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A33525 A practical discourse of prayer wherein is handled the nature, the duty, the qualifications of prayer, the several sorts of prayer, viz. ejaculatory, publick, private and secret prayer : with the necessity of, and ingagements unto, prayer : together with sundry cases of conscience about it / by Thomas Cobbet. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1654 (1654) Wing C4780; ESTC R29965 290,377 588

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consented to his designment to that office as the Lord Christ saith Esa 48. 16. and now the Lord God and his spirit hath sent me yea they must eye the Holy Ghost as that blessed spirit and more immediate efficient by whose power and grace they thus come to the Lord and are enabled to pray to him or look to him we cannot look aright to the blessed Father but we must look to him as it were through the blessed Son neither can we look upon the Son but by the Spirit As he said in that case 1 Cor. 12. 3. so may l in this If we worship God as our Father with whom we have Union and Communion we beleeve him to be so to us in his Son and that this Union and Communion is effected by the Holy Ghost so that if we worship God aright we worship each person in the Trinity in any one person as Con-causes of our Sonship and union with God the Father as first in order regenerating and adopting of us the Son as one in and by whom we are redeemed and reconciled and for whose sake we are accepted with God and expect to be heard the holy Ghost as the immediate efficient of and with the blessed Father and Son of our calling and adoption c. and therefore is he called the spirit of Sonship as the Greek word signifies Rom. 8. 15. see Tit. 3. 5 6. and he by whom more immediatly we are enabled to pray to the Father in the name of his blessed Son Rom. 8. 26. true it is that a Christian may not in every particular petition or confession particularly and distinctly consider of the other two persons in that one person to whom more properly he directeth his prayer but yet he must in the general bent of his minde and spirit do it and intend it 3. That in order we are first to direct 3. Direct we our prayers to the Father as first in order of the persons our prayers to the blessed Father yet not as first or chiefe in honour and dignity above the other two for even the Son who albeit as man and as Mediatour he be inferiour to the Father John 14. 28. yet as God and as the Son of God he is equall with him John 5. 18. Phil. 2. 6. and the Son is to be honoured as equal with the same honour as the Father Iohn 15. 23. but as first in order of subsisting according as the Scripture in two places where the order of the blessed persons is set downe the Father is first set downe in order of witnessing 1 John 5. 7. and in invocation and worship Mat. 28. 19. as first in order to be mentioned and invocated and as he is the first in order who was displeased and to whom we are first in order reconciled in Christ and who is first in order pleased on him Col. 1. 19 20. yea who first in order among the persons laid the foundation of our Redemption ibid and therefore to him is ascribed the work of giving his Son John 3. 16. and of sanctifying or annoynting and appointing the Lord Christ to his Office of Mediatour albeit as was said the holy Ghost be not excluded but included as acting in the blessed work Esay 48. 16 so are we in that order to worship him and to breath after neerest fellowship with him through Christ by the help of his blessed spirit 4. In singling out any one person in 4. In singling out some person in the blessed Trinity let it be the Father most usually the blessed Trinity we are to pitch most usually upon the Father as he to whom we direct our prayers through the mediation of Christ and by the help of the holy Ghost that is the rule and method prescribed by Christ to aske the Father in his name Iohn 16. 23. and sutable is and hath been the usual practice of the Saints and yet in such directings of prayers most what as to the Father in the general intention of their spirits do the Saints mind and eye the other two persons and include them as joyntly worshipped and therefore in their Prefaces of prayer oft-times mention expresly that blessed God one in Essence yet three in persons as he to whom they speak and in the close they subscribe glory to the blessed Father Son and Spirit three persons yet one God c. 5. We may single out the Son of God the Lord Christ as he to whom we occasionally 5 We may pray unto Jesus Christ present some special request either by way of Apostrophe whilst we are directing our prayers to the Father or in way of ejaculation as did Stephen Acts 7. 59. Lord Jesus receive my spirit and so in the instance of that short prayer of the converted thiefe Luke 23. 42 43. Lord remember me when thou commest into thy Kingdome and so in that short prayer of Iacobs the Angel which hath delivered me from all evil blesse thee Gen. 48. 16. this Angel was Christ the Father never being called an Angell in Scripture that I read of or being said to be sent of any other of the persons nor do I find where the holy Ghost is called an Angel and a created Angel surely it was not It being unlawful to Iacob as well as to any others to worship Angels Col. 2. 18. and in more continued and solemne wise did Abraham pray to that Angel which in the same chapter is called the Lord which indeed was Christ by the reasons foregoing Gen. 18. end to him did Iacob pray and make supplication by the space almost of the whole night Gen. 32 from verse 24 to the end compared with Hosea 12. 3 4. yea he had power over the Angel to him is the prayer of the afflicted made Psal 102. which was to Iehovah verse 1. which was God the Son verse 24. 25 26 27. compared with Heb. 1. 10 11 12. read and peruse and consider the places at your leasure and the primitive Saints they are said to call not simply and onely upon the name of the Father but of the Lord Jesus Christ for it was the Lord Jesus whom Saul persecuted that appeared to Saul Acts 9. 5 6. and after wards to Ananias verse 11. it was the Lord whose Saints Saul so much injured verse 10 and upon whose name such as called Saul had commission to bind verse 14. see verse 15. 17. so 1 Cor. 1. 2. and the reasons hereof are evident Because 1. Prayer is due to God 1. Because prayer is a divine worship of God as God and therefore due to the Son and so to the holy Ghost as well as to the Father Rom. 10. 13 14. 2. We are baptized into the Name of the Sonne and the Holy Ghost as well as 2. We are baptized into the Sonnes name into the name of the Father and therefore both the Sonne and the Holy Ghost likewise may be particularly and personally invocated and worshipped as well as the Father
3. We are to believe in the Sonne and 3. We are to believe in Christ particularly so in the Holy Ghost as well as in the Father and that personally and particularly and therefore so are to pray to either Iohn 14. 1. That which the Apostle expoundeth of the Gentiles trusting in Christ Rom. 15. 12. the Prophet expressed of their seeking to him Esay 11. 10. so that they are inseparably due to one and the same Christ upon one and the same ground See Rom. 10. 13 14. before-mentioned It is supposed that he on whom men call he must be believed on or else he cannot be called upon by any and when the Apostle in the vers 13. mentions the Name of the Lord as that which is called upon he in vers 14. expoundeth it to be meant of the Lord himselfe to call upon the Lords Name is to call upon himselfe 4. The Lord Christ promiseth that he himselfe will doe what we aske Iohn 12. 4. Christ promiseth to hear our prayers 13 14. and therefore he may be sought to doe the same and indeed he thereby proveth himselfe in that Chapter to be equal with the Father by this argument because petitions shall not onely be granted in his name but by him neither doth he make account that this is any disparagement to the Father but a glorifying of him Ibid. I will doe it that my Father may be glorified What we have said to prove that in our prayers we may single out the Sonne of God may serve to prove the same may be done to the Holy Ghost and more arguments might have been added if need were Against this which we have spoken it Object may be objected we are to ask all we doe ask in the name of Christ and therefore how can we be said to aske him or pray to him Iohn 16. 2. To which I answer 1. The Lord Christ Answ is asked or prayed unto in that prayer 1. Christ is prayed to in the prayers made to God that is put up to the Father in his Name Iohn 16. 23. Christ speaking of the time after his Resurrection and Ascention saith In that day ye shall ask me nothing or which he makes all one Verily ye shall ask the Father nothing in my name but he will give it you He is glorified as God in that all is done with God in his Name and for his Father For albeit it be sometimes said for Abraham and Davids sake God will doe this or that yet this is meant in reference to Gods covenant of grace with them and so to Christ properly in whom that Covenant is ratified Gal. 3. 17. They called on the Name of the Lord Iesus in all places 1 Cor. 1. 2. Yet surely they brake not that rule Iohn 16. 23. they called on the Father in Christs Name also yet are said to call on Christs Name even in their calling upon God in his Name and Christ as God is also called upon in that his Father as God is also called upon 2. In all externall worship of God one 2. The Trinity undivided in worship person of the Trinity being named the other are understood and are not to be excluded 3. If Christ be considered as the Sonne 3. Christ is prayed to as God not as man of God in Essence the same with the Father He is he to whom we come c. comming in prayer to the Father if considered as Mediator God incarnate God and man He is he by whom we come to the Father Heb. 7. 25. 1 Tim. 2. 5. and look as it is another part of his divine glory ascribed to him Phil. 3. 21. which is true of him as the Sonne of God he by his divine power doth subject all to himselfe and yet in another consideration and respect namely as Mediator he hath all things subjected to him of the Father 1 Cor. 15. 28. so it is here in this part of his glory as the Son of God he may be he must be prayed to which is God and man in one person but is not prayed to as man but as God So much be spoken to this weighty duty of prayer and to the incessant practise thereof FINIS
time approaches when the promised mercies to the poor blinded Jewes shall be accomplished and what more seasonable work of love can we do for the Lord or them then to be now much in praying Oh that the salvation Psalm 14. 7. of Israel were come out of Zion In a word Let all the enemies of England old or new to Commonwealth or Church know that Churches of praying Believers are terrible as so many Armies with Banners as so many thundring Legions Let them tremble to think that what ever breaches they have occasioned amongst the Lords people yet that there is a considerable stand of resolute ones left right bred Israelites notable good wrestlers and as special prevailers with God I believe that the Churches enemies the Prelates and others of Englands enemies to their Civil State have been forced to see or feel the force of Saints Prayers We may set God to work pardon the expression in these dangerous times to Church and Commonwealth by our Prayers as hee did of old in like case Psalm 119. 126. It is time for thee Lord to work for they make void thy Law Wherefore Christian Reader albeit others have written worthily about this Subject of Prayer in their times yet let it not seem unseasonable to thee or bee unaccepted by thee that I also though the most unfit and unworthy to attempt so great a work do at this time likewise bring in Evidence with other Witnesses to the same Truth concerning the Nature Necessity Excellency and Efficacy of holy and spirituall Prayer and that I also according to that small measure of Light and Grace received of the Lord doe hereby endeavour to stir up thy pure mind by way of Remembrance that thou mayest bee mindfull not alone 2 Pet. 3. of their Writings but especially of the words before spoken both by the Prophets and Apostles concerning this Subject of Prayer that as in Preaching upon it here the Lord was pleased to blesse that Discourse of Prayer to sundry Souls so if it may be his gracious pleasure it may bee of lively and effectual use to thy souls welfare and peace Which shall bee his prayer who is Thine in the Lord Jesus THOMAS COBBET Ly● in New-England the 24. of October 1653. The Heads of the Chapters the particular Contents whereof stand in the Margin of the Book at their proper places which they refer to PART I. Chapt. 1. THe several Reasons of prayer taken from God Christ and the Holy Spirit and from Saints themselves also from the necessities of and engagements unto prayer Chap. 2 Ejaculatory prayer is described the excellency of it is showen in that it is the Saints first and last holy breathing the Alpha and Omega of Solemn prayer Chap. 3. The Requisites unto publick prayer are handled Chap. 4. The duty of Family-prayer is handled Chap. 5. Handling the duty of Closet-praier Chap. 6. The Rules about praying for others is handled and also of prayer of Imprication against others PART II. Chap. 1. Is shewne wherein Importunity in prayer consisteth Chap. 2. Handling the Opportunities of praier Chap. 3. Sheweth what it is to pray indesinently and not to give out in prayer Chap. 4. Touching faith in prayer and the necessity of it and what faith is required in prayer Chap. 5. Sheweth wherein Humility in prayer consisteth Chap. 6. Sheweth wherein Sincerity in praier consisteth Chap. 7. Sheweth a threefold watchfulnesse in praier is required and wherein it consisteth PART III. Chap. 1. Touching unregenerate persons prayer and that they are bound to pray Chap. 2. Touching distraction in prayer and the causes thereof and what distractions nullifie prayer Chap. 3. Shewing that things materially good suggested in prayer may be delusions Chap. 4. Shewing what means are to be used in praier Chap. 5. About the time that is to be spent in prayer which is to be much Chap. 6. Shewing the necessity of pleading in prayer Chap. 7. Shewing the causes of straitnings in prayer Chap. 8. About inlargements in prayer which are saving Chap. 9. About meltings in prayer which are from saving principles Chap. 10. Shewing how to conceive of God in prayer Chap. 11. In what order we are to direct our prayers to God GOSPEL INCENSE OR A DISCOURSE About PRAYER Delivered in sundry Lecture Sermons from 1 Thes 5. 17. Pray without ceasing PART I CHAP. I. Touching Prayer in General NOT to spend time in analysing the Chapter In this Text you have two parts 1. The Duty enjoyned Pray 2. The modification of the Duty Without ceasing In the former also you have 1. The Soveraign commanding this Duty even God the Father yea Jesus Christ his Son who by his Spirit sent Paul his Apostle to deliver this piece of Message 1 Thess 1. 1. 2. The Subjects injoyned this Duty the Church of Thessalonica jointly and severally and so in in them all other Churches of Christ and Members of them yea all Christians whatsoever whence observe That Incessant Prayer or Prayer without Doctr. ceasing is a duty which the Lord requireth of all and every one of his people in a special manner Luk. 21. 36. Pray alwaies Luke 18. 1. He spake a Parable to the end that men ought alwayes to pray Rom. 12. 12. Continuing instant in Prayer Col. 4. 2. Continue in Prayer Eph. 6. 18. Praying alwayes c. For the better and fuller handling of this weighty service of Prayer consider 1. Of the Duty it self Prayer 2. Of the Modification of the performance of it scil Without ceasing 3. Of the conditions required to such incessant Praying 4. Of some cases of Conscience respecting that incessant exercise of our selves in it Touching the Duty it self Prayer let it be considered 1. More Generally in the nature of it both as held forth in several names given to Prayer in Scripture and in a short definition thereof 2. More Particularly 1 In the sorts and species of it as 1. Sudden or ejaculatory Prayer 2. Set and solemn Prayer and that either publick or Church Prayer private or family Prayer secret or closet Prayer 2. In the parts of Prayer which albeit many yet wee shall briefly only consider of Prayer 1. Of Intercession 2. Of Imprecation Prayer is a duty very many wayes enobled and honoured of God and his people and as that which is of large use and extent whose worth is not knowne nor easily decyphered whose nature is not readily conceived or described and yet that which should be most familiar to the Saints it is set forth in Scripture by many names Let us then read over the Titles of this royal work It is called an Offering Zeph. 3. 10. My 1 Prayer an Offering Suppliants shall come and bring mine Offering or they shal in a solemn reverent and cheerful manner pray unto the Lord even as the Godly use to bring the Lords Offering to him Isaiah 19. 21. The converted Egyptians will do Sacrifice and Offering make Prayer their spiritual work and businesse And Prayer
expressions in prayer Prayer is called a talking with God Job 5 Prayer a talking with God 15. 4. thou restrainest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 talking before the Lord Psal 55. 17. evening and morning and at noon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will I talk or pray Psal 64. 1. hear my voyce O my God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in my talke or prayer the Hebrew word is used to signifie some studyed excogitated thing in the mind Amos. 4. 13. he telleth to man what is his Secho his thought or some serious solicitous discourse 1 Kings 18. 27. he talketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Saints in prayer do familiarly commune with the Lord as Abraham did in his petitioning of the Lord. Gen. 18. end But yet are they very serious and intent in this their holy discourse with the Lord and though they do wrestle with the Lord in their pleas in prayer yet do they not tumultuously wrangle with him but their spirits are still and calme as but talking with the Lord. Prayer is a secret silent submissive whispering 6 Prayer an holy whispering Esay 26. 16. they have powred out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a softly speaking the word is used of their muttering when Davids childe was dead 2 Sam. 12. 19. True suppliants they are so sensible of their own vilenesse and troubled about their owne unworthinesse that they are in a holy wise afraid and ashamed to speak out to the Lord as sometime Ezra was Chap. 9. 6. yet through faith do they eye the Lord as one so near them that it sufficeth them to whisper to him the desires and ailes of their hearts and as one so faithfull that hee will wisely consider of what they thus impart to him The Hebrew word is sometimes used for charming Jer. 8. 17. Serpents to whom there is no charming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or which will not be charmed But verily a godly mans prayer is oft times such a spiritual charming of serpentine divellish suggestions yea and of these inward vile distempers and lusts which Satan too oft maketh use of to ensnare them that they doe even bring them under command and allay by grace the height and the heat of them they even pray downe blasphemous atheistical thoughts or a lust of the world c. Prayer is called a wrestling with the Lord 7 Prayer an holy wrestling in Gen. 32. 24 25. There was a mutuall wrestling of the Lord 's with Jacob which was by divine tentations of Jacob's with the Lord and such as whereby he prevailed over him and that was his supplication or prayer as Hosea chap. 12. 4. expounds it hee prevailed over the Angell he wept and made supplication Col. 4. 12. alwayes wrestling for you in prayers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 striving as they did for masteries in the Olympick-games and Rom. 15. 30. Striving together with me in prayer Praying work is wrestling work crosse and harsh to the flesh and bloud The Saints are put to it by their ungenerate part to strive with that to get into a praying frame Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh yea with Satan too Eph. 6. 12. And when got into such a frame here is much conflicting with the enemies of prayer to keep in it but as if this were a small matter a supplyant hath God himselfe to wrestle with and who is sufficient for these things We had need indeed with praying Jacob of Gods strength that thereby we may prevail with him Hos 12. 3. and by his strength God's strength hee had power with God the Lord is willing to forgive ready to help and hear yet he delighteth to try his owne strength of grace in his people the strength of their faith in Christ and in his covenant the strength of their holy desires and pleas c. When such holy strength is put forth in prayer then we pray indeed for then wee wrestle When in prayer we close with the Lord get fast hold of him of his grace goodnesse power and truth or the like and keep our hold so fast so long that we are got within him as I may say that we have him where we would have him as I may say that we get our spiritualized wils of him that he expresseth a holy yeilding to heare and help us so as that therby our very hearts are cheared quickned and quieted by it now have we prayed for wee have wrestled to purpose And for this end that our praying may be such indeed or that it may bee wrestling conscience is to be made of preparation as for wrestling 1 Cor. 9. 25. to be temperate in all things forbearing any inordinaries of cares fears desires delights imployments and to dyet our selves feed and delight our selvs in such sort as may fit us for prayer To exercise our selvs in holy ejaculatory prayers and holy meditations and to get our souls well oyled and suppled by the praying graces of the spirit before hand Prayer is a serving of God and a serving 8 Prayer a serving God in the spirit of God in the spirit Act. 26. 7. Our Tribes instantly serving God night and day that is praying Rom. 1. 9. My God whom I serve in my spirit that is to whom I pray A Suppliants prayer is to him his only work and businesse such as if hee had then nothing to doe beside yea it is his Lord and Masters businesse which he in obedience to his command is ready to attend a businesse to be done with all his might hee loveth to make something of it before he leaveth it if he seemes sometimes to idle out his time in distractions and distempers how greivous is it to such an one to seeme to have lost such a morning or evening without doing any thing of moment for the Lord for his owne soul or others Hee loveth to get him a-heat at this holy work to pray whilest his heart bee well warmed nor is the Lord wont to bee behind-hand with any such as so serve him hee payeth them best in holy recompences of his grace in them which pray most to him The people concluded that Jonathan had wrought with God that day wrestled prayed hard when they saw so apparently the stamp of God imprinted upon that victory given into him and by him 1 Sam. 14. 45. yea verily it is no smal reward to the supliants of God that the Lord doth account that when they are praying to him they are serving of him when they are telling him of their spiritual wants and inabilities to doe him service confessing their failings in his service and what unprofitable unthankful servants they have been to him how the Lord reckoneth they are doing him very acceptable service the poore Saints are ready to complaine that they can do God no service c. No Can you beg Can you pray This is service of God indeed Prayer in the manner of carrying it on is an
holy serving of the Lord how awful is a suppliant hee serveth the Lord with feare and trembling whilest praying how humble is he he is carefull to keep his distance even in talking thus with the Lord Gen. 18. Abraham then telleth the Lord he is but dust Prayer also in the intents and desires of the suppliant it is serving the Lord all that which a true suppliant fetcheth of God in Prayer if you resolve it into its last end it is service He prayeth for outward things as Jacob Gen. 28. For parts and gifts as Solomon 1 King 3. For life and health for deliverance out of divers afflictions outward and inward as Hezekiah Esay 38. and David oft but in all it is that he might serve the Lord and glorfie him the more thereby he cometh with a servantly spirit for mercy from God ready pressed to doe any work of his to attend any command of his Psal 123. 1 2. A praying frame is an obediential frame a command of God bringeth a true suppliant upon his knees and on his knees he wayteth for a command from him Prayer is called knocking namely at the door of Gods grace and mercy in Christ 9 Prayer a spiritual knocking as 't is called in scripture Matth. 7. Knock and it shall be opened unto you Prayer is a holy approaching and repayring to the door of mercy for all manner of supplies of grace which the Saints stand in need of the saints rest not in this that there is a doo● of grace that there is mercy for sinner● to be had in Christ but they are conscionable in the use of this holy means of opening the same mercy is freely promised to th● people of God yet may none rush into the door of God under pretence that it i● open without knocking Ezek. 36. 25 26 27 c. The doore of grace is set very open I will poure clear water upon you c but verse 37. For this will I be sought by the house of Israel Prayer acknowledgeth the Lords prerogative royal In all thy wayes acknowledge him Prov. 3. True suppliants eye the Lord as a great God as well as gracious and therefore are willing to keep their due distances though the Saints be the friends of Christ and of God who may make in a holy wise bold with him yet it is holy manners to them not rudely to presse upon his favour or challenge this or that benefit of it without asking leave Indeed pinching extremities will make them put a good face upon it and not continue walking to and againe aloof off within some general veiw of mercy but to knock and knock again and again at mercyes doore to pray often for the opening thereof to them True suppliants are in haste of earnest and weighty affairs in their converses with the Lord they have much to do with him much to say to him much to receive from him and therefore they must they will knock they are sure that a gracious father of theirs is within yea within hearing and therefore they cannot but thus knock and pray True it is sometimes this door of grace seemeth to be shut against them in some displeasure but yet this maketh them the more earnest Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies Psal 77. 9. Luke 11 Trouble me not for I am in bed saith the friend within but yet see what prevailing importunity he useth so that for his importunity the friend riseth openeth and giveth what is desired What is Prayer but as spiritual knocking a special means of opening of the gate and door of Grace and so of all the lesser wickets as it were thereon depending Hence Psalm 119. 169. Let my cry come before thee saith the Psalmist and ver 170. Let my supplications come before thee as if he would say Open Lord to Prayer let it come in let not that stand without or as if it were a plea Lord Prayer is at the door therefore open So Psal 88. 2. Let my Prayer come before thee or come where thou art And Psal 55. 1. David prayeth that the Lord would not hide himself from his supplications Prayer it will come in where the Lord is will look him out as it were in all corners Psalm 66. 20. David blesseth the Lord that he had not turned away his Prayer Prayer standeth still at Gods door it will not away without its errand and answer Wisdomes out-doors even the Ordinances Prov. 8. 34. These are opened by Prayer Out-lary Gentiles fare the better this way for that Prayer Psalm 67. Let thy way be known among the people thy saving health among all Nations Matth. 9. end Pray the Lord of the Harvest that he would thrust out Labourers into his Harvest Prayer helpeth people to a fruitful Ministry Prayer helpeth to open the Ministers mouth openeth a door of utterance Colos 4. 3. Pray that God would open my mouth Prayer openeth a door of faith 1 Cor. 16. 8 9 The mystery of Salvation may be made known by it Ephes 6. 19. The Word may come to have an open and effectual passage into peoples hearts by it Hence that 2 Thes 3. 1 Pray that the Word may a have free course and be glorified c. The door of Liberty the Churches Liberties may be opened to the Prayer of the Saints as to Paul upon his Prayer Acts 11. Those strong and secret doors of death may be opened by Prayer Hence the Prophets raising of the dead child by Prayer 2 Kings 4. 32 33 34 35. So Jonah by Prayer had the belly of Hell the Whales belly and jawes opened to him to let him out Jonah 2. 9 10. By Prayer the doors of the womb as they are called Job 3. 10 are opened as in Hannahs case 1 Sam. 1. 15 16 20. and Rebecca's Gen. 25. 21. and Elizabeth's case Luke 1. 13 By prayer the doors of Heaven are opened If I shut heaven and my people pray c. I will hear c. 2 Chron. 6 26 and 7. 13 14. By prayer the Prison doors are opened as to Peter upon the Churches prayer Acts 12. 5 10. Secrets which otherwise are not to be opened yet are to be unfolded by prayer Dan. 2. 18 19. Then was the secret revealed upon prayer for the mercies of Heaven that way yea prayer will open even Hell gates as I may say as by Luthers Prayer one was recovered who had even given his soul to the Divel This kind of Divel goeth not out but by prayer and fasting Matth. 17 by fasting and prayer then even such a Divel is cast out and a poor man let go out of his possession As in other knocking there is a hand there are fingers which make a noise and help open the door so here there is a hand of faith which knocketh and that wil open that large gate and door of mercy and any of the lesser wickets depending Matth. 15. 28. O woman great is thy faith be it unto thee even as
thou wilt Come into all my Treasures of Grace and take even what thou desirest Godly desires knock and make a noise in Gods ears and he opens to them He heareth the desire of the humble Psa 10. 17. They will come in where the Lord is Psa 38. 9 Lord all my desire is before thee The Saints sighs make a noise at Heaven gates and God cometh forth to them For the sighing of the Prisoners I will arise saith the Lord. Psal 12. 5. and Psal 79. 11. Let the sighing of the prisoners come before thee room for the sighing of the prisoners Lord yea their very tears too make a loud noise at this door and they have their voice also in prayer Thou hast heard the voice of my weeping Psal 68. No wonder then that effectual prayer consisting of all these be indeed a knocking and meanes of opening of the gate and door of Mercy in Jesus Christ We pass by other names given to Prayer as that of seeking asking calling opening of the mouth wide running to the Lord for counsel referring ones case to him the like Come we now to give a description of Prayer Prayer is a spiritual and faithful opening of the heart to God in the name of Christ A general description of Prayer with an eye at seasonable help and relief from him By heart we mean thoughts desires affections these wants and weaknesses and sins to which the heart is privy and of which it is sensible We call it an opening of the heart in opposition to hypocritical covering and attempts to hide any thing from the Lord whereby their prayers become no prayers their Worship vaine whilst digging deep to hide the counsels of the heart from God Isaiah 29. 13 15. compared with Psal 119. 26. I have declared my wayes to thee that is prayed and thou heardst me Prayer is a shewing of God our waies or as the Hebrew word beareth a telling or counting them one by one as if we pray indeed when we do from our hearts deal plainly and punctually with God therein when we leave out nothing which we know by our selves untold before him even in a particular manner whether respecting our wants our sins or the like so Psal 38. 18. I have declared mine iniquity meaning all and each of his sins there were some more special sins sinnes which were chiefly his the Hebrew word signifieth a telling of some new thing Davids prayer and confession is not a high-way rode and some one track of confession but it is a telling him of any new fresh acts of sinne Jer. 20. 12 To thee have I opened my cause or prayed to thee Prayer is an opening of the souls causes and cases to the Lord the same word in another conjugation is used for uncovering making bare and naked Gen. 9. 21. The Saints in prayer do or should nakedly present their soules causes without all cover-shames or so much as a ragge of selfe or flesh cleaving to them All things are naked to him with whom Obs we have to doe he is privy to our secrets how is prayer an opening of the heart to him Suppliants are said in prayer to open Answ their hearts to God 1. In that they doe not dare not goe about to hide or desire that ought in their hearts should bee hid from the Lord. It is their desire he should and they are very glad that he doth know all their heart their hearts are ready to break when they through temptation or desertion want prayer vent 2. In that it is their desire and endeavour to present all within their hearts which God by a general eye of wisedome and omniscience seeth unto a more special energetical veiw of the eye of Gods compassion and love Psal 80. 14. Behold and visit this vine Psal 119. 132. Look upon mee as thou usest to doe on those that feare thy name Isay 63. 15 16. Looke downe from heaven c. where are the sounding of thy bowels c. 3. In that they doe thus in way of an ordinance of God which he doth eye and owne as opening of their heart to God Psal 62. 8. Poure out your heart to him or pray to him And albeit their hearts are open to God before yet not actually opened in this way of injoyned expressing the same till they do thus pray 4. In that when prayer is duly performed as their minds and hearts are uttered and poured out as before the Lords face Psal 62. 8. or before him so are they in lively manner quickned to behold Gods mercifull and energetical view of the same hence that perswasion of David All my desires are before thee Psal 38. 9. It is a spiritual opening Spiritual in respect of the efficient and working cause Gods spirit acteth and worketh therein It is prayer in the holy Ghost Rom. 8. 26. The spirit maketh intercession in us the spirit of praier is acted in it Zach. 12. 10. Prayer is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in-wrought our spirits also as acted and improved thereby are at work in it My God whom I serve with my spirit Rom. 1. 9. Our hearts are as water poured out to waft along each petition and confession or as oyle to anoint these messengers of the soul that they might flye the faster to Gods throne It is spiritual in the matter of it things of Gods Kingdome Matth. 6. 33. or if other things yet under a spiritual consideration as according to Gods will and for his glory Spiritual in the manner namely in a sublime and elevated manner of performance Isay 37. 4. Lift up thy prayer Spiritual in the end a calling upon God whereby he is exalted Esay 12. 4. Spirituall in the motive and ground-work a command of God requiring a promise in encouraging Thou saidst seek my face my heart answered Lord thy face will I seek Psal 27. 8. for thou revealedst to thy servant saying I will build thee a house therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer 2 Sam. 27. 27. Faithfull opening that is unfeigned without reservations c. Prayer from unfeigned lips Psal 17. 1. To God not to Saints and Angels which neither know our hearts nor can help us Isay 63. 16. Though Abraham know us not And it is to God not as into the aire or as at an uncertainty where or to whom In the name of Christ There is a holy renouncing of our selves and our owne worth and strength and a resting and trusting upon the Lord Jesus onely through whom we come to the throne of grace and for whose sake alone wee plead for and expect audience and acceptance yea and assistance With an eye to seasonable help Our Our eyes are unto the Lord until hee shew us mercy Psal 123. 1 2. Thus much concerning prayer in generall We might give sundry reasons to inforce Reasons why we must pray this duty Taken 1. From God absolutely and relatively 1 From God considered who is thereby
Lord be Judge betwixt Israel and Ammon Judg. 11. 27 Israel injuriously begirts Judah and no other help for them but this Judah cryed unto the Lord Enemies 2 Chron 13. 14 15. Pharaoh with an huge host hath Israel at an advantage and they must needs then thus crye out unto the Lord. Enemies unexpected scornes of the Saints put the Saints upon these short appeals Nehem. 4. 4 5. Hear Oh our God f●r we are despised Their sudden affrighting of them doth as much they all made us afraid Now therefore O our God strengthen my hands Neh. 6. 9 The present hearing of the Princes good will to the Commonwealth put forth godly Subjects then present to affix their Ejaculatory Amen thereto 1 Kings 1. 36. Amen the Lord thy God say so too A sudden hand of God upon others put godly Judgments God Moses upon it thus to pray for Miriam O Lord heal her c. Numb 12. 13. and godly Hezekiah to pray for his people The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord though not so prepared And the Lord hearkned and healed the people 2 Chron 30 18 19. Any sudden notice of some special service of God unto Special services which some of the Saints are addressing themselves must needs put others that hear thereof by such sudden lifts of their hearts to give them a lift therein Is David going to a solemn Sacrifice godly A●aunah will thus wish him good speed 2 Sam. 24. 23. The Lord thy God accept thee Eli perceiving Hannahs Prayer-business 1 Sam. 1. 16 cannot but add his fiat also ver 17. The God of Israel grant thee thy petition Sudden weighty changes of some of the Saints in their Changes outward condition put others that hear of it upon this holy service of love to them as Boaz his godly neighbours Ruth 4. 11 12. The Lord make this woman like Rachel and Lea● c. Sudden and unexpected Kindnesses others kindnesses shewed to the Saints will put them to speed such a kind of Messenger as this to heaven presently to tell their Father of it Ruth 2 19 20. Naomi seeing Boaz his kindness to his daughter Ruth saith Blessed be he of the Lord that hath not left off his kindness to the living and to the dead Besides even one Ejaculation of the Saints Continuation of Prayer puts them upon making more upon praying thus also without ceasing One Ejaculation begetteth another Isai 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early because they had thus prayed they will pray yet more Psal 62. 1 Hear my cry attend to my prayer yet no words there of mentioned and ver 2. From the end of the earth will I cry he had thus cryed and he will therefore cry againe and again As billowes of ten ptation ever and anon stop his mouth and ●n●errupt him so as he now and then doth but peep above water and get breathing space he will thus cry Lead me or guide me or carry me to yonder rock which is higher then I. Hence Jonah in his perishing condition mentioneth his Praiers plurally there were many of these short Praiers like Messengers sent Poste in some great and present stress one after the other to speed succor from heaven J●n 2. 1. 2 7. My Praiers came in unto thee Yea these holy Traders with Heaven using to make as quick returnes as speedy dealings thus with the Lord as they gain upon the Lord they are suddenly sending for more and bespeaking yet more blessing from him When Moses by his short Prayer● hath got a grant of God My presence shal● go with thee Exod 33 12 13 15 16. compared then doth he in a holy wise grow upo● God He hath one short yet no smal reques● more ver 18. I beseech thee shew me thy glory And chap. 34. 9. he hath another reques● yet more Pardon our iniquities and take u● for thine inheritance So Abrahams shor● requests as they are granted Gen. 18. so they multiply If there be fifty Lord in Sodom wil● thou not spare it and then if but forty five then if forty then if thirty then if twenty then if ten Thus much also be spoken to shew the necessity Reasons why 1 From the honor it puts on God of this Duty in sundry respects Let us now briefly add a Reason or two yet further to enforce this duty The first is taken from the nature and property of this duty which honoureth the Lord in a special manner as a glorious In his immensity and Omniscience Spirit which needeth not any words of ours to express what we would to him He can hear the holy language and speech of our spirits he understandeth the meaning of sighes not to be expressed Rom. 8. 26. Ejaculatory Prayer proclaimeth the Lord that he is not as the Idol Gods who needeth not to be awakened by loud out-cryes as 1 Kings 18. 27 as Elijah derided Baals Priests wisheth them to cry aloud c. Who needeth not to be carryed up and down as dunghil Gods do Jer. 10. 5. No this proclaimeth to all the world that the God of the Saints is an all-seeing God espying the least moving of their desires to him that he is in all and through all and filleth every place yea that he is a very present help at any dead lift that he is a God hearing Prayers all sorts of Prayers the shortest of them If Ephraim but lisp and wisper out Turn thou me and I shall be turned c. God saith I have surely heard him Jer. 31. 18 19 20. If Israel take unto them words prayer-wise though but short Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously c. God can and will say I have surely heard him and observed him Hos 14. 1 2 3 8. This glorifieth him as one who assuredly waites to be gracious that any such cry and whisper as this is of the Saints is attended by him Isai 30. 18. The Lord waits to be gracious and ver 19 is a demonstration thereof The Lord will be very gracious at the voice of thy cry The second Reason is taken from the precious fruits of the conscionable exercise 2 From the Fruits of it It s a means of this duty of such sudden and short lifts of the heart to the Lord. 1. It is a very special means to keep our 1 To keep us Spiritual hearts very Spiritual and savoury when so often in heaven taking some short turnes with God and Jesus Christ When so oft with God distances will not so easily grow when conversing so with God there is more of his brightness more of his Image upon such an ones face and heart When gracious persons are ever and anon making such holy stands and pawses of spirit lest being let go too long and at too large a teather they grow unsavoury they are kept
by special stirrings of faith and love such times sometimes the Saints here met withall They are as in Christs lap upon their spouses knee in their beloveds bosome Cantic 8. 5. and would yet be nearer to him The Church is leaning upon her beloved yet saith set me as a seale upon thine arme and upon thy brest and then makes that gracious motion to her beloved verse 8. We have a little sister and shee hath no brests what shall we doe for her in the day she shall be spoken for As she is ready to do her part so shee would have him doe his part for the others good when the daughters of Jerusalem find Christ when he meeteth them then they must in their prayers tell him of the Churches sad case that shee is sick of love Cantic 5. 8. Moses will take the advantage of Gods being so near him and speaking to his heart Exod. 33. 13 14 15 16. to speak for his presence with the rest of Gods people If thy presence goe not with us carry us not hence And Exodus 34. 8. 9. And Moses made haste and bowed himselfe to the earth and worshipped and said O Lord I pray thee if I have found favour in thy sight that the Lord would now go with us and pardon our iniquity and our sin and take us for thine inheritance It were pity that the Saints would not improve their waiting months upon the king of Saints to move him as well for others as for their owne good The King at Esthers banquet expecteth Esthers requests for her people so doth the Lord at such time especially look ●hat some should make intercession Isai 59. He expecteth that some should aske him of ●hings to come concerning his Sons and his daughters Isai 45. and pray for the peace ●f Jerusalem Psal 122. 6. 2. When others are under any special Pray for them whe 2 deserted tempted or afflicted desertions or temptations or in any help●ess desolate disconsolate conditions as when the Lord is withdrawn from them My ●eloved had withdrawne himselfe Cantic 5. ● 8. Tell him that I am sick of love When under reproaches and indignities offe●ed the Saints from others which by their ●rofession and place should doe better of●ices for them as when the Church is smit●en and wounded by the watchmen and her ●aile taken away by the keepers of the walls ●hen tell My beloved I am sick of love saith ●he When others are deeply sensible of their ●eed of Christ and nothing else will con●ent them but Christ then they are sicke of ●ove then tell Christ of it ibid. When ●he displeasure of God himselfe is breaking or broken out against Gods owne people ●hen if Moses have interest in God he must downe on his knees for Israel Exodus 34. 13 14 15. c. and Exodus 34. 8 9. then Aaron must haste to offer incense Numb ●6 Then Job must offer for his friends Job 42. 8. When enemies are ready to swallow up the Lords heritage then Isaiah must lift up his prayer for the remnant of God Isaiah 37. 4. When persons of choicest use are in greatest hazards through the rage of persecutors then prayer is made without ceasing for Peter by the Godly Acts 12. 5. When people want a fruitfull ministery like brests pray for them especially Cant. 8. 8. Matth. 9. 36 38. Pray then that the Lord would thrust forth labourers into his harvest in divers other like sad cases of the saints 3. Be we serious and not slighty in pleading for others Lift up thy prayer for the 3 Pray for them with fervency remnant that is left Isai 37. Wrestle together in prayer for me Rom. 15. 30. if wee should seeme therein to get a foyle yet get up againe and trye it out a little more with God for them especially in difficult cases Abraham followeth Christ with prayer upon prayer even for Sodome Gen. 18 the end Isai 62. 6 7. Give the Lord no rest until hee make Jerusalem a praise in the earth 4. Take we advantage of the least may-be 4 Take the advantage of a may-be of mercy and possibility of speeding to set up upon this service of love for others in any case whatsoever though not alwayes desired thereto by others but especially when thereto moved by them Isai 37. 4. It may be the Lord hath heard Rabshecahs word in ver 5. Wherefore lift up thy prayer for the remnant that is left Exod. 32. 30. Moses said unto the people yee have committed a greivous sinne but now I will goe up to the Lord peradventure I may pacifie him c. Helps to pray for others 1 Brotherly-love Touching the second even helps to further us in this duty 1. Cherish we brotherly love and kindness and charity Love the Church and people of God his Jerusalem and you will pray for them Psal 122. 6. Love your enemies and you shall pray for them Matth. 5. 44. The Centurion will be suing to Christ for his servant who is very deare to him Luke 7. 2. If we love others wee will every way seek not our own things so much as theirs 1 Cor. 13. It s Jonathan who loveth David will bee a petitioner to his father for him 1 Sam. 19. 4 6. and 20. 30. And Esther who loved her people will not bee content to ask her owne life but theirs also of the king Esther 4. 11 16. and 5. 1 2 3. So it is in this case in our requests to the Lord for others if we love them Moses will have no greatness of his founded in his peoples ruine nay hee refuseth an offer thereof so hee may bespeak mercy for his people Exodus 32. 10 11. and Numb 14. 11 12. True suppliants can sometimes be earnest for others when more sparing in suing for themselves 2. Be as much acquainted with and 2 Knowledge of others conditions especially of the good in them well informed in other estates as you can especially espy and inquire out all the good which is in them The knowledge of others miseries as the eye affecteth the heart openeth those sluces then whereby it cometh to be poured out for them this brought good Nehemiah upon his knees when hee had certain information of Jerusalems calamities He sate downe and wept and fasted and prayed Nehem. 1. 1 2 3 4 5 c. Hence the direction confesse your faults one to another and pray one for another James 5. 14 15 16. The best of us are much lead by sense others cases of which wee have but some general informations doe not so affect as those of whose particular cases wee have better knowledge knowledge also or hope at least of the good of grace which is in others doth much quicken us to pray for them From the day that Paul heard of the faith of the Colossians and Ephesians how importunate is he in prayer for them Col. 1. 3 4. Ephes 1. 15 16. The report of Philemons
and suggesting is played by divers Spiritual Harpers this holy harmony of spirits seeking to the Lord that he would loose in heaven some poor sinning persons formerly bound but now repenting this argueth the presence and acceptance of the Lord. What ye loose on earth is loosed in Heaven that is If you shall agree or symphonize on earth as touching any thing you shall ask it shall be done c. Matth. 18. 18 19 20. 5 When God carryeth out some of his 5. If those praiers are importunate servants in Prayers for others very earnestly resolutely and constantly as those who will have no nay God assuredly as a fruit of such holy importunity in Intercessions maketh that Jerusalem a praise in the earth Isai 62. 6 7. Paul who alwayes in every Prayer of his is stirred up to mention the Philippians Phil. 1. 4. is confident that God will go on with his work in them ver 6. and he thinketh it meet to bee so confident of it because the Lord hath put them thus oft into his heart in prayer for them ver 7. Such earnest incessant prayers of the Church for an imprisoned Peter are not denyed there being most of the Spirit in such Prayers 6 When God stirreth up the faith of such 6 When such pray in faith for others which pray and plead for others to listen attend wait and expect yea and to bee perswaded of their answers as the Psalmist in Psal 85. 8. who expecteth peace as an answer of those praiers for others of the Saints I will hearken what God the Lord will say for he will speak peace to his people and his prayers for them are mentioned in the former verses When the Church in praying for the King is perswaded that they shall have the joy thereof Psal 20. 1 2 3 4. and ver 6. she concludeth the same from her faith That God will shew mercy to the King according to her desire ver 6. Faith ever speeddeth in its Suits and in this our holy trading with God it s the Lords earnest penny that he will give us sutable and seasonable returnes 7. When mercies begged for others are 7 When the mercies beg'd for them come in suddenly and strangely suddenly and strangely brought about upon our Prayers yea and as suddenly brought to our knowledge Acts 12 5 12. c. Peter is sent in unto them as set at liberty from his chains whilst they are praying for him wherein the providence of God would as it were speak to them thus There is the Mercy here is the man for whom you make so much a do since you will needs have it so and will have no nay and the ears of the Lord are so filled with your cryes take it and be thankful 8 When we are in especial wise enlarged 8. When as large in praises for mercies to them and quickned in thanksgiving for Gods mer●yes upon others The many which gave thanks to God for his gift bestowed were surely of the many by means of whose helping prayings it was bestowed 2 Cor. 1. 11. Eli prayed for Hannah 1 Sam. 1. 17. worshippeth being answered in prayer ver 28. The same Spirit moving to praise God did assuredly stir up to prayer before It is a sign of peculiar interests in those mercies of others when the Spirit of God moveth us in such thankful sort to owne the same Let us now speak a little more largely to the other branch being somewhat more intricate and not so often spoken to Prayer in way of Imprecation is that part of Prayer wherein the Saints do not barely complaine of the indignities done by Gods and his peoples enemies against him and them but crave Divine Justice against them Let us first clear this to be a Duty of the We may and in case must pray against Gods and his peoples enemies Saints in case to pray even against such as hate God and his people Judg. 5. 23. Curse ye Meros c. Deut. 27. the Levites were to pray against divers kinds of sinners and the people to joyne in those imprecations by saying Amen The Scripture holds forth many examples of such Imprecations as Lament 3 64 65 66. Psalm 144. 5 6 7 8. and many other Scriptures Reasons enforcing the Saints to it are 1 Their love to God out of love to Reasons 1 From our love ●o God whom they may and must say as he did Do not I hate them that hate thee c. Psalm ● 39. 20 21 22. The converted Princes shal hate the Antichristian Harlot Revel 17. 16. and if the Saints may and must hate the enemies of God they may pray against them 2 Their respect to Christ and his Kingdome 2 From our respect to Christ and his Kingdom which we are taught to pray that it may come as well in the confusion of some as the conversion of other of his enemies Psalm 45. 5. Let thine arrowes be sharp in the heart of the Kings enemies whereby people fall under thee Psalm 99. 1 2. O thou to whom vengeance belongeth shine forth let the glorious beams of thy Soveraignty as a King and equity as a Judge appear lift up thy self thou Judge of the earth render a reward to the proud 3 Their respect to the Church and people of God and their peace and good 3. From our respect to the Church whence those Imprecations Psalm 137. 7. Remember O Lord the children of Edom c. Psalm 129. 5 6 7 8 Let them all be confounded that hate Zion c. But because our natures as carnal are principled rather with dispositions to curse then blesse a carnal mans mouth is full of cursing Rom. 3. 14. so that herein we need not spurs so much as bit and bridle to curb and guide us And because even the dearest of the Saints have fouly miscarried this way yea even when they least suspected the same as James and John Luke 9. 54 55. would have been requiring fire to come downe from heaven upon those Samaritans as Elias sometimes did but were rebuked for it though they seeme to ask Christs counsel in it Wilt thou that we command fire from heaven to exalt Christs soveraign power in it if that he willed it they in his name might command it and to be zealous of his honour injured by those Samaritans yet checked as persons who knew not of what spirit they were of Now considering such like things we had need to have aime given us and to have the Mark described at which wee must shoot Consider we then 1 In what way we Cautions Imprecations must not be may not imprecate and pray against others 2. In what way wee must pray against Gods enemies 3. Against what enemies 1 We may not curse nor pray against the 1. Against the Righteous the Righteous upon any pretence whatsoever no not of sharp harsh high or continued opposition against us There was a sharp contention betwixt Paul
very well bear the dry blows they meet with in fighting to enter in as the force of that Phrase Luke 13. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holdeth forth fighting as those of old in the Grecian exercises some whereof were with fists and batts Brave spirits are up in the soul when a spirit of importunity in prayer is stirring and they will make suppliants bear any thing so much also the force of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used both Col. 4. 21. and Rom. 12. 12. For continuing instant in prayer holdeth forth continuing therein with much patient bearing of incumbrances or molestations 6. It consisteth lastly in being in a holy In holy insatiablenesse with mercies received wife unsatisfied with smaller measures of prayer-blessings pressing still on for more Importunate Abraham hath his additionall requests to the former when they are granted Gen. 18. 17 20 30. So Moses when heard for Israels pardon so far forth Exod. 32. 10 11 12 13. yet hee wants and must have the Lords gracious presence along with him and then Exod. 33. 12 13 17. when that is granted yet he wanteth a further light of Gods glory v. 18. And when he hath got that yet chap. 34. 8 9. he hath a further request for Israel againe verse 8 9. Gideon hath scarse ever done asking one signe and token of Gods gracious presence with him after another granted him Judg. 6. 17 18 37 38 39. compared Those earnests make them presse harder for the receipt of farther and larger sums of grace those gracious recoveries makes them to renew their suits and pleas those tastes do but whet their appetites after more of such spiritual cheare such first-fruits make them long the more for gathering in more of that blessed harvest now and then a view and kisse of their beloved at their request makes them more enamoured with love-desires after more Now of the second thing propounded Importunity in prayer must not be 1 Unseasonable What manner of importunity is required To which I answer 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively Negatively also two wayes 1. Look that it be not unseasonable importunity but a seeking of Christ early in the day time of grace not in the evening the close and ending of that day Prov. 1. 28. Thou shalt seek me early and not find me when the door of grace is shut to cry Lord Lord open to us it is in vaine Luke 13. 25. when men have wearied out the Lord with knocking at their hearts and with calls and they answer not him they shall cry saith the Lord but I will not heare 2. Looke that it be not an inordinate 2 Inordinate or for a lust importunity an importunity of some lusts like Rachels wrastling in prayer also with great wrastling for a son Quest How may Inordinacy of affection Quest or lust be discerned to be the spring and give rise to importunity in prayer 1. Answ When importunity in prayer Answ 1 for mercies which we want is uttered with Markes of earnest prayer when from our lust 1 Undervaluing of mercies received undervaluing of the blessings wee already have or with discontentment at them Numb 11. 4. You fell a lusting and wept saying who will give us flesh and verse 6 We can see nothing but this Man Like children that whilest crying for an apple from their fathers hand will fling away the cake that is in their owne and so get a whipping rather then a pippin as wee say so such get a lashing rather then their longing which argueth an inordinacy in such children 2. When such importunity in seeking such 2 Valuing of things desired even with a bad estate or such things from God is accompanied with a prising of a very bad estate in the enjoyment of the things we ask as we remember say they the flesh we did eat in Egypt Numb 11. 4 5. they are so eager for flesh that Egypt it selfe where they had such flesh hath now an honorable memoriall with them and they could even be glad of Egypt againe upon condition they had but flesh enough as formerly A place of bondage a place where sacrificing to the Lord was an abomination to the Egyptians would be a welcome place with that desired flesh they crave Luke 15. 12. The younger said father give me the portion of goods which falleth to me he will have it though he want his fathers presence and the communion of his family and be left to himselfe to shift for a living The Israelites will have a King though they are told from God that they will be in a farre worse condition under their tyrannous usages then ever they were under the government he appointed over them even under their Judges 1 Sam. 11. 11. to the 18. And vers 18. And you shall cry out in that day because of your King which you shall have chosen you and the Lord will not hear you in that day verse 19. Neverthelesse the people refused to obey the voice of Samuel and they said nay but we will have a King over us Like some young men that against all their fathers wholsome admonitions will needs have such an one for their wife and night and day sollicit their father to let them have her though told that they will but undoe themselves by it 3 Asking things unsutable to our condition 3. When we aske things of God that are unsutable for our condition as for the younger sonne to ask his father to have all at his own dispose when no way fit to manage it Luke 15. 12 13. So for Israel in a wildernesse to desire quailes a meat altogether unsutable for their place and estate So for James and John to desire that one might sit at his right hand and the other at his left hand in the Kingdome of heaven Mark 10. 35. 37. before they are fitted to suffer with Christ or for him to be riding on horseback ere they are able to goe on foot 4 Rashnesse in asking 4. When wee are rashly importunate as James and John were Mark 10. 36. You aske you know not what they considered not understood not what they asked or as in that request for fire to come down from heaven to consume those Samaritanes Luke 9. 54. Christ told them you know not what spirits you are of they considered not from what spirit they were moved in that request When we waite not for Gods counsell advise not with the Lord about what we are to aske or not seasonably before our hearts are growne inordinate with their desires Psalm 106. 13 14. They waited not for his counsel they lusted in the wildernesse when desires prevent or outrun deliberate judgement they are not right or when judgement the mistresse must waite upon these her maids there is disorder When your princely minde must go on foot whilest servantly affections ride on horseback there is confusion when understanding must only dance after affections pipes there must needs be
if by some awakening afflictions sent upon them they come to be roused yet it is too often their just doome to be earnest indeed but without any regard thereunto by the Lord. They shall cry but I will not hear Zeph. 7. 11. Isai 65. 13 14 But at best any degree of such a slighty spirit in prayer will become very grievous to us if truely gracious whence that way of complaint Isai 64. 7. There is none that calleth upon God no not one that stirreth up himselfe to take hold of Saddest heartgreifs God It is as grievous to such soules to have their spiritual joynts either bound or benummed as it is in a like case to men when their body hath its numb palsie when in prayer a gracious heart is ever reaching out to take an approaching mercy and then through a little incogitancy remisness the mercy is let slip and the advantage at that time lost it must needs bee grievous to the godly To the fourth Query Quest What means we should use to be Quest 4 importunate in prayer I answer get thee more abundant Answ knowledge of God and of our selves but Helps to importunity in prayer 1 Distinct knowledge of the Lord. especially acquaint our selves with Gods friendly and mercifull disposition towards us Luke 11. 7 8 5. verses compared Hee who was importunate for bread knew he was at a friends door like the Syrians hearing that the Kings of Israel were mercifull Kings this quickned them up to that earnestnesse in seeking their favour 1 Kings 20. 31. It will make a beggar earnest for an almes when he knoweth where a bountiful person liveth who is not wont to send any beggar away empty 2. Cherish wee hope of the Lords 2 Lively hope of mercy mercy to us Jonah 3. Let them cry mightily to the Lord verse 9. Who can tell if God will turne and repent the possibility that the Lord was within hearing and might open to the Ninivites made them knock so hard at his doore of grace 3. See wee bee sensible of our utter destitutenesse 3 Sense of our owne helplesnesse of what we are to ask of God and our shiftlesnesse to get it any other where or way Luke 11 3 6. Lend me three leaves for a friend of mine is come and I have n●thg to set before him Luke 15. 17 18 19. I perish for hunger I will arise and goe to my father and say make me as one of thy hired-servants Psal 143. 4. My heart is desolate within me ver 6. My soul thirsteth after thee When all other meanes and doors fail such spiritual beggars that one only door of grace is left for their reliefe or else they must famish how earnestly will it cause them to knock there Jer. 3. 21. A voice of weeping and supplication was heard verse 23. Truly in vaine is salvation hoped for from the hills Truely in the Lord our God is the salvation of Israel 4. Look that we account highly of the 4 High esteem of what is desired in prayer mercies we ask in prayer Prov. 2. 3. If thou cryest after knowledge and liftest up thy voyce after understanding verse 4. If thou searchest for her as silver and searchest for her as for hidden treasure The Church was sick of love Cant. 5. 8. and useth all meanes to find him and no wonder her beloved was the chiefest of ten thousand to her ver 10. 5. Take we holy advantages of the gales 5 Opportunity of prayer and movings of the spirit in prayer and of Christs approaches to us opportunity helps importunity in prayer Mat. 20. 30. And behold two blind men sitting by the way side when they heard that Jesus passed by cryed out saying have mercy on us O Lord thou Sonne of David And verse 32. And Jesus stood still and called them and sayd what will you that I doe unto you verse 33. they say to him Lord that our eyes may be opened When Christ by his spirit calleth us to him puteth us upon asking and when hee stands still waiting to be gracious to us now let him not goe till hee blesse us When beggars come whilst a bountifull person is giving out his dole to the poore or in dinner time when victuall is stirring they will not away without something so if we perceive the Lord to bee on the giving hand put in hard for a blessing 6. Improve we former advantages gotten 6. Improve experiences of God in and by prayer I will cry to God most high unto God who performes all things for me when we see crying will doe it will put us on not to spare for crying Now in this holy search after experimental knowledge of Gods grace wee now and then light upon a smaller vain of such treasure we will not spare any pains in digging when in our daily woing of Christ in praier we meet now and then with a smile and kiss and love-token it will make us follow our suit close 7. Goe we about prayer as our onely 7. Make praier our only businesse businesse which then wee have to doe ingaging our selves to attend it Saints are spiritual solicitours by their calling as Saints That which made Abraham so urgent in his request Gen. 18. 27. is this Behold now I have taken upon me to speake to the Lord. 8. Chide we our selves sadly and bee wee seriously abased for any sleightinesse 8 Chide our selves out of sleightinesse in prayer at any time in prayer as the Prophet complaining thereof Isa 64. We have now called upon thy name nor stirred up our selves to take hold of thee and Isa 63. 17. Why hast thou hardned our hearts from thy feare As Elisha was wroth with Joash for smiting but thrice and then staying 2 Kings 13 18 19. Saying thou shouldest now have smitten five or six times or as they did chide sleeping Jonah when hee should have been praying Jonah chap. 1. 6. Awake thou sleeper and call upon thy God So chide we our sleighty spirits to awaken unto prayer 9. Set we the examples of the most 9 Set before us the best examples of importunity in prayer importunate suppliants of God before our eyes James 5. 17. Elias prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not a very dullard will pluck up his feet when he seeth how nimble his leaders are Lastly take heed of all such things as are enemies and impediments to Importunity Le ts to importunity in prayer 1 Inordinate desires after other things in prayer Such as are inordinate desires after other things we cannot to any purpose follow severall suits at once in severall Courts we cannot ply the worlds court and Gods too The messengers are sent out another way which should importune heaven and they cannot be here and there too whilst our winged desires are hasting after other things and booties we are slowest in moving heaven-ward with wings as Angels 2. Immoderate intentness
Exod. 30. 1 2 3. That which Ezekiel seeth in vision is three Cubits high and two Cubits long the breadth is indefinite and unlimited Ezek. 44. 22. Shewing that the Saints under the Gospel would make much more improvement of the Lord Jesus their holy Altar in prayer and make use of his mediation and Intercession by Faith in their heavenly sublimated supplications for height more sublime for continuance more stable and lasting c. than the Saints of old were ordinarily wont to doe Hence a Spirit of supplication promised in those dayes not to be barely dropped but abundantly to bee poured out upon the Saints Zech. 12. 10. 4. To be indesinent in prayer is to be 4 To be constant in a course of prayer constant in a course of prayer daily implyed also in dayly prayer to be made for daily bread Hence Paul injoyning praying alwayes joyneth persevering or holding on our course in prayer Eph. 6. 18. so Col. 4. 2. Continue instant in prayer As for Reasons why we ought to pray Reasons why we must pray constantly thus indesinently they are briefly these 1. In that the Lord is very constant 1 God is constant in calling upon us in calling upon us Esa 65. 12. He daily spreads out his hands to us we may well bee daily lifting up our hearts and hands to him 2. In that Jesus Christ intercedeth for 2 Christ is constant in pleading for us us without ceasing he ever liveth to make intercession for us coming unto God by him It is all his worke in a manner Heb. 7. 15. and 9. 14. Therefore wee may well be so much taken up with this businesse of prayer 3. In that the maine matters of our 3 Choice things beg'd are perpetuall prayers are everlasting matters and everlasting mercies call for incessant prayers yea the prayses one day to bee returned for answers of prayers will be everlasting and there would bee some proportion of perpetuity in our holy prayers 4. In that the Lord ceaseth not blessing of us till we cease begging but if we 4 God continueth to blesse whilest wee continue to aske give out from praying hee will forbear his wonted giving so long as Abraham held on asking the Lord held on answering Gen. 18. When Abraham left off Communing with the Lord he goeth up from Abraham If Joash be scanty in smiting with his darts his victories over the Syrians are the lesse 2 Kings 13. 18 19. Fewer spirituall wrestlings will issue in fewer spirituall Conquests The oyle of grace still runneth as long as there are empty vessels to receive the same As sometime Sir Walter-Raleigh answered Queen Elizabeths demand when he would leave begging of her not till your Majesty said he cease giving so should we perceiving that whilest wee seek the Lord he is found of us As 2 Chron. 15. 2. We should resolve to hold on seeking pray as long as wee prosper in it 5. In that holy constancy in prayer 5 Constancy in prayer argueth integrity in it will bee an argument of most integrity in it The Hypocrite will not pray alwayes Job 27. 8 10. They are elect ones which are so incessant in prayer Cry night and day Luke 18 7. They are naturall fruits to trees which they bring forth constantly So constancy in holy prayer argueth prayer to be in a holy wise naturall to us as Saints and that there is in us some praying nature It is a beame of Divine Immutability amidst variety of Changes in other things yet to be inchangeable in our way and course of holinesse and so of prayer The Saints as Saints whatever their changes otherwise may be yet are suppliants Zeph. 3. 10. From beyond the river of Aethyopia shall my suppliants come That is my Saints my effectual called ones which will be continually even naturally making holy supplications to me If abroad they are conscionable of prayer and so likewise if at home If free then free to pray if bond yet the Lords free men to pray In priviledged and peaceable times they continue praying and so they doe in boysterous and troublesome times whilst the light of God shineth in their tabernacles and on their spirits they labour in prayer and so in darknesse of temptations afflictions c. and yet they hold on praying 6. In that special and desirable benefits 6 Special blessings attained by constancy in prayer come by constancy in prayer for which onely consider that place Luke 21. 34 35 36. It s a special help against all worldly temptations If we would not be far charged with cares of this life pray alwayes Men much in prayer with God are ever the most weaned from the world They have so many sweet discourses with God that other talks with the world are more harsh and burthensome to them they are so oft in speech with the Spouse of their souls that they cannot affect to speak familiarly with that Strumpet They are so much in heaven that their spirits cannot bee much in earth Psal 3. 19 20. They drive so rich and gainful a trade in that celestial City that they have little list or delight to bee pedling elsewhere about trifles They fare so well at their fathers house that they care not for the devils husks or the worlds scraps It is likewise a meanes to escape the displeasure of God which lighteth upon others to escape that which cometh as a snare which taketh and holdest fast and bruiseth crusheth and killeth others ibid. Besides it is a means to fit us for Christs second coming Pray alwayes that ye may bee accounted worthy to escape all these things and to stand before the Sonne of man Persons much in prayer do so oft set up Tribunals in their owne hearts so frequently doe they make up just accounts with God in Christ and so many times in their prayers are they making references of matters unto that day that they familiarize with their Judge and do in a manner facilitate the businesse of that day so far as it concerneth them But here we might justly reprove such Use in our dayes who have formerly been more constant in family and possibly in Closet Prayer but now leave it off seldome or never pray in their closets and will not joyne with others in prayer This is charged upon hypocrites as their guise and garbe Job 27. 10. Will hee alwayes call upon God Quest Whence cometh it to passe that any Causes of ceasing in praier faint or grow weary or cease from praying Quest Answ Many bring with them to prayer Answ 1 too many incumbrances and they tyre 1 Incumbrances in prayer them they cannot travell on to hold out in a course of prayer when they use themselves to carry so much luggage with them 2. Many do but slightly waste their time in 2 Slightnesse in prayer prayer to no purpose so getting nothing by this their trade they grow weary of it and men shut up
and his people that pray are to humble themselves and then the Lord promiseth them hearing 2 Chron. 7. 14. But Humility in prayer consisteth for our better proceeding in handling this condition of prayer Let us consider 1. Wherein that Humility which is required in prayer doth consist 2. When Humility expressed in prayer may be discerned to be saving 3. Why this Humility is required to prayer 4. What are usefull helps and means furthering such humility in prayer To the first we say Humility required in prayer consisteth in these six or seven things 1. In low thoughts of our selves to attempt 1 In low thoughts of our selves as unmeet to pray or set about such a duty When wee are going about it we judge our selves most unmeet and unworthy in our selves to speak to the Lord as we are imployed in praying still the serious and sensible thoughts of our owne worthlesnesse dwells with us and works on us That justified suppliant mentioned Luke 13. 13 14. standeth a far off and would scarce lift up his eyes to heaven he thinks he is not worthy to come nearer let others goe as high as they please as for himselfe hee will take the lowest roome in Gods house It is more then he is worthy of to be admitted to come there at all and heaven is too glorious a place in a manner for him a wretch as hee hath been to be so bold he hath sinned against heaven it is better for him to look on the dust yea to kisse and lick the dust In the words which the wiseman speaketh prayer-wise unto Christ that Itheil he that was his God and that Vcall that mighty one Prov. 30. 1 7 8 9. You see how humbly hee prefaceth in his speech so far as directed to him in way of prayer as verse 2 3. hee professeth hee is more bruitish then any man and hath not the understanding of a man so unfit and unworthy doth he see himselfe to speak either of Christ in an instructive way as verse 4 5 6. or to Christ in a supplicating way ver 7 8 9. The Disciples having been at praier with Christ they see so much weight in the duty and so much excellency in the due exercise of the gift and grace of Christ in prayer that they look at themselves as most unfit to pray as they ought and therefore intreat his help and direction Lord teach us to pray Luke 11. 1. The Psalmist beginneth his prayer in a kind of expostulation with God Psal 22. 1 2. and pressing of God with examples of his mercy to others in like cases verse 4 5. But if thou think hee is too bold with God and keepeth not his due distance hee will professe that for his owne part he is a worm and no man verse 6 7. he judged himselfe as infinitely unworthy to stand upon termes with God so even unfit to make comparison with others verse 5 6. But I am a worm and no man what ever our fathers were yet I look at my selfe as fitter to creep on the earth and feed onely upon the dust in respect of the guilt of sinne laid upon me for if you apply it to Christ the antitype God laid upon him the iniquity of us all Isai 53. 6. but we intend it of the Psalmist rather himselfe then as a man to lift up my selfe to heaven and therefore am justly made the reproach of men ibid. No sooner do the Saints essay to draw near unto God but the beames of the glory of God reflect upon the faces of their souls which doe thus awe and abase them they see in the glasse of that excellency their owne vilenesse 2. In abased thoughts of our selves 2 In low thoughts of our selves when heard when we do get any thing of the Lord by prayer True it is humble ones do speed best of all others in prayer but yet as mercyes of prayer found them so they leave them humble When Abraham hath gained upon the Lord by prayer Gen. 18. 26. yet then nay then especially is Abraham lowest and vilest in his owne esteeme then verse 27. he saith and seeth he is dust and ashes He then considereth what he is in himselfe whence he came and whither he must notwithstanding the favour which hee findeth with the Lord he knoweth no cause which should move the Lord to give any answer of mercy to so meane an one as himselfe but his rich grace What is in dust to move respects in God to it and secretly presenteth it as a plea to continue such undeserved mercy to such an one from that which moved the Lord to begin to respect his prayer Thus David Psal 34. 4 when hee had gained by his prayer and God was found of him yet verse 6. hee putteth an humble Emphasis upon the matter this poore man cryed That they verse 5. even better men then he such as had walked worthy of God and of his grace looked unto the Lord in prayer and were incouraged by answers of favour was no wonder but that this poor man that he poor wretch as he esteemeth himselfe one that as in the title of the Psalm saith he changed his favour and was not like himselfe in that case at Gath 1 Sam. 21. 13 yet he to cry unto the Lord and be heard this is a wonder of grace to him After Ephraim hath prayed for turning grace from God Jer. 31. 18. and is answered v. 19. then is he abased yea more abased in his own sight then before When the Church upon her request is drawn unto her beloved Cant. 1. 4. then she cryeth out of her blacknesse verse 5. Humblest Christians are the soundest and healthiest in spirit and as showres and blasts of affliction and temptation doe not much annoy them so neither doe warming gleames and shines of mercy distemper them still they are humble they are square men nothing comes amisse to them they will fall right which way ever they are cast if lowly Look as vessells whose sayls are filled if well ballasted they run a more steady course so is it here with the Saints when they pray with full sayled joy of faith yet when this holy ballast of humility is in the hold of the heart and not meerly aloft in shew above decks appearing to men they are not soon lifted up with every good successe they meet with but keep low and deep and carry it evenly with the Lord as humbly if not more humbly then before The Saints know well they are but beggers and stand in need of much they prayse not their good prayers but their good Master for the almes of grace which they get Not unto us and because once was too little to set forth their owne unworthinesse of any mercy they repeat it againe not unto us but to thy Name give glory c. Psal 115. 1. Liitle cause to be proud of a trade or art of such holy begging albeit through the bounty of God it proves
our selves and thereby furthereth such humility 2 Get our hearts filled with love to the Lord. Love is a stooping grace it will 2. Love to the Lord. make a Christian think meanly of all he saith or doth in behalf of Christ whom he loveth that he never speaketh nor doth enough for him Love will make a man amplifie his worth and excellency and glory and even be speaking well even the best of him and that wil surely make him carry it submissively to him as very loath to displease or dishonor him and when at any time a Christian wrongeth or offendeth the Lord Oh how will love occasion self-loathing and displeasure and distaste and trouble for it The Lord Jesus in giving that answer in that poor womans hearing Luke 7. 47. Her sins which are many are forgiven her for she loved much sheweth that love also set her on work in such humble and melting sort to expresse the secret desires of her soul unto him touching the conserving and clearing of her Justification ver 38. 3 Be we sincere in heart in our prayers 3. Sincerity which we make The sincere hearted Publican will humble himself in seeking of Gods favour by prayer when the leaven of hypocrisie will heave and puff up that Pharisee whilst he is praying Luke 18. Sincerity will make us in prayer speak all freely and ingenuously on the part of God and Christ in way of good and on our own part in way of our evil and emptiness it will make men of yeilding and flexible tempers and cause persons to be open and plain hearted with the Lord and that they shall not refuse or be unwilling to take any shame before God 4 Improve we the thoughts and serious 4. Thoughts of our need and Gods greatnes considerations of our needy conditions as likewise of the greatnesse of God The Saints are stiled such as are beggers in spirit Matth. 5 3. hungry ver 6. Luke 1. 53 Destitute ones Psal 102. 17. such as whose best habilements are rags Isaiah 64. 6. Clay vessels the Lord our potter ver 8. Dust Gen. 18. 27. and such like the consideration whereof kept those Saints of God as Abraham and the rest humble in their praiers When we look at this ragged condition of ours it will make us remember our selves and keep us humble in our Supplications 5 Spread we much our own and Ancestors 5. Thoughts of our Ancestors sins sins before the Lord when we are to pray And thus did Daniel chap. 9. thus did Ezra chap. 9. The very serious mention and meditation of an offence of a child of God against his Father will make a Regenerate nature begin to work and then will issue such holy blushes in the face of an ingenious Christian If through the wily slights of Satan and our deceitful hearts we should begin to gaze on our goodly feathers and have some risings of spirit in way of pride yet at the sight of this black foot of ours we should then assuredly fall in our spirits 6 Take we all holy advantages of such 6. Taking advantage of melting workings in our selves melting weeping plights in which we are sometimes above others Davids heart being in that humble plight upon occasion of a good word of the Prophet sent to him from God then David goeth in and prayeth and then he carryeth it so humbly 2 Sam. 7. 18 19 c. When Ezra upon the hearing of the evils among them was put into that abased frame Ezra 9. 3. then he falleth into that humble sort to pray before the Lord ver 5 6. c. So whilst Nehemiahs heart was even broken at the present hearing of the sad newes he forthwith setteth himself in solemn wise to pray and weep before the Lord Nehem. 1. 2 3. compared with verse 4 5. c. Albeit such melting desires and inclinations should haply be raised from other causes or spiritual miseries yet being stirring already they may the better be spiritualized There are times when we are so strangely stupified that scarce any thing will affect us but when affected seriously with any thing it is an advantrge if improved wisely to turn such waters the sluces being now opened into the right channel 7 In our secret approaches to the Lord 7. Premeditation spend some time in serious premeditations it will help to put us into a more serious frame of spirit and that is the next neighbour to an humble and sensible plight It will add plummets to fleety lofty spirits especially if we seriously consider of his Majesty and Soveraignty before whom wee come surely that will help to bring us on our knees The sight of the Kings Colours will doubtlesse make all but some presumptuous carelesse stout spirits to lower their sails even when they are going on full sail'd in prayer CHAP. VI. Of Sincerity required in Prayer HAving spoken in part of the third general thing propounded touching the conditions required to the incessant practice of this Duty of Prayer and therein handled two of those conditions required namely Faith and Humility we come now to a third namely Sincerity or Purity or Integrity The approved Suppliants are such as call upon God out of a pure heart 2 Tim. 2. 22. such as call upon him in Truth Psal 145. 18. The prayer of the upright is a delight to the Lord Prov. 15. 8. Prayer that is pure Job 16. 17. For our better handling of this Requisite to prayer consider we 1 Wherein this Purity Integrity and Sincerity required in prayer doth consist 2 Why the Lord requireth it 3 What are the Marks of it 4 What Meanes and Helps there are to it 5 And lastly what Motives may stir us up to indeavour it To the first we answer That such Sincerity consisteth in these six or seven Sincerity consisteth things 1 In carrying on the whole business of 1. In praying as to God prayer as to God Whether we confesse our sins and miseries or crave redresse of them whether we ask such or such blessings or favours for our selves or others or whether we blesse the Lord for Grace already vouchsafed us for what else we do in Prayer we are to carry it with such awe and reverence as those which are speaking to God and with such intention and attention and observance as those that are now to deal with God and to keep our true distance neither heartlesly distrustful and dismayed and yet not heedlesly and presumptuously or malepertly bold with God Afraid of him yet not terrified by him sollaced in him therein yet trembling before him satisfied in him yet unsatisfied in continued desires of mercy from him resting on him yet restlesse and albeit restlesse as pressing upon him for mercies we need yet resting on him quietly for the same Having such apprehensions of God in the duty as befitteth him and as are sutable to us to the Duty to the present work and workings therein If we confess our
musings 8 Spiritual drowsinesse sluggishnesse 8. Sluggishness and slightiness of heart When heart and mind is of a drowzie temper it is of a dreaming temper full of impertinent fancies even when to be imployed in prayer or the like yea if both body and soul be not in a waking and watching plight the soul wil be apt to be hurried with impertinencies temptations Matth. 26. 41. Watch and pray lest yee enter into temptation Now touching the second thing propounded Remedies against distractions in praier even the Remedies of such distractions in prayer Let but diligent heed be taken and conscionable indeavour used against each of the former occasions and causes thereof and it will help to redresse the same Espy out and bewaile the secret guile and wilinesse of heart get your heart rid of those distrustful cares of that Disconcontent and inordinacy of affection banish that spirit of Lust and of Error from your souls beware of that family contention and that spiritual or corporal supineness and you wil in a good measure get rid of such distractions in prayer But yet for our better help herein 1 Make conscience of holy and due Holy ●●●paration unto prayer preparation of our selves unto prayer Exod. 34. 3. Moses must come alone to God and leave the flocks Jacob ferrieth over all belonging to him on the other side of the river before wrestleth with the Angel Gen. 32. Abraham leaveth the servants and the Asses at the foot of the hill when to goe to sacrifice to the Lord. Gen. 22. David had got his heart into a very serious and fixed frame for that praising part of his prayer and yet as thinking that all too little saith hee will yet rouse himselfe up to that work Psal 57. 7. O God my heart is fixed my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise and verse 8. I my selfe will arise right early So good Deborah rowseth up herself amain to powr out prayses to the Lord Jud. 5. 12. Awake awake Deborah awake utter a song A gracious heart should think it self never enough awaked to such holy work experience of Saints will prove it and when they can by grace get their minds and hearts a little sequestred to consider seriously of the work they are going about and of God and Christ before whom they come and of themselves who are to come before the Lord and the like before they actually addresse themselves to solemne prayer how intently and spiritually and strongly they are wont then to bee carryed through the duty and all other times when they more suddenly and inconsiderately set upon prayer how unprofitably they are wont to spend such a time and how many hurries of spirit this way and that way they are cumbred with and much adoe to make any thing of it at such times 2. Spiritual wisedome is another help 2 Godly wisedome Godly wisedom will choose places for prayer which are freest from any distracting occasion Hence Christ so often repaires to the mountaine to pray Wisedome will seasonably discern a deluding cheating thought yea though it come with its vizard or with its painted face wearing in view the very livery of our heavenly Father and much readier will it espy other thoughts which would slyly withdraw our minds by little and little from the present businesse of our souls Wisedome is before him that hath understanding Prov. 17. 24. whilst the fools eyes are wandring in the corners of the world The wise Christian keeps his eye from gadding after vaine objects and keeps it rather intent upon wisedomes works and wayes The heart of the wise is at his right hand the instrument of action Eccles 10. 2. He hath his heart and spirit at an holy beek to be imployed as wisedom shall direct as there is need of the exercise of thoughts or desires or griefe or joy or feare or anger in an holy way or work a truely wise Christian hath them at hand to do their several homage to the Lord being thereto commanded by his spirit The wise mans eyes are in his head Eccles 2. 14. The truely wise Christian hath the ready and seasonable use of the eyes of his mind and understanding holy thoughts and apprehensions are not to seek when the Lord calleth for the use thereof as in prayer or the like but they are then active and so ready to keep out worse or unjust thoughts A wise Christian being also privy to his owne inability to keep his heart close to God he betaketh himselfe to the Lord as he did Psal 86. 11. Vnite my heart to fear thy name He would have the Lord to keep his heart close to any part of his fear or worship that it scatter not wander not therefrom Intruders cannot get in unseene and untaken notice of whilst this lightsome watchful grace is imployed as they will in darker places This skilfull Pilot at the helm by keeping its eye upon Gods compasse avoids many yawes and much lee-way in a gracious Christians course in prayer or otherwise which other unwise Christians make 3. Wathfulnesse which is the seasonable 3 Watchfulnesse and practical use of that holy wisedome upon every occasion This will bee examining such as knock at the door of the heart whilst the spirit is talking with God in prayer Those godly Church-officers described Revel 4. 6 8. with their eyes before and behind and within also to observe all without and as well also within themselves they goe on uninterrupted in the worship of God as though their cry was but one and the same continued cry night and day They rest not night nor day saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which is and was and is to come This pondering the path of our feet is a help to going right on in this or any other way of God without diversions from it or stumbling in it Prov. 4. 26 27. Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy wayes be established Turn not to the right hand nor to the left the former is the meanes to the latter A good watch at the City gates the out-lets and inlets of suggestions to the mind or motions from it will keep us from trouble-Cities such trouble-souls as are these distractions and help rid them of such Vagrants as they are Such holy careful oversights of the banks will prevent the dividing of the streams and issues of our minds even our thoughts that they run in no other channel and way then is meet for them When we go to prayer we are assaying by the ladder Jesus Christ to climb up to heaven and this holy care of our feet keeps them from slipping and us from falls Look to thy foot when thou goest into the house of God namely to worship God in prayer or otherwise Eccles 5. 1. When wee go to pray we go spiritually to plow and this holy minding of our work and our hand helpeth to keep us in our right furrow 4 Holinesse and
without measure or whip them to death Potters doe not use to conceive so deep a distaste against a poore vessel of clay as to rage against the same without all respect to their own credit or to their own workmanship and therefore surely thou our heavenly Father and Potter canst not wilt not doe thus Thus David pleads his Fashioning by God Psal 119. 73. Thy hands have made and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandements God himselfe maketh it an argument to himselfe why he wil bear his people Esay 46. 3 4. I have made and I will beare even I will carry and will deliver you And it is a prevailing reason with God not to contend for ever lest the soule should faile before me saith he and the spirit which I have made Esay 57. 16. so would God have this an argument to help the weakest faith to expect its desires above all its feares Esay 43. 1 2. But now thus saith the Lord that created thee O Jacob and he that frmed thee O Israel Feare not And so V. 7. For I have created him for my glory I have formed him yea I have made him And therefore surely the Saints may wel urge this in any like case in prayer 2. We may plead the imbecillity and We are fraile creatures frailty of our natures So Iob pleadeth for the speeding of Gods manifesting of his pardoning and reconciling grace to him Iob 7. 21. Why dost thou not pardon my transgression and take away mine iniquitie for now shall I sleep in the dust c. As if he had said Lord if ever thou intendest as I am perswaded thou dost to renew the former beams of thy favour and pardoning mercy thou hadst not need to defer too long lest it come somewhat too late for ere long I shall returne to my dust This is Davids plea in the like case Psal 39. 12 13. Keep not silence at my teares for I am a stranger with thee Spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I goe hence and be no more So Iob pleadeth this Iob 13. 25. Wilt thou break a leafe driven to and fro and wilt thou pursue dry stubble What credit it is to so great a Majesty as thou art to shew thy power against a poor leafe or to runne after a poor leafe which every puffe of wind whisketh hither and thither or is it any honour so much as to a man to be cutting and hewing a poor leafe which can make no resistance Thus Abraham pleadeth for Audience and patience in hearing him because he is but dust and ashes of little substance short continuance before the Lord if the Lord please now to heare him whilst he is before him he is not like to trouble him long it is but a very little and he is gone he is but weak and it is not much discouragement in denial of requests which he is able to beare Gen. 18. 27. And the Lord hath sanctified this plea as an argument to himselfe to shew his servants mercy Psal 103. 13 14. He pittieth those that feare him for he knoweth our frame he remembreth that we are but dust So Esay 57. 16. I will not contend for ever for the spirit should faile before me This prevaileth with the Lord not to charge too hard upon his poore people 3. Plead we the extremities of our miseries We are in extremities inward or outward our extremities being Gods opportunities of hearing and helping us Psal 27. 16. Have mercy upon me O Lord why so for I am desolate And Psal 143. 7. Heare me speedily O Lord why so my spirit faileth I have but a little spirit left O Lord to breath after thee and speak to thee let me not spend that in waste Lord my soule is dying away speak Lord answer Lord before I faint quite away A gracious answer Lord would even fetch life in me again and nothing else but that wil recover me and therefore heare me speedily a poor dying sinking fainting spirit O Lord I intreat thee So Psal 69. 12. Save me O God for the waters are come even to my soule I sinke in the deep mire where is no standing This plea in effect is thus Lord I am ready to drown if ever thou wouldst save a poor perishing servant of thine save me my troubles and temptations are too deep for me I am ready to sinke over head and eares in them and therefore Lord reach hither thy gracious hand and beare up my head above water least otherwise I miscarry but especially if such extremities continue the continuance of them may be pleaded Such is Hemans plea Psa 88. 14 15. Lord why hidest thou thy face from me I am afflicted and ready to die from my youth up whilst I suffer thy terrours I am distracted and God maketh this an allowed plea to himselfe of shewing his people mercy in such a case Esay 42. 19 20. I have a long time holden my peace Now will I destroy and devoure at once And I will bring the blinde by a way they know not c. Christ the Angel useth this plea Zech. 1. 12. O Lord of Hosts how long wilt thou not have mercy on Jerusalem against which thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten yeers 4. Plead we our helplesnesse in our We are helples otherwise selves and in any other besides himselfe So Psal 22. 11. Be not far from me for trouble is neer for there is none to help So Ier. 14. 22. Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause raine or can the heavens give showres Art not thou he O Lord our God therefore we will wait upon thee for thou hast made all these things So 2 Chro. 20. 12. We have no might we know not what to doe but our eyes are unto thee Either then thou must help O Lord at this dead lift or else thine enemies will prevaile So Psal 60. 11. Give us help against trouble for vain is the help of man When people are in a perishing condition it must not keep them from making out to God but they must take this to bottom their requests upon for mercy their spirituall oppressours and oppressions must make them repaire to the Lord and that wil prevaile for succour from that great one the Lord Jesus They shall cry unto the Lord Esay 19. 20. because of the oppressours and he shall send them a Saviour and a great one and he shall deliver them Psal 72. 12. It is engaged concerning Christ the true Solomon He shall deliver the needy when he crieth the poore also and him that hath no helper He cannot forget the cry of his sucking shiftlesse babes that hang upon the breast and can no more shift for a living then a poore infant God himselfe urgeth his people to come to him with this plea in their mouthes Hos 14. 2 3. Take unto you words and say Take away all
Heathens These may please mens eares but in prayer whereas suppliants should be most humble and self-denying they are loathsome to the Lord. 2. Such Repetitions which are vain 2 When vain Matth. 6. 7. Vse not vain repetitions vaine that is empty frothy impertinent unprofitable repetitions wherein is no spiritual life heat vigour nor yet solidity nor integrity 3. Such repetitions which are Idolized 3 When Idolized Matth. 6. they think they shall be heard for their much babling to conceit that God would not or could not take notice of our wants unlesse we should word it in that sort with him is a great dishonour to his free and rich grace and to his faithfull and watchfull care and respect to his suppliants or to rest and trust in our Repetitions that God will the rather regard us is to make God like a mortall man 4. Such Repetitions which spring from 4 When from hypocrisie hypocrisie namely from secret desire to seem to be fervent in prayer or to be thought of others to spend much time in prayer or to stop the mouth of an accusing conscience which would else be quarrelling at persons if too briefe in prayer and therefore to fill up times men will be making such repetitions of the same things and phrases in their prayers such like repetitions as these are sinfull and heathenish men thereby take Gods name in vaine abuse his holy eare willing to draw him to listen to bablings they derogate from the glory of Gods wisdome would make God to be one that is dull of hearing or conceiving as childish as the sonnes of men like an Idol Baal 1 King 18. needing long and loud crying to awaken him by a vain reiteration O Baal heare us Such cast disparagement and dishonour upon the renowned Ordinance of Prayer making it to be but as empty expence of time in aiery vain and vanishing expressions So much for the answer to the former part respecting length of prayer Now consider in what cases and with what Cautions we may be short in prayer We may be short in prayer in case of bodily Ayls We may be short in prayer 1. in case of bodily sicknesse pain Faintnesse and death approaching Dan. 10. 16. 17. How can thy servant talk with this my Lord there remaining no strength in me Sick Hezekiah and Jacob were short in prayer Esay 38. 1 2. Heb. 11. 21. Jacob worshippeth God leaning on his staffe 2. In case of pressing occasions unavoydable 2 Of pressing occasions by ordinary prudence or providence when the Philistims came suddenly upon Samuel and upon Saul in prayer they soon dispatch 1 Sam. 7. 14. 3. In case of prevailing indisposednesse 3 Of prevailing indisposedness of heart to pray after much strivings to pray yet distempers and hurries of spirit abate not better then be short then multiply words in any senseless and tumultuous manner and take Gods Name in vain 4. In case a Christian be personally persecuted 4 Of personall persecution and may not stay long in one place 5. In case the prayer to be made be 5 Of Occasionall prayer onely occasionall above that of our ordinary course In such a case Hezekiah is short 2 Kings 19. 14. to 20. and 2 Chro. 30. 20 21. Onely in spending so little time in prayer take we these Cautions Cautions touching short prayer 1 That it be not usuall 1. That it be not ordinary and usuall with us so to doe but rather occasionall to be ordinarily so brief in prayer would argue strangenesse and unacquaintednesse with the Lord men not using to hold any long discourse with strangers It would manifest suspition and distrust and sleighting of God as men that use to speak either seldome or but little at once with persons they suspect or dare not trust or who are not regarded Besides it would evidence a self-full spirit they have little businesse with the Lord and therefore will not exchange many words before him however it will be an argument at best of slender abilities and weaknesse of mind that they cannot hold any long discourse with God 2. That it be not out of a worldly 2 That it be not so from a worldly spirit spirit so earnest and intent upon the world as affording scarce time for God or good family and closet services of God must therefore be dispatched usually in haste and a hurry there are so many that call upon such persons without that they have not leisure or list to be with God in prayer within they are so familiarly and fully imployed with these new friends that they speak but by snatches with God They are so much abroad that they can be but little at home when these choaking weeds of the world spread so fast so far that they croud and thrust the good grain hearbs and fruits into a very narrow room and compasse 3. That it be not from negligence 3 It be not from sleightnesse or sleightnesse yea or from prophanenesse of spirit supposing that such a short good-morrow or good-even will serve the Lords turn wel enough 4. That it be not out of improvidence 4 That it be not from improvidence when by the use of godly foresight wisedome and prudence such streights of time for prayer might have been prevented for that will sadly afflict and abase a Christian if he be indeed gracious and tender-hearted CHAP. VI. About pleading in Prayer WE have already spoken to some Qu. 6 Cases of conscience considerable About pleading in prayer in the incessant practise of this duty of prayer A sixth Case commeth now to be spoken to namely touching holy pleading with God in our prayers Wherein let us consider and cleare 1. That we must use holy pleas in prayer 2. What pleas we may use therein 3. What Rules we are to attend unto in our pleading with God in prayer Now first that we may and must plead That we must plead in prayer with God in prayer Esay 1. 18. God saith to penitent ones Come let us reason together God reasoneth with us by his word and providences outwardly and by the motions of his spirit inwardly but we reason with him by framing through the help of his Spirit certain holy arguments grounded upon allowed principles drawn from his nature name word or works And it is condemned as a very sinfull defect in professours that they did not plead the Churches case with God Jer. 30. 13. There is none to plead thy cause that thou mayest be bound up If you persue the examples of the most famous prevailing suppliants of God recorded in Scripture roules you shall finde them using holy pleas in their prayers for themselves or others Thus did Abraham Gen. 18. 25. Shall not the judge of the whole earth doe right So Jacob Gen. 32. 9 12 13. Which saidest return to thy Fathers house And saidest surely I will doe thee good Which is as if he had
said Lord I undertook not the journey upon my own head but thou badest me goe and I have thy word for a good successe and therefore I look thou shouldst beare me harmlesse and blesse me in this undertaking So Moses David Daniel and others their prayers are full of holy pleas And that we may strengthen this by two or three reasons consider Reasons 1 It s an argument of familiarity with God acquaintance and friendship thus to plead with God in prayer and therefore most suitable to this holy talking with God As men use to plead with such as they are most intimate withall so is it here Hence the Saints which have been men inward with the Lord to whom he hath made himselfe most known and opened his mind and bosome to them and they theirs to him they ever use the most pleas with God in their prayers What meere men more intimate with God then Abraham Moses and David and who pleaded it more stoutly freely with him then they did This is a branch of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we have through Christ and it being so deare a bought priviledge we may wel improve it to the utmost Ephes 3. 12. By whom we have free accesse with confidence Heb. 10. 19. By the blood of Jesus we have accesse with boldness unto the holy place 2. It will be an argument of fervency 2 Of Fervency and holy seriousnesse in our spirits in prayer to back the same with prevailing pleas As it is in all petitioners amongst men suing for things they most strongly desire 3. It will be an argument of our careful and serious minding and recording of 3. Of holy minding of Gods word and works what the Lord holdeth forth in his word or works for our encouragement in our prayers Hence when the Ministers of the Church are wished to be Pleaders in the Churches Case they are called Remembrancers Recorders and therefore men fittest to plead yea persons called to plead with the Lord for his people Esa 62. 6 7. Ye that make mention of the Lord keep not silence Give him no rest c. and the Hebrew Affix doth shew their eminency in it the Word Mazkir there mentioned is for such a one who by his office did note down al the memorable matters of the King and used to suggest to the King seasonable Items of things to be done accordingly Esa 36. 3. 2. Sam. 8 16. But three or four things may be objected against the necessity of such pleading Objections against pleading in prayer Obj. 1. Jesus Christ is the common pleader and Advocate for his people 1 John 2. 1. If we sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous What need they then do any more then barely present their requests unto God in his name Answ True Christs office is to present our requests to God which we bring before him but withall also to perfume those holy pleaes with the odour of his merit and mediation The Lord Christ meant to pray the Father for them but yet will have the Disciples in his name to ask more to purpose then ever they had done Ioh. 16 23. 24. Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name ask that is more freely and fully and strongly that your joy may be full yea he is an Advocate to sollicite and plead on our behalf as well our pleaes for what we sue for as the suits themselves Obj. 2. God is not as man hard but rather easie to be intreated as being much more merciful and wise then any of the sonnes of men whose wisedome from above is to be easie to be intreated Besides as men the more intire and sincere they are the more candid they are in ready answers to others desires which they may grant They will not assent to carry it otherwise then they intend no more will the Lord but as he is so will Mich. 7 18 Esa 65. 14 he shew himselfe to be ready to shew mercy and ready to forgive and therefore what need such a urging on pleading Answ True the Lord is thus ready to help and heare yet who more full of pleaes for his mercy then David the Pen-man of the Holy Ghost in ascribing this to God that he is ready to forgive and plenteous in his mercy to all that cal upon him Psal 86. 5. in that very place he pleadeth incline thine ear and hear why so for I am poor and needy vers 1. and preserve thou my soul why so for I am thy servant and trust in thee vers 2. c. Bee merciful to me O Lord why so for I cry to thee continually vers 3. And rejoyce the soul of thy servant why so for unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soul Verse 4 which is backed with another argument from this very gracious disposition of God vers 5. For thou Lord art good and ready to shew mercy and rich in goodnesse to all that call upon thee This readinesse then to mercy must not hinder but further the Saints pleading in prayer and help to finde the more Argument whereby to plead with God therein Jesus Christ knew that his Father alwayes heard him Ioh. 11. 42. yet in that his solemne prayer recorded Ioh. 17. how many Arguments doth he use to strengthen his Petitions as to glorifie him verse 4. 5. Father glorifie thy Son why so The Houre or the Time is come Ibid And verse 4. 5. I have glorified thee on Earth And I have finished the work thou hast given me And now or therefore glorifie me c. V. 21. Let them be one in us why so That the world may know thou hast sent me V. 24. Let them be with me to behold my glory why so For thou lovedst me before the world was Surely God himself must needs be ready to do what himselfe willeth yet as one stirring up himselfe to act he argueth with himselfe Esay 51. 9. Awake Awake O Arme of the Lord why so Art not thou it that hast wounded the Dragon and verse 10. Art not thou it that hast dried up the Sea So Esay 63. 8. For he said Surely they are my people children that will not lye So he was their Saviour and Psal 12. 5. For the sighing of the poor and cry of the needy I will arise saith the Lord and set him at liberty from him that pusseth at him God glorifieth his readinesse to mercy in that we no sooner plead for it in our prayers but he sheweth mercy Esay 65. 14. Whilst they yet speake I will heare Psal 65. 2. O thou that art hearing prayers It is the Lord who prepareth our hearts in prayer and furnisheth them with holy pleas and it is the rather a pledge that he is ready to heare the pleas of his own spirit The Lord may and sometimes doth prevent his people with mercy Esay 61. 24. Before they call I will heare Yet ordinarily he will have us to