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A02087 Meditations and disquisitions upon the Lords prayer. By Sr. Richard Baker, Knight Baker, Richard, Sir, 1568-1645. 1636 (1636) STC 1223; ESTC S100533 121,730 220

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therefore commonly goes away as it came and makes no stay there And if it come to the eyes as sometime it offers at the sight of Gods workes It findes them not able to stay long open but must have their windowes shut in so are apt to keepe it out or if they stand open they are apt to let in vanity which this Kingdome likes not and therefore cannot abide to abide there neyther but vanisheth away And indeed these are but Out-places this Kingdome loves to be within us as Christ saith The kingdome of God is within you and we have no place within us fit to make the Seate of a Kingdome but onely our heart and this indeed hath no back doore to let it out as the eare hath nor no percullis to keepe it out as the eye hath but it hath a large entrance and a boundlesse circuit and therefore most fit to give this Kingdome entertainement And yet as fit as it is God will not have it unlesse we give it him and he will not have it so neither unlesse we give it him all for it is against his Nature to have a Partner and he cannot abide to heare of moyities either he must have all or he hath nothing at all to be a piece for God and a piece for the world is to be all for the world to conclude God at all is to exclude him from all Wherefore O my soule mangle not thy heart in giving it to God but give it him all and thinke thy selfe happy that he will take it all for the more he possesseth it the freer he makes it the more hee dwelleth in it the fayrer hee builds it the more raigneth in it the richer he adornes it O my Lord God that thou wouldst come and dwell in my hea●ras the owner of it and reigne in my heart as the King of it I should not then envy the Pallaces of Princes nor the kingdomes of the earth seeing I should have within my selfe a Pallace and a Kingdome not onely to equall but farre to exceede them But what kinde of Kings will this Kingdome make us Is it as one saith Rex est qui metuit nihil and indeed there is not such a King to be found amongst all the Princes of the earth for how is it possible they should be without feare who have a sword hanging over their heads continually but by a thred yet such Kings shall we be made by the comming of this Kingdome For whereof should we be afraide Of enemies but they shall be all subdued under our feete Of poverty But we shall hunger and thirst no more Of nakednesse But the Sunne shall not burne us by day nor the Moone by night Of sorrow But all teares shall he wiped away from our eyes Of death but Mors ultra non dominabitur Yet all this will m●ke us but negative Kings and meere negation makes not happy for happinesse is a positive thing and puts us in a reall possession of all good things And such happinesse too shall we have by the comming of this Kingdome for wherein can wee thinke doth happinesse consist If in dainty fare we shall eate and drinke with Christ at his Fathers Table If in fine clothes we shall all be cloathed in long white robes If in curious Musicke we shall heare the Quier of Angels continually singing If in light Fulgebimus sicut sol If in knowledge we shall know as we are knowne If in dominion we shall judge the Angels If in joy our joy shall be full and none shall be able to take it from us If in glorious sights we shall see the blessed face of G●d which is the glory of all sights the sight of all glory O happy Kingd●me O happy comming O happy we to whom it shall come that we can never be intentive enough in praying never earnest enough in longing that this Kingdome may come But doth not this petition seeme to cast an eye upon the Iewes seeing it is not the Kings but the Kingdomes comming that is here prayed for for their King it was well enough knowne was come knowne by the Wisemens question Where is the King of the Iewes that is borne Knowne by the peoples acclamation Hosanna Blessed is the King of Israel that commeth in the Name of the Lord. Knowne by Pilates superscription Iesus Nazaronus Rex Iudaeorum Thus their King they saw but his Kingdome they saw not for how could they see that which was spirituall with carnall eyes neyther indeed can they ever come to see this Kingdome unlesse this Kingdome come and visit them first And is not this then a fit petition for them also And if we give way to this fancie of exposition it will not goe much a stray from the former seeing the comming of this Kingdome to the Iewes is the immediate Fore-runner of the comming of this King to us that are Christians But it is time now to leave being Iewes and to pray for the comming not onely of the Kingdome but of the King himselfe that seeing in attire of humanity they knew him not and in estate of submission they honoured him not he would now come at length in the brightnes●e of his Deity and in the greatnesse of his Soverainety that the eyes which scorned his humility may bee dazeled at his glory and that they which refused the haven of his mercy may suffer shipwracke on the rocke of his justice And to this end we doe all of us set our hands and hearts to that supplication of thy Saints who groaning under the burden of their long deferred hope doe continually with sighes present thee this petition Come Lord ●esus come quickly And if O God thou hast Corne behind to reape which is not yet sowne and stubble behind to burne which is not yet sprung though with patience we will waite the season of thy pleasure yet with prayers we will importune the hastening of thy Harvest and though we be not worthy to open the Seales yet we cannot chuse but be tempering with the waxe that we long for no others comming but thine owne and reckon nothing long a comming but thy Kingdome It is proper to this petition that where all the other have their present dispatches and are put in possession of their suites this onely lives in expectation and is put off with a dilatory answer for God knowes how long yet is as well pleased with this expectation as the others are with their present possessions and therefore may justly be called the petition of hope but hope that makes not ashamed seeing it consists not in the uncertainnesse of the matter but onely of the time Next to the Saints in heaven are placed the Saints on earth for when it is sayd Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven is it not plainely the prayer of the faithfull living seeing Christ himselfe while hee lived on Earth made use of this
bread and this likewise was figured by the next favour shewed to the Israelites his sending downe of Manna day by day from Heaven and his bringing water out of the Rocks The next Petition is for sanctification when our wills are made conformable unto his and though by his Adoption we are children yet by our owne Vow are servants ●nd this also was Figured in the Israelites by his giving of the Law when God said to them ye shall be to me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation and they againe answered God All that the Lord hath spoken we will doe The next Petition is for the comming of his Kingdome which is not onely wages as to servants but an Inheritance as to children For it is not only said Euge bone serve but venite Benedicti Patris and this was also figured in the Israelites when God distributed amongst them the Kingdomes of the Heathen and every Tribe had their stations assigned them in the land of Canaan some by Geometricall proportion and some by Arithmeticall The last Blessing is our first Petition when we shall come to be as Angels and when our Hallowing of Gods Name which is now our worke shall be our happinesse and this was also Figured in the Israelites when they rested in Canaan and subduing their Enemies round about them had nothing but songs of Praise and Thanksgiving for the Blessings they enioyed After this there is no more Figure for we are come to that which cannot be Figured there shall be no more use of the Name of Father for we shall Haliow God in his proper Name and as hee is in himselfe and our charity shall bee in that we shall then love God Not as Misericordem Not as Bonum nobis but as Bonum and not onely love him for himselfe but not love our selves but for him that it is no merveile Saint Paul leaves Faith and Hope behind this Charity seeing They are onely for our selves This only for God and great reason for God shall then be All in All. And now before we make an end to speake of Hallowing Gods Name It may not be unfit to consider the Three First Petitions as they are onely Hallowings or Alleluiahs for observing the difference of the songs we shall perceive the difference of the singers The First when we say Hallowed be thy Name is the Alleluiah of Angels and we may truely say is Canticum Canticorum the song of songs not only because it is sung without ceasing but because it shall be sung without Ending and is both the cause and the effect both the signe and the substance of our Eternall Happinesse The Second when we say Thy kingdome come is the Alleluiah of the Saints in Heaven and is an aspyring to the First but in aspiring in a very neere degree Neere in Dystance though remote in Existence for they are an assurance of Attayning and doe but tarry the time but the time will not be till Time will not be The Third when we say Thy will be done is the Allelujah of the Saints on Earth and is an aspiring to the second but an aspiring in a remote degree for while they are in the world they are subiect to all the rubs of the world while they live in the Flesh to all infirmities of the Flesh yet they have a confidence though no assurance or an assurance though but in confidence and therefore are remisse but not dejected Bold but not presumptuous not out of heart but not out of feare And may it not here be observed that as we beginne in saying Hallowed be thy Name so we end in a kinde of facting the Hallowing it and our first and last words are all for his Glory who is the first and the last and these three Attributes seeme to answer to our th ree first Petitions Hallowed be thy Name for Thine is the Glory Thy Kingdome come for Thine is the Kingdome Thy will be done for Thine is the Power and we seeme to sing not only in the first an unisonewith the Angels but in all the Three the same Ditty with the Saints in Heaven for their Allelujah is Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Glory and Honour and Power and ours here Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory that having sung the Song of Saints and Angels here on Earth we may be admitted into the Q●ire of Saints and Angels in Heaven and sing eternally Thou art mo●thy O Lord toreceave Glory and Honour and Power For Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory for ever and ever Amen And now O my soule Consider how perfect this Prayer is where are the Petitions of Men and Angels the Petions of the Church Militant and Triumphant the Petitions of Innocent Infants Paenitent sinners and Faithfull Beleevers And then harken what Musicke it makes in Gods Eares how Pleasing where the songs are all of Christs owne setting how Melodious where they are all so sweet singers how loud where there are so many voyces especially when this Chorus Cantantium this Quire of singers which hitherto have sung their parts a part shall all ioyne their voyces together in that sacred Antheme For Thine is the Kingdome the Power and the Glory and so End all in that which is the End of all and is it felfe without End The Glory of God FINIS Esa. 1.1 Heb. 2.9 Esa. 59.10 Mal. 2.8 Eph. 4.19 Fph. 3.12 Heb 4.16 Heb. 8.9 ●oh 16.14 Colos. 2.3 Ier. 8.6 Deut. 1.45 Zach. 7.13 Ier. 11.11 Esa. 1.15 Colos. 1.20 Mat. 21.22 Esa. 51.16 Luk. 18.1 Exod 16. 8. 1 Thes. 15.17 Levit 6. 12. 1 Cor. 11. 10. Ezekiel 36 37. Hosea 14. 3. Psal. 87.7 Psal. 10● 1 Psal. 87.7 Iam. 1.6 Psal. 65.2 Luk. 18.13 Psal. ●4 10 Psal. 84.1 Psal. 94.2 Mat. 6. 〈◊〉 I am 3. 41. Psal. 139. 7. 〈◊〉 23 24. Ch●o 2. 6. Psal. 57.5 Eph. 4.10 Psal. 19.1 Rom. 1.20 Wisd. 13.50 Nah. 3.1 Psal. 32.7 Ioh. 14.3 Psal. 66.9 Exod. 〈◊〉 .15 15.3 Psal 104. 2. Zach. 14.9 Esa. 42. 16. Psal. 113 6. Esa. 53.3 ler. 51.53 lob 20.6 Heb. 9. 11. Iob 4. 19. Re● 3. 21. Psal. 73. 5. lob 21. 7 8. Ioh. 8.39 Ioh. 4 19. Ioh. 6. 44. Deut 13.13 Mal. 1.6 Ezek 20.25 Psal 37.25 Ioh. 14.3 Isa. 13.7 Luke 6.24 Wis. 6.6 Revel 18.7 Psal. 19. 7.99 130. Ec●lef 18. 6. Psal 83. 18 Psal. 27. 4. Luk. 10.42 Math. 5.45 Iohn 1. 12. Rom. 8.14 Luke 11.13 Revel 11.4 Isa. 11. 2. Colos. 2.14 Revel 1. 18. Psal 142. 7. Esa. 42. 7. Psal. 51.10 Eccles. 18.1 Mal. 1 〈◊〉 Iudg. 13.18 Psal. 103. 1. Psalm 8. Psal 118. 12. Num. 20.10 Psal. 106.33 Num. 20.12 1 Kin. 8. 65. P Sal. 40.16 Psal. 148. Psal. 118. Exod. 33.21 Revel 4.3 Revel 4.10 Revel 6.10 Math. 5.3 Iam. 4.4 Ioh. 17.16 Revel 3.20 Esa. 41.8 Esa. 63. 16. Col. 2.18 Exo. 33.15 Eph. 2.12 Esa. 26.13 ●udg 9.14 Zach. 4.11 1 Chro. 16.33 Psal. 96.12 Psal. 24.9 Esa. 47.7 Esa. 40.10 Esa. 16.13 Prov. 13.26 Luk. 17. 21. Revel 7.16 Psal. 125.6 〈◊〉 Revel 7.17 Revel 6.11 〈◊〉 Cor. 6.3 Iohn 15.11 Iohn 16.22 M●r. 2.2 Iohn 12.13 Rev. 6.11 Rev. 5.4 Rom. 5.5 Psal. 135.6 Esa. 14.24 46.10 Ier. 42.6 Psal. 49. 20. 73. 22. Esa. 1. 3 Esa. 1.13 Mal. 3.6 Psal. 6.27 Col. 5.9 Psal. 69.9 Psal. 119.105 Iohn 4. 24. Psal 119.66 Psal. 50. 16. Exod. 19.8 Psal. 119.112 2 P● 3. 13. Psal. 14. 3,4 Esa. 1.23 Mic. 〈◊〉 7.2 Rom. 8.21 Esd. 30.33 Cant. 1.10 Cant. 4.13 Ier. 9.1 Exod. 19.6 Ier. 10.23 24.7 Ier. 3.7 Ier. 3.20 Lam. 5●21 Esa. 40.10 Esa. 4.10 1 Cor. 9.17 Iohn 16.17 Wisd. 11.25 lam 1.18 Math. 5.48 Mal. 3.14 Esa. 61.3 Psal. 104.21 Psal. 147.9 Psal. 65.9 Hos. 2.22 Psal. 78.25 Psal. 145.15 Gen. 2● 20. Hab. 1.16 Eccles. 6.2 Eccles. 11.1 2 King 7. Deut. 11.14 Esa. 21.12 Psal. 127.2 Eccles. 5.12 1 King 19. 8. Psal. 90. 31. Rev. 10.6 Esa. 60.19 Math. 6.34 1 Tim. 5.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 14.11 Eccles. 5.11 Ecclus. 30.15 Psal. 4.7 Mark 14.3 lam 4.10 Esa. 10.23 Ezek. 16.49 Math. 26.29 Gen. 30.1 Rom. 8.26 ●en 1.x Revel 〈◊〉 Ioh. 8.10 ●oh 1.9 le● 8.22 1 Cor. 1● 44 Luk. 1.6 ●l 18.24 2 Cor. 1.23 5.5 Mich 7.9 Psal. 103.12 Esa. 38.17 ●sa 64.6 Psal. 40. ● Psal. 103. Psal. 136. Psal. 19.11 ●l 15.17 ●od 34.6 Math. 6.12 L●k 11.2 Cal. 6.5 Math. 6.14 Luk. 14.17 ●oh 13 35. Esa. 58.5 Ioh. 22.3 Psal. 16.2 Psal. 18.25 Ezck. 25.12 Exod. 32.3 Phil. 1.15 Psal. 44.22 Acts 21.23 Psal. 68.19 1 Sam. 15.22 Ioh. 1.16 Psal. 25.11 Iob 13.27 Manass. Psal 38.4 Gen. 4 10. Psal. 25.11 Psal. 6.4 Psal. 110.1 Ioh. 11.14 1 lim 2.6 Esa. 53.12 Ioh. 1.6 Psal. 109.7 Esa. 29.13 Heb. 12.29 Ioh. 1.9 Mark 6.5 Math. 18.23 psal 51.4 Psal. 10.4 37.33 Rom. 12.9 Psal. 97.1 2 Sam. 24.13 Psal. 56.4.11 Heb. 13.6 Ier. 15 11. Psal. 51.2 Mark 22.32 Heb. 11.6 1 Cor. 1.8 ler. ●1 9 Ioh. 16.33 Gal. 5.29 Gal. 3.24 Psal. 119 37. Psal. 26.1 2 Psal. 31.3.51 l●b 1 11. Iob 1.8 Iam. 1. ● 1 Cor. 10.13 Prov 30.8 Ioh. 17.20 Psal. 68.18 Iam. 1.14 Luk. 22.31 1 Pet. 5.8 Psal. 26.2 Psal. 141.4 Esa. 37.3 Psal. 18.48 Psal. 49.15 Ier. 9.4 Eccles. 6.13 1 Pet. 5.8 Exod. 14.4 Exod. 15.2 Psal. 118.14 Esa. 12.2 1 Sam. 2.30 Heb. 6.11.18 Psal. 16.9 Ioh. 19 2● Gal. 5.5 Tit. 3 7. Math 22.32 Num. 26.54 lesnua 21.44
be but as it gets ground from our senses to stand upon And what ground can our understanding have for this from any sense of ours we cannot heare him so much as to call to us by our names as Samuel did we cannot see him so much as flaming in a bush and not consuming it as Moses did we cannot touch so much as the wounds of Christs side as Thomas did and from whence then should our understanding take its rising It is true we see the heavens and they declare the glory of God but we slight them through too much familiarity we heare his words in the Law and the Gospel and in them is eternall life but we regard not them as having them but at the second hand and they but touch us as it were at the bound but if we could heare God speaking himselfe as the Israelites did in Sina Or if we could see but the backparts of God as Moses did in the rocke but most of all if we could see the face of God which all his Saints and Angels behold in heaven then indeed we should not need this prayer any longer for the very sight would worke in us the effect of the prayer and as Peter at the onely transfiguration of Christs humanity was so astonished that he spake he knew not what yet thus much was even extorted frō him by the glory of the sight to say Bonum est esse hic so when we shall come to enjoy the vision of God and to see one sitting upon the Thron like a Iasper stone though we shall be never so much astonished at the glory of the fight yet this will even be extorted from us to say with the 24 Elders Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and power and wee shall fall of our selves into the song of the Angels Holy holy holy Lord God almighty and not only say it but never cease to say it for seeing our beholding will be cause of our admiring our admiring cause of our saying we shall never cease to say it because never cease to admire it and never leave admiring it because never leave be holding it And indeed till we shall come to see his face we shall never perfectly hallow his Nam and therefore what we want in ability we must supply with prayer that seeing our words doe but halt after our understanding and our understanding after his glory with our hearts we may adore him but adore him as incomprehensible with our hearts we may hallow him but hallow him as uns●eakable When we pray for the hallowing of Gods Name we pray implicitely for all things necessary and conducing to it we pray for the agent and for the instrument we pray for the time and for the place we pray for the speaker and for the hearer and in one word we pray for the propagation of the Gospell that doores may be opened to all men of faith that so the building may goe up of the new Ierusalem That labourers may be sent into Gods harvest that so theweeds may be pluckt vp and the good Corne brought into the Barne that there may be Ioy in Sion and peace within her walls that not the Trumpet of War but the Trumpet of praise thankesgiving may be heard amongst us that all eares may be circumcised all tongues touched with Coales from the Altar that so nothing be spoken nor any thing be heard but tending all to the honour and glory of Gods Name This petition stands neerest unto God of them all and makes us stand neerest to the Angels and gives us seisin as it were of what wee shall be hereafter when we shall be sensible of the sweetnesse of it though now Flesh and blood finde little rellish in it having tongues to say it but not to taste it untill they shall put on incorruption For as little account as men make of it here this very hallowing of Gods Name is the highest step of the Angels ladder to happinesse and under an Angell none can climbe it And it may be called the petition of sanctity for by it we are reduced Ad similitudinem Dei Be ye holy as I am holy And it is proper to this petition that this onely is eternall and as it is our first petition here on earth so it shall be our last ther petitions shall have an end For though Hosannaes shall cease with the ceasing of fayth and hope yet Halleluiahs shall continue with the continuance of charity and not onely continue but be continuall But may we not thinke that these words Hallowed be thy Name are not properly a petition or any part of our prayer but rather a complement and solemnity attending upon the Name of God as the Iewes manner is not onely wh● they name any of their famous ancestours the● alwaies adde some words of Benediction as speaking of Moses they alwaies adde Zechar● liberacha Memoria ejus in benedictione as we al● to say Of blessed memory but much more s●aking of God they alwaies adde Hacadosh Baru● Hu Sanctus Benedictus ille which is in effect the 〈◊〉 we say here Hallowed be thy Name and it would fall out well to understand it thus that so we may make Christ as good as his word for then Thy Kingdome come will prove the first petition and it will be as Christ sayd Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof and all other things shall be ministred unto you for having sought the Kingdome of God by this petition and the righteousnesse thereof by the next all other things are ministred unto us by the petitions following For we have a Deed of gift of all temporall things by one and a generall pardon of all faults by another and a Protection royall from all evill by the last But O my thoughts wander not in such by-paths by your selves where being alone you are not onely in danger to goe out of the way but you are in a way to fall into dangers but keepe the roade where you have company and conduct that will alwaies keepe you right and guard you safe for these words Hallowed be thy Name shall well enough and most justly be a petition and a part of our prayer and yet Christ neverthelesse be as good as his promise for this petition Hallowed be thy Name refers only to the honour of God but of those which relate to our own benefit Thy Kingdome come is worthily the first and so Christs counsaile stands firme Seeke first the Kingdome of God and all other things shall be ministred unto you Next unto the Angels in heaven are placed the Saints in heaven for when it is said Thy Kingdome may it not fitly be thought the prayer of the Saints departed of whom it is said that lyingunder the Altar they cry How long O Lord holy and true wilt thou not avenge our blood upon them that dwell upon the earth we all indeed pray
the helpe of Abraham For Abraham was Gods Friend and men will doe much for their friends how much more will God This also hath been and is still the ignorant fancy of some men therefore ignorant because Abraham is ignorant of us and knowes us not and seeing while hee lived hee came short by Tenne in helping the Sodomites whom hee knew he is like to come much shorter now in helping of uswhom hee doth not know But would it not be sufficient to pray for the ayde of Angells as God promised Moses that his Angell should goe with him and wee may be sure that God knew well what Assistance would serve Of this Errour it se●ms by Saint Paul some Colossians were in danger but wee see Moses would not trust to that helpe neither but flatly refused it It seemes he took Gods offer but as a try all and unlesse God would goe himselfe hee thought it no boore for him to stirre And indeed who can thinke it reasonable for Sonnes to rely upon their Fathers Servants For wee fight not with flesh and blood but with principalities and Powers and seeing we have a Kingdome to assault us wee must likewise have a Kingdome to assist us Neither our owne Forces Nor Succour of Saints Nor ayde of Angells will stand us in stead God himselfe must goe forth with our Armies or wee shall never be able to overcome And if we place the emphasis upon the first word It may then raise our minds to this meditation There are many competitors for this Kingdome to rule over us but above all though the basest of all the bramble satan catcheth hold of us to get it God is the trne Olive tree but he cannot take it upon him unlesse he should leave his fatnesse Hee is the true Figge-tree but he cannot be King over us unlesse he should leave his sweetnesse and that fatnesse and that sweetnesse he left the Father when he gave his Sonne the Sonne when he gave his life and now let all the Trees of the wood rejoyce for Thou O Lord art w●rthy to receive all glory and honour and power and the Lord shall raigne for ever And what then shall we render for this inestimable favour in taking us to be his subjects O let us offer him not onely the tenths of our labours but the first fruits of our affections let us open not onely the doores of our lips but the gates of our hearts that this King of glory may come in And when thou vouchsafest O my Lord to come with thy high Majesty under my low roofe and to worke a miracle by having that greatnesse which the world containeth not contained in the little corner of my breast Vouchsafe also to send thy Grace for the Harbinger of thy Glory seeing there can no roome be dressed up against thy comming but onely by thy comming and no place can be reckoned fit for thee untill it be made fit by thee Possesse me wholly O my soveraigne raigne in my body by obedience to thy Lawes and in my soule by confidence in thy promises Frame my tongue to praise thee my knees to reverence thee my strength to serve thee my desires to cover thee and my heart to embrace thee that as thou hast formed me to thine Image so thou mayst frame mee to thy will and as thou hast made mee a vessell by the stamp of thy Creation to serve thee on earth so thou may est make me a vessell of honour by the priviledge of thy grace to serve thee in thy Kingdome In some the world Governes and he who is Prince of this world the divell and this government is a very ●yranny the people here are not Subjects but slaves they have fetters on all their faculties and if they ●oe not feele them it is because they are past feeling The avre of this place is onely Fogges and Mists which both blind their eyes and infect their spirits and makes it their Paradise to be wallowing in puddle He is no true P●nce but an usurper and therfore rules all by force and falsehood He takes upon him to be their Pilot launcheth them out into the maine and then leaves them to stormes and tem●ests and their Haven is to split against the Rockes So here is no being for thee O my soule thou hadst need to make haste hence and to seeke thee out some better harbour In some the flesh governes and they which be Ladies of the flesh Pride and Lust and this government is a very Anarchy Every base fancy hath an even sway with noble reason Wisdome here is not justified of her children they may speake the language of Canaan but they are all natives of Sodome their eyes are seeled up yet their flight is onely downe hill for they are travelling to the bottomles Pit So this O my soule is no place for thee neyther No resting for thee here seeing here is no rest but all in motion and all motion here is commotion In some the spirit governes and he who is the Father of spirits God himselfe and this government is a perfect Kingdome He hath Majesty for his Crowne Mercy for his seate and Iustice for his Scepter He hath wisedome for his Counsailour Almightinesse for his guard and Eternity for his date He hath heaven for his Pallace the earth for his Footstoole and hell for his prison He hath lawes to which nature assents and reason subscribes that doe not fetter us but free us for by them nature gets the wings of grace and transcends the earth Reason gets the eyes of fayth and ascends up to heaven He hath a yoke indeed but it is easie a burthen but it is light his reward is with him and his worke before him He is established in this soveraignty not by his subjects election of him but by his election of his subjects not as rayfing himselfe to a higher title but as humbling himselfe to a lower calling and as not receiving it from a Predecessor who is before all so never leaving it to a successour who is after all This is the place where my soule shall dwell here will I pitch my Tabernacle Onely O Lord let me be taken into the number of thy subiects and endue mee with the priviledges of thy Kingdome and I will freely and faithfully serve thee for ever Other Lords besides thee have heretofore ruled us but now we will remember thee onely and onely thy Name When we make this petition to God that his Kingdome may come we should doe well to remember a petition which God makes to us My sonne give me thy h●art For unlesse we give God our hearts whither can wee thinke this Kingdome should come For if it come to the eares as oftentimes it makes offer at the hearing of Gods Word it findes that onely a Thorough-fare which lies open on every side and no fit place to make a residence in and
where there is no other will done Wee learne by this Petition what it is wee must doe when wee come to Heaven and doth not this make men carelesse whether ever they come there or no for seeing the Will of God is so unpleasing a thing to doe heere how can they thinke it will be any better or be ere a whit mended to doe it there and therefore if there bee nothing gotten by going to Heaven but doing of Gods will they thinke themselves better as they are and would bee glad to tarry heere still where they may doe their owne wills But O my soule is not this to bee starke dead in sinne For it there were any sence of life or any life of sence remaining in us we could not choose but see the beauty and tast the sweetnesse and smell the Odour of doing Gods Will. Sweeter saith David then the hony or the hony combe More beautifull saith Salomon then the rowes of Iewells or then chaines of Gold More fragr●t saith hee also then an Orchard of Pomegranats or then Myrrhe and Aloes with all the spices O thou eternall light and life of all things so enlighten the eyes and qui●ken the senses of my soule and body that I may both see the Beauty and Tast the sweetnesse of doing thy will I shall not then neede any greater motives of longing to be in heaven then that I may be as able as willing who now am scarce willing but altogether unable to doe thy Will But why doe wee pray that Gods Will may be done in Earth which is done in Earth already and that by Creatures which one would thinke were never able to doe it Hee hath set bounds to the Sea which it must not passe● and the Sea as raging as it is and provoked by all the Rivers of the Earth that come running into it as it were for the nonce to make it passe his bounds yet keepes it selfe precisely within the limits He hath appointed the earth to stand still and not to move and the earth though but hanging in the Ayre and nothing at all to hang upon yet offers not so much as once to stirre He hath chargedthe Trees to bring forth fruit and the Trees though even killed with cold of winter and threatned with tempests of the spring yet take heart to come forth and seeme to rejoyce they can doe as they are bidden The very beasts though never so wilde and savage yet observe the properties of their kind and none of them encroach upon the qualities of another And why all this but onely to doe the Will of God And that which may seeme more strange the Flowers come out of the durty earth and yet how neate and cleane Out of the unsavoury earth and yet how fresh and fragrant Out of the sowre earth and yet how mellifluous and sweet Out of the duskish earth and yet how Orient and Vermillian Out of the unshapen earth and yet in what dainty shapes in what curious formes in what enammelings and Dyapers of beauty as if the earth would shew that for all her being cursed she had something yet of Paradise left and why all this but onely to doe the Will of God And why then should there be complaining as though the Will of God were not done in earth O wretched man It is onely thy selfe that is out of tune in this harmony Man that should be best is of all the worst that should bee cleanest is of all the foulest that should be most beautifull is of all the most deformed most full of graces yet most voyde of grace of most understanding to direct his will yet of least will to follow the direction of understanding Man endued with celestiall qualities yet leaves them all to encroach upon the qualities of every beast upon the obscenity of swine in drunkennesse upon the greedinesse of Cormorants in covetousnesse upon the craftinesse of Foxes in fraud upon the cruelty of Tygers in malice as if he would strive to exceede his first parents in transgressing and try whether God had any greater punishment left then casting out of Paradise that if Christ would have served us in our kinde and as we deserve he needed not have gone for patterns to Heaven he might have found patterns good enough for us amongst the meanest creatures of the earth and as he told the Pharisees the Queene of the South should rise up against them in Iudgement so he might have told us the Flowers the Trees the Beasts shall all rise up in Iudgement against Man that we had more need to say O that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weepe day and night then after Trees and Beasts have done Gods Will to come after them all with but onely saying Thy Will be done in earth as it is in heaven But how doe these Petitions hang together or how is not this directly contrary to that which went before For there we desire a Kingdome that we may doe what we list and here we desire subjection and to be at anothers command Yet here is no contrariety for there we desire to raigne over our owne wills and here we desire to be subject to his will and this subjection is our true reigning this service our perfect freedome Or is it not rather a straighter Obligation For by the comming of his Kingdome we may be thought onely subjects at large but by submitting our selves to his will we are servants by vow that seemes to referre to Gods promise to the Israelites Yee shall be to mee a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation this seemes to referre to the peoples answere to God All that the Lord hath spoken we will doe And so there is no contrariety betweene the petitions but the latter is a consectary to the former But is it not rather that wee overshoote our selves and make it here a suite to bee made bond-slaves for what is it but slavery when wee can never have our wills but must live alwaies subject to the will of another especially where there is so great an antipathy as betweene Gods Will and ours But O my soule consider how wretched a thing thine owne will is how blessed a thing the Will of God is and be not here a Dogmatist but an Empyricke rather hearken not to thy reason which oftentimes is but a Parasite to thy sence but looke upon experience which rightly discerned will make thee alwaies to discerne the right Hath not misery alwaies followed the doing of our owne will happines alwaies the doing of Gods Will Our first parents left Gods Will to doe their owne will in eating the forbidden fruit and what fruite followed but the utter undoing of themselves and all their followers Cain left Gods Will to doe his owne will in killing his brother and what became of him but that hee became a vagabond lived like a beast and came at last to be killed for a
for the inchoation of the Kingdome of Grace but these are p●operly they that pray for the consummation of the Kingdom of glory when all things shal be made subject to the Father and God shall be all in all And it remaines onely for these to pray for this Kingdome seeing they are already lifted up above all other kingdomes having the kingdomes of the world in contempt the kingdome of satan in subiection and as for the Kingdome of Grace they have it already in perfection Though we have stiled this petition the prayer of the Saints departed as being the most eminent persons that can say it yet we doe not thereby exclude our selves but we enter common with them or rather we pray for a King●ome more then they doe They onely for the Kingdome of glory we for the Kingdome both of grace and glory yet may we justly call it theirs seeing they began it to us and continue it with us and enforce it for us But doe not the words of this petition crosse one another and is there not an opposition betweene them For Kingdome is a word of Majesty and comming is a word of inferiority at most of equality and so we seeme to pray to Gods disparagement we make a superiour inferiour at most but equall But is it not that we mean not here a descent but an extent of the Kingdome and a comming not of duty but of grace and so neither the Kingdome disdaineth the comming nor the comming disparageth the Kingdome but Kingdome and comming are magnified both in their uniting This petition at first sight seemes to flatter flesh and blood asking as they themselves would wish but Christ hath taken them downe from any such hope professing plainely that his Kingdome is not of this world And though it may be thought am●ition to aske so great a matter as a Kingdome yet it is in truth humility for untill we attaine to this Kingdome we cannot be wholly Gods true servants and it is reason the suite should be the greater because we are likely to tarry longest for it But is it not strange to see us come as we doe here In forma pauperis to aske a Kingdome yet so we must doe and so hath Christ proclaimed it Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of Heaven And yet if we marke it well as poore as we seeme to come we shall finde that Salomon in all his royalty was not cloathed as we are by this petition for by it we are cloathed here with sanctification that we may be cloathed hereafter with immortality Some seditious heads may here take occasion to thinke that to pray for this Kingdome is to pray against all earthly kingdomes and to disthrone Gods Lieutenants of their authority But know O world that this Kingdome though it take away our subjection to the world yet it taketh not away our subjection in the world though we be not of the world which St. Iames taxed for Enmity with God yet we are of the world which Augustus taxed for tribute to Caesar and this tribute must be paide as well from our hearts as from our purses for out of the duty we owe him that hath placed us in his service we learne to be contented to serve every one in his place When we say this petition we meane not that Gods Kingdome should so come to be here as that it should be no where else for this were but to remove it whilst we seeke to enlarge it and to make that finite which is infinite but we pray onely for the beames of the Sunne of righteousnesse not for the Sunne it selfe for the power and priviledges of the Kingdome not for the body that as Christ saith No man can come unto me except the Father draw him So we most properly understand the Kingdome to come to us when the Father drawes us and makes us come unto it and so in effect our petition is this that God by his Spirit would so rule over us that our spirits may wholly be ruled by him and that his Kingdome of grace may so come unto us that we may come at last to his Kingdome of Glory But what need we to pray for the comming of this Kingdome for seeing it is infinite it must needs be every where and being every where it must needs be here already But is it not that there is a difference between the being of this Kingdome and the comming It is indeed every where but it comes not every where It is in the wicked upon earth and it is in the damned in hell but it comes onely to the faithfull on earth or to the Saints in heaven for wher it onely is it is in power or justice but where it comes it is in love and bounty where it onely is it leaves us at sea and suffers us to suffer shipwracke but where it comes it brings us into the Haven and sets us safe on shoare This Petition hath but three words and each word may have its emphasis each emphasis its meditation For if we place the emphasis upon the last word the meditation may be this that the ambition is not in asking a Kingdome but that we must have it come to us as though we thought our selves too good to goe to it but alas poore lame soules wee cannot goe to it though we would never so fayne for the truth is we are in bondage to another Prince that unlesse this Kingdome come and free us our Fetters will not suffer us to stir a foote But is not this directly contrary to that which Christ saith Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the kingdome prepared for you for here we pray that the Kingdome may come to us and there we are invited to come to it Here we are the marke and the Kingdome is the commer there the Kingdome is the marke and we the commers This indeed may well seeme wonderfull in our eyes seeing nothing is more wonderfull in nature then the nature of this Kingdome is It comes to us as our Ransome We come to it as to our Triumph It comes to us as it came and sat upon the Apostles in fiery tongues we come to it as Elias went up in a fiery charriot It comes to us as the Kingdome of Grace we come to it as to the Kingdome of glory And if wee place the Emphasis upon the second word It may be seconded with this Meditation It is true we are in this world as in a warre and have many enemies to assault us but will no lesse ayde then a Kingdome serve us Have we not Forces of our owne which we may muster up and make resistance This indeed was Pelagius his dreame but all men that are awake finde it otherwise For seeing those Forces did not serve our first Parents who were strong and at liberty what hope is there for us who are weake and in bondage But might it not serve to require