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A20731 The Christians sanctuarie vvhereinto being retired, he may safely be preserued in the middest of all dangers. Fit for all men to read at all times, especially for those that are exercised in the schoole of affliction, in the time of Gods present visitation. Described in two bookes or treatises: I. Of the Christian exercise of fasting. II. Of holy inuocation on Gods name. By George Dovvname Doctor of Diuinitie. Downame, George, d. 1634. 1604 (1604) STC 7113; ESTC S117550 81,534 108

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bee the more encreased by the beholding one of another 21 Fourthly we are to abstaine from all carnall delights whereby any one of our sences might bee pleased For the sence of pleasure would abate our mourning diminish the sence of our want and hinder our vnfained humiliation before God Wherefore Ierome saith that fasting is to abstaine not onely from meats but also from all pleasures or allurements And Augustine The Scripture saith he teacheth a general fast not from the concupiscence of meates onely but also from all pleasures of temporal delights Thus are we not only to abridge our tast of meats but also to containe our eies from beholding vanities and pleasures our eares from hearing mirth or musick which in time of mourning is vnseasonable our nostrils from pleasant odours and effeminate smels Our sence of feeling from the vse of the marriage bed which as all married persons are to forbeare vpon consent for such a time of humiliation that they may giue themselues to fasting and prayer so are the Bridegroome and Bride admonished to come forth of their marriage chamber in the time of the fast And all these are to be done partly as meanes of our humiliation in remouing the impediments thereof partly as signes of our humiliation whereby we acknowledge our selues vnworthy of these delights and partly as tokens of our repentance in that by way of godly revenge because all our sences haue sinned we depriue thē all of their seuerall delights And as wee are to make all our sences thus to fast so must wee also weyne our minds from sports and recreations which would not onely hinder our humiliation and godly sorrow but also distract our minds from better meditations in sanctifying the fast And thus haue I shewed that in our fast we are to abstaine from food and some other helps and commodities of this life and also from all outward delights and pleasures 22 Now it remaineth that I should speake of rest from bodily labours and worldly businesse For the time of the fast hath the nature of a Sabboth And by the Prophet Ioel it is called dies interdicti a solemnity or day of prohibition wherein men are forbidden to do any worke as ths Lord expoūdeth that word Leui. 23. It is a day of prohibition or a solemne day You shall do no seruile worke therein And Deut. 16. Six dayes thou shalt eat vnleauened bread and in the seuenth day which shall be a solemnity or day of prohibition to the Lord thy God thou shalt doe no worke So Num. 29.35 For there is the same reason of the extraordinary Sabbath of humiliation and of the ordinary But the ordinary was a Sabbath or rest in which no worke was to bee done yea the Lord threatneth to destroy that person from among his people that shall doe any worke that day And as I said before the law of the weekly Sabbath is to be extended to other extraordinary Sabbaths But on the weekly Sabbath wee may do no worke therefore not in this 23 But let vs consider also why and in what respects rest is required in the day of our fast and bodily labours and worldly businesse forbidden The Lord forbiddeth labour and worldly businesse and commaundeth rest on euery Sabbath not because simply he either liketh of rest or misliketh labour but because bodily labors worldly businesse are a meanes to distract vs from the worship of God and rest from them is a remedy against distraction For euery Sabbath is to be sanctified and set apart from our businesse and affaires and is to bee consecrated to the worship of God And further on the Sabbath of humiliation we take vpon vs after a more speciall maner to worship God and therefore that wee may seriously and entirely intend the seruice of God we are to abandō all other busines and cares For that is better done which is done alone as the Philosopher hath truly said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it is the counsell of the Wiseman that what wee doe wee should do with all our might For by doing many things our minds are distracted This therefore doth teach vs that with free and entire minds sequestred from all worldly cares we are to be conuersant in the worship of God chiefely when after a more speciall manner we indeuour to humble our selues before him For if bodily labours and worldly businesse bee therefore forbidden because they are meanes to distract vs then may we be sure that distraction it self in the worship of God is much more forbidden For distraction breeds hypocrisie in Gods worship and causeth vs when wee draw nigh to the Lord with our lips to remooue our hearts farre from him 24. Againe the Lord commaundeth vs in all his Sabbaths to rest from labours that this outward rest might be an admonition vnto vs to rest from sinne For why may euery one of vs thinke doth the Lord forbid me on the day of rest the lawfull workes of may calling Or why doe I cease from mine honest affaires Must I forbeare that which in it selfe is lawfull and may I doe that which is vnlawfull Must I therefore for this time sequester my selfe from my honest businesse that I may attend vanities or sinnes Or doth the Lord enjoyne me rest because hee is delighted with idlenesse and would haue me to doe nothing No verily If he forbid me that which is lawfull much more doth he forbid that which is vnlawfull And if he commaund me to rest from honest affaires it is not because he would haue me idle for idlenesse is the mother of much iniquitie but because hee would haue me attend better matters In a word he forbiddeth me to doe mine owne workes and businesse that I may doe his worke and attend his religion and seruice Lastly there may an outward cause be rendered why on the day of the fast wee are to cease from bodily labours For our fraile nature cannot well beare abstinence and bodily labour together for labour setting the bodie in a heat wasteth the moisture and spirits which are to bee supplied by nourishment otherwise we spend vpon the stocke of our naturall moisture which is as it were the oyle in the lampe of our life 25. We see then wherein the outward exercise doth consist and the particulars from which we are to abstain Now wee are briefely to consider for how long this abstinence is to be obserued The vsuall time of a fast is the space of a naturall day viz. from euen to euen or from supper to supper For as that was the time appointed for the ordinarie Sabboth of humiliation so also of the extraordinarie From euen to euen shall you celebrate your Sabboth And accordingly it is noted of the Israelits fast Iud. 20. of Dauid and his followers 2. Sam. 1. of Iosuah and the elders Ios. 7. that it was vntill the euening And more particularly of
pastimes for if that be vnlawfull on the ordinarie Sabbath much more is it vnseasonable on the Sabbath of humiliation Lastly to sinne for if the workes of our lawfull callings be forbidden on the Sabbath much more the workes of darknes whereunto whosoeuer addicteth himselfe on the day of the fast he celebrateth a Sabbath to Sathan and not vnto the Lord. Againe whereas I said it is to be obserued as a Sabbath of humiliation we learne that we are therein to abstaine not onely from labours as on the ordinarie Sabbath but also from food from exercise of sleepe from brauerie in apparell and from all worldly delights c. 57. Thirdly whereas I add that it is to bee sanctified both publickly and priuatly as a Sabbath of humiliation I signifie that not onely rest is required but also an holy rest and not onely the outward fast but much more the spiritual exercise of prayer and repentance And that this sanctificatiō of the day of the fast which standeth in vsing the meanes of sanctification is partly publicke and partly priuat The publick is in the assembly for this as euerie other Sabbath is a day of an holy assembly Leuit. 23.27 Ioel. 2.15.16 Here therefore we are to consider the office of the ministers who are the chiefe actors in the publicke sanctification of this and euerie Sabbath and the dutie of the people The office of the minister is noted in generall termes Acts 13.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they performed the publicke function of their ministerie vnto the Lord and fasted more specially Neb. 9 where they are noted to haue read and preached the word of God as before chap. 8. and that foure times and so oft also to haue called vpon the name of the Lord-Likewise Ierem. 36 when Ieremie being shut vp could not go into the house of the Lord he sendeth Barach with a booke written from his mouth wherein were specified the judgements of God threatned against the Iewes that he reading it in the audience of the people vpon the day of the fast they might be brought to a serious humbling of themselues in prayer and to vnfained repentance The dutie therefore of the ministers is to stirre vp themselues in a more than ordinarie measure of zeale to discharge their ministerie both in preaching the word of God and also in prayer In preaching that it may bee through the blessing of God a powerfull meanes to worke in the people those things which in this spirituall exercise are required viz. humiliation prayer with feruencie and faith and repentance In praying that it may be an effectuall meanes in and through the mediation of Christ our Sauiour and auaileable with the Lord for the remouing of those euils and for the bestowing of those good things for which this exercise is vndertaken 58. The dutie of the people is first to bee present at publick assembly for if we will sanctifie a Sabbath vnto the Lord we must reuerence his sanctuarie where as the Lord hath promised his presence so he requireth ours And for this cause as I sayd before this and euerie other Sabbath is appointed of the Lord to be an holy conuocation We must therefore take heed that we absent not our selues without very just and necessarie occasion lest we may seeme either secretly to neglect or prophanely to contemne the presence of Christ the gathering together of the Saints the publicke worship and seruice of God the call of the holy Ghost the meanes of our saluation the publicke occasion of the fast as though neither the publicke judgement nor the common good did concerne vs. But it is to little purpose to be present in the publicke assembly vnlesse we joyne together with the assembly in the sincere worship of God That being assembled together in the name of Christ we may as it were with one consent call vpon God and heare his word praying with humilitie in respect of our own vnworthinesse with reuerence of Gods majestie in sence of our wants with sorrow for our sins with earnest desire to haue our wants supplied our sins remitted and the judgemēts of God remoued with faith assurance to find help to obtaine mercie in cōuenient time with promise purpose to amend our liues that in sinceritie and truth we may subscribe to the prayer of the Church and say Amen Hearing also the word with reuerence with attention with faith with desire to profit with purpose to practise with submission to euery part thereof In a word so hearing the word of God as in this our present sute we desire to be heard Vnto these duties of religion and meanes of sanctification we are to joyne a publicke dutie of charitie as a worke of sanctification for it is and hath bene a laudable custome of the Church of God that in publicke fasts there should be publicke collection made for the releefe of the poore 59. But we are not onely publickly to sanctifie the day of the fast but also priuatly both by vsing meanes of sanctification and also by doing workes of sanctification The meanes are especially meditation prayer which are to be vsed both with reference to the publicke sanctification and that not onely before to prepare and fit our selues for the profitable and sauing vse of the meanes which Daniel calleth the setting of his face and the setling of his mind to seeke the Lord but also after to fit and apply the meanes to our vse and besides as priuat meanes by themselues without reference to the publicke The workes of sanctification are the duties of repentance whereof I spake before but especially the workes of mercie and charitie for with such sacrifices God is pleased 60. Wherefore the day of the fast is to bee obser●ed and sanctified as a Sabbath of humiliation not onely by outward abstinence rest but also by vsing the meanes and doing the workes of sanctification both publickly priuatly spending the whole day besides the publicke sanctification and the time which is to bee spent in our preparation before and in our meditation afterwards in the priuat means of sanctification as reading meditation prayer in the priuat works of sanctification as the duties of repentance towards God and the workes of mercy and charitie towards our brethren Which course whosoeuer shal take in sanctifying a fast vnto the Lord he shal be sure to obtaine at the hāds of God either that particular request for which he is an humble sutor vnto the Lord or that which is better the Lord alwayes hearing his children thus suing vnto him and granting their requests as shall be most for his glory and their singuler good 61. HAuing thus set downe the doctrine of fasts according to the rule of Gods word and practise of ours and other reformed churches we are now to take a briefe view of the Popish fast that it may euidently appeare how
THE CHRISTIANS SANCTVARIE Whereinto being retired he may safely be preserued in the middest of all dangers Fit for all men to read at all times especially for those that are exercised in the schoole of affliction in the time of Gods present Visitation Described in two Bookes or Treatises I. Of the Christian exercise of Fasting II. Of holy Inuocation on Gods name By GEORGE DOVVNAME Doctor of Diuinitie SALVS VITAE LONDON Printed by Adam Islip for Thomas Man dwelling in Pater-noster Row at the signe of the Talbot 1604. To the Right worshipfull my singuler good friend M r. Iames Mountague Doctor of Diuinitie and Deane of his Maiesties Chappell WHen as it pleased God by his publicke visitation the last yeare to call vs vnto Fasting and mourning and to mooue the Royall heart of our Soueraigne Lord the King to proclaime a generall Fast to be obserued weekly I did acknowledge it to be my bounden duty hauing according to direction of publicke authoritie assembled the congregation ouer which I am placed for the obseruation of those Fasts first to instruct them in the doctrine of fasting and prayer and after to stirre them vp to the effectuall practise of these Christian duties Wherefore after I had bestowed some paynes that way I was intreated by a louing friend that I would not only set downe in writing a couple of my Sermons which especially handle the dutie of prayer but also pen a Treatise of the Christian exercise of Fasting The which I was the more easily persuaded vnto because it was then alledged and I knew not the contrarie That there was very little written of this argument in the English tongue Howbeit I do now vnderstand that not onely before that time but also since I wrot this Treatise which I wholly finished the last yeare some others haue taken good paines in this kind To whose godly labors this booke of mine though published after them ought not to be preiudiciall as though I had gathered into this short sum what they and others haue written more at large of this argument for as I had fully finished this Treatise before I saw theirs so haue I not since taken any thing from them This Treatise of the Christian exercise of Fasting together with the other of Prayer containing two Sermons on the 15 verse of the 50 Psalme which were written in the due season though published thus late hauing waited at London euer since the last yeare vpon the printing of my Lectures on the 15. Psalme I now dedicat to your Worship as a small token of my great loue and a perpetuall remembrance of mine vnfained thankfulnesse Of my loue in respect of your manifold vertues wherewith I was long acquainted whiles we liued together in Christs Colledge that famous seminarie of good learning and true godlinesse Of my thankfulnesse in regard not onely of your former goodwill but also of your late fauours vouchsafed vnto me since you followed the Court. The Lord blesse you and enrich you with his graces and increase your fauour with God and man to his glorie and your owne endlesse comfort Amen Mondon in Hertfordshire the 12. of Nouember Anno 1604. Your worships in the Lord George Downame THE ANALISIS OF THE FIRST Treatise being the Christian Exercise of Fasting This Treatise containeth the Doctrine of the true and Christian fast shewing in Generall what fasting is § 1. Particular the sorts of fasting § 2. viz. that it is either Naturall Ciuile Spirituall and that is either the Morall or chast fast § 3.4.5.6 Religious fast § 7.8.9.10 11.12.13.14.15 whereof there are two Parts viz. the Outward and bodily exercise of abstinence § 16. where we consider From what we are to abstaine viz. from Helpes of this life as from Food wholly § 17.18 Sleepe in part § 19. Better apparell § 20. Worldly delights and pleasures § 21. Bodily labours and wordly businesse § 22.23.24 For how long we are to abstaine and what the time of the fast is § 25.26 Inward and spiritual exercise § 27. of prayer joyned with repentance which we consider Ioyntly § 28.29 seuerally viz. Prayer whereof the Parts are Deprecation of euill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 § 35. Precation of good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 § 36. Properties Feruencie § 37. Faith § 38.39.40.41 Repentance the parts whereof are Humiliation or penitencie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is partly Inward and that is the Sence of our miserie and sorrow for sin § 30. Humble conceit and base estimation of our selues § 31.32 Outward as Lamentation and bewayling of our miserie § 33. Confession of our sinne §. 34 Amendment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which standeth in Eschewing euill and fasting from sinne § 42.43.44 Ensuing that which is good both for the time Present by practising duties of Pietie towards God Charitie towards men but especially the works of mercie § 45.46 To come by purposing and promising amendment § 57. Sorts for it is either Priuat § 48. Publicke where we consider the Appointment of it By whom § 49. Vpon what occasion as the Obtaining of some publicke blessing § 50. Remouing of some publick euil either of Sinne Punishment either threatned § 51. inflicted as Sword Famine Pestilēce Captiuitie § 53.54 Obseruation of it By whom § 55. How viz. that it is to be sanctified as a Sabbath of humiliation § 56 both Publickly by the Minister § 57. People § 58. Priuately § 59.60 Suruey of the Popish and Antichristian fast § 61 62.63.64 THE FIRST TREATISE OF THE CHRITIAN exercise of Fasting FAsting being a voluntarie abstinence from all food for a time is distinguished from that abstinence which being only in respect of the quantitie or qualitie is a forbearing not of all food but of such and so much That which is in respect of the quantitie is the moderat sober and temperat vse of food auoiding all excesse That which is in respect of the qualitie is the abstemious vse of food forbearing some kind of meat or drinke which we suppose to be noysome vnto vs in regard either of our bodies or soules health The former which is the sober diet ought and the latter which is the abstemious diet may bee perpetuall among Christians But fasting is an abstinence not onely à tali tanto that is from such and so much but à toto that is from all food Neither is it a sober or abstemious vsing of food but a not vsing or forbearing of food altogether during the time of the fast For therfore is it called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth not eating or not taking of food And he is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is fasting who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is who hath taken no food And whereas I call it a voluntarie abstinence therein I distinguish fasting from that forbearing or wanting of food which is not voluntarie or purposely intended but forced either because men
as indigested meat c. The other thing that as we vse fasting sometimes so must wee vse temperance and sobrietie alwayes auoiding euermore excesse especially of such things as are apt to prouoke lust For what are we better for fasting at any time if we recompence our fasting with fulnesse at other time for then our minds by much repletion will wax heauie irrigata corporis nostri terraspinas libidinum germinabit And the earth as it were of our bodies being well watered will bring forth the thornes of lust And therefore as Ierome well sayth A spare diet and a stomacke alwayes hungry is preferred before fasts continued three dayes together and it is much better euery day to take but a little then sometimes though seldome to take too much But as excesse of all meats and drinkes is to auoided so especially of wine and strong drinkes It was truly said of the Poet Sine Cerere Libero friget venus and of another vina parant animos veneri The same is testified by Salomon Prou. 23. that if we delight in wine our eyes will looke vpon strange women and our hearts will speake leaud things And this the daughters of Lot knew too well for that incestuous copulation which they could not expect from him whiles hee was sober they obtained by giuing him wine to drinke For as one sayth Proximus a Libero patre intemperantiae gradus ad inconcessam venerem esse consucuit 5. The next enemie to chastitie is slouthfulnesse which containeth two nurses of lust idlenesse and drowsinesse For the matter which gluttonie and drunkennes prepareth for lust that doth idlenesse preserue And therefore not vnworthily are fulnesse of bread slouthfulnesse reckoned among the sinnes of Sodome wherby they were incensed to vnnaturall lust For idlenesse is both the mother and nurse of lust Haec otia ut ames faciunt haec quae fecere tuentur Haec sunt iucundi causa cibusque mali A Philosopher being asked what lust or impure loue is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee said The passion of an idle mind For as water which is not stirred putrifieth and yron that is not exercised rusteth so the mind by idlenesse is corrupted For as the Grecians rightly say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idlenesse or doing nothing is the beginning of doing ill And as Basill sayth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euery occasion of idlenesse is occasion of sinne Such is the disposition of our minds that if they be not exercised about lawfull things they will goe a whoring about things vnlawfull In desiderijs est omnis anima otiosi sayth Ierome Euery idle mans mind is ouertaken with lust And that the example of Dauid himselfe doth shew who on a time giuing himselfe to idlenes was ouertaken in this kind And therefore such as haue out of their owne experience prescribed remedies against lust haue warned men especially to beware of idlenesse Likewise much sleeping and long lying in bed are the workes of darkenesse the companions of wantonnesse the nurses of lust For that matter which by large diet is prepared for generation and by idlenesse and ease preserued by long lying and much sleeping is concocted and perfited 6. Whosoeuer therefore hath a true and serious purpose by fasting to chastise his body let him with his extraordinarie fasting and praying ioyne ordinarie temperance and sobrietie diligence in his calling and vigilancie And if hauing vsed these meanes of chastitie in single life which is the gift of continencie to a perpetuitie whereof very few attaine who are fit for procreation then let him know that God doth call him to mariage which he hath prouided as a lawfull remedie against lust That those who cannot liue chastly in single life may liue chastly in mariage for as there is chastitie in single life so also in wedlocke And whosoeuer hauing not the gift of continencie refuseth this ordinance of God vnder pretence of chastitie he liueth in vncleannesse or if he striue ouermuch as it were against the streame by fasting and abstinence to subdue his body in an erronious desire of keeping the seuenth commaundement which of the most may better be kept in mariage than in single life he breaketh the sixt in shortning his dayes and making himselfe vnapt for the duties of his calling and vnfit for the seruice of the Church or common-wealth Neither may any man alledge that in respect of his outward estate it is inconuenient for him to marrie for no outward inconuenience can be so great as to liue in sinne And thus much may suffice to haue spoken of the former sort of spirituall fasts may chiefe desire and purpose being to intreat of the religious fast 7. The religious fast is a solemne exercise of religion wherein we being humble suters vnto the Lord vpon some speciall or extraordinarie occasion do abstaine not onely from food and some other commodities and delights of this life but also from bodily labours and worldly businesse during the time of the fast which is a Sabbath of humiliation that by this outward abstinence our humiliation may be furthered and our repentance testified to the increase of our feruencie and confirmation of our faith in prayer for the obtaining of our request at the hands of God For further explication whereof we are to cōsider that where I call it an exercise of religion that is presupposed which before I touched that this religious fast is an ordinance of God for nothing may be offered vnto the Lord by way of religion or worship which is not appointed and ordained of the Lord for whatsoeuer is obtruded vnto him for worship being not ordained by him is will-worship and superstition Now that the Lord hath appointed and ordained that we should humble our selues before him by fasting and prayer for the obtaining of some speciall blessing from him it may appeare first by euident testimonies of Scripture in the old testament Whereunto if it shall be objected that the places of the old Testament which require fasting may seeme to enjoyne it among other ceremonies of the Iewish religion vnto which Christians are not bound I answer that in the Iewish fasts some things were ceremoniall and so peculier to them other things were morall and so common to vs. The things which were peculier to them were first the circumstance of the time in their set and ordinary fasts whether that which was appointed by the Lord on the tenth day of the seuenth moneth or those which the Iewes voluntarily vndertooke during the time of the seuenty yeares captiuity in the fourth moneth in the fift in the seuenth and in the tenth And secondly there were certaine habits and iestures vsed among them when they mourned and fasted which were part of the pedagogie of the old testament which as they are abrogated by Christ in the new Testament so were they not greatly required in the old
strike vs or else as he hath threatned to lay his judgements vpon vs then doth the Lord especially call vs to fasting and mourning howbeit the chiefe cause of mourning must be not so much the consideration of the judgement it selfe whether present or imminent as the detestation of our sinne whereby we haue offended God and prouoked him either to threaten or to inflict that judgement vpon vs. Examples hereof we haue in respect of judgements imminent in the Niniuits who when destruction was threatned against them for their sinnes humbled themselues before God in fasting and prayer In Iosaphat who hearing of an inuasion attempted against him by the Moabits and Ammonits feared and set himselfe to seeke the Lord and proclaimed a fast throughout all Iudah In respect of afflictions and calamities present as famine sword pestilence captiuitie and such like messengers of Gods wrath we haue both commaundements as our rules and examples as precedents in this behalfe In the time of famine the Lord by his Prophet Ioel commandeth the Iewes to turne vnto him with all their heart and with fasting weeping and mourning And to that end he biddeth them to proclaime and sanctifie a fast And as touching the sword when the men of Ai had discomforted the Israelits Iosua and the elders of Israell fasted vntill the euen In the time of captiuitie Daniel greatly desired the deliuerance of the Iewes out of the captiuitie of Babylon at the end of seuentie yeares according to the promise of the Lord by the Prophet Ieremie he turned his face vnto the Lord God and sought by prayer and supplication with fasting and sackcloth and ashes And as touching sicknesse and mortalitie we haue a notable example in Dauid who when his child which hee had begotten in adulterie was sicke he besought God for it and fasted and went in and lay all night vpon the earth yea when some that prooued his enemies were sicke he professeth Psal. 35 that he clothed himselfe with sackcloth and humbled his soule with fasting and that he prayed for them with such compassion that hanging downe his head for griefe his prayer returned vpon his bosome And if fasting is to bee vsed for priuat persons when they are sicke much more in a publicke visitation and in the time of pestilence 15. These allegations therefore of holy Scripture may be sufficient directions for vs when we are to vndertake this exercise namely when we haue some vrgent cause of a more than ordinarie humbling of our selues before God in prayer And when such causes are offered we may not thinke that it is a thing meerely arbitrarie whether we will vse this exercise or not but by warrant of the former Scriptures we are to be persuaded that the Lord doth call vs to this exercise It is well said of Basill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The time of fasting is not euerie mans will but the necessitie of those who come to Gods worship and in a time of such necessitie to fast it is necessarie When as therefore there is publike necessitie those which are in publicke authoritie must thinke that a necessitie is imposed vpon them to blow the trumpet in Sion and to proclaime a fast And those which are in priuat place must thinke a necessitie imposed on them to obserue and sanctifie the fast And if it happen that they which are in authoritie neglect this duty then those who according to the example of the faithfull Ezek. 9 which were marked to saluation doe mourne either for the common calamities or for the common enormities of the time which are forerunners of calamities they are to vse this exercise priuatly and secretly which also they are to do when their owne necessities require As for those who neither by publicke calamitie nor priuat necessitie can be drawne to this dutie but continually take care for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof they must know that they are but carnall m●n who as they sow to the flesh so of the flesh shall reape corruption 16. Thus we haue heard that the religious fast is a solemne exercise of religion to bee vndertaken of vs when we are humble suters to the Lord vpon some vrgent occasion Let vs now consider wherein this exercise doth consist which is expressed in the rest of the definition whereout we may gather that this exercise consisteth on two points viz. the outward or bodily and the inward or spirituall exercise The former being the means to the latter the latter being the end of the former for the bodily exercise profiteth little or nothing at all vnlesse it be referred to the spirituall exercise as a meanes to further it The bodily exercise is an outward abstinence from food and some other commodities and delights of this life and also from bodily labours and worldly businesse during the time of the fast which is a Sabbath of humiliation Here therefore we are to consider in respect of the outward exercise from what we are to abstaine and for how long 17. First we are to abstaine from food from whence the whole exercise hath his name And here we are to vnderstand not an abstinence in part nor a sober and abstemious vse of diet as I haue shewed before but a totall abstinence both from meat and drinke so farre as our health will permit for this is required to the nature of a fast as hath bene declared and further may bee proued by the examples of such fasts as are recorded in the scriptures Dauid when he fasted and mourned for the death of Abner swore that he would not tast bread or ought else till the Sunne were downe Ezra when he fasted for the sinne of the people he did neither eat bread that is not so much as bread nor drinke water that is not so much as water The fast which Esther required and performed was the totall abstinence from meat and drinke The Niniuits when they proclaimed a fast gaue a charge that none should tast any thing whether it were meat or drinke And of Paul it is sayd Acts. 9 that for the time of his fasting and prayer he did neither eat nor drinke That we should not thinke either that fasting is an abstinence from meat and not from drinke or that it standeth onely in choise of meats And yet this totall abstinence from meat and drinke is not so strictly required but that they whose health cannot beare it may for their necessarie sustenance take some little refreshing for the Lord who desireth mercie rather than sacrifice doth not so require this outward abstinence that it should impaire our health or make vs vnfit for his seruice in the spirituall exercise of the fast but that it might further vs therein But here we must take heed that we vse not this libertie as an occasion to the flesh pretending we cannot when
Dauids fast for Abner that hee refused to eat any meat while it was yet day but swore saying So doe God to me and more also if I tast bread or ought else till the Sunne be downe In like sort not onely the Iews but also the auncient Christians vsed to fast vntill the Sunne were set Howbeit in processe of time they began especially in the Church of Rome to dissolue their fasts at the ninth houre which is three a clocke afternoone which now they haue brought to the sixt houre and for the most part on their fasting dayes goe to supper before noone But the shortest time that is mentioned in the Scripture of a fast is vntill the euening to which custome their practise is most conformable who fast all day vntill the ordinarie time of supper This as I said is the vsuall time But the children of God when they haue beene pressed with more vrgent occasion haue sometimes continued this exercise for more dayes together As Esther and the Iewes for three dayes Esth. 4 and likewise Paule Act. 9. The men of Iabesh Gilead when they mourned for the death of Saule and his sonnes fasted seuen dayes 1. Sam. 31. Daniell one and twentie dayes 26. As for the fortie dayes fast which Moses Elias and our Sauiour Christ did fast it was miraculous and therefore not to be imitated Neither did they fast fortie dayes together either to subdue their flesh or to humble their soules But Moses being the publisher of the law Elias the restorer of religion our Sauiour Christ the author of the Gospell the Lord would by this miraculous fast so countenance their doctrine as that in respect therof they might seeme not men arising from the earth or authorised by men but the two former as Angels the third as the sonne of God sent from heauen for their abstinence for the time was angelicall And we might as well take vpon vs to imitate the Angels not taking of food which they doe not need as the fast of Christ and of the other two who were by the power of God aboue the strength of nature so sustained as that during their fortie dayes they no more needed food than angels doe Neither did our Sauiour Christ or either of the other fast fortie dayes euery yeare but once onely in all his life Wherefore vnlesse we haue the like cause of fasting and the like power to support vs as indeed none haue it is but a vaine thing to goe about to imitat their fast Now when the fast is continued for more dayes together it is not vnmeet that as in the meane time we are to take but one meale euery day in the euening so also that we should at those times content our selues with a spare diet in respect of the quantitie and meane in respect of the qualitie whether it bee fish or flesh or neither according to the example of Daniel But when our fast is once dissolued whether it bee at the end of one day or of more we may freely vse our ordinary diet obseruing alwayes the rules of temperance and sobriety And it fitteth best the faith of Gods children when they haue humbled themselues before God and poured forth their suit into his bosome to cheere vp themselues in this persuasion That they hauing cōmended and committed their cause to God he will dispose of it and them as shall be most for his glory and their good To this purpose consider the examples of Anna 1. Sam. 1 who after she had fasted and poured forth her soule before the Lord she went her way and did eat and looked no more sad Of Dauid euen then when the Lord did seeme to haue denied his perticuler request 2. Sam. 2. He arose from the earth and washed and annointed himselfe and chaunged his apparell and came into the house of the Lord and worshipped and afterward came to his owne house and bad that they should set bread before him and he did eat And thus much may suffice to haue spoken of the outward fast 27 Now for as much as the kingdome of God standeth not in meat and drinke nor in the abstinence therefrom and seeing bodily exercise profiteth little but piety which consisteth in duties of religion sincerely performed hath the promises both of this life and of that which is to come therefore all this outward abstinence is nothing worth vnlesse it be ioyned with the inward fast and spirituall exercise of religion and bee referred thereunto as to the end thereof For if men rest in the outward fast as though that in it selfe were acceptable vnto God they fast no better than the beasts of Niniuie fasted They fast not vnto God for God is a spirit and they that will worship him must worship him in spirit and truth Wherefore as Zacharie sayth to the Iewes who resting in the outward fast imagined that they pleased God therby When you fasted and mourned in the fift and seuenth moneth these seuentie yeares did you in fasting fast to me to me sayth the Lord Likewise Esay 58 when as the Lord respected not the fast of the Iewes whereby they looked to win his fauour as appeareth by their question vers 3. Wherefore haue we fasted and thou respectest it not we haue afflicted our soules and thou regardest it not He rendreth this reason Because neglecting the inward exercise they rested in the outward Is it such a fast that I haue chosen that a man should for a day afflict his soule namely by outward fasting and hang downe his head like a bull-rush and lie downe in sackeloth and ashes wilt thou call this a fasting or an acceptable day to the Lord But if men shall not onely rest in the outward fast as if that in it selfe were an acceptable worship of God but shall also obserue it with an opinion of satisfaction and merit persuading themselues that by their fast they satisfie for their sinnes and merit euerlasting life then is it much more abhominable in the sight of God as being derogatorie to the onely both satisfactorie sufferings and meritorious obedience of Christ our Sauiour And such seemeth to haue beene the fast of the Pharisie who for all his fasting twice a weeke and his other merits which hee alledgeth went home vnjustified And such is the fast of the Papists at this day who not onely rest in their outward fast which notwithstanding in many respects is but a mockefast but also ascribe satisfaction and merit thereunto 28. What then is the spirituall exercise and the inward fast whereunto the outward abstinence must be referred It is an humbling of our soules in a solemne exercise of prayer joyned with repentance for the obtaining of our speciall suit holpen forward and testified by the outward fast as Ezra speaketh chap. 8. I proclaimed a fast that we might humble our selues before our God and seeke of him a right way
that fasteth for his sins and committeth them again who will heare his prayer or what doth his fasting helpe him 45. But for as much as Augustine saith It is but a slender fast to abstaine onely from sinne vnlesse we also adde good workes therefore wee must know it is our dutie especially on the day of the fast not only to eschew euill but also for the present to be exercised in well doing and for the time to come to purpose and to promise amendement The duties wherin we are to be exercised are both the duties of pietie and religion towards God which in the time of the fast are to be performed in a speciall manner and also the duties of loue and mercie towards our brethren as to execute true judgement to shew mercie and compassion euery man to his brother For is not this the fasting that I haue chosen sayth the Lord to loose the bands of wickednes to take off the heauie burthens and to let the oppressed goe free and that ye breake euery yoke Among the rest the dutie of almes-giuing and relieuing the poore is commended vnto vs as it followeth in the Prophet Is it not to deale the bread to the hungry and that thou bring the poore that wander vnto thine house When thou seest the naked that thou couer him and hide not thy selfe from thine owne flesh for so he calleth thy poore brother Then shall thy light breake forth c. then shalt thou call and the Lord will answere thou shalt crie and be will say here am I. If thou takest away from the middest of thee the yoke the putting foorth of the finger whereby is meant euen the least injuries and wicked speaking if thou poure out thy soule to the hungry that is if with the bowels of compassion thou doest relieue his need freely and chearefully and refresh the troubled soule then shall thy light spring out in the darkenesse and thy darkenesse shall be as the noone day that is thine aduersitie and affliction shall be turned into peace and prosperitie 46. Wherefore it hath beene and is the custome of the godly in the time of their fasts by doing workes of mercie and giuing almes to relieue the poore For as our Sauiour hath joyned the doctrine of these three together almes prayer and fasting so must we after the example of Cornelius joyne them in practise For as the Lord hath promised to shew mercie to the mercifull and to answere their crie so on the other side he that stoppeth his eare at the crying of the poore himselfe shall crie and not be heard And surely vnlesse we will fast for sparing after the manner of niggards who will be glad of so good a pretence to spare from their bellies to depriue their families of their ordinarie allowance for the increase of their worldly estate wee ought to giue so much to the poore as by our abstinence is saued Vt ieiunium tuum saith Ierome non sit lucrum marsupij sed saturitas animae that thy fast be not the gain of thy purse but the saturitie of thy soule For as Augustine sayth Then are our fasts acceptable to God when as they whom need doth force to fast are refreshed by vs. And againe Ieiunium tuum te castiget sed laetificet alterum Let thy fasting chastise thee but let it comfort another So fast that thou mayest be glad that thou hast dined in another that eateth by that meanes for the Lord loueth a chearefull giuer for when a poore man eateth of thine allowance in him Christ who affirmeth himselfe to be hungry in his poore members doth dine And elsewhere Accipiat esuriens Christus quod ieiunans minus accepit Christianus Let Christ being hungrie in his poore members receiue that which the fasting Christian hath spared Castigatio volentis fiat sustentatio non habentis Let the chastisement of him that hath and is willing to forbeare be the sustenance of him that hath not and faine would eat And to conclude Cyrill In a certaine booke sayth he we find it said of the Apostles Blessed is hee who fasteth to that end that he may feed the poore 47. And as we are thus for the present to be exercised so for the time to come we must vnfainedly purpose and faithfully promise amendement in performing duties heretofore omitted and in eschewing sinnes heretofore committed And to this purpose it shall bee needfull for the better setling of our resolution to bind our selues by a solemne vow and with the Iewes in the booke of Nehemiah to put our seales vnto it that so we may impose a necessitie vpon our selues of well doing and we are to know that it is a happie necessitie which forceth vs to better things The necessitie of this vnfained purpose to be had in this exercise is euident because without it wee remaine in our impenitencie And being impenitent sinners the Lord will not heare vs as the Lord threatened the impenitent Iewes When they fast sayth he I will not heare their crie Ierem. 14. And therefore vnlesse wee repent of our sinnes and resolue to amend this exercise which wee being suters vndertake for the obtaining of our sute is performed of vs in vaine For this wee are to know to be assured of That the Lord heareth not impenitent sinners Wherefore true is that saying though of an Apocryphall booke Prayer is good with fasting almes and righteousnesse 48. And thus we haue heard what the religious fast is and the parts also wherein it doth consist Now we are to consider the sorts of it for the religious fast is either priuat or publicke The priuat fast is that which is obserued priuatly as the fast of some one man or of a priuat familie And this is to be vndertaken either for priuat or publicke causes for priuat concerning either our selues and those that belong to vs so fasted Annah 1. Sam. 1. Cornelius Act. 10. Dauid 2. Sam. 12 or others as Dauid for those that prooued his enemies and Darius though an heathen for Daniell when he was cast into the Lyons den But we are to fast priuatly not onely vpon priuat occasions but much more vpon publicke causes For as it is the dutie of the faithfull priuatly to mourne for publicke calamities and common corruptions which ordinarily are the fore runners of common calamities so also they may fast therefore And such was the fast of Nehemiah chap. 1. and of Daniel chap. 9. In priuat fasts our Sauiour Christ requireth that they be so secretly performed as that vnto men we may not seeme to fast but onely to our heauenly father who seeing in secret will reward vs openly And for as much as the day of the fast hath the nature of a Sabbath wherein we are to cease from bodily labors and worldly businesse therefore those which bee vnder the gouernment of
others as wiues children and seruants may not take vpon them to obserue a fast on a working day without the leaue and liking of their gouernours 49. The publicke fast is that which being vpon publicke cause by publicke authoritie proclaimed before the Lord is both publickly and priuatly to be sanctified of all as a Sabbath of humiliation vnto the Lord. In which definition there are foure things to bee obserued first who are to appoint the publicke fast secondly vpon what cause thirdly who are to obserue it fourthly how As touching the first The appointment of publicke fasts appertaineth to those who haue publicke authoritie to call the people together to the publicke worship of God and to cause them to cease from their bodily labors and worldly affairs as appeareth in the examples of publicke fasts recorded in the word of God as 2. Chron. 20.3 Ion. 3.7 1. Sam. 7.5 Ezr. 8.21 Ioel 1.14 And this they are to doe by proclaiming of the fast that is both by giuing publicke notice of it and also by charging all men to assemble themselues at the time appointed to obserue it according to the direction of the holy ghost by the Prophet Ioel Blow the trumpet in Sion sanctifie a fast that is by your proclamation which is meant by sounding the trumpet appoint a fast to be sanctified proclaime a day of rest or Sabbath of humiliation assemble the people c. And here we are to obserue that which is further added out of Ierem. 36. that this fast is to be proclaimed before the Lord that both they which haue authoritie doe proclaime it not in any wicked or worldly respect but in vprightnesse of heart as before the Lord and also that those who are to obserue it assemble themselues as before the Lord to sanctifie a fast vnto him 50. The next thing to be considered is the cause whereupon the fast is to be proclaimed that when there is just cause those which are in authority may take knowledge of their dutie in this behalfe And that is as I haue generally noted before when we haue some important and vrgent occasion to become humble and earnest suters vnto the Lord either for the obtaining of some speciall and publicke blessing or for the remoouing of some publicke euill and this either for our selues or for other churches of Christ. As for example when some publike matter of great importance is to be attempted then as we haue extraordinarie occasion to craue the blessing of God vpon vs so also we haue just cause to fast Consider to this purpose the examples of Ezra chap. 8. and of the faithfull in the primitiue Church Act. 13. and 14. both which being to craue the blessing of God the former vpon their voyage towards Ierusalem after their captiuitie the latter vpon the ministerie of his seruants whom they either ordained or sent forth to the worke of their ministerie commended their sute vnto the Lord by publicke fasting and prayer Which examples may be a sufficient direction for appointing publicke fasts vpon occasions of no lesse importance In the hystorie of the Kings it appeareth to haue beene the custome of the Israelits though that practise was monstrously abused by Iezabell that publicke matters of importance should bee enterprised with a fast 91. As touching publicke euils they be either publicke sinnes or publicke judgements of God for sinne For if the people of God haue committed some common or publicke sinne and thereby haue prouoked the Lord to wrath and indignation as indeed when we sinne he is angry then it behoueth them to judge themselues if they would not bee judged of the Lord and by humbling themselues before the Lord in fasting and prayer to appease his anger and to preuent his judgements The people of Israel when many of them had sinned by idolatrie and by reason of their sinne stood in feare of the Philistims the Prophet Samuell assembleth them together to Mizpeh where they solemnized a fast and pouring forth water before the Lord acknowledged and bewayled their sinne Likewise when many of the Iewes who were returned from captiuitie had mingled themselues in mariage with the heathen people of the land contrary to the commaundement of God they humbled themselues before the Lord in a publicke and solemne fast If wee therefore would auoid the judgements of God as they did wee must follow the example of their repentance when we haue not beene behind them in sinne But if it please the Lord to manifest his wrath either by threatening his judgements or by inflicting them then doth the Lord as it were call vs to this exercise Now the Lord threateneth his judgements first by his Prophets and ministers as by Ionas against the Niniuits whereupon they fasted secondly by some manifest tokens of his wrath as by earthquakes and other prodigious signes whereby the auncient Romans being also Gentiles haue beene mooued to proclaime publicke fasts thirdly by giuing vs notice of some imminent danger as when we heare of an open inuasion intended by forraine enemies which consideration mooued Iosaphat to proclaime a fast or vnderstand of some more secret plot or conspiracie against the Church the prince or state such as was the conspiracie of Haman against the people of the Iewes for the disappointing whereof the Iewes did fast If therfore the Lord do in like sort threaten vs as it were shake his rod ouer vs we must prepare our selues to meet our God and to turne vnto him by repentance with fasting and prayer 52. And if judgements threatened should mooue vs to fast how much more are wee bound to humble our selues vnder the mightie hand of God when it is vpon vs scourging and afflicting vs for our sinnes As for example when the Lord sendeth any of the publicke messengers of his wrath as the sword famine pestilence captiuitie The ten tribes after two discomfitures receiued at the hands of the Benjamits wherein fortie thousand of them were slaine humbled themselues before the Lord by fasting and prayer The Prophet Ioel when the Lord sent a grieuous famine vpon the land earnestly exhorted the Iewes in the name of the Lord to turne vnto him with all their heart with fasting with weeping and mourning c. Likewise for the time of pestilence as well as of famine Salomon giueth direction that men should humble themselues before the Lord. Which course his father Dauid had taken when the Lord sent the pestilence amōg the people of Israel which judgement was occasioned by his numbering of them but caused by their owne sins Moses also when the plague was begun among the people of Israel for their murmuring he commaundeth Aaron to take his Censer and putting therein incense to go among the people and to make an attonement for them which Aaron hauing done and standing betwixt the dead and them that were aliue the
do eat at the sixt houre that is at noone therfore custome doth wholly excuse all others 64. Againe their fasts are statarie and obserued at set times Wherefore as they are seldome or neuer vnderdertaken vpon any speciall occasion so are they for the most part vnseasonable and consequently hurtfull euen as new wine in old vessels and yet imposed vpon all vnder the penaltie and guilt of mortall sinne If any man object that the same times are obserued among vs I answer that it is not a fast which is obserued among vs at those set times but an abstinence only from flesh in a ciuile respect viz. that fish and other meats might bee vsed and spent as well as flesh and that flesh being spared and forborne at such times might be the more plentifull and consequently the more cheape And further they are also superstitious standing in the prohibition of meat for religion sake which is a doctrine of diuels And so far are they gone in this superstition as that in their times of fasting they seeme to place the top of holinesse in abstinence from meats forbidden and the height of iniquitie in eating flesh for to eat one mor●ell of flesh in Lent is a greater sinne and more sharply punished among them than not onely drunkennesse or gluttonie in other meats but also than whordome or idolatrie to say no more Lastly whereas their fast being a more externall fast and yet but a mock-fast in respect of a true outward fast is notwithstanding by them obtruded vpon the Lord not onely as his solemne worship but also as a worke satisfactorie for their sinnes and meritorious of eternall life it it is sacrilegious blasphemous abhominable and in a word Antichristian And so I leaue them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE SECOND TREATISE OF HOLIE INVOCATION ON GODS NAME Psalme 50.15 And call vpon me in the day of trouble I will deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me THIS Psalme as some of the learned judge was written by Dauid at what time the Angell of God after the three yeares famine and three dayes pestilence mentioned 1. Chron. 21. 22. had shewed vnto him the place which the Lord did chuse for his worship and seruice For after that place was once knowne and prepared for Gods worship the lawes concerning sacrifices and the whole worship of God were more accuratly and fully to be obserued and kept as appeareth Deut. 12. But forasmuch as the greatest part of the Israelits did rest in the performance of the externall and ceremoniall worship as though that in it selfe were acceptable to God the Lord therefore reasoneth with his people concerning his worship from the 7. verse to the 16 teaching and enforming them That howsoeuer he had ordained lawes concerning sacrifices which now were more precisely to be kept yet that he neither required nor esteemed the externall sacrifices in or for themselues but that there are certaine other sacrifices which he farre preferreth before those sacrifices of the law and those are the sacrifice of praise verse fourteene and the sacrifice of a broken and contrit heart poured forth before the Lord in hartie and earnest prayer verse fifteene For we may not thinke that the Lord did wholly condemne sacrifices which himselfe had commanded but so farre forth as men rested in them as though they in themselues did please him For if they were rightly and duly offered namely to testifie the parties humiliation for his sinne and the acknowledgement of his guilt which was signified by laying his hand on the head of his sacrifice secondly to signifie his faith in the all-sufficient sacrifice of Christ figured by that legall sacrifice and thirdly to be an obligation for the sacrificing of himselfe vnto God in all thankfull obedience they were so acceptable vnto God that they are called the sacrifices of righteousnesse Neither doth he simply and absolutly reject outward sacrifices but in comparison of those other sacrifices of praise and prayer in respect whereof hee would haue his temple wherein alone the sacrifices were offered to be called the house of prayer and thus these places of Scripture are to be vnderstood Ierem. 7.22.23 Psal. 51.16.17 Hos. 6.6 to wit comparatiuely according to that of Samuel 1. Sam. 15.22 Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken is better then the fat of rammes Out of this context therefore and coherence of these words with the former we may for our encouragement and stirring vp our selues to the performance of these duties of inuocatiō obserue That the calues of our lips as Hosea calleth the sacrifices of praise are preferred before the sacrifices of Buls and the sacrifice of an afflicted soule poured forth before the Lord in prayer before the sacrifices of the law But now let vs come to the words themselues which may be diuided into two parts a precept and a promise The precept enioyneth the faithfull to call vpon God in the time of trouble wherein foure things are to bee considered 1 The first is the person to whom this precept is directed namely the faithfull man as appeareth not onely by the 5. and 7. verses but especially by the words which immediatly follow this text vers 16. But vnto the wicked saith God c. Which plainely shew the words of this text not to bee directed to the wicked but onely to the godly Whereas therefore the Lord commaundeth the faithfull to call vpon him in the time of trouble we gather that the godly haue their times of trouble and that it is the lot of the faithfull to be vnder the crosse and to bee exercised with affliction as the Scriptures elsewhere doe testifie Ioh. 16.20 You shall mourne saith our Sauiour Christ to the faithfull and the world shall reioyce you shall sorrow but your sorrow shall be turned into ioy Act. 14.22 Through manifold afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of God 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution This therefore our Sauiour Christ said to all that none should think himselfe exempted if any man will come after me let him deny himselfe and take vp his crosse day by day and follow me For whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and he scourgeth euery sonne that hee receiueth Here therefore first the godly are taught patiently and chearfully to beare their crosse because no strange thing happeneth to them but that which is common to all the faithfull Yea the sufferings of the godly are the sufferings of the body of Christ yea of Christ himselfe For such is the communion of Saintes that when the godly are afflicted with them both Christ himselfe and the church also which is his body doth suffer Secondly those which are not afflicted are taught not to be hasty as many are in censuring
carefull to auoid our sinnes if we desire that our affliction may be remoued for they are as a wall of separation betwixt God and vs. If therefore thou wilt not ceasse to sinne neither will God ceasse to afflict thee vnlesse perhaps hee will giue thee ouer as one that is incurable as Phisitians sometimes giue ouer their patients when they thinke them past cure And to conclude this point if when thou callest vpon God in the time of trouble the Lord doth not deliuer thee examine they selfe whether thou doest not continue in sinne without repentance and if thou doest breake off thy sinne by repentance and turne vnto the Lord and he will heare thee for so he saith by the Prophet Esay after hee had protested that hee would not heare their prayers whiles they continued in their sinnes Wash you make you cleane take away the euill of your workes before mine eyes ceasse to do euill learne to do well seeke iudgement releeue the oppressed iudge the fatherlesse defend the widdow Come now and let vs reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes were as crimson they shall be made white as snow though they were red like scarlet they shall be as wooll The second limitation is in respect of the prayer it selfe For we haue no assurance that God will heare euerie prayer but onely such as is made according to his will reuealed in his word as Iohn saith this is our assurance that if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs. We must therefore be carefull that our prayer be conformable to the word of God both in respect of the maner and forme how we pray and also in regard of the end as touching the manner there are three things which are especially required First that we pray in truth for it maybe that when thou callest vpon God thou prayest in hypocrisie and not from thine heart either because thou prayest with wandring thoughts or with fained lippes With wandring thoughts when as thy tongue vttering a prayer thy heart goeth a wandring or whoring after the vanities of this world or is otherwise distracted with other vnseasonable thoughts For if when thou commest neere to the Lord with thy lippes thou remouest thy heart from God thou maist justly feare left in steed of the blessings which thou seemest to aske thou pull down the judgements of God vpon thee according to the threatning of the Lord by the Prophet Esay chapter 29. For if thou shouldest joyne into one speech the thoughts of thy mind and the words of thy mouth both which the Lord doth vnderstand a like thou wouldest be ashamed to deliuer such a speech to a mortall man which thou art not ashamed to vtter vnto the immortall God Or how canst thou looke that God should heare or regard thy prayer when thou doest not heare nor regard thy selfe With fained lippes thou prayest when the desire of the heart doth not agree with the prayer of thy lippes when thou askest with thy mouth that which thou doest not desire with thine heart or when thou pretendest that in thy prayer which thou doest not intend or promisest that which thou doest not meane to performe this is no better than lying vnto God when men cry vnto God but not from their harts as the Prophet Hosea speaketh for what doth a man but lie when hee speaketh otherwise than he thinketh This is a common fault of men when they are in affliction to promise and pretend great matters when notwithstanding their heart is not vpright with God and therefore the more carefully to be auoided of vs lest we seeme with the vnsound Israelits when the hand of God was vpon them to go about to deceiue the Lord with our mouth and with our tongue to speake lies vnto him It is true indeed that God hath promised to heare the prayers of them that call vpon him but this promise is to bee vnderstood with restraint to them that call vpon him in truth As Dauid most plainely teacheth Psal. 145 The Lord is neare to all that call vpon him what to all yea to all that call vpon him in truth For that payer which is acceptable to God is not onely the moouing of the lippes or the speech of the tongue or the lifting vp of the eyes or hands but it is the lifting vp of our soules as Dauid describeth his prayer Psal. 25 A lifting vp of our hearts with our hands vnto God in the heauens as Ieremie exhorteth vs to pray it is the pouring forth of our soule before the Lord as Anna expresseth her prayer 1. Sa. 1 and as Dauid willeth vs to pray Ps. 62. The second thing required in respect of the maner is that we pray with feruencie of spirit It may be when thou callest vpon God thou prayest for fashion rather then for feeling and so vtterest a cold or luke-warme prayer like to thy selfe which thou mayst justly feare is no more acceptable vnto God than luke-warme water to the stomacke It is true that the prayer of the righteous man auaileth much but with this addition if it be feruent This is that prayer which pierceth the clouds and is effectuall with God If therefore we would obtaine our sute let vs craue the assistance of Gods spirit by whose helpe and direction we may pray with sighes that cannot be expressed let vs learne to poure forth our soules like a streame of water let vs as the Apostle speaketh in the Epistle to the Thessalonians pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 superabundantly or exceedingly let vs with reuerence be it spoken to the glorious majestie of God wrestle with the Lord in our prayers as the Apostle speaketh which kind of wrestling Iacob hauing vsed Gen. 32 he became Israell that is one which preuaileth with God as the Prophet Hosea sheweth chapter 12.3 4. The third thing required in the manner is that wee pray with faith It may bee when thou prayest thou art in doubt whether thou shalt be heard and therefore mayst not looke to obtaine thy sute For it is the prayer of faith to which the promise is made whatsoeuer you aske in prayer saith our Sauiour Christ if you beleeue you shall receiue it Likewise Iames If any man saith he want wisdome let him aske it of God and it shall be giuen him But let him aske in saith and wauer not for he that wauereth is like a waue of the sea tost of the wind and caried away Neither let that man thinke that he shall receiue any thing of the Lord. If therefore thou wouldest pray acceptably thou must pray with faith for without faith it is impossible to please God With faith I say in God for how canst thou call vpon him in whom thou doest not beleeue with faith in Christ being assured that both thou though sinfull in thy selfe thy prayer though vnperfect in it selfe
measure of their graces either in respect of the greatnesse or of the continuance that patience may haue her perfect worke in them And hence it is that the best men haue endured the greatest trials as appeareth in Abraham Dauid and Iob c. Wherefore Iames exhorteth vs to count it exceeding ioy when we fall into manifold temptations knowing that the triall of our faith for so he calleth affliction bringeth foorth patience And let patience sayth he haue her perfit worke that you may be perfit and entire lacking nothing If the Lord doe trie vs to discouer and bewray our weakenesse that so hee may abate our pride and humble vs before him it is sometimes expedient that the afflictiō should be prolonged though to our griefe for the present yet to our good in the end Because many men are able to endure the first brunt and therein greatly please themselues who notwithstanding in the continuance of the affliction doe notably bewray their weakenesse But because this kind of triall is also a chastisement let vs consider those fruits and effects which the Lord by chastisements doth worke in his children 1. First therefore the Lord doth chastise vs that hee might teach vs to know our selues and acknowledge our sinnes and might humble vs vnder his hand for prosperitie puffeth men vp and maketh them forget themselues 2. That he might stirre vs vp to call vpon him often and that with feruencie of spirit for when men enjoy their ease they are not vsually either so feruent or so frequent in prayer 3. That he might reclaime vs from sinne and might mortifie our corruptions for as fire purgeth gold so doth affliction the children of God 4. That he might teach vs obedience by those things which we suffer 5. That hee might waine our soules from worldly desires 6. That he might exercise and strengthen our faith and patience Well then call thy selfe to an account thou which thinkest it so long till thou bee deliuered First art thou not yet humbled vnder the mightie hand of God but continuest still as proud and as vaine as in former times assure thy selfe it is good for thee that thine affliction should be continued that thou mayest learne humilitie and the knowledge of thy selfe and mayest be brought to a more serious consideration of thy sinnes and of thy wretched estate in thy selfe 2. Doest thou not flie vnto the Lord by prayer or if thou prayest doest thou pray but coldly and as it were for fashion sake therefore the Lord delayeth to helpe and deliuer thee that thou mayest learne to call vpon him seriously and feruently 3. Hast thou not yet repented thee of thy sinne whereby thou diddest prouoke the Lords anger against thee Hast thou not yet turned to him that smiteth thee Therefore doth he continue thine affliction as thou continuest thine impenitencie and as thou delayest thy repentance so doth he delay his helpe 4. Hast thou not yet learned obedience by that which thou doest suffer Therfore doth he still continue thine affliction to teach thee obedience and to make thee partaker of his holinesse for although the chastisement of God vpon thee seeme grieuous for the time yet in the end it will bring foorth the quiet fruit of righteousnesse vnto thee who art exercised thereby For which cause Dauid as hee professeth of himselfe that it was good for him that hee had beene afflicted that ●e might learne the statutes of the Lord so he pronounceth that man blessed whom the Lord doth chastise and teach in his law c. 5. Art thou still addicted to the world minding and affecting things below more than the things which are aboue Therefore the Lord mingleth thy worldly prosperitie with the gall of affliction that as nurses by laying bitter things vnto their dugs doe waine their children from them so hee by affliction might waine thee from the world and that through bearing the crosse thou mightest bee crucified to the world and the world to thee 6. Hast thou not yet learned patiently to beare the crosse to repose thine affiance in God more than in the meanes which God permitteth to thee Therefore doth he still continue thine affliction that thy patience might be exercised and by exercise confirmed as the Scriptures testifie therefore doth the Lord bereaue thee of other meanes that thou mightest relie onely vpon him Here then we are to be admonished to make a right vse of our afflictions and as we desire to be deliuered for our comfort so to labour that these or such like effects may by our affliction be wrought in vs for if wee desire to bee deliuered out of affliction before it hath wrought any good effect in vs wee desire vnawares that God should giue vs ouer as incorrigible When as therefore a faithfull man hath prayed effectually vnto the Lord for deliuerance out of affliction and yet is not deliuered let him know that it is not good for him to be deliuered as yet And withall let him bee persuaded of these two things First that God doth chastise him in loue for his profit according to his necessitie as being not delighted with our afflictions and therefore inflicteth vpon him no greater measure of affliction than in his fatherly wisedome he thinketh necessarie And therefore wee ought to possesse our soules in patience committing and resigning our selues into the hands of almightie God as of a most wise and louing father and most expert phisition of our soules A sonne that hath any grace in him will meekely submit himselfe to the chastisement of a wise and carefull father how much more ought we to submit our selues to the correction of our heauenly father A man that hath in his bodie any wounds or sores he will not onely be patient but thankefull also towards the surgeon that launceth or seareth his bodie that hee may cure it how much more ought we patiently and thankefully to suffer the Lord to afflict our bodies that he may saue our soules Secondly let him be assured that the Lord doth neuer reject the effectuall prayer of a faithfull man but alwayes heareth the same graciously if not according to his desire yet according to his profit yea that hee alwayes graunteth it if it be rightly conceiued For as we are to aske spirituall graces necessarie to saluation absolutely so wee are to beleeue absolutely that God will graunt the same vnto vs yea this is a certaine and comfortable truth that whosoeuer hath thus much grace truly and earnestly to desire any sanctifying grace the same grace is alreadie begun in him the Lord accepting in his children the will for the deed And as wee are to aske temporall blessings conditionally so farre foorth as the graunting thereof may stand with Gods glorie and our euerlasting good so we are to beleeue and to be assured that God will graunt the same so farre forth as may be for the