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

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Lord and thou art exalted as head above all 1 Chron. 29.10.11 David calleth upon his soule and all that is within him to praise his holy Name Ps 103.1.2 The Apostle requireth that in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving we should make our requests knowne unto God Philip. 4.6 Also he saith Let us by Christ offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of our lips giving thankes unto his Name Heb. 10.13 Reas 1 Praise and thankes are 〈◊〉 unto God for hee himselfe do most excellent being infinite in all holinesse of wisedome power mercy and all the rest of his divine attributes If there be any excellency in any creatures the praise belongeth unto God because hee made it excellent and if any good thing be bestowed upon any man whatsoever was the secondary meanes God was the first cause and 〈◊〉 the true giver thereof Of him are all things therefore to him be glory for ever Rom. 11.36 Reas 2 It is good pleasant and comely to praise the Lord Psal 147.1 It is good because it is the will of God being a part of his worship It is the best meanes to continue and make good unto us the good things we have 1 Tim. 4.4 It is the best meanes to procure those good things which wee yet have not It is well pleasing unto God for he saith He that offereth praise glorifieth mee Psal 50.23 It doth become the upright to bee thankfull Psal 33.1 for it doth shew their humility and dependance on God acknowledgment that they in all things are beholding unto God This reproveth all those who Vse 1 notwithstanding they have the great booke of the creation and frame of the world to looke upon and the booke of the Scriptures to looke into both which doe set forth the unspeakeable excellencies of God yet never admire him nor speake of him to his praise whereas if a mortall man shall doe some curious piece of worke shewing therein some rare skill and invention his worke shall be gazed on and admired and the workman praised of every one and hee shall be halfe deified And if a friend shall save their lives or deliver them out of prison or doe any other such speciall kindnesse unto them they thanke him and acknowledge themselves beholding unto him as long as they live whereas God which gave power and will to the same friend to doe thee good and doth give them all other good things who would also deliver them from the bondage of sinne and Satan a●● from eternall death he is forgotten and is never thanked by them yea many of those who in their distresse doe seeke unto him and are holpen even they like the nine Lepers never returne to give thanks Luk 17.17 It is ten to one as we say if any give glory to God Most men ascribe the praise of all good things which they have unto nature fortune lucke or chance unto their wit or to their hands or to their friends to any person or thing rather then unto God without whom they could have had nothing These men are wilfully blinde if they doe not see that Gods hand doth all things But if they see that all things are of God and yet will not give him the praise and thankes they doe much wrong God in depriving him of his honour and doe manifest themselves to be utterly unworthy of all good There is no sinne can bee more hatefull then ingratitude There is no sinne can bee more hurtfull to the committer of it for it doth provoke God and cause him in wisedome and justice to take away from them those good gifts which once hee gave unto them As he did with his daughter Israel of whom he saith Hos 2.8.9 Because she did not know that I did give her corne c. Therfore will I returne and take away my corne in the time thereof And for this cause God giveth men over unto reprobate mindes because they having meanes to know God and cause to be thankeful Yet they doe not glorifie God neither are thankefull Rom. 1.21.28 Vse 2 Let all that professe the name of God learne hereby to bee alwaies as readie to speake of God and to God in praises and thanksgiving as to aske and receive any thing from him by petition For which cause we must consider the workes and word of God for they testifie of him Gods infinite wisedome power mercy and goodnesse and all other his excellencies are seene in the creation preservation and redemption of man and are all clearely revealed in his word In so much that when David did consider the heavens and the worke of his fingers hee breaketh forth into an holy admiration of God saying O Lord our Lord Psal 8.1.9 how excellent is thy name in all the earth And the Apostle could not speake of the worke of redemption by Christ but he saith concerning God To whom be glory for ever Amen Gal. 1.5 Eph. 3.21 If wee would but consider how little good and how much evill wee deserve at Gods hands how that it is his mercy wee are not consumed and if wee would consider how little evill Lam. how much good wee receive every day of his meere goodnesse we could not chuse but be thankefull Wherefore wee must bewaile our barrennesse of heart and with David call upon our soules and all that is within us to blesse and praise his holy name Psal 103.1 We must call his benefits to remembrance and tell our soules what great things the LORD hath done for us recounting one benefit after another untill we have convinced our hearts of our dutie and have enforced our selves unto thankfulnesse But our thanks must not be verball onely like that of the proud Pharisie saying Lord I thanke thee Luk. 18.11 they must be heartie and reall which is then then wee shew that wee do indeed acknowledge our selves bound and beholding to God for those things for which we say we give him thanks namely when we use his gifts as he hath appointed to his glory and when we give our selves both in soule and body to his service thus let us give thanks it is good it is pleasant it will become us Then this nothing more pleasing unto God nothing more profitable unto us for everie heartie thanks is a reall effectuall begging of continuance and blessing upon what we have and of new supplies unto what wee have not such shall never want good gifts because God knoweth he shall never want hearty thanks Thine is kingdome He saith not thou hast a kingdome but which is more thine is kingdome that is all kingdome and soveraigntie is thine in originall right and is not a derived soveraigntie as all other governments are Whence we learne Absolutenesse of authoritie Doct. 3 and Soveraigntie is properly and onely in God The Lord made that great Monarch and earthly king of kings Nebuchadnezzar to acknowledge and proclaime
it up nothing so high above us or so farre from us but with this hand wee may reach it to us Hee that wrastleth by the strength of prayer though hee wrastle with the strong God shall prevaile as did Iacob of whom it is said Hee had power over the Angell and prevailed hee wept and made supplication Hos 12.4 Of all helps prayer is readiest at hand in all places and at all times if wee be not without our hearts wee neede not be without helpe It is the most universall helpe it is good for all persons at all times in all things It is a most certain helpe no faithfull prayer was ever made in vaine It is a key to open heaven all that have skill to handle it may from thence fetch all things that may doe themselves or their neighbour good Moreover when wee have made our requests knowne to GOD and have commended our cause to him by prayer this will comfort quiet and rejoyce our hearts so that wee neede bee no more sad with Hannah 1 Sam. 1.18 nor need we be carefull in any thing but may goe on in our calling in peace Phil. 4.6.7 and may lye downe in peace being assured that now God careth for us knowing that his wisedome truth and power are all set a worke for us And which is more then all which yet hath beene said Prayer is most pleasing to God hee delighteth to heare the voyce of his children It is a more sweet smelling sacrifice then that of incense It maketh way to thanksgiving It is a glorifying of his great name Sith it is the will of God that Vse 4 we should pray all feare of approaching to the throne of his grace may hence be remoued What though God be a God of majestie and thou bee an unworthy person in thy selfe It is no presumption to presse into his presence when hee commandeth this is instead of his scepter of acceptance of thee though no man might come uncalled unto that majesticall Ahashuereth yet any man might come being called nay the Queene was deposed from her place because she came not at his commandement So that it is not presumption to come but rebellion if you come not sith God every where in his word calleth you So that whatsoever thy case be thou maist come with good comfort to God and bee holpen as they say to the blinde man Marke 10.49 Be of good comfort hee calleth thee God calleth you to this duty feare not therefore to goe to God in prayer at any time Objections against prayer answered To this end you must bee able and willing to answer and resist all such objections and discouragements that Satan and your owne heart shall raise against it You may learne how to answer to those objections against the necessity of prayer namely God knoweth what we need and hee hath already decreed what we shall have and many that make no conscience of prayer have more then heart could wish by that which is written before in this doctrine in the third reason taken from the necessity of prayer And for your help I will propound and answer other objections as followeth I am not assured that I am converted Ob. and am the childe of God or that I have the Spirit of God wherefore I think that it belongeth not unto me to pray You are by profession a convert Answ and the childe of God and it may be you have the Spirit of God though yet you do not acknowledge it therefore it belongeth unto you to pray But suppose that you are not converted doth not God command you to convert Ier. 31.18 and turn unto him and finding your inability to turne you should with Ephraim pray saying Turne thou me and I shall bee turned And do you finde the want of the Spirit you should the rather pray for it that God according to his promise may give it Luk. 11.13 Do not say I cannot pray untill God have given me grace and abilitie to pray but having an expresse commandement of God to pray you must set about it assay to pray as well as you can desiring and expecting grace from him to enable you to pray For God doth not usually let us feele the strength of his grace requisite to the performance of a good dutie till that out of conscience of obeying of the command we craving his helpe do set about the doing of it Ob. My sinnes are so many and so great and I have relapsed into such grievous sinnes since I last prayed that I am ashamed and afra●d that I dare not come into the presence of God againe to pray unto him Answ The greater and more hainous your sinnes are the more need you have to come unto God whom by them you have offended to aske of him pardon of them And sith God is onely able to cure and heale your soule there is the more cause that by prayer you should seeke unto him to cleanse you of your sinnes and to give you power against them David doth not say because his sinne was great therefore I dare not pray but therefore prayeth thus Psal 25.11 For thy Names sake O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great And is not forgivenesse of sins one of the petitions which Christ hath bid you to make daily when you pray To bee ashamed for your sinne when you come before God is good and argueth that you are the fitter for prayer Ier. 31.19.20 and that you are now a meet object of Gods mercie and compassion but to be ashamed to pray and not to dare to come into Gods presence being by him commanded is a great sinne to be repented of Indeed we should not sinne at all 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 but if any man sinne be his sinnes many or few small or great we have an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation who hath made satisfaction for and hath covered and done away all our sinnes When you come before God to pray in the name and mediation of Christ God looketh upon your sinnes which you confesse unto him as satisfied for done away in Christ Why then should you be afraid and ashamed to pray unto him Ob. When I should pray I feele my selfe so much straitened so dead and so much indisposed to prayer I want words and matter I can neither begin or at least hold out well in prayer to the end for that I am pestred with so many wandring impertinent and sometimes evill thoughts I cannot remember all the sinnes which I should confesse nor yet all the needfull good things which I should aske I cannot pray in faith but am so full of wavering and doubting that God is not well pleased with my prayer I oft feele my selfe worse rather then better after I have prayed I rise up oft times from prayers heavie and discomforted and I offend so many wayes in prayer that I oft times am readie
his life The unbeleeving Noble man was in the midst of plenty 2 Kin. 7.19 but did not eate thereof Men may taste and eate and put on cloathes and yet be neither warme nor satisfied Hag. 1.6 While the daintiest meate is in the mouthes of men it may be their bane and not their nourishment as it fared with the children of Israell Num. 11.23 who while the meate was betweene their teeth ere it was chewed the wrath of the Lord smote them with a very great plague Vse 1 Wee may hence safely conclude against Popish merits for if all men must receive their bread of free gift so that they cannot deserve so much as to challenge preservation of due debt then much lesse can they deserve so as to challenge salvation by their owne merits for we see that Peter himselfe was to obtaine bread by humble petition Let all men therefore take heed how they challenge any thing at Gods hand by debt of desert lest he give them nothing but what they earne Rom. 6.23 even the wages of sinne which is eternall death Vse 2 Sith all temporalties are Gods gifts and must be held of him as chiefe Lord and can doe him that holdeth them no good without Gods blessing then they deale presumptuously with God and foolishly for themselves that will lay hands upon the good creatures of God such as are food and the like necessaries of this life without as king leave of God or craving a blessing upon the use of them This sinne is common among all sort both rich and poore noble and base who if there be not a Minister present or some childe to say grace as they call it they fall to their food and depart from it as irreverently and brutishly as any swine The richer sort do many of them live as if this were onely the poore mans prayer If they have goods before hand they with the foole in the Gospell say Eat drink be merry Luk. 3● 39.10 God is not in all their thoughts though haply hee be so neare them that they feele his just wrath with that presumptuous foolish man ere next morning For as Zophar in Iob truely spake if it had beene as wisely applied Iob 20.22.23 In the fulnesse of his sufficiencie hee shall be in straights every hand of the wicked shall come upon him When he is about to fill his belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall raine it upon him while he is eating This Belshazzar found true in fearefull experience when being amongst his cups hee saw the handwriting on the wall which did portend the losse of his kingdome Deut. 5.5 Because men will not seeke the things of this life of God and because when they have them they will not in them see God the giver of them God doth oft cast them into want or what hee giveth them is given in his wrath and is accursed to them their food accursed their apparell their marriage their lands and all that they have because they do not sanctifie and make them good to themselves 1 Tim. 4.4.5 by prayer and thankesgiving Gods own children must be remembred of this their fault of seeking to earthly meanes and trusting to them Many of them are too like Asa if they have outward meanes they seeke to them and not to God who must give them with a blessing or they cannot profit those that have them But let Gods hand upon his servant Asa be a warning to all that feare God His disease was but in his feet yet because he sought not to the Lord 2 Chro. 16 12. but to the Physitians it was his death Considering that God is the Vse 3 giver of bread and of all other good things for this life this should move all men to get their names entred into his checkroule become servants to this great Master and being admitted to be members of his familie and houshold of faith this should cause them to approve themselves good servants by doing their Lord and masters will then may they be assured they shal want nothing that is good It is of this God and Father of whom it is said in the parable Luk 15.17 His servants have bread enough and to spare It is therefore good serving of this master who will alwaies either give much or cause the little which he giveth to be like the meale in the barrell that it shall not waste 1 King 17.14 or the oyle in the cruse that it shall not faile untill he send all plenty who can so blesse Daniels pulse and water Dan. 1.12.15 that he shall be as faire healthy wittie and every way in as good liking as those that fed upon all delicates And when this our Lord pleaseth to shew his power hee can blesse one meale that a man in the strength thereof may live forty dayes and forty nights 1 King 19.8 Whosoever are good servants and children to such a master such a Father how can they want For as he hath wherewithall to give so having commanded us to aske of him Iam. 1.5 hee will give to us liberally and never upbraid us with what hee hath given Moreover what hee giveth to his owne he giveth with a blessing which maketh rich Pro. 10 22. and he addeth no sorrow with it These things considered who would not serve and waite continually before this God who is a Lord so al-sufficient so bountifull Whosoever would have Vse 4 health peace and all other good things needfull for the body must be exhorted and perswaded hereby to aske them of God in whose gift they are and when they have received and doe injoy any thing they must acknowledge this as Gods gift with all thankfulnesse If a friend give us our board but a moneth or two we think our selves much beholding to him How much then are wee beholding to God at whose table we live of free cost all our life time Let us seek our maintenance of God 2 Kin. 6.27 for if the Lord doe not helpe as the King of Israel could say when there was nothing to be had either out of the barne floore or out of the winepresse we cannot have maintenance by any meanes Prayer is a speciall meanes to obtain good things with a blessing which if they be received with thanksgiving they are good indeed 1 Tim 4 8 Let us not therefore forget the Lord our Lord for it is he that giveth us power to get substance Deut. 8.18 What though we were borne to the things we doe possesse or they were given us or we bought them or did attaine them by hard labour and industry yet it must be acknowledged that Gods gift was in all these For who made our Ancestors who gaue them lands or livings to leave us who did put it into the hands and hearts of our friends to bestow any thing upon us did not the Lord
and with assurance of what they hope to have Phil. 4.6 and need be carefull in nothing For God according to the graciousnesse of his nature and truth of his promise doth care for them Doth not this open a gap to idlenesse improvidence Quest and unthriftinesse which are condemned in the Scripture the contraries whereof are commanded expresly and commended in the examples of good men and women yea of the very Ant or Pismire Pro 6.6.8 which provideth her meat in Summer and gathereth her food in harvest to which silly creature the Lord sendeth the sluggard to learne thrift and providence Doth not this likewise disallow all laying up of money or money-worth against old age or for posterity Answ To seeke to God for provision for the present day onely and then to leave the care of what wee shall have hereafter to God is not contrary to diligence in a calling providence to gather and thrift to save and lay up what God by his blessing hath bestowed upon any man It should be in Gods great familie as it is in some well ordered families among men the master of the familie beareth the burthen of care and providing meate and drinke and other necessaries the servants and children need care for nothing but to doe their worke If the master provide them their dinner and supper and lodging c. this is all they care for yet these servants if they be faithfull will bee painefull and provident for their master that there may be plenty brought in out of which they might have their daily allowance Therefore in harvest these servants reap and carry into the barn more in one day than need bee spent in many daies Yet their care is but for the present though their providence be for time to come So it is between the great Lord of all the earth and his servants he appointeth every man his worke in a lawfull calling a great part of his worke is to earne and gather in such things as may maintain him and his that there may be meate in Gods familie for a mans selfe and for his fellow servants as God shall please to distribute Here is labour providence and laying up by the servant but all is for the Lord his master When much is thus gathered into Gods barnes and storehouses say they be mens owne houses yet this servant should onely expect his dinner and supper and other maintenance from his master for the present day leaving the care of provision upon God it is not meet he should be his own carver This doctrine opposeth onely care of distrust and carking about what shall bee had hereafter doubting of Gods providence and successe of their labours but not the care of a wise providence to gather by lawfull meanes things meete for this life nor yet the care for laying up for them and theirs for God alloweth that when a man hath payed his debts Rom. 13.8 Eccles 3.12 and that he and his have comfortably injoyed a part according to the condition of their place and occasions and after that pious and charitable uses have taken up another part then the overplus may nay must be saved and reserved for afterwards Our Saviour would have the remainder of the loaves and fishes gathered up Ioh. 6.12 that nothing be lost And it doth belong to Parents to lay up for their children 2 Cor. 12.14 It is comfortable to Gods Vse 3 children to consider that God will have them be at his finding every day they may bee sure therefore if they will trust to this they shall be well provided for And seeing it is his will they shall aske their maintenance every day of him they have good leave and good occasion to increase an holy acquaintance with God by comming oft into his presence and speaking oft unto him Besides if the thiefe or vermine or any casualtie deprive us of what we thought should have maintained us we may go to him boldly for more for if wee depend on him according as hee hath commanded us it concerneth him to provide for us He hath store and great plenty he will provide for his children that which shal be sweet and good and enough It will not stand with his honour that his children should want No man under the Sunne can live more merrily more securely than Gods children may do for they need care for nothing but to please God Though there are many things for which they must labour in their calling yet there is nothing for which they need to care The children of Israel might lye downe and sleepe securely in the wildernesse when they had not one morsell of bread against to morrow for the morrow-day brought with it Manna provision for to morrow this was because God sustained them Psal 3 5. Psal 4.8 This holy security wee should alwaies have for it is the Lord which sustaineth us also This day Therefore bread must be asked every day If this petition for bread then the other petitions also whence we are taught Prayers must be made to God Doct. 6 every day It was Davids use At evening morning and at noone to pray and cry aloud unto God Psal 55.17 Daniel prayed three times a day and gave thankes before his God as he did aforetime it was his custome Dan. 6.10 The daily morning and evening sacrifice appointed in the Law doth teach as much Prayer and thanks are testifications Reas 1 of dependance upon God every day which worship and homage is therefore due unto him every day Gods glory kingdome and Reas 2 will are opposed every day And man hath need of bread forgivenesse of sinnes and new supply of grace every day Reas 3 Omission of prayer but one day giveth Satan great advantage Besides disuse of prayer doth so estrange the heart from God that there followeth unwillingnesse and difficultie to set about the worke of prayer againe any day Vse 1 It is therefore a fault to bee seldome in prayer If a man let a day passe and doe not make a solemne prayer to his God hee must charge himselfe with a great fault Into this fault many do fall daily for they let not dayes but weeks and moneths passe and never make an hearty prayer unto God in faith It may bee in their extremities they will howle and cry and sometime when their leisure serves God shall be beholding to them for a few words of prayer But know that not to pray daily is the very guise of hypocrites Iob. 27.10 Will he alwaies call upon God saith Iob He that will pray but seldome but now and then may justly expect that God will heare him never for of such he saith Pro. 1.28 They shall call upon me and I will not answer What shall I say then to those that doe not onely utterly neglect this duty themselves but despise all other that doe make it their practise daily to call upon God The Prophet doth set this as a brand
duty to pray for Reas 1 the dead as well as the living there would have beene some precept or it would have beene commended in some example in Scripture Wherefore wee may conclude in such a case as this from the silence of Scripture that onely the living not the dead are to be prayed for It is vaine and bootlesse to Reas 2 pray for the dead for either they be carried by the Angels into heaven where they need not our prayers Luk. 16. or else they are throwne into hell the Scripture knoweth no third place out of which our prayers cannot fetch them Eccles 9.10 And there is no repentance or forgivenesse in the grave Vse We are therefore to abhorre and avoid that point of Popery which teacheth praying for the dead yet as absurd and vain as it is that old Poperie which was bred in the bone will not out of the flesh of many Protestants For many will never speake of any departed but with this addition God be with him or Lord have mercie on his soule If ye tell them of this fault they say Better say so than worse and if we do them no good by our prayers wee are sure we do them no harme I answer what necessity is there of praying better or worse for them And grant that your prayers do them no harme I am sure they do them no good But in praying for them you do your selves harme in committing a sinne against God by making a prayer which cannot be a prayer of faith Now he is unwise that will do himselfe harme in any thing wherein he neither pleaseth God nor doth good to his neighbour Our implyeth a plaine acknowledgement and confession of sinne without hiding excusing or extenuating of sinnes Whence this is observable In asking pardon of sinne there Doct. 8 must alwayes be an heartie acknowledgement and confession of sinne When David gave over hiding his iniquitie and said I will confesse my transgressions to the Lord then saith he Thou forgavest the iniquitie of my sin Psal 32.5 We have a large example of his confession of sin originall and actuall Psal 51.3 4 5. Daniel saith We have sinned against thee Dan. 9.8 Heartie confession of sinne Reas 1 giveth glory to God for thereby it is acknowledged that God should have been obeyed this giveth him the glory of his authoritie and soveraigntie Also thereby is acknowledged that Gods Law which is broken is equall holy and good else the act of sinne could not be acknowledged to be a fault Reas 2 A free confession sheweth that a man is ashamed of his sinne and that he is humble and sorie for it and he is hereby capable of forgivenesse whereas when a man hath committed a sinne if he will not confesse it it doth then stand God upon to seek out his proofes and bring him to his triall Reas 3 An unfained confession of sinne argueth a true desire of pardon yea it doth put an edge to desire for when the bed role of many damnable sinnes is laid open to the view of a man it will make him earnest with God as it did Daniel who after his confession is most fervent in prayer saying O Lord heare O Lord forgive O Lord hearken and do deferre not for thine own sake O my God Dan. 9.19 God hath promised to forgive Reas 4 those that confesse their sinne If we confesse our sinnes he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sinnes 1. Ioh. 1.9 It is therefore a great fault Vse 1 not to confesse but to go about to hide sinne from God and a mans owne conscience this doth greatly aggravate sinne This sinne is one of the first sins and one of the commonest sinnes that are amongst the sonnes of men When the devill had drawne Adam and Eve into sinne he knew the best way to keepe them from forgivenesse was to teach them to excuse and extenuate their sinne the man layeth the fault on the woman yea upon God himself Gen. 3. the woman layeth it on the serpent neither of them will take it upon themselves Even so it is with all the children of Adam untill God endue them with a great measure of his grace either they will denie or excuse or extenuate or shift it off imputing their sinne either to their naturall disposition therefore they cannot chuse they must bee borne with or they impute their sinnes to the wickednesse of the times or to their companie or to the deuil when all this while the evill heart which is most in fault is not charged at all with any faultinesse whereas in touch whatsoever was the occasion or whosoever was the entise if the heart yeeld to commit sinnes the sinne is a mans own and must be called as it is in the petition Our debt or my d● It is the extreamest folly 〈◊〉 can be to go about to hide si● for it cannot be hidde from his eyes which seeth all things who will one day when all secrets shall bee made manifest fully discover it It is a fault to commit sinne but it is aggravated when it is not confessed If I covered my transgression as Adam or after the manner of man saith Iob Iob 31.33 and 2. By hiding my sinne in my bosome Then what portion of God is there and what inheritance of the Almightie from on high verse 2. For this is the generall evill which is to be applyed to all the particular sinnes mentioned in that Chapter The hiding of sinne therefore is dangerous according to that saying He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper Prou. 28.13 Would any man have his Vse 2 sinnes forgiven then let him uncover his sins and lay them open before God in confession that so God may hide and cover them in Christ who is the covering and true propitiation of all our sinnes that through him he may put them out of his remembrance as if they were cast into the bottome of the sea In confession it shall be needfull to observe these rules 1 Confession must be heartie not verball for this is meere hypocrisie 2 It must be voluntarie not constrained and forced as w● that of Pharoahs when Gods terrible judgement being upon him hee said I have sinned against the Lord c. Exod 1● 16 3 It must bee mixed with faith and hope of pardon 〈◊〉 was that of Daniel Dan 9.9 saying 〈◊〉 the Lord our God belong mercies and forgivenesses though we have rebelled against thee It must not be a desperate com●sion like that of Judas Mat. 27 4. sayi● I have sinned in betraying inn●cent bloud 4 It must be with holy affections of griefe godly shame for sinne with contrition and brokennesse of heart with a lothing and detestation of the sinnes confessed and with true humiliation of heart Thus did Ezra confesse saying O God Ezra 9. I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God for our iniquities are increased over our heads Thus did the
Thes 3.5 J sent to know your faith lest by some meanes the tempter have tempted you But to say that God doth thus tempt any man is blasphemy for Saint Iames saith Iam. 1.13 God tempteth no man because he cannot be tempted to evill But to leade into temptation taken in the good sense as it proceedeth from God is onely such an act or acts of Gods soveraignty and wise providence concerning man whereby it so commeth to passe that a man is exposed to the temptations either of Sathan of other men or of a mans owne euill lusts who are the proper and onely actors of temptation unto sinne In this act of leading into temptation allusion may in part be made unto the acts of a Generall of an Army who may according to his discretion lead which band he pleaseth and set them in the Forlorne hope the place of greatest danger and may keepe which band he pleaseth in the Reserve or in some Fort the place of greatest safety It may likewise be somewhat resembled by an act of the Moderator of the games of combats where none might enter the lists and play their prize but according to the permission and appointment of the overseer and moderator of those exercises The Lord God hee is the great Lord of hosts and is the over-seer and over-ruler of the great Theater of the world who doth at his pleasure moderate and order all actions therin in perfection of wisedome to his owne glory Evill is either evil of punishment which is temporall prayed against in the fourth petitiō eternall prayed against in the fift petition Or evill of sinne which is referred either to persons or actions When this word evill noteth out a person in Scripture it signifieth the divell who because he is of himselfe so exceeding evill and doth make it his worke to infect all men with evill he is called the evill or the evill one So he that Math. 13.19 is called the evill one in the Greeke is v. 39. called the divell Some would restraine this word evill that it should meane the divell as if hee onely were prayed against in this petition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that because this word evill in the Greeke hath his article joyned with it which giveth an emphasis to evill pointing at some speciall evill one which is the divell I doe grant that sometimes these articles do give a speciall force unto the words to which they are annexed yet for the most part the Greekes use to adde them rather for a grace and ornament of speech and are so used seven or eight times at least in the Lords prayer So that seeing there is no necessitie in respect of the word evill to understand the divell onely and because evill of sinne is most opposite to sanctification I thinke that it is not Christs meaning to restraine the word evill unto him Evill hath respect to actions and then by evill is meant any irregularitie or swarving in any action contrary to the will of God to which will of God evil of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly standeth in opposition in which sense it must be taken in this petition and if wee put any emphasis in the article it may as wel denote evill of sinne in generall as any particular evill yet here I doe not exclude the divell as if hee were not meant at all to be praied against but doe include both him and evill men and the evill world the euill heart and all other things so farre as they are movers and inticers unto evill In this very sense are the same words used by Christ saying Father Ioh 17.15 keepe them from the evill or from wickednesse So 1 Ioh. 5.19 The world lyeth in euill or wickednesse And that of the Apostle Rom. 12.9 is without all exception Abhor 〈◊〉 that which is evill cleave to that which is good Evill is here taken indifferently for all manner of evill of sinne and whatsoever doth conduce unto it Deliver implyeth two things First preservation from falling into sin Secondly helpe of God to rise out of sin by repentance both these deliverances are here meant Keeping from evill in Christs prayer Ioh. 17.15 and deliver from evill in this prayer have one meaning When Paul saith Rom 7.24 Who shall deliver he meaneth who shall give mee power against this body of sinne And that Gods giving of repentance is deliverance from evill that saying of the Apostle 2 Tim. 4.25.26 maketh it manifest where Gods giving men repentance verse 25. is all one with recovering themselves out of the snare of the divell which evil is without our question prayed against in ●hose words Deliver us from evill Vs in both clauses leade us and deliver us noteth out the same persons mentioned in the fourth petition scil our selves all our brethren that live upon the earth That we may understand the meaning of this Petition more fully more cle●ly it is to be considered what grace of God it is which is he● prayed for by vertue whereof a man may be delivered from the evill here deprecated First wee pray that God by an act of his gracious providence would free us if it might be from the very temptation unto sinne namely that wee may be delivered and kept from seducers corrupters that they may not tempt us unto evill according as Saint Paul prayed that Satans buffeting 2 Cor. 11.7.8 the prick● in the flesh might depart fro● him Wee may pray that God would please not to leade us unto temptation Moreover sith GOD hath thought it meete that his owne children should bee exercised with manifold tentations and the flesh the world and the divell conspire to assault us with temptations it cannot be but we shall daily bee tempted Wherefore prayer also is to bee made unto God that he would not leade us into temptation that is hee would bee pleased to uphold us and that hee would so effectually worke in us by the grace of his spirit that we may not be insnared by it and held under the power of it so as to be overcome made to yeeld to commit that sinne to which we are tempted This speciall and effectuall grace is it which is requisite both that we may resist temptations and that wee may have both will and ability to live holily righteously in the whole course of our life By this effectuall grace I understand not onely such a work of the holy spirit of God that inlighteneth the minde and which cureth the will by an immediate influence so farre as onely to raise the will from its naturall propensitie to evill to a meere indifferency to resist a temptation to evill if a man will and to imbrace a motion to good if he will But it is such a powerfull worke of the Spirit that it causeth the will so to decline evill that it will resist the temptation if he can and
therefore they pray unto him The meaning of these words may bee thus expressed O Lord God which art King of kings and rulest over all we have none either in heaven or in earth to whom we may make our requests but thee for thine is the kingdome it belongeth to thy place of soveraigntie to provide for thy name and honour by advancing thy kingdome by causing thy will to bee done and by preserving and receiving into favour and by giving grace to thy people Thou Lord art able to fulfill all this that we have asked and we do yeeld thee as is most due the glory of thy soveraigntie and power and if thou shalt please to grant these our requests as thou shalt therein deserve so we shall bee readie to give unto thee all glory everlasting wherefore wee are bold to aske and to expect the granting of them For thine c. In the entrance into prayer Christ taught his disciples to represent God to their thoughts under such titles and names whereby they might confirme their faith in prayer and here in the close and end of prayer he doth wish them to presse and urge God from consideration of his soveraigntie power and glory from whence they may encourage themselves by good reasons both to aske and looke for what they have asked whereby we learne The Lord would have his children Doct. 1 have good ground and reason for the petitions they aske of him and would have them uttered unto him in their prayers Thus did Jacob when he prayed to bee delivered out of the hands of his brother Esau saying Gen 32.9.10.11.12 O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isack the Lord which saidst unto mee Returne into thy country and to thy kindred and J will deale well with thee I am not worthy of the least of al the mercies which thou hast shewed unto thy servant Deliuer me I pray thee from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau for I feare him lest hee will come and smite me and the mother with the children And thou saidst I will surely doe thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the sea In this prayer Iacob gathereth reasons from the covenant between God and his fathers from Gods commandement and his obedience therto from his acknowledgement of Gods mercie and his owne unworthinesse from the relation he had to God being his servant from the condition of his adversary he being his inraged brother Esau from the extream danger hee and his wives and children were in lastly from a promise that God had made to him in respect of his posterity which could not be fulfilled if Esau should have destroyed Jacob and all his children Vpon all these reasons hee doth ground that petition Deliver me I pray thee from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau In like manner Salomon confirmeth his faith in the beginning of his prayer 1 King 8.23.24.25.26 And it is ordinary with David throughout the Psalmes Reas 1 Though God need no reasons either to informe him of their need or to move him to supply their need for he knoweth every mans case better then himselfe and is more readily inclined of himselfe to helpe then any man can be ready to aske yet he doth delight that his children should yeeld reasons of their requests because therein they shew proof of their knowledge faith confidence and other graces which is much pleasing to their Father Reasons in prayer doth much Reas 2 confirme faith in us and stir up good affection in prayer For when a man can assure himselfe he hath good warrant to aske and to hope to obtaine hee can breake through all the discouragements which the divell or a mans owne heart can cast in to hinder him Hereby all praying without Vse 1 understanding be the intention of the heart never so good must be judged to be faultie for hee that knoweth not what hee asketh can never give reasons why he asketh Vse 2 This reproveth all rash and inconsiderate entrances and proceedings in prayers which is when men are led therein onely by custome or present sense of necessities but never exercise their faith in uttering any reasons of their requests Hence it is that they are so weake in faith and so cold in devotion and heartlesse in their prayers because they doe not establish their faith and put life to their affections by uttering of apt reasons of their present petitions Vse 3 Whosoever therfore would make a prayer in faith and fervencie must follow our Saviours direction the examples of godly in Scripture who have gone before us in giving reasons of their requests For it doth please God to heare his children reason it out with him Wherefore hee doth sometimes of set purpose seeme not to heare but rather seemeth to deny his children that pray unto him because hee would have them answer all doubts and resist all impediments and be more importunate with him in giving reasons why they should be heard Thus the Lord dealt with the woman of Canaan first he seemed not to heare her then when he heard he seemed to deny her suite and yeelded a reason of his deniall Mat. 15.25 28. yet all this was but to make triall of her faith which when she shewed by her importunate continuance of her suit and wise answering of Christs objection saying Truth Lord yet the dogs do eate of the crums which fall from their masters table shee thereupon received of him a commendation of her faith saying O woman great is thy faith and withall obtained her request even to the full for he said Be it unto thee even as thou wilt Reasons of our petitions may be taken from Gods nature from his promise from our capablenesse to have our prayers granted either because wee are in Christ and are his servants and doe pray in his name or they may bee taken from our need of helpe or from that experience wee have had of helpe in time past or from the thanks and glory that we doe give and will give if it shall please the Lord to grant our requests If from these such like grounds out of Scripture we shall wisely make choise of reasons befitting our present occasions and shall use them understandingly not so much to informe or perswade God what hee should give as to inform and perswade our selves how to aske we shall be much holpen in our praying and God will bee well pleased with our prayers The reason of the asking the aforesaid petitions is set downe in a forme of praise and thanksgiving from which wee may observe Christians must in their prayers Doct. 2 as well offer praise unto God as make requests Wee must as well giue him glory and thanks as pray to him to give us grace or any other good thing Thus saith David Thine O Lord is greatnesse and the power and the glory and the victory and the majestie Thine is the kingdome O
that he was a God of Gods and a Lord of kings and that his kingdome was an everlasting kingdome Dan. 2.47 and 4.3 The Lord made and doth Reas 1 preserve all things therefore must needs be above and have soveraigntie over all things The acts of God do prove it Reas 2 for he changeth times he removeth kings and setteth up kings Dan. 2.21 By him kings reigne Pro. 8.15 All powers are of him Rom. 13.1 Vse 1 This should take downe the pride and insolencie of all that thinke in their heart or speake with their tongue saying as they in the Psalme Psal 12 4● Who is Lord over us This should likewise make all wicked men to tremble for he who is an absolute king whom no policie nor power can withstand hee to whom vengeance belongeth even he is Lord over them Vse 2 If absolute soveraigntie bee proper unto God then we must acknowledge no soveraigne Lord and master to have right to give such lawes that properly of themselves binde the conscience but onely God For is this respect our Saviour 〈◊〉 One is your Father which is in heaven and one is your Master even Christ Matth. 23.9.10 Wherefore the Pope must bee held to be an usurper of Gods prerogative because he doth presumptuously take upon him to give lawes such as shall properly binde the conscience whereby he doth domineere over mens faith and conscience 2. Thes 2.4 and doth take upon him as God Hereby we must be exhorted Vse 3 to yeeld absolute subjection in all things at all times unto the commandements of God 1. Cor. 6. And as for inferiour and subordinate authorities of men under him we must for his sake submit our selves unto them but in the Lord only 1. Pet. 2.13 for if they command any thing that God hath forbidden or forbid any thing which God hath commanded we must answer them with the words of the Apostle Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more then unto God judge ye Act. 4.19 To refuse to obey them in this case is not to resist authority but to resist the corrupt wils and lusts of those that abuse and exceed their authority Vse 4 This should teach kings and all inferiour governours in the Church common-wealth and familie to acknowledge that they derive their authoritie from God Ezra 1.2 whose is kingdome Wherefore they must beware that they do not tyrannize over their subjects and domineere over their wives children or servants abusing the authoritie which God hath given them as if they had no master to whom they should give account of their government For the Apostle saith unto all such Your master also is in heaven neither is there respect of persons with him Ephes 6.9 Vse 5 Lastly it will much refresh and rejoyce the hearts of every servant and childe of God to consider that their God and father is King and Lord of all for the majestie and soveraigntie of the father is for the honour and advantage of the children They cannot be base and ignoble which have such a Lord and Father for as Christ our head is hereby honorable because hee hath such a Father so wee the members are honored and may rejoyce 1. Cor. 12.26 because we have such an head whereby we become one with his father and our father to whom absolute soveraigntie doth belong If we lack any thing we do hereby learne to whom to repaire even to God who will not faile his subjects that depend upon him Rev. 1.6 Rev. 5 10 but will make them all Kings unto him for his is kingdome And if we be oppressed by the authoritie of men we need not be troubled but may commend our selves unto God in well-doing 1. Pet. 4 19 comforting our selves in this that he that is higher then the highest regardeth us Eccles 5.8 And the power Sith power is ascribed unto God we may observe Doct. 4 Power originally belongeth unto God All power is in him and from him David saith Power belongeth unto God Psal 62.11 Daniel saith Wisedome and might are Gods Dan. 2.20 Reas 1 He is God therefore omnipotent Reas 2 The works of creation preservation and redemption do shew his eternall power and Godhead Vse 1 All the wicked which provoke God against them because they will not obey his will should tremble quake at the thoughts hereof for the Lord of whom Nahum saith that he revengeth he revengeth is great in power and will not at all acquit the wicked who can stand before his indignation Nah. 1.2.2.6 He is able to destroy both body and soule in hell Matth. 10.28 This reproveth all that call Vse 2 Gods power into question like those Israelites which said Psal 78.9 Can God prepare a table in the wildernes Or like those that thinke their sins to be so many their hearts to be so hard that they cannot be pardoned or cured This doctrine of Gods power Vse 3 may give hope unto most grievous sinners that if they will repent of their sinne and beleeve in Christ they shal be saved For the Apostle speaking of hard hearted Iewes saith God is able to ingraft them also if they abide not in unbeliefe Rom. 11.23 If Gods hand bee upon any Vse 4 man let him not thinke that by any violent meanes he can deliver himselfe frō under his hand but let him humble himselfe under the mighty hand of God 1. Pet. 5.6 There is no contending with God that can prevaile with him but Jacobs wrastling which is humble and heartie prayer by this a man may have power over God and prevaile if he can weepe and make supplication to him Hos 12.4 Vse 5 Would any man have power to do good and to eschue evill and to resist and overcome all his enemies both bodily and ghostly he is here taught from what fountaine to derive and draw it even from God onely whose Name is the strong God Exod. 34.6 Vse 6 If any man have any power to do himselfe and others good let him not bee proud thereof nor yet abuse his strength but let him thanke God for it and use it for God who gave it Vse 7 Lastly Gods owne people may gather much comfort to themselves when they consider that they are sonnes and daughters of God almightie I even I 2. Cor. 6.18 am he saith God that comforteth you who art thou that thou shouldest bee afraid of a man that shall dye and of the sonne of man which shall bee made as grasse Isa 51.12 Nahum saith The Lord is good Nahu 1.7 a strong hold in the day of trouble he knoweth all that trust in him Hast thou not knowne saith God that the everlasting God Isa 40.28.29.30.31 the Lord the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is wearie he giveth power to the faint and to them that have no might hee increaseth strength Even the youths that is the strong