is our Sun and life depart what darkness deadness and emptiness must be in the soul But as if it were too little to be dead and destitute of life foolish sinners will kill themselves and harden yet more the heart which already is harder then the adamant or flint and when the sun goeth down they will shut the doors and windows yea and pull out their own eyes that they may not see and thus as Seducers in respect of a total privation of life are said to be (a) Jude 12. twice dead So the Saints themselves many a time in respect of their partial deadness and the gradual departure of the Spirit of life may be said to be twice hardned blinded and indisposed for duty Not only doth sin provoke the holy Spirit to depart and thus morally and by way of demerit it stops the fountain of life but also by its poison and venomous nature it doth pollute and infect the heart it leaveth such a blot and tincture upon the soul as disposeth it for blindness and deadness Sin is not only of it self and formally opposit to grace but it maketh upon the heart as it were efficiently such a contrary impression to grace and matterially indisposeth it for a communion with God and spiritual exercises and thus stealeth and taketh a way the heart Hos 4.11 And albeit every sin hath more or less of this malignant quality in it yet their be some sins which in a special maner do produce this wofull effect after which we shall now enquire having in the preceding Section spoken of the former head viz. of the withdrawing of the Spirit and of these sins which did most directly and immediatly bring on that sad stroke but there being such a connexion between our deadness and the departure of the Spirit of life and the causes and cure of (b) Viz. of the with drawing of the Spirit and of our deadness and indisposition for duty both those evils being much alike and the same we may without any culpable confusion here speak to those joyntly especially since we referred to this place one sort of those (c) Viz those causes which did not so directly and by way of indignity and contempt of his office and work but rather condignly and by way of demerit prrooke the Spirit to depart causes which did provoke the Spirit to depart Before we speak of the remedy we will search after the causes which we shall rather name then enlarge and insist on at any length First then as to the causes of deadness indisposition and wandring thoughts in prayer for all these cursed branches may spring
it to the honour of his name and for promoving the work of our salvation O then art thou called a Christian and if thou be not an atheist and worldling whatever pains and diligence thou art at let this be the main from which thou expectest more then from thy rising early and going late to bed whatever care and labour may want successe and prove to no purpose yet thou shalt never seek his face in vain He hath said he will not send the praying soul away empty and will he not perform O then let us say we would rather have a little this way then all the riches and honours imaginable without the blessing rather let us have none of these things with the love of God then never so much in wrath Have we little or much or nothing with the blessing we are happy and all the work without this will prove but a curse and a snare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gift and no gift Ah Sirs all of us would have and when would we say its enough But O how few are they who take the right course and run to the right fountain Whether would you trade with your own stock or not whether do you expect more by your prayers or your labour and industry and whether would you rather receive from God or by the work of your own hands canst thou say that thou dependest upon God and will be content with his allowance and resolvest to improve what he giveth to the honour of his name if this be thy purpose and desire then hast thou little or hast thou much it is a blessing thy condition is good and best for thee thou hast and thou shalt have more untill thou be satisfied when the immortal crown shall be put upon thy head We will close this discourse concerning the right maner of asking temporal and outward things with a word from the learned Augustine When ye ask temporals ask saith (e) Quando temporalia petitis cum modo petite cum ●imore petite illi committite ut si prosint det si scit obesse non det quid autem prosit quid obsit medicus novit non aegrotus Aug. serm 53. de ver dom he in measure and with moderation ask in fear and with submission committing to him to give if what we ask would do us good and to withhold if he know it would hurt The Physitian knoweth but not the sick what would obstruct and what would procure health Concl. 7. While we compare spirituall things with temporall we must observe that order prescribed by our Lord Jesus Mat. 6.32 Spirituall things must have the precedeney we should seek first the kingdom of God which consisteth in righteousnesse peace and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 We must seek the things that belong to that kingdome (f) Primum h. e. praecipue Glos interlin Primum non tempore sel dig mi●ate primum querite regnum Dei i. e. prae ponite omnibus rebus caeteris Glos ordi quod primum relativè dicatur ad secundum pater c. Nic. de Lyra in loc first not so much in respect of time and externall method for the holy Ghost doth not peremptorily determine and confine us to any order th●t way and in that perfect pattern of prayer Mat. 7. the petition for dayly bread is put in the midle but first in regard of our estimation affection and desire our love our care and endeavours must mainly be spent and employed about these more excellent things nay in respect of these we must hate father and mother and life it selfe when they come in competition we must carry our selves towards these inferior things which we are obliged to love most dearly as if we hared them we must forsake and abandon them Luk. 14.26 Mat. 10.37 39. We must count them as losse and dung for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Philip. 3.8 there is no comparison between-things temporall and eternall things that are momentany and the exceeding and eternall weight of Glory things that belong to the outward and to the inward man 2 Cor 4.16 17 18. if the strength and z●al of our affections be not placed on God and spirituall things we undervalue them if our desires be not thus enlarged if we do not thus hunger and thrist after the heavenly manna we shall never tast of it The generall precept and promise Mat. 7.7 c. when it is applied to these excellent things must take in a sutable qualification and proviso things must be askt and desired according to their necessity worth and excellency there is but only one thing necessary which we may not want upon any terms Luk. 10.42 and therefor all other things should be loved and sought in subordination and in reference unto it we must not be absolute and peremptory in our desires after them for what we thus covet and affect we cannot want we must have it whatever it cost O let us not so set our he arts upon perishing tr fles but earnestly (g) Cor. 12.31 covet the best things nay if these excellent and spirituall things have not the precedency and first place in our estimation affection desires endeavours pains and diligence if these be not mainly imployed for getting and keeping of them we will not only lose what we have thus basely undervalued but we will lose all our first born and the son of our strength not being the son of the promise will get none of the blessing O! the folly of worldlings their diligence and zeal for the fat of the earth doth not only consume their strength and (h) Mat. 16.26 1 Tim. 6.9 destroy their Soul but also marreth their gain while they trade for the earth they lose both earth and heaven for that we should seek first spirituall things and give them the precedency is (i) Mat 6.32 required not only as a condition for our finding of them but also for the obtaining of temporalls that they as pendicles and casualities of the Kingdom of grace may be added and given as a mercy and blessing And albeit some temporall mercies be more necessary then other yet the least measure of grace should be preferred to the most necessary and usefull thing that concerneth the outward man and to the greatest earthly excellency as being more excellent in it self and having a more immediat and direct tendency and reference unto the great end and therefore as the soul is to be preferred to the body heaven to earth eternal happiness to a perishing trifle the chidrens portion to the bones that fall to the dogs and that which tendeth to the glorifying of God and the saving of our souls to that which serveth to the satisfying of our carnall lusts and selfish desires So must spirituall things alwayes have the preheminence yea we should prefer not only grace it self but also every mean that tendeth to the begetting or strengthning of it all Gods ordinances and every
be so careless in the worship of our God while poor Pagans were so zealous and serious in their devotion to Idols Ah! shall Baals priests (k) 1 Kings 18.28 tear and cut themselves with knives and lancets till the blood gush out and all as is thought to stir up their affection and to make them call on him more zealously and fervently however they lookt upon that as acceptable service to their idol and shall we think it enough if we but put (l) Proverb molli brachio sou extremis digitis attingere summis naribus olfacere to our fingers to the work and perform it never so negligently and will not be at the expences of some few tears or affectionat desires we will not be at so much pains as to (m) Isa 64.7 stir up our selves to call upon and to take hold of the Lord how then shall we suffer any thing for him or in his service While Alexander was offering incense to his God a coal fell on the young mans hand who held the golden censer but he considering the sacred action in which he was employed would rather suffer the burning and extremity of pain till the service was ended then in the least once stir or move his arm and thus interrupt that holy as he imagined performance and yet the least of Sathans fiery darts the least worldly trifle and sensual thought will quickly and easily divert us and turn away the heart while it is sacrificing to him who only should be served and worshiped The Pagan (n) Reusuer symb imper clas 1. ad sym L. Veri pag. 65. Emperour L. Aurelius Verus his motto was nil obiter Nothing must be done remisly negligently and as it were in the by Far rather should this be the motto of every true Israelite in the matters of God other things to him ought to be in a comparative sense handled in the (o) In transcursu Proverb Plutar de lib. educandis passing using the world as if he used it not for here is not our home and rest but our trade and great business is with God and for a kingdom rhat is worthy of our chief care and diligence If (p) Mat. 6.33 we seek it obiter and as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we undervalue it and lose our labour but alas as that Emperour did not answer his symbol being wholly (q) Cluver hist epit pag. 302. addicted to effeminatness luxury and pleasure so neither do many Christians their engagements and profession and titular Saints who have no more but the outward badge and the meer name of Christianity employ all their strength diligence and seriousness about the perishing trifles in the world and seek after heaven only in the by using the ordinances of life as if they used them not their hearts not being towards them they go about them in a dead lazy way without activity and life they see not their danger and misery and hence not being affected with it they act not as if they were in any strait and extremity they pray not against sin as knowing that either they must mortifie it here or else it will kill and destroy them for ever they pray not for pardon as knowing they must have it or else go to hell and there be tormented with the devils for ever and ever There is no remedy till once we be brought to this extremity and accordingly act as becometh those who are in such danger and hazard We will not now stay to press this necessary point but remitting you to those practical (r) M. Love zea l. Christ on Luk. 11.8 M. Cobbet on prayer part 2. ch 1. M. Gurnal spir arm part 3. pag. 553. c. Divines who have at length insisted on it only let me add a word by way of caution mistake not and beware least thou call thy lust zeal and thy impatience this holy fervency and importunity If we spend our affections upon earthly things they are mispent and misplaced Col. 3.2 Ah! shall our love our zeal and strength be laid out upon such trash shall the marrow and activity of our most precious things be thus debased Corruptio optimi pessima We have many experiences in nature (ſ) Who can endure the smell of a dead carrion especially of the body of man 〈◊〉 which is the most excellent of all living creatures c. shewing the corruption of the best things to be accompanied with loathsom and noxious consequents and shall not the abuse which is the corruption of spiritual things have very sad and dolefull consequents to the soul It is (t) Thom. Fullers good thoughts in worse times pag. 90. reported of witches that they say the Lords prayer backwards this is one of the ordinances of hell whereby Sathan doth engage these wretches to him and shall this course be followed by any who hath not renounced his part in Christ now as for order of words and place that is not material the Lord hath not bound and stinted us that way yea even their daily bread is put before remission of sins but he hath fixed an order as to our estimation affection and diligence and thus Gods kingdom must be sought before our daily bread nay comparatively and in respect of that this must not be sought our labour must be no labour and our love hatred Mat. 6.33 Joh 6.27 Luk. 14.26 And thus too many pray backwards they prefer earth to heaven the creature to God the body to the soul and their daily bread to Gods kingdom Ah! that so many should walk after Sathans rule and thus carry his mark on their forehead O! but honest supplicants though they will be very zealous for the Lord and impatient when he is dishonoured yet with what moderation and submission will they ask these outward things and how patiently will they bear the loss of such trifles and they will be more anxious and solicitous concerning their duty to ask and in every thing to make their requests known to God then concerning the success as to the having and receiving these things Phil. 4.6 You will say should we not then pray importunatly for temporal mercies Ans 1. Importunity and fervency is required in every prayer thou offerest up to God thou must alwayes offer up the best of the flock to the great King cold luke-warm affections in the worship of God is loathsome and unacceptable we must seek the Lord with the whole heart else we will not find if prayer be not fervent it availeth nothing Jam. 5.16 But take heed where thou placest thy zeal and fervency when ye seek the world let heaven be your mark and when ye desire the creature let the glory of the giver be your end Though thou must not spend thy zeal upon perishing things yet thou mayest earnestly seek the sanctified use of them and the blessing either with or without them and that the Lord either in giving or withholding of them would mind
nunc so they may serve to convince and perswade us that when the particular is withheld the Lord doth what is best for us upon such an occasion 7. Otherwise it would follow that often we must seek the Lord in vain contrary to his own protestation Isa 45.19 For albeit it were granted that our prayers were accepted as service done to him and would not want their reward in the day of general retribution yet still those prayers that want a particular return as to the present exigence and occasion would prove to be in vain as to that end for which they are employed and for which the Lord hath appointed them to be used 8. Let us consider how loathsome and displeasing to our kind Lord our jealousie and diffidence must be vult sibi quisque credi saith Seneca habita fides obligat There is no man can endure to be distrusted and shall we deal thus with the God of truth but when we trust and rely upon our friend he will think himself obliged not to disappoint us fidelem si putaveris faciet And will not our kind Father answer the expectation and confidence of those who trust in him Mr. (o) Mr. Bolton instruct for right comforting sect 3. part 1. chap. 2. Bolton reporteth of a godly man who being askt in his last sickness by some Christian friends admiring the singularity of his peace and calmness of spirit especially under such a trial how he came to that quietness answered that he had stedfastly fixed his heart upon that sweet promise Isa 26 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose heart is stayed on thee Because he trusteth in thee And said he my God hath graciously made this good unto my soul So saith Mr. Bolton must every Saint do who would sound the sweetness of a promise to the bottom For God is wont to make good his promises unto his children proportionably to their trust in him and dependance upon his upon his truth and goodness for a seasonable performance of them Great Luther was a man of much faith and it was said of him potuit quic quid voluit he could do what he would For saith (p) Tantum quisque habet quantum credit junta illud secundum fidem tuam tibi fiat Zanch. in 5. ad Ephes Zanchius every one hath as much as he beleeveth according to that word be it unto thee according to thy faith Many want because they ask not Jam. 4.3 and many ask and receive not because they ask not in faith Jam. 1.6 7. they are jealous of God and expect little from him and therefore he hideth his face and turneth away our prayer and his mercy from us Oh! the unbelief of our hearts we complain of God while the fault is in our selves we mistrust his Word and yet murmur because it is not accomplish●d to us But if we did more firmly believe the promises we should see and have experience of Gods truth and fidelity and would acknowledge that even then when sense and carnal reason are most ready to complain the Lord in great mercy and faithfulness doth deal with us and provide for our good by those means which we are ready to conceive to be so contrary unto our happiness because bitter and afflictive to sense We will rather choose to be under our own tutory then at Gods disposing we cannot endure to be curbed and hemmed in and O! will unbelief say why might I not have such a mercy what evil is there in it and why might not such a rod be removed what good can it do were it not better to be at liberty then shut up in prison or arrested on the bed of languishing As if the (q) Petitaeger ut quod ad salutem apponit medicus auferatur tu dicis tolle quod mordet medicus dicit non tollo quia sanat tu ad medicum quare venisti sanori an molestiam non part non ergo exaudivit Dominus Paulum ad voluntatem quia exaudivit ad sanitatem quare non habeatis pro magno exaudiri ad utilitatem quia autem obsit quid profit medicus novit non aegrotus August de verbis Domini serm 53. Patient should complain and say why is such a bitter ingredient put into this potion were it not better to put in the place of it some delicious cordial while as this exchange might cost him his life Ah! wilt thou trust the Physitian for the good of thy body and yet not trust the sovereign Physitian for the good of thy soul But fools despise their own mercies and are ready to murmur when they are best dealt with It is no great matter saith Augustine to get our desire for the devils sometimes have been thus heard but it is a mercy indeed to obtain what maketh for our life and happiness If we (r) Periissem nisi sic periissem had many of our desires saith a late (ſ) Mr. Goodwin return of prayer chap. 9. pag 49. Optima da nobis vel si pater illa rogamus Vel non at damnum caeco si errore petamus Tu damnum a nobis prae●ens avertit● Jova Vet Poct Prima fere vota cunctis notissimae temp●is Divitiae crescant ut opes maxima toto Nostra sit arca foro Sed plures nimia congesta pecunia cura Strangulat cuncta exuperans patrimonia census Juven Satyr 10. vid. loc Ah how should earthly minded professors be ashamed to read such a sermon preacht by a Pagan Divine we had been undone But our kind Father will not put a cup of poyson in our hand though we much long for it And it is no wonder while we thus live by sense and judge by that crooked rule though we mistake Gods meaning in his dispensations towards us and because we walk by such a rule and will not submit to God nor trust him and because we are so carnal so selfish and sensual and love our own things too much therefore doth the Lord withdraw them from those he loveth that they may learn no more to dote upon and idolize those trifles and therefore are they held in the furnace because they will not part with their dross it were not fit to remove the plaister untill the sore be cured nor to prescribe cordials untill ill humors be purged out And were our eyes (t) Rev. 3.18 anointed with Christs eye-salve that we might see our state and condition and if we were more acquainted with the noble life of faith we would acknowledge with him Ps 119.75 that all our afflictions rods and trials did flow from Gods mercy faithfulness and kindness towards us and when we come home and shall be more able to judge of Gods Word and works then we will confess with thankfulness that we could not have wanted any of these rods wherewith we were exercised in our pilgrimage and that those supposed mercies we so much longed for might have
is like an Ecclipse or Sea-sickness that will quickly pass And thus 3. the one is foolishly mercifull to himself entertaining a groundless fancy of Gods mercy as separated from his holiness an justice yea and denying the truth of the threatnings thastand against him he laith claim to the promises to which he hath no right and maketh lies his refuge and so perisheth in his delusion going to hell laughing and rejoycing hoping the best till he find the worst and see his case to be remeediless the other is unadvisedly cruel to himself tormenting and vexing his own soul with a needless jealousie the one goeth laughing to hell the other weeping to heaven the one enjoyeth a fools paradise on earth the other a sort of hell in this life living in darkness till the dawning of the glorious and long-lasting day of eternity And thus both mistaking their state and condition the one apprehending it to be better the other to be worse then it is both pass a wrong sentence the one for the other against himself both mis-applying the Scriptures the one to his eternal ruine the other to his present trouble and disquiet and thus it is easie to judge whose case is most dangerous and whose fault and error most grievous only let me add a word to the doubting or shall I say unbelieving believer from (a) Non orarem si non crederem sed si vere crederem illud cor quo Deus videtur mundarem manibus tunderem pectus genas lachrymis rigarem corpore inhorrescerem ore pallerem jacerem ad Domini mei pedes cosque ●●eiu perfunderem crine tergerem haererem certo trunco crucis nec prius amitterem quam miscricordiam impetrarem Nunc vero creberrime in oratione mea aut per portious deambulo aut de faenore computo aut abductus turpi cogitatione etiam quae dictu erubescenda sunt gero Ubi est fides Siccine putamus orasse Jonam Sic tres puer●s Sic Danielem inter Leones Sic cerie Latronem in cruee Hieronym dialog advers Luciser Jeroms pathetick encomium of and exhortation to exercise and act faith particularly in prayer If I saith this holy man did not believe I could not pray but having faith with what humility tenderness reverence and godly fear may we draw nigh to God c. CHAP. III. Some consequent conditions what we must do after we come from the throne of Grace 1. We must wait 2. watch 3. be busie in using the means and 4. renewing our requests and 5. we must thankfully improve what the Lord giveth in return to our prayers With a word concerning the necessity of these and the former qualifications Psa 85.8 I will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people but let them not turn again to folly Psa 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me 2 Chr. 30.18 19. The good Lord pardon every one c. HAving spoken of the antecedent and concomitant qualifications of an acceptable prayer now come we to show what must be done after we go from the throne Ah! too many go to work heedlessly and without all kind of preparation and perform it perfunctoriously and in a dead formal maner and no wonder though such have done when they have said that when they leave off to speak they minde the work no more but thou who tookst heed to thy steps while thou drewest nigh and who wa st serious when thou didst approach pouring out thy soul unto thy God wilt expect some fruit of thy labour and wilt take heed to thy wayes lest by thy folly thou shouldst intercept and obstruct the return of thy prayers 1. Then after thou hast poured out thy complaint to God thou must wait listen and diligently observe when he answereth and how far he answereth thy prayers we must hear what God the Lord will speak Psa 85.8 If we presented a supplication to a King how would he think himself mockt if we did not stay for an answer If beggars knock and cry but will not wait till an alms come who will send it after them Ah! 1. are we not Gods subjects and servants and should we not look up to our King and Master and patiently wait till he have mercy upon us Psa 123.2 2. Did the Lord ever disappoint them who thus did wait and depend upon him Isa 26.3 Psa 85.8 Mic. 7.7 Psa 107.43 3. But if ye will not wait for an answer if no answer come know who should bear the blame if the beggar be gone while the alms is coming his pride impatience and sloth must be the cause of his not receiving faith is not more necessary in asking then that we may receive and if ye do not wait unbelief must say (a) 2 King 6 33. What should I wait on the Lord any longer And with them Joh. 21.15 What profit have we if we pray to him It was in vain to pray and now to look for an answer 4. Nay though the Lord answer in wrath and reward thy contempt and the dishonour done to his name with some remarkable judgment thou hadst no cause to complain who could endure such an indignity what is truth said Pilat to Christ and when he had said he goth away and will not wait for an answer Joh. 18 38. Ah! will ye deal no better with the great God then a mocking pagan dealt with Christ in the day of his reproach may ye not fear lest he be avenged on you for this dishonour injury and affront offered to his Majesty 5. As you thus dishonour God and provoke him not only to withhold the desired mercy but also to take the rod in his hand So if the Lord should answer follow and pursue you with his mercies while ye are running away from him you would deprive your selves of a double advantage 1. Of the joy and comfort that redounds to an honest supplicant when he observeth God to have hearkned to his desire nay the comfort that many times ariseth from this consideration doth exceed the satisfaction reaped by the naked enjoyment of the mercy it self that being an evidence of our adoption of Gods love towards us of our moyen with him c. 2. We thus deprive our selves of a notable mean 1. for strengthning our faith in the promises 2. for clearing the Lords fidelity in keeping his word to his servants and 3. for judging of the sincerity of our hearts and wayes and knowing when we have prayed acceptably and 4. for encouraging us to continue instant in prayer and to say with him Psa 116.2 therefore will I call upon God as long as I live And as thus you are injurious to your selves So also to the Lord and to your brethren 1. To the Lord if he should answer ye who do not hearken would not hear ye who would not look up to him would not see nor discern his
viz. the abuse of Gods mercy by making that which is the only rock of safety to which the ship-broken passenger should run for his life a stone of ruine and destruction against which they dash their brains as if a man were so foolish as to imagine a bridge to be broader then it is and in this delusion step aside the bridge would not keep him from drowning so while deluded sinners extend the mercy of God beyond the bounds he hath set in his Word and thus in their presumption step aside to their own crooked wayes the mercy of God will not keep them from falling head-long into the pit of destruction To continue in sin saith (d) Peccare de Dei creatoris clementia praesu● mere pelago justitiae ejus exponi est Greg loc prius cit Gregory and yet to presume of the mercy of God is to cast our selves into the sea of his justice and displeasure The Lord ere it be long will vindicat his mercy from such a base abuse to the everlasting confusion and astonishment of presumptuous sinners But we may not insist only to our purpose let such remember that this delusion is a black mark of a never-do-well and therefore doth the Apostle abominat it with so much indignation shall we continue in sin that geace may abound God forbid Rom. 6.1 2. and then by several arguments showeth that a child of God will not cannot make such an inference And the Apostle Iude speaking of some who were of old ordained to condemnation describeth them by this that they turned the grace of God into lasciviousness ver 4. O! would you then escape damnation beware least ye be hold to sin because God is slow to anger and least ye add to your iniquities because the Lord is gracious and abundant in goodness and that ye delay not your repentance because he is long-suffering and patient And if thou must needs tempt God first take a tryal in thy body or outward estate before thou hazard thy immortal soul and everlasting portion go and waste thy estate and provision and see whether the mercy of God will keep thee from begging and put thy finger in the fire and try whether the mercy of God will keep thee from burning but if thou wilt not trust the mercy of God while thou slightest the means he hath appointed as to these inferiour ends and yet wilt misspend this day of the Gospel and slight the ordinances of life which are thy portion and allowance and the talents wherewith thou shouldest trade for eternity and yet think it will be well with thee hereafter if thou wilt cast thy soul into the fire of sin and yet think to escape the burning and torments of hell profess what thou wilt it is not thy confidence in God but thy negligence and want of care for thy soul that makes thee despise the means of grace and slight thy duty and thy body estate and perishing life is thy idol for which thou takest more thought then for thy soul and eternal happiness 9. Earthly-minded covetous worldlings are lying under the serpents curse which hardly or never will be removed Mark 10.23 Gen. 3.14 First they go upon their belly and cannot stand streight nor look up-ward their heart cleaveth to the earth and they cannot (e) Colos 3.2 set their affections on things above they only (f) Phil. 3.19 minde earthly things and spend all their (g) Joh. 6.27 labour for the meat that perisheth 2. Dust is their portion and food they slight the childrens bread and undervalue the (h) Rev. 2.17 hidden manna and with the swine of the world live upon the (i) Luk. 15.16 husks and yet those miserable wretches will not want fair pretences and plea's we must will such say live and provide for our families the times are evil and we know not what may fall out and all we can purchase may be little enough what should we be idle may we not follow our calling and watch on our business c. But thinkest thou O worldling this to be a sufficient plea for making the world thy idol and for neglecting the one thing necessary Knowest thou not that the love of money is the (k) See the testimonies of heathens concerning which the Apostle apud Reusner symb imp clas 2. symb 36. root of all evil 1 Tim. 6.10 and that he who will be rich rather rich in wealth then in grace for himself rather then towards God Luke 12.21 fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition and pierce them thorow with many sorrows v. 9.10 and is not Christs verdict of such very terrible It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle then for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God Mat. 19.23 24. Ah! this devil of earthly-mindedness hath destroyed many thousand souls it so filleth the heart that there is no room left for the Word of God to enter in but it choaketh the Word at the very entry and makes it become unfruitfull Mat. 13.22 this was it that hindred that people from profiting under Ezekiels ministry Ezek. 33 and this is the great obstructer of the Gospel wherever it is preach'd They come unto thee saith the Lord to the Prophet and sit before thee as my people and with their mouth show much love and they hear thy words but they will not do nor obey them for their heart goeth after their covetousness v. 31. Hence the Apostle must weep when he thinks on covetous wretches Phil. 3.18 but what alleth thee O Paul thus to bewail such wealthy well-guiding and thriving men Ah! saith the Apostle whatever be their portion of the world and whatever be the estimation of the wicked who will be ready to bless the covetous whom the Lord abhorreth Ps 10.3 yet they are most despicable and miserable creatures for their glory is their (l) Pronunciat Apostolus gloriam qua nunc sunt inflati ignominia mutatum iri Calv. in loc shame and their end destruction v. 19. and as for their religion profess what they will they are the grossest idolaters Eph. 5.5 their belly being their god Phil. 3 19. Ah! ill and un-wise merchants who sell heaven for earth and your soul and the immortal crown for an empty and perishing trifle how hath the world thus be-fooled and (m) Gal. 3.1 quasi praestigiis quibusdam dementes facti Beza in loc Quadam veluti magna incantatione Calvin in loc with sorceries Hammond ibid. bewitched you 10. There is little hope of mockers of piety haters of God and of his servants and who are ready to revile and tear their faithfull monitors and reprovers I joyn these because usually they go hand in hand for hatred of holiness as it floweth from enimity against God So it will beget enimity against his children and servants and a cursed impatience and rage
what he will do and what is best to be done to us and for us but let us be sollicitous concerning our duty committing the success to him who will with-hold no good thing from his honest servants nor suffer one word of promise to want its accomplishment let us not then ask what God will do but what we should do and if nothing will satisfie our curiosity untill we be acquainted with Gods secrets let us then take the right course let us not thus begin at the wrong and uppermost end of the ladder and descend before we ascend it were better and safer to learn from our way and work some thing of Gods purpose concerning us then to enquire after our duty in the Lords secret decrees which are no otherwayes revealed to us but by his Word and Works If then 1. thou hast a promise and 2. if thou meet with strength for doing thy duty thou may'st prophesie the event and success without any hazard of being accounted an enthusiast for thou mayst know that what ever be the Lords decrees concerning the futurition of events yet there is no decree which needs 1. discourage thee who art in sincerity seeking his face or which 2. can (q) It s obserable that a known decree did give no supersedeas from prayer to Christ though a Son for in that decree Ps 2.6 7. was included his kingdom and that he should have the utmost ends of the earth for a possession which notwithstanding must be askt by him ver 8. warrant thee to neglect the means and say it were to no purpose to call upon God neither 3. is there any decree in God to cross his promises or to bind up his hands from fulfilling the desires of all them who call upon him in truth But we like not the work and any thing will serve for a plea and excuse to lye by Ah! is it not lamentable that such as scarce can speak sense or to purpose in any other business yet will argue with such subtilty and prove such egregious sophisters for deceiving and ruining their own souls certainly Sathan must have no small hand herein and it doth not a litle discover our natural enmity at holiness and the wayes of God that we are so (r) Jer. 4.22 wise to do evil and to provide covers for hiding from our eyes the way of life while as otherwise we are foolish and ignorant and have no knowledge to do good Is it not strange to hear those persons talk of the decrees of God who never yet seriously minded and know little of their duty and to bring a reason from the secret purpose of the most high for them to be idle and neglect the means of salvation and to destroy their own souls Ah! what do such fools mean is not their soul of far more worth and excellency then their body and the immortal crown of glory then their perishing trifles and worldly enjoyments why do they not then first try those desperat conclusions upon these base and worthless things before they put their soul and eternal happiness to such a venture and hazard why do they not say what needs us rise early and go to bed late at night what needs us till and sow c. for if the Lord hath decreed to give us a large and plenteous harvest it must be so whether we be at so much pains and travel or no and if the Lord hath determined to with-hold the encrease our labour and pains will not do the turn and why should we eat drink sleep for if the Lord hath appointed us to live to such a time we must live so long whether we eat or not and if he hath numbered our dayes and the set time of our departure be at hand our eating and drinking will not prolong our dayes if any upon this account would labour to (r) I remember I have read or heard of one who was tainted with this damnable delusion who falling sick and sending for the Physician met with this reply to what purpose should I come for if it he appointed that ye shall now die my coming will not add to your dayes and if it be appointed that ye shall recover whether I come or not ye must convalesce and recover of this disease To whom again he sent intreating him dotwithstanding to come who coming and the Lord blessing his pains with success the man was convinced of his error and became a penitent and thus both his bodily and spiritual disease was healed and cured disswade us from using the means for our bodily life and accommodation in the world we could tell them that it is not for us to meddle with Gods decrees but it behoveth us to use the means and to wait upon him so some will speak who little mind his providence for the success and with what disdain would ye abominat and mock him who should in earnest reason thus and yet upon this very ground ye will become careless and negligent in matters of soul-concernment as if it were in vain to take pains for eternal life and to work out your own salvation But we may to far better purpose retort this argument and draw an encouragment to duty from the immutability of Gods decrees as hath been already hinted at and conclude that if the Lord who is unchangeable and immutable in his purposes hath (ſ) Aquinas meeting with this question after that he had rejected three erroneous opinions of some ancient Philosophers which he had refuted 1 part quaest 22. art 2 4. quaest 115. art 6. quaest 116. art 3. 1. that humane affairs are not governed by divine providence 2. that all events come to pass by a fatal necessity both which make our prayers useless and 3. that the divine appointment was alterable and might be changed by our prayers and devotion having I say rejected these dangerous errors he himself gives a very considerable and satisfactory answer Ad hujus evidentiam considerandum est inquit quod ex divina providentia non solum disponitur qui effectus fiant sed etiam ex quibus causis quo ordine proveniant Inter alias autem causas sunt etiam actus humani unde oportet homines agere non ut per suos actus divinam dispositionem immutent sed ut per actus suos impleant quosdam effectus secun dum ordinem a Deo dispositum simile est de oratione non enim propter hoc oramus ut divinam dispositionem immutemus sed ut id impetremus quod D●us disposuit per orationes esse impledum Thom. 2.2 quaest 83. art 2. in corp Si quaeratur an posito fundamento erroneo scil omnia fatali necessitate evenire D●umque ex necessit●te naturae agere recta intu●erius orationem fore inutilem vid. Suarez de ●rat lib. ● cap. c. Franc. Venet. de harmonia mandi cant 1. ion 1. cap. 16. appointed such and such means for obtaining such
(i) 1 Cor. 1.20 foolish and (k) Hence Seneca inferreth that we should rather pity the wicked as so many fanaticks and contemn their contempt then be angry with them or take pains to convince and confute them for saith he why do ye bear the madness and phrensie of one in a distemper but because he knows not what he doth So c. mad is the wisdom of this world the world it self being judge 14 If the Word of God had only born record that the Saints are the excellent in the earth Ps 16.3 and the only worthies of whom the world is not worthy Heb. 11.38 that godliness is great gain 1 Tim. 6.6 and the only true treasure that cannot corrupt or be taken away Luk. 12.33 c. If I say these divine Truthes were only held forth in the Scriptures of truth scoffing Atheists who have cast off the fear of God might be the more secure but while short-sighted nature by it's dark candle hath discovered and moral reason attested the same and so convincingly condemned the way and course of those desperat misers they must either renounce their understanding and discretion and take with their brutishness and stupidity or confess themselves to be self-condemned and 15 that contrary no less to their own knowledge and light then to religion and duty they maintain a war against the heavens and abase their noble soul to serve their lusts becoming swinish Epicureans led by sense and their carnal appetite in making their pleasures their idols and the world and their belly their god But such haply will say well then we injoy our pleasures and lead a merry jovial life while they who are accounted Saints are sad dumpish sullen and broken-hearted creatures Ans This is an old slander raised on the way of life by such as are strangers to true joy peace satisfaction and contentment and hath proven a great stumbling block in all ages and this was one of the great topicks which Sathan did mainly urge about the time of reformation from Popery when his kingdom began to totter and shake and the popish Factors then frequently inculcated that the Calvinian spirit was a melancholick spirit But ah wherefore should they be sad (l) 2 Sam. 13 4. who are Kings sons and heirs of an immortal Crown joy is their portion and allowance and it is their priviledge to rejoyce alwayes their joy and peace is secured to them devils and men cannot rob them of it Their wayes are wayes of pleasantness and all their paths are peace Prov. 3.17 Phil. 4.4 Joh. 14.27 Joh. 16.22.24 c. But alas how can they rejoyce who are destroying their own souls and rushing head-long upon everlasting woes and misery who ere it be long will cry but in vain to the mountains and rocks to fall on them and hide them from the face of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb Rev. 6.16 But we may not insist only let us hear what the Pagan Moralists have said to this purpose The wicked 16 notwithstanding all their outward and seeming mirth joy and delight have saith Juvenal a judge witness and tormenter within whose lashes and strokes are more grievous and terrible then any punishment invented on inflicted by Caeditius or Rhadamantus and the most strict justiciaries and cruel executioners there is saith Cicero no punishment comparable to that which accompanieth sin either for greatness or continuance 17 for not only shall the wicked be eternally vexed in hell with the infernal furies but also here they have their domestick fiends alwayes to attend and their own guilty consciences to tear them and the sense of a deity night and day to distract them as with madness no solitariness nor society no might nor wealth no eminency nor greatness can bring ease or relief and though there be some difficulty in walking in the narrow way yet the conscience and remembrance of a well ●ed life is saith he 18 most sweet and full of delight Hence the Emperour Albert 1. his Symbol was What is best 19 and most virtuous is most pleasant and full of joy s where the gloss from Corinficinus hath this paraphrase The best kind of life is to be chosen 20 which custom and use will render most easie and pleasant But ah the flagitious by custom in sin have so hardened their heart and filled it with such prejudices against the way of righteousness that they go unwillingly to work and no wonder though holiness appear difficult and a grievous burden to them for as the Comedian saith 21 there is nothing so easie but it will become heard and unpleasant to him who undertaketh it unwillingly Ah! Madam what matter of lamentation is it that so many who are called and would be accounted Christians should come so far short of Heathens as to oppose that for which they have so zealously pleaded and by their practice destroy what they with so much industry have built I am confident your Ladyship will joyn in this sad complaint and that such a warning and testimony against those who are concerned therein will be very acceptable But I will not now take upon me to hold out any directions or perswasions to your Honour nay though you had importuned me to that effect the bounds of this short Epistle would excuse my silence but I could wish that excellent Epistle written some hundred years since by that zealous Ancient (m) Jerom l●ved in the 5. century Jerom to the noble Lady Celantia upon her earnest desire were translated that it might become a directory to all Ladies who account it their greatest honour and happiness that they are as the Apostle John calleth that Lady to whom he wrote elect beloved in the truth and of all them that have known the truth I will not transcribe what is there held forth at length but among these many grave and profitable directions this eminent Minister of Christ obtesteth that pious Lady not to boast of that 22 nobility she hath from her Ancestors but rather to rejoyce in this that she is of a royal and heavenly descent which will appear to be the only true nobility in that (n) Mal. 3.17 18. day the Lord makes up his Jewels and puts a perpetual difference between the precious and the vile that she is born of God and an heir of the immortal crown of glory and that she is freed from the base slavery of hell and sin and hath chosen such a Master whom to serve is to reign 23 O! Madam we have an honourable but not a hard Master our very work and imployment is our honour and happiness his (o) Mat. 11.30 yoak is easie his burden is light and his (p) 1 Joh. 5.3 commands are not grievous but our (q) Joh 1 12. Rev 1.6 c. priviledges are great and many and our (r) Ps 19.11 Eph. 3.10 1 Cor. 2.9 reward far exceeds all that we can desire or conceive and
possesse all things 2. Cor. 6. ver 10. All are thus put under the Christians feet and may be subservient to us and become as it were a staff in our hand while we are walking with God and toward the promised Land omnia vestra sunt saith Cajet in 1. Cor. 3. ver 21. h.e. Propter vos ordinaia ad vestram utilitatem All are his 1. Cor. 3. vers 21 22. the world the whole world is his Yea what is not yet known or discovered Could Alexander Caesar or he who was the greatest Monarch and Potentate lay claim to so much Sea and Land with all it's furniture all it's beauty glory and riches is too mean a portion for him who is (b) 1. Joh. 3.9 born of God The Heavens are his and may I not say Hell also though he shall never see that place of torment yet it is his talent which he may improve to advantage And yet all these great and excellent things are not all nor the main they are little they are as nothing they are not worthy once to be named in respect of those things which eye hath not seen nor ear heard 1. Cor. 2. vers 9. in respect of that Crown of life and glory 1. Pet. 5. vers 4. Jam. 1. vers 12. and that incorruptible and undefiled inheritance that fadeth not away reserved for him in the Heavens 1. Cor. 9. v. 25. 1. Pet. 1. v. 14. Thus O! ye despised and disconsolated Saints this is your allowance and great portion and these other things are but for our provision while we are in the wilderness and a torch to let us see our way and a staff in our hand while we are going home Thus the children of God are great Heirs indeed they are Kings Rev. 1. vers 6. All the Honours Riches and Pleasures under the Sun all corruptible Crowns wrapt up in one are but as a Cipher and amount to nothing in respect of this one thing They are verily happy and blessed who are thus happy and yet the prime of all their happiness and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consisteth in this that they have (c) 1. John 3. vers 9. fellowship with the Father and His Son Jesus Christ The Lord himself is our great all in Him alone we eminently enjoy all qui habet habentem omnia habet omnia He who can with David Psal 16. vers 5 6. say The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and cup hath reason with him also to conclude I have a goodly heritage This was the marrow of Abrahams blessing when called to sojourn in a strange Land that the Lord himself should be his portion and exceeding great reward Gen. 15. vers 1. Ah! would the men of this world have said is this all our portion and allowance Is this all the recompence we may expect O! How would they have slighted such an offer They could not exstract any consolation from it O! but saith the Lord to Abraham What thinkest thou of thy condition View thy portion and allowance I am thy Shield and wilt thou fear I am thy Reward and hast thou proven an ill Merchant Doest thou rue thy bargain now thou hast the full Ocean for leaving the empty Cisterns I who am thy inheritance am the Almighty God or as others but to the same purpose translate the words I am God all-sufficient there is in me not only an infinite self-sufficiency but also enough to satisfie the vast capacity of the reasonable creature which cannot be filled with any finite object My sufficiency shall be for thy satisfaction I am thy Reward and although thou must be an expectant for a while as to the full fruition of thy inheritance yet thou shall have something in hand I will not be as a stranger to thee in this thy Pilgrimage I will visite thee and all my Attributes shall be imployed for thy good my Mercy and loving Kindness shall follow thee my Beauty and Excellency thou mayest behold my Power shall uphold thee and my Fury and 〈◊〉 justice shall pursue thine enemies O! But may some with her John 4. vers 11. say the well is deep and we have nothing to draw with Ans It is true of our selves we have neither a vessel to hold nor a hand to draw but He who openeth the fountain and invites us to drink doth offer both to us He of His free love hath digged the well the Promises which hold out to us these living waters and Faith which is the hand are His free Gifts and unlesse He pour out upon us the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication that being as it were the bucket wherewith we draw we know not what to ask so that albeit the Lord honour us in calling for our help and in imploying us in His work yet all must come from Himself and when He rewards our work He (d) Deus coronat sua dona non tuamerita August de gr lib. cap. 7. hom 14. in 50. hom cum ab illo habeamue quicquid illi offerimus ex illo si● quicquid boni sumus Serm. 1. in Psal 32. nobis 33. vers 4. inter pontificios vid. Durand in 2. Sent. dist 27. quest 2. crowns His own Gift But thus though we have nothing to offer to Him but His own as David and that people truly said concerning outward things and temporals 1. Chr. 29. vers 14. but we far rather and upon another account as to our Spiritual sacrifices yet He calls for our offering though we have nothing wherewith to draw yet He calls for our bucket that He may fill it He will have us to pray and He will perform our desires He will give to His honest Supplicants not some few things but whatsoever they shall ask Joh. 14. vers 13. and chap. 16. vers 23. He is God all-sufficient all that can make for the creatures happiness is eminently to be found in Him and efficiently from Him and all this good these great and excellent things which eye hath not seen nor ear heard must be conveighed unto us by Prayer and given in return to our Supplications That key wherewith (e) Jam. 5. vers 17. 2 Chr 6. v. 26 and chap. 7. vers 13. Elias did open and shut the doors of heaven must unlock all our Fathers cabins and the praying soul may choose what Jewel he will he may lay hold on eternal life and the immortall crown the hidden (f) Rev. 2. vers 17. manna and the white stone in which is engraven the new name which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it 2. There is a fulness in Christ Job 1. vers 16. in Him are treasures all treasures of wisdom and knowledge but ah they are (g) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hid Col. 2. vers 3. Though the treasure be full yet it is lockt and where shall we find a key to open it It s hid and how shall the ignorant foolish sinner fall upon it Nay but why
complainest thou poor indigent and witless creature The owner (h) Rev. 3. vers 18. Is 55. vers ● 2. invits thee to come he points out thy way and discovers the door and thou hast the (i) There is no door so fast shut that Prayer will not get entrance vid. part 4. ch 1. keyes as it were hanging at thy belt for if thou wilt knock it shall be opened unto thee if thou wilt seek thou shalt find and if thou ask it shall be given thee Math. 7. vers 7. There is a well furnished table set before thee and it is left to thy choice to cut and carve what thou wilt and so if thou starve thou mayest know who should bear the blame O! saith an (k) Gerbard cont barm cap. 179. utilitas orationis tanta est ut nemo eam c. eminent and judicious Divine who is able to enumerat all the excellencies and advantages of Prayer What the heart is to the living creature What rest to the weary What joy to the sad What gold to the indigent What strength to the feeble What nerves to the body What spirits and blood to the life Prayer is all that to the afflicted soul It is as the Sun in the Firmament or rather the Glass by which light is communicat it's medicine to the sick a refuge to the opprest a sword against the devil and a shield to ward off his fiery darts It 's eye-salve to the blind it begetteth hope and confidence it inflameth the heart with love it worketh humility and filial fear it elevats the mind above the creature and sets the affections on things that are above it brings a taste of the hidden manna and sets the Supplicant before the Throne to behold the King in his glory and leads him into the (l) Song 7. vers 6. Galleries where he may familiarly converse with his Lord and Soveraign This is that golden chain which will hold the Almighty untill He blesse thee it is Jacobs ladder whereon thou mayest mount up to Heaven It is that Jaw-bone wherewith Sampson smote the Philistines This is Noah his dove which alwayes returns with an Olive leaf of comfort to the disconsolate This is Davids stone wherewith he smote Goliath and his Harp wherewith he drove away the evil spirit from Saul This is that Pillar of fire and cloud which directs the Saints and blindfolds their enemies This was that Bow the Promises being the Arrow and Faith the Hand whereby these Worthies Heb. 11. of whom the world was not worthy waxing valiant in fight turned to flight the Armies of the Aliens quenched the violence of the fire escaped the edge of the Sword subdued Kingdoms stopped the mouths of Lyons c. O! Who is able to enumerat all the noble and admirable (m) Vide infra pare 4. chap ult effects of Prayer What desolations it hath made in the earth what revolutions in the world and what astonishing deliverances it hath brought to the Saints O! That He who gave wisdom to (n) Exod. 31. vers 6.11 Bezaleel and Aholiah for making the Tabernacle according to the Pattern would teach us the heavenly art of sacrificing to our God in spirit and in truth The material Tabernacle and Temple where are they now Yet we must still bring our offering the Christian oblation must never cease we are Priests Rev. 1. vers 6. and we have an Altar Heb. 13. vers 10 12 15. But alas may we with Isaac Gen. 22. vers 7. say where as the Lamb for a burnt offering we have nothing to offer unless the Lord provide a Ram and instruct us how we should offer it up Rom. 8. vers 26. It is thought one of the most tolerable and easy tasks to pray and every one as they think is able and sit enough for such an employment and are busie enough in carrying on that trade and they were not worthy to live will such say who do not call upon God But ah Who are they that are acquainted with the mistery of Prayer Lip-labour is indeed an easy work the Popish devotion the whiting the out-side of the Sepulchre is no difficult task but it is not so easie to give life to the loathsom carcasse within thou mayest draw nigh the Throne and prattle some few words before the Lord and yet never put to one finger to the work if thou do not put out thy strength to draw up thy dead lumpish heart if thou find not a burthen pressing thee and it down and call not to heaven for help and for fire to kindle and enlive thy sacrifice Every key will not open the doors of Heaven every knock will not obtain an entrance nor every cry prevail Let us then look up to Him who can only give us that wisdom which is from above who can discover bring to our hands and help us to use that admirable piece of work that it may not only prove a key to open the Fountain the Store-house door and all our fathers Cabins but also for opening of our hearts and an hammer to break the hard rocks of corruption and the stone there Ah! But who is sufficient for such a task A word spoken on such a subject can never be unseasonable and though many have put in their Sickle here yet much of the harvest is un cut down But more hath been said then rightly improven though the Lord hath stirred up so many of His Messengers to point out the way to the Throne and how to carry on a safe trade with Heaven yet who hath believed their report And we shall not think our labour lost in bearing testimony against this sinning and prayerlesse Generation nor shall we stand upon an Apology for making choice of such a Theme Alas How often have (o) Is 37. vers 4 5. the children come to the birth and have stuck there for want of Prayers (p) That I may so speak with some eminent Divines Mr. Good-wine Mr. Gurnall c. Midwifry The Promise many times is big with child and is come to it's full reckoning and hath no longer to go with the desired Mercy then till thou run to the Throne of Grace and plead for it's deliverance it only waits for the obstetrication of the prayer of Faith that the Man-child may be brought forth The Lord deals not sparingly with us He hath many blessings to bestow None of His children need with (q) Gen. 27. vers 38. Esau complain that he hath not one to bestow on him But alas we are like a Kings Son in the cradle who knows not that he is Heir of a Crown and thus neither regards nor improves his Dignity and Priviledge Or like a Traveller who having many Bills of Exchange yet will not be at the pains to read them but undervalues them as so much un-written paper and will rather starve than bring them to the Exchanger and plead for the sums to which they give him a right Ah! Who
Apud Swar in 2.2 tract 4. lib. 1. de or cop 11. Sect. 9. Alensis will have them not only to pray for what they want but also for what they have that their happiness may be continued with them And the common opinion amongst them though it be not so gross yet it hath a most fabulous foundation viz. that the (k) Vid. Swar loc cit Sect. 11. Saints in glory as to the measure degree and increase of their happiness are yet as it were on the way and are subject to some mutation and thus are capable of a farther measure of happiness which they do pray for and for all the means whereby this their accidental happiness as they call it may be promoved We will not digress to confute that conceit and to shew that after (l) Heb. 9.27 Eccles 11.3 1 Cor. 9.24.25 1 Tim 4.7 8. Rom. 2 6. c. Joh. 9.4 death we are judged and stated into an unalterable condition that the tree must ly as and where it falleth that this day of our life is the time we have to run the race to fight the good fight and that with our dayes we must finish our course that we must be judged according to the deeds done in the body after the night of death cometh no man can work any more the long day of eternity is for wearing and not for purchasing the crown or any pearl to be added to it And why should I prove what the Lord by a voice from heaven hath attested that these who die in the Lord are blessed and that their works done on earth do follow them but in heaven they rest from their labours Rev. 13.14 I did think that heaven was our home and (m) Heb. 4.9 10. resting place and if after the Saints be come thither they be yet in viâ I would ask when they shall come to their journeys end For I see no reason why unto all eternity they may not alwaies be panting after and endeavouring for some new addition to their happiness according to their principles who plead for this accidental felicity to which they ascribe so great a latitude for if after the crown is put on their head it be lyable to so many changes I know not when it wall be so fixed that it will suffer no new alteration and addition If the particular (n) Quod enim in die judicii futurum est omnibus hoc in singulis die mortis impletur Hieronym in Joel cap. 2. judgment after death doth not state us into an unchangable condition why should the generall Judgment do it 2. As for Alensis his (o) Yet Medina his conceit is more grosse who affirmeth that neither Gods Word nor works can be a ground of confidence Deus potestatem suam non alligavit Scripturis promissis quae in Scriptura continentur Jo. Med. cod de orat quaest 6. But of this more part 2. and part 4. where we shall hear Mendoza though a Papist blush at such abominable doctrine conjecture it doth suppose that the Saints shall never be secure of their happiness which they enjoy and that we shall be still under the Ordinances and that we must use the means after we have attained the end that the state of glory is alterable and the sentence of the great Judge revocable 3. As to Thomas his opinion it is more probable but the souls in glory being so fully satisfied with the beatifieal vision and fruition of God they can have no anxiety fear unquietness or dissatisfaction with their present condition and though their bodies be in the dust and they may be said to long for the consummation of their happiness in the rising again of their bodies and their partaking according to their capacity of the Crown of felicity yet since they are sure that the day of Coronation when both soul and body being united shall be filled with glory is approaching it may be questioned whether or not they pour out these longings and desires prayer-wayes to God For they being now above Ordinances and faith being changed into vision and hope into fruition it seemeth most agreeable to that state that prayers also should be changed into continual praises As for that place Rev. 6.9 10. which is mainly urged for their praying for the consummation of their happiness albeit the prayer there mentioned is intended against their persecutors and only in the return made ver 11. there is a word which may aime at the Resurrection which though it be there promised by God yet it was not askt by them and it is mentioned there rather to design the period of time and date of the return of their prayer then as a part of it I do not deny that some of our (p) As Diodat on the place and Seb. Mayer apud Marlorat in loc c. But M. Thomas Goodwin loc cit sect 5. ch 7. pag. 109. speaketh most expresly affirming that this is not spoken metaphorically of them but truly done by them that not only their blood but themselves did cry Divines do seem to say that it is a proper prayer yet we rather think with Tironius whom Ribera on that place citeth and though a Papist doth not reject that the souls of them who were slain for the Word are there said to cry for vengeance on persecutors not that they did truly and properly pour out any such complaint against them unto whom while on earth they prayed for mercy and pardon but that their sufferings and their blood like (q) Heb. 21.24 Thus also the English Divines and Dr. Hamond interpret the place and Mr. Durham and Da. Paraeus grant that here is an allusion to the cry of Abels blood Heb. 12.24 Abels did cry against ●●e murtherers and such as succeeded to them in their cruelty and persecution As for the souls in hell they are to come to their as it is said of Judas Act. 1.25 that he went to his own place that place of torment of weeping and gnashing of teeth that place of dispair cursing and blasphemie and so cannot be a place of hope supplication and prayer they know how false that fancy is which commonly is ascribed to (r) Mr. Rosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sect 7. quaest 22. pag. mihi 202. à Castro adver haer lib. 8. de inf 2. haer pag. mihi 620. August de haeres cap. 43. But it s though that Origens writings have been miser ably corrupted by hereticks Origen and that they shall never come out of that prison untill they have (ſ) Luk. 12.59 Mat. 5.26 payed the very last farthing and they not being solvendo and never able to satisfie for the least offence but must still contract new debt therefore can conceive no ground of hope that ever they shall escape and thus in dispair they continually belch out cursings and blasphemies We do indeed read of a conference between a rich man in hell and Abraham Luk. 16.24 c.
deal with him as he did Adonijah he will not tear thy supplication and make it a dittay against thee for taking away thy life only beware of Adonijah his heart do not design treason as its thought he did while thou presents thy desire t● the King if then thou wouldst ask what course thou shouldst take that thou mightest be saved I would tender thee no better advice then Peter did to Simon the Sorcerer while he was yet in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity Act. 8.23 22. repent of thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee And to presse this so necessary advice and exhortation let us brieflly by way of motive and encouragement hold forth some grounds which may serve as so many arguments to vindicate the point from the Antimonian dream 1. What ground hast thou to entertain the least scruple concerning thy duty to pray to God and bemoan thy condition to him to perform this part of worship which not only thy indigence but also his honour calls for at thy hands what seest thou what do Antimonians hold forth unto thee for taking off the tye and obligation which thy condition and dependance thy wants and fears and Gods law written in thy heart and in the Scriptures doth lay upon thee Can thy former wickedness make thee now a Libertine can it pull out thy shoulders from under the yoke 2. Thou being convinced of thy duty wilt thou ask whether thou mayest perform it or not There can hardly be a clearer contradiction imagined then to say its my duty to pray and yet I may not I ought not to pray I am infinitly obliged to do and yet I should not do for what call ye duty but that which we are obliged to do Was there ever such a subtile notion as to abstract duty from the obligation to do Or can there be a more unreasonable fancy then to say that these who are under the means may not use them true it is that after death the case is altered thou art no more under the means neither doth the King call and invite thee to come but yet even then if he would hold forth the golden Scepter to the damned as now he doth to the unconverted they were obliged to draw nigh the Throne 3. Art thou not convinced that grace is lovely and desirable and from whom canst thou desire it but from God and that 's to pray for what is prayer but an offering up of our desires to God 4. For thy warrant thou hast the command of God again and again repeated in the Word 5. Many sad threatnings denounced against kingdoms families and persons that will not call upon God 6. Thou hast seen heard and mayest read of many judgments temporal and spiritual poured out upon such as did not call upon him 7. We may with the Apostle in another case 1 Cor. 11.14 appeal to nature it self doth it not teach him that is in misery to cry to him who is able to help and relieve and to intreat him whom he hath wronged and off nded to pardon and forgive Thus the light of nature discovereth this duty to Pagans and as with a double cord bindeth it unto thee who also hast the light of the Word pointing out that way to thy feet 8. Several talents bestowed on thee for this effect do call to thee to improve them What hast thou not some natural power and ability to desire and expresse though not in a spititual and saving way thy desires to God 9. Doth not thy conscience draw thee to the Throne Doth it not accuse and challenge thee when thou omittest this necessary and as I may call it natural duty 10. Hast thou not many wants fears c. and what do all these say unto thee but O! run to the Throne for a supply and remedy 11. The greatness of the priviledge that thou mayest approach the great King doth call upon thee to imp●ove it together with the great benefits which thereby may be purchased Yea 12. though there were no other income then the present effect which usually it hath on the heart to enlarge fit and in some measure dispose it for becoming a temple for the holy Ghost and to be a fit room to receive and welcome the King with all his train of attendant graces which are the harbingers of glory nay it is not only a disposition but a beginning of the saving work prayer if serious is a turning of the heart to God it s a spiritual and converting motion of the soul it s the first breathing of the new creature desire of grace say Divines is grace Certainly if it be effectual and resolute it must be so and desire is the life of prayer and without it there is no prayer so that such as forbid the unregenerate to pray do disswade them to be converted and turn to God or begin the saving work of grace prayer is not only a converting ordinance but also the first breathing of the converted not only a mean but also a part and the first fruit of conversion 13. The doleful and sad consequents that must follow the contempt of this promising remedy the King ere it be long will tear these proud rebels in pieces who would not submit and supplicate him for a pardon 14. The great advantage that may be expected that probability if not certainty of successe that God will fulfill thy desire may as a strong cord draw thee nigh to God thou hast not one but many encouragements to excite and set thee a work 1. Gods bowels opened in the Ordinances and his arms stretched forth to embrace thee 2. His call and invitation his counsel entreaties requests expostulations c. together with his solemn protestation that he delights not in the sinners ruine but rather that he would draw nigh to him that he might live while the King inviteth the traitor to come and seek his pardon what should discourage him 3. His Ordinance and appointment in making prayer a mean for that end they who teach that sinners cannot expect a blessing on their offering up their desires to God do say yea though we did abstract from his fidelity in fulfilling his promises that God hath appointed that Ordinance in vain 4. His stirring up the heart and filling it though by a common work of the spirit with such desires and purposes as are fit materials of prayer do say that if we will improve that season the Lord purposeth not to send us away empty he will not be wanting to promove what good he begins to work in us till we resist his spirit and first draw off and lye by and thus stifle the new birth in its conception 5. God's satisfying the natural appetite of inanimate creatures and fulfilling the sensual desires of the brutes and brutish requests of sensual men when selfish Ahabs have opened their mouths for outward mercies and deliverances he hath filled them
rule so it s 2. constant perpetual and immovable we need not fear least the Lord abrogate and disannul it but that same hand of providence which now holdeth out to us what our hears desire may in a moment be lifted up against us that same hand that now seemeth to open the door may shut it when he pleaseth and crush thee if thou stand in the way Sect. 2. For what things and in what order and maner should we pray THe promise being such a sure ground and foundation of prayer we may safely go where see this star point out our way the promises are not only precious and exceeding great 2 Pet. 1.4 But also like the (a) Ps 119.96 commandments exceeding broad and of a large extent they go as far as a rational and sanctified appetite can reach The will I confesse may chuse every (b) Bonum est quod omnia appe●uus Arist Eth. 1. cap. good thing and the promise is of as large a compasse The Lord hath said that he will give grace and glory and are not these very large and comprehensive yet least any should complain he will leave no room for any exception but as he hath promised to give these great mercies so that he will withhold no good thing from his honest servants and supplicants Ps 84.11 Ps 34.9 10. Ps 23.1 Ps 85.12 c. and that he will preserve them from all evil Ps 1 21.7 that he will preserve their soul ver 7. and their body their going out and coming in and that he will not suffer their foot to be moved ver 8 3 5 6. Thus the promise excludeth nothing that is good and I know no good thing which we may not pray for Goodness by the Phylosophers is thought to be a relative property and in the Schools that is called good which is fit and (c) Bonum est ens ut conveniens non fibi ut ex tern●●●● videtur manifestum sed alteri unde Hurtado ex divisione boni in honestum u●ile delectabile recte colligit bonum communiter usurpari pro convenienti quia inquit honestas utilitas delectatio dicunt ordinem ad aliud Hurt metaph disp 7. § 5. § 56. convenient which general may to good purpose be applyed to this case in divinity while we enquire what is good for a Christian and what he may claim and ask as being his by vertue of a promise viz not every thing which his lust doth crave but every thing that is fit and convenient and so good for him It may be riches pleasures honours c. would not hic nunc and at such a season be convenient for him but would prove a snare and therefore there is no promise that we can absolutely and peremptorily plead as a bond for such a supposed mercy The object of the promise must be some good thing bonum tibi there can be no promise made to thee but it must be concerning something which is good and covenient for thee otherwise it were rather a threatning then a promise O! If all our prayers and desires were thus limited and did carry alongst with them this proviso we would not be so peremptory in our requests nor so impatient under a repulse nor so ready to call in question Gods love and care and the truth of his promises when in mercy he refuseth to satisfie our lusts and foolish desires And O! with what confidence security and calmness of spirit might we roll our selves and all our affairs over upon our kind and provident Father who as he will not withhold what as good so will not suffer what is evil to come near us But as thou mayest ask every good so only what is good for no evil can be an object of love and desire but rather of hatred and aversation and so falleth not under a promise but a threatning and thus cannot be a fit material for prayer and supplication but rather for deprecation or imprecation But here we might speak to this question whether we may desire and pray for any evil whether of sin or suffering though not absolutely and for it self yet as it may be a mean for humbling of us and drawing us near to God There be few of those we have read who propound and none who at any length do speak to this material as we conceive case but since there be so many particulars which we must speak to in this Chapter we shall remit this to Part 3. and handle it amongst the cases Only let us from thence suppose that the object of our prayers must be something that is good fit convenient and profitable to us and that not only respectively and in reference to such an end but also absolutly and of it self at least negatively and permissively And thus it must not be evil either morally or physically it must not of it self be either dishonourable to God and contrary to his law or afflictive and bitter to us But as to what is thus good thou art not straitned either by the promise or the nature of this performance we have both conjoyned and meeting together in this center or rather diffused through this large circumferene Mat. 7.11 Your Father which is in heaven shall give good things to them that ask him We need not descend unto particulars these being so many and different whatever thou stands in need of what ever may be useful and profitable either for soul or body for this life or that which is to come for thy state and calling for thy present exigence and condition c. thou mayest ask in prayer and plead a promise for the obtaining of it All which good and desirable things are summarily comprehended under six heads in that perfect pattern which our Lord Jesus taught his Disciples Mat. 6.9 Luk. 11.2 a commentary and explication whereof we purpose not to offer now especially since that hath been often and fully done by many judicious and learned Divines But we shall reduce what we judged necessary to add concerning the object of prayer into two generals viz. of things and persons Of the first we shall speak here and of the second in the following Section 1. Then as to these good things and mercies which are the matter of prayer it would be observed 1. that these are either temporal belonging to our bodily and perishing being in this world or spiritual which do (d) For even these temporal things have a remote tendency and should by us be referred to such a noble end more immediatly concern the soul and our everlasting being and happinesse 2. Both spiritual and temporal mercies may be subdivided for some of them are more some lesse necessary for obtaining the aforesaid ends as amongst spirituals some are necessary for our being and spiritual life others only for our greater comfort vigor and activity in doing so amongst temporals some are necessary for our bodily being and life others only for the comfort better
with the rest of the members while they suffer and seekest not after a remedy it s a token thou art a rotten and dead member which must be cut off O! but Christ the head continually prayeth for all the members of his body and wilt thou not joyn with him hell and the world are enraged against them they have but few friends and shall these prove unfaithfull and not help them by their prayers whom otherwise they cannot profit wilt thou prove like Pharouh's butler whilst thou art advanced and hast moyen at court wilt thou forget the affliction of Ioseph if hitherto thou hast done so say with (b) Gen. 41.9 him I do remember my fault this day Albeit no Saint should be excluded from our prayers yet more specially we should remember the afflicted whoever be forgotten the sick child will be cared for affliction is a fit season for prayer and not only the afflicted should pray for himself but others should joyn and put up a prayer for him Iam. 5.13 14. But yet more especially we should compassionat persecuted Saints who suffer for righteousnesse sake though Moses Nehemiah Esther and Daniel might have enjoyed the pleasures which a Kings Court could furnish yet the affliction of Gods people did afflict their spirits and send them to the throne to interceed for their brethren You will perhaps say who is he that forgetteth the Saints Answ But it may be thou prayest not for them as Saints but as thy friends and neer relations if thou pray for any one as a Saint thou (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includit supponit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod enim alicuiconvenitqua tali necessario convenit omui ideoque a quatenus adomne vales consequentia vid Arist 1. Post cap. 4. must pray for all (d) Eph. 6.18 Saints self-love as it may make thee pray for thy self so also for thy relations amongst which may be many Saints but only the love of God can make the love his children as such and all that bear his image though never so mean and despicable in the eyes of the world and not able to serve or profit thee O! let us hearken to the invitation Isa 45.11 Let us ask of God concerning his sons the Lord calleth us and assureth us of successe only let us take heed that we forget none of his sons the father will not take it well that any of his children should be slighted as Joseph would not speak to his brethren till all were present so thou mayest meet with many frowns from the Almighty if thou come alone or forget any of thy brethren behind thee 6. And we shall instance no mo particulars The relation that is between Pastors and people do engage to the mutuall performance of this duty as for the Ministers of the Gospel as they are by their calling obliged so they will make conscience if of any thing to pray that the word preached by them may be accompanied with power for the conversion of the hearers that it may be received with meeknesse and reverence not as the word of man but as the word of the living God which is able to make wise the simple and to save their souls that they may not become unfruitfull hearers but doers that their fruit may be holinesse and the end everlasting life that they may grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ c. Jam. 1.21 25. Rom. 6.22 Psa 19.7.2 Pet. 3.18 c. You will not deny that Ministers should pray for the people committed to their charge for whose souls they must answer in the day of accounts that they have laboured to feed them and rescue them from the snare of the devil and have watched for them and sought their good in every ordinance Heb. 13.17 2 Timoth. 2.24 25 20. But that the people should pray for their Pastor we do not too many will say see such reason or necessity nor is it very usuall Answ What dost thou talk of reason or necessity when may we argue from these if not in the present case and therefore hearken O negligent hearers who care not for your own souls but would cast all the care of them over upon the Minister to whom you deny your assistance in that work and ponder these few amongst many motives that may prevail with you to make more conscience of this so much slighted though most necessary duty 1. Thou canst nor prepare thy heart to hear the word and no wonder then though thou get no good by it if thou neglect this duty if the husbandman take pains on the ground he will not be wanting so far as his care and industry can reach to provide good seed and if thou desire and expect a blessing on the word which is the seed of immortall life as thou will labor to have thy heart which is the ground fitted and enlarged to receive so thou wilt by prayer wrestle with the Lord who is the great master and (e) Joh. 15.1 husband-man that he would enable his messengers that they may speak as the oracles of God in power and demonstration of the Spirit that a door of utterance may be opened unto them for to make known the mystery of the Gospel that they may speak boldly and may exhort and rebuke with all authoritie and may be instant in season and out of season with all long suffering and patience that they preach not themselves but Christ that they may take heed to their Ministy to fullfill it that they may be cloathed with righteousnesse being an example to the flock in word in conversation in charity in faith purity self deniall and holinesse that thus they may save themselves and those that hear them c. 1 Pet. 4 11. 1 Cor. 2.4 Col. 4.3.17 2 Tim. 2.15 Tit. 2.15 2 Tim. 4.2 2 Cor. 4.5 Psa 132.9 1 Tim. 4.12 c. if thou desire the (f) Pet 2.2 sincere milk of the word that thou may grow thereby thou wilt not forget the nurse if thou regard what seed be sown in the ground thou wilt not neglect to go to him who only can fill the hand of the sower and to say to him O! let us not have tares in stead of good seed if thou care for thy spirituall life thou wilt say O! let the stewards hands be full let him have an allowance for us that we starve not for want of the childrens bread 2. What are Ministers weak frail men subject to like passions as others are Jam. 5.17 Act. 14.15 and who is sufficient for such an high and weightie charge 2 Cor 2.16 and therefore as they have need to watch over their own hearts to take heed to ther steps and to be frequent and servent in their addresses to God so the people should wrestle together with them in their prayers to God for them Rom. 15.30 and thereby strengthen their hands against all the discouragments and difficulties they may encounter
the use its smo●k is loathsome ●nd a favour of unpleasant smell to God The strange punishment of Na●ab and Abih●s for bringing strange fire to the Lords sacrifices should be a warning to us they should have brought sacred fire from the (k) Which should have been alwayes preserved burning and never go out Lev 6.13 Altar and not have prefaced the ordinance of God with that which was common now this sacred fire saith (l) Diod on Levit. 10.1 Diodati on the place signified the power of the holy Ghost by which we can only offer sacrifices acceptable to God our sacrifices must be an abomination to God unlesse we bring a coal from the Altar and writ u●●n the br●●things of his Spirit to quicken and warm our dead and c●ld affecti●●e (m) Mant. on Jud. 20. Fire from heaven on the sacrifice once was saith one and yet is a solemn token of acceptance You will say those who are in the way to conversion who are lying under some legal preparations who are looking after God and advancing some steps towards the kingdom do often meet with acceptance though as yet they have not the (n) Rom 8.9 Spirit of Christ and are none of his and so cannot pray in the Spirit yet their prayers are heard and their endeavours prove successefull Ans 1. There is a twofold acceptance one absolute and illimited by way of soveraignty and there is a qualified and covenanted acceptance by way of gracious transaction and free promise the Lord out of his absolute soveraignty may do with his own what he will and shew mercy to whom he will and thus accept of persons and grant their desires though they cannot ●●y claim to a promise but a covenanted and ●●●●●lible acceptance supposeth an i●t rest in Christ pleaded ●t the th●●ne of Grace by the help of the Spirit But. 2 though such as are seeking after God in a legal way of hum●●●tion conviction endeavour c. have not as yet the Spirit 〈◊〉 Christ dwelling in their hearts yet they have some wark●●●d impression of the Spirit on their 〈◊〉 though 〈…〉 be not yet renewed and sanctifi●● 〈◊〉 the Spirit 〈◊〉 a s●●cial hand in every step they move ●●●●●ds God 〈…〉 cial insh●●ce upon their heart 〈◊〉 in the ev●●●●y prove and so may be called saving and effectual ●●●●ce it tendeth that way and may in the issue proves●●h ●●ay there is not any excellency in m●● or difference as to the better of ●●e from another but it prece●ds from the Spirit and every 〈◊〉 towards the kingdom of God must be ordered and carryed on by him and the nearer we are brought the ●●ore we owe to the Spirit and his work is the more eminent and sp●ciall As to the second how doth the Spirit ●●lo us what is that assistance he ass●●deth to us in praye● Ans There is a common a distance and 〈◊〉 is an ass●●●● 〈◊〉 ●●●atly given to the Saints and 〈…〉 for it would 〈◊〉 (o) See ●h●● 1. ●●●embred that prayer may be considered either as a g●ft common to good or bad or as it is a grace and ●●●ct find mea● for obtaining what we stand in ne●d of and thus it is prop r●●o the Saint 1. Then as to the gift of prayer or an ability and readines● to express our desires whether real or in s●●w only in a sit and decent man●r that must 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 Spirit of God and be fr●●ly given to ●s wh●●●●tu●●lly 〈◊〉 (p) not only g●a●i● gr●●●●● saciens ●s they p●●k but not properly if truty but also g●●tia gratis da●● not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p●●●ce ●eth from the Spirit and the word 1 C●● 4.7 may be c●●c●ded to 〈◊〉 ●x●●●●●cy wherby one diss●reth from another destitute as of the grace so of the gift of prayer not only that extraordinary gift whereby in the infancy of th Church some were able upon all occasions according to the exigence of the hearers to pray in a strange language which they never learn't not only this miraculous gift immediatly infused by the holy Ghost which notwithstanding was but a gift and might be abused as may appear from 1 Cor. 14.15 16. but also the ordinary gift and faculty of expressing our conceptions and desires in apt words and a decent maner before the Lord to which our natural parts and industry our hearing reading meditation conference c. do contribute and concur must be freely given and proceed from the Spirit of God as the principal author and efficient He who filled Bezaleel and Aholiab with wisdom and understanding in all manner of workmanship Exod. 35.31 and to whom the Plowman oweth his skill in tilling and sowing the ground Isa 28.26.29 must not he stir up in our minds holy thoughts and fill our mouths with sutable expressions when we come before the Lord There is here much more then parity of reason this being a gift for the edification and sanctification of the Church which is his special work though there be diversitiy of gifts as to that end viz. the good and building up of the Church yet one and the same Spirit worketh all these dividing to every man severally as he will 1 Cor. 12.4 11. But though thus the gift of prayer proceedeth from the Spirit of God yet it being a common gift we cannot thereby be said to pray in the Spirit or in the holy Ghost according to the proper sense of these words Eph. 6.18 and Jud. 20. and as they are used by Christians for thus they rather signifie the grace then gift of prayer and thus the bestowing of this gift cannot be that assistance after which we now enquire there is a mutual separation for as thus the gift may be without grace so there may be this gracious assistance without any considerable measure of that gift as we shew Chap. 1. But so much now of the common assistance of the Spirit whether miraculous or ordinary 2. As for that speciall assistance which is peculiar to the Saints it is either habituall or actuall 1. Then habituall grace that seed of God and principle of life the soul of the new man is necessary to prayer as to every spirituall performance a dead man cannot move and naturall life is no more necessary to vitall actions then the life of grace to every spirituall action the tree must be made good else it cannot bring forth good fruit Luk. 6.43 44 45. Mat. 12.33 we cannot pray in the spirit till we have received the spirit of adoption we must be I do not say we must know that we are Sons before we can truly and in faith call God Father The Spirit doth not infuse prayer in us as he doth the habits or rather faculties of grace and life without our activity and concurrence prayer is not as (q) Yea and Aunomians also according to Pagits cata logue of their errors here siog pag. 110. Where they are said
to affirm that allgiaces are in Christ as the subject and none in us so that Christ beleeves Christ loves c. and so they agree with familists in denying our concurrence Familists foundly dream so the work of the Spirit that it is not our work also the spirit doth not pray in us or for us but helpeth us to pray for our selves (r) Vna sub levet Beza ad juvat ●ulgata auxiliatur Erasmus una capessit Scapula in voc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 part●cula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad nos laborantes refertur Bez. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8.26 he concurreth and addeth his assistance to our work which subjectively is terminated in us and denominats us and can we work without strength and untill first an active principle of life be breathed into us hence Interpreters by the phrase praying in the spirit Eph. 6.18 do affirm to be held forth both the spirit of him who prayeth viz. the new nature which frequently is so called in the Scripture and the Spirit of God which helpeth and assisteth us in that work But though habituall grace be thus so necessary yet it is not sufficient its true the spirit of regeneration is also the spirit of supplication therefore these two are conjoyned in the promise Zech. 12.10 A gracious soul must pray there is no blind nor dumb children in Gods family all of them as they must look up to their Father and depend on him so they must speak to him and lay out their wants and necessities before him but yet there is not such a inseparable connexion but there may be and often is a separation a gracious heart at some seasons and occasions may want the assistance of the Spirit when he would draw nigh to God so that he may pour out naturall and carnall desires yea and when as to the matter the desires are spirituall yet they may be so weak and faint so remisse and destitute of that life that attention high estimation fervency seriousness c. which the quality and worth of the object and the nature of that solemn and heavenly exercise requireth that it were a great in sign ty to the holy Ghost to f●ther such prayers upon him While then the pious and learned Mr. (f) Mr. Baxter m●th for a settled peace of con●cience direct 29. doubt 9. Baxter saith He ●e●●●veth there is never a prayer that ever a Beleever did 〈◊〉 up to God for things lawfull and usefull but it was put up by the help of the Spirit I would think this judicious Divine doth not speak universally of all prayers put up by Beleevers but only of all such prayers as have some life and seriousness in them some measure of attention c. which are the proper effects of the Spirits assistance and while the Lord is thus (t) Ps 145.18 called upon in truth though there be much weakness and manifold infirmities yet I grant and this may be all that this Author aimeth at that the Lord in mercy covereth and for Christs sake pardoneth these imperfections and accepteth the duty Yet there may be such carnal ends such deadness indisposition and w●nt of attention that the beleever after he hath done cannot give an account what he hath askt at least as to some p titions and it were very grosse to ●ffi●●● that such prayers were put up by the help of the Spirit there being nothing of that life truth and other qualifications which alwayes accompany the Spirits work and assistance And with what shame and confusion do Beleevers many a time come from the Throne while they reflect upon their work and the dishonour they have done to God for ●●king ●i● name thus in vain and profaning such a soler●n ordinance through their neglig●●●● and giving way to carnal and distracting thoughts and such (u) An objection from that author obviated prayers cannot be said to contain good desires for where ●●●re is no atten i●● and seriousness there no d●si●● ca● be kindled enlivered and s●●ct●fi●d and so though 〈◊〉 ●●re never so good ●nd ●●●●ent yet the prayer m●st ●●●ght (x) Except in that sense in which Phylosophers affirm that gravi● levia moventur à g●nerante To●et 8. phys quaest 2. Con●●br R●vius ibid. cap. 4. quaest 2. Su●● met●ph dl p. ● sect 2. S● much for the habitu●● 〈…〉 is pre-su●●osed 〈…〉 previous unto 〈…〉 p●●●ing 〈…〉 ●he 〈◊〉 is self and 〈…〉 upon i● bu● 〈…〉 ●ff●ct viz tha● 〈…〉 preserved by the Sp●●● and wh●ich ●●●●g actu●●ed by the spirit doth concur with the Spirit in all our spirituall performances 3. Then that assistance which directly and properly is held forth by the help of the Spirit must be some actual influence and work upon the soul and concurrence with it in it's actings which we may branch forth in these few particulars and speak of a four-fold act of the Spirit by way of actual assistance beside that constant and continual supply and influence whereby the new man and weak principle of life is conserved and supported against the mighty assaults of old Adam within and the strong man without 1. To actuat and exuscitat 2. To strengthen and corroborat 3. To instruct direct and regulat And 4. to encourage embolden and make us draw nigh to God with confidence 1. Then the Spirit exciteth quickneth and bloweth up the (x) Ps 3 ●● fire though there be a principle of heat within yet the spirit must blow upon these coals and dispell the embres before they will burn the habits of grace do stand in need of quickning and stirring up otherwise they cannot act they lose their vigor and activity unless the Spirit draw us we will not run Cant. 1.4 Unless the wind blow upon our garden the spices thereof will not flow out But 2. we must not think that we stand in need of no more but of this quickning and exciting motion as if the man were strong and able enough to walk if once awakned nay unless the Spirit concur and assist unless he bring furniture and provision and put new strength in us the work will be marred though he did set u● upon our feet we would quickly go to the ground and fall asleep again though you would draw a paralitick man after you yet he could not follow though you did lift him up yet he would instantly fall back again unless you would add strength to his muscles and joints but I said that the Spirit must not only concur but also strengthen and corroborat the spirit must supply our weakness and inability So that here we may take notice of a twofold act 1. to concur with the new man according to the measure of its strength and activity 2. since the new creature is weak and not able to go of its self the nurse must take it by the sleeves and uphold it we have not a sufficiency in our selves for one good thought 2 Cor. 3.5 If the Lord hold
unprofitable task and too high for us and will not have such new wine put into our old bottels till they be renewed lest they break Mat. 9.17.5 Sathan as a cruel exacter may press thee to deal inhumanely and too rigourously either towards thy self or others and though such a work may seem to have much piety and zeal in it yet Sathan doth blow the bellows Thus if tender Christians should find a mighty impulse upon their spirits to pray and fast so long and so frequently as to hazard their health and to neglect their calling and not provide for their family ah how rare a case is this but though multitudes do spare and pamper their bodies to the neglect and ruine of their soul yet some have failed on the other hand and then certainly Sathan is not idle it is he that helpeth forward this cruel zeal Thus he stirred up the Jews in (x) But the command given to him was only for trial there being a ram provided for the sacrifice Gen. 22.13 but they could pretend no kind of command Jer. 7.31 Nay the Lord will rather have no sacrifice then a work of mercy should be omitted far more then cruelty should be exercised Mat. 11.7 imitation as it would appear of faithfull Abraham to offer up their children the Lord commanded them to sacrifice their beasts but Sathan taught them in a mad fit of zeal thus to super-erogat and to sacrifice their sons and daughters which oblations are said to be offered up to devils as for other reasons so haply for this because Sathan did prescribe require and stir them up thereunto Psa 106.37 Thus also he moved Baal's Priests to cut themselves with knives and lancets till the blood gushed out 1 King 18.28 Thus also he driveth blind Papists to afflict and scourge themselves c. and yet this sort of cruelty is far more tolerable then the fury of Anabaptists and other Sectaries who are mercifull to themselves but mad against all others in their zeal for God they could embrue their hands in their neighbours blood and cut off all others that they might enjoy their possessions that they might live as Kings there being no man to say to them (y) Eccl. 8.4 What do ye 6. Sathan moves tumultuously and confusedly holy motions having no dependance one upon another and tending to distract the heart in the present work whether that be prayer hearing the word c. must come from him who likes not the work and who laboureth by all means and that his hand may not be discerned maketh choice of the most fair and specious as being at such a season most probable to mar the work in hand but the Lord prepareth strengthueth fixeth and enlargeth the heart and inclineth it to perform His Statutes and establisheth our goings Psa 10.17 Psa 27.14 Psa 40.2 c. He will not raise but rather expell those storms and mist of confusion that dis-inableth us in His work 7. Sathan will suggest and stir us up to good divisively and partially Sathan when he moveth us to do good being out of his own element his motion cannot be equal and uniform if to some good not to all yea to some for this very purpose that we may be stayed from following some other haply of more concernment However he knoweth that he who is guilty of offending in one point is guilty of all and that God will accept of none of our works unless we have respect to all His commandments Psa 119.6 Jam. 2.10 and therefore if he can set one table of the Law or any one commandment against another he will not withdraw his help for enabling thee to bear that part of the burthen thou hast chosen Thus some seem to be very zealous and diligent in religious performances who neglect their relative duties as they are parents masters servants neighbours c. not unlike to those who were taught of the Pharisees to be liberal in their contributions for pious uses and undutifull to their indigent parents Mat. 15.5.6 But there are others and these not a few who place all their Religion in the duties of the second Table and they have no other charter to happiness but that they are good neighbours they deal justly they wrong no man c. and that Sathan may foster their delusion he will allow them to be very strict and exact in their carriage towards men Ah! what a monstrous kind of Religion must that be to wrong men in nothing and to rob God of all his service and worship except perhaps some outward performances without life and heat to give to man all his due and to God none of his O! but the Spirit teacheth and helpeth us to walk uniformly and to (z) Act. 24.16 exercise our selves alwayes to keep a good conscience both towards God and man 4. As to the rule if there be a mistake as to it if a false rule be set up Sathan will stir us up to be very active for it and zealous in our conformity to it if he can get our zeal wrong placed he will blow up the coal it was he that stirred up Paul to be (a) Act. 26.11 exceedingly mad against the Saints and violently to (b) Act. 22.3 4. persecute them he did cherish that blind zeal in the Jews who Rom. 10.2 3. laboured to establish blish their own righteousness he did kindle that zeal in those false brethren who Gal. 4.17 sought to seduce and draw away the Galatians from the simplicity of the Gospel and he it is who ruleth in Schismaticks Hereticks and all kind of persecutors making them mad against the truth and the sincere Professors of it Nay every motion though upon the matter never so good which tendeth to justifie any sinfull course to harden our heart therein and to feed any distempered passion and lust must come from the evil one and from him it also proceedeth that men are more zealous for their own inventions and superstitious customs then for the commands of God O! but the Spirit teacheth us to be (c) Gal. 4.18 zealously affected alwayes in a good thing to follow the direct on of the word and with (d) Job 23.12 Job to esteem his commandments and the words of his mouth more then our necessary food but every anti-scriptural and erroneous motion is a satanical suggestion proceeding not from the spirit of truth but from the father of lies who can cite Scripture and pretend divine Authority as he did to Christ Mat. 4.6 to back his temptations 5. As to the time 1. Sathan may move us to pray by fits and starts but the Spirit only can make us (e) Rom. 12.12 continue instant in prayer we cannot pray alwayes unless we pray in the Spirit Eph. 6.18 carnal men will not constantly call on God Job 27.10 2. Sathan can move thee to pray unseasonably as while a Judge is sitting on the Bench and God calls him and his place calls him to minister
clamours and accusations of the judge within and for the most part a little will do the turn some few outward performances without life and affection the popish opus operatum if the work be done no matter how it be done from what principle upon what motives and to what end Thus Paul before his conversion was a great zealot conscience did press him to do many things upon the matter good and he verily thought with that Ruler Luk. 18.21 that he had perfectly kept the whole law and lacked nothing Act. 22.3 Gal. 1.14 Though then he was as afterwards when his eyes were opened he professeth a blasphemer a persecutor and injurious 1 Tim. 1.13 O! but the Spirit enlargeth the heart and makes us with him Ps 119.6 have respect unto all Gods commandments he moveth to good and to all good without any reservation or limitation and enableth us to do and to do well and especially to look to the inward frame and carriage of the heart as knowing that to be the first thing the Lord asks for and mainly regardeth Prov. 23.6 c. 3. Albeit sometimes there may be a flash of impetuous violence and fervency as in him who riding post for a kingdom said (p) 2 King 10.16 come and see my zeal for the Lord yet (q) Natural motions to good are 1. rare and not usual 2. they are weak and 〈◊〉 faint 3. they are transient and quickly gone ordinarily and habitually and when such fits which are but evanishing flashes are past the stirrings and motions of an unrenewed heart are faint weak and remiss a little blast will blow them away how small a temptation did make that great zealot embrace Jeroboams calves and turn aside from the law of the Lord ver 31. A little trouble and difficulty loss hazard or danger will out-cry a natural conscience and either stop its mouth or prevail against its clamours thus Pilat though convinced of Christs innocency and desirous to set him at liberty will rather deliver him to be crucified then lose the peoples favour his conscience soon yielded to their importunity the warning of a natural conscience is transient and soon choaked like to Ephraim and Judah their goodness which was (r) Hos 6.4 as the morning cloud and the early dew which at the approaching of the Sun will quickly vanish and pass away O! but the Spirit enableth us to stand fast and be constant and immovable in the day of temptation being in nothing terrified by our adversaries and to obey the exhortation Phil. 4.1 Phil. 1.27 28. 1 Cor. 16.13 c. A proof whereof we have in that cloud of witnesses who under cruel mockings scourgings bonds c. obtained a good report Heb. 11. The Spirit fills the heart with (ſ) Heb. 6.18 strong consolations as an antidot against strong temptations and by the power of his might out of weakness we are made strong Heb. 11.34 2 Cor. 12.9 Yea when the quickning presence of the Spirit is withdrawn yet his assisting and supporting presence continueth without change and alteration except in some extraordinary cases procured by our pride sloth c. in which there is as it were deliquium gratiae the new man is cast in a sownd and yet if a discerning Physician did feel his pulse he would find some motion the man is not quite dead his soul is in him the fountain of life is not yet altogether stopt the seed of God yet remaineth in him 1 Joh. 3.9 But during that fit of lethargy the old man rageth and tyranizeth improving that advantage to the utmost and like that dumb devil Mark 9.17.20 22. he often teareth the man and casteth him into the fire and the water to destroy him but the Lord at length pitieth him and as Christ there ver 25. rebuketh the foul spirit and restores the captive to his former liberty but for ordinary the Lord doth not with-draw the assisting yea and in some measure quickning yea even when he doth with-hold the comforting sealing and witnessing influence of his Spirit therefore the Saints stand when others do fall away their leaves are alwayes green and they being planted in God's orchard and from time to time watered by his hand they constantly bring forth fruit in all seasons whileas brambles seeming to blosom for a season shall quickly wither and decay Psa 1.3 4. What though the Saints be not alwayes alike enlarged in duty and have not the same quickning comforting and ravishing manifestations and influences Yet alwayes they have what is necessary to life and motion and they are still advancing and going forward towards their home and it is an evidence the sails were filled with a kindly wind when the Vessel without interruption though not alwayes equally is carried on till at length it arrive at the desired haven But the whirle-wind that bloweth from a naturall conscience though it may impetuously fill the sails and drive the Vessel by a confused motion yet it carrieth it not on towards the harbour but after much tossing too and fro the ship may be as far from the port as before that blast did come and so though it may trouble and molest yet it doth not help the passenger but he seldom meeteth with such a storm which usually ariseth from some extraordinary occasion and when it cometh it is quickly over and gone 4 The motions of a natural conscience are ill seated and placed as strangers they are admitted to the utter court but they are not taken in to the parlor they may have some room as common trash in the house but they are not like the jewels laid up in the cabin as weeds they may grow without the hedge but they are not taken in to the garden they fleet in the understanding and get a candle set down before them there and are attended by the practical judgment and the sentence of the conscience but though they come to the heart and stand at the door and knock yet they cannot get entrance the will and affections take up arms against them and hold them at the door and thus though they come from within yet in some respect they may b● called violent and unnatural the byass and inclination of the heart and will which is the great soveraign and sord of our microcosme is against them they are not unlike the faith of devils which maketh them tremble Jam. 2.19 For 1. as to their original and rise they do not proceed from a kindly principle but from slavish fear conviction and the challenges of conscience awakned by some outward rod or threatning c. As thus they come before they be sent for they rush in without the consent of the will Multitud●s are ready here to mistake and to esteem the light of conscience to be the choice and inclination of the will thinking that they love God and the beauty of holiness because the practical judgment doth dictate that God is the most lovely object and grace most
themselves inordinatly such as serve and idolize their lusts are forced in the issue to undergo what they most abhor self-love proveth the grossest self-murder Mat. 16.25 Such as make self their last and great end their state is wretched and miserable and their woes shall never come to an end You will say Quaest since prayer should be used as a mean for obtaining the desired mercy how shall I know when I idolize that mercy and make it my ultimate end in prayer Ans Thou dost provoke the Lord and abuse a most solemn and promising ordinance Ans when thou expectest no return of thy prayers and askest not that thou mayest obtain and therefore whatever other end thou mayest propose as discharge of duty the enjoying of fellowship with the Father and his Son an heavenly frame of spirit the shining of Gods countenance in that ordinance and a tast of the heavenly manna yet the proper immediatand direct end of prayer c. is to procure the particular mercy we desire and stand in need of and therefore we must use it for that end and have it often in our eye 1. before we come it must send us to the throne 2. while we come it must animat the desire and 3. after prayer it will make us wait and look for a return But let us beware of the popish leaven that no (c) Suar. lib. 1. cap. 11. sect 13. Ex Alense proponit tres fiues seu fructus orationis viz. 1. ad degustandum seu ad dulcedinem delectationem ex contemplatione amore Dei capiendam 2. ad exsolvendum seu ad merendum satis faciendum divinae justitiae 3. Ad impretandum quod petimus De primo tertio non est quaestio inter nos Pentificios de secundo disputari selet in articulo de merito bonorum operum quod nostri Theologi passim refellunt ut vanum absurdum commentum sed fere nihil ut fatetur Suarez cap. 22. sect 1. hoc loco specialiter de oratione dicere necesse est quamvis oratio sit praecipuum inter tria principalia capita ad quae opera satisfactoria a papistis reduci solent Jejunium enim refertur ad orationem eleemosyna est opus exterius vid Thom. 22. quaest 83. art 13. opinion of merit do feed our expectation who would not abominat that beggar who would ask an almes upon the account of debt as if his asking did give him a right and what creditor would accept of entreaties and requests as good payment all would go to that market where such money were current Ah foolish Papists and unwise how dare ye thus mock the holy one And shall such proud boasting Pharisees (d) Jam. 1.7 expect to (e) An opinion of dignity and merit would hinder and obstruct the acceptance and successe of prayers he who hath money wherewith he may buy needs not begg When we resolve to stand to a legal plea we need not make our supplication to the Judge Job 9.15 receive any thing from the Lord such as would carry on a trade with heaven must not bring such (f) Isa 64.6 filthy rags Ah what are all our righteousnesses all our prayers and performances who will go about to establish their own righteousness but such as are ignorant of the righteousness of God Rom. 10.3 If our works have such a meritorious worth in them Christ died in vain and what do we ow to the free mercy and grace of God For to him that worketh the reward is reckoned not of grace but of debt Rom. 4.4 It is Christs prerogative to ask upon the account of justice and ●o plead the title of purchase but to us all is free his love his blood all the promises all our enjoyments and all the good we stand in need of grace glory our bodily being and life with all its comforts and accommodations Though the Lord by his free promise hath made a connexion between our working and the reward yet we must not imagine any kind of causality by way of merit though our works be via regni yet not causa regnandi They are the way and a mean sanctified and appointed of God for obtaining the blessing but not the cause nor can they give any title by way of purchase and causality but yet the connexion is no less sure and infallible the Lords truth and veracity being as strong and firm a ground and support of faith as his equity and justice hence we may as confidently look for the return of our prayers as if by these we did merit and purchase what we desired But though thus we be (g) Subordinata non pugnant allowed to look after those inferiour and subordinat ends yet if these exclude yea if they no not stoop unto the great and ultimat end viz. the glory of God the whole work is (h) Bonum opus intintio facit non enim valde attendas quid homo faciat sed quid cum facit aspiciat prin quinquag ex prolo Ps 31. August Quicquid autem boni sit ab bomine non propter hoc fit propter quod fieri debere sapientia praecipit etsi officio vidoatur bonum ipso non recto fine peccatum est August lib. contra marred and wants one of the most noble qualifications and that which must be a necessary ingredient in all our acceptable sacrifices not as if in every petition we must reflect upon that high end but that habitually virtually and interpretatively it must alwayes be intended it must so far abide as to have influence upon the whole action so that we must alwayes so carry as if alwayes we did mind and think upon it as he who is riding a journey must so far mind the place he is going to as not to be diverted or driven out of the way And now we come to speak more directly to the main question viz. what is it to intend the glory of God and how shall I know when I make it my great and ultimate end in prayer Ans We may make use of these few characters for a discovery of what end we propound and aim at 1. the end hath a (i) Quid est ergo amor nisi quedam vitta duo aliqua copulans amentom scil id quod amatur August de trin lib. 8. cap. 10. magnetical and attractive vertue it draws out the soul after it and if it be our chief good and the great end it so glueth and uniteth the heart to it that there can be no divorce Hence the soul is said (k) Anima magis est ubi amat quam ubi animat to be more where it loveth then where it liveth And indeed as to the estimation and choice it will prefer what it most loveth unto life it self thus Paul was ready not only to be bound but also to die for the name of Christ Act. 21.13 and the glory of God
13.12 1 Joh. 3.2 CHAP. II. Of the withdrawing of the Spirit of deadness indisposition and wandring thoughts in prayer their causes and remedy ALL our light and strength our activity life and zeal being the fruit of the free Spirit of grace as hath been shown Part. 1. Chap. 9. We not being of our selves sufficient to think far less to do as we ought all our sufficiency coming from God alone 2 Cor. 3.5 If the Lord withdraw his Spirit and if the Spirit of (a) Rom. 8.10 life do not quicken and enable us for our our duty what deadness and indisposition must there be upon our spirit and how unfit and unable must we be for the work of the Lord and for any part of his worship We shall not then here separate the cause and the effect but we not being meer patients but by our folly and unkindness provoking the Spirit to depart yea and not only thus procuring this sad dispensation but also joyning and actively concurring and taking as it were the hammer in our hands for hardning our own heart shutting our own eyes that we might not see and casting water upon the fire that it might not burn we shall enquire after both sort of causes adding some few things for curing and remedying this evil and for our direction whilewe are under this sad tryal Sect. 1. How far the Spirit doth withdraw and why Joh. 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing Psal 5.11 12. Take not thy holy Spirit from me uphold me with thy free Spirit WE shall not now speak of the case and state of desertion in the general what it is what be its kinds what are the causes what the symptoms and marks what the effects and wofull consequents of that malady and what should be done by way of cure and remedy that were a large field hath been the subject of several excellent (a) Mr. Boltons instructions for a right comforting c. Mr. Goodwins child of light c. Mr. Symonds desert souls case and cure c. Treatises but we shall only meddle with so much of that case as concerneth the present subject and now enquire how far the Spirit doth withdraw his help and assistance from the Saints in reference to their prayers and shall but in a word and very briefly speak to that and to the rest of the particulars in this and the following Sections because they fall in here occasionally and as in the by as also since they very much depend upon the case in the si of which now we cannot speak and the general grounds and purposes which belong to that head As to the first question here propounded how far the Spirit doth withdraw Let us 1. suppose against Socinians Papists and Arminians that the Spirit doth neither totally nor finally leave and forsake any of the Saints 1 Joh. 3.9 Joh. 10.28 29. Jer. 32.39 40. Heb. 13.5 c. 2. From the constant presence of the Spirit we may well collect his constant work and operation there is a necessary influence of the Spirit whereby the Saint● are supported and upheld the life of the new man is preserved and the (b) 1 Joh. 3.9 seed of God is kept from corruption and that influence is never denied or withheld from the Saints when they are at the lowest and in their worst and weakest condition when they have been sadly buffeted by Sathan and dangerously wounded by their lusts and after that little of life which yet (c) Rev. 3.2 remaineth in them is ready to die yet there is a secret hand that supporteth them so that they shall never perish Joh. 10.28 But 3. it is more diff●●ult to determine whether as the Spirit alwayes worketh to the conservation of spiritual life So also to its operation acting and exercise and the work of the Spirit as to the former may be called upholding and conserving grace and as to the latter assisting and concurring grace Ans Albeit we did joyn with an (d) Mr. Symonds case and cure ch 4. pag. mihi 36. excellent modern Divine while he thus resolveth this question God never wholly denieth his assistance to a faithfull soul though some degrees of divine help be withheld so that the soul languish in a sort and sink into a state of deadness and au●ness yet there is life and that both habitual and actual Gods clock never stanos there is no such deliquium gratae no such swoun of the new man in which all acts do cease though a Christian may do less yet still he doth something and though he may lose some help from God yet not all Albeit I say we did grant what is here asserted yet these actings may be so weak and faint that it will be hard to discern and put a difference between them and our natural motions they may be so cold and liveless as if no fire had come from heaven and as if the Spirit of life had never breathed upon the soul nay though something of the new life and of grace might be discerned in those actings yet we could not assent to what is said by this (e) As the Spirit worketh alwayes to the conservation of spiritual life So it worketh ever to the growth of graces A Christian is over growing yea then when he seemeth to himself and others to stand at a stay yea to decline he groweth alway really though nor apparently nor equally idid pag. 26. Author concerning the constant growth of grace unless by growth he understand no other thing but the bringing forth and bearing some fruit though n●ver so small and little but this cannot be the importance of the word while we are exhorted to grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 And thus a man may be said to grow while he is lying on his death bed and while he is in the most languishing condition for even then he can elicit some vital acts and bring forth some f●uits of life and yet it would be thought a strange paradox to affirm that such were in a (f) And the instance of plants under the nipping blasts of the winter when the fruit and leaves fall off brought by that Author overturneth his conclusion for though then there be a tendency to growth yet there is no acttual growing but a d●cay growing condition there is no proper growth but when the habit fountain and principle doth receive an addition and increase But 4. what ever be said as to a total cessation from all acts of spiritual life and to an universal withdrawing of all assisting grace though a Saint under the most dreadfull storms and while he is at his lowest were never such an empty vine as to bring forth no fruit and though at no time he were so far deserted as to have all measure of assistance for every spiritual duty withheld yet there may be a total suspension of influence and assistance in reference to some particular performance and that it may be
so in the present case is too apparent and thus some (g) Mr ●ildersh●n● on Ps 51. Mr. Love Tre●t of mortification Divines observe that all the w●●l David wallowed in the mire and till he repented of his murder and adultery his mouth wa● shut and he could not pray and therefore after he had bewailed his sins he begs that God would open his lips and would uphold and streng then him with his free Spirit Psa 51.15 12. Guilt upon the conscience will make the sinner speechless when he comes before the Lord ah what can the rebell say who purposeth to go on in his rebellion dare he say and what el●e can he say Lord though I purpose to break thy holy commandments and to provoke thee to thy face yet withdraw not thy Spirit be not angry pardon my sin c. or if any had the impudence thus to mock the holy Lord would any imagine that the holy Spirit did help and assist him in such an hypocritical bold and foolish performance And since the Spirit may thus be provok't totally to withdraw his help and assistance as to our spiritual sacrifice and the offering up of our desires to God we need not descend to particulars for all that actual help and concurrence with the several steps thereof (h) Vid. loc 337. seq mentioned Part. 1. Chap. 9. may be denied and for a season withheld and suspended It would be here observed that this suspension of the assistance of the Spirit may fall under a twofold consideration 1. as our tryal 2. as our punishment For though he Lord doth not withdraw his Spirit but from sinners yet not alwayes for sin though we be guilty and sin may be called the (i) Causa sine qua non dispositiva imo meritoria cause and occasion of desertion that which of it self deserveth this sad stroke and makes us lyable to this sore trial for in heaven when we shall be free of sin there shall be no night nor ecclipses there shall be no complaint for the want of the influences and the light of this Sun yet the Lord doth not alwayes pursue a quarrel and for our sins withdraw his Spirit but for some other high and holy ends 1. the Lord like a Physitian will take down the body and draw blood to prevent the disease thus the Lord did so far withdraw his assistance from Paul as to suffer the messenger of Sathan to buffet him to prevent Spiritual pride and that he might not be exalted through the abundance of revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 2. As a teacher and instructer of his people he will withdraw his help to teach and warn them of their own weakness and inability and the need they stand in of a continual supply from the fountain thus Peter in the hour of temptation was so far deserted and left that he denied his Master thrice and with an oath Mat. 26.70.72 74. 3. As a soveraign Lord and Master (k) Mat. 20.15 who may do what he will with his own he will withdraw his Spirit for the trial of his honest servants and to give the world a proof and evidence of the reality and strength of their graces thus Job was left to Sathans buffering from within and without as if God had set him up as a mark at which he would shoot all his arrows Job 7.20 so that his soul choosed and had he not been by a secret hand of providence upheld would have embraced strangling and death rather then life ver 15. And yet the Lord all the while was not pleading any controversie against Job but rather offering him to the trial that his sincerity and uprightness might be brought to the light and made more manifest and that we hearing of his patience might learn to imitate it and seeing the issue and period the Lord put to his trial might be encouraged in the day of our trouble Job 1.8 Job 2.3 Jam. 5.11 But 4. though the Spirit doth not (l) Quod ad tritum illud Augustini Prosperi Deus neminem deserit nisi prius deseratur ab ipso Intelligi potest vel de desertione totali finali vel de desertione castigatoria ae quasi paenali si loquamur de homine lapso certum est omnem hominem ●ut loquitur Did. Aluarez de auxil div disp 58. sect 7. prius deseruisse Deum per peccatum actuale v●l orignale quam Deus illum deserat alwaies yet often and most usually he withdraweth for sin according to that threatning 2 Cor. 5.2 If ye forsake him he will (m) Not only in respect of outward blessings prosperity prorection c. but also in respect of inward and sanctifying grace withdrawing both the one and the other forsake you Our kind Father will withdraw and hide his face from his own children when they become unkind and undutifull and then desertion is a paternal chastisement and undutifull and then (n) But rather negative then positive and if we would speak strictly it is rather the suspension of an act but in that it doth flow from the holy counsel and appointment of God we may in respect of its original seu causaluer call it an act u● loquamur cum vulgo act not of meer soveraignty but rather of justice though not pure and vindictive but rather paternal and castigatory and mixed with much love and tending to our good profit and amendment Heb. 12.10 And thus there are as it were four kinds of substractions and withdrawings of the influence of the Spirit viz. 1. medicinal cau●ionary and for preventing of sin 2. monitory and doctrinal 3. probatory exploratory and for trial albeit the former two also in some general sense may go under this name and be said to be for tryal which thus is opposed to punishment which falls under the last sort of desertion which is 4. castigatory and as it were penal and by way of chastisement for sin we will not further prosecute the difference let us only observe that as it is more honourable and comfortable for the Saints to be cast into this furnace then to cast themselves into it to suffer according to the will of God then for their sin So usually there is some one or other circumstance and ingredient in the trial it self that hath much love in it or is some kind of mitigation and extenuation of that sad stroke or some thing in the issue for the greater advantage and establishment of such as have been under the trial thus Paul though buffeted by Sathan yet not foiled but keeps his ground though he was left to wrestle with the temptation yet not to become a prey to it and though Peter fell foully and most deplorably yet he was not left in the mire but instantly recovered by Christs look and though Jobs trial was very sore yet the issue was very glorious and comfortable But though the Lord thus may for holy ends known to
of sincerity a d●uble minded man is unstable in all his wayes Jam 1.8 and albeit this evil be in part cured in the Saints yet it may so far prevail upon occasion as to keep the heart from fixing and being serious at it's work there can be no constancy not fervency where there is not sincerity and hypocritical heart must be a (ſ) Hos 10.2 The Hebrews hold out an hypocrit as having two hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cor cor 1 Chr. 12.33 Psa 12.2 c. Hence also with us ho●is called a double minded man divided heart and while that prevalleth we cannot seek the Lord nor call upon him with the whole heart and so much of the heart as doth not concur in the duty must be otherwayes employed and divert the mind hence wandring thoughts deadness c. 4. Want of feeling and sense of thy wants and indigence when the poor man is pinched with famine and his empty stomach sets him a work with what seriousness and importunity will he cry and beg but if he be full or forget his misery he may fall asleep or become remisse in asking When Laodicea fancied her self to stand in need of nothing she would not go to the market to buy hence Christs warning and counsel Rev. 3.17 18. the (t) Pro. 27.7 full soul leatheth the honey-comb but to the hungry every bitter thing is sweet O! come not to Christs door till thy hunger send thee thither thou canst not feelingly nor seriously ask neither wouldst thou prize the mercy though thou d●dst receive it unless thou be sensible of thy indigence and need 5. Diffidence and distrust 1. if we distrust Gods care and providence in governing the world and minding his people in all their straits and difficulties we will readily seek to help our selves and run to the creature for a supply or if we seek to God but for the fashion in a careless and formal maner those who expect little from God will not be very serious in their addresses to him Iob 21.15 2. Distrust of Gods fidelity in fulfilling the promises to hear and answer our prayers we will be heartless at work when we expect little success advantage or reward they who begin to doubt and with them Mal. 3.14 to ask what profit is it to follow the Or finances of God will be ready either with him a King 6.33 to say why should we wait or call upon him any longer or else with Papists and Formalists to rest on the outward performance without life and heat and to think any sort of performance enough and too much our diffidence and distrust will be followed proportionably with so much despondency deadness want of life activity and fervency in our work faith saith (u) Mr. Gurn loc cit ch 6. pag. 565. one is the back of steel to the bow of prayer which sends the arrow with force to heaven where faith is weak the cry will not be strong he that goeth about a business with little hope to speed will do it but faintly he works as we say for a dead horse the less we hope the less we endeavour See Part 2. Ch. 2. Sect. 2. 6. Excess and surfeiting when the soul is full and glutted it is not fit for bodily far less for spiritual exercises therefore if ye would watch unto prayer ye must be sober 1 Pet. 4.7 If we would not fall asleep at our work let us use the creatures with moderation and sobriety and beware of drunkenness and gluttony 1 Thes 5.6 7. But as there is a bodily so also there is a moral surfeiting and over-charging mentioned and joyned with the other Luk. 21.34 when the soul is drunk with the (x) See Cause 1. cares of this life it will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the word is Luk 12.29 it will become like to a wandring meteor now up now down and unfit for any spiritual employment wordly cares will choak good motions and mar the work these thorns will over-top the good seed and not suffer it to grow Mat. 13.22 periclitatur pietas in negotils the world eats out our zeal and exceedingly blunts and takes off the edge from our spiritual affections if we look up to God we will find that heavy clog and (y) Heb. 12.1 weight to beset us and presse us down and hardly will we get that burden casten off when the soul is drowned in the world how can it mount up as on eagles wings and a scend to the throne The world is Sathans b●rdlime if we stay too long upon the earth he will readily catch us and cut off our wings if our chariot drive too far in the mire it will leave the wheels behind when we come reeking and sweating out of the world we will find our spirits to be spent and that we have no strength for doing the work of the Lord nay the world will not thus part with us though we would leave it for a while yet it will follow us and cry after us and thus inter●upt divert and disturb us while we would look up to God and therefore if we would pray affection●●●y and fervently we must be carefull for nothing as prayer is a remedy and should come in the place of immoderat excessive and distrust●ull care So it is inconsistent w●th and cannot be to purpose performed when that is hence the opposition Phil. 4 6 Prayer as (z) Melch. Adam in vit Luth pag. 139. Lucher said is hirudo cararum the leeches that should suck out our cares but alas there is no such venom and distemper in the spirits of many as killeth these leeches and will not suffer them to enter our cares do choak our prayers and in many are so excessive and incurable that they will not admit a remedy 7. Lasciviousness wantonness and a spirit of lust will take away the heart and indisoose us for spiritual duties Hos 4.11 If Sampson fall a sleep in Dalilahs lap she will betray him to the Phil●stins and he may lose both his sight and his strength and if he (a) Judg. 16.20 essay to go out as at other times before and to shake off his fetters he will find they are now too strong for him when that strange fire burneth in the heart the smoak thereof will defile our sacrifices and its flame wi●l eat out the fire of the sanctuary which is of a heavenly descent 8. (b) Sathan desires to fish in troubled waters he no sooner espieth any distemper in the affections but be is in readiness to joyn with it and to ad fewel to that fire Discontent with our condition family (c) Inter jurgia lites Precibu● non est locus contention anger wrath jealousie grief fear and whatever excess and distemper in the affections and passions of the soul when these are out of order and raise tumults stir up confusion and make a noise in the heart how will they disturb and distract it
commend this practice which yet did very much evidence their zeal offered themselves to the flames and though thousands from day to day did suffer yet the number of professors did daily encrease The (i) Sanguis martyrum semen ecclesia ashes of the Martyrs becoming the seed of the Church many strangers did then come in who seeing the zeal and courage of Christians joyned with them in their sufferings owning Christ and his Gospel in these cruel and bloody times but alas how few in our dayes would abide the tryal a little storm would make the multitude of professors to renounce and disown their old Master with whom they resolved to stand but not for him to fall and shall we make such our copy and think it enough to do as they do A third direction is this converse with the Saints their company and society may be very quickning it s not good for the sick to be alone the company of friends may then be very usefull comfortable and refreshing but especially dead Saints may be profited by the society of their living brethren spiritual conference flowing from sincerity experience sense tenderness c. is very qu●ckning and enlivening (k) Ferrum ferro acuricur as iron sharpeth iron So the Saints the countenance of their friends Prov. 27.17 How did the hearts of the two disciples going to Emaus burn within them at Christs heavenly discourse Luk. 24.32 N●y the Spirit of God may come upon a (l) 1 Sam. 10.10 Saul when among the Prophets such may find a temporary work upon their heart and shall a S●int among the S●ints meet with no heavenly impression When they that fea●ed the Lord spake one to another the Lord dr●w ●igh and hearkned and would he come without a blessing Mal. 3.16 While the Disciples were communing about Christs sufferings himself drew near and met them Luke 24.15 and he will never be far from those who are thus employed and such while alone shall not as he said of himself John 16.32 be left alone his spirit will come and visit them Mat. 18.20 When Christ is the subject of our conference he will be an associar and assistant Ah! that Saints now a dayes should be such strangers to this prom●sing exercise and this is one and not the least of the causes why the Saints of old did so far exceed us in z●al activity life and tenderness they could scarce meet together and see one another in the face without a word concerning their beloved but how do we blush to speak of maters of soul concernment lest we should be judged to be hypocrites singular busie-bodies and I know not what I will say no more now but there will be found to be here a mutual causality when Christ is near the heart he will not readily be far from the mouth and again the lips will affect the heart and heavenly discourse will make an impression there 4. Attend the ordinances of life diligently as faith (m) Rom. 10.17 cometh so it is strengthned by hearing though private ordinances must not be slighted yet a special blessing may be expected on Word Sacrament and the publick Ministry our graces comforts strength activity and enlarg●ment are all conveyed through the same channel and if the Word could beget a flash of joy in Herod Ma●k 6.20 if it could quicken and as it were soften that flinty heart will it not make a more deep and lively impression upon a (n) Ezek. 11.19 heart of flesh If the Word can thus beget heat where there was no fire will it not far rather blow up those coals which are already kindled 5 If we would be fervent in spirit let us not be sl●thfull in business Rom. 12.11 Though we must be carefull for nothing Phil. 4.6 yet we must not be idle and negligent he who will not work should not eat 2 Thes 3 10. Immoderate excessive and distrustfull care choaks the spirit as too much oyl the flame and yet moderate care in the fa●●hfull discharge of our particular calling is a notable help against sleep and drowsiness and a preservative against infection as in the body the humours will putrifie without motion and will beget dangerous diseases So the faculties of the soul when not imployed will contract rust and become unfit for action and when they are not set a work either in religious exercises or the duties of our calling Sathan will readily improve the occasion and imploy them in his (o) Nihil agend● homines m●le agero di●cunt work an idle man tempts the d●vil to tempt him Idleness as (p) O●ium pulvinar Satanae 〈◊〉 alesicii principium apud R●us sym inter part 1 sym 53. Otia dant v●tia 〈…〉 one saith is Sathans reposing be● and the mother of all wickedness Ah! this in great part is the cause both of the outward and spiritual poverty of many in this Land who being askt as Iosephs brethren were be Pharaoh 2 Gen. 47.3 What is your occupation could return no other answer but that they were Gentle-men as if by their birth they were licentiated to be idle and to follow no calling or occupation yea and as if a calling would be a reproach to them and a disparagment to their ancestors and education whileas truly and according to Aristophanes his verdict a (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristo●han apud Reu● loc c●● life of idleness better becometh beasts then men and as (r) Ego inquit Cyrus Xenophonteus arbitror decere principem ante ire subditis non vita deside laborum experte sed eo quod ribus provideat laboresque lubenter subeat Reus ibid symb 30. Cyrus said it is more noble and Prince-like to excell and go before others in activity diligence and pains then in sloth idleness and luxury And O! if such would consider that idleness was one of the crying sins of Sodom Ezek. 16.49 Time is too precious a talent to be hid in a napkin and being once past cannot be recalled are potest nullo perbreve tempus emi no gold nor money can buy and redeem it Thus you see how ye should prepare for and come to the work now let us add some few directions which may help to quicken us while we are at the Throne 7. Then limit your heart to the duty and (ſ) Now labour to put in practice that resolution of which direct 5. arrest it at the present work lift up your heart to God and settle it upon him suffer it not to look down to the world or gad about lay a restraint upon thy vain roaving and unstable mind repelling without dispute and inquisition every suggestion and impertinent thought not asking whence or for what it came yea though upon the mater and otherwise it were never so good and necessary yet reject it then with indignation as being unseasonable and coming to interrupt thee while thou art speaking to the great King Albeit such pretended friends
brought his people out of Egypt to destroy them in the wilderness yea and rather then the whole body of that people should be destroyed Exod. 32. And Paul his wish that he rather were accursed from Christ then that his brethren and kinsmen should perish Rom. 9. But these two practises being rather for admiration then imitation such a height and measure of (o) Zeal to Gods glory and for the happiness and salvation of his people Where there is no hazard of excess in our affection we cannot be too zealous for God nor too desirous of the well fare of his people zeal being scarce attainable since it cannot be affirmed that any other ever did or shall in this life come their length David his desire and prayer 1 Chr. 21.17 is very considerable in the present case Let thine hand saith this holy man be on me and on my fathers house but not or rather then on thy people that they should be plagued It is true he had sinned and deserved to be punished but whatever were his motives we see this holy man prefer the good of Gods people to his own personal interest and desire that the rod should be rather on himself and his family then on the body of the people But abstracting from such high and holy ends and when the comparison is only between some evil or temporal rod lying upon us and some other evil which may rid us out of the present trouble if the Saints should desire any such evil by way of remedy such a desire must be sinfull the object being evil in it self and not determined as a necessary and the only mean for removing the present evil which perhaps is less in it self and less dangerous and so the end being base and low and the root and principle sinfull and carnal such as pride passion impatience distrust and the like I hope none will plead for such a desire though in the most eminent Saints as in Job ch 6.8 9. in Moses Numb 11.15 in Jonah ch 4.39 in Eliah 1 King 19.4 in Jeremiah ch 20.14 15 16 17. c. For though Job was a pattern of patience Jam. 5.11 Moses of meekness Numb 12.3 and Eliah of confidence 1 King 18. yet they were subject to infirmities even there where they were strongest and those slips and fits of passion and impatience are left on record to be 1. a warning to us of our frailty that we may learn to be humble watchfull and circumspect 2. to be as a beacon on the rock which we should shun and 3. to teach us that our imitation of men though eminent for holiness should be with a limitation and with caution that we must only follow them when and so far as they follow Christ and walk by rule But though some weak Saints may miscarry on the one hand by presuming on Gods care and bounty that he will bless such a severe course of physick as they prescribe to themselves without his warrand and approbation Yet alas it is more usual to miscarry on the other hand So that we need not stay long in debating this case all of us have a monitor within which will be too ready to warn us of our danger loss and bodily evil and will be ready to call to us to spare our selves when the Lord doth call us to suffer and when his glory and our everlasting happiness do cry to us not to (q) Rev. 12.11 love our lives unto the death and when if we (r) Mat. 16.25 save our life we will lose it And since we may not wish evil to our selves that the Lord may turn it to our good far less may we thus wish evil to others with whose comforts and creature-enjoyments we have not such power to dispense as with our own and of the frame of whose hearr we know less and of their readiness to abuse mercies As also since here there may be some suspicion of malice envy c. ah who would look upon him as a genuine son of Zion who under the pretence that the affliction of the Church hath often proven a mean of reformation humiliation c. would wish and pray that her calamities might be multiplied or continued If these shall prosper that love and pray for her peace Ps 122.6 what shall be their portion that under whatsoever colour dare pray for her trouble 3. As for evils of sin who will be so mad as to plead that these are desirable these laid the foundation of hell and made Angels once glorious become devils these defaced the beautifull Image of God in man and robbed him of all his excellencies these are the grand murderers that kill both body and soul and daily thrust multitudes into the pit these are the procurers of all our ●wo and misery here and hereafter and yet how many love and imbrace these scorpions till they sting them to death but yet secretly and as stollen wares few being so impudent as to own and defend though too many will excuse their sins far less dare any pray to God for help to sin against him sin is an evil (t) August loc cit pag. 486. vid. loc an only evil there is nothing in it amiable or desirable it is true God can bring light out of darkness and make the lancet of an enemy to open a sore that despised all remedy Hence s Austin durst affirm that it might sometimes be profitable to some Saints to fall into some gross sin to humble them and awaken them out of their security No doubt the Lord can make the consideration of our sins to humble us and become more watchfull and circumspect and thus even make our sins (t) Rom. 8.28 work together for our good which is a demonstration of the wisdom and power of the Physician and proclaimeth his mercy and tender bowels towards us that of our venom and poison he can and sometimes will make to us a healing plaister but this is no warrand to us to prescribe such a medicine for our selves we may not de evil that good may come Rom. 3.8 CHAP. IV. Of cursing and imprecations Whether it be lawfull to pray for vengeance on the wicked and on persecuters Rom. 12.14 Bless them which persecute you bless and curse not THere be (a) Having in the preceeding Chapter enquired Whether we may desire any evil to our selves or to the people of God we come now to ask Whether we may wish and pray for any evil to the wicked and to our enemies here several particulars that need not be brought under debate as that we may pray against 1. the sins of men and say with him Ps 7.9 Oh! let the wickedness of the wicked come to an end 2. Against the plots counsels machinations and interprises of the wicked against the Saints and people of God his Truth and Ordinances and say with him 2 Sam. 15.31 O Lord I pray thee defeat the counsel of Ahithophel and turn it into
into temptation nova haeresis nimium perniciosa inquit tempestas surgere inimicorum gratiae Christi caepit qui nobis etiam dominicam orari onem impiis disputationibus conantur auferre c vid. loc hinc epistolae etiam subscribunt patres Concil Milevitani vid. etiam epist 94. testimony which a Castro citeth from Austin to prove this to have been Pelagius opinion doth say no more but that his doctrine did destroy the necessity of prayer But though there be few or none who have the forehead to avouch such an atheistical tenet yet alas it is practically owned by too many and multitudes of orthodox professors are pestred with this heresie for all such as restrain prayer and make no conscience to call upon God do in effect and in Gods esteem joyn with those Atheists who said it is vain to serve God and what should it profit us to pray to him Mal. 3.14 Job 21.15 Having thus spoken a little to these two extreams now come we to enquire more narrowly after the meaning and genuine sense of the former exhortations and to satisfie the case propounded and 1. some (r) Apud Salmeron com in evang tom 7 tract 31. in parab affirm that the scope of these words is to perswade us to be liberal to the poor that they may alwaies pray for us that by their prayers procured by our liberality and almes we may be said to pray alwaies But 1. many have not whereupon to bestow so liberally to the poor 2. neither do the poor alwaies pray for their berefactors 3. if we speak of our ordinary beggers their lip-devotion and mock-prayers is a grievous provocation and a profanation of the holy name of God 4. we may not substitute a suffragan in the exercises of religion nor think that their actions shall be reckoned to us while we do not concur and act with them whatever profit may redound to us by the prayers of others yet this doth not liberate us of any (ſ) Or for any time so that then we may abstain because others are employed for us pa●t of our duty to pray for our selves the command to pray as the other commands and exhortations in the Word is personal and concerneth every particular man and woman it s a popish trick to substitute deputs in the matters of God such as will intrust their salvation to the care and diligence of others would take heed least as others work for them So they be crowned for them every one without exception of whatsoever rank or degree must (t) Our work is the way in which we must walk to heaven but not our money as Papists dream whereby we may purchase a possession there work out his own salvatton Phil. 2.12 2. (u) Apud Salmer loc cit pag. 194. Others think that they may be said to pray alwaies who have resigned themselves to God and refer all their actions to his glory who hearken to the exhortation 1 Cor. 10.31 and who endeavour in all their waies to approve themselves to God and whether they eat or drink or whatsoever they do to do all to the glory of God but this being so far sought and so impertinent for clearing the present difficulty it deserveth no refutation especially since it is so general and no more concerneth prayer then any other performance A third conjecture much like to the former is that he (x) Non desinit orare qui non definit benefacere leaveth not off to pray who constantly doth well This is an old saying and brought by many for loosing the present knot the most ancient writer of those I have known thus to interpret those Scriptures is the famous (y) Aug. loc infra cit Austin and he who wrote (z) Gloss ord in Luk. 18 1. 1 Thes 5.17 the old gloss whom the (a) We should pray alwaies by faith hope and charity and by working the things that he acceptable to God Rhemist on Luk. 18.1 vid. etiam Aug. epist 121. cap. 9. Beda in Luc. 18. Rhemists and several other popish commentators do follow But thus faith is confounded with other duties and the scope and sense of the words grossy (b) Sed quamvis non incpte dici possent oper● hona genus quoddam orationis quoniam Deum ad misericordiam provocants quemadmodum mala opera clamaent a à Deum iram ac furorem ejus accendunt tamen hoc non proprie Dominum voluisse cum ait oportet sempet orare perspicuum est c. Bellat loc cit cop 9. mistaken which do clearly hold out and recommend to us the practice of a particular duty A fourth opinion much lik the former is that of the venerable as they call him Beda (c) Beda in Luk. 18.1 dicendum est omn is quae justus ecundum Deum gerit dicit ad orationem esse reputanda who thinks that we may be said to pray alwaies when all our actings may be reckoned unto prayer that is as I apprehend when all we do prepareth and fitteth us for prayer and when we exercise our selves in other spiritual performances for that very purpose that we may be the more enabled to pray But though we grant that there is a connexion among spiritual exercises so that one may fit and prepare for another yet there is a difference and separation and we may be employed in one when we do not mind another and as other spiritual performances may be helps to prayer So prayer may prepare the heart for going about them and yet we cannot be said to perform them when we are praying and wherefore should we be said more to pray when we are employed in them and the words do manifestly speak of prayer as contradistinguished from other duties A fifth conjecture is that of the learned (c) Manet namque virtus hujus desiderii in omnibus quae ex charitate facimus Jo. de Thabi● in voc orare vid. etiam Tho. 2.2 quaest 83. art 14. Austine who thinketh that we should alwaies pray because we should alwaies desire eternal life its true the desire of the soul is the life of prayer and that Christians (d) Sine intermissione orare quid est aliud quam beatam vitam ab eo qui cam selus dare potest sine intermissione desiderare semper ergo hanc a Domino desideremus oremus semper August epist 2 21. cap. 9. ven Beda in collect ex Aug. in epist 1. ad Thes 5.17 continuum desiderium continua oratio quicquid aliud agris si desideras illud sabbatum non intermittis orare frigus charitatis silentium cordis est flagrantia charitatis clamor cordis est virtually habitually and as to the general bent and main inclination of the heart may be said alwaies to desire eternal life but it is as impossible at all times actually to desire eternal life as alwaies to pray and expresly direct
come and yet the people of God lye in Babylon the Turk and Antichrist tread upon the Lords vineyard and many ravening wolves are seeking to make a prey of the Saints and shall not thy voice be heard bemoaning their condition thou who hast moyen with the King wilt thou not improve it in their behalf and are we not debtors to the Jews who yet continue in their blindness and infidelity they were mindfull of their litle (x) Cant. 8.8 sister when she had no breasts and now when our breasts are full shall we forget the elder sister in her widowhood living in a barren and empty wilderness and then as to our domestick and personal relations where can we look but we may behold some one or other saying to us as that (y) Act. 16.9 man of Macedonia to Paul come and help us you have moyen in heaven speak for us to the King your prayers will not be shut out ye are our friends and let us have your help in this time of need 10. Our condition here should mind us of our duty we are but (z) 1 Pet. 2.11 pilgrims and strangers and as we are far from home and live at a distance from our fathers house So also from our father and though he will keep tryst with us in his ordinances and allow us a sight of his back-parts yet how little of God is seen and enjoyed while we are in this state of (a) 2 Cor. 5.6 absence and exile But since our gracious God is pleased in some measure to descend to us in these and make as it were a visit to his poor despicable creatures saying to them behold me behold me oh how carefull should we be to improve every such opportunity for renewing and confirming our acquaintance with him and for knowing and enjoying more of him that thus the distance in part may be removed our peace promoved and our interest in him the more secured frequency in approaching will bring us nearer and will beget familiarity and confidence O then from time to time (b) Job 21 2. acquaint thy self with him and be at peace thereby good shall come unto thee O what familiarity and spiritual boldness what satisfaction sweetness delight enlargement c. have the Saints found in this ordinance so that Clemens Alexandrinus had reason to say which also with him is acknowledged by the Jesuit (c) Quare cum tantum sit bonum nostra petitio merito Clem. Alex. lib 7. strom dicebat plus paratum debere esse bominem petere etiam si non impetret quam impetrare non petendo adeo ex imium bonum est petitio si recte fiat Fran. Tolot in Joan. 16. v 26. Tolet that upon this consideration we should be more ready to ask though we did not receive what we asked then to have and receive what we desire without asking prayer it self being a greater blessing then any outward mercy we can ask 11. If thou canst with the (d) Ps 116.1 Psalmist say I love the Lord thou wilt with him also resolve to call upon the Lord as long as thou livest Love is communicative and must speak with the beloved it is impatient of distance and absence and will break thorow many impediments and difficulties and O! since prayer will open a door and give access so that he is w●thin a cry and thou may'st speak to him love will say pray thou must there will be no place left for debates and delayes 12 Where there is faith there will be no silence if thou lift not up thy voice faith will make thy conscience cry and roar and will fill it with vexing challenges and accusations the believer is a (e) 2 Cor. 5.17 new a creature of an enemy he is become a son to him who never had a dumb child and as in the natural generation the child usually cometh in to the world weeping So in the spiritual regeneration the man-child is brought forth with tears in his eyes and with a cry the believer must look up to God and lift up a prayer to him and accordingly prayer gets an (f) Jam. 5.15 epithet and is called the prayer of faith these two are inseperable companions and not only like Hippocrates his twins do they live and die but also grow up together and mutually strengthen and stir up one another the first news we hear of believing Paul Act. 9.11 were Behold he prayeth You will say but did not Paul before this time pray Ans No doubt Paul while a Pharisee being so great a zealot did pray and very frequently but there was no life in his prayers ye use to give the mans name to the dead corps but the body void of life is not the man neither is that prayer that is not the prayer of faith and prayer is not an empty and fruitless associat but it bringeth meat and provision with it and it is a monitor and guide and a sure anchor which will keep the praying soul from wavering Jam. 1.6 and as thus they begin and grow up So they may be supposed to die together when faith is turned into an immediat and blessed vision and when neither we nor our brethren shall be exposed to any moe wants and tryals prayer shall give place to incessant praises 13. If thou cast (g) Job 15.4 not off fear thou wilt not restrain prayer thou wilt be afraid to stay too long out of thy fathers sight lest he frown and being convinced of thy weakness and inability to walk before him in all pleasing thou wilt without ceasing (h) Col. 1.9 10. pray for grace and strength to do his will and that thou may'st become fruitfull in every good work And thus 14. if thou be not a stranger to the initial and fundamental graces of humility and self-denyal thou must be sensible of thy wants and that there is nothing at home but indigence and misery and many sores and evils and where shouldst thou go but to the rich treasure there is (i) Luk. 15 17. bread enough in thy fathers house and wilt thou rather perish with hunger then go to him and ask he is able to (k) Ps 103.3 cure all thy sores and maladies and wilt thou not run to this great Physician Humility will not be ashamed to beg nay it is the most noble and heroick employment to beg from God not only a (l) Joh. 2.27 portion for this bodily life and his blessing with it but that meat that endureth unto everlasting life Did ever Cesar or Alexander contend for so noble a prize and what honour and priviledge is like to this to be a supplicant and a favourit of the King of Kings and to have access to him when we will as our father and bountifull provisor 15. Hast thou yet learned any thing of the noble art of spiritual prudence art thou yet (m) Luk. 15.17 come to thy self and hast thou laid aside thy