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A68718 A key of heaven the Lords Prayer opened, and so applied, that a Christian may learne how to pray, and to procure all things which may make for the glorie of God, and the good of himselfe, and of his neighbour : containing likewise such doctrines of faith and godlines, as may be very usefull to all that desire to live godly in Christ Iesus. Scudder, Henry, d. 1659?; Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1633 (1633) STC 22122; ESTC S1717 241,855 822

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act in respect of the Father Son holy Ghost in the first act of Faith and conversion of a sinner whereby the person of a man stands justified before God and shall without intercision of justification and losse of this favour of God stand before the barre of Gods tribunall and is and alwaies shall be absolutely justified and acquitted from all sinnes past present to come because all obligations hand-writings against him are in that act cancelled and blotted out he forgiving all trespasses Colos 2.13.14 Yet it must be knowne that of this act there is as it were a double sentence First in Court of heaven at which time the elect in Christ have their names inrolled in the booke of Gods effectuall calling and are numbred among the just which sentence can never be revoked or blotted out this is that which was passed with God that I may so speake after the manner of men in the first act of conversion Secondly this sentence of forgivenesse is passed in the court of the conscience of him that had the former sentence pronounced for him in heaven This sentence is the second act of the holy Ghost wrought in this manner First after that a sinner is cōvinced of his guiltines of sin and of his damnable condition because of his sinne then forgivenesse is offered and pronounced to the eare in that gracious promise of salvation to all that beleeve in Christ Iesus which promise is proclaimed in the ministerie of the Gospell in which light of the Gospell he sheweth unto a man possibility of salvation setting before him I speake of men of yeeres and understanding Christ the meanes of salvation and by this meanes the holy Ghost worketh faith in Christ then confession and griefe for sinne then prayer to aske forgivenesse and grace to live godly and then doth witnesse to his spirit that he is accepted of God Thus sentence is pronounced in the conscience from whence ariseth sense of Gods love which is called the shedding abroad of the love of God in our hearts by the holy Ghost Rom. 5.5 also sense of the loving countenance of God Psal 4.6 7. which is the signe of his loving kindnesse and is that speech of God by which he doth say to our soules he is our salvation and then ariseth in our hearts peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost This sentence of forgivenesse unto the conscience hath different degrees it is sometimes more cleare in the apprehension of the soule somtimes more dimme yea sometimes quite blotted out in the counterpane of our release or copie of our acquittance as it was with David Psal 51. so that a person perfectly just before God hath sometime little or no sense or apprehension of it in his owne conscience but doubteth whether he be in state of grace or no. Which happeneth because of the staine and guilt of new sinnes which guilt abideth in the conscience untill a man do confesse his sinnes repent and aske forgivenesse and by a renewed faith apply forgivenes by which meanes the evidence of his pardon is againe by the holy Ghost exemplified and sentence by this new application is againe pronounced in his conscience whence ariseth new assurance of salvation and renewed joy in the holy Ghost This is that justification which for distinction sake Divines call justification by parts or continued or repeated justification or new application of one and the same justification which justification though in respect of the sentence pronounced in heaven is one individuall act whereby a man standeth alwayes just before God yet in respect of the pronouncing of that sentence to the heart it is not actually applyed neither can a particular sinne be said to be everie way actually forgiven untill after it have beene committed is confessed and repented of nor untill forgivenesse be asked and until the holy Ghost hath made new application thereof unto the conscience through renewing of faith by which a man doth againe and againe as new sinnes are committed apply the merits of the bloud of Christ unto his soule Also it must be knowne that the sentence of pardon which is passed in heaven with God is not fully executed untill the last degree of it when sentence of absolution shall be pronounced by Christ Iesus Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world Matt. 25.34 It must moreover be conceived and held that notwithstanding this distinction of justification betweene an absolute justification in respect of God and a justification by parts in respect of application to mans conscience there are not two kindes of justification a first and a second as the Papists hold but one and the same justification considered in different respects In respect of Gods actuall acceptation of a mans person justification is absolute but in respect of the actuall application and manifestation of Gods acceptation unto a mans conscience justification is by parts and degrees When a man alreadie justified asketh forgivenesse he doth not ask a new justificatiō but a second or new application of pardon unto the conscience of those particular sinnes which are daily committed together with continuance of Gods favour and more cleare evidence that he is sealed up unto the day of redemption The third thing to be spoken of for the better understanding the word forgive concerneth the effects following the apprehension thereof these are Peace of conscience Rom 5.1 Ro. 14.17 and joy in the holy Ghost These things touching justification and remission of sinnes being opened we may understand what is prayed for when we say Forgive sinnes Wee pray first that those which belong unto Gods election but are not yet converted may be accepted of God through Christ Iesus God not imputing their sinnes to them but unto Christ whereby they are freed from the curse We pray likewise that Christs righteousnes may be imputed to them that they beleeving in Christ might bee saved and for that cause pray that they may beleeve Secondly wee pray that our selves and others being justified and accepted into favour it would please the Lord to continue this his favour and that he would signifie and make the same knowne to our hearts and consciences daily by a new testification of the holy Ghost accompanied with a new application of pardon for new sinnes daily committed and that wee may have more and more assurance of our perfect redemptiō at the day of judgement and that we may have peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost in the meane time The particular circumstances in this Petition come next to bee laid open which are three First the connexion of this Petition by this copulative and that is As well forgive sinnes as give daily bread The second is the person who is to forgive that is God the Father through the satisfaction and mediation of the Sonne by the application of the holy Ghost Thus much is implyed in forgive in which
to speake something of this Treatise of this godly and painefull Minister of Christ which is written by him without affectation as desirous to cloath spirituall things with a spirituall manner of writing the diligent and godly Reader shall observe a sound cleare substantiall handling of the greatest points that naturally fall within the discourse and a more large and usefull unfolding of many things than in former Treatises It appeareth he sought the good of all so that besides the labours of other holy men there will be just cause of blessing God for his assistance in this worke To whose blessing I commend both it and the whole Israel of God Grayes Inne R. SIBBS A KEY OF HEAVEN The Lords Prayer opened and applyed MATH 6. 9 After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in heaven hallowed be thy Name 10 Thy kingdome come Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven 11 Give us this day our daily bread 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debters 13 And leade us not into temptation but deliver us from evill for thine is the kingdome and the power and the glory for ever Amen THese words are part of our Saviours Sermon in the Mount they concerne Prayer and doe consist of a Precept or exhortation to pray in a right manner Patterne to exemplifie the said manner The precept is After this manner pray ye The patterne is Our Father c. This Exhortation is inferred upon consideration of divers abuses of prayer whereof our Saviour had warned his Disciples to wit Hypocrisie and vaine babling of the Pharisies and Heathen Hee reasoneth from the dissimilitude that ought to be betweene hypocrites and heathen between true Christians and faithfull beleevers saying verse 8. Be not ye therefore like unto them but pray ye in an holy manner And for that cause doth propose unto them a perfect forme of prayer intimating that if they would pray according as he did therein prescribe they should neither play the Hypocrites as did the Pharisies nor babble as the heathen nor offend any other way in this holy exercise of calling upon the name of the Lord. The words of the exhortation containe these particulars 1 The person exhorting Christ Iesus implied in his imperative speech Pray 2 The persons exhorted Ye 3 The inference whereupon it is grounded Therefore 4 The subject of the exhortation Pray in this manner Pray 1 Sam. 1 1●.15 P●●2 8 Is●●● to pray doth import an holy speech and pouring out of the soule unto God being a joynt act of the minde will whereby the minde by voyce or thought doth make knowne to God the desires of the heart What it is to pray shewing both what a man wold have God to doe for him or to accept from him A bare desire is not to pray for many wish and desire those things for which they never speake or pray unto God Orare est appetere petere Phil. 4 6. Psal 38.9 Neither are words without desires any prayer but when the minde maketh knowne to God what the will desireth this is to pray By what way soever of expression a man doth signifie his desire directing it to God whether it be by thought onely or also by sigh a Psal 38.9 Rom. 8.26 groane or b Psal 39.12 tears or by lifting up * Ps 28.2 a hand or c Psal 123.1 eyes towards God in the heavens or by d Psal 141.1.2 voyce perfect or e Isai 38.14 unperfect if it be but by f Lam. 3.56 breathing it out as it were so be hee intend and understand what he desireth this is to pray Desires are naturall or spirituall Naturall when a man Difference between naturall and spirituall desires in prayer out of a sense of that which hee needeth and which may be for his naturall well being here and for his happinesse hereafter from a meere well-wishing to himselfe doth pray unto God to obtaine it Thus a naturall man a very Balaam may pray Num. 23.10 A spirituall desire be it of naturall or spirituall good things is from the spirit and regenerate part of man Rom 8.26 27. put up to God with holy affections in a spirituall manner to a spirituall end Onely the regenerate can thus pray Ye first the Disciples and under them hee meaneth all Christians Act. 11.26 For although Christ gave his Disciples some precepts that onely did belong to them as Apostles yet hee gave very many precepts to them as they were Christians as that in Marke 13.37 What I say to one I say to all Watch so here what he saith to them he saith to all Pray Therefore hath a double reference both to the sinfull manner dehorted fom and to this holy manner exhorted to He reasoneth thus the manner of hypocritical and heathenish praying is sinfull this manner here propounded is most holy therefore pray in this manner and not as they doe After this manner or thus the word rendred thus or in this manner is a note of likenesse pointing unto the patterne following As if he had said Say Our Father as it is Luk. 11.2 or if you use other words let them be according unto this patterne here prescribed to wit to the same person the same matter in the same kindes of prayer whether it bee in Petition for our selves for that which is good or in deprecation against that which is evill or in Intercessions for others or in Thanksgiving both for our selves and for others and with the same good disposition of heart as is taught in this forme of prayer following The words thus opened the particulars therein offer divers profitable lessons Christs diligence in teaching his servants and familie this necessarie religious duty of praier both at this time of his owne accord and at another time at the request of one of his Disciples is first to be observed Luk 11.1 All the actions of Christ Jesus are observable and of excellent use but onely some of them binde Christians to imitation That I may therefore cleere the foundation of the doctrine to be concluded from Christs practise let it be considered that the actions of Christ were of different natures He did some acts as he was God and as Mediator betweene God and man as his miracles and offering up of himselfe a sacrifice for sinne c. These actions should work in all men an holy admiration of him and faith in him but must not nay cannot be imitated How far Christs example doth bind to imitation He did other actions as hee was man some whereof were indifferent being neither commanded nor forbidden others were necessarie being commanded Those actions which he did which were indifferent doe teach us Christian libertie shewing what we may do but doe not lay a bond upon the conscience to tye us to doe the same Christ did sometimes stand when he prayed this was an indifferent action
Answ and these they have uncertainely without a blessing with them They have them but as fruits of his common goodnesse providence Psal 36.6 Psal 145.9 God knowing what imployments he hath for them amongst men and not as fruits of his speciall love promise and mercy God giveth them oft-times in wrath with a curse Tit. 1.15 they are impure unto them they make leane soules increasing their sin Psal 92.7 fatting them but it is to the slaughter it is that they may bee destroyed for ever whereas on the contrary all that pray aright shall in the best time have what is best for them with Gods blessing as a token of his speciall love unto them Vse 1 It is therefore a great fault in all those that shall under any pretence omit and neglect prayer then which fault I know none more common For except it be when all other helpes faile and they bee in a desperate extremitie who in comparison seeketh unto God by prayer When they be sicke to the Physitian or to the Surgeon onely but not to God by prayer yea some runne to Witches and Wizards to charmes to the divell to any thing rather then unto God If they be in want then they betake them to their friends to their hands to their wits yea to c●asening and shifting but never looke up to God and the like in all other cases The same course they take for their soules If the comming to Church and formall hearing the word receiving the Sacraments and the prayers of others will save them they will not alwaies be wanting in these externall devotions but as for prayer any more then a little lip-labour which indeed is no prayer they are meere strangers to it Causes why men call not upon God This neglect of prayer commeth from prophanenesse and pride of heart from confidence in the creature and from selfe-dependance which causeth them to be unwilling to come into the presence of the holy God or to be beholding to him For this cause God in justice casteth them into want They have not Iam. 4.2 because they aske not or if he give unto them without asking he giveth it with a curse it is impure unto them Tit. 1.15 as before you heard There are some so prophane that they omit prayer in contempt and with deriding all which conscionably performe it But as for those which have got into the scorners chaire and have made themselves unworthy the pearle of a reproof I leave them to the considerations following They carry in their faces the very brand of an Atheist for it is his guise not to pray himselfe but would shame him which maketh God his refuge Psal 14 4 6. And how can they be called Christians to whom the description of the heathen doth so properly agree Ier. 10 25. The Prophet Ieremie describeth the heathen by this that they were families that call not on Gods Name and these he holdeth to be meete persons upon whom God should poure out his fury and fiercenesse of his indignation But I leave these and come Vse 2 to speake to Gods owne children who even in this point of prayer are much to blame For many of them make too little account of this pretious dutie How seldome doe they set about it how loath to come to it how cold and livelesse in it and how soone wearie of it Is it any marvell if they be full of crosses and be impatient under them Is it any wonder that the world doth so oft overcome them and the divell so oft foile them when they are so seldome and so weake in prayer This failing proceedeth from want of faith in God from too much confidence in the arme of flesh and meanes here below and from poring too much upon the prosperitie of those Psal 73.7 who without prayer have more then heart could wish and by laying their owne crosses in which they lie notwithstanding they have praied too close unto themselves From these and the like causes as lying in some sinne unrepented of or the like it is that you are unwilling to pray and when you doe pray your edge of praier is quite taken off But enter I pray you into Gods sanctuarie that you may see confesse and bewaile your folly and learne with that Psalmist to say Psal 73.28 It is good to draw neere to God and to put your trust onely in the Lord. Vse 3 Let all that professe the name of God bee exhorted not to conceive of praier as a thing arbitrarie and indifferent but as of a necessarie duty as hath beene proved in the Doctrine Are any afflicted Iam. 5.13 let them pray Are any in prosperitie let them pray and praise God In what condition or state soever ye are pray For besides that it is Gods command and his immediate worship Manifold motives unto prayer we by prayer injoy an holy communion with God taking sanctuarie under his wings We edifie our selves also in our most holy faith and in all other the saving graces of Gods spirit when we pray in the Holy Ghost for by it all the weapons of our Christian warfare all the good gifts of God and meanes of our salvation become usefull and good unto us By prayer either we shall prevent Gods iudgements and corrections or bee made able to beare them and be made much better by them By prayer wee shall obtaine pardon and repentance of sins past and strength to resist temptations of sinnes to come In thus doing we shall have all such good things as be needfull for us with a blessing upon them or with contentednesse without them grace and peace in this life perfection of grace and glory in the life to come Would wee doe good to our enemies and to our friends and would we doe our selves good would we be beneficiall to the Common-weale and Church then let us pray 2 Chron. 30.20 Gen. 25.21 Mark 9.25 Mat 15.28 Mat. 8.13 Gen. 24.12 For Kings have prayed for their subjects husbands for their wives fathers for their sonnes mothers for their daughters masters for servants servants for masters and all have beene heard in that which they praied Prayer because it is ordained by God and hath his promise calleth in and ingageth Gods power truth for him that maketh it and so through God becommeth omnipotent What hath beene or can be too hard for Prayer Exod 14.15.16 It hath caused the Sea to divide it selfe and become an high way to Gods people also together with the Whale Ionah 2 1.1.10 Iosh 10.12 to give up Ionas alive and set him ashore It caused the Sunne to stand still yea to goe backe It hath loosed chaines and unlocked Prisons Act. 1● 5.7.11 and iron gates and delivered the prisoners What hath not prayer done what will it not doe in the behalfe of the Church or of any of Gods chosen Nothing so deepe but with this bucket we may draw
thus divided Summum bonum the first expresseth the desire of the chiefe good scil the glory of Gods name in the first petition Hallowed be thy Name the means whereby his Name is hallowed and glorified are the matter of all the rest delivered in a most heavenly order Gods Name cannot bee hallowed if hee doe not make his holy Name known by erecting his kingdome therefore the comming of his kingdome is the matter of the second petition And because his kingdome is not made manifest and his Name is not acknowledged to be holy and glory is not given unto him untill his will bee unfainedly obeyed therefore thy will be done is the matter of the third petition Now because no man can do the will of God upon earth except God sustain him on earth therefore daily support from God is prayed for and is the matter of the fourth petition And when a man hath all comfortable supplies for this naturall life yet if he bee not in Gods favour and be reconciled unto God he neither hath will nor power to glorifie God nor can bee accepted in any thing he doth therefore forgivenesse of sinnes and justification before God is the matter of the fift petition Lastly though a man have his sinnes past pardoned and he be justified he cannot do Gods will nor declare that the kingdome of God is come to him nor any way hallow his Name if he have not grace and power against sinne therefore the sanctification of the whole man is prayed for which is the matter of the last petition This is the holy order and subordination of the petitions Fourthly the different manner of propounding the petitions cause a different acception of them some are petitions properly so called when the good things asked are expressed and the evill prayed against is understood as in the foure first petitions some are deprecations when the evill prayed against is expressed and the good prayed for is understood as in the two last petitions The first petition is Hallowed be thy Name here it must bee considered what is meant by Name the object of hallowing then what hallow signifieth Name hath reference to God and it signifieth God himselfe scil the person named Also all such names and titles of God his attibutes actions ordinances and all things which have any speciall print of Gods holinesse stamped upon them are Gods name because by them he is knowne as men are by their names The word thy appropriateth the hallowing of the name unto him who is before named and described in the invocation opposing and preferring Gods name to the name of man or Angell or of any other creature To hallow is either to make a thing holy which was common or prophane or to declare and acknowledge and use holily some thing which is holy already Hallow must not bee taken in the first sense scil to make a thing holy for God and his Name alwayes was is and for ever shall be of it selfe most holy But to hallow Isa 29.23 here signifieth thus much to conceive and acknowledge with the heart and to declare with the tongue and life that God and his Name is holy and to bee respected and used as most holy in like sense as Wisdome is said to bee justified of her children Mat. 11.19 that is declared and respected as wisdome ought to bee respected For to hallow a thing is to respect and use it according to the holinesse thereof Prophaning Gods name is contrary to the hallowing of it The aime of our Saviour is that God may bee set up in mens hearts and may bee glorified and acknowledged in the world For this cause hee maketh choice of the most apt word that could be invented for hallowing leadeth vs to a consideration of Gods holinesse which is the glory of all other his attributes and includeth the cause why he should be glorified and therefore is a word of larger extent than magnified or glorified for the one doth but point out the glory of his greatnesse the other doth not expresse the cause why hee should bee glorified both which hallowed doth For holinesse is that rectitude in God and freedome from all impurenesse and from all shadow of imperfection or sinne which is the excellency and perfection of all other things that are in God and to speake with holy reverence of his Majesty the other attributes of God could not be commendable in God if they were not all infinitely holy His soveraignty would be tyranny his justice would bee cruelty his mercy would be foolish pity his wisdome would bee craft and subtilty if his greatnesse justice mercy and wisdome were not infinitely holy The like may be said of his other attributes For we see in creatures as in the Deuill and sinfull men the more strength and wisdome and skill they have the more mischievous they be because they want holinesse to use these gifts aright Wherefore in saying Hallowed be thy Name we desire that the excellency of his Godhead may be acknowledged as there is due cause according as they sing in the Song of the Lambe Rev. 15.4 Who shall not feare hee O Lord and glorifie thy Name for thou onely art holy Isa 64.2 This word Hallowed is set downe impersonally in such a forme of signification as includeth all persons or things which are capable of setting forth and acknowledging his holinesse As Let thy Name be hallowed by Thee so saith Christ Father glorifie thy Name Ioh. 12.28 and make Me to hallow thy Name in acknowledging thy holinesse and let all others acknowledge thee to be holy and to be the onely true God 1 King 18 36. Thus Elias prayed Let it be knowne this day that thou art God in Israel And God saith when hee will magnifie and sanctifie himselfe Ezech 38.23 I will be knowne in the eyes of many nations and they shall know that I am the Lord. The petition being thus opened we may expresse it in these or the like words Holy Father whose Name is holy to thee therefore all glory doth belong Lord glorifie thy selfe make it knowne that thou onely art God deserving all praises make me and all men to acknowledge thee onely to be God and our God and that of perfect excellencie according as thy Name in thy titles word and workes doe set thee forth And let thy Name Psal 111.9 which is holy and reverend be so honoured that so farre as any person or thing hath upon it any print of thy holinesse it be honoured and respected accordingly And farre be it from me or any man to deny thee in whole or in part or give any of that glory which is due to thee to any person or thing whatsoever or to prophane any thing whereupon any footsteps of thy holinesse is imprinted Hallowed be thy Name If it be observed that to desire that Gods Name should be glorified is the subject of this petition and that Christ hath set
this in the first place wee may learne Doct. 1 The glory of Gods holy Name must be the chiefe of every Christian mans desire and indeavour Psal 96.7.8 It must be every mans first and chiefe care that Gods Name be hallowed and glorified and that his glory be not given to any other Isa ●2 ● Whatsoever ye doe saith the Apostle doe all to the glory of God 1 Cor. 13.31 It was our Saviours prayer and practice he saith Father glorifie thy Name Ioh. 12.28 he saith likewise I honour my Father And I seek not mine owne glory Ioh. 8.49.50 And I have glorified thee on earth Ioh. 17.4 Reason 1 It is due to him that is holy and who onely is holy that hee should be sanctified and his Name hallowed * Isa 5.16 God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousnesse saith the Prophet Therefore the Seraphims cry one to another Holy holy Isa 6.3 holy is the Lord of hosts the whole earth is full of his glory The foure and twenty Elders say Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour Rev. 4.11 and power c. And Give unto the Lord O ye kindreds of the people give unto the Lord glory and strength give unto the Lord the glory due to his Name Psal 967.8 saith the Psalm The name of God of Christ Iesus is a name above all names Of him through him are all things saith the Apostle therefore addeth Rom. 11.36 To whom be glory for ever Amen Gods glory is the chiefest good mans life yea mans salvation is to be set behinde it which made Moses to wish rather to have his name blotted out of Gods booke Exod. 3● 12.32 than that God should be dishonoured by the Egyptians who would say if God destroyed the Israelites in the wildernesse that for mischiefe he did bring them out to slay them Reason 2 God himselfe proposeth his owne glory to himselfe for the end of all his actions Eph. 1.5.6 He predestinated us to the praise of the glory of his grace Prou. 16.4 Hee made all things for himselfe yea even the wicked for the day of evill Therefore man should make the glory of God the end of all that he doth Reason 3 It was the end why Christ redeemed man that he might hallow Gods name that both in body and soule he should glorifie him 1 Cor. 6.20 Vse 1 If therefore any man seeke not to glorifie God he is guilty of a most hainous sinne than which no sinne is more common For man since Adams fall is most prone to fall into it ascribing too little to God whom he doth not see setting up and magnifying the creature too much which he doth see That this sinne may the better appeare to the conscience it must be considered when and how God is dishonoured Gods Name is dishonoured when he is professedly denyed to be God this is professed Atheisme or when hee is acknowledged to be God yet is not esteemed and glorified as God Rom. 1.21 which disesteeme is then shewed when that respect which is due unto his person and Name is not given unto him His person is dishonoured when what is due to him is not given to him or is given to another Honour is denied him three wayes in heart word deed and conversation Man dishonoureth God in heart first when he is ignorant and doth not know him Secondly when he hath a meane opinion of him or hath erronious conceits of him questioning his providence power wisedome or any of his attributes Thirdly when he is forgetfull of him Fourthly when he doth not beleeve him thus Moses and Aaron dishonoured God Num. 20.12 Fiftly when he doth not love him Sixtly when he doth not feare him Seventhly when he doth not trust in him Eightly when he is not zealous for him Man dishonoureth God in word First when he speaketh not of him to his praise in confessing him Secondly when he speaketh not for him when hee is dishonored by others Thirdly when he never or seldome speaketh to him in thankesgiving Fourthly when he speaketh against him Man dishonoureth GOD in deed when though he professe God in word yet doth deny him by his evill deeds as they did Rom. 2.23 of whom it is said they dishonoured God and as those in Titus 1.16 which though they professed the knowledge of God yet denied him in their workes Thus God is dishonoured by not giving due honour unto him Gods honour is given to others when men give divine worship to any person or thing but God as to worship Saints or images also when men enter into too neer a league with idolaters Mal. 2.11 as to marry with the daughters of a strange god or when men take divine worship as Herod did the peoples applause saying Act. 12 22. The voyce of God and not of man this glory of divine worship God wil not have given to any other This taking to ones selfe or giving to another the honour due to God proceedeth from these evill causes pride selfe-love too high admiration of the creature from ignorance and want of admiration of the Creator Lastly God is dishonoured when due respect is not given to his Name as to his titles attributes or to his word and holy ordinances Malach. 1.12 or to his Saints and children For all these have a speciall print of his holinesse stamped on them so that if all these or any of these be either set at naught or lightly esteemed hee taketh himselfe in them to be dishonoured And to shut up all in a word all misconceit or irreverent conceit of God or irreverent carriage whether by word or deed either towards God Mal 1.12 Ezek. 22.26 Lev 19.12 Amos 2.7 Mal. 2.10.11 or towards any thing that is holy all abusing or taking of Gods name in vaine all acts of unholinesse and disobedience are a prophaning of the holy Name of God Thus the conscience of every offender may take notice how he hath prophaned the holinesse of the Lord and hath dishallowed his Name whereas hee ought to haue hallowed it But know it is not safe for any to dishonour God for his owne children when they have failed in this point of giving honour unto God have received dishonour and disgrace from him He saith to Moses and Aaron Because ye beleeved mee not to sanctifie mee in the eyes of the children of Israel therefore yee shall not bring this congregation into the land which I have given them Numb 20.12 Deut. 32.51 1 Sam. 2.17 The high Priesthood was removed from the house of Eli because he did not honour God in restraining his sons which caused through their prophanenesse the offerings of God to bee abhorred therefore did God judge his house saying They that despise me shall bee lightly esteemed 1 Sam. 2.30 If God spared not his owne best children will he not then much more poure out shame everlasting contempt upon
to be prayed against but not their persons except in the case following Thus David I pray thee 2 Sam. 15.31 turne the counsell of Achitophell into foolishnesse Act. 4.29 And the Apostles say Now Lord behold their threatnings Wee may therefore pray that God would restraine the malice and abate the power and defeate the plots of the adversaries but must not pray against their persons but love them for it may bee they doe belong to God as Paul did who was once a persecutor 3 The very persons of those which sinne unto death incurably may be prayed against I say not saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 5.19 that he shall pray for it And Paul wisheth that they were cut off that did trouble that Church Gal 5.12 David prayeth against the malicious enemies of Christ Psal 69.38 saying Let them be blotted out of the booke of the living and not be written with the righteous But this kind of sinners cannot be discerned by ordinary spirits this kinde of imprecation therefore must be left unto such spirits as was David's and the Apostles and must bee forborne of ordinary Christians except it be when the Church hath righly for evident and just cause cut men off by the curse of Anathema Maranatha not from the body of the Church onely but from the head Christ also as those deserve to be which are open malicious and inveterate Apostates 4 The persons of our enemies and persecutors though they doe what they can to hinder the Gospell are not to be prayed against For our Saviour prayed Father forgive them Luk. 23.34 they know not what they doe Steven said Act. 7.60 Lord lay not this sinne to their charge Yea wee are commanded to pray for them which despitefully use us Mat 5.44 and persecute us 5 Prayer may be made that God would sometimes inflict temporall judgments upon obstinate sinners but without limiting the Lord unto particulars so it be conditionally if their case require it and that it be in love to their soules and persons that they may be therby made to seeke God Thus David prayed Psal 83.16 Fill their faces with shame that they may seeke thy Name O Lord. 6 Lastly God must bee interessed in the cause else no man must be prayed against Gods dishonour not onely a mans private wrong must cause it It must proceed from holy zeale for God and not from passion and private spleene and desire of revenge These rules observed it may be knowne when and how a Christian may imprecate evill against his and Gods enemies and how and when he may not The last thing in the kingdome of grace for which praier must be made concernes the liberties and franchizes therof which are the very good commoditie Rom. 14.16 or livelihood of the subject which so farre as respects this life are freedome from the curse of the Law and dominion of sinne Rom. 6.11 a freedome in righteousnesse thence peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost of which the Apostle saith the kingdome of God doth consist scil In righteousnesse peace joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 The last thing of all which is considerable in this petition is the kingdome of glory Concerning which request must bee made that God would hasten it that Christ would overcome the last enemie 1 Cor. ●5 26 death and so put all enemies under his feet that he would come to judgement in his appointed time to magnifie himself in his just vengeance upon the wicked 2 Thes 1.8 1 Cor. 6.2 the Saints sitting upon them with him in judgement and that he would bestow perfect glory upon all the elect 2 Thes 1.10 whereby hee himselfe may be perfectly glorified in them at that day when also the forme of governing this kingdome by him as Mediator being determined he shall have delivered the kingdome up to the Father 1 Cor. 15.24.28 that God may be all in all to the glory of Father Sonne and holy Ghost for evermore Amen Amen Some of the particulars mentioned in this petition I doe confesse will come to be condered again in the fourth fifth and sixth petitions as the continuance of the course of nature magistracy peace of conscience and eternall glory likewise power against sinne and increase of grace yet the petitioner shall not therein tautologize or make vaine repetitions For here they are mentioned onely as meanes to set forth the glory of God in the comming of his kingdome that his Name may be hallowed but there they have respect to the good of man The Doctrine being thus inlarged the Vses will more easily follow First all such as desire not Vse 1 the comming of Gods kingdome according to the particulars before rehearsed are to be reproved As all that are enemies to civilitie and unto Schooles of learning who because of some abuse of them which will alwaies be of the best things thinke them needlesse All such as deny magistracie be they Familists or Anabaptists or any other for it is their great sinne All such magistrates themselves which turne the point of their authoritie against the Church or at best like Gallio Act. 38.17 care not which way it goe with it well or ill All idle or unfaithfull Ministers which in stead of directing Christs spouse unto him doe smite and wound her Can. 5.7 and shame her by taking her veile from her who in stead of feeding doe starve or poyson Christs flocke All Governours of the Church which make sad the heart of the righteous Ezek. 13.22 and make glad the hearts of the wicked which censure thrust out the good● and receive into the Church and hold in the bad In a word all that doe not beare good will to Sion which is indeed to be an enemy for in this case Hee that is not with us Mat. 1● 30 is against us saith Christ and hee that doth not gather scattereth Lastly if any be open persecutors of the truth or seducers and inticers from it all these may see in this Doctrine as in a large glasse their errors and foule blemishes But he which will say Goe ye cursed Mat. 25.41 42. to all that do not prove themselves to be his friends will have to reckon with all the enemies of his kingdome How many be there that hypocritically will say Thy kingdome come and yet use all meanes to hinder it and keepe it downe And if it came in any place it is the very burden and vexation of their soules Is not this most grosly to mock God But woe be to such Pharises hypocrites which will say to God our Father Thy kingdome come and yet will as much as they can hinder the passage or power of the Gospell of his kingdome Mat. 23 13 which will not enter themselves nor by their good will suffer those that would to enter in Be wise in time It is not safe to cast off or refuse the yoke
upon Atheists which in their hearts say there is no God Psal 14.4.6 They call not upon the Lord saith he You shame the counsell of the poore because God is their refuge But know ye the Lord looketh from heaven and doth behold and punish such impiety and prophanenesse In concerneth all Christians Vse 2 therefore to make all the petitions in this Lords Prayer either in this same forme or in other words to the same effect every day It was Christs practise and hath beene the manner of the faithfull in all ages Then shall we hold a gracious familiaritie with God our Father Then will he heare us alwaies and we shall ever have our requests granted when it shall be best for us The case touching how oft in a day wee must pray If it be asked how often in one day prayers are to be made I answer ejaculations and short liftings up of the heart should be very often according as sudden occasions shall minister cause more set and solemne prayers should be made ordinarily at morning at meales and at evening These times doe alwaies minister due cause of solemne prayer and may ordinarily without necessary lets be performed Also at other times prayer must bee made as there shall fall out speciall cause 1 Thes 5.17 For wee must pray continually that is in every state and condition and upon every good occasion when there is opportunity then pray and also praise God No certain rules can be given for any set number how oft this is left unto a mans Christian discretion as his necessities and as his opportunities doe vary But to keepe canonicall houres and to pray by stinted numbers upon beades or otherwise as Papists doe is ridiculous and too too superstitious It will rejoyce a Christian Vse 3 heart to consider that hee hath leave to come to God to preferre his suits unto him every day We are loth to put up petitions unto men too oft lest they should grow weary of us but it should not be so between Christians and the Lord for he is best pleased with those that come oftenest to him In Courts of Requests amongst men there are certaine dayes in which one mans suit is heard at which time other mens suits must be put off to other dayes of hearing Every man cannot have his suit sped every day no not every Terme But all Gods people may come to him by Christ Iesus and have their requests heard and granted in the Court of heaven every day yea seven times and if need be seventie times seuen times in one day Our that is such bread wherto we have true right and proprietie Hence we are taught Doct. 7 The maintenance wherupon a Christian may desire to live must be his owne He must have right both before GOD and man Drinke waters out of thine own cisterne Pro. 5.15 The Apostle commandeth that men should eate their owne bread 2 Thes 3.12 If they have not a spirituall Reas 1 right to their maintenance by their marriage with Christ it will be impure unto them for to the unbeleeving and defiled is nothing pure Tit. 1.15 To desire to live upon that Reas 2 which is another mans were to go about to draw the just God into copartnership of their injustice towards man With what face then can Vse 1 idle persons which have no calling or will not with quietnesse worke that they might have bread of their owne to eate say Give us our bread 2. Thes 3.10.12 the Apostle saith such should not eat untill they have laboured and gotten wherewithall by honest meanes But more especially how dare those that get their living and raise their estates by indirect and unlawful courses such as lying stealing defrauding gaming oppression usurie and such like meanes how dare I say these pray to God that hee would give and blesse to them their own bread when what they have to eate is the meat of wickednesse and what they have to drinke is as the wine of violence But wee unto him that increaseth that which is not his Pro. 4.17 Hab. 2.6 Vse 2 Would any man make this prayer in sinceritie so that he may expect a blessing from God let him be sure that hee have a good title unto that which he would have God to blesse unto him so that he can truly call it his owne There is a twofold right to the things of this life one common to all the other speciall and peculiar to the children of God The common right is founded in Gods goodnesse and bounty to man as he is his creature and is conveighed to man by such acts of Gods providence as do give unto a man a true proprietie amongst men in the things which they possesse this is called a civill right The speciall right is founded in Gods speciall love to his children in and through Christ which is added to their common right namely a right of inheritance which giveth not onely a right to the things themselves but to the blessing and comfortable use of the same this is a spirituall right derived to a beleever through Christ The want of this right is the cause why to the wicked even the things which they lawfully possesse are in their use impure Tit. 1.15 Hence it is that wicked men have not so good and so full a right to the good creatures of God as true beleevers have nor yet can have so comfortable and so sanctified a use of them as the godly may have they never partake of the good creatures of God but hee hath to except against them though not alwayes for the having yet for the abusing and for the unsanctified use of them For God giveth meat and so I may say of other things to them that beleeve 1. Tim. 4.3 and know the truth to be received with thanksgiving Though men may have a common right to the creatures of God without Christ yet they cannot have the speciall right or blessing in the use of them but by Christ For this cause it concerneth us to do two things First make we sure to bee ingrafted into Christ the heire of all things that through him it may bee said 1. Cor. 3 22. All things are ours Secondly we must live in an honest calling Eph. 4.28 and therein labour with our hand or head the thing that is good we must worke that wee may eate our owne bread having a civill right to what we possesse as well as a spirituall We must not thinke to be maintained being in a fruitfull land with Manna and Quailes from heaven for God will not allow his servants to eat either the bread of idlenesse or wickednesse Our bread Here God giveth his children leave to call bread their bread whence observe Everie childe of God hath a Doct. 8 true right to those temporall goods which hee doth lawfully possesse The meeke have right of inheritance unto the earth Matth. 5.5 They have right in the right
perseverance that GOD should afford first his prevenient superoperating grace to begin the good worke in the will of man whereby the will being an active power doth suboperate and actually will to beleeve will to repent and to resist a temptation to live godly and to persevere and also that it is needfull that God do afford a subsequent prevailing grace whereby a man under God by his helpe may indeed beleeve repent resist a temptation and doe what may be pleasing in Gods sight and also persevere this is evident both by the Scriptures namely Philip. 2.13 and elsewhere as also by the experience of the best children of God God hath given the Apostle grace to will for hee saith Rom. 7 1● 18.19 to will was present with him when yet he wanted power to doe the good which he would for he saith also how to perform that which was good hee found not The Spouse had grace to wil to runne after Christ yet in the sense of her inability actually to runne she prayeth thus Cant. 1.4 Draw me and we will runne after thee Our Saviour saith Ioh. 6.44 none can come to him except the Father draw him That man commeth to Christ that is beleeveth in him this is the formal and proper act of man but that hee is wrought to this act this is of God by his grace as effectuall as if he were forcibly drawne Now if God should give onely a lesse measure of grace that is if he onely raise the will to an indifferency to will if a man will and shall suspend the concourse of his gracious power requisite to the act of willing and doing that which is good untill the will by its owne liberty now restored by grace shall determine whether it will choose or refuse to will or to doe man in this state shall never partake of that gracious concourse whereby a man should actually will or doe any thing that is truely morally good for man in this state will never determine to will or to doe that which is good but rather the contrary For since mans fall the remaines of inbred sinfulnesse even in the regenerate which doth so easily beset him Heb. 12.1 together with the addition of the weight of a temptation these will if God adde no more then a generall concourse of his power which hee affordeth to the substance of al mens actions good or bad or if hee onely be ready to yeeld a speciall gracious concourse to the doing of a good worke which hee is a like ready to yeeld unto all upon supposition that their will shall first determine to wil or to doe it the weight I say of the disposition of the flesh lusting against the spirit the weight of the temptation will cause that the wils indifferency to good shall cease and the will of man will actually determine for that which is evill Whence it must of necessity follow that every man will inevitably fall into sinne and will live and dye in it and so no man can possibly be saved for wee may well reason thus If our first father Adam who had not in his will two contrary principles flesh and spirit who had not two contrary dispositions and propensities fighting weighing one against the other as every man even he that is most regenerate now hath But if Adams will was habitually and perfectly well disposed to the choise of good only having not the least propensity to evill and had no weakenesse but what was common to him as a creature namely a possibility through freedome of his will to choose the evill and to refuse the good if he would it being possible that he might be deceived in judgement yet because when he was tempted though with no other temptation but such as by his habituall grace he might easily have resisted God left him to the liberty and power of his owne will and did not afford him a speciall helpe by his grace he was overcome of the temptation Let it now be considered if Adam in state of innocency and in a state of perfection if when he was left to the liberty and power of his will the temptation caused his will that was in equall balance to will and to make choise of that which was evill being overcome of the temptation is it possible that any man living who shall have onely grace to will and do well if he will who shall have no more grace of God till first he himselfe hath determined to will that which is good shal ever actually withstand daily temptations or being fallen shall ever rise out of his fall for hee never will will either to resist the temptation or by repentance to rise out of his sinne The matter of this petition and the words being explained they carry this sense O Lord God which lovest good and hatest evill thou which over-rulest and disposest all things by thy divine providence now that of thy mercy thou hast delivered me and all other of us that beleeve from the punishment of all our sinnes past in forgiving all our trespasses do not now we beseech thee expose us unto the temptations of the wicked world of the divell or of our owne evill hearts but that whensoever they assault us to entice us or enforce us to evill we may by the power of thy grace and might resist and overcome them And whereas through our frailty we are fallen and daily doe fall into sinne Lord give grace unto us to rise out of our sinne by hearty repentance For this cause vouchsafe unto us thy holy spirit that good motions may be put into us and may be strengthened in us that by the deeds thereof we may mortifie the deeds of the flesh Let the same good spirit also frame us unto and uphold us in an holy course of new obedience that we may serve thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life to the glory of thy most holy Name in doing thy will Lead us not c. It is evident that sanctification and holinesse of life is the principall thing aymed at in this petition whence if we observe with it the conjunction and which joyneth this to the other petition wee learne Jt ought to be the desire and Doct. 2 endeavour of all Christians as well to be holy in this life as to be happie in that which is to come As well to have power against sinne as pardon of it as well to be sanctified as justified Christ prayeth for all that did should beleeve saying J pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world but that thou shouldest keepe them from evill Ioh. 17.15 and verse 17. Sanctifie them with thy truth David speaking of presumptuous sinnes saith to God Let them not have dominion over me Psal 19.13 The like prayer he maketh against all sinnes saying Order my steps in thy word and let not any iniquity have dominion over me Psal 119.133 The whole tenor of
when such shall say to Christ when the doore of heaven is shut against them Lord Lord open to us he shall say to them Luk. 1● 25 26 27 28. I know you not whence you are if they reply we have professed thy name he doth make the same answer as before saying I know not whence you are depart from me all ye workers of iniquity There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when they shal see all the godly in the kingdome of God and themselves thrust out Vse 2 Gods owne children must here be put in remembrance of that too too little holinesse that many of them shew forth in their lives and of their too much pride voluptuousnesse worldlinesse and prophannesse and how that they shew forth little more then a bare forme of godlinesse shewing little or no power thereof in their lives I do intreat these men to consider seriously of the reasons of this point and of the motives to an holy life prosecuted in the next Vse and to say each with himselfe How do I by my sins grieve and dishonour God how do I discredit my holy profession how do I grieve and hinder the godly how do I open the mouthes of the wicked and how do I hurt my self and interupt my peace with God and how do I play the foole in making choice of the crooked damnable wayes of the devill leaving the straight and saving pathes of Gods commandements Thinke this with thy selfe then humble thy selfe then pray and endeavour a reformation Vse 3 This should incite all that professe Christianity to labour in prayer to God and to take paines with their owne hearts that they may get more and more power over their corruptions and more and more grace that they may shew forth true godlinesse in their conversations amongst men To induce you hereunto consider besides the reasons already given in the doctrine these motives following First all Christians should endeavour to bee holy in their conversation out of the due respect which they owe unto God 1. Out of love and in conscience of duty 1. Thess 4.3 1. Pet 1.15 16. 1. Ioh. 3 2● Mat. 5.16 because it is the will of God our sanctification that we should be holy as he is holy 2. Because holinesse pleaseth him and 3. because he is glorified by it Whereas a wicked life of such as professe his Name Isa 63.10 doth much grieve his holy Spirit Isa 3 8. Heb. 3.10 and doth provoke the eyes of his glory I was grieved with this generation saith he Also they dishonour him as he saith to the Iew by breaking the Law dishonourest thou God Secondly consider that an holy life doth adorne the Gospel Tit. 2.10 and true religion of God but a vicious behaviour of men that professe Christianity 1. Tim. 6.1 doth cause the very religion and doctrine of God to be blasphemed Thirdly consider the different fruits of an holy and of an ungodly conversation in respect of our neighbours with whom we shall converse 1. Pet. 2.12 1. Pet. 3.1 A constant good conversation is a meanes to winne unto the power of godlinesse those which yet are strangers to the life of God and it doth rejoyce the hearts and doth confirme and increase the forwardnesse in grace of those which are already the children of God Moreover an unblameable life doth muzzle the mouthes 1 Pet. 2 15 and put to silence foolish men or if they be so maliciously wicked that they will needs speake of such holy persons as of evill doers they shall be in the end ashamed 1. Pet. 3.16 for falsely accusing their good conversation in Christ But the ungodlinesse of those which professe Christ doth much grieve and oft times doth corrupt in part and infect even those that bee truly good and doth harden the wicked in evil and giveth them just cause to complaine and exclaime against them Fourthly consider the good or evill which accrueth or befalleth to a mans selfe according as his life is holy 1. Tim. 4.8 or sinfull Godlinesse hath the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come Psal 34.9 10. Wherefore holinesse of life will either keep a man from crosses and afflictions and will remove such as are alreadie upon him Psal 34 19 1 Sam 3.18 Psal 119.71 Rom 8.28 Deu. 28.8 Phili 4 11. or will make him able fruitfully and patiently to beare them causing all things to work together for his good It will likewise procure all plenty and prosperity or it will cause contentment in adversity Also by adding unto a mans faith an holy righteous and sober life he doth make unto himselfe his calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1.10 from whence ariseth peace of conscience Rom. 5.1 and joy in the holy Ghost in this life and according to his holinesse Matth. ●5 28.46 such shall be the extent of his eternall glory in the world to come But a sinfull life pulleth downe Gods judgements upon a man and maketh them to abide long and causeth impatience under crosses causing likewise a purblinde judgement barrennesse 2 Pet. 1.8 9. and much unfruitfulnesse in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ This carelesse falling into sinne and lying in it causeth even in the elect doubtings of their being in state of grace Psal 77. and in Gods favour and of their salvation as also desperate feares through horrour of conscience And if a man have onely a forme of godlinesse but denyeth the power of it by a bad conversation he is unto God abhominable Tit. 1.16 and is exposed not onely to be accursed in every thing hee puts his hand unto Deut. 28 20. in the things which concerne the outward man 2. Thes 2.11 12. but to be further given over to Apostacie through strong delusion being to every good worke reprobate that in the end hee may be damned because though he made a profession of beleeving he yet tooke pleasure in unrighteousnesse Fifthly consider holinesse it selfe in respect of the nature thereof as it is compared with and standeth opposite to wickednesse Eph. 4.24 Holinesse is a likenesse and conformity to God our heavenly Father it is his very image renued in us which according to him is created in righteousnesse and true holines But sinne is enmity to God Rom. 8.7 Ioh. 4.44 a conformity to the very devill The wayes of holinesse are all heavenly holy spirituall equall Rom. 7.12 and good but the wayes of wickednesse are all earthly unjust Iam. 3.15 sensuall and devillish I referre the judging here of to any that is in his senses and hath but the use of right reason when he is himselfe namely whether workes of piety mercy righteousnesse and sobriety be not farre better then acts of prophanenesse cruelty unjustice intemperance and uncleannesse let any man instance in himselfe in particulars All these motives considered is there not cause why wee
should desire and labour to be holy namely for its owne sake for our neighbours sake for our owne sake for Religion sake but chiefly for the honour and glory of our God even for Gods sake Mean●● e godly For this cause we must learne to know the wayes of godlines by frequent reading and hearing the Word which Word as it is the rule so it is the ministry and meanes of obtaining the Spirit of God which is the Author of godlinesse Moreover though the Word and holy Spirit dwell in us we must stirre up this Spirit and be very circumspect and watch unto well-doing praying unto God to give us both to will and to do that which is according to godlinesse and lastly let us converse much with those that live holily Who so doth thus shall be able in some good measure to subdue his wickednesse and shal increase in true holinesse Leade thou and deliver thou The person prayed unto here to be understood is God without whom no man can be delivered from evill Vnto him our Saviour sendeth his Disciples to make this petition Whence observe Whosoever would be preserved Doct. 2 from sinne or delivered out of it and would leade a godly life must obtaine it wholly of the gift and free grace of God The Lord must give grace else no man can be holy Ioh. 15.5 Without me you can do nothing saith our Saviour I am the Lord thy God which teach thee to profit which leadeth thee by the way which thou shouldest go saith the Lord Isaiah 48.17 It is God which worketh in you both to will and to do at his good pleasure saith the Apostle Philip 2.13 And he saith The God of peace shall tread Satan under your feet shortly Rom. 16.20 Man is of himselfe insufficient Reas 1 to thinke so much as a good 2. Cor. 3.5 thought much lesse is he able to make himselfe holy Before his conversion he is dead in sinnes and trespasses and in the very power of sinne and Satan who taketh him captive at his will After his conversion 2. Tim. 2.26 he is fraile and disposed of himselfe to returne to his former evill conversation if the Lord do not support and enable him to stand by his grace The way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Iere. 10.23 If man cannot order himselfe in the smaller things which concerne the outward man much lesse can he dispose himselfe in the greatest which concerne the inward in the matters of sanctification If God do not prevent man with his grace he cannot so much as will that which is good and being prevented if God pursue him not with his grace he shall but will in vaine Rom 7.18 to will may be present with him and yet he may not find ability to do that which is good this was the Apostles case and the case of Ephraim Ier 31.18 For when we have done what we can and do as much as lyeth in our power which yet wee must not bee wanting in yet conversion actuall resisting of temptation and new obedience is out of our power any further then wee are holpen by Gods free grace The adversaries unto holinesse Reas 2 are most subtill and mightie they are principalities powers and spirituall wickednesses that if they be not resisted by a stronger even by the power of Gods might Eph. 6.10 12 13. they will prevaile unto ungodlinesse man cannot be able to withstand in the evill day As God onely is able to overcome Reas 3 sinne and give grace so God hath in his wisedome reserved it as a part of his divine prerogative himselfe to bestow it For he knew wel that if man could conferre grace or could attaine it by any meanes without him or having obtained some initiall or preparative grace may then have the prime stroke in the doing of a good worke by his owne free-will then al the praise thereof would be given to man God should have none and man would grow so proud that he would claime heaven by merit and flesh would glory in his presence 1 Cor. 1.29.30 if God were not mans sanctification as well as his redemption Vse 1 First this confuteth the Popish doctrine of free-will which teacheth that a man hath power of himselfe without Gods speciall grace to resist temptation This also confuteth those that do not acknowledge that God wholly and of his free grace and meere good pleasure doth bestow the gift of faith repentance perseverance to any man but according to their works at least according to this work namely if they will what is this if not Pelagianisme condemned by the Orthodox long since who opposed those men which held that God giveth grace to men according as they dispose themselves thereunto for want of which disposition hee denyeth it to others Thus making the act of faith either not at all to bee the worke of God any more then by concurrence to the substance of the act or to make him to be the lesse principall worker of it and withall that what God in the second place doth he is held to do it according to mans worke preceding which taketh away the chiefe praise from God and giveth it to a mans selfe because it suspendeth faith repentance and every good worke upon the determination of man● will Indeed man neither doth nor can beleeve or repent untill first hee himselfe determine in his will to beleeve and repent but this hee cannot do before that God hath wrought this determination in his will by the grace of his holy Spirit by which also hee enableth him actually to beleeve to repent and to do the things that are acceptable in his sight God first doth worke the power then the will and also the deed God inclineth and swayeth mans will to follow his and doth not expect and stay untill man doth will and then follow it It i● impossible to the working of mans will that God having given him a power to will should expect that man should first produce the act of willing and then should graciously concur to the said act For what need shall there be of Gods concurrence to draw forth the act of a mans will when he hath willed alreadie Moreover if God by his grace did onely give a man power to will and to do if he will and if God shall there wait and proceed no further by the helpe of his grace untill men have willed then the efficacie of mans willing doth depend not upon Gods purpose and upon Gods grace given according to the purpose of Gods will but it doth depend originally and principally upon mans wil and hereby man shall be made a converter of himselfe before God have converted him and it may rather be said contrary to the Apostle that man worketh in God the will and the deed Phili. 2.13 then to acknowledge that God worketh in man the will and the
deed and it may bee said that God worketh in man according to mans good pleasure and not according to his owne good pleasure And thus man shall have matter of glorying and boasting in himselfe because he hath differenced and discerned himselfe by his willing to beleeve to repent and to convert and to resist a temptation when another who had alike sufficiencie of grace and had God alike readie to joyne with him to helpe him yet would not beleeve repent convert or resist a temptation The tru●● to be maintained touching this point is that the beginning proceeding and consummation of a mans regeneration and sanctification is of the free grace of God in man without any cause in man moving him thereunto And the cause why he giveth unto some men faith repentance power Rom. 9.11 16.18 Eph. 2.4 5 1 Pet. 2.10 Act. 19.9 against temptations and not to others this is not because he findeth in some good dispositions and such good workes which he findeth not in others but of his meere will and pleasure For God hath mercy on whom he will that is he softeneth hearts and giveth grace to beleeve c. to whom hee will and he hardeneth that is leaveth into impenitencie and unbeleefe whom he will This Doctrine of Gods free and full grace in the worke of sanctification doth also overthrow the merit of workes done by men in state of grace For even then every good worke is done by the continuance and new supplie of Gods grace Now if the doing of good works which are fruits of sanctification be of grace how can they merit This also discovereth the ignorance Vse 2 and folly of such as presume that they can presist temptations at their pleasure and therfore presumptuously runne into manifold occasions of sin and that they can repent when they will and this they thinke they will do hereafter intending to convert and to be godly before they dye thus the devill and a deluded and deceitfull heart doth misleade them For if God give them not grace to resist a temptation and if God convert them not and give them repentance 2. Tim. ● 26 Satan will hold them captive at his will and they will by reason of the hardnesse and impenitency of the●● hearts Rom 2.5 treasure up to themselve● wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God Moreover how doth any man know that God will give him grace hereafter who hath refused and daily doth refuse and resist Gods grace tendred in the Ministery of his Word for the present If he do it is more then ordinary for his ordinary dealing with such sinners is that because they refuse and continue long to refuse when he calleth therefore he giveth them up unto their owne hearts lusts Psal 81.12 that they walk in their owne counsels and either he never giveth them a will to seeke unto him or if he giveth them ever any will to seek him it shall be to seeke him with a meere selfe-serving and so that when they call he will not bee found of them Prov. 1.24.28 For they will not seeke him with their whole heart We heard before in the prosecution of the doctrine how much holinesse deserved to bee desired now would we obtaine it then according as wee are taught by this doctrine we must seek it of God let us say to him Turne thou us Ier. 31.9 and we shall bee turned And with David let us wish Psal 11● 18 36. O that my wayes were directed to keepe thy statutes Open thou mine eyes that J may behold wondrous things out of thy Law And Incline mine heart to thy testimonies and not to covetousnesse And Set a watch O Lord before my mouth keepe the dore of my lips Incline not my heart to any evil thing Psal 141.3.4 And Ps 139.24 Leade me in the way everlasting Let us use all those meanes which he hath ordained to preserve us from sinne let us betake our selves to the Christian armour Ephes 6.13 and resist whatsoever opposeth it selfe to the will of God But this resistance must not be in the power of our owne might but in the power of GODS might through whom it is that the weapons of our warfare doe beat downe the strong holds 2 Cor. 10.4.5 and doe bring into captivitie every thought to the obedience of Christ If we doe thus we shall stand fast in the evill day even in the day of the fiercest temptations Vse 4 Lastly hath any man obtained mercy of God to have power to resist temptations or to recover himselfe out of his sin and is he made able to doe any thing that is good let him take notice that this was of Gods free grace and that it was wholy of his grace He must to the praise of God acknowledge that all is of God nothing of himselfe Hee must acknowledge that God is not onely the Author or beginner Heb. 12.2 Phil. 1.6 but also the perfecter of our faith and that he is not onely the beginner of the good worke of conversion in him but that he hath beene and will be the performer and perfecter of it unto the day of Christ And as wee praise him for that he made us Psa 100.3 and not wee our selves so we must praise him for that he hath regenerated and new made us Iam. 1 1● and not wee our selves being moved hereunto not by any thing in us But as he of his owne will begat us with the word of truth so of his owne will by the same word of his grace Acts 20.32 he doth build us up further till hee give us an inheritance amongst all those that are sanctified If wee will doe this seriously it will keepe us from three of the greatest sins which a Christian is incident to into which he will certainly fall if this present consideration and the like doe not restraine him These are spirituall pride contempt of our weake brethren and unthankefulnesse to God For let our graces bee never so many and never so excellent how can a man thinke highly of his owne worth or meanely of his brother when hee considereth that all he hath is nothing but what he received 1 Cor. 4.6.7 And the more graces wee see in us the more thankefull we will bee to God which gave them to us Let us therefore see God in every good grace we have and in every good worke wee doe then shall wee remaine low in our owne eyes mercifull to our brethren and thanekfull to our God But let us in our thanksgiving give the whole praise of every good worke to God not part to God and part to our selves which is to rob God of all For sith God deserveth all if we give not all unto him hee taketh it as if we gave him none at all Leade thou us not c. but deliver thou us Here note that Gods owne leading of men into
in his holy wisedome decree to permit it Moreover there could be no faultinesse in such a decree because that in it was set such an order that neither the coming of things to passe by Gods permission nor that which should come to passe by his working should either offer violence to the wills of the reasonable creatures or should take away the liberty or contingency of second causes but doth establish them rather For Gods decree doth determine the creature to worke according to its nature that as all naturall agents as that stones should descend if they be not upheld and that fire should burne combustible matter should worke necessarily so all voluntary agents should worke freely and contingently The liberty of the creature together with the sinfulnesse of the act of the creature may and doth well stand with the decree of God Indeed upon supposition of Gods decree to permit Adam to fall it followed by necessarie consequent that Adam would fall yet was it not necessarie that Adam should fall necessarily But rather upon supposition of Gods decree Adams fall by eating the forbidden fruit which God permitted him to do came to passe freely and contingently that is with a possibility of the contrary namely of forbearing to eate of the forbidden fruit This was because God had made man a rationall and voluntary agent to worke contingently and freely according to the freedome of his will and not to be forced thereto by any necessity The decree of permitting sinne doth not lay any necessity upon any man to commit sinne Sinne hath not relation to Gods decree as the effect hath to its cause but onely as a consequent of it and as an object whereabout the decree is conversant Gods fore-knowledge of what shall come to passe and his will to permit it to come to passe are sufficient to denominate a necessity or certaintie of event that the same thing must needs come to passe but neither his fore-knowledge or his will that a thing shall come to passe by his permission maketh God the author of that which is fore-knowne or permitted but to produce a thing that maketh God to be the author of it As for sinne there is no operation of God concerning it as it is sinne but rather negation or suspension of that grace which if God did bestow would keep man from committing of it Gods decree to permit sinne doth not destinate any man to sinne for destination is the ordaining of a person to a certaine end an evill action cannot be the end to which a man is ordained And this decree of permitting sinne and of leaving him in his sinne and then of damming him for sin all which presuppose that God decreed to create man yet from hence it doth not follow that God made any man to the end hee might damne him the end of his creation and of all the parts of Cods decree was the manifestation of his owne glory He made all things for himselfe Prov. 16 4. Now if man might fall by Gods permission and yet God is free from being author of sinne then who can have any colour of exception if after man is fallen God do leave him in his sinne and shall condemne him for his sin especially sith that though Gods decree to leave a man in state of sinne and to reprobate him from faith and other graces needfull to salvation be absolute and without any cause out of God but of his meere will and absolute pleasure yet he never decreed to reprobate or destinate any to damnation absolutely nor yet doth he execute or damne any but for his sinne God never doth save or damne any absolutely but as they are found to be in Christ or as they are found to be in their sinnes out of Christ For God did not absolutely elect any unto salvation nor absolutely reject any to damnation but he decreed to save only those which should actually by his Spirit beleeve in Christ repent and persevere in an holy life to the end if they be of yeares of discretion and such as by secret union of the Spirit should by a way unknowne to us partake of and belong to Christ if Infants within the covenant of grace And he decreed to damne onely such as should persevere in their sinne and infidelity For the promise of salvation and the threat of damnation is made respectively onely to such Yet know that God of his meere will and pleasure did absolutely elect some and did determine to give them the grace of faith in Christ repentance towards God and perseverance in holinesse of life and likewise absolutely to reject others therefrom and to leave them in their sinne and infidelity Thus God is cleared from being any author of sinne or yet to blame if he proceed in rigour in the eternall punishment of some for sinne I will last of all shew that God was no deficient cause in Adams sinne though he did decree to permit it and did work accordingly either by denying his grace or by concurring with him to the substance of the act which was sinfull In all this God did not carry himselfe otherwise than an absolute Lord and a most holy God might rightfully do What though God made the forbidden fruit of an alluring nature pleasant to the eye and good for food as it seemed to Eve and was called by an alluring name a Tree of knowledge of Good and evill What though God exposed Eve unto the temptation of the Serpent and Adam to the temptation of his wife What if God restrained the good Angels that they did not as otherwise they might assist Adam against Satan and against his temptation by minding him of his duty to God and of the falshood and malice of the devill and how much he was but lately beholden to God And what though God left Adam and Eve to themselves without giving thē actuall assistance of his grace any more than what he gave them in their creation to preserve them from falling which he gave to the good Angels and denyed to others What hath God done in all this which he might not do For notwithstanding all this there was a naturall and true possibility in Adam and Eve to have forborne to eate of the forbidden fruit in spite of Satan though hee did his utmost that he could Adam and Eve did eate the forbidden fruit as freely without compulsion as ever before they had eaten of any other tree in the Garden No compulsion but bodily appetite leading them to eate of the common fruit and partly bodily appetite and partly affectation of being like God in knowing good and evill seducing them to eate the fruit which was forbidden There remained I say a true possibility in Adam to have stood For by vertue of the graee of God received in the creation he could not only have abstained from every outward action forbidden him of God but to abstaine from it in a gracious manner for that both outwardly and
fourth thing to bee considered is the end which God proposeth and attaineth by permitting and ordering of the sinnes of men far different from those which men propose in committing of them which ends are holy good namely to set forth his owne glory and that many wayes as by discovering the impotency of the creature what need it hath to depend upon the creator for that man though perfect yet could not stand for want of a speciall grace to support him also to manifest his owne freedome and absolutenesse over his creature besides that his wisdome saw that permitting sinne in such a way as could no way impeach his holinesse it would make way for the manifestation of his power in his infinite grace and mercy mixed with justice towards some and in his infinite justice towards others This hee did not that he could not glorify himselfe otherwise but for that in his holy wisdome he held it fitte●●●o glorify himselfe thus But the end of the proper causes of sin is alwayes naught namely envy against man and malice against God was the cause why Satan tempted man to sinne the satisfying of some vile lust is the cause why man enticeth and is enticed unto sinne Why might not God first permit sinne to be in the world that so a cleere way might bee made to the manifestation of his holinesse in hatred of sinne and in his just revenge upon sinners in which respect though sinne was no way good in acting yet it was good that it should be acted And since the fall his end of giving up the wicked unto abhominable sins is to shew his displeasure in his righteous punishing of one sinne with another for this hee holdeth to bee a meet and equall punishment as he saith of the Romans Rom. 1.17 They received in themselves that recompence of their errour a● wa● meete He doth thus dispose of their sinnes that it may also appeare that he hath just cause to damne them at the day of judgement Wherfore though sinne be evill ye● the punishment of sinne is 〈◊〉 evill but exceeding good The ends of the Lords permitting and disposing of the temptations and sinnes of the elect are manifold First at the first his permission of sinne to bee through mans fault made way for an object of his mercy since the fall he permitteth hi● owne people to be tempted unto sinne to shew his wisedome and power in sustaining the● that they do not fall into evill notwithstanding the subtilty of Satan and the d●ceitfulnesse of their owne heart or if they 〈◊〉 into sinne he suffereth it that he might shew his grace and mercie in forgiving and his almightie power in rescuing and delivering them out of the power of sinne Also God oftentimes suffereth his owne children to commit some great sinne that hee might discover unto them which do commit it that wickednes of heart which they would never else have acknowledged to be in them And this God doth that he might cure them of their diseases of sinne doing like a skilfull Physitian let them fall into one disease to cure them of a greater as they say they will cast a man into a burning ague to cure him of his Lethargie or like as a cunning Surgeon can gather dispersed humors unto an head and there make an issue whereas he may let out that corruption which otherwise could not be drawne forth even so God by suffering his children to fall into some great sinne letteth out that securitie and pride which else would not be cured and worketh that humiliation repentance and care to shunne sinne afterwards which would not else have beene wrought in them Seeing therefore God hath such good ends moving him to permit sinne and to dispose of it in manner as hath been said he is to be cleared from all imputation of faultinesse in all that he hath to do in the sinnes of men The last thing to be considered is how God standeth affected unto sinne Touching which be it knowne that he hateth it perfectly as it is sinne for he forbiddeth it before it be done he never approveth of it by his approving will when it is done yea he is so displeased with it that he never letteth it go unpunished after it is committed for he hath punished it in Christ for the elect and is daily in punishing of it and reserveth it to bee eternally punished by hell-fire upon the reprobate Thus Gods holinesse is every way cleared though he permitteth sinne and hath an over-ruling hand in mens sinnes God is the cause of the action which is the matter of sinne Ob. therefore of the sinne Here is no sound consequence Sol. for as sinne is an action and is an effect of God it is good and is no sinne Peccatum est defectus nou effectus but sinne is sinne as it is a defect and failing in the action swarving from the rule of righteousnesse which is not caused by God nor by any cause which hath any direct subordination from God the chiefe cause of all things God disposeth of sinne Ob. and worketh in sinne therefore in some respect an author of it Sinne hath reference unto God as it is an object Sol. or subject wherein or whereupon hee worketh disposing it to his own holy ends but it never hath reference unto God as the effect hath to the efficient cause Peccatum quà peccatum est objectum operis nb● opus Dei to be wrought by him therefore it doth not follow because he hath a worke concerning it or in it therefore he is a cause of it so long as it cannot be said he doth worke it Ob. God is a cause without which sinne could not be therefore a cause of sinne after a sort Sol. Grant that wirhout God sin could not be yet he is in no sort a cause for this kinde of cause which is called sine qua non is 〈◊〉 truth no cause And all that ca● be yeelded is that God is onely a cause by accident now caus●● by accident are properly no causes No wise man will say the warmth of the Sunne is a true cause of the stinke of carrion which doth not stinke untill the Sunne did shine upon it the cause of the stinke is in the 〈◊〉 thy corrupt matter of the carrion not in the warmth of the Sunne for the same Sunne shining at the same time upon violets occasioneth a sweet smell The Scripture doth seeme to say plainly Ob. that the cause of some mens sinnes have beene of God 1. King 12.15 The King hearkened not to the people for the cause was of God Now in not hearkening to them the King sinned Cause Sol. in that place doth not signifie the proper effecting of a thing causally but a disposing of the proper causes so as they did produce this effect God left Rehoboam to his evill heart and suffered the young counsellours to give counsell according to the pride of their owne hearts by which meanes it
came to passe that Rehoboam sinned the infatuating of Rehoboam who was of himselfe partially and corruptly affected towards his young Councellours and the not putting of wisedome into Rehoboams greene head was of God but that Rehoboam made choice of the worst counsel that was a most free act of his owne Now Gods hand was in the disposing of these things that the thing before prophesied might come to passe Thus much the word translated cause doth signifie scil the thing brought about or brought to passe was from God This act of not hearkening must be considered in divers respects First as an evill act of Rehoboam and his evill Councellours in this respect God did not cause it Secondly it must be considered as a meet punishment of that kingdome and as a means to bring to passe the prophesie of Ahijah in which respect that God in justice should leave Rehoboam and his young Councellours to their folly and to the pride of their owne hearts it was good and was caused of God Thus it may appeare as I hope that God hath an over-ruling and disposing hand in mens sinnes without being author of sinne and without any impeachment of his-holinesse The uses follow They are therefore to blame Vse 1 that alter the forme of this petition saying Suffer us not to be led in stead of Leade us not Their end may bee good but their alteration is naught and to no purpose for in truth this change of words doth not cleare Gods justice any more then Christs owne words Let the petition therefore remaine and stand holy as it is set down by Christ for it is presumption to teach Christ how to speake This our tenent is an apology Vse 2 against Papists or any other that shall slanderously affirme that we hold either directly or by consequent that God is the author of sinne although wee say as this petition teacheth us that God leadeth into temptation and hath more to do in the sinnes of men then a bare permission Vse 3 This should cause all men to admire and magnifie the infinit wisedome and perfection of Gods holinesse that can have so much to do with sinners and with their sinnes and yet there doth not so much as one dust or spot of defilement cleave unto him Vse 4 Hereby are condemned the blasphemies of very many who to excuse or lessen their sin will lay the fault on God because Gods determinate counsell hi● providence power permission and his giving men over is in their sin and because he might have hindered it if he would therefore they thinke they cannot chuse but sinne and why should fault bee found with them if God would it shou●● be otherwise Such are brought in objecting Rom. 9. Who hath resisted his will Why doth he yet finde fault This they take from Adam who before his conversion would have laid the fault on God rather then take it on himselfe for he saith Gen. 3.12 The woman whom thou gavest to be wiih me she gave me of the tree and I did eate But take notice that although he thus extenuated his sinne by laying it on God yet God could Gen. 3.17 and did curse Adam and the earth the bitter fruits whereof we feele unto this day Know therefore thou that any way darest put off thy sin upon God if thou do not beleeve in Christ and forsake thy sinne the Lord will one day shew to thy cost that he can bring it about that thou through thine owne evill heart shalt sinne he giving thee over unto it and yet can in holy justice cast thee into hell for thy sinne For he can say he deceived the false Prophet and yet justly punish the said Prophet and all that are deceived by him Ezek. 14.9 10. Vse 5 May God if he please leade into temptation and can we not be overcome by temptation except the Lord permit This should teach all men to live so that God may be their friend and may not be provoked in his justice to give them over to the power of the devill and unto their owne lusts For which cause observe and keepe these directions following 1 First make your peace with God by faith in Christ repent of all sinnes past and having hereby obtained friendship with God then keepe it by being good before him which is then approved when you shall endevour to please him by doing his will in time to come which if ye do for this is to be good before God or to please God then you shall escape the snares and nets the hands and bands of the most enticing harlot in the world the like may be said of all other temptations but the sinner saith Solomon shall be taken by her Eccles 7. 2 As much as in you is abstaine from all sinne for since mans fall Gods giving over unto sinne is a punishment for some former sinne but especially shunne those particular sins for which God doth in speciall sort give men over the chiefe whereof are these following 1 First all refusing 2 Thess 2.10.11 or a slight and formall receiving of the truth For this causeth God to send men strong delusion to beleeve a lye 2 Abusing or not making right use of that knowledge a man hath Rom. 1 21.22 23 24 26 28. doth cause God to infatuate and give him over to vile affections 3 A willingnesse of heart to be ignorant of the truth and a wilfulnesse to practise evill for of such saith the Lord Ezek. 14.4 He that setteth up his idols in his hea●● and cometh to the Prophet I the Lord will answer him that commeth according to the multitude of his idols 4 Presumption of a mans owne power of himselfe to resist temptations Matth. 26.33 34. for this cause the Apostle Peter was given over to fall so fearfully 5 All willing casting of ones selfe into the occasions of sinne for this cause Jehoshaphat's familiaritie with Ahab 1. Kin. 22. caused him to be given over to beleeve Ahabs false Prophets rather then good Micaiah 6 Idlenesse to live without a calling or negligently in a calling Ezek. 16.49 doth expose a man unto the Lords giving him over unto many abhominations for this he gave over Sodom to uncleannes 7 Allowance of secret sinnes this provoketh God many times to give men over unto some grosse open sinne that it may worke sense of sinne shame for sinne and true repentance in the elect may worke unto shame and eternall perdition of the reprobate Shun all sinnes therefore as much as in you lyeth if you would not have God leade you into temptation but especially take heed of those before mentioned Let all that beleeve in Christ and have thereby true interest Vse 5 in God draw comfort from this doctrine for God you see hath an overruling hand in the temptations and the sins of all men Satan therefore cannot winnow us nor buffet us no Luk. 2● 31 he cannot touch us but as
unto the end thereof that in the end we may with firme remembrance of what hath been spoken and with good advisement redouble our desires and testifie our hope of audience when we say Amen Thus to pray is to pray in the spirit Amen In saying Amen a man repeateth and redoubleth his desire as if he said What I have desired I do againe and againe desire and wish it may bee so Whence note Doct. 3 There ought to be an holy fervor and earnestnesse in prayer Good King Hezekiah shewed his earnestnesse when hee said Encline thine eare O Lord and heare open thine eyes O Lord and see Isaiah 37.17 Daniel is likewise earnest when hee saith O Lord heare O Lord forgive O Lord hearken and doe deferre not for thy names sake Dan. 9.19 Aske seeke knock saith our Saviour Matth. 7.7 Those prayers which prevaile with God are called effectuall fervent prayers Iam. 5.16 For when a man is fervent Reas 1 in prayer it argueth that a man is sensible of what he doth aske and that hee is unfained in his asking It argueth that hee hath faith Reas 2 and hope to obtaine what hee asketh Mat. 15 22 25.2● as it did the faith of the woman of Canaan The evils to bee prayed against Reas 3 are so extremely hurtfull and things to bee prayed for such as grace and glory are so excellent and so exceeding needfull that it concerneth men to be earnest God only can heare and help Reas 4 if he help not we perish good reason therfore why we should be urgent with him Reas 5 The more fervent any man is in requests the more hearty hee will be in thanksgiving Vse 1 This reproveth the faintnesse of the prayers of many persons who put up onely slender and single requsts unto God without redoubling or seconding them with pertinent repetitions or hearty adding of Amen to their requests which argueth that either they have no hearty desires of that they aske or they have little hope to speed both which faylings in prayer do much displease God Vse 2 Let all therefore that are to come before God in prayer not onely pray with understanding and in the spirit but with fervency of spirit Luk. 18.1.2 Christ teacheth this by the parable of the importunate widow and unjust Iudge for by importunity and earnestnesse she prevailed even with him Wherefore if wee would importune the righteous and most gracious God wee should prevaile much more This fervency commendeth and giveth force to our prayers yea though they bee utterred but with unperfect speech and inward grones more than the most fine phrases and most choice words that can be uttered if fervor be absent Amen doth also expresse that perswasion of faith and hope which hee that prayeth hath to obtaine his requests Whence we learne Whosoever prayeth aright Doct. 4 must beleeve and expect that he shall have his prayers granted This same Christ himselfe teacheth saying What things soever ye desire when yee pray beleeve that yee receive them and ye shall have them Mar. 11.24 The Apostle would have men pray every where without doubting 1. Tim. 2.8 John saith This is the confidence that wee have in God that if we aske any thing according to his will hee heareth us 1. Ioh. 5.14 Reas 1 Because whosoever asketh aright asketh onely those things which are lawfull and according to the will of God Therefore may expect to have them granted Reas 2 God hath peomised to grant the petitions of them that pray unto him saying Aske and it shall be given you Matth. 7.7 Our Saviour saith If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall aske what ye will and it shall be done unto you Ioh. 15.7 Yea the promise is made with condition of beleeving that they shall obtaine therefore they must beleeve for Christ saith All things whatsoever ye shall aske in prayer beleeving ye shall receive Matt. 21.22 Reas 3 All which pray aright do aske the Father in the name of Christ Rev. 8 3. who is that Angel which hath much incense which hee doth offer with the prayers of the Saints thereby making them acceptable who hath by his word given all men assurance that whatsoever they shall aske the Father in his name he will give it Ioh. 16.23 This discovereth the sinne of Vse 1 many who notwithstanding they pray daily yet they are full of doubt and do not beleeve that God doth heare or grant their requests Nay many will say that it is not their case onely for they do heare many complaine that their prayers are not granted How can we beleeve that our prayers are or can be granted To such I answer Let not Satan and a misguided judgement deceive you For First the cause may bee in your selves that you are not heard Secondly though God do not take any exception against your person or praier but liketh both well yet in his wisedome he may see cause why hee will not grant your desire Thirdly God may heare and grant your petition when yet you may thinke that you are not heard Fourthly God may for good causes oft-times deferre the granting of your requests which must not be accounted for a deniall If the fault be in your selfe either through the faultinesse of your person or action in prayer then God of purpose forbeareth to grant your prayer not because he heareth not but because he would have you to amend what was amisse both in your selfe and in your prayer To qualifie a mans person that hee may have his prayer heard it is requisite 1. that he be the true childe of God that he be ingrafted into Christ by faith and that hee abide in Christ and have his word dwelling in him For Abide in me Ioh. 15.7 saith our Saviour and let my word abide in you ye shall aske what you will and it shall bee done unto you Or 2. if a man indeed be regenerate Psal 66.18 yet if hee regard any particular knowne iniquitie in his heart and if hee lye in any grosse sinne unrepented of the Lord hath cause not to heare for this sinne as a thicke cloud Lam. 3.40.42.44 causeth that his prayer as Jeremie saith cannot passe through 3. He that would himselfe be heard of God and have God to forgive him must be one that hath put on bowels of mercie Col 3.13 Mat. 6.14 and kindnesse and readinesse to give unto and to forgive his brother at his request else how can hee thinke that God will heare him Matth. 18.32.33.35 so as either to give unto him or to forgive him 4. It is requisite that hee which would have his new petitions granted should first be thankfull for former and for old mercies received else this may be a sufficient barre to the granting of new requests 5. He that would obtaine his petitions must be readie prest and be industrious in using those means wherein and whereby the good thing asked is by
Gods providence or grace usually bestowed else let no man looke to have his prayer granted He that doth aske daily bread he must labour and use the lawfull ordinarie meanes of maintenance else he may justly starve notwithstanding his prayer So likewise a man may pray for knowledge for faith repentance and for eternall life but if this bee but a sluggards wish and be not joyned with using the ordinarie meanes of knowledge faith and repentance as namely hearing reading and meditating of the Word of God and a right partaking of the Sacraments If a man do not heed the Word if he do not consider it and lay it to his heart If he do not withall improve the strength which hee hath gotten in the use of the meanes of grace considering what grounds and what cause he hath to beleeve and repent c. and if he do not assay and put himselfe on to the leaving the sinne he prayeth against or to the doing whereof he desired grace of God let him never thinke that he shall obtaine the things prayed for For God never intended to give them but in the use of those means which he hath prescribed If therefore your person bee not thus qualified If either you be not in state of grace or if you live in any grosse sinne unrepented or if you bee not in charity with your neighbour or if you have beene and are unthankfull for old favours or if you be failing in not using the lawfull meanes of having what you aske you may thanke your selfe if though you have prayed yet you have not your petitions Though your person may be in the maine fitly qualified in the former respects yet there may be such failing in the particular act of praying that it may hinder the granting of the praier As 1. If you pray not to God onely 2. If you conceive not of God aright 3. If you pray not in the name of Christ at least impliedly 4. If the matter of your prayer bee not good and warrantable 5. If you do not pray with understanding 6. If you do not intend your prayer as a worship of God and be sincere in it 7. If it be not with a sensible desire 8. If it bee not with attention of minde 9. If it be not with fervour 10. If it be not with holy devotion 11. If it be not to a right and warrantable end 12. And if it be not in faith beleeving that you shall have your request put up to God in manner as aforesaid and if it bee not such a faith which causeth you to waite patiently then if God have not heard you must blame your self and if you would be heard another time consider wherein you failed and amend it and particulary take heed that when you have endeavoured to pray as well as you can that your not beleeving you should be heard be not the chiefe cause why you have not your prayers granted It will further be objected Ob. If the before-mentioned failings may hinder the granting of our prayers then who can beleeve that ever his prayer shall be heard for who faileth not in some or other of them I answer first God is many times better to us than our praiers and if hee please hee may grant our petitions though made with some speciall failings if he do it is of his mercy if he do not the fault was in us But secondly difference must be put betweene a failing out of weaknesse and manifold temptations and that which is through wilfulnesse and customary negligence If a mans conscience can witnesse to himselfe that when he prayeth the intent and the bent of his heart is to pray aright and not to faile then God for Christs sake in whose name prayer is made doth passe by and forgive such failings and doth certainely heare Wherefore in such cases we ought when we pray to beleeve that God will grant our prayers notwithstanding such failings in prayer Secondly though we have not offended him in our prayers yet God may see cause why he will not grant them For the generall rule of his promise to heare our prayers doth admit of some exception As first when if the thing asked were granted it would crosse some acts of his eternall purpose not knowne to us which he hath intended for the setting forth of his glory in wayes unknowne to us whether it be in things concerning his Church or our owne selves in particular Moreover we are apt to desire things to come to passe in such or such a way and by such or such meanes and in such or such a manner as we thinke may stand well with Gods will when yet God hath some other way some other meanes of doing his Church or of doing us good in another manner then we expect Many times wee would have it our way but God holdeth it best to give it his way 2 King 5.11 Like Naaman the leper he would be cured one way but God cured him by another way Act. 27.24.30.44 God saved Paul and all with him not as they would by the safety of the ship but by the pieces of the ship after shipwracke We are apt to rest upon such and such meanes and to set the meanes above God then it is fit that he should choose other meanes yea hee doth many times choose weake meanes to confound the strong that all the praise may be given to God and that no flesh might glory in his presence Many want comfort and other things because they prescribe to God the meanes Mat. 26.39 In such cases wee should alwayes pray with a reservation namely if thou wilt let this thing be or let this thing passe yet not my will but thine be done A second exception is if the thing asked be not for our good We many times aske for things good in themselves and lawfull for us to aske but God who knoweth what is better for us than we do he knoweth that if we had them they would not be good for us In this case to be denyed our suite is a mercy and and a favour to us God promiseth that we shall want nothing that is good Psa 34.10 Psa 84 1● Rom. 8.28 and that hee will with-hold nothing that is good and that all things shall worke together for good to them that love him Thirdly God doth heare and grant our prayers when wee thinke that he doth not God doth grant our requests divers wayes Sometimes he giveth the same thing that is asked even in the same kinde as when God gave unto Hannah a sonne at her request 1 Sa. 1.27 Psal 21.2 and gave unto David his hearts desire Sometimes God doth not give the same thing in kinde which is asked but the same in effect or that which is farre better When wee aske temporall blessings as health wealth liberty or the removall of such and such a crosse it may be God doth not hold it fit that those particulars