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A54928 The spiritual sacrifice, or, A treatise wherein several weighty questions and cases concerning the saints communion with God in prayer are propounded and practically improved by Mr. Alexander Pitcarne. Pitcarne, Alexander, 1622?-1695. 1664 (1664) Wing P2295; ESTC R30533 821,533 890

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intended to obscure the mistery of incarnation and to foster that hellish blasphemy of the Pharisees that Christ did cast out devils by (h) Mat. 9 34. Mat. 12.24 Beelzebub the prince of devils The enemy of all truth would give testimony to that great and fundamentall truth that Christ was the promised Messiah that thus he might render the testimony of faithfull witnesses and of the Lord from heaven the more suspect and that he might invalidat and obscure that clear and convincing evidence which the astonishing miracles wrought by him did produce and hold forth But the Lord who can (i) Hoc suit ex omnipotente sapien●ia Dei ut inimiciveritatis fiantipsi testes veritatis August contra Petil. Donat lib 2 cap 30. over-rule and befool the devil and his instruments did thereby declare Christs power over those his enemies that nill they will they they must give a testimony to him and to his servants and the doctrine of the Gospel the confession of adversaries was alwayes acknowledged to be a most (k) Nullum efficacius argumentum c. efficacious largument for the truth Another instance we have in Peters counsell to Christ to spare himself Mat. 16.22 O! may some think there was much love Zeal and tendernesse in that motion but it being obstructive of the work of redemption it came from hell and because Peter in it did follow Sathans suggestion our blessed Lord calls him Sathan v. 23. Thus also while we should be employed in the publick ordinances and attend unto them Sathan may suggest some pious though impertinent as to the present work meditation or stir us up to pray that thereby he may hinder our edification or conviction by the word preached 2. Sathan may presse us to duty as to prayer reading conference c. that he may make those religious performances a snare to catch our selves and others He hath many a time laid this snare before young converts whom he was not (l) The devil will sail with wind and tyde and improve the present temperature and disposition of spirit for his own end able to divert from the exercise of holiness he would labour to drive forward and to make them over do to the neglect of their bodily health and callings that at length he might weary them and make them faint and give over that he might terrifie others from putting their necks under such an insupportable yoke and that religion might be esteemed to be a tyrant and cruel exactor which can never be satisfied and to be inconsistent with health joy use of the creatures lawfull imployments recreations c. Albeit we cannot love God and hate sin too much yet there may (m) See M. Symonds case and cure chap. 20. be a nimium in the external exercises of religion and there may be some excesse and distemper intermixed with our spiritual affections which Sathan by all means will labour to foster and encrease Thus he improved the zeal of the Church of Corinth against the penitent incestuous man that his sorrow might degenerate into dispair and that he might be swallowed up thereby 2 Cor. 2.7 Sathan can well bear that some few and for a short while be very zealous and active for the Lord and diligent and frequent in duties if thereby he can beget a prejudice in the hearts of men against Gods service and can make them think that Christs burthen were like the (n) Mat. 23.4 Luk. 11.46 Pharisees heavy and grievous to be born contrary to that word of truth Mat. 11.30 1 Joh. 5.3 3. Sathan may move us to be frequent in prayer and to wait upon the publick ordinances most punctually that thereby he may either stop and silence the consciences and that thus we may commit sin with the greater freedom and boldness or else as in gross hypocrits that this may be a cloak and pretence a mask and cover to hide our wicked designs and wayes from the eyes of others that so we may be able to do them the more mischief and to sin with the less suspicion and hazard Thus the hypocritical Pharisees that they might with the more security devours widows houses for a pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 And Absolom that he might cover his conspiracy and treason will go and pay his vow in Hebron 2 Sam. 15.7 Sathan could well suggest such a fair pretence to Absolom and bear with pharisaical oppressors in their seeming devotion But especially his hand may appear when sinners become so mad as to think not only to hide cheir wickedness from men by those outward performances but also thereby to purchase a liberty from the Lord and thus as it were to hire and bribe him as they do their own consciences to be silent as that impudent woman Prov. 7.14 15. I have this day saith she to the foolish youth whom she enticed to whordom payed my vows and I have peace-offerings with me therefore came I forth to meet thee As if she had said I have payed old debt and by my sacrifices purchased a liberty for us to do wickedly we need not fear I have moyen for time to come I have provided a ransom and given my bond for what debt we can now contract I have (o) Albeit in peace offerings a portion returned to them that offered wherewith they might make a feast unto which this woman in these words inviteth the young fool yet I conceive that mainly she laboureth to allure him by the religious pretence here mentioned See Annot. on the Bible edit Amsterd in fol. ann 1640. peace-offerings with me which will make amends and satisfie for all the wrong we can now do to God 4. Sathan may come and stir us up to religious exercises that thereby he may add fewel to our pride Thus Pharisees of old and superstitious Papists to this day in their madness and exceeding zeal as Paul speaking of his persecuting the Church of Christ calls it are helped of Sathan they meet with fire from hell to kindle their affections in their unwarrantable performances and though their work upon the matter were good and commendable yet Sathan will not draw back his hand if thereby he can puffe them up and beget in them an opinion of their own worth and that by their good works they are justified and merit heaven This perswasion cometh not of him that calleth you Gal. 5.8 This perswasion that by your works ye are justified v. 4. cometh not from God who calleth you to the kingdom of his dear Son but from him who thereby labours to make Christ of none effect unto you v. 24. and to drive you to hell We need not then ask why many Papists are so eminent for works of Charity and liberality and so frequent in their dead formall and carnall way of worship since Sathan will be ready to fill the sails with wind when the vessel is loaden with provision to feed our ambition and pride but if that current
extrinsecal and moral possibility flowing from the decree and purpose of God concerning the futurition of such an object possibility in the thing petitioned that in that case the Lord will so far respect our prayers as that in return to them he will at length give to them what we asked for them and that though many haply have (o) Whether in praying for the salvation of one particular person or for publick mereles and deliverance to the Church for now we are joyntly speaking of both cases concurred in the work and though we have often petitioned that mercy yet none of our prayers shall be forgotten but all and every one of our supplications shall have a proportionable insluence in procuring the blessing Albeit the mercy may be for a long time with-held yet the Lord keepeth all the prayers of all his honest supplicants in remembrance and in answer to them the mercy in due time shall be given Albeit Monica for a long time prayed for her son Austin his conversion yet none of her prayers were lost the Lord had them all on record and at last satisfied the desire of that zealous woman but we must not imagine that God then only had regard to the prayer put up about the time of her sons conversion nay but every tear and prayer which from time to time she had poured out had influence upon the work and helped forward the new birth of that convert But 2. as to the compensation when the Lord purposeth not to hear and give the particular we prayed for to others that will not be made to them for whom we pray but to us who pray for they being reprobats and despisers of the mercies of God no ordinance can do them good but if they be Saints and yet the Lord in his holy and wise providence will not give them such outward mercies for as to spirituals these shall not be finally with-held from such as we did petition for them albeit the Lord may and no doubt often doth make some compensation to them and will not suffer them to be deprived of the fruit of our prayers although what we did ask was not good hic nunc yet that which universally and in all cases our faith may lay hold on by way of compensation when the particular is with-held must be something respecting the supplicant himself some one or other mercy to be bestowed on him by way of return and answer to his prayers and thus while we pray for the salvation of reprobats or for such publick mercies to the Church and People of God which he according to the depth of his counsel hath determined not to give our prayers notwithstanding are not lost as to us for though Israelites captivity be continued yet they who love and pray for Jerusalem shall prosper Psa 122.6 Albeit the Lord did not give to Davids enemies those mercies he petitioned for them yet his labour was not lost nor his prayers like water spilt upon the ground the Lord did receive and welcom them and would not send back those faithfull messengers empty though no return came to those incorrigible enemies in whose behalf they were sent yet some (p) And this may be the occasion of that expression and the reason why Davids prayer is said to return into his bosom viz. because it did bring along with it some seasonable or some considerable mercy for what we take into our bosom must lye near the heart and have some room in the estimation heart-affecting and bosom-blessing was dispatched to David his prayer returned but not (q) Etsi non eis prosit ego tamen nonsa 〈◊〉 frustratus m●a mercede gloss in loc vid. etiam Lyr. ibid. empty though it be the maner of men yet not of the great and gracious King to send away any honest supplicant without an answer Psa 35.13 But do not mistake and say O! then it must be better with the supplicant when his prayer for others is not heard as to them and when they get no good by it because then it returneth into his own bosom and the good redounds to him Do not I say entertain such a conceit for although we now only mentioned the personal return made to the supplicant when his desire for others was not granted that being the present case to which we should speak and a notable encouragment to to the conscionable and constant performance of that duty whatever might be it's fruit and success as to those for whom it were performed yet we did not exclude that personal return which every petitioner may expect when the Lord doth fulfill his desire towards others we shall not fair the worse because it goeth well with others nor shall the Lord be less kind to us because for our sake he sheweth kindness to others we shall not lose because others do gain by our trading our God hath blessings enew to bestow and though he answer the supplication he will not let the messenger go away without his wages he shall get something in hand but that is not all nor the main but they who by their prayers exhortations c. turn (r) Though Gods servants and messengers labour in vain and though Israel be not gathered yet honest supplicants and labourers shall be glorious in the eyes of their Master and their reward shall be with their God Isa 40.4 5. Yet when God blesseth his own Ordinance as that will cause the hearts of henest labourers to rejoyce So the Lord may out of his good pleasure and soveraign mercy crown that mercy with other mercies both to him who did pray and to him for whom supplication was made mary to righteousness shall shine as the stars for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 not only their prayers and endeavours shall come in remembrance but also the fruit and success thereof but not to obstruct and hinder their mercies but rather to promove their happiness If it be here askt whether the former assertion concerning Gods hearing and answering of all our prayers so far as alwayes to do what is best for us in the particular which we desired and petitioned whether I say that hath place in this case Ans That assertion it self without any further explication might have prevented such a question for while the mater of our prayer is not personal and doth not concern us but others it seemeth a little impertinent to ask whether the Lord when he giveth not the particular askt viz. to others doth that which is best for us for what doth not concern us cannot be said to be more or less convenient for us But 2. albeit what we ask for others doth not concern us as to our personal loss or advantage except when we ask publick mercies for the Church or Incorporation whereof we are members yet to a believer who already hath a right to all personal happiness and felicity no compensation can be made for those spiritual mercies which he doth ask for
righteousnesse 6. His omnipotence and fidelity may allure and invite the most stubborn and unwilling to the frequent practise of this heavenly exercise he hath promised and he is able to do great things for his honest supplicants will ye so far envy your own happiness as not to become one of those all of us would be great and mighty but alas few take the right course for only the praying Christian is (k) According to Pauls prayer Col. 1.9.11 strengthned with all (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might and thus in some sense may be called Almighty all his strength is borrowed and dependent on the first fountain but thus though the world believe it not he is very strong nay saith (m) Nihil est homine orante potentius Chrysost as he is cited by the Author of a treaty of pacification pag. 57. Chrysostom there is nothing more strong and mighty then a praying soul prayer saith (n) Jenk ●n Jude 21. another hath a shadow of omnipotence in it it sets infinit power a work for fulfilling thy desires and (o) Mr. Sam. Clark in his examples pog mihi 504. reports that some Princes professed they feared more the prayers of some Saints then an army of twenty thousand men maketh the Church (p) Cant. 6.4.10 terrible as an army with banners enemies at length will be forced to put to their seal to this truth what ever success and prosperity they may meet with for a while when the day of Gods power cometh the Lord will send the rod of his strength out of Zion and will rule in the midst of his enemies Psal 110.2 3 5 6. It was said of zealous Luther potuit quicquid voluit he could do what he would but may not the same be said of every believer doth not our blessed Lord say as much while he promiseth to give to such whatsoever they shall ask in his name Joh. 14.13 14. Joh. 16.23 c. But ah who hath believed his report who maketh not God a lyar by distrusting this sure word of promise ye will not take Gods word therefore ye will not pray ye will not rest on Gods bond and therefore ye look on the promises as no great encouragments to holiness O if this one word were soundly believed though love to God or to our duty did not prevail with us yet self-love would often send us to the throne but you may as well question all the Scriptures as any one word or portion of them and this promise of audience so often repeated to cure thy unbelief must be more sure then all the bonds and evidences in the world it being easier for heaven and erath to pass then one jot or title of Gods Word to fail and not be fulfilled Luk. 16.17 Mat. 5.18 Hence Davids (q) Which some call Luthers Psalms because when he met with any trouble or difficulty he ran to it as his city of refuge and was not diseppointed confidence Ps 46. though the earth were removed c. yet he would not fear Ah! wilt thou who art called a Christian and who wouldst be reputed a believer dispute and debate question or deny any part of the holy Scriptures while the devils believe and give such a full and firm assent to every word that (r) Isa 55.11 proceedeth out of Gods mouth (ſ) Jam. 2.19 they believe and tremble and wilt not thou believe and rejoyce believe and love and draw nigh to him in full (t) Heb 10.22 assurance of faith Alwayes ye who rest in a state of unbelief and who lodge and entertain such thoughts as ye will not be able to carry to hell with you ye who would say if ye were not ashamed to speak out your atheism and unbelief what a (u) Whether he did vent this blasphemy in his own name or expressing the thoughts of too many we need not enquire we will not undertake his vindication who speaks nothing for him self blasphemous Pamphleter once said (x) Qui petit accipiet Jacobus Apostolus inquit O si Jacobus Rex mihi dicat idem Whites Sermon on Dan. 9.25 pag. 13. O said he if I had the Kings word in stead of Gods and if King James would say what the Apostle James said and would promise to give me whatsoever I should ask I should not be such a stranger at Court as I am in the sanctuary I have I say to you O blasphemous Atheists who thus undervalue the rich promises of God and will not be at the pains to plead them at the throne of Grace a sad message from the Lord and a dreadfull prayer against you who will not pray for your selves that the Lord would pour out his fury and wrath upon you that finding the efficacy of that imprecation ye might once learn to believe that the effectual fervent (y) Jam. 5.16 prayer of the righteous availeth much the words are most terrible and O! if they were more pondered by secure Atheists we shall only offer these four or five observations which deserve our serious meditation and shall not now stay to (z) See the Preface and Part 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. press this exhortation further And 1. it would be considered that this dreadfull imprecation is doubled and set down in two several Scriptures by two heavenly messengers without any considerable variation either in matter or words viz. by the Psalmist whether David or Asaph its needless to enquire now Ps 79.6 and by the Prophet Jeremiah chap. 10.25 And I may say with (a) Gen. 41.32 Joseph to Pharoah concerning his dreams that this threatning is doubled because it is established by God and God will shortly bring it to pass however mockers may slight this sad doom and put it far from them 2. It would be observed that this threatning is not concerning some outward and temporal stroke and judgement but concerning the fury and indignation of him who is of (b) Job 37.22 terrible Majesty the (c) Ps 90.11 power of whose wrath cannot be known till it be felt in hell 3. That they who call not upon God are classed and put in one category with Heathens and Pagans what ever be their Church-priviledges and outward profession yet truly and in Gods esteem such Atheists are not better but rather worse then Barbarians 4. That it shall not excuse them nor guard them from the stroke of Gods fury that they are many though they be kingdoms and families though they be never so mighty and numerous the Lords (d) Ps 21.8 9 right hand shall find them out and shall make them as a fiery oven add he will swallow them up in his Wrath. 5. That this judgment is denounced prayer-wayes certainly the servants of God did not delight in their ruine whom they were obliged to (e) 1 Pet. 2.17 honour and (f) Gal. 5.4 love as men and brethren but the Lord having commanded they must obey and must not only
know when the Spirit with-draweth his help from supplicants Page 600 Sect. II. A two-fold deadness and indisposition one privative by the departure of the quickening and strengthening influence of the Spirit another positive into which we are casten by the opiat of sin Page 602 Divers kinds of causes of this evil Page 603 Among externals Sathan is the chief Page 604 But the root of the matter is within us hereditary sin a mother sin Page 605 To which some gross pollution or conscience-wasting sin being super-added the heart must be very much straitned in it's approaches to God Page 606 What are these sins against which the Saints should especially guard Page 607 What be these sins which more formally and efficiently straiten the heart and occasion deadness and wandering thoughts Page 607 1. Earthly-mindedness 2. irreverence and want of fear 3. hypocrisie 4. want of feeling 5. distrust and unbelief 6. excess and surfeiting either bodily or spiritual 7. wantonness and a spirit of lust 8. discontent with our condition family-contention and whatsoever distemper of the passions anger grief c. 9. not watching the heart 10. nor guarding the outward senses 11. taking unseasonable times for performing these duties 12. disuse omission and want of frequency 13. a giving way to a slight and superficial way of performance 14. ill company ibid. Positive directions and remedies 1. strengthen and fortifie the heart with the cordial of love 2. let us rouse up and awaken our sleepy hearts 3. let us beg the quickening presence of the Spirit of Christ bewailing more the want thereof then the want of his consolations 4. let us diligently mark and observe when the Spirit draweth nigh and when he with-draweth 5. when we set upon any duty let us renew our resolutions to hold our hearts fixed at the work 6. in the intervals of prayer let us give our selves unto holiness 1. do not stint thy self to such a measure of holiness 2. imitat the best examples 3. converse much with the Saints 4. frequent the Ordinances diligently and 5. be diligent in thy particular calling 7. arrest thy heart at the present exercise and work 8. remember 1. the greatness and excellency 2. the goodness and bounty 3. the presence and all seeing eye and 4. the holiness justice and terrors of him with whom we have to do 9. use such a gesture as may be most helpfull to raise the heart 10. thou mayest while indisposed have recourse to a set form and then 11. let frequency supply the want of continuance and enlargement 12. whatever success thou meetest with yet leave not off but still follow on to seek the Lord in his Ordinances till thou find him do not faint nor weary for c. Page 620 Sect. III. Whether our deadness and indisposition will excuse our negligence and omission of duty Page 637 Six or seven reasons for the negative ibid. Our deadness should rather send us to then hold us from the throne of grace Page 640 Motives to stir us up to shake off our laziness indisposition negligence c. Page 640 What copy should we set before our eyes as to our diligence and activity for eternal life Page 643 When and what wandering thoughts do nullifie our prayers and hinder their success Page 644 The testimony of some Divines Page 645 Deadnesse and wandering thoughts a grievous burden to the Saints Page 646 Whether we may be too much inlarged in prayer or meditation Page 648 Of the Popish mystical Theology Enthusiasme c. ibid. Whether the Saints be alwayes precisely limited to the present work in which they are imployed Page 650 Whether sincere supplicants use to be be more inlarged in private or publick ibid. Whether it be a mercy to have our prayers answered when we are cold and formal Page 651 CHAP. III. Whether we may pray for any evil either of sin or suffering Page 652 Some distinctions Page 653 We may not pray for any evil either absolutely or relatively ibid. Five arguments Page 654 Objections answered Page 657 Far less may we pray and wish evil to our brethren Page 663 A word concerning the evil of sin ibid. CHAP. IV. Whether it be lawfull to imprecat the question propounded and limited Page 664 It is certain we may 1. pray against the sins and 2. against the plots of the wicked and 3. that we may complain of their cruelty and 4. that we may pray the Lord to break their snare of success and prosperity and 5. that justice may be executed upon malefactors ibid. But we must not curse 1. without a cause nor 2. for our own cause nor 3. our relations Page 665 The question answered negatively and objections obviated Page 666 CHAP. V. What it is to pray alwayes Page 668 The Euchits confuted Page 669 Whether Pelagians taught that it was needless to pray Page 670 Six conjectures rejected Page 671 The exhortation to pray alwayes and without ceasing supposeth a spiritual disposition Page 674 It answereth the question when should we pray ibid. It importeth assiduity and frequency ibid. It requireth 1. constancy and 2. universality 1. in respect of the object 2. in respect of the seasons time and opportunities whether set or occasional Page 676 An omission cannot be imputed to us unless we be called and oblieged to do Page 677 The least that can be allowed for a set course of prayer is twice a day Page 678 What time of the day fittest Page 679 Scripture-instances with some variety Page 680 How we may discern the occasional season of prayer Page 681 What is done in it's season whether set or occasional is said in Scripture to be done alwayes Page 683 There ought also to be an universality in respect of the subject Page 684 Lastly it importeth perseverance Page 684 How much time should be spent and how long should we continue at prayer Page 685 Whether it be lawfull to use repetitions and what repetitions in prayer Page 687 A word concerning ejaculatory prayer Page 691 The Saints have continued for a considerable time at prayer Page 692 An exhoration to frequency Page 693 A word of caution take heed lest custom and frequency make us customary and superficial in prayer Page 695 PART IV. Of the return of prayer CHAP. I. Of the success of prayer Page 695 Sect. I. The Christian is the only worthy and invincible man Page 696 Prayers and tears the arms of the Church Page 697 How the holy Spirit expresseth the power and prevalency of prayer Page 698 Sect. II. The Atheists great objection all things come alike to all answered Page 701 What the Lords hearing of prayer importeth Page 703 Hence several arguments proving that the wicked receive nothing in answer to their prayers Page 704 Why then doth the Lord bestow mercies upon them Ans Page 706 Four wayes of the Lords hearing the prayers of his servants Page 710 A delay to give or denial of the particular askt may be a gracious answer of
geese-god Wendilin their sheep-god Eulogius their horse-god Antonius their swine-god c. Rochus their plague-physician and protector Appollonia their tooth-ach doctrix John a god of the Epilepsy Eutropius of the Hydropsy and Dame Catharine is lady of the mid-wives c. O! what mater of astonishment is it to consider that these who professe the Gospel should be so far left of God as thus to lick up the very dregs of Pagan superstition and idolatry and that so many learned Rabbies should come to that height of impudence not only to borrow from such and learn of them their way of worship but also to make use of those reasons and arguments which blind heathens alledged for their maner of devotion yea and that after the Fathers whose doctrine they would seem to own with so much care and zeal had razed from the ground that foolish building It were no hard task for one of ordinary parts and reading to demonstrate from the writings of the primitive and most ancient Doctors of the Church that the popish Saint-worship is all one mutato nomine the name of Saturn Mars Venus c. being changed into Francisce Catharin c. with the Pagan multiplicity of gods and that it doth stand upon the same foundation and pillars They who will take a little vieu of (c) Vid. argument Celsapud Orig. sub fin lib. 7. init lib 8. contra Celsum Ambros in epist ad Rom. cap. 1. si auctor fit istius commentaril hanc Ethnicorū stultitiâm redarguentem corumque vanam excusationem Origen and Ambrose need go no further for making out this parallel and if we will hearken to what Pagans say for themselves and compare their writings with the popish we need not run to an arbiter to give sentence for as in (d) Prov. 27.19 water face answereth to face so the pagan and popish way of worship for albeit the poor Pagans did worship many gods yet they (e) Thus Augustine in Ps 96. nobis 97. bringeth in one of the Pagans excusing their idolatry non illud colo seu adoro quod video sed servio ei quem non video quis est iste numen quoddam invisibile quod praesidet illi simulacro c. vid. etiam in Ps 113. Chrysost in Eph. 5. Hom. 18. acknowledged only one supream God and though many of them did not know who he was and what name to give him yet they knew there was such an absolute majesty whom they did fear and worship and thus as it were with the Athenians they did consecrate an altar to the unknown God and through this blindness and ignorance they fell into many strange apprehensions concerning this infinite Deity and particularly to our purpose they imagined it to be below this great God to take notice of sublunary affairs and of maters which were not of great and publick concernment and that he had committed the care of such things to some deputies and officers of trust whom he had appointed to be the overseers and dispensators of these things that concern the sons of men to whom they should have their recourse as to inferior gods who were more familiar and condescending and who would not stand at such a distance from mortals as being by nature nearer unto them and so more compassionate and easie to be entreated and thus thinking it too great boldness in them to make an immediate addresse to the great God they made use of these inferior gods as mediators and patrons by whom they might get their business dispatched as having power and moyen with and commission from the great God for that effect And the Platonicks who were the best refined and most polished Pagans did (g) Vid. Euseb lib. 15. de praep evan August in libris de civit Dei constitute two sort of patrons to whom they did run and by whom as mediators their prayers might be presented to the great God viz. their Damones or Angels and their Heroes or the souls of the defunct and is not this the very popish doctrine can one (g) non ovum ovo s●milius egge be more like to another If it be askt when and by what steps did this pagan doctrine creep into the Church Ans Although idolatry was the epidemical disease of the Jewish Church they were ready to worship the (h) 2 King 17.16.17 host of heaven the sun moon and stars and in their mad zeal to cause their children passe through the (i) 2 King 23.10 11. fire to Molech yet we (k) Though Papists run to some apocryphal texts contrary to their own concessions as we shall hear read not of their worshiping and invocating of Angels or Saints departed yea even then when they were on the declining ●and And all the true Israelits did only have their recourse to God in Christ disclaiming all other mediators and advocates as being ignorant of them and their condition We have their confession of faith as to this article Isa 63.16 Doubtlesse thou art our father saith that Church to God though Abraham be ignorant of us and Israel acknowledge us not thou O Lord art our father and redeemer But what now since they were cut off and scattered among the nations they professe or practise cannot be so well known nor is it needful to enquire they being (l) Hos 1.6.9 now Lo-ammi and Lo-ruhamah their carriage can be no precedent or rule to us neither can it be imagined that now they keep that uniformity in worship which they observed while they were united in one incorporation and as to this particular it would appear from Philo their great Rabbi that not a few of them after their dispersion were tainted with this leaven for he being a Platonick and having from his master (m) Vid. Phil. Judaeum lib. de exceratione sub finem pag. mihi 594. learned that point of divinity he would not want followers amongst that people who might also from the nations amongst whom they lived learn this lesson As for the Christian Church many of them being lately converted from the heathenish superstition and idolatry it would appear that they stood in some hazard to look back again to their former way of devotion so that the Apostle had need to warn them as he did the Colossians Col. 2.18 to beware least any man beguile them in a voluntary or without warrant and command humility in worshiping of Angels and it would appear that the heresie of the Angelici did then creep in which shortly after as (n) Apud August lib de haer ad Quodvultdeum haeres 39. Angelici in angelorum cultum inclinati quos Epiphanins jam omnino defecisse testatur haec August vid. Theodoret in Col. 2.18 Concil Laodic can 35. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Epiphanins doth witnesse was universally disclaimed and had none to own it O! who can admire the impudence of Papists who acknowledging the Fathers and Councels to
accommodation and emolument thereof And accordingly the promises do and our desires and prayers should in a different maner respect these objects For clearing of which as being the main scope of this Section v●e shall lay down some few positions beginning with temporals and as to these first laying the foundation and shewing that they may be lawfully askt before we speak of the maner how they should be askt Concl. 1. We need not fear to go to our Father for a supply of all our wants as well outward and bodily as spiritual Thus our blessed Lord in that perfect pattern of prayer Mat. 6.11 Luk. 11.3 hath taught us to ask our daily bread and Agur by his example Prov. 30.8 doth warrant us to pray for food convenient and the Apostle exhorteth us to make our requests known unto God in every thing Phil. 4.6 And there be so many promises concerning these outward things and so many instances of prayers put up by the Saints registred in the Word especially in the book of the Psalms that it were not worth the time to insist upon citations having the constant practice of all the Saints as daily memorials of our duty and as so many torches to shew us our way Yea this seemeth to be one and not the least of these reasons why the Lord doth subject and expose us to so many wants and dangers that we may run to him for a supply of our wants and for protection from the evil we fear and we should look upon these as so many messengers sent to invite us as the famine did the prodigal to draw nigh to our Father We will not now digress to confute the old Manicheans who affirmed that only these temporal and outward things were promised in the old Testament with whom in this (e) Cateches Raccov cap. 5. per t●tum Socin praelect theol cap. 17. com in epist Joan. p. 207 210. Ossor inst rel Christi a cap. 22. usque ad 34. Smalc de div Jes Ch. cap. 5. p. 17.25 26. c. Soci●ians and (f) Remonst apolog pag 26 conf cap. 10 12. Sim. Episcop disp 12. de faedere Dei thes 4. disp de conven discri vet nov Test thes 5 20 31 c. Arminians do joyn albeit some of them would mitigate the mater by their distinctions while they tell us that the Scriptures of the old Testament do expresly and directly speak only of temporals so that the people of the Jews could not understand nor collect from thence any ground for beleeving a life eternal As if God had only proposed to that people a swinish and Turkish felicity Neither will we now meddle with these hereticks whom (g) Theophyl fol. 156. edit an 1533. in Joa 6.27 August de here●●b cap. 57. Psalliani pro Messaliani scriptum est c●rruptissime inquit L. Danaeus in locum August ra●iones quas subjicit videntur pr●habiles sed Theophylactus ut mo●ui vo●at bos hareticos Mosselianos Theophylact calls Masselians and Augustine Psallians who on the other hand do teach that we should not labour or care for temporal and outward things her●●e it would appear that they did teach that we should not p●ay for them were it nor that (h) Aug. loc cit Euchitae Masseliani signifie the same thing the one word being as to its ●riginal Syriack and the other Greek vid Danaeum loc cit Augustine tells us that they belong to the Sect of the Euchits who pleaded but I am sure not by their p●●ctice that men ought alwayes and without intermission to pray and then surely no object whether temporal or spiritual must be excluded from those perpetual prayers And yet what we may not some one way or another care for especially as to those things that require our labour and endeavour for obtaining of them that we may not I would think pray for But in opposition both to Manicheans and (i) Those whom Theophylact calls Masselians others most usually call Messalians Masselians let us lay down this sure conclusion That godliness alwayes was and still is profitable for all things having the promises for things belonging both to this bodily perishing life and for that eternal life of glory which is to come 1 Tim. 4.8 It s true the antient people had many particular promises of earthly things which we cannot lay claim to The Church then being in her infancy was accordingly left under an elementary paedagogy and had a greater allowance of sensible and outward mercies as being more sutable to their condition as their ordinances were more (k) Heb. 7.16 and 9 10. carnal consisting for a great part in externals and in outward bodily performances so the promises and motives to obedience accordingly did more respect their outward state and condition here in the world then now under the Gospel when we being liberate of the yoke of these bod ly rites and ceremonies and light having arisen to us after these (l) Cant. ● 2.17 shadows are gone have more spiritual duties and more pure motives and encouragments Not that their performance were not also spiritual and as if these types had not pointed out Christ whom they were to eye in all sacrifices washings c. But because the maner of performance was much conversant about the outward man and sensible things Nor 2. That Christians have not the promise of this life and for temporal mercies but because they had many particular peremptory and absolute promises for such things which do not belong to us who instead of Canaan a land flowing with milk and honey have for the most part the crosse for our portion and badge here in this wilderness as being more profitable to us and more subservient to his glory who often maketh the (m) Sanguis martyrum semen ecclesiae ashes of the Saints the seed of the Church It s true the general promises made to that people do no less belong to us then they did to them for instance that word Ps 84.11 is no lesse true to day then when it was at first written the Lord being no lesse then he was then a Sun to comfort and a Shield to protect his people As the Lords hand is not shortned so neither is his bowels more straitned and narrow towards us Christians yea as to these temporal mercies And if they were as fit and convenient for us we should have them as certainly and in as great abundance But the thing indefinitly promised not being hic nunc and as clothed with such and such circumstances fit and convenient for us qua talis and as such it is not contained in the promise And thus though the Lord will with hold no good thing from them that walk uprightly yet he will not give such a supposed mercy but really a snare And thus in withholding of it he withholdeth not what is good but what would be evil We will not now enter the lists
they might be doing but they could not blame him if their labour wanted sucesse Nay such an app●rent prohibition is so far from laying a restraint upon the Saints that if thereupon they did forbear they would provoke the Lord and wrong themselves and others Thus Gen. 32.26 the Lord saith to Jacob let me go but he will not till he get the blessing and if he had yielded we may suppose he would not then have gotten the blessing so Exod. 30.10 the Lord sayes to Moses let me alone Nay but replyeth Moses I will stand in the breach and will not leave off to interceed for that people though it hath most grievously provoked thee You will say may we not pray against such as have committed that unpardonable sin Thus the Christians of old prayed against Julian the Apostate if then we may pray for such it must be lawfull to put up contradictory prayers Ans Albeit too many no doubt have been guilty of that blasphemy yet since that which is the main ingredient of it viz. malice rage and hatred of the known truth is a latent thing and not obvious to the eye of our discretion I never read of any since the dayes of the Apostles whom the Church of Christ durst determine and peremptorily conclude to be guilty of that sin except (n) Theodor. hist lib. 4. cap. 9.17.19 Julian the Apostat for whom they left off to pray and prayed against his malice and rage that the Lord would prevent that mischief he intended against Christians and would remove such a stumbling block out of the way of the Gospel but they did not pray for Julians condemnation nor had they any warrant to pray for that Again you will object and ask what difference there is between one lying under that peremptory sentence and him upon whom it is already executed May we not as well pray for them that are in hell as for those we know to have sinned unto death Ans Because we conceive this to be the main objection we will now speak to it at some length And first if we abstract from a revelation which cannot now be expected and spe●k of those who have grievously backslidden as we would remember Beza his caveat and beware lest we too rashly judge of any man that he hath committed that unpardonable sin So this may be warrant enough for us to pray for any man though never so gu lty and lying under many sad threatnings that there is no sentence and threatning though never so peremptory but it admitteth a limitation and proviso When I say unto the wicked thou shalt surely dy would not this appear to be a most peremptory and irrevocable sentence and yet hearken to what followeth if he turn from his sin he shall surely live he shall not die Ezek. 33.14 16. It is true 1. these who are guilty of the blasphemy against the holy Ghost shall never find grace to turn and repent and lay hold on Christ and so shall never be pardoned yet if they did turn they should find mercy and live And then 2. albeit there be no particular sin that is unpardonable except that blasphemy yet the most part of sins and sinners shall never be pardoned and therefore our prayers can do them no good and thus unless we limit our prayers to the Elect and add this condition when we pray for others if they belong to the election of God we must pray for them whom our prayers will not profit Secondly and especially we answer Albeit these who are guilty of that unpardonable sin be under an irrevocable sentence and though we as is supposed know their condition to be desperate yet we must carry our selves far otherwayes towards them then towards those who are in hell and as upon a civil consideration we owe them if our Superiors Magistrates Parents Masters c. honour and obedience So also upon a sp ritual account there be several duties which we may perform towards and with them while they are Viators and on the way which we may not perform with or for them after they are cast into hell for so long as they live in this world they are under the (o) Nunc enim propterea orat Ecclesia pro iis quos in genere humano habet inimices quia tempus est paenitentiae fructuosae Aug. de civit Dei lib. 21. cap. 24. means though these shall do them no good their day is not yet come to an end and though they were excommunicated and thus in part shut from publick ordinances they are not as yet actually stated into an unalterable condition and therefore they may well be an object of prayer pity and Christian compassion though the malefactor be sentenced and condemned yet we may deal with the King for a pardon O! but when the sentence is once executed there is no remedy after the repobats are cast into hell and come to their everlasting home after their day is spent and they removed from the ordinances and means of grace to what purpose should we pray for them after the ship is broken sails cables and anchors will not profit if life be gone no medecine can do any good when the night hath surprised them so that they can no more work for themselves we must not imagine that we can help them with our hands But some may yet reply we cannot in faith pray for such as we know to be reprobats or to have committed that unpardonable sin we cannot have the least hope or expectation of success and dare we pray and not in faith and such a prayer must be performed as a meer task and if I might call that which we grant is not commanded a duty It cannot not be a mean for good to them and why may we not thus pray for those that are in hell Ans Certainly we should not ask what we may not ask in faith only the prayer of faith is an acceptable sacrifice but the faith that is required in prayer hath not alwayes one and the same object as shall more fully be shown Part 2. Ch. 2. And if we know that God will accept of such prayers as a testimony of our love and commpassion towards our neighb urs and of our zeal to his glory in their conversion then we may know our labour shall not be lost what though they for whom we pray reap no benefit thereby The Popish dream of Falconilla and Tr●j●ns deliverance out of bell by the prayers of Theela and Gregory is fabulous and ridiculous As also that of Augustine though an eminent Ancient Neque enim de quibusdam veraciter d●ceretur quod non eis r●mitratur neque in hoc seculo neque in futur Mat. 12.23 nisi ●ssent quibus etsi non in isto tamen remitteretur in futuro Aug. de civit Dei lib. 21. cap. 24. yet if our prayers as Davids for his enemies return into our own bosome with a message of peace we have no cause to
undone us And now I would ask at carnal hearts who undervalue this heavenly and soul-enriching exercise being ready to say if I might have my desire satisfied none should pray more frequently then I but I see little good that may be expected thereby no income nor advantage since they who are most employed in that work have as many wants and trials as other folk I see no good they get by all their prayers why should I loss my pains Ah! Atheist dost thou not know that a little which a righteous man hath is better then all the riches and great revenue of the wicked Ps 37.16 Prov. 15.16 Prov. 16.8 Whatever the righteous hath be it litlte be it much it is a blessing and mercy indeed Nay his wants and crosses become blessings unto him they are medicines prescribed by the great Physitian for the health of the soul and preservatives to keep us from infection while we live in a contagious world but on the other hand all that the wicked have their choycest blessings are according to that threatning Mal. 2.2 (u) Aliquando Deus iratus dat quod petis Deus propitius negat quod petis August de verbis Domini serm 53. nocitura toga nocitura petuntur Militia Juvenal Sat. 10. cursed they are snares and thorns to prick them and will prove as coals heaped on their head to encrease their misery and torment for ever and their present rods and sufferings are an earnest and prelude the first fruits and beginning of their eternal wo and punishment The godly and the wicked while under one and the (x) Multum quippe interest non quid accipiat sed quis accipiat nec quale sit quod datur sed qualis sit ipse cui datur nam bona obsunt mala prosunt sicut fuerint quibus dantur August tract 62. in Joan. same outward rod and in the same furnace find it not to be the same to both the furnace that purgeth the dross from the gold doth by little and little consume the tinn the godly are gold and are more refined by trials but that fire in which the wicked are now cast doth drie up their marrow and fat till at length it consume them by a never ending consumption But while thou sayest thou wouldst ask if thou thought'st thou wouldst obtain dost thou think that thou art a loser by any limitation or qualification of the promise of audience unless thou be an Epicure (y) We heard the confession of Pagans and wilt not thou who art called a Christian come their length and wilt thou grudge when the Lord doth that to thee and for thee which Pagans have askt and prayed for to themselves Ah shall they allow to God the liberty to make their choyce of their mercies as knowing what is best for them to have or want and wilt thou prescribe to him and mindest no more but the satisfying of thy beastly and sensual appetite Ah! is not the promise while thus limited to thy eternal happiness and spiritual good more z sweet and full then if it wanted such a proviso What wouldst thou have God to joyn and comply with thy foolish and hurtfull desires and to give thee upon thy asking a serpent to sting thee to death and a delicious potion full of deadly poyson because perhaps it is pleasant to thy taste whether is it better for a Pupil to be guided by a wise Governour then to be left to his own choyce and to follow his youthfull and unadvised courses albeit the discreet Governour will curb and hold him in and often withhold what he craveth yet it s for his good that he thus dealeth with him if the inconsiderat youth might have his will he would quickly lavish and spend his large patrimony and with the Prodigal bring himself into great extremity And our kind Lord dealeth with us as pupils and children this is the time of our under-age and if now we had our wills we would undo our selves Adam was more knowing and wise then we who yet being left to the counsel of his own will did prove a prodigal and quickly spent one of the largest patrimonies that ever did fall unto any meer man Is it not then for our good that the Lord himself will be our Tutor and Governour and will give us what is good for us but will not satisfie our (z) Recordaris dixisse te in plarima dubitatio●c discrimineque versari ne teipsum falleres cum mala quandoque pro bonis op●ares verum mi hi v●detur ab animo tao prius o●ortere caliginem qua nunc offunditur auferre deinde illa pro●iu● admovere per quae seu bonum quid fit five malum dignoscas nunc enim impos esse videris insanum quiddam mibi videtur temero Deum precari ac diligenter considerandum ne quis seip um fallat mala petens dum bona se putat orare prudentior po●ta qui precabatur mala ab orantibus abesse Plato temo primo Alcib 2. pag. mihi 139 140 136. interpret Mars Ficin hurtful and sensual desires But you will say albeit from what hath been said I be now convinced that the Lord often yea even then while he withholdeth the particular that was askt doth that which is best by way of return to the prayers of his honest supplicants and though I would fain beleeve that the Lord doth alwayes thus hear and answer our prayers because the Scriptures seem to hold out this point most frequently and very convincingly yet there be some cases in which the Lord doth not satisfie and fulfill the desires of his children which cannot fall under the exception of non expediency hurt and evil particularly these three 1. when we pray against our sins and corruptions and that we may not be led into temptation 2. when we pray for spiritual mercies to others that the Lord would open their eyes and change their hearts and bring them out of the snare in which they are caught 3. when we pray for outward and publick mercies to the Church and people of God what evil can there be in those petitions that the Lord should not alwayes hear and answer them In answer to this question we shall first speak to the first case by it self because it is concerning a personal mercy to the supplicant himself then in the second place we shall speak to the other two joyntly because they are concerning mercies askt for others and thirdly we shall obviat objections To the first we answe 1. albeit it be our indispensible duty to subdue and mortifie sin so that we should alwayes be opposing and fighting against our lusts and resisting temptations yet the Lord may have his holy and wise ends why he will suffer us for a while to wrestle before he give the victory or remove the temptation and though the mortification of sin and the removing of temptations be absolutely good and alwayes yet in the issue
all the prayers of his honest supplicants which is the foundation of faith so every Saint hath his own experiences which spiritualized sense and feeling may lay hold upon and is there yet any thing wanting for thy comfort and establishment is there yet any of the sons of Zion who dare doubt of the tender love and care of their Father and which is worse who dare give God the lie he may summond all his creatures and put them to it if there be any among them who can bear testimony against his Word O! what an impudent and blasphemous lie were it to say that God had not kept promise and yet this atheisme lurketh in the hearts of too many yea and so much of unbelief as lodgeth in the best so much also of this venom which the old serpent did (ſ) Gen 3.5 6. spue out upon our first parents and which they too greedily sucked in but after that we have cast out all that poyson and are perfectly purged after that our eyes are anointed and all mists of darkness are dispelled we will doubt no more and complain no more after we are once entered in the light of glory we will then clearly see our errours and mistakes and will proclaim to all eternity the Lords faithfulness in fullfilling all his promises and his bounty and kindness towards us in not granting our foolish and sensual requests nay who did ever hear a Saint on his death-bed when carnal baits and worldly temptations could promise little and furnish no contentment and thus were not able so to allure infatuat and bewitch as formerly who I say was the man that entring upon the borders of eternity durst challenge the Almighty for not accomplishing his promises or who could say that at any time he had called upon God in vain All ages can give their evidences and all beleevers will and must sooner or at length confess that there was never a prayer put up in faith that proved abortive though all our labours and endeavours under the Sun may be fruitless and to no purpose yet prayer will never be as a (t) Hos 9. ●4 miscarrying womb and dry breasts but alwayes proveth that good seed which though it may for a while lie hid under ground yet still yields good fruit for the comfort and satisfaction of the sower What is (u) 2 Sa●●● 22 said of the bow of Jonathan and the sword of Saul is a fit motto of the prayer of faith it never returneth empty And this truth will not be called in question by any except when sense and carnal reason these corrupt judges in the matters of God do sit on the bench and give out sentence But ah our unbelief negligence and estrangedness from God doth deprive our selves and the Church of many mercies and of much matter of comfort to our selves of praise to God and terrour and astonishment to enemies 7. If we consider the many sweet and binding relations which the Lord hath been pleased to undertake towards his covenanted people who are true Israelits and are sincers in their profession if we consider how all the persons of the blessed Trinity are affected towards them what is the love of the Father the purchase of the Son and the work of the holy Ghost our doubting and unbelief will be most unteasonable 1. then is not God our Maker our Lord and Master our Father and Husband c. And will not the infinit Creaator care for his creatures who depend upon him will not the great Lord and Master of heaven and earth care and provide for his honest servants will not the Father of mercies pity his children in the day of their trouble and hear their cry will not the Husband hearken to the voice of the Spouse and grant her desire c. 2. As to the relations under which we stand towards the persons of the blessed Trinity severally (x) Quem enim invocamus Patrem Fratrem Advo●atum Quo ausu Patre jubente Fratrejustituente Advocoeto inpellente Quae fiducia Patre promittente Fraire adjurante Advocato testificante Quid petimus baereditatem quam nobis impetravit Fraterconcessit Pater obsignavit Spiritus sanctus Gerhar harm Evang. cap. 149. is not the x Father our father the Son our brother and advocat and the holy Ghost our helper leader and guide and who will doubt of acceeptance welcome and success while his father commandeth his brother inviteth and his guide and counsellour perswadeth and allureth him to come and present this requests while the father promiseth the elder brother and heir reneweth and y confirmeth his fathers grant our leader and assistant doth put that security in our hand and is willing to engage with them in the same bond and putteth to his seal and subscription confirming their evidence and adding his own what place is there left for unbelief doubting and fears Especially if 3. we consider 1. the Fathers love that mysterious love in giving his only begotten Son to death that we might live Joh. 3.16 1 Joh. 4.9 and shall we think that he who spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us will not freely with him also give us what we shall ask in his name Rom. 8.32 I say not saith the Son that I will pray the Father for you for the Father himself loveth you Joh. 16.26 27. I would not have you think that you have no other ground whereon to build your faith (r) By a most emphatick asseveration which to many of the learned appeareth to be an oath as Joh. 16.23 c. but my intercession I will not pray for you to one who knoweth you not and hath no respect to you I will not pray for you as if ye were enemies and strangers neither should ye thus pray for your selves after that ye are reconciled to him through my blood after ye are become children and mutually love and are loved of the Father and me Courteours will confidently draw nigh to their Prince and we have moyen in heaven the King himself loveth us and hath adopted us to the crown and will he withhold lesser mercies and hide his face while we present our requests to him But as the Father doth thus love us and freely give and by covenant dispone to us all that we can desire or stand in need of So 2. the Son hath laid out a price for us and by his blood hath purchased all these things to us and ever liveth to make intercession for us and to apply to us the merit of his death and to put us in possession of all these good things which are the purchase of his blood ah we seldom visit the throne yet Christ is alwayes there we weary in praying for our selves but Christ wearieth not to pray for us our prayers are cold and without life but Christ doth not faint nor grow remiss our manifold iniquities do cry against us but the blood of Christ doth out-cry them And
predicatui de tribus personis simul exceptis quae pertinent ad incarnationem seu assumptam naturam exam plorum loco hac adsert Deus noster Pater noster Praedestinator Creator Recomc●liator Adoptator Sanctificator exauditor precum Forh instr Histor theo●l lib. 1 ●cap 12. our blessed Lord teacheth us to call God Father not as if thereby he did point out to us the distinction or relation that is among the persons of the trinity or to single out to us the first excluding the other two for its certain we should direct our prayers to God who is Father Son and holy Ghost but to hold out to us (x) Ostenàit ad veram Deo gratam orationem requiri ut in vera siducia oremus ac jciamus nos invocare Deum qui in Christo dilecto suo filio nos dilexit ante jacta mundi fundamenta qui in filios suos adoptavit ac spiritum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nobis donavit qui paternum erga nos gerit animum quem proinde juxta ipsius exemplum mandatum ut panem nostrum invocare possumus Gerhard in loc cont harm cap. 180. the fatherly affection and tender bowels of God and of all the persons of the blessed Trinity and to encourage us to draw nigh to God with confidence as children to a father ready to help and pity us and though we be not limited to the same words or to say no other then is held forth in that pattern and copy yet we may not change our thoughts of God nor imagine that he hath cast off his fatherly care and affection towards us And herein as we have the command So we have the example of Christ he looked upon God as a father in that solemn prayer Joh. 17.1 Father the hour is come glorifie thy Son So also ver 11 21 24 25. For though he hath another kind of interest in the Father then others yet this doth not nullifie and hinder our interest and relation especially since ours is founded upon his God having adopted us in this his beloved Son we are truly sons though not such sons as Christ we are his sons not meerly nor especially by creation but by adoption redemption and a right to the inheritance And that Christ and beleevers have the same Father and thus stand under the relation of brethren he himself is not ashamed to profess Heb. 2.11 and Joh. 20.17 Go to my brethren saith our blessed Lord to Mary and say unto them Iascend unto my Father and to your Father and to my God and unto your God And thus the ancient Church in their prayer Isa 63.16 ingeminat this (y) Dulce nomen patris sweet relation with much confidence Doubtless thou art our Father thou O Lord art our Father our Redeemer And as thus we have 1. a precept and 2. practice so also 3. a promise for our warrant 2 Cor. 6. 17.18 Touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you and will be a father unto you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord almighty And 4. this is made one end and design of the sending of the spirit into our hearts viz. because we are sons and that we may know and improve our relation by calling him Father Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.15 to banish fear and to make us draw nigh in confidence and love 2 Tim. 1.7 But you will say how can we call God Father since we are not assured of our adoption Ans If God be not thy father he must be thy (z) Mr. Murcot being in great anguish because he feared that God was not his father had these words impressed on his mind If I be not thy father am I thy enemy and again if I be not thy father why dost thou follow after me Mor. exerc Serm. 14. enemy for there is no middle state and how darest thou who art stuble draw nigh to the consuming fire If thou be not a son thou hast no interest in Christ in whom only we have access to the Father Eph. 2.18 Joh. 14.6 And if God be not thy Father why dost thou hing and depend upon him yea even then when he frowns and seemeth to beat thee off and drive thee away I spake a little to the like case Part. 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. and shall not now say much but remember that the Lord as in another case So also in this (a) 2 Cor 9.7 loveth a cheerfull giver He would not have us to come to his altar and to bring our oblation grudgingly he would not have his spouse look sad or his children to distrust his love and care towards them nor his servants fear least he were such a one as the ill and wicked servant called him a hard master and ill to please Mat. 25.24 What a grief was it to Peter to have his love to Christ questioned Job 21.17 yea though lately he had denied and disowned him and must it not grieve the good Spirit of God when we have base and low thoughts of his mercy and kindness towards us yea even then while we are constantly reaping the sweet fruits thereof Ah! will ye thus requite the Lord and deal no better with him then they Mal. 1.2 I have loved you saith the Lord yet ye say wherein hast thou loved us But if ye will trust him ye have his word he will not disappoint you and ye do thus as it were engage his majesty not to fail you O! then draw nigh to him in confidence and fear not to call him father who hath purchased so great an inheritance at so dear a rate for thee its good in some cases as a reverend divine said to threap kindness upon God He will never challenge thee who hast the heart and love of a son for calling him Father If thou be a child of light though thou fittest in darkness yet thou are still a child and thy father will not disown thee if thou claim an interest in him what though thou blushest to call thy self a son as being unworthy of that relation yet surely God hath not lost his title nor deserved at thy hands that thou shouldst rob him of that relation he hath bought by the unvaluable price of his Sons blood and its observable that the Saints many a time would divide the relation that is mutual at least are more positive and peremptory in asserting the one part then the other and as the prodigal when he had by his riotous living forfeited his son-ship and was brought to confess that he was no more worthy to be called a Son yet durst profess that he had a Father and durst call him by that relation and take on this resolution to arise and go to his father and say father Luk. 15.19.18 So they may call God Father while they are convinced and may from an humbled heart confess that they are not worthy to be called his sons and even then while their face is
prayer and supplication may be for a season totally withdrawn but though the Saints be seldom laid so low yet there may be a partial departure accompanied with many sad effects which may easily be discerned if we reflect upon the several fruits of the Spirit mentioned Part. 1. Chap. 9. and those infirmities which he helpeth and removeth if then 1. thou dost not so prepare thy heart to seek the Lord if 2. thy ends be not so pure and spieitual if 3. thou art unwillingly drawn as it were to the throne rather by the enforcement of conscience then out of love to the duty if 4. thou pray not so frequently nor 5. so fervently and feelingly nor 6. so confidently nor 7. with such complacency and delight if 8. thy communion with God in that ordinance hath not such influence upon thy heart to warm and quicken it and to engage it for the Lord and against sin as sometimes it hath had c. it is an argument that the Spirit hath in part withdrawn It s true the most watchfull and zealous Saints do not alwaies and without interruption enjoy the comforting quickning presence of the Spirit the wind doth not constantly blow after one the same maner upon the most fruitful garden therefore we must not measure our state by some present indisposition unless there be some notable considerable and abiding decay and abatement of our spiritual life but when that is observed we have reason to mourn and to lay to heart our loss and the greater and more eminent and longer continued we should be the more affected and sensible of this evil what a misery and sad judgment was it to Sampson and Saul to have but the common gifts and operations of the Spirit removed from them for as we may suppose Saul never to have had So Sampson never to have been totally deprived of the saving and sanctifying presence of the Spirit we may read their lamentation Jud. 16.28 30. 1 Sam. 28.15 And what is the chiefest measure of gifts and common priviledges and excellencies in respect of the least portion and degree of grace Ah! do not then sit down content when the breathings of the Almighty are withdrawn but go and cry to the (n) Cant. 4.16 north wind to awake and to the south wind to come and (o) If the wind blow not thy ship cannot come to the haven but being tossed to and fro by contrary tides is left to be a prey to pirats blow upon thy garden that the spices thereof may flow out go in faith ye have a promise for your encouragment the Father will give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Luk. 11.13 We will not insist on directions but reserving those in great part to the following Section let us now remember that if the unclean spirit return after he hath been cast out and find the house empty and swept he will enter in again and lay claim to his former possession Mat. 12.44 Nay though the house be not totally desolate yet so much room as he findeth empty he will seek to possess so far as the Spirit withdraweth so much the nearer Sathan approacheth if the Spirit withdraw his holy motions Sathan will improve the advantage and will fill the heart with vain idle impertinent and sinfull motions as Pirats may easily surprize the ship when the Pilot is gone So having entred it and finding it empty they will not fail to loaden and fill it with their trash and stoln wares Sect. 2. What may be the cause of that deadness and indisposition and these wandring thoughts that arise in the heart upon the Spirits departure and what course should be taken for removing this evil and for recovering and maintaining the presence of the Spirit and a praying frame and disposition Psa 81.11 12. But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me So I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels Hos 4.11 Whoredom and wine and new wine take away the heart IF the Sun be set and leave our hemisphere it must be night with us and darkness must cover the face of our earth if the soul be separated from the body the man must be dead and coldness must seize upon the liveless carrion So if the Spirit which is our Sun and life depart what darkness deadness and emptiness must be in the soul But as if it were too little to be dead and destitute of life foolish sinners will kill themselves and harden yet more the heart which already is harder then the adamant or flint and when the sun goeth down they will shut the doors and windows yea and pull out their own eyes that they may not see and thus as Seducers in respect of a total privation of life are said to be (a) Jude 12. twice dead So the Saints themselves many a time in respect of their partial deadness and the gradual departure of the Spirit of life may be said to be twice hardned blinded and indisposed for duty Not only doth sin provoke the holy Spirit to depart and thus morally and by way of demerit it stops the fountain of life but also by its poison and venomous nature it doth pollute and infect the heart it leaveth such a blot and tincture upon the soul as disposeth it for blindness and deadness Sin is not only of it self and formally opposit to grace but it maketh upon the heart as it were efficiently such a contrary impression to grace and matterially indisposeth it for a communion with God and spiritual exercises and thus stealeth and taketh a way the heart Hos 4.11 And albeit every sin hath more or less of this malignant quality in it yet their be some sins which in a special maner do produce this wofull effect after which we shall now enquire having in the preceding Section spoken of the former head viz. of the withdrawing of the Spirit and of these sins which did most directly and immediatly bring on that sad stroke but there being such a connexion between our deadness and the departure of the Spirit of life and the causes and cure of (b) Viz. of the with drawing of the Spirit and of our deadness and indisposition for duty both those evils being much alike and the same we may without any culpable confusion here speak to those joyntly especially since we referred to this place one sort of those (c) Viz those causes which did not so directly and by way of indignity and contempt of his office and work but rather condignly and by way of demerit prrooke the Spirit to depart causes which did provoke the Spirit to depart Before we speak of the remedy we will search after the causes which we shall rather name then enlarge and insist on at any length First then as to the causes of deadness indisposition and wandring thoughts in prayer for all these cursed branches may spring
foolishness And Ps 9.19 Arise O Lord let not man prevail 3. Neither will it be denied that we may complain to God of all the wrongs and injuries of the cruelty persecution threatnings and blasphemies of the wicked with Hezekiah Isa 37. David Ps 10. the Apostles Act. 4.29 c. And this complaint will be found to have something of an imprecation in it hence while Eliah is thus complaining to God and lamenting Israels apostasie the Apostle saith that he maketh intercession against Israel Rom. 11.2 3. Neither 4. will it be denied that we may pray the Lord to break the snare of prosperity and success in any evil course whereby as with chains Sathan holds them at his work nay and upon supposition that otherwise they would prove incorrigible and if there be no other mean to reclaim them we may not only pray that the Lord would not further their wicked device Psa 140.8 but also 5. that they might not prevail and meet with success in the ordinary works of their hands yea and that the Lord would fill their faces with shame that they may know themselves to be but men and might seek his name Psa 83.16 And 6. we may pray that justice may be impartially executed upon malefactors that King and Rulers would resolve with David early to cut off all wicked doers from the city of the Lord Psa 101.8 We must so love the life of wicked men as not to prefer that to Gods law and the laudable laws of the kingdom appointing capital punishment for gross crimes and hainous transgressors that others may be afraid to follow their footsteps On the other hand its certain that we may not curse 1. without a cause Prov. 26.2 Nor 2. for our own cause and because of private and personal wrongs done to us we should thus forgive our brethren and not give way to the spirit of malice and revenge Mat. 6.15 and 18.35 c. And. 3. we must not curse our relations nor cast off these bonds whether natural civil or spiritual under which we stand towards others children must not upon any terms curse their parents nor parents their children people must not curse their rulers and magistrates nor one Saint another notwithstanding personal wrongs and injuries mutually received Exod. 31.17 Mat. 15.4 Exod. 22.28 1 Cor. 13.7 1 Cor. 6.7 c. And therefore that cursed crue of passionat creatures who for a trifle will give their children servants or neighbours to the devil must have their tongues set on fire of hell Jam. 3.6 and they must be acted by the devil who is the father of envy malice virulency and of all such cursing Jam. 3.14 15. These things being premised that which may here fall under debate is whether we may pray against though not as they are our enemies yet as they are Gods enemies and the Churches enemies and though not for their eternal ruine as may appear from Part 1. Chap. 7. Sect. 3. yet for their temporal destruction and overthrow and that either indefinitly not pitching upon any particular incorporation or persons with Deborah 5.31 So let all thine enemies perish O Lord and with the Apostle 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be anathema maranatha Or particularly directing our prayers against such and such enemies as Judg. 5.23 and when there is thus an application to such and such persons whether we might curse them conditionally though not absolutly especially if with the condition a blessing be annexed thus Lord if these thine enemies be incorrigible destroy them in thy justice and if not reclaim them in thy mercy Here I grant there are far different cases and that there is less hazard in praying against Gods enemies then against our own enemies and in the general chen condescending upon such or such a faction and by way of supposition If they be incorrigible then absolutely and upon any terms Neither would I rashly condemn those learned and judicious Divines who plead for the lawfulness of such maledictions yet I should think it a more Gospel-like frame of spirit to bless and pray for persecutors then to curse them Mat. 5.44 Rom. 12.14 1 Pet. 3.9 This wants not that example that Christ left us to follow when he suffered 1 Pet. 2.21 But on the contrary he left us this pattern When we are reviled not to revile again and when we suffer not to threaten but to commit our selves and our cause to him that judgeth righteously ver 23. What are not all men our brethren and (b) Proxim us est omnis homo vid. Ames loc cit part 1. cap. 7. qui fratrem suum oderit homicida est hoc loco fratrem omnem hominem oportet intelligi c. August de sancti c. neighbours and should we not then love them and wish their good how shall we then curse them and desire their ruine and if we will not forgive them their injuries done to us how can we say for give us our sins as we forgive them that sin against us But if we would bless them and pray for them that would be an evidence of our sincerity and that we had overcome that devil of malice and revenge that rageth in carnal hearts Mat. 5.45 48. Rom. 12.19 20. Did not Christ at his death pray for his persecutors Luk. 23.34 and Stephen for those who stoned him Act. 7.60 And did not David fast and pray for his enemies though at other times upon some special account he prayed against them Psa 35.13 Nay we may here alledge the example of Pagans when the Athenians commanded their priest to curse Alcibiades after he was condemned nay saith she for I (c) Precibus non imprecationihus constituta sum sacerdos apud Wendelin Philos mor. lib. 1. cap. 10. was not consecrated a priest to (d) Or by cursing but by prayer curse but to bless But you will say may we not pray that temporal judgments may be inflicted on persecutors yea and that they may fall and never rise again to molest and vex the Saints Ans There would be a difference put between private persons and a faction or multitude for though we may desire that a malefactor may suffer according to the law yet we may not desire the ruine of a multitude for though it be an act of justice in the magistrate whom the Lord commissionateth and sends against such a party to fight against them yet that sentence cannot be so orderly and deliberately executed against them as when a process is legally led against a malefactor and such a dispensation may prove a mean through the Lords blessing to prevent eternal ruine but when a wicked faction are killed in battel death eternal usually followeth their bodily death and overthrow Yet I deny not that we should pray for success to the magistrate in such an expedition and that his enemies may not stand before him but thus we do it only comparatively that since matters
So (ſ) Thom. 2.2 quaest 8 3. art 14. ad 1. Rainer panth sect de orat cap. 7. ubi concludit sic unde quam diu in orante devotio durat tam diu oratio durare debet c. vid. loc Bellarm de bon oper in part lib. 1. cap. 9. Aquinas with his disciples and Rainereus yea and Bellarmine himself that great deceiver of this age by his patrociny of the mock-prayers of the Roman Church Ah! should we in this come short of these lax-casuists and shall we while the cloud of presence abideth upon our tabernacle go out from the presence of the Lord. But here we may take occasion from Austius words to enquire whether it be lawfull to use repititions in prayer Ans Certainly some repetitions are lawfull and warranted by the example of Christ and of the Saints both in the old and new Testament and may be very pithy and emphatick expressions of zeal love spiritual delight importunity faith c. or of the greatness of our danger and strait c. But yet there are other repetitions which are unlawfull and forbidden Mat. 6.7 viz. 1. idle and vain repetitions proceeding from want of 1. affection 2. matter and 3. (t) Viz. When want of words floweth from want of zeal and affection expression or words 2. affected and hypocritical repetitions when either that we may seem devout or that we may play the oratour we may ingeminate the same words in a strain of eloquence and elegancy 3. proud and boasting repetitions when we think to be heard for our much speaking and that our vain words doth oblige the Lord and deserve an answer But 3. in case of dulness and indisposition of heart yea and of bodily fainting and weakness it were better to be frequent in prayer then to continue long in that exercise and to divert a while and by reading meditation or conference to sharpen the irons rather then to use them while they are so blunt nay thou mayest well intermix the works of thy lawfull calling and follow thy business in the world or moderatly use some recreation for repairing some natural vigour and activity which may be subservient in this heavenly exercise We do not serve a hard Master who will call for alike work from the weak and strong and who will allow us no time for our own work or for fitting and preparing us for his service You will say but were it not better alwaies to be short in prayer whatever be our fitness and disposition since these prayers which arerecorded in the Scriptures are of no considerable length the longest being that of Solomon at the dedication of the Temple 1 King 8. and of our blessed Lord a little before his Passion Joh. 17. the complaint of the afflicted Psa 102. Ezra his confession chap. 9. the Levits thanksgiving and acknowledging of the Lords justice in punishing that people for their sins Nehem. 9. c. We have also the practice of these Saints in Egypt whom (u) Loc. jam cit Austin mentioneth and doth not condemn some also of the present age eminent for piety might here be alledged particularly the judicious Mr. (x) Vbi suprae pag. 477. Gurnal Ans Albeit 1. we must not quench the Spirit nor draw back so long as the Lord doth arrest us at the throne by the smiles of his countenance yet 2. for ordinary I do not dissent from those who do advise rather to be frequent in prayer then to continue long at once our hearts are very slippery and our affections cannot long keep their vigour and zeal but like a deceitfull bow will quickly slaken and not be able to carry the arrow to the mark But especially in publick and when we joyn with others we would so far condescend to their weakness as not to stretch forth our selves to such a length as the most enlarged can scarcely reach as is too usual and I wish that no principle of Pharisism and self-seeking had influence therein but 3. though thus for ordinary we need not be very long yet when we are under indisposition we may yet be shorter but then we would be more frequent yea 4. as to occasional prayer we may yet spend less time in it and yet prevail and we would here observe a very considerable difference for albeit we need not stay long in our ordinary course of daily prayer yet comparatively some considerable space of time would be allowed for that exercise but as to occasional prayer we may be very short in it yea when we are pressed with business or company and have not opportunity to go apart and in a solemn manner to make our adress to God we may dart up to heaven some short ejaculation which will not be thrust out nor sent away without the blessing And having thus made mention of ejaculatory prayer we could not leave that sweet point till we had digressed a little to its use necessity and singular use were it not that Mr. (y) Mr. Cobbet of pray part 1. cha 2. Mr. Gurnal ubi supra cha 30. pag. 375. which should be 383. Cobbet and Mr. Gur●al have spoken so fully and pithily to that subject and now I shall need add no more but recommend what they have written to all those who desire to walk with God and to carry on a safe and thriving trade with heaven But who is able to discover the excellency and several advantages of such short ejaculations and apostrophe's to God O! how do they help to maintain a heavenly and praying-disposition in the heart These are the swift messengers which upon all occasions we may dispatch to the throne by these we may beep constant correspondence with heaven and have our conversation there no calling trade nor condition of life needs hinder this spiritual traffique and negotiation the most laborious tradesman may follow his business constantly and work hard in his shop and thus pour out a prayer to God such a short parenthesis will make no sensible and considerable interruption in any business or employment And oh what a difference is there between those Christians who exercise themselves in such spiritual diversions and short conversions to God and others who suffer their heart to stay so long here beneath and so to fasten and take such deep root in the earth The Lord in his providence offereth to us many occasions for some spiritual thoughts and heavenly meditation where canst thou cast thine eyes and not behold a miracle which thou dost sleight because it is ordinary and from day to day renewed or continued who hath covered the face of the earth with such variety of herbs flowers c who maketh the fire to burn the wind to blow c. And besidethese outward occasions how many motions doth the Spirit suggest for lifting up the heart to God and were it not our wisdom not to choak these motions nor let such opportunities slip but to dart up some short desire and
(ſ) We are not now speaking of spirituals which have no place here because these shall not be with held no not as to their measure and degree as may appear from Patt 1. Chap. 7. Sect. 2. indifferent and may in the use prove serpents to sting thee and not bread to nourish thee and so could not be given to thee when such but in wrath But if thou hast learned to pray as thou ought'st submitting to him who is (t) Isa 28.29 wonderfull in counsel and excellent in working to the only wise God and thy compassion at Father who will not give thee a stone in stead of fish and confining thy desires within the bounds of the promise for these indifferent things only then fall under the promise when hic nunc they are good to us as hath been shown Part 1. Chap. 7. and Part 2. Chap 2. if thou hast thus learned to pray aright thou needst not doubt of the success of thy prayers but maist be assured that though thou hast not gotten the particular that thou named in thy prayer yet thy prayer hath been heard and answered the true sense and meaning whereof must be this (u) 1 Tim. 1.17 O Lord thou knowest what is good for me to have or want and this is the mercy that I desire if it may prove a mercy and blessing indeed but otherwise let me rather want it then have it in wrath and to be a snare unto me So that every prayer for outward and temporal things must have a condition either tacite or expressed and so must have two parts and members and as we pray for such a supposed mercy upon supposition of expediency and conveniency So we pray against it and that it may not be given upon supposition of inexpediency and hurt Hence its evident that the Lord in denying when the condition of expediency faileth or delaying till it be placed doth hear and answer thy prayer and if he did give the particular he would not answer but reject thy prayer for under both parts of the supposition this is it which is absolutely said and askt Lord do thou as a wise and tender father make choyce for thy foolish child and do as to the particular desired what may prove for thy glory the good of the Church and thy servants comfort advantage and eternal happiness And when we thus pray if the Lord did not with-hold what would be for our hurt for otherwise as we may suppose from Part. 2. Chap. 2. Sect. 2. and what here followeth when these outward things would prove good for us they will not be with-held and if he did give the particular we named he should not answer our prayers nor fulfill his promises nor do according to our faith and expectation nor according to our trust in him or that fatherly care and providence he exerciseth towards his chosen ones but in with-holding what we thus desired in the supposed case of inexpediency he answereth all those ends and engagements And upon the former ground we may yet further argue 1. what is only conditionally askt if the condition fail it is not askt and what is only relatively and in reference to such an end loved and desired when it will not conduce unto but rather hinder and obstruct that end it is not loved and desired but rather hated and loathed But the Saints pray for these outward and temporal things only conditionally and relatively as we have seen Part 1. Chap. 7. Sect. 2. and in the present case the condition faileth and their subserviency to the great end and therefore they being thus cloathed with such circumstances they are not askt not desired and therefore their prayers cannot be said to want an answer because these are not given 2. Such conditional petitions must have two parts and those opposit according to the nature of the condition viz. that such a particular may be given upon the supposition of expediency and upon the contrary supposition of hurt and inexpediency that it may be with-held and not given now both these conditions cannot concur as being opposit and so both these parts joyntly and in sensu composito cannot subsist nor be askt and one of them and that the best and which only in the supposed case is desired and shall I say absolutely x askt is alwaies heard and answered (u) When the condition is placed and included an bypothetical proposition be co●eth absolute condition●lis p●sita cou●● one fit absoluta even then when the particular is not given 3. If our prayers must not be thus resolved and so thus heard and answered when the particular is denied as we would 1 prove forgetfull of our main and great unsiness and the one thing necessary in not asking in subordination threunto and 2. as we might prejudge the Church and wrong others who may be also concerned therein So. 3 we might be inju●●ous to our own selves in reference to our self ends which then must rule and mislead for what knowest thou but in the denial there may be a reservation for some greater mercy of the same nature and kind which would have been obstructed by ●●y getting what for the present thou so earnestly desired if thou hadst come to such a place and hadst been put in such a station and condition of life as thou didst so greedily cover that might have obstructed thy greater preferment and better accommodation in the world and then again ●●y getting such a particular might bring along with it some sad and heavy cross which the having of such a mercy could not counter-ballance and therefore the Lord in his love and in his pity may prevent such a great evil by with-holding a less good And th●n w●at hath been said in reference to the prayers of the wicked that they are not accepted heard nor answered a● being 〈◊〉 abomination to the Lord when the particular they desired is given may serve as a second ground for illustrating the present point concerning the Lords hearing and answering the Saints prayers when the particular is not granted As there will hear be found parity of reason though upon contrary grounds So the ends and designs keeping still the opposition will appear to be proportionably alike by comparing what hath been here said concerning the one viz. the ends propounded in the dispensation of those mercies to the wicked with what followeth Sect. 4. concerning the trials and disappointments of the Saints only in the general now we may suppose that as the Lord in wrath giveth to the (y) Eph. 2.3 children of wrath that which through their folly and abuse becometh a snare and occasion of their ruine So in mercy he with-holds from the vessels of mercy what would harm them and become a temptation and occasion of their hurt and therefore as he answereth ●ot the prayers of the wicked when he giveth them their hearts des●re So he answereth the prayers of his servants when he withholdeth the particular they
that we may run to the fountain it self to have a supply and an up-making there the Lord will with hold many creature enjoyments that we may know our home not to be here and that our minority is not yet past nor the inheritance to be yet intrusted to us as being but pupils who must depend and ro●l themselves and their affairs over upon the care and fidelicy of another and that thus our hearts may be enlarged with longing desires after that day when our wills shall run parallel with our good and the glory and purpose of our Master 4. To prevent our hurt we are ready to mistake and to ask a serpent in stead of an egge but God will not grant such foolish desires but will according to Christs (e) Joh. 17.25 prayer keep us thus as it were against our wills from the evil of the world 1. from the evil of temptation for often (f) See Sect. 2. such things prove an occasion of sin 2. from the evil of suffering for riches honours and pleasures have often proven a precipice from which the men of the world have been cast headlong 5. to promove our good and greater advantage what we desire may prove obstructive of a greater mercy either spiritual or temporal and the Lord in his pity and love will not suffer such a block and impediment to be cast into our way 6. for our instruction what is said of the cross schola crucis schola lucis may well be applied to this dispensation which often through our ignorance and mistake proveth a sad affliction to us thus we may learn no more to live by sense and hereby we may be set a work to examine our hearts and wayes more narrowly that we may know whether such a dispensation proceedeth from anger or love and thus we may be brought to espy what formerly did escape our view c. nay here we might alledge all those motives which prevail with the Lord to afflict his people and honest servants while he doth not pursue any quarrel against them as in the case of Job of the Apostles and Martyrs for as this case is much like to that this being often very grievous to us and looking affliction-like So the ends and motives on the Lords part will be found to be much alike and for the most part the same As to the second branch of the question viz. those ends for which the Lord delayeth to give what he purposeth at length to give we might here resume several particulars mentioned in the former head as there also might be applied much of what we are now to say these cases not being much different as to the present enquiry since both those dispensations flow from one and the same fountain of love wisdom care and fidelity of a compassionat father towards his children and servants 1. Then the Lord delayes to give till we be fitted and (g) Tauto quippe illud quod valde magnum est sumemus eapacius quanto fidelius credimus speramus sirmius defideramus ardentius prepared to receive and that such a dispensation may be a mean to humble and prepare us every thing is good and beautifull in its season and the Lord knows best how to time our mercies right if the Lord should give in our time and before we be prepared to receive and improve such a gift would be as medicine unseasonably taken which would rather encrease and beget then remove diseases but as the Lord thus delayeth till we be fitted to receive and improve his mercies aright So 2. till other things be fitted and be in readiness to joyn with the desired mercy for our good that thus according to that sweet though little pondred or believed word Rom. 8.28 all things may work together for our good that impediments may be removed and other means may be placed and joyn hands with such a mercy that fit occasions may be offered and such circumstances may combine c. and thus a considerable space of time may interveen before the right and fit season come 3. To make us prize the Lords bounty the more when he fulfilleth our desire and to make us the more thankfull for the mercy (h) Augustin supra citat cito data vilescunt soon and easily gotten little prized and soon forgotten 4. To make us pray more frequently and importunatly (i) Ibid. Deus differt dare ut tu discas orare the Lord delayeth that we may add both to the number and measure of our prayers that we may become both more assiduous and more ardent supplicants 5. That at length he may appear for our greater comfort the Lord waiteth that he may be gracious and that our mercies may be full compleat and stable 6. To learn us that hard lesson of submission and that we may not dare to limit and prescribe to the Lord that we may patiently wait and look up to him untill he show us his loving kindness to make us examples to others of patience dependence and self-denial c. I have not insisted on these particulars because many of them or such like are more fully handled and applied to a more (k) Viz. both to this and that which followeth chap. 2. general case by the judicious Mr. Gee in his elaborat Treatise concerning prayer-obstruction Chap. 4. But what hath bee said may suffice for convincing us of our impatience folly and ingratitude to our kind God who waits that he may be gracious to us and who will not with-hold our desires when these are not contrary to his glory the good of his people and our own comfort and happiness CHAP. II. When and whose prayer will the Lord not hear nor answer WE will 1. speak of this question as it concerneth the Saints 2. as it concerneth the wicked Sect. 1. When will the Lord not hear his children and servants and what are these sins that will obstruct and hinder the success of their prayers Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me VVE may speak of the Saints prayers either for privat and personal mercies or for publick mercies to the Church and incorporation of believers but as to the present case we need not insist on this distinction but in reference to both sort of prayers we may generally answer with the Psalmist Psa 66.18 if we regard iniquity in our heart the Lord will not accept or answer any of our prayers either for our selves or others See Part. 2. Chap. 1. But it may be askt what are those sins which in a special manner do obstruct and hinder the success of our prayers Ans Albeit we condemn the stoical dream concerning the equality of sins it being evident from the Word of truth and sound reason that there is a great difference between sins and sins some being much more hainous and grievous then others both in respect of the act object manner of performance and many aggravating
help of the Spirit Page 332 There are no theandrick actions Page 37 What faith did Adam in innocency act Page 530 We should pray for all men Page 260 Christ our altar and Priest Page 324 To pray alwayes what it importeth Page 668 c. Whether the Angels and Saints in glory pray for us Page 78 We may not pray to Saints or Angels Page 106 Whether all good floweth from the suggestion of good and all evil from the suggestion of evil Angels Page 362 367 Angels why called Seraphims Page 446 Whether Angels may be said to pray and to pray in faith Page 531 The wicked receive nothing in answer to their prayers Page 704 721 A delay or denial may be a gracious answer to our prayers Page 711 Whether the Lord alwayes answers when he hears prayer Page 720 Rules for discerning an answer to our prayers Page 723. c. The appropriation of works and attributes to any of the persons of the glorious Trinity not exclusive except in the mystery of incarnation redemption c. Page 569 Aquinas his empty speculations Page 17 Our assurance confidence and boldness admitteth a latitud Page 345 The necessity of attention the impudence and tergiversation of the Popish Doctors Page 427 The Atheists great prejudice against prayer removed Page 701 B Mr. Baxter interpreted Page 336 The blasphemy against the holy Ghost unpardonable Page 239 Whether we may pray for such as are guilty of that blasphemy Page 249 C Calmness after prayer an evidence of faith in praying Page 525 There are not three first causes and principal Agents but one onely Page 569 Characters of such as will never be heard Page 763 c. Of the many that are called few only are chosen Page 767 Christ's intercession see the first Table Page 34 c. Whether Christ's prayer that the cup might pass was heard Page 70 Whether all Christ's prayers on earth were mediatory Page 75 Whether we should pray to Christ as Mediator Page 104 Whether we may ask any mercy in Christ's name to them for whom he died not Page 271 Christ hath removed from us a two-fold incapacity of drawing nigh to God Page 299 We must ask in Christ's name see the first Table Page 301 c. Some Gentiles knew Christ 312 Whether the Jewish Church and the Disciples before Christs death tendered up their prayers in Christ's name Page 318 When we pray for the Church how alwayes heard Page 486 The Saints prayers the Church treasure Page 295 Why the Lord will often rather make a compensation then give to his honest supplicants the mercy in kind which they askt Page 734 In what sense prayer is said to be conditional Page 194 What is askt conditionally is not askt if the condition fail Page 713 Whether confession of sin be a part of prayer Page 19 Confused knowledge a medium between ignorance and distinct or more perfect knowledge Page 309 Whether and in what sense we should be content with a small measure of grace Page 227 We should continue instant in prayer Page 456 541 Several motives to continue instant in prayer with an answer to objections Page 791 c. What copy should we set before us in working out our salvations Page 643 A voluntary covenant the ground of conveighance of all good to the Saints from the Father thorough the Son by the holy Ghost Page 577 Of cursing and imprecations Page 664 c. D Popish praying for the dead confuted Page 233 Deadness and indisposition in prayer it's kinds causes and cure see the first Table Page 602 c. Deadness excuseth not our negligence or ommission of duty Page 637 The decrees of God are not our rule Page 816 142 c. A delay or denyal sometimes a gracious answer of prayer Page 711 Why the Lord delayes to give what at length he will give Page 736 Sathans design in moving to good Page 369 The desire needs not an interpreter Page 23 We should said a Divine pray desperatly Page 449 Dev●ls and the damned in hell cannot pray and why Page 83 A spiritual disposition necessary in prayer Page 409 Whether doubting believers may pray in faith Page 497 Prayer considered as a duty and as a means Page 9 E The efficacy effects and fruit of prayer Page 2 473 698 What end should we propose in prayer see first Table Page 415 c. An exhortation to pray for enemies Page 273 Whether we may pray for incorrigible enemies and haters of godliness Page 268 Enlargement in prayer an evidence of faith Page 521 Whether we may be too much enlarged in prayer Page 648 Whether the Saints use to be more enlarged in private or publick Page 650 Popish enthusiasme Page 648 Euchites confuted Page 669 Whether we may pray for any evil either of sin or suffering Page 652 Example a bad rule Page 150 The condition of expediency doth not diminish the fulness of the promise Page 483 The Saints experience of the success of prayer Page 513 The Popish explicit faith Page 313 F Whether the unconverted may pray in faith Page 99 Whether the Saints may pray for the reprobat in faith Page 255 We should especially pray for such as are of the houshold of faith Page 277 Of the Popish blind faith with four degrees of their explicit faith Page 313 What faith required in prayer see the first Table Page 460 If we walk not as children we cannot call God Father Page 519 It 's not presumption but a duty to call God Father Page 559 c. Five bonds whereby a child of light walking in darkness may lay hold on God as a Father Page 564 Why Christians most ordinarily address themselves to the Father Page 575 What kind of fear required in supplicants Page 435 Fervency required in prayer Page 442 Whether it be a mercy to have our formal and cold prayers answered Page 651 729 Of frequency it 's necessity and fruit Page 656 693 It's foolish to fret because of the prosperity of the wicked or the Saints afflictions Page 718 G We know not but the Lord may have mercy on all this generation Page 264 272 The Gentiles not left without a testimony concerning Christ Page 312 Prayer considered as a gift and as a grace Page 9 The Lord alwayes giveth what we ask in faith or what is better Page 477 The Popish glass of the Trinity Page 120 How we should conceive of God when we draw nigh to him in any Ordinance Page 553 c. We may worship God absolutely not actually minding the personal relations Page 581 Whether our prayers may be said to move God Page 822 Papists have made many new gods Page 107 Mr. Goodwins assertions concerning Christ's intercession considered Page 62 Grace how it should be askt Page 211 The measure and degree of grace must be absolutely desired Page 214 Whether grace may be abused Page 223 227 Whether we should submit and be content with a small measure of grace Page 227 Whether
grace alwayes groweth till it be perfected in glory Page 588 H Whether we may love them whom the Lord hateth Page 255 The Lord's stile to be the hearer of prayer Page 510 What his hearing of prayer importeth Page 703 Four different wayes of hearing Page 710 The Lord hears to our profit when not to our desire Page 716 Whether the Lord alwayes answers when he hears prayer Page 720 When and whose prayer the Lord will not hear Page 738 763 c. Whether the habitual intention of the heart be sufficient for offering up our prayers in Christs name Page 321 Whether Sathan hath an immediat access unto and influence on the heart Page 351 Whether Sathan knoweth the secrets of the heart and can turn it Page 355 How the Spirit helpeth us to pray see the first Table Page 329 Though we must pray in the holy Ghost yet not in the name of the holy Ghost Page 301 Holiness of heart expressed in the life and conversation is necessary to the acceptance and audience of prayer Page 407 Humility required in supplicants which is not inconsistent with but rather is a ground and foundation of filial boldness and confidence Page 437 I Prayer no cloak for idleness Page 542 Mental idols and false representations of the infinit Majesty of God dangerous Page 555 The Jewish Church worshiped not Angels or Saints Page 109 How Gospel-mysteries were made known and in what measure to the Jews Page 308 Whether they tendered up their prayers in Christs name Page 318 Many impediments in our way to the throne of grace Page 338 Importunity required in prayer Page 442 Of imprecations and cursing Page 664 How the Spirit is said to interceed for us Page 29 Christ's intercession see the first Table Page 34 c. Saint invocation a Pagan dream 107 By what steps it crept into the Church c. See the first Table Page 108 c. K VVhy the Lord sheweth kindness to the wicked Page 706 If the Lord give not the mercy that was askt in kind he will give what is better Page 477 716 VVe should pray for the King and all in authority for the kingdom and place of our nativity and abode Page 275 247 L Prayer the ladder that reacheth the heavens Page 329 VVhether the Saints in prayer be limited to that duty Page 650 VVhether we may love them whom the Lord hateth Page 255 M Prayer excludeth not the use of the means Page 541 What was the least measure of knowledge in Gospel-mysteries that was necessary to salvation before the coming of Christ Page 310 Medina his denying Gods fidelity and truth while he would plead for his soveraignty Page 503 There is a medium between a full assurance of faith and a probable expectation Page 345 The Lords mercy a ground of faith Page 500 Papists plead that by their prayers they merit an answer Page 419 437 Saint merit the ground of Saint-invocation Page 131 Whether we should pray to Christ as Mediator Page 104 A Mediator of intercession should also be a mediator of redemption Page 129 The School-distinction of mission not full Page 581 Divine motions to good distinguished from Satanical moral and natural Page 369 Motives to pray Page 792 Whether our prayers may be said to move God Page 822 N We must ask in Christs name See the first Table Page 301 c. Prayer necessary Page 16 It is one thing to be necessary only because commanded and another to be necessary as a mean Page 315 O Whether faith in the object be no less necessary to the success of prayer then faith in the subject Page 486 How Sathan representeth objects to the mind Page 353 The Atheists great objection Page 701 Objections against praying answered Page 815 Omission of duty not excused by our unfitness and indisposition Page 637 When the omission of duty is culpable and imputed Page 677 We should pray for others See the first Table Page 286 P. Whether a pardoned sin can obstruct and hinder the success of prayer Page 742 People oblieged to pray for their Pastors Page 279 Whether Papists will have the Pater-noster to be said to the Saints Page 125 The Pelagian error concerning prayer Page 670 For what persons should we pray see the first Table Page 232 What persons and prayers have met with success Page 511 Gods power a ground of faith Page 508 Whether Christ interceeds for us as a common person Page 66 Popish devotion ridiculous Page 17 Popish Saint-invocation a Platonick and Pagan invention Page 107 Prayer See the first Table Why the heavens earth c. are invited to praise God Page 76 Preparation necessary wherein it consisteth and what must be done before we draw nigh to God Page 410 Whether a prohibition layeth a restraint on us not to pray for others Page 249 Whether the unconverted have a promise to be heard Page 100 The promise a sufficient warrant and ground of prayer Page 152 The promises of grace distinguished from the promises to grace Page 208 Whether such as are under the spirit of bondage can plead the absoute promises Page 209 Whether must we doubt of the promises when we doubt of the success of prayer Page 469 It is for our advantage that the promise of audience hath the condition of expedience annexed to it Page 483 VVhether the promises concerning temporals admit the exception of the cross Page 498 How we may know whether we doubt of the promise or of our own sincerity Page 505 Whether the misbelief of the promises or threatnings be the greater sin Page 533 How and what kind of promulgation of the rule is necessary Page 148 218 Providence not our rule how it may be helpfull for clearing c. Page 158 c. Q The qualifications of prayer Page 400 c. A word concerning the necessity of such qualifications Page 547 How the Spirit is quenched see the first Table Page 594 R In prayer we should minde our relations Page 274 What repetitions in prayer are fit and may be used Page 687 Whether we may pray for reprobats known to be such Page 242 246 Whether Judas knowing his reprobation ought to have repented and prayed for himself Page 247 Whether the holy Ghost will dictat a prayer for a reprobat and whether Christ prayed for such Page 269 Reverence required in supplicants Page 435 The Saints have another kind of right to the creatures then the wicked Page 198 The will of God our rule but not his decrees Page 141 Three things must concur for constituting the rule of prayer Page 147 Rules for discerning the success of prayer Page 723 c. S Saint-invocation confuted Page 106 Whether Sathan can work immediatly upon the will and understanding Page 351 Whether Sathan knoweth the secrets of the heart see the first Table Page 355 Several Scriptures concerning prayer paralleled Page 12 Whether we may run to the Scriptures and apply to our case the passage that first occurreth Page 175 Of
the season of prayer Page 681 c. When we deprecat sin we must prevail as to the particular askt Page 484 How a pardoned sin may be said to obstruct prayer Page 742 Sin●e●ity necessary in prayer and why c. Page 441 How the Spirit is said to in●erceed for the Saints Page 29 How the holy Spirit helpeth us to pray as we ought Page 328 As the Spirit alwayes abideth so he alwayes worketh though not as to the growth of grace Page 587 588 How far the Spirit with-draweth his influence in reference to prayer and why Page 589 How and wherefore the Spirit is quenched c. see the first Table Page 593 c. Spiritual mercies alwayes given when askt Page 486 The state of the supplicant considerable Page 401 Three grounds of the success and prevalency of prayer Page 300 Several grounds for supporting our faith Page 500 T We should pray for temporal mercies and how Page 182 Arminians and Jesuits cannot tell what they ask when they pray for temporals Page 187 Whether temporals should be asked in Christ's name Page 321 When do temporals become absolutely good according to Aquinas his conjecture Page 425 Whether we may pray for temporals with importunity Page 452 How should our prayers for temporals be resolved Page 712 We may not be anxious about temporals though we should ask them importunatly Page 719 The testimony of some practicall Divines in reference to the qualifications of prayer Page 549 The popish mystical Theology Page 645 Whether thanksgiving be a part of prayer Page 19 Thanksgiving in case of a seeming denyal an evidence of faith Page 526 Thanksgiving after the Lord hath heard our prayers necessary what it importeth c. Page 544 What things may we ask in prayer Page 179 How much time should be spent in prayer Page 685 The Saints prayers the Church treasure Page 295 After what order should we direct our prayers to the persons of the glorious Trinity Page 566 c. Truth and sincerity necessary in supplicants Page 441 The Lords truth and fidelity a ground of faith vindicated from Medina his impious gloss Page 503 U What is that vail the Lord hath drawn over the heart for hiding it from Sathan Page 356 Saints praying for the unconverted may plead the promise Page 486 Some causes of our unfitness to pray with some remedies Page 602 c. Unfitness excuseth not our negligence and omission of duty Page 637 The blasphemy against the holy Ghost unpardonable Page 239 W After prayer we must wait for an answer Page 535 Wandring thoughts their cause cure c. Page 602 When and what wandring thoughts hinder and marre the success of prayer Page 644 c. We must have a warrant to draw nigh to God and for what we ask from him Page 141 We must watch in prayer and after prayer Page 453 539 The Saints weary in but not of prayer Page 457 The wicked ought to pray Page 86 Some assertions concerning the wicked's obligation and ability to pray Page 88 Whether the wicked may ask in faith and plead any promise as having a right thereto Page 99 100 Prayer an act of the will Page 21 Witches say the Lords prayer backwards Page 452 Whether the Lord now worketh any wonders or miracles Page 508 Words required in prayer and how Page 20 Whether Christ now in prayer uttereth words Page 61 The Word of God how tasted by the unconverted Page 388 How the works of the unconverted may be said to please God Page 94 Whether in every act of worship we must conceive of God under the personal relations so that we may not conceive of him absolutely as the alone Jehovah first Being and Cause Page 581 Who is the true worthy and invincible man Page 696 Z Zeal required in prayer Page 442 Much zeal expressed by Pagans in their worship Page 449 A TABLE of such places of Scripture as are occasionally explained vindicated or illustrated in this TREATISE Ch. ver Page Genesis 1.26 588 2.7 64 3.6 612 15. 311 4.4 402 6.3 747 12.11 12. 600 15.1 2 24.14 172 32 25. 347 698 42.15 617 48.16 117 Exod. 3.14 556 10.17 297 20.7 641 9. 675 23.21 318   396 28.36 38. 397 29.39 679 31.17 665 32.10 698 32. 229   258 33.20 23. 554 34.6 7. 501 Levit. 9.24 332 10.3 641 17.4 5. 325 Numb 11.15 600 14.17 18 19. 518 Deut. 3.26 742 6.4 583 8.16 648 27.14 c. 666 30.15 19. 830 32.47 631 Judg. 5.12 621 31. 666 6.37 166 18.24 598 1 Sam. 1.15 18. 525 13.9 375 14 9 10. 172 16.1 250 252 17.9 10. 702 37. 519 2 Sam. 15 7. 371 31. 664 1 King 8.39 355 11.7 624. 8. 690 12 13 14. 742 21.39 707 24.10 13. 742 2 King 2.12 508 6.30 33. 610 655 19.34 319 1 Chron. 21.17 662 22.16 543 2 Chron. 6.30 355 26.16 19. 375 30.19 26. 415 36.15 16. 765 Nehem. 6.3 630 9.1 c. 690 3. 693 4. 693 Esth 4.16 17. 693 Job 1.8 590 2.15 671 3.3 600 5 23 677 6 8 9 662 9 11 710 11 7 8 9 553 15 11 623 21 15 830 23 13 823 27 9 10 407 541   685 31 1 613 34 32 592 38 41 793 42 5 6 440 8 293 Psalm 2 8 59 264 5 1 412 5 751 6 4 319 7 9 664 9 10 518 10 17 410 11 6 721 16 6 2 18 41 744 21 8 763 22 1 563 25 10 715 11 318 27 8 805 13 526 32 6 744 34 9 10 715 35 13 490 37 15 709 16 425 40 11 319 45 1 413 50 15 639 16.17 22. 406   564 51.3 8 10 11 12   598 12 15 589 17 789 55 17 680 57 7 625 59 2 747 63 4 15 65 2 510 66 18 408   521 738 19 722 68 28 685 69 3. 445   693 22 708 71 14 680 73 22 718 77 4 612 78 29 31 732 79 6 809 80 10 11 595 81 10 521 83 16 665 84 11 479   715 85 8 408   535 87 17 174 91 11 12 365 95 3 742 102 1 c. 690 17 18 519 106.15 43 44 789 111 10 718 119 71 75 658   478 122 319 164 680 132 10 319 138 6 607 140 8 665 145 16 14 19 793 Prov. 1 26 27 28 743   744 787 32 708 3.31 34 765 710 6 2 618 7 14 15 372 10 22 201 13 4 618 15 8 401   701 803 820 19 21 826 21 1 360 26 2 665 27 17 628 28 9 332 29 1 745 30 4 553 Eccles 3 1 11 677 5 2 400   432 13 705 7 16 755 10 1 645 11 3 233 Song 1 4 337 6 439 2 13 14 682   803 820 4 16 622 5.2 3 5 6 394   594 7 5 6 682 Isa 6 9 10 777 11 9 264 26.3 480 29 13 14 432 38 14 319 40 31 636 43 11 557 24 417 45 19 242   467 698 11 12 22 14   699 49 14 15 563 55 6 681
with and thus the meanest labourer in the Paroch may joyn in the work and give his help and assistance and the most able and zealous Minister stands in need of the prayers of the meanest Christian such as have the greatest measure of holiness knowledge c may have their stock yet increased and daylie stand in need of grace and of a new supply of strength and actuall assistance for improving their talents for the honour of God and the salvation of the flock Eph. 6.19 3. Otherwise you must either idolize them or your selves and sacrifice either to the sower or to the ground as if from either or both the increase did come if the blessing were expected from God it would be askt from him and that the instrument might be enabled for doing his work acceptably and succesfully if all be nothing 1 Cor. 3.7 God is all and the increase must be expected and sought from him he hath not put that in the hands of any creature v. 6. and should we not ask and wait upon him alone for it 4. Ministers are in greater hazard then others and shall their people ly by and give them no help the devil and the world are mad and enraged at a godly and faithfull ministry Behold I send you forth as Lambs amongst Wolves saith our blessed Lord to his disciples Luk. 10.3 which in part hath had its accomplishment in all who have succeeded them in the Ministry praedicare nihil aliud est quam derivare in se furorem mundi To be a Preacher is nothing else said Luther but to draw the worlds fury and malice upon himself And as to his own case he (g) Mr. S. Cleark in his life writeth thus Lutherus foris à toto mundo intus à diabolo patitur omnibus angelis ejus that he was pursued from without by the world and from within by the devil and all his angels Contempt scorn oppression violence c. are all the reward that can be expected from a wicked world which hateth the light because their works are evil But we if faithfull shall have better entertainment in the world to come and though now by men we be as our betters were (h) 1 Cor. 4.13 accounted the filth of the world and the off-scourings of all things yet we are precious in the eyes of our master we are what shall I say his Jewels yea it is written and canst thou read it and not admire we are the (i) 2 Cor. 8.23 glory of Christ But it were well if we had not greater and worse enemies then the world who only can vex a frail decaying body Sathan the (k) Joh. 12.31 Prince of this world and all the wit and might of hell is engaged in that quarrel If Joshua appear before the Lord to interceed for the people Sathan will stand at his right hand to resist him Zeth 3.2 (l) Eph. 6.12 Principalities and powers do stand in battel-aray against us and shall we have no help from our friends Many be the temptations and snares that are laid for poor Ministers and shall their people look on as nothing concerned in the mater not knowing that at the breach made in the Pastors Sathan purposeth to enter in and spoil and make a prey of the flock He knoweth that their fall will occasion the stumbling of many and be a great discredit to the holy profession and therefore he draweth out all his forces against them giving these a charge not unlike to that which the King of Syria gave to his Captains in reference to the King of Israel 1 Kings 22.31 to sight neither with small nor great save only in a comparative sense with the Ministers Ministers are (m) Isa 9.15 16. Mat. 15.14 leaders (n) Isa 56.10 11. Ezek. 34.2 shepherds (o) 2 Cor. 5.20 Eph. 6.20 ambassadours (p) Isa 56.10 Jer. 6.17 watch-men c. What is our Christian life but a (q) 2 Cor. 10.3 4. war fare we are called out to fight the Lords battel against hell the flesh and the world and to wrestle with (r) Eph. 6.11 12. principalities and powers against the rulers of darkness and wicked (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. inquit Beza in loc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sceleratos spiritus spirits now if in this contest the leaders fall or the watch-men be corrupted Sathan is sure to carry the day if the shepherds be turned out of the way must not the sheep go a stray if ambassadours deal deceitfully and comply with the enemy much hurt and mischief may thereby redound to the whole state and intorporation thus you see how nearly ye are concerned in your Ministers tryals temptations and perils and will you not remember him in your prayers and though he run all that hazard for your sake will you do nothing for his help and assistance 5. If we ponder the several steps and as it were parts of the ministry we will find that prayer hath a hand in them all and may be instrumental in the procuring and for the right administration of them 1. It hath a hand in the sending forth and planting of Ministers where there is no labourer Mat. 9.38 2. Prayer may be instrumental for the continuing of Ministers their staying and abiding with their flock and their deliverance from the fury and rage of persecutors and from all their troubles and temptations 2 Cor. 1 10 11. Act. 12.5.3 That their ministry may be successefull and that a door of utterance may be opened unto them that they may make known the mystery of the Gospel and may preach in the power and demonstration of the Spirit Eph. 6.19 Col. 4.3 4.4 Neither the care and diligence of the husband-man nor the goodness of the seed can make the stony ground become fruitfull and yield encrease though the Pastors mouth be opened yet the people may be (t) 2 Cor● 6.11 12. straitned in their own bowels their hearts may be lockt and receive nothing and prayer is the best key to open a shut and the best hammer to break a hard heart Ps 119.18 27 32 33 34. c. Thus you see your duty and danger O then I as you love your own souls make conscience to pray for your Ministers pray that they may be faithfull and may stand in the hour of temptation that they may be zealous for their master and may diligently discharge their trust that they become not proud because of their parts that they become not carelesse secure carnal and worldly-minded we will not be ashamed so beg the help of your prayers and to confess our own weakness and frailty Paul though an eminent Apostle and valiant champion you may take a view of his gifts graces revelations pains sufferings c. 1 Cor. 15.10 2 Cor. 12 yet was sensible of the need he stood in of the prayers of the Saints and how pathetically did he obtest the Churches to which he wrote
that they would not forget him in their prayers Rom. 15.30 Eph. 6.19 Phil. 1.19 Col. 4.3 1 Thess 5.25 2 Thess 3.1 And we again and again Beseech you brethren as he did the Romans for the Lord Iesus Christs sake and for the love of the spirit that ye strive together with your pastors in your prayers to God for them that their ministry and message may meet with acceptance and successe amongst you But if ye will neglect the nurse the blood of the child will be upon your heads Ye will no doubt be ready to complain that the Minister speaketh not home to your condition that you hear the Word but are little better of all you hear the Word preacht is unsavory and O! will some who think they are some body say If I were living under a more searching and powerfull ministry Thus many will be ready to cry out against Christs messengers and ordinances and plead conscience for their complaint when they can find no other thing to object either against the man or his ministry The Lord pity poor frail men who notwithstanding they gladly spend and are ready to be spent for their people yet with him 2 Cor. 12.15 have reason to complain that the more abundantly they love their flock the less they are beloved all the reward they meet with from the most part of hearers is a load of reproach and contempt So that if we durst be silent if there were not a necessity lying upon us to preach and wo unto us if we preach not the Gospel of Christ 1 Cor. 9.16 if we looked for no other return but what we meet with from man we would deservedly be the most contemptible men upon earth And while parents are deliberating how to dispose of their children they had reason to say what many carnall men do say such a son is for this calling and employment and such for another but this naughty underling child is fit for nothing but to be a minster as if the worst and bas●st of men were good and fit enough for that which is the most high eminent and excellent imployment pardon me to say so from the Word of God whatever the world do think or say if such as reason thus be not amongst the number of those cursed deceivers Mal. 1.14 who having a male in iheir flock do vow and sacrifice to the Lord a corrupt thing let their own conscience judge and give out sentence O! But they have you will say a considerable pension and stipend Ans But no thanks to thee who art ready to hold b●ck from them what is their own which God hath allowed them King and Parliament and the laws of the kingdom hath secured unto them thou who wouldst live upon their maintenance and delight in their ruin if thou were permitted to enjoy what belongeth to them thou art not the man to whom they are obliged for their allowance and though all be not so carnal and selfish yet if Ministers were to live on the benevolence of the people they might often take a sleep for their supper But O! What a poor base thing is it for an ingenuous spirit to undergo such a burden of pains care grief ingratitude reproach and disrespect for such a mean maintenance though I deny not there may be some and too many mercenary Ministers yet where is the man of parts resolution and candor who might not be as well provided another way and who would not rather chuse a mean maintenance in any other condition then to endure the affronts and reproaches that accompany the calling of the (u) I hope none will judge that I am particularly aiming at this people to whom I have a special relation and that I am preaching my own case though I had reason and I wish none had greater I would not go to the pulpit far lesse to the presse with any sach challenge and complaint ministry But to return to those complainers of the ministry I would ask 1. If ever to this day they have seriously reflected upon and complained of the hardness and naughtiness of their own hearts if they had been thus busie at home perhaps they had not brought their complaints so far off 2. I would ask whether thou who art so ready to complain of the Minister hast been as carefull to pray for him thou thinkest thou sees his infirmities and weakness but didst thou ever pray the Lord to strengthen and enable him thou art ready many wayes to discourage and weaken his hands but when and wherein hast thou encouraged and assisted him As no Sermon can have life and influence upon a dead careless people so their deadness may exceedingly indispose the Minister and provoke the Lord in part to stop his mouth A dead people may occasion and procure a cold and liveless Sermon Who knows what a discouragment it is to preach as he Isa 6.18 and 53.1 to stony hearts to heavy ears to shut eyes and for a Minister to consider that he runs in vain and few or none believeth or regardeth his report and with this discouragment the Lord often joyneth h●s stroke and in judgement straitneth his messengers and thus withholdeth a seasonable word from despisers If people did care for their souls they would not commit the whole work to another ye will not so intrust any worldly business to whatsoever factor or agent but ye will be doing waiting on and some one way or other giving your help and yet he who watcheth for the good of your souls shall have none of your aid and assistance not one tear or prayer and must such be accounted Christians Oh! remember he is but a weak sinfull man called out to encounter with many and strong enemies many discouragments difficulties tryals and temptations and the work is great and far above his strength his shoulders are too weak for bearing such a heavy burden O then put in your necks under the yoke and lend a lift Your joynt prayers may bring help from heaven vis unita fortior Solitariness as it is uncomfortable so it is unsuccessefull If the work be great it needeth the moe hands Ye may help your Minister to preach and you may hinder see what ye will answer to God if you ly by what can ye not pray and if ye would ye should have less cause to complain Ye will seek a blessing on your work and meal and will ye not minde the work of the Ministry and that which should be meat to your souls But to pass from this particular to the general how should we bewail the neglect of this necessary sweet and evangelical duty Thou who hast the communion of the Saints standing as an article in thy Creed wilt thou keep no communion with them and allow them no room in thy prayers Thou who acknowledgest that prayer which Christ did dictate to his disciples to be a perfect pattern darst thou pray for thy self and not for others Thou who callest God