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A20735 A godly and learned treatise of prayer which both conteineth in it the doctrine of prayer, and also sheweth the practice of it in the exposition of the Lords prayer: by that faithfull and painfull servant of God George Downame, Doctr of Divinity, and late L. Bishop of Dery in the realm of Ireland. Downame, George, d. 1634.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1640 (1640) STC 7117; ESTC S110202 260,709 448

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meditated of Psal. 142. 2. Effundam coram eo meditationem meam I will poure out my meditation before him There is such affinity between meditation and prayer that the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth either of both to meditate or to pray and therefore Gen. 24. 63. some reade that Isaac went out to meditate others to pray And it is likely that he did both first meditate and the●…●…ay Now the end of this preparation being to make us fit to perform such duties as are required in prayer our meditation must be referred thereunto And first if we find ourselves backward in the duty it self we may meditate on those reasons which before we used to this purpose And that we may perform it in an holy manner we must stirre up our hearts as David doth in many places as Psal. 103. 1. that so we may call upon God with our hearts And if our knowledge be so small that we are not able to conceive a prayer of our selves but must be fain to use a form prescribed by others we must before hand meditate thereof that we may be able both to understand it and to use it aright And that we may pray in faith we are to meditate on the promises of God made to our prayers and on the mediation and intercession of our Saviour Christ on which our faith is to be grounded Likewise we are to meditate on our own unworthinsse that so we may pray in humilitie of the glorious Majestie of God our heavenly Father that we may call upon him in reverence of the excellency profit necessitie of those blessings for which we either pray or give thanks that so we may pray with fervencie and give thanks with alacrity And further if we conceive a prayer before not used we are to meditate not onely of the matter but also of the manner and order of our speech that we may be able to say with David My heart is prepared so is my tongue I will now call upon the name of the Lord. And thus much of Preparation After the actio●… 〈◊〉 ought to be such a disposition as the severall kind of invocation doth especially require Whereof in due place In the mean time this admonition in generall may be given That when we have at any time called upon God we take heed that we do not end our prayers as we end epistles with a V●…le bidding the Lord Farewell till the time of prayer come again as though we had then ended our task and had performed all the service we ow unto God in the mean time neither thinking of God or godlinesse but following our own corrupt wayes For howsoever we cease to speak unto God for a time yet we cease not to be in his sight and presence and therefore cannot do as untoward children and unchast wives who though in absence they have behaved themselves lewdly yet approve themselves to their parents and husbands by their demure carriage in presence But we are continually in Gods sight and presence and therefore if after we have called upon God we play the lewd children even in his sight and go a whoring after vanities in his presence how cannot this but greatly amaze us against we shall pray again and put us out of hope to be heard Wherefore the frequent exercise of prayer is a notable bridle to restrain us from sinne whether you respect that which is past or that which is to come For when a man is about to commit sinne let him call to mind his prayer past Am I that man who so lately called upon God making such shew of pietie pretending a zeal of Gods glory in advancing his kingdome and doing his will c. or that which is to come With what face can I appear before God guilty of such offenses with what affiance can I lift up these cyes unto God that behold vanities these hands unto God that commit such sinnes c. Let us therefore with David use to meditate If I regard wickednesse in my heart the Lord will not heare me Psal. 66. 18. following the advice of the Apostle 2. Tim. 2. 19. Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquitie For not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heaven but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven Matth. 7. 21. Inefficax est petitio cùm precatur Deum sterilis oratio i. sine operibus Petition is uneffectuall when we call upon God with a barren prayer that is without good works And thus much of the manner of Invocation CHAP. XXV Of the matter and subject of our prayers and what is required thereunto namely that it be good and according to Gods will NOw followeth the matter or the subject that is the things for which we either do pray or give thanks Conc●…rning which this is to be noted in generall That we have a sound perswasion grounded on the word of God that they be lawfull and good First because what is not of faith is s●…n Rom. 14. 23. Secondly for what we do elther pray or give thanks to God thereof we acknowledge God to be the authour but it is blasphemous to make God the authour of that which is wicked unlawfull Thirdly prayers must be made in faith viz. that God accepteth our prayers and will grant them unto us This faith must be grounded on Gods promise and God promiseth to give good things to them that ask Matth. 7. 11. Evil things are not within the compasse of Gods promise for the foretelling of that which is evil is rather a threatn●…ng then a promise Fourthly the assurance that we have to be heard is when we ask any thing according to Gods will 1. John 5. 14. but to ask evil things is not according to Gods will Fifthly they that call upon God for evil things are like the wicked Psal. 50. who think that God is like unto them Sixthly if we ask good things we have assurance to be heard Matth. 7. 11. 1. John 5. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For our direction in this behalf our Saviour Christ hath prescribed a most perfect form of pray er which is summa petendorum the summe of things to be desired So that whatsoever may be referred thereunto we may be assured is according to Gods will but what cannot be referred to some part of the Lords prayer that our Saviour hath not taught us to ask nor the Father promised to give There remaineth the last point For now it may be demanded How we being so corrupt and sinfull in our selves should be able to pray according to the will of God Of our selves indeed we are not able to think a good thought and much lesse to conceive an acceptable prayer Of our selves we cannot say that Jesus is the Lord and much lesse call upon God as our Father in Christ But the Spirit of God helpeth our
of our assertion in ascribing praise to God and also a true desire and zeal of Gods glory Hence therefore we may learn again those duties which heretofore have been taught 1. That we call upon the Lord with unfeigned lips and upright hearts truly desiring those things with our hearts which we ask with our mouthes and being truly thankfull for those things for which we give thanks 2. We must strive against our infidelitie and doubting Psal. 42. 12. and must truly believe that the Lord will grant our requests so farre forth as they stand with his glorie and our good otherwise we cannot say Amen 3. We are to rest in the good pleasure of God with assurance expecting his grace and help Psal. 123. 2. and 3. 4 5. and 4. 9. And thus our Saviour hath taught us with this word to seal up our prayer Which therefore is not unworthily of some called Signaculum orationis Dominicae the seal of the Lords prayer For he that truly believeth that the Lord doth heare him and goeth away resting in his goodnesse putting his Amen to Christs Amen John 16. 23. he hath set to his seal that God is true in his promises and that to the Lord belongeth kingdome power and glory for ever But here see the hypocrisie of men who say Amen but pray not from their hearts nor truly desire that which with words they ask nor are thankfull for that for which they would seem to give thanks neither do they believe that God will grant their requests and therefore though they say Amen yet therein they lie unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS The method observed in this tractate Of prayer The definition of Prayer Of the name of Invocation Prayer Of the generall nature of Prayer Psal. 5. 1. Damasc. De Orthodoxa side lib. 3. cap. 24. The proper nature of Invocation What is required in all invocation acceptable to God De orando Deo lib. 1. cap. 1. Isa. 64. 7. 1. Reason taken from the law of nature 2. Because it is the end of our creation and redemption 3. Because it is injoyned in the morall law Object Answ. Esth. 4. Special commandments injoyning prayer 1 From the excellency of it Lib. De orand p. 120. 2. From the profit of it August Chrysost. At●…anas De Psal. 68. 1. Whether prayer be efficacious to obtein ou●… desires Object 1. Answ. Epist. 121. ad Probam Object 2. Hunnius De Providentia Answ. Arist. Phys. 2. T●… Aquin. 2. 2. qu●… 83. 2. c. Jam. 5. 16. Rom. 10. 12. Jer. 25. 11 12 Bellarm. D●… bonis operib in particul lib. 1. cap. 3. Of the efficacy of prayer in respect 1. of the ●…lements 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. of the heavens and heavenly bodies 3. of men 2. Kings 6. Chrysost. De orat lib. 2. cap. 1. 4. of sicknesse death and devils 5. of God prayer is of greatest essicacie The uses A threefold limitation of Gods promise to heare 1. God heareth not the impenitent sinners 2. That we must pray according to Gods will Object Answ. What in particular is required to ●…ffectuall prayer The third limitation in respect of the things prayed for Two benefi●…s accrewing by prayer Rom. 8. 26. The Papists confuted who hold that prayer is satisfactorie and meritorious That the righteous onely are admitted to pray There is a twofold 〈◊〉 Legall Evangelical what it is Hab. 2. 4. Isa. 59 1 2. John 9. 31. That the impenitent is not able truly to utter any petition in the Lords Prayer That all promises are limited with the condition of faith and repentance Object Answ. God heareth not the wicked for spirituall blessings That God often heareth the wicked for temporall benefits and how God heareth the wicked as a severe Judge August ad Probam Epist 121. 1. Reason An objection of the Rhemists answered The distinction of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 discussed De civit Dei lib. 10. cap. 1. Ails 20. 10. 1. Thess. 1. 9. Rom. 7. 6. and 12. 11. Quaest. super ●…xod lib. 2. 94. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suid 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. Reason Jer. 2. 27. Thom. part 3. quaest 25. a●…t 4. 5. Reason Heb. 11. 6. Rom. 14. 23. That Angels ought not to be worshipped 1. Reason Vide Ambros in Rom. 1. pag. 177. 2. Reason Object Answ. That Saints departed ought not to be invocated 1. Reason 1. Exception of the Papists The glasse of the Trinity forged A second pretense of the Papists answered A third pretense avoided 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. Reason Object Answ. 1. Object Answ. In Apolog. Rom. 1. 23. Psal. 106. 20. Whether it be lawfull to direct our prayers unto any one person in the Trinitie Whether Christ as Mediatour is to be invocated That we must worship Christ in his whole person and not in his manhood alone Ad Theodos. De rect fide 1. Tim. 1. 5. The Papists make two sorts of mediatours Object Answ. How the Saints in heaven may be said to pray and for what Contra Epist. Parmen lib. 2. cap. 8. The holy Ghost joyneth intercession and redemption both in one Contra Parmen lib. 2. Epist. cap. 8. The high Priest a type of Christ. 1. In respect of the soul in truth and uprightnesse of heart That our prayer must be the speech of the soul. Psal. 62. 8. The necessity of praying in truth proved by divers reasons Ephes. 6. 6. Praying with feigned lips to be avoided and what it is 2. We must not pray with wandring thoughts Serm. de Orat Domini Inter Orthodoxogr 1399 Tom. 4. Homil 79. 641. B. in F. Contra Julian lib. 2. ex Ambros. De suga seculi First we must know God 2. We must know Gods will and pray according unto it In Psal. 99. The doctrine and practice of the church of Rome confuted who presse prayer in an unknown tongue Concil Trid. sess 22. can 9 The Papists shifts avoided which they use to ●…lude the Apostles words 1. Cor. 14. Object Answ. vers 14. Object Answ. Lib. De Magistro cap. 1. That the people ought to understand publick prayers Basil. in des breb. 278. De Genes ad literam lib. 12. cap. 8. In 1. Cor. 14. De Tristib lib. 5. cleg 11. Contra Celsum lib. 8. Chemnit Exam par 2. 172. a. Object Answ. Object Answ. Object Answ. Of private prayers in an unknown tongue and the evils thereof In Psal. 1●… Expos. 2. Prayer unprofitable in our mother-tongue if we pray not with understanding Psal. 5. 7. A double faith required in invocation 1. Thess. 5. 17 18. That we must pray in faith proved 1. By testimonies 2. By reasons Ephes. 3. 12. Object Answ. Tom 3. 632. The necessitie and profit of humility proved by testimonies and ●…xamples Examples of the humility of the godly Luke 18. 13. Faith and humility must be joyned together Object Answ. Bernard De triplici mod●… orationis serm 5. fol. 22. D. August Epist
A GODLY AND LEARNED TREATISE OF PRAYER Which both conteineth in it the Doctrine of Prayer and also sheweth the Practice of it in the exposition of the LORDS PRAYER By that faithfull and painfull servant of God GEORGE DOWNAME Doct r of Divinity and late L. Bishop of Dery in the Realm of Ireland 1. THESS 5. 17 18. Pray without ceasing in every thing give thanks for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you ¶ Printed at Cambridge by ROGER DANIEL for Nicolas Bourn and are to be sold at his shop at the South-entrance into the Royall Exchange in London 1640. THE DOCTRINE OF PRAYER Teaching the nature efficacie utilitie and necessity of this holy duty by whom unto whom and through whom it is to be performed what things are required that our prayers may be acceptable both in respect of our souls and bodies both before in and after prayer and more especially of the parts of Prayer Petition and Thanksgiving LUKE II. 1. One of his disciples said unto him Lord teach us to pray as John also taught his disciples ¶ Printed by Roger Daniel Printer to the Universitie of Cambridge Ann. Dom. MDCXL To the Christian Reader THere is no duty more excellent in it self or profitable to us then that of Prayer Wherein we have sweet communion with God and free accesse to the throne of grace laying open to a gracious Father all our wants and grievances in hope and confidence to have our suits granted our sinnes pardoned our necessities supplyed and our griefs removed and relieved It is that hand and key which helpeth to unlock and open the treasury of all Gods graces for the enriching of our souls with all his blessings the horsmen and chariots of the Israel of God whereby they get victorie over all their enemies yea they prevail with God whē he seemeth to oppose against them as an enemie and to wrestle with them that he may soil and overthrow them as he did with Jacob. In all which and innumerable other respects as it is to be esteemed the chiefest exercise of a godly and Christian life which can never be too much practiced as the Apostle implyeth where he injoyneth us to pray continually and in all things to give thanks so can it never be sufficiently insisted upon in the doctrine of it whereby we are pressed perswaded to the frequent exercise of it and taught to perform it in a right and acceptable manner In which regard though much already hath been excellently spoken and written upon this subject yet let no man think it superfluous to have more published of this argument seeing that can never be too much taught which is never sufficiently learned and loved The ensuing Treatises were the labours of that learned judicious and godly Divine D. Downame late Bishop of Dery in the Realm of Ireland my most dear brother which were penned with his own hand for his private use but for the publick service of that part of Gods Church over which he was a painfull and faithfull Pastour conteining the summe of many of his sermons which he preached on this argument The which if he had been pleased to have polished and perfected with his own learned hand no doubt much would have been added to their lustre and beautie Yet seeing this was not done according to his better abilities I thought it a dammage to Gods people that they should lose the substance for the want of some circumstance and have no use of a well-compacted bodie fit to do God and his Church good service because it was not decked with gay ornaments And therefore I have presented it to the view of the world and indeavoured to perform the dutie of a brother to him that is deceased though not to raise this spirituall seed to him for it was of his own begetting and composing yet to give unto it birth and being in the world without which it would have proved abortive and so have been buried in perpetuall oblivion The which service I have the more willingly undertaken for the benefit of all that will take pains to peruse this work because I am now disabled by age and many infirmities to produce any further labours of mine own in this kind wherein I have not been wanting in my more able and mature times according to the proportion of my small talent which my great Lord and Master hath entrusted me with Herein imitating the example of the weaker sex who after they have been fruitfull in bearing children themselves and now being come to older age are disabled to have any more conceptions do some of them become midwives who are helpfull to those who are young and fruitfull for the bringing of their children into the world The Lord whose onely blessing maketh all our indeavours profitable by giving efficacie unto them by the inward operation of his holy Spirit blesse these and all other labours of his servants that they may bring forth plentifull fruits for the advancement of his glory and the benefit of all his children who are willing to make use of them to these ends Thine in the Lord Jesus to do thee any Christian service JOHN DOVVNAME ¶ The contents of the Chapters of the first part of this Treatise viz. The Doctrine of Prayer together with the chief points therein handled Chap. 1. OF the definition of Prayer and of the persons who are to pray Pag. 1 Of the name of Invocation and Prayer 2 Of the generall nature of prayer 3 Of the proper nature of prayer 4 What is required in invocation acceptable to God 5 Who ought to pray 6 7 c. 2. Reasons moving to the dutie of prayer 8 9 c. 3. Other motives to the dutie of prayer 11 4. Three questions cleared 14 Whether prayer be efficacious to obtein our desires 15 That prayer is necessary notwithstanding Gods decree 16 17 c. 5. Of the great and wonderfull efficacy of prayer 21 6. Whether by prayer we alwayes obtein our desires 26 7. Of the profit of prayer 29 8. A threefold necessity of prayer 32 9. Who are to perform the duty of prayer 33 10. None but the faithfull can pray effectually and acceptably 37 That the impenitent cannot pray acceptably 39 In what respect God heareth the wicked 47 11. That God alone is to be called upon 51 12. That we ought not to invocate any creature 58 That Angels and Saints are not to be invocated 59 That Saints departed are not to be invocated 61 Chap. 13 That we must conceive of God in prayer as he hath revealed himself in his word 64 Whether Christ as Mediatour is to be invocated 66 14. That Christ alone is the Mediatour of intercession as well as of redemption 68 15. That we must pray onely in the name of Christ 77 16. Of the manner how we are to call upon God 80 That we must pray with upright hearts 82 c. That we must not pray with feigned lips and wandring
chearfully speedily uprightly faithfully constantly fully when as in truth they do the will of God no otherwise then the devils in hell which howsoever in respect of their intent rebell against the will of God yet if you respect the event they become maugre their spite the instruments to bring to passe that which God hath willed and decreed They crave bread at the hands of God as if a small thing would content them when they desire excesse of riches neither can be satisfied with abundance They crave daily bread or as the word signifieth such a portion of temporall blessings as God shall judge most expedient for them as if they meant not to be their own carvers but in these outward things resigned themselves into the hands of God and submitted themselves to his fatherly providence when they are such as have set down with themselves that they will be rich 1. Tim. 6. and will come to great matters whether God give them good means or not and will frame their own fortune They beg for a day as if they would depend upon God for tomorrow yet distrustfully hoard up for many yeares They desire temporall things to be given them of God and yet seek them by wicked and unlawfull means They desire God to remit their sinnes as if they repented of them which they still retein as if they did in mockery desire the Lord to forgive the sinnes which they will not forgo Yea they desire the Lord in hypocrisie so to forgive them their trespasses as they forgive those that trespasse against them when as they nourish hatred and a desire and purpose of revenge so in stead of obteining mercy and forgivenesse at Gods hands they call for the fierce wrath and vengeance of God to be executed upon them They desire that God will not lead them into tentations and yet themselves run into tentations and seek occasions of evil They desire that they may be delivered from evil and yet wilfully go on in evil and will not be reclaimed as though they had made a covenant with hell They ascribe kingdome to the Lord and yet will not obey him as his subjects power and yet neither fear nor trust in him glory yet do not glorifie him They subscribe to their prayers and say Amen as though they unfeignedly desired and assuredly believed that their requests should be granted when as they neither desire that which in hypocrisie they ask nor believe the granting of that which without faith they have begged And finally in all these requests they draw neare to the Lord with their mouth and with their lips do honour him but they remove their hearts farre from him Isa. 29. 13. It is evident therefore that as the prayer of the righteous is acceptable to God as the evening sacrifice Psal. 141. 2. so the prayer of the wicked is detestable unto him Which may further be proved by expresse testimonies of the holy Scriptures The sacrifice of the wicked saith Solomon is an abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is acceptable unto him Prov. 13. 9. and again v. 29. The Lord is farre from the wicked but he heareth the prayers of the righteous The same doth David testifie Psal. 34. 15 16. The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his eares are open to their crie but the face and angry countenance of the Lord is against them that do evil to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth The man which had been blind John 9. 31. delivereth this as a received truth in the Church of the Jews This we know saith he that God heareth not sinners that is impenitent sinners but if a man be a worshipper of God and doeth his will him he heareth Wherefore it is manifest that the promises made to them that call upon God are restrained and as it were appropriated to the godly And therefore whosoever desireth to pray unto God with hope to be heard must turn unto the Lord by repentance and lay hold upon Christ by faith unfeignedly purposing amendment of life For the name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth unto it and is exalted or set in safetie Prov. 18. 10. But it will be objected That the promises are generall and therefore belonging to all they are not to be restrained to some I answer That they and all other promises of the Gospel are to be understood with the condition of faith and repentance which many times are expressed and where they are not they are alwayes to be understood as restraining the promises to the faithfull For whereas Joel saith chap. 2. 30. that whosoever calleth upon the name of the Lord shall be saved our Saviour restraineth it to the righteous Matth. 7. 21. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord that is which calleth upon me shall enter into the kingdome of heaven but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven and the Apostle Rom. 10. 13 14. to the faithfull But how shall they call upon him in whom they have not believed And whereas our Saviour saith That whatsoever ye shall ask in my name the Father will grant it John 16. 23. that also is restrained in the 1. epistle of John 3. 22. to the righteous Whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his commandments and do those things which are pleasing in his sight And so our Saviour John 17. 7. If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you As for the wicked the Lord denieth to heare them though they cry loud in his eares and make many prayers unto him Isa. 1. 15. When ye spread forth your hands saith the Lord to the impenitent Jews I will hide mine eyes from you ye●… when ye make many prayers I will not heare whom notwithstanding upon their repentance he promiseth to heare and to receive into favour v. 16 17 18. So in Ezek. 8. 18. Though they cry in mine ●…ares with a loud voice yet will I not heare them Psal. 18. 41. Micah 3. 4. They shall cry unto the Lord but he will not heare them he will even hide his face from them for their wickednesse Jer. 14. 12. When they fast I will not heare their cry Neither doth he onely refuse to heare them but the godly also praying for them 1. Sam. 16. 1. Jer. 15. 1. Ezek. 14. 14 20. and therefore forbiddeth many times the godly to pray in their behalf Jer. 14. 11. or if they do he protesteth that he will not heare them Jer. 7. 16. and 11. 14. When as therefore impenitent sinners do call upon God and are not heard let them not think that the Lord is not able to heare or help them Behold saith the Prophet Isaiah chap. 59. 1. the Lords hand is not shortened that it cannot save nor his eare heavy that he cannot heare but your iniquities have
profit and necessity of those things which we crave that so our affections may be inflamed with a desire thereof as also of the necessity of Gods help that except the Lord heare us and help us our case is desperate So David prayeth Psal. 28. 1. and 143. 6 7. Heare me O Lord and hide not thy face else I shall be like to them that go down into the pit Fourthly we are upon extraordinary occasions to joyn fasting with our prayers as we are directed in many places of the Scripture For fasting as it causeth the hunger of the body so it is an effectuall means to stirre up and increase the hunger of the soul. For which cause the Fathers call fasting orationis alas the wings of prayer CHAP. XXX Of Faith which is chiefly required in prayer BUt the chief thing which maketh prayer effectuall is Faith whereof Fervency it self is a fruit And therefore our Saviour attributeth the earnestnesse and importunity of the woman of Syrophenicia's prayer to the greatnesse of her faith Matth. 15. 28. For that prayer which S. James chap. 5. 16. calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the 15. verse he calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the prayer of saith Now in prayer there is a double faith required The one more generall apprehending the promises of the Gospel concerning salvation by Christ by which we are in some measure perswaded that we and our prayers are accepted of God in Christ Of which I have spoken before in the general doctrine Rom. 10. 14. Heb. 11. 6. Ephes. 3. 12. The other more speciall giving speciall assent to the promise made to our prayer whereby we are perswaded that our particular requests shall be granted unto us according to Gods gracious promise in this behalf Matth. 7. 7 8. John 14. 13 14. and 16. 23 24. To pray effectually therefore is to pray faithfully For what things soever saith our Saviour ye desire when ye pray believe that ye shall receive them and ye shall have them And it is usuall with our Saviour Christ to dismisse his suiters with this answer As thou believest so be it unto thee On the other side he prayeth not effectually who doubteth whether he shall be heard or not Wherefore as S. James saith chap. 1. 5. If any man want wisdome let him ask it of God and it shall be given him But let him ask in faith nothing wavering for he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed to and fro Neither let that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord. So S. Paul 1. Tim. 2. 8. would have men pray without doubting Examples Psal. 4. 3. and 55. 16 17. And the Apostle S. John saith This is our confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and if we know that he heareth us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him 1. John 5. 14 15. Wherefore seeing in Christ we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence by the faith of him Ephes. 3. 12. we ought as we are exhorted Hebr. 4. 16. to come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtein mercy and find grace to help in time of need and draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith Heb. 10. 19 22. But here a distinction is to be used In matters spirituall necessary to salvation as we are to ask them absolutely as being perswaded that God hath subordinated our salvation to his own glory so are we absolutely to believe that the Lord will grant them unto us Yea this may be added for our comfort that if God hath given us grace unfeignedly and earnestly to desire any saving grace the same grace is begun in us In matters temporall or spirituall which are not necessary to salvation as 2. Cor. 12. as we are to ask them conditionally so far forth as they may stand with Gods glory and the good of our selves and our brethren so are we to believe that he will so far forth grant them and therefore that he will either grant our desire or that which is better For which cause in such requests we are most willingly with our Saviour Christ to submit our will and desires to the will and pleasure of God Matth. 26. 39 42. who as he knoweth what is good for us better then our selves so he is most ready to give good things unto us Matth. 7. 11. and therefore we are alwayes to believe that our requests being rightly conceived shall be granted unto us I would believe that I should be heard were it not for mine unworthinesse and my wants in prayer Indeed thou mayest be such an one and such may be thy prayers as thou canst have no hope to be heard that is if thou be an impenitent and unbelieving sinner God will not heare thee or if thou pray in hypocris●…e and dissimulation the Lord will not heare thy prayer But if thou art a penitent and believing sinner yea if thou dost unfeignedly desire to believe and repent and dost pray unto the Lord in truth with unfeigned lips thou oughtest to pray with assurance to be heard and this thy faith and assurance must not be grounded on thine own worthinesse or dignitie of thy prayer but on the undoubted promises of God and on the merits and mediation of Christ in whom both we our prayers are accepted of God As for the sense of thine unworthinesse if it be in truth and joyned with unfeigned desire of grace it ought to make thee the rather to pray in faith for such as I have shewed our Saviour calleth with promise to heare and help them And such he pronounceth blessed Matth. 11. 28. John 7. 37. Matth. 5. 4 5 6. Now for the helping of our faith we are in our preparation to meditate of these things especially First of the power of God who is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we do ask or think Eph. 3. 20. Secondly of his fatherly good will who will deny us nothing that is good Matth. 7. 11. The consideration of both which our Saviour hath prefixed before the Lords prayer when he teacheth us to call upon God as our Father therein noting his love good will which is in heaven therein noting his power Psal. 111. 3. that being perswaded that God is both able and willing to grant our requests we might pray in faith and assurance that our prayer shall be heard Thirdly of his gracious promises made unto prayer as Matth. 7. 7 8. John 16. 23 24. which if we cannot find in our hearts to believe we are not to pray for in not believing we make God a liar Lastly and especially of the merits and mediation of our Saviour Christ who sitteth at the right hand of his Father making intercession for us Though our prayer must be fervent and confident
that we may see and feel our miserie in respect of them that labouring and being wearied under the burden of them we may out of an humble and contrite soul poure out our supplications unto the Lord. The neglect whereof is reproved Jer. 8. 6. And that we may obtein forgivenesse we are also to come in charitie being as desirous to forgive our brethren that have offended us as we desire to be forgiven of the Lord Matth. 6 14 15. See Ecclus 28. 2 3. 1. Tim. 2. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without wrath And likewise we are to repent of those sinnes the pardon whereof we desire For that is pretended in our asking forgivenesse that is both to be sorie for our sinne past and to promise and purpose unfeignedly amendment for the time to come And both these duties of charity and repentance are likewise to be practiced in our lives after we have craved forgivenesse at the hands of God For as touching the dutie of charity in forgiving others If after we have desired forgivenesse and in our conceit have obteined pardon if we deal unmercifully with our brother whom we will not forgive it will be an evidence against us that our sinnes indeed were not pardoned Matth. 18. 23 to 35. And for the other duty of repentance A man cannot have assurance of the forgivenesse of his sinne which he doth continue in For God doth not remit the sinnes which we our selves retein He that confesseth and forsaketh his sinne shall have mercy Prov. 28. 13. And as we are to pray for the forgivenesse of sinne or taking away of the guilt so we must also pray that we may be delivered from the corruptions and preserved against tentations alluring unto sinne for the time to come And as we are to pray against corruptions and tentations so must we in our lives strive and fight against our corruptions and resist tentations avoyding also occasions of evil otherwise how can we ask that of the Lord which we our selves will not yield unto in our practice So much of prayer against malum culpae the evil of sinne There is also prayer against malum poenae the evil of punishment both spirituall and temporall and also eternall The spirituall is when God doth punish sinne with sinne blinding the eyes of men and hardening their hearts and giving them over to a reprobate sense The temporall when God doth either for chastisement or triall or punishment afflict men with the afflictions and calamities of this life against which sort this kind of deprecation is most usuall Psalmus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nè perdas Psal. 57 58 59 75. But in this kind of prayer especially we must wholly submit and resigne our selves unto the good will and pleasure of God who knoweth what is good for us better then our selves with patience and comfort to bear what it shall please God to lay upon us after the example of David 2. Sam. 15. 26. and of our Saviour Matth. 26. 39 42. For herein especially that is verified Rom. 8. that we know not what to ask For to be afflicted is not simply evil but contrariwise worketh for the good of them that are afflicted Rom. 8. 28. Insomuch that David professeth that it had been good for him that he had been afflicted Psal. 119. 71. and Jeremy Lam. 3. 27. yea David pronounceth the man blessed whom the Lord doth chastise and nurture in his law Psal. 94. 12. Deprecation of calamities is often joyned with Lamentations particularly bewayling their state and Expostulations Example of the former in the Lamentations of Jeremie Expostulations are vehement interrogations of the afflicted expressed from their grief whereby they expostulate with God concerning the greatnesse or continuance of their afflictions Psal. 22. 1. But here we must take heed that our expostulation be a lively fruit of a strong faith lest perhaps it do degenerate into open murmuring and repining against God David Psal. 22. 1. and our Saviour Christ being assured that the Lord is his God and therefore calling him My God my God expostulateth with him why being his God he had forsaken him So much of Petition or Prayer CHAP. XXXV Of Thanksgiving THanksgiving is that invocation whereby we do render due thanks and prayse unto God for his benefits As touching the name This duty is by divers names expressed in the Scriptures Psal. 100. 4. Isai. 12. Psal. 145. 2. As To prayse God Gen. 29. 35. To blesse him Psal. 103. 1 2. and 104. 1. 1. Chron. 29. 13. Jam. 3. 9. To confesse unto him Matth. 11. 25. Heb. 13. 15. To give him thanks Psal. 105. 1. 1. Chron. 16. 8. 1. Thess. 5. 8. Rom. 1. 21. Eph. 5. 20. To magnifie the Lord Luke 1. 46. Act. 10. 46. and 19. 17. To extoll him Psal. 145. 1. To exalt his name Psal. 34. 3. To glorifie him Matth. 9. 8. and 15. 31. Luke 2. 20. To make his name glorious Psal. 66. 1 2. To offer viz. a voluntary oblation thanksgiving and prayse Psal. 50. 14 23. To offer the sacrifice of prayse unto God that is the fruit of our lips confessing to his name Heb. 13. 15. as Hosea speaketh chap. 14. 2. To render the calves of our lips To sacrifice unto God with the voice of thanksgiving Jon. 2. 9. Psal. 116. 17. To sacrifice the sacrifice of thanksgiving The duties required in thanksgiving are either common to it with prayer or proper and peculiar unto it For when I say that thanksgiving is a kind of invocation you are to understand that all those things which were spoken of in the generall treatise are particularly to be applied to thanksgiving The which I will the rather do because commonly those things are delivered not as generall points but as particular to prayer Thanksgiving therefore as well as prayer is a religious speech of the faithfull unto God in the name of Christ made according to the will of God by the help of the holy Ghost concerning good things apperteining to Gods glory and our own good I call it a religious speech because it is a principall part of that religious worship which we ow unto God whereby it is also distinguished from the civill thanksgiving to men and is therefore religiously to be performed In the rest of the definition I noted six things which are essentiall to all invocation and without which it cannot be acceptable unto God First That the party which doth invocate must be faithfull for God heareth not sinners And thanksgiving being a sacrifice the holy Ghost telleth us that the sacrifice of the wicked is abomination to the Lord Prov. 15. 8. The proper subject of Gods prayse is the Church Eph. 3. 21. To him be prayse in the Church Psal. 65. 1. Praise waiteth sor God in Sion The Lord Psal. 50. 14 15. exhorteth his saints and his peculiar people to offer unto him thanksgiving and to call upon him in the day of trouble But v.
and 22. 2 c. Where by the way we may note that where the word of God and gospel of the kingdome is truly preached there is the kingdome consequently the Church of God and therefore that may be also verified of us which our Saviour Christ speaketh of the Jews that the 〈◊〉 of God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 17. 21. This preaching of the word is also called the arm of God Isa. 53. 1. whereby ●…e p●…lleth 〈◊〉 o●…t of dark●…sse into lig●… and out of the power of Sata●… 〈◊〉 God Acts 26. 18. But especially the Lord ruleth in our hearts by his Spirit drawing us unto his So●…e bending and bowing us to the obedience of his word inlightening our minds and 〈◊〉 our hearts and leading us into all truth c. ●…ortifying sinne a●…d corruption in us and renewing us unto holinesse of life The end of this kingdome is the kingdome of glory And therefore Christ saith to his Church Luke 12. 32. Fear not little flock c. For therefore doth he pull us out of the kingdome of darknesse and bring us into the kingdome of grace that by faith we may have remission of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified Acts 26. 18. By reason of the certainty hereof it is said that those that believe have everlasting life John 5. 24. and are translated from death unto life that those whom God hath justified he hath also glorified Rom. 8. 30. The kingdome of glory in respect of us is the blessed estate of the godly in heaven when as God shall be all in all 1. Cor. 15. 28. where God hath prepared such things for them that love him as neither the eye of man hath seen nor eare heard nor c. 1. Cor. 2. 9. What this word come signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adveniat This word Come is diversly to be expounded according to the divers significations of the kingdome of God The universall kingdome or kingdome of power is said to come when it is manifested and made apparent that all things are guided by the power and providence of God Here therefore we are taught to pray That the Lord would vouchsafe to advance his kingdome bring all things into subjection under his feet and also that all men may acknowledge this universall kingdome of God ruling all things according to the counsel of his will and may willingly submit themselves to the government of this absolute Lord who hath placed his seat in heaven and his kingdome ruleth over all That he would subdue his enemies Psal. 110. 2. governing them with an iron rod Revel 12. 5. and 19. 15. and bruising them like a potters vessel Psal. 2. 9. That he would execute his holy and eternall decrees both in the generall government of the world and also in the saving of the elect and destroying the reprobate to his own glory working all things according to the counsel of his will And albeit this kingdome cannot be resisted or hindred maugre all the enemies thereof yet we are to pray that it may come and that he would exalt his kingdome as before glorifie his name not meaning thereby to move God but to shew the concurrence of our will with Gods will and our affection towards the advancement of Gods kingdome and zeal towards his glory Secondly the kingdome of grace is said to come unto us whenas it is either begun erected in us or continued and increased amongst us And in this behalf we are taught to pray not onely for the coming of this kingdome but also for the granting of the means whereby it cometh also removing the impediments of the coming I. As touching the coming it self we are to note out of this word That we come not to this kingdome of grace of our selves but this kingdome cometh unto us and in coming preventeth us as our Saviour speaketh Luke 11. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is come upon you for we naturally are the bondslaves of Satan and subjects of the kingdome of darknesse out of which bondage we are not able to come except the Lord do pull us and as our Saviour saith John 6. 44. No man cometh to the Sonne b●…t whom the Father draweth Wherein appeareth the undeserved mercy of God in preventing us in seeking that which was lost in being found of them that sought him not in coming to them that neither could nor would through their own default come unto him And secondly because there must be alwayes a daily progresse in this kingdome and work of grace in this life therefore we are taught to pray daily that this kingdome may come Now let us see how this kingdome cometh and what it is which here we ask Of the coming of this kingdome there be three degrees The first is the pulling and drawing us out of the kingdome of Satan and power of darknesse unto God which is our effectuall calling whereby we are brought from the spirituall bondage of sinne and Satan into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God and are made fellow-citizens of the Saints domestici Dei of the houshold of God Ephes. 2. 19. And this calling is wrought by this means First to us sleeping in our sinnes the word of God is sent to rouse us the law shewing us our sinnes and the punishments due for them the Gospel promising salvation upon the condition of faith and repentance Secondly the spirit of God concurring with the word inlighteneth our minds to understand the word of God inclineth our minds to attend thereunto mollifieth our hard and stony hearts in the sight and sense of sinnes and then travelling under the burden of them with wearinesse he stirreth up in us a hunger and thirst after the righteousnesse of Christ and reconciliation with God and teacheth us to pray with sighs which cannot be expressed Secondly when the Spirit of God applieth the merits and efficacy of Christs death and resurrection to the justification of the sinner and by degrees worketh in him faith and assurance of the pardon of his sinnes whereupon followeth peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost In which three t●…e Apostle saith that the kingdome of God do●…h consist Rom. 14. 17. Thirdly when Christ our King ruleth and reigneth in our hearts by his word and Spirit t●…aching us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live soberly justly and holily in this present world expecting the happy hope and glorious appearance of the great God our Saviour Jesus Christ Tit. 2. 12 13. that is when by his Spirit he applieth the merits of his death to the mortifying of sinne in us and of his resurrection to raise us up to newnesse of life And this we desire not onely for our selves but also for the whole company of the elect That the Lord would from all sorts gather his Church electing them from the world engraffing them into his Son justifying them by faith and sanctifying them by his Spirit That he would
not performed in that mann●…r and measure which his law requireth and therefore every one had ne●…d to pray as Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into judgement c. Secondly because whatsoever obedience we can perform it is a debt and duty Luke 17. 10. When we have done all that is commanded w●… must say that we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our duty to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. 12. and 13. 8. Gal. 5. 3. Now certain it is that we cannot ●…atisfie debt with debt but no●… withstanding our latter obedience we shall be debtours in respect of the former debt unsatisfied Seeing ●…herefore we are not able to satisfie for the least of our sinnes our Saviour hath taught us to say not with ●…hat ser●…ant Matth. 18. 26. Hav●… 〈◊〉 Master I will satisfie but Lord remit tak●… away and blot 〈◊〉 our offenses Furthermore we are taught to p●…ay that the Lord would remit our debts that is not onely forgive the fault but also 〈◊〉 ●…he punishment in r●…spect whereof sinnes are called debts And therefore it cannot be truly said tha●… God forgiveth the ●…ault and 〈◊〉 the punishment for which w●… our selves must ●…atisfie either in this life or in purgatory For if God should 〈◊〉 of us satis●…action for those 〈◊〉 which he pardoneth in Christ it would follow 〈◊〉 that ●…ither the sufferings of Christ were unsufficient or else that the Lord is unjus●… 〈◊〉 i●… is abs●…rd that sinne ●…eing 〈◊〉 the punishment should be reteined For sinne is ●…he caus●… of punishment and the cause being taken away the 〈◊〉 also is removed And again wher●…as sinne i●… 〈◊〉 increased in respect of that infinite Majestie and justice of God whi●…h is violated 〈◊〉 it is that we cannot satisfie for it before we have e●…dured endlesse pu●…ishment which will never be Whereas therefore our Saviour Christ teacheth us thus to pray he sheweth that we cannot be discharged from thes●… our debts by our own satisfaction or merits o●… any other means but onely by the free remission of them and imputat●…on of Christs righteousnesse And this is to be understood not onely of our great and grievous sinnes but also of our lesse offenses which the Papists call veniall and erroneously hold not to be mortall neither need the death and merits of Christ for their expiation but may by the holy-water-sprinkle or by episcopall benediction or by knocking of the breast be taken away As therefore every sinne great or small deserveth death and is also punished with death either in Christ or in the sinner himself and as the bloud of Christ doth purge us from all iniquitie 1. John 1. 7. so that by him we have remission of all our sinnes so are we to pray that the Lord would for the precious merits and righteousnesse of our Saviour Christ remit all our sinnes both more and lesse from which we could by no other means be delivered but by the merits of Christ. But here it may be objected Our sinnes were forgiven in baptisme Acts 2. 38. therefore we need not now the forgivenesse of them Some answer That because we sinne after baptisme therefore we ought after baptisme to pray that the Lord would forgive our sinnes But this answer is not sufficient considering that in baptisme is sealed the remission of sinnes not onely past but also for the time to come during the whole course of our life For otherwise baptisme had need to be reiterated I answer therefore That we feeling the burden of our sinnes pray that the forgivenesse of sinnes which was represen●…ed and sealed unto us in baptisme may indeed be granted unto us and that we may feel in our selves the fruit and effect of our baptisme For we must not think that the Sacraments absolutely conferre grace to every receiver but onely upon those conditions which are conteined in the promises of the Gospel whereof baptisme is a seal Now the Gospel promiseth remission of sinnes and salvation onely to them that believe and therefore the Sacrament sealeth and assureth remission onely to them that believe For we ask forgivenesse onely for the righteousnesse of Christ but the righteousnesse of Christ is there imputed to righteousnesse where it is apprehended by faith In which sense we are said to be justified by faith alone and by faith to have remission of sinnes And therefore in this petition we desire that the Lord would work in us true faith that being united unto Christ and made partakers of his merits we may have not onely forgivenesse of sinnes but also a●…surance thereof by the anointment of the holy Ghost the Spirit of adoption crying in our heart●… Abba Father c. And because none attein to that measure of assurance but that it is mingled with some doubting therefore all had need to pray that the Lord would increase their faith and more and more assure them of the pardon of their sinnes Vs. This teacheth us to pray not onely for the remission of our own sins but also of our brethren it being a duty of charity to desire and to further the salvation of our brethren And this duty as it belongeth to all so especially to those that are governours of others either in the Church or Commonwealth Examples of Moses who oft stood in the gap Psal. 106. 23. Exod. 32. 21 32. Num. 14. 19. Samuel 1. Sam. 12. 23. Neither are we to pray for our friends and well-willers alone but also for them that hate and persecute us according to the precept and practice of our Saviour Matth. 5. 44. Luke 23. 34. and the holy martyr Stephen Acts 7. 60. And as we are to pray the Lord to forgive them so must we as willingly forgive them as we desire to be forgiven of the Lord neither can we in truth of heart desire God to forgive them if we do not Duties in prayer The duties which here we are taught to perform in prayer are either more peculiar to this kind of deprecation or common The former is Confession which must concurre with Deprecation of pardon and goeth before pardon as appeareth Psal. 32. 3 5. Prov. 28. 13. 1. John 1. 9. Num. 5. 7. Examples 2. Sam. 12. 13. Luke 15. 21. Now this confession is to be made of unknown sinnes generally as Psal. 19. 12. of known sinnes particularly Isai. 59. 12 13. And to this end it will be profitable to examine our hearts and our lives by the law of God taking a view of the duties therein commanded and vices forbidden that we may particularly see and acknowledge what duties we have omitted and what vices we have committed The common duties That we pray in fervency faith and perseverance That we may pray in fervency we must have both a true sense of our wants and earnest desire to have the same supplyed The wants which we are to bewail are 1. our manifold sinnes and transgressions for which we are to be grieved that
to withstand Sinne is deceitfull Heb. 3. 13. The flesh continually sendeth forth concupiscences which sight against souls 1. Pet. 2. The law of the members carrieth captive to sinne Rom. 7. The things which we desire in the world are so many baits of the devil to allure us unto sinne The bad examples of other men are so many stumbling-blocks whereat we stumble fall The devil very cunning powerfull malitious diligent For his craft he is called the old serpent cunningly using our own corruptions and inclinations the baits of the world and examples to intangle us For his power he is called the prince and the God of this world John 12. 31. 2. Cor. 4. For his malice he is called Satan For his diligence he is said to traverse the earth Job 1. 7. and as Peter saith to go about as a roring lion c. 1. Epist. 5. 8. As for us we are prone to sinne naturally drinking in sinne like water Job 15. 16. and weak to resist And therefore seeing our fight is not with flesh and bloud but with principalities and powers with worldly governours of the darknesse of this world with spirituall wickednesse in high places therefore we are to stand upon our guard to take unto us the armour of God and especially by prayer to flee unto the Lord that he would establish us by his free Spirit that we may be able to stand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against the artificiall and cunning assaults of the devil Ephes. 6. 11 12 c. But let us come unto the words Wherein the petition is first propounded and afterwards expounded For when we desire that the Lord would not lead us into tentation we do not desire not to be tempted but when we are tempted to be delivered from evil that we quail not in the tentation And so our Saviour prayeth John 17. 15. I do not pray that thou shouldst take them out of the world but that thou wouldst keep them from evil Therefore these two branches are not to be distinguished into two petitions as the adversative particle But sheweth For he doth not say Lead us not into tentation and deliver us from evil but thus Lead us not into tentation but deliver us from evil in the former part setting down our request negatively in the latter affirmatively as if we should say O Lord do not thou give us over to the tempter nor leave us to our selves but with tentation give an issue that we be not overcome in the tentation but preserved and delivered from evil But we are first to expound the words severally and then from thence to inferre the uses Two sorts of temptations Temptations are of two sorts 1. Probations 2. Provocations to evil 1. Probations and trialls And so men sometimes do tempt and sometimes God Men as when one friend to try the good will of another asketh some benefit which he meaneth not to take or when a man to try the fidelity of his servant either droppeth some money in his way or biddeth him do some difficult things which he would not have him to do c. God trieth men either that his graces may appear to his glory and their good or their infirmities may appear that they may be humbled more seriously turn unto him Deut. 8. 2 16. And these trialls of God are either of the right hand or of the left The former are his temporall blessings which he bestoweth upon men many times to try their thankfulnesse humility obedience charity affiance in God or the contrary Exod. 16. 4. when the people wanted food the Lord sent them food from heaven to tempt or to prove them whether they ●…ould walk in his law ●…r no. If men which are in prosperity would consider that the Lord bestoweth his blessings upon them thereby to try them that they should shew what manner of men they are doubtlesse this meditation would be profitable partly to bewray their wants unto them partly to incite them to labour to approve themselves to the Lord that proveth them Prove therefore and examine thy self God hath bestowed these blessings upon thee so many so great Hast thou been thankfull to God the giver hath not thine heart been lift up with pride hast thou been carefull to please him that hath been so gracious unto thee or hast thou been displeased with thy self when thou hast offended so good a God hast thou been ready to expose those gifts which thou hast to the glory of God and relief of thy brethren hast thou not trusted in thy riches and thine own means more then in the providence and blessing of God If in these respects thou hast been wanting then by these trialls God would let thee see what thou art that thou mayest be humbled before him and mayest truly labour to approve thy self unto him by thy thankfulnesse humility obedience charity affiance reposed in him c. The trialls of the left hand are such as crosse our desires as first when the Lord commandeth such things as we are loth to do So he tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. Secondly when he exerciseth us with afflictions which are hard for flesh and bloud to bear So Job was tempted and so the godly in all ages And therefore afflictions are called tentations Jam. 1. 2. 1. Pet. 1. 7. laid upon them of God to try their faith and their patience their obedience and their love c. and are therefore called trialls of faith Jam. 1. 3. Revel 2. 10. The devil shall cast some of you into prison that ye may be tried Ecclus 27. 5. The fornace proveth the p●…tters vessel so d●… tentations try mens thoughts Pro. 17. 3. And as by winnowing the wheat is tried and severed from the chaff so is the sound Christian from the hypocrite by affliction Hath the Lord therefore laid any crosse upon thee consider that he hath done it to try thee Examine therefore thy self if the Lord hath let thee see thine own weaknesse let the sight thereof humble thee and make thee more carefull for the time to come and labour to approve thy self unto the Lord by thy humble patient thankfull and chearfull bearing of the crosse For as James saith chap. 1. 12. Blessed is the man that indureth temptation For when he shall be found approved he shall receive the crown of life which God hath promised to them that love him Thirdly thus God also trieth his servants by suffering heresies and permitting the wicked to live among them 1. Cor. 11. 19. There must be heresies that they which are approved may be known Deut. 13. 3. Jud. 2. 22. Seeing therefore all these trialls of God are for our good Deut. 8. 16. we are not to pray that we may not be tried but rather contrariwise that we may be tried and being tried may be found approved Psal. 26. 2. and 139. 23. Temptations which be for evil are either provocations unto evil and therefore evil or punishments of
to withstand our enemies in the evil day and having finished all things may stand fast Ephes. 6. 13. being kept by his power through faith unto salvation 1. Pet. 1. 5. And II. more specially 1. against the tentations of the flesh we are to pray That howsoever sinne dwel in us yet it may not reigne in our mortall body that we should obey it in the lusts thereof or give our members as weapons of unrighteousnesse unto sinne Rom. 6. 12 13. And especially That he would not punish our sinne with sinne giving us over to our own lusts Psal. 81. 13. Rom. 1. 24. or to the hardnesse of our own hearts Ephes. 4. 18. or to a reprobate mind Rom. 1. 28. to commit sinne with greedinesse But contrariwise That he will give unto us his sanctifying spirit not onely to fight against the flesh but also to mortifie our ●…rthly members Col. 3. 5. as our inordinate affections and evil concupiscence and to crucifie the flesh with the lusts thereof Gal. 5. 24. and that being renewed by his spirit we may no longer be carnall men but spirituall walking not after the flesh but after the spirit Rom. 8. 1. 2. As touching the world We also pray That we may not be carried away with the world or overcome thereby but that by faith we may overcome the world 1. John 5. 4. And whereas the world is said to tempt in respect either of the men or the things in the world and whereas the men tempt either to evil of punishment and danger by captious questions or to evil of sinne either by bad speeches inticing incensing counselling or lewd examples We therefore against their captions desire the spirit of wisdome that we be not insnared and against their offenses and scandals either in word or deed constancy perseverance that we do not stumble or fall nor be conformed to the world Rom. 12. 2. As for the things of the world they are either the desires thereof or the terrours and crosses In respect of the desires of the world which are the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life 1. John 2. 16. the world is said especially to tempt they being the baits of sinne and snares of the devil Against these we pray That we may have grace from above to renounce all worldly lusts Tit. 2. 12. to be wained from the world to use it as though we used in not 1. Cor. 7. 31. to ●…e cr●…cified to the world and the world to us Gal. 6. 14. to live as pilgrimes and strangers upon earth and citizens of heaven minding heavenly things and contemning all the desires of the world as mere vanities in comparison of heavenly joyes As touching the crosses and afflictions of this life which are worthily called tentations We are to pray That God will not suffer us to be tempted above our power c. 1. Cor. 10. 13. but that the Lord in his good time would either release us from them in whole or in part or else arm us with patience to bear whatsoever he shall lay upon us that we may endure tentation and being found approved we may receive the crown of life Jam. 1. 12. whereof the afflictions of this life are not worthy Rom. 8. 18. 3. As concerning the tentations of the devil We desire that the Lord would tread Satan under our feet Rom. 16. 20. or at the least that it would please him to arm us with the complete armour of God that we may be able to stand against the cunning sleights 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the devil Ephes. 6. 11. and especially with faith whereby we may quench all the fiery darts of the devil Ephes. 6. 16. Now in all these we are to pray as our Saviour teacheth us both by his example John 17. 15. by his precept in this place O Lord we do not desire not at all to be tempted but that we may be delivered from evil that is from the tyranny of the flesh that it hold not us captive unto sinne from the allurements of the world that they do not draw us unto sinne from the assaults of the devil that he prevail not against us from the punishments of sin and judgements which by sinne we deserve so farre as our deliverance therefrom may stand with Gods glory and our good and lastly from the corruption of sinne it self in regard whereof we desire the Lord would endue us more and more with the Spirit of sanctification applying unto us the merits and efficacy of Christs death to mortifie our sinne and of his resurrection to restore us to newnesse of life wherein we are to proceed from faith to faith and from one measure of grace to a greater untill we come to a perfect man in Christ. And as there are two degrees of our deliverance from these our spirituall enemies the one begun and imperfect by sanctification in this life the other full and perfect in the life to come which is our full redemption and glorification So we pray not onely that we may be freed from our corruptions in part but also may be fully conformed to the glorious image of the Sonne of God and therefore pray that we may be delivered from every evil thing and be preserved to his heavenly kingdome 2. Tim. 4. 18. whereby it appeareth that as in the fifth petition we desired pardon of sinne and justification by faith so here we crave strength against sinne freedome from the corruption and sanctification by Gods Spirit and finally the end of our faith which is the salvation of our souls For when we pray to be delivered from evil we desire deliverance also from hell and consequently salvation in heaven Now as these graces are to be asked in fervencie and affection so also in assurance of faith that we shall be heard For as the Apostle James chap. 1. 5 6. teacheth If any man desire wisdome of God wisely to endure tent●…tion he must ask it in ●…aith And to this faith the holy Ghost doth most notably encourage us in the Scriptures Prov. 18. 10. The name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runneth unto it in edito collocatur and is placed on high The Lord saith Peter 2. Epist. 2. 9. knoweth to deliver the godly out of tentation And of our Saviour the Apostle saith Heb. 2. 18. In that he suffered and was tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted Christ hath overcome our enemies the devil Col. 2. 15. the world John 16. 33. and to this end gave himself for us that he might deliver us from the hands of our spirituall enemies He that is in us is stronger then he that is in the world 1. John 4. 4. Neither shall any be able to pull us out of his hands John 10. 28. Christ whose prayer is alwayes heard John 11. 42. hath prayed for us that our faith shall not sail Luke 22. 32. and that
meant honour and praise 1. Tim. 1. 17. For to him belongeth the glory honour and prayse of bestowing all good things He is the fountain and authour of every good gift Jam. 1. 17. His is the glory of hearing and granting our prayers Psal. 65. 2. And to his glory whatsoever we ask according to his will doth especially tend Therefore as by his kingdome a●…d power he is able so for his glory he is ready and willing to grant our requests which we make according to this direction of our Saviour For what Christ hath taught us to ask in his name that the Lord hath promised to give for his sake in whom all the promises of God are Yea and Amen to his glory 2. Cor. 1. 20. This therefore serveth to confirm our faith For doubtlesse such things as tend to his glory he will grant especially considering it is his glory to heare the prayers of his servants and seeing to him belongeth the glory of giving every good gift but these things which we ask according to our Saviours direction do tend to the glory of God and to that end we ask them therefore we may be assured that he will grant our requests so far forth as they stand with his glory Now whereas our Saviour directed us to make this our first suit That Gods name may be glorified and now teacheth us to make his glory the reason of our prayers this sheweth That the glory of God should be the main end of all our desires for which w●… should affect them and unto which when we have obteined them we should referre them 1. Chron. 16. 35. Psal. 50. 15. And forasmuch as the glory is the Lords which he will not have communicated to any other Isai. 42. 8. therefore we are to call upon him alone as being the onely fountain of every good gift the onely hearer of our prayers Of which glory we rob the Lord if we direct our prayers to any other And as we are not to give his glory to any other so we are not to take it to our selves For seeing the glory is the Lords therefore vainglorious persons seek to rob God of that glory which is proper to him and to assume it to themselves But we must say with David Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord c. and with Daniel chap. 9. 7. Righteousnesse O Lord belongeth unto thee and to us shame c. But we ascribe unto the Lord not onely kingdome power and glory but also an everlasting kingdome an eternall power and immortall glory For as Moses saith Psal. 90. 2. He is God from everlasting to everlasting he is King for ever Therefore he hath right not onely in this life to crown us with his blessings but after this life he hath an everlasting kingdome to bestow upon us Luke 12. 32. unto which he is able and willing to bring us by his power everlasting to the immortall glory of his mercy Now these reasons as they must be propounded in faith so also with chearfulnesse as a consequent thereof And when they are chearfully uttered they are not onely reasons of our requests but also a notable form of praysing God which our Saviour hath taught us to joyn with our prayer And so the holy Ghost hath directed us elsewhere as Col. 4. 2. Phil. 4. 6. And that this is a form of prayse and thanksgiving appeareth by other places of Scripture where the men of God setting themselves of purpose to prayse God have used the very like form As David 1. Chron. 29. 10 11 12. and Psal. 145. 10. and 11. 12 13. Revel 7. 12. Jude v. 25. Revel 4. 11. Vses Duties concerning prayer 1. That we pray to God and him alone Whereof a reason is conteined in these words For his is the kingdome c. 2. That we pray in faith seeing our heavenly Father whose is the kingdome power and glory is both able and willing to grant our requests 3. That with our prayer we joyn prayse and thanksgiving which in this short form is not omitted Duties in our lives 1. To arrogate nothing to our selves but to ascribe all kingdome power and glory to the Lord Psal. 29. 1 2. and 115. 1. and of all good things received to ascribe the praise to God 2. If God be our King then must we behave our selves as dutifull and obedient subjects If his be the power then are we both to fear him and to trust in him If his be the glorie then of him must we beg all good things and to his glory must all be referred If his power kingdome and glorie be everlasting then are we taught whom to fear whom to serve whom to trust in namely him that is able not onely in this life to blesse us but also after to crown us with immortall glorie in his eternall kingdome If we serve the flesh the devil the world we shall have the momentanie fruition of sin and after this life is ended eternall torments God liveth for ever as to crown eternally the godly so to punish the wicked eternally He then will exclude them out of his kingdome and will be of power to destroy both body and soul in hell and he will glorifie his justice in their endlesse confusion Hypocrisie discovered But here the hypocrisie of men is to be discovered who ascribe kingdome to God and yet obey him not power and fear him not glory and glorifie him not and they adde all these reasons to their petitions as if they should say Thou Lord wilt grant our requests for thine is the kingdome power and glory for ever and yet do not believe that the Lord will grant their requests Amen And so much of the confirmation of our faith Now followeth the testification both of our faith and of the truth of our desire in the word Amen For it importeth the assent of the heart to the words of our mouth and it signifieth truly or even so or as the Grecians sometimes translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So be it The meaning of it is thus much as if we should say As I have made these requests unto thee O Lord so do I both unfeignedly desire the performance of them Let them O Lord be granted 1. Kings 1. 36. and also truly believe that thou in thy goodtime wilt grant my desires so farre forth as they stand with thy glory and my good and in this perswasion I rest attending thy good pleasure And as I have ascribed unto thee kingdome power and glorie so I do both unfeignedly acknowledge that thine alone is the kingdome c. and also heartily desire that I and all others may truly and effectually ascribe unto thee everlasting kingdome power and glorie For being annexed unto prayer it signifieth both the truth and earnestnesse of our desire and also the assent of faith laying hold on the promises of God made in Christ to our prayers And being added to thanksgiving it signifieth both the ●…ath
infirmities for we know not what we should pray as we ought but the Spirit it self maketh intercossion for us with gronings which cannot be ●…ttered And he that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to God Rom. 8. 26 27. Quodnon sic est intelligendum saith Augustine ut existimemus sanctum Spiritum Dei qui in Trinitate incommunicabilis Deus est cum Patre Filio unus Deus tanquam aliquem qui non sit quod Deus est interpellare pro sanctis Dictum quippe est INTERPELLAT PRO SANCTIS quia interpellare sanctos facit Sicut dictum est TENTAT VOS DEUS VESTER UT SCIAT SI DILIGATIS EUM hoc est ut scire vos faciat Which is not so to be understood that we should think the holy Spirit of God which in the Trinitie is God incommunicable and with the Father and Sonne one God should pray for the Saints unto one who is not that which God is But it is said He prayeth for the Saints because he inableth the Saints to pray as it is said Your God tempteth you that he may know whether ye love him that is that he may cause you to know it It is well said of Chrysostome Supra vires hominis est sacere cum Deo colloquium nisi adsit vis actus Spiritûs sancti It is above the strength of man to conferre with God unlesse the vertue operation of the Spirit be present And therefore when we pray we are to crave the assistance of Gods spirit which is the spirit of grace and prayer Zech. 12. 10. which God hath promised to give to them that ask him Luke 11. 13. and in and by his holy spirit we are to call upon God Jude v. 20. For whereas many graces and duties are required in prayer all which are above our own strength the spirit of God which is the spirit of grace and supplication effecteth them all in the children of God It is he that prepareth our hearts to prayer Psal. 10. 17. that openeth our lips that our mouth may shew sorth his praise Psal. 51. 15. It is he that anointeth our blind eyes that we may see and toucheth our senselesse hearts that we may feel our misery and want that in true humility of soul we may poure forth our hearts before God It is the spirit of the fear of God that maketh us to come with due reverence of his Majestie It is the spirit of suppllcations that maketh our frozen and benummed hearts to pray fervently with sighs that cannot be expressed It is the spirit of adoption who testifieth unto our spirits that we are the children of God by which we do cry in our hearts Abba Father Finally it is the spirit of grace which helpeth our infirmities and furnisheth us with those graces which be requisite in prayer and teacheth us to pray according to God And this is that which Paul teacheth us that we have accesse to the Father through the Sonne and by the holy Ghost Ephes. 2. 18. that is in the name and mediation of Christ by the help and assistance of the holy Ghost For being both unworthy in our selves and of our selves unable to call upon God as we ought if we come in the name of Christ craving the assistance of the holy Spirit in Christ we shall be accepted and by the holy Ghost enabled to pray according to God But here we are to take heed that we abuse not this doctrine concerning the help and assistance of the holy Ghost in prayer by neglecting our own indeavour and presuming of the extraordinary inspiration of the holy Ghost for that is to tempt God But in doing the uttermost of our own indeavour we are to crave the assistance of Gods Spirit who will not be wanting to those who are not wanting to themselves Now if it be demanded how these things may stand together that no man can pray without the spirit of God and without faith and yet both the spirit and faith is to be obteined by prayer I answer God by his preventing grace worketh in us a true desire of grace and of faith which desire of grace is the beginning of the grace desired And therefore the grace of the spirit and faith in order of nature go before prayer which is the effect of that desire and yet prayer goeth before the knowledge or feeling of either of both CHAP. XXVI Of the circumstances of prayer ANd thus much of the substantiall points of Invocation Now follow the accidentall which are the circumstances of Person Time and Place Prayer in regard of persons is either publick or private Publick invocation is the prayer of a congregation as of a parish or colledge Of publick prayer we are to make speciall account For if the prayer of some one man can avail so much as heretofore I have shewed what shall we think of publick where the prayers of so many ascend together unto the Lord As the flame of one faggot-stick to the ●…lame of the whole faggot or bundle so is the prayer of one man to the prayer of the whole congregation for Vis unita est fortior force united is so much the stronger and a threefold cable is hardly broken Our Saviour Christ hath bountifully promised that where two or three be gathered together in his name there is he in the middest of them Matth. 18. 20. Yea such is the presence of the Lord in publick assemblies that those which have been excluded thence have thought themselves banished from the pres●…nce of God and to be put away from his face It was the punishment of Cain and so he esteemed it Gen. 4. For when the Lord had banished him from that earth which h●…d received his brothers bloud from his hand v. 11. which was the place of the visible Church v. 14. he saith that by reason of this punishment he should be hid from Gods face We see the same in the practice of David Who when he was in banishment desired nothing more then to have libertie to come into the assemblies of the saints when he had liberty he rejoyceed in nothing more For the first reade Psal. 27. and 42. and 84. In Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I require even that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to visit his temple Psal. 42. 1 2. As the hart brayeth for the rivers of waters so panteth my soul after thee O God My soul thir steth for God even for the living God when shall I come and appear before the presence of God c. And v. 4. he saith that his soul languished when he considered that had it not been for the tyrannie of his oppressours he might have gone with the rest of the assembly into the house of God
we may be kept from evil John 17. 15. The Lord hath promised and is faithfull to perform that he will not suffer us to be tempted above our power but with the tentation will give an issue that we may bear it 1. Cor. 10. 13. And finally Joel 2. 32. he hath promised that whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved Our faith therefore concerning assistance against tentation and deliverance from evil must be grounded not upon any conceit of our own strength or worthinesse but on the power mercy faithfulnesse and truth of God in his promises and on the mediation and intercession of Jesus Christ. Duties to be performed in our lives I. Generall 1. To avoid tentations and occasions of evil To shake off slothfulnesse and diligently to employ our selves either in good exercises or in the works of our callings 2. To resist tentations and to withstand them 3. To be vigilant and watchfull Mark 13. 33. 1. Pet. 5. 8. Ephes. 5. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to walk circumspectly to shake off security to keep a watch over our senses To make a covenant with our eyes Job 31. 1. To desire the Lord to turn away our eyes from beholding vanities Psal. 119. 37. 4. To get unto us the whole armour of God as the shield of faith c. Ephes. 6. 12 13 18. 1. Thess. 5. 8. II. More particular 1. To deny our selves to cr●…cifie the flesh and not to satisfi●… the lusts thereof to abstein from fleshly lusts 1. Pet. 2. 11. 2. To renounce the world and the desires thereof 1. John 2. 15 16. 3. To resist the devil not to yield to his motions but rather practice the contrary not to believe his perswasions 1. Pet. 5. 9. Jam. 4. 7. 4. To hate all sinne as we desire to be delivered from all To retein no one sinne with Herod To think no sinne small To abstein also from all shew of evil 1. Thess. 5. 22. To desire full deliverance Phil. 1. 23. Cupio dissolvi I desire to be dissolved Rom. 7. 24. Quis me liber abit Who shall deliver me Hypocrisie discovered Here then is discovered the hypocrisie of those 1. Who pray that God would not lead them into tentation and themselves runne into tentation as those that go to playes and give themselves to idlenesse 2. Who by security and idlenesse make preparation for the unclean spirit Matt. 12. 44. 3. Who take thought for the flesh to satisfie the l●…sts thereof Rom. 13. 14. 4. Who are addicted to the world and the desires thereof as pleasures profits 1. Tim. 6. 9. Those that will be rich fall into tentation c. and preferments 5. Who have made a covenant with hell Isai. 28. 15. who pray to be delivered from sin and yet will not forsake their sinne as their drunkennesse whoredome usury c. but harden their hearts and therefore shall fall into evil Prov. 28. 14. who are so farre from desiring full deliverance from evil by their dissolution and translation out of this life that rather they have placed their paradise here upon earth The Conclusion HItherto we have spoken of the petitions Now followeth the Conclusion of the Lords prayer in these words For thine is the kingdome the power and the glorie for ever and ever Amen For howsoever this clause is omitted of the Latine interpreters and is rejected by Erasmus yet was it added by our Saviour and registred by Matthew For first the Greek copies have it secondly the Syriack Paraphrast translateth it thirdly the Greek writers expound it as Chrysostome and Theophylact and fourthly it is not onely consonant with the rest of the Scriptures but also in this prayer hath a necessary use For we have heard that praise is to be joyned with prayer and in prayer two things required fervencie and faith Now as the petitions especially conteined a specification of our desires so this conclusion conteineth partly a confirmation of our faith joyned with praysing God in these words For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for ever and ever and partly a testification both of our faith and of the truth of our desires in all the former petitions in the word Amen Our Saviour teacheth us to confirm our faith by three reasons For that they be reasons the word For signifieth And reasons they are not so much to perswade God that he would grant our requests as to perswade and assure our selves that we shall obtein The reasons are taken neither frō our own worthinesse nor from the dignitie of our prayers for if our faith were to be grounded thereon we should neither dare to pray nor hope to be heard but from the nature attributes of God that we might know that the obteining our requests dependeth not upon our own worth but on the power and goodnesse of God The reasons I say are drawn from three attributes of God viz. his eternall Kingdome eternall Power eternall Glorie His is the kingdome therefore he hath right to give us whatsoever we desire His is the power and might therefore he is able to grant our requests His is the glory both of giving all good things and also of all good things given and thereunto our requests do tend and therefore he is ready and willing to grant our requests for the manifestation of his own glorie And this we shall the easier believe if we consider to whom we ascribe these things namely to our heavenly Father whose seat is in heaven and his kingdome ruleth over all Psal. 103. 19. who is in heaven and doth what he will Psal. 115. 3. who sitteth on the heavens as his throne full of majestie and glory and rideth on the heavens for our help Neither doth the right power and glory of giving benefits temporall and concerning this life alone belong unto God but also of everlasting blessings in heavenly things after this life is ended For his is the eternall kingdome eternall power and eternall glorie signified in those words for ever and ever which are to be referred to all the three attributes What kingdome here signifieth But first of his kingdome Which here signifieth 1. generally the universall kingdome of God which some call the kingdome of his power whereby he ruleth and governeth all things Psal. 103. 19. 2. Chron. 20. 6. and in regard whereof the right of all things belongeth to him Deut. 10. 14. Psal. 24. 1. This then teacheth us two things 1. That our heavenly Father is the absolute Lord and owner of all his creatures who as he is the Creatour so is he also the possessour of heaven and earth in whose hand all good things are to bestow as it pleaseth him This therefore must encourage us with assurance of faith to make our requests to our heavenly Father of whom we cannot ask any good thing whether spirituall or temporall which is not his to bestow And therefore it is well said of Seneca Audacter Deum