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A25478 A supplement to The Morning-exercise at Cripple-Gate, or, Several more cases of conscience practically resolved by sundry ministers; Morning-exercise at Cripplegate. Supplement. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1676 (1676) Wing A3240; ESTC R13100 974,140 814

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say I would my poor hungry child I would but I have it not Why then will you not come at me live together and eat together at my cost and care and charge and yet be whole months and never come at Me and that your children have reason raiment limbs not born blind nor of a monstrous birth which things Heathens have been affected with and a thousand ways besides have I done you good may God say Why then will you live whole years together and never together come at me Have you found one more able or more willing to do you good that you never can Why then are you so unthankful as not to come at me After the like manner the Lord expostulates with his People to whom he had been a bountiful Benefactor and yet they answered not his bounty nor served him their Benefactor for which he calls to the Heavens to be astonished and the Earth to be horribly afraid Jer. 2.5 Thus saith the Lord Mercies do engage to duties We should have him for our God for ever and serve him that always doth us good So the Poet. O Melibaec Deuo. nobis haec otia fecit Namque erit ille mihi semper Deus illius aram Saepe tener nostris ab ovilibus imbuet agnus Virg. Eclog. 1. Officia etiam saerae sentiunt nec ullum tam immansuetum animal est quod non cura mitiget in amorem sui vertat Leonum ora à magistris impunè tractantur Eliphantorum feritatem usque in servile obsequium demeretur cibus adeo etiam quae extra intellectum atque aestimationem bemeficii sunt posita assiduitas tamen meriti pertinacis evincit Ingratus est adversus unum beneficium adversus alterum non erit Duorum obliru est tertium etiam corum quae excideru●t memoriam reducet Qui instat onerat priora sequentibus etiam ex duto Immemori pectore gratiam extundat N●o audebit adversus multa ocu●c● allollere Senec. de benef c. 3. what iniquity have your Fathers found in me that they are gone far from me 6. Neither said they where is the Lord that brought us up out of the land of Egypt Should such a people forsake such a God and go far from him that did them so much good yet they did ver 13. Be astonished at this oh ye heavens You see when God is a Benefactor to a People and there is the same reason for Families and they do not serve him what monstrous wickedness it is God hath kept you all safe in the night and yet in the morning you do not say Where is the Lord that did preserve us come ô come Let us give joint praises to him God hath done you and your Families good so many years and yet you do not say where is the Lord that hath done such great things for us come let us acknowledg his mercy together God hath carried you through affliction and sickness in the Family the Plague hath been in the house and yet you live the Small pox and burning Feavors have been in your houses and yet you are alive your conjugal companion hath been sick and recovered children nigh to death and yet restored and for all this you do not say Where is the Lord that kept us from the Grave and saved us from the Pit that we are not rotten among the dead and yet you do not pray to nor pra se this your wonderful Benefactor together Let the very walls within which these ungrateful wretches live be astonished at this Let the very beams and pillars of their houses tremble and let the very girders of the floors on which they tread and walk be horribly afraid that such as dwell in such an House together go to bed before they go to Prayer together Let the earth be amazed that the Families which the Lord doth nourish and maintain are rebellious and unthankful Being worse than the very Ox that knoweth his Owner and of less understanding than the very Ass Isa 1.2 3. There is such validity in the consequence from God's being our Benefactor to our duty to him in serving of him that Joshua builds his exhortation to the Heads and People of Israel to fear and worship God upon this very foundation as appeareth plainly to any that read the Chapter where the Text lieth From what hath been said I reason in this manner 3. Arg. If God be the Founder Owner Governour and Benefactor of Families as such then Families as such are jointly to worship God and pray unto him This cannot be denied But God is the Founder Owner Governour and Benefactor of Families as such Neither can this be denied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristot Moral Nunc adhibe puro Pectore verba puer nunc te melioribus affer Quo semel est imbuta recens● servabit odorem Testa diu Horat. Ep. l. 12. adeo in teneris consuescere mul●um est Virg Geor. l. 2. Therefore Families as such are jointly to worship God and pray unto him Argument 4. Masters of Families ought to read the Scripture to their Families teach and instruct their Children and Servants in the matters and doctrines of Salvation therefore they are to pray in and with their Families No man that will not deny the Scripture can deny the unquestionable duty of reading the Scripture in our houses Governours of Families teaching and instructing them out of the Word of God Amongst a multitude of express Scriptures look into these Exod. 12.26 And it shall come to pass when your Children shall say unto you what mean you by this service 27. Ye shall say it is the Sacrifice of the Lord 's Passeover who passed over the houses of the Children of Israel in Egypt when he smote the Egyptians and delivered our houses And there is as much reason that Christian Parents should explain to their Children the Sacraments of the New Testament to instruct them in the nature use and ends of Baptism and the Lord's Supper Deut. 6.6 And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart 7. v. And thou shalt teach * Crebris admonitionum quasi ictibus haec mea praecepta infiges optabis sicut repetitis mallei ictibus f●rram aptatur Lud. de Dieu Et dentabis ea i. e. inter dentes versabis assidue lo queris vel dentibus mandes praemansa in os ingeres filiis tuis Malvend 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whet or sharpen them diligently to thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest in the way and when thou liest down and when thou risest up i. e. morning and evening Deut. 11.18 19. Ephes 6.4 And ye Fathers provoke not your Children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. And God was pleased with this in Abraham Gen. 18.19 For I know him that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they
the one and the other might see the right way of Salvation by Jesus Christ for though the Light of Nature by which we are convinc'd of the equity and righteousness of the Moral Law do bind us to Repentance when we act against it yet it cannot promise that we shall get any thing by our Repentance being altogether ignorant of the Mystery of the Gospel Thus we see the Mountains must be brought low and the Valleys filled up and both reduc'd to such an exact level evenness and plainness that Christ may sit close upon the soul without the least interposition of any thing between him and us or the least remaining vacuity or emptiness in our selves into which his Fulness doth not descend making up whatsoever is wanting in us and when it is so there is a through perfect closure with Christ in the greatest nearness in the strictest and most intimate union that can be But you will say How shall we come to this How shall we walk thus between the Mountain and the Valley in a streight direct line of Faith and Hope to Jesus Christ which brings me to the Case or Question now to be spoken to from the Text which is this viz. How may we steer an even course between Presumption and Despair The true state of this Question depends upon a clear discovery of the real difference that is between the Grace of Hope and both these extreams Presumption and Despair therefore 1. I shall distinguish between Presumption and Hope The difference between Hope and Despair is more apparent but we are too too apt to confound Presumption and Hope there being a greater Affinity between these than the other as in Morality some vertue come nearer to one extreme than to the other So here there is something of the general nature of Hope in Presumption Presumptio non excludit spem sed rectitud●nem spei Zanch. Therefore we must be the more acurate and strict in distinguishing between the Grace of Hope and the Sin of Presumprion which fallente quâdam Specie Aquinas resembles the grace of Hope and those who are guilty of this Sin do alwayes put the specious name of Hope upon it they are not sensible of any Presumption as others are of Despair and therefore their case is more dangerous Eo magis desperati quo minus desperantes Ames de Consc And where one despairs thousands do presume Before I come to particulars I must distinguish of a double Presumption 1. Of our Selves and our own merits 2. Of God and his mercy Both stand in a direct opposition to the true Grace of Hope and I shall shew you where the difference lies I begin with 1. The First sort of Presumption which is of our selves This is a proud arrogant presumption arising from a vain conceit of our own supposed worth and righteousness we think to stand upon our own legs insisting not upon what Christ is to us or hath done for us but upon what we are in and to our selves and have done for Christ We have Prophecied in thy Name c. Mat. 7.22 We are not as this Publican we have done thus and thus and ought to be considered for our good works and we doubt not but we shall 't is not the Promises of Free-grace but the Law and their strict observance of that which these men ground their hope upon But the true Grace of Hope is alwayes grounded upon Faith in the Promises and is all along fed nourish'd maintain'd and strengthened by those believing perswasions that it hath of the truth of those Promises which at first produced and begat this hope in the Soul and in the continual exercise of this Grace in its daily actings it eyes the Promises hath daily recourse to them for its further confirmation 't is bottomed upon them takes its rise from thence and bears up the Soul upon the credit of them Rom. 15.4 Psal 119.74 this is the hope of the Gospel Col. 1.23 that carries us out of our selves A Christian's Hope is hope in another and not in himself The right notion of Hope as it is an Evangelical Grace implies our sole dependance upon God as the only Author and Fountain of all that good which we desire and look for which doth sufficiently difference it from that false hope or self-presumption that I have been speaking of and which was principally aimed at by John in the Text being a Presumption more peculiar to those times and persons here spoken of who lived under the Law and were much in doing but understood not the End of their Moral or Ceremonial Works but trusted in them and made Saviours of them and at the first entrance of the Gospel they opposed the Doctrine of Free-grace would hear neither John nor Christ himself but rejected the Counsel of God against themselves Luke 7.30 33 34. See what a Character Paul gives of them and of all others throughout the world who should entertain the least thought of Salvation out of Christ Rom. 3.16 17. Destruction and misery are in their wayes and the way of peace have they not known This one Scripture if well weighed is enough to shake the confidence of the most Presumptuous Self-justitiary that is and to convince him and all the world of their need of Christ In Psal 14. which Paul quotes in this Chapter God is brought in taking a strict Survey of Mankind before he sent his Son into the World to see if there were any that stood in no need of him q. d. If there be any such let him come forth and shew himself David answers for himself ver 7. Not I Lord not I Lord I wait for Christ I long for Christ O that the Salvation of Israel were come out of Zion O that Christ were come that the Free grace and mercy of God were more clearly revealed then Jacob shall rejoice and Israel shall be glad this will be good news indeed So Jer. 17.5 6 7. The result of all is this true Hope eyes God in Christ and argues from him this Presumption now spoken of eyes self and argues from thence in all its actings 2. The second sort of Presumption to be distinguish'd from Hope is that by which we presume upon God and his mercy This is grown up since the preaching of the Gospel there is indeed too great a spice of the former Presumption among Professors and as that vvears off this succeeds nay they unhappily mingle together If Legal Presumption cannot altogether shut out conviction yet it minces the matter 't is a little one and my Soul shall live and so makes vvay for this credulous presumption that brings in a Salvo for all presently God is gracious mercy is promised Christ has died for Sinners and all vvill be vvell vve shall go to Heaven of course vvithout any more ado and so they sit down in security all their dayes till they are surprized vvith their everlasting doom unawares This is Infidelis fiducia Bern. a
preserved and maintained and who though he could so easily destroy you and glorifie his justice hereby yet is both patient with you and willing also to be reconciled unto you and sends his Embassadors in his name to tell you that he entreats you that you would be reconciled and let these considerations affect you with ingenuous grief for sin Lastly Get conviction of the defilement of sin how your Souls are stained by it and hereby degenerated and debased into a lower degree of vileness than is in the beast that perisheth yea that hereby you are become without regeneration and until your Souls are washed more loathsom in the eyes of God than the most nasty thing in the World is in your eyes 2. Make confession of sin In some cases it is requisite you should confess some sins unto man but it is absolutely universally necessary in order to forgiveness that you should confess your sins unto God the promise of pardoning mercy is made to confession Prov. 28.13 He that covereth his sins shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy David found by experience the evil of covering and keeping close his sins and the benefit of acknowledgment and confession Psal 32.3 4 5. When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long for day and night thine hand was heavy upon me my moisture is turned into the drought of Summer Selah I acknowledged my sin unto thee and my iniquity have I not hid I said I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin Selah Sinners make a full confession of your sins that you may have a full pardon and discharge do not hide any sin as a sweet morsel under your tongue it is a vain thing to seek and endeavour the hiding of any sin from him who is omniscient God hath knowledg of all your Iniquities do you therefore acknowledg all unto him Make free confession of your sins Stay not till God force you by his Scourges and even drag you unto it by his cords of affliction but let it be your voluntary act and be ingenuous herein mingle not your confession with excuses and extenuations Say not though you are bad yet you are not so bad as others that your hearts are good though your lives have been naught that such and such gross sins were your slips and failings that you were overtaken overperswaded and drawn unto such wicked practices by your companions and so by transferring your guilt endeavour to make your selves as Innocent as you can this is abominable in the sight of God and a certain sign of sin's dominion which is inconsistent with the remission of it and will shut you out from pardoning Mercy but in confession of your sins acknowledg your selves to have been the chief of sinners Sinners take all the blame to your selves and set your sins out in the deepest Crimson and Scarlet colours and with all their hainous circumstances and aggravations tell God that your heart is the worst part and if there have been some abominations found in your lives there are a thousand-fold more abominations in your hearts Confess your sins with humility and self-loathing say with Agur Prov. 30.2 Surely I am more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man with David Psal 73.22 So foolish was I and ignorant I was as a Beast before thee with Job Chap. 42.6 I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes Confess your sins with shame like Ezra Chap. 9.6 O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift my face unto thee for our iniquities are increased over our head and our trespass is grown up unto the Heavens Confess your sins with grief and godly sorrow like David Psal 39.18 I will declare mine iniquity I will be sorry for sin 3. Make Application of Christ by Faith that you may attain forgiveness There is no other Name given under Heaven amongst men whereby you can be pardoned and saved Acts 4.12 And he is able to save you and procure a pardon for you in the uttermost extent of your most hainous guilt Heb. 7.25 And the reason is given in the same Verse because he ever liveth to make Intercession for sinners it is his Office as High-Priest wherein he is most merciful and faithful to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People Heb. 2.17 Christ is near to the Father being at his right hand in Heaven and hath great interest in him being his dearly beloved Son and his Intercession for pardon is always accepted it being for no more than what himself hath purchased and what his Father hath promised and therefore you that are the worst of Sinners have great encouragement to come unto Christ and to make Application of him you have his promise that whosoever cometh unto him he will in no wise cast out Joh. 6.37 and if you apply your selves unto him and apply unto your selves his merits and Righteousness by believing you shall certainly attain the forgiveness of all your sins however numerous and hainous they have been Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And our Saviour himself telleth us Joh. 3.16 God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And the Apostle doth discourse at large in the former part of his Epistle to the Romans concerning Justification which he proveth by manifold Arguments that it cannot be works that it must be by Faith therefore by Faith make Application of Christ and his imputed Righteousness and rest therein only that you may be justified that you may be pardoned and saved 4. Forsake every sin that you may attain the forgiveness of it Prov. 28.13 He that confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall find mercy Isa 55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and return to the Lord for he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon him Isa 1.16 17 18. Wash ye make ye clean put away the evil of your doing from before mine eyes cease to do evil learn to do well seek judgment relieve the oppressed judg the fatherless plead for the widow Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as Scarlet they shall be as white as Snow though they be red like Crimson they shall be as Wool You must loath your sins that you may be pardoned and withal you must leave them you must cease from doing evil if you would have God cease from his displeasure and unless you do forsake your sins never expect that God should forgive them there must be a returning to God that you may be received unto favour and this cannot be without a turning from sin It would be a dishonour unto God to pardon you
which will one day be made good upon them and if they will not know what else they should yet let them know this that Because they are a people of no understanding therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them and he that formed them will shew them no favour Of Sabbath Sanctification Serm. VI. Isaiah 58.13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the LORD honourable and shalt honour him not doing thine own wayes nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking thine own words Then shalt thou delight thy self in the LORD and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy Father for the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it THese two verses contain a modell of Sabbath Sanctification The 13. v. contains the Duties enjoyned The 14. v. contains the priviledges annexed The Duties are set forth unto us 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively The Negatively Duties are express't 1. Generally and Comprehensively 2. More particularly and distinctly The Generall in these words If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day Wherein there are three things 1. The thing forbidden i. e. The doing of our pleasures on the Sabbath God never appointed a Sabbath for the satisfaction of corrupt nature 2. The manner of doing or forbearing it and that is by turning away our foot from the Sabbath The meaning of which phrase may be 1. Either a turning away of our mind and affections from each objects to which corrupt will do strongly incline us The Affections are the feet of our souls Secondly Or an awful fear of trespassing upon the Sabbath for the satisfying of our carnal desires As men that are afraid of trespassing upon some great mans free-hold withdraw their foot and turn another way c. The Sabbath is Gods Free-hold of which God saith as once to Moses put thy shooes from off thy feet for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground When we are tempted to any thing unworthy of the Sabbath we should make a stop and turn away that we may not transgress 3. The third thing in the General is the reason why we should be so afraid of incroaching upon Sabbath-time implied in this clause upon my holy day Wherein are two considerations 1. It is holy time 2. It is Gods time To take holy time and bestow it upon our own lusts it is profaneness To take Gods time and bestow it upon the uses of the flesh it is sacriledge It is not fit to make sacred time to serve any but sacred uses This is the general inhibition Secondly The more particular and distinct inhibition followeth in the end of the verse Wherein Three things forbidden in the particular 1. We are forbidden the doing of our own ways It is an Hebraism as much as in our English going our own ways i. e. following our carnal and sinful courses pursuing our own corrupt and sensual inclination 2. We are forbidden the finding of our own pleasure which is the same forbidden in the General ut supra only with this difference that there as I conceive pleasure is taken more largely so whatsoever is pleasing to unregenerate nature and inclinations whether they be bodily labour or Carnal recreations profit or pleasures sports or the works of our Callings we must not find them that is we must be so far from making provision for the satisfying of the sensual Appetite that we must not so much as own them when we meet them we must not suffer our selves to be tempted or insnared by them we must be to them when we meet them as if we had neither eyes nor ears nor hands nor feet we must not desire them or have any thing to do with them 3. We are forbidden the speaking of our own words that is our own impertinent discourses worldly contrivances or in the Apostles language All filthiness Eph. 5.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and foolish talking and jesting or any thing that is not convenient Christians should not only consult what is lawful but what is decent and ornamental to the Sabbath None of these things must be so much as named on our days much less on Gods days Christians look to it you may profane the Sabbath by your Words as well as your Works and by vain words as well as by vile words But there is one thing further observable that is the note of appropriation viz. thine own thine own ways thine own pleasure thine own words thine own what is that Answ In opposition to Gods ways Gods pleasures Gods words thereby utterly excluding not only wicked ways and sinful pleasures and profane words whatsoever which are unlawful at all times but even all such ways pleasures words and thoughts also which are the words of the mind which relate to our own private concernments whether personal or domestical of a worldly and secular nature which though they may be lawful upon other days duly circumstantiated yet by no means to be allowed of on Gods day unless they fall under the general exception of Gods own indulgence namely Necessity and Charity of which I shall speak more largely hereafter In a word Nothing may be done or spoken but what is of a divine or Sabbath nature and tendency upon pain of forfeiting our part in the blessed priviledges following verse 14. and so much for the negative part of Sabbath Sanctification I come to the Affirmative And shalt call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord Honourable and shalt honour him In these words also there be four branches or duties 1. We must call the Sabbath a delight 2. We must call it holy or the holy of the Lord. 3. We must call it honourable or glorious 4. We must not only call it honourable but must actually and really honour It or Him by a suitable deportment 1. If we would sanctifie the Sabbath acceptably we must call the Sabbath a delight Call i. e. account it so calling it is an act of the judgment or appreciative faculty a Delight or as some render it thy delights we must reckon the Sabbath inter Delicias as is said of Jerusalem Lam. 1.7 she remembred all her pleasant things surely her Sabbaths were some of those pleasant things it is said Her enemies did mock at her Sabbaths I but she did mourn They were her delightful things whereupon her heart was And so they must be to us But we must also remember to take in with the Day all the Ordinances and religious services and Duties of the day They must not only be done spiritualy holily and Vniversally but they must be done with delight and complacency we must prefer them to our chiefest joy yea the very approach of the Sabbath should be our delight so have all the Saints and servants of God in all ages
humiliations more affectionate and evangelical As in that fast I mentioned before Neh. 9. The Levites did stand up among the people and begin the day with blessing God Blessed be thy glorious name which is exalted above all blessing and praise ver 5. and so they proceed to recite a catalogue of God's mercies even from the first call of Abraham to their settlement in the Land of Canaan which reacheth to ver 25. And all this was to bring in the Nevertheless mention'd v. 26. with the greater Emphasis to their humiliation Nevertheless they were disobedient and rebelled against thee and cast thy Law behind their backs and shew thy Prophets c. and the same we may observe in Ezra chap. 9. He takes notice of the reviving God had given them in their bondage and the Nail in his holy place and the Wall in Judah and Jerusalem ver 8 9. the more to aggravate the peoples sin in doing according to the abominations of the Canaanites and mingling themselves with the people of the Land ver 1 2. The goodness of God is said to lead men to Repentance Rom. 2. And therefore mention is to be made of it upon a day when the exercise of Repentance is specially in season Yea Thanksgiving also is requisite as an attendant of supplication for the giving thanks for mercy received is an effectual way to obtain New mercy According to that known saying Efficacissimum genus rogandi est gratias agere Giving thanks for mercy received is the most effectual way to obtain new mercy Thanksgiving carries supplication in the spirit of it And if according to the Apostle Phil. 4. We are in every thing to make known our request with supplication and thanksgiving then when ever we come to God with Supplications we are to couple them with thanksgiving 6. The last duty I mention which is the Appendix to the rest is that of Alms-deeds for when we come to beg mercy from God we should not forget to shew it to men And he that stops his ear to the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 he may cry but shall not be heard yea his prayers are so far from coming up as incense before God that they are an abomination Cornelius that was a man much in prayer and fasting also as is noted of him Act. 10.30 was full also of Alms-deeds Act. 10.31 and both together came up as a memorial before God Alms-deeds as they are not to be confined to a fast day so surely are not to be excluded He that vvill on such a day shut up his purse let him take heed least God shut up against him his ear his heart and his hand The People complain Isa 53.8 Wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not God tells them they fasted but shewed not mercy and therefore fasted not aright and then tells them what was the fast that he had chosen ver 7. Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry and when thou seest the naked that thou cover them c. Certainly those duties that ought to follow our fasting or else it avails nothing with God ought not to be shut out of the duties of such a day if there be call and opportunity thereunto Thus I have shewn the duties of a fast day which are external with respect to the outward performance And next I shall shew what frame of spirit is requisite to such a day without which all these duties may be externally performed and yet the fast not accepted Rom. 2. ult For as the Apostle saith of Circumcision It is that of the heart and of the spirit so is that fasting that is well pleasing to God There may be confession supplication renewing the Covenant Thanksgiving Alms-deeds and yet if there be wanting a suitable frame of heart all this may be but as a body without the soul or matter without form that may have praise with men but none with God Now this frame of soul consists in 1. Self-debasement 2. Godly sorrow 3. Filial fear 4. Ingenuous shame 5. Inward purity 6. Evangelical faith and hope I shall speak briefly to them all 1. Is self-debasement God complains of the Jews fasting Isa 58.5 they did hang down their heads like a bulrush but their souls did not bow down within them We call a fast day a day of humiliation but we have the name but not the thing if the soul be not humbled What is it for the body to wear sackcloth if Pride cover the heart or to spread ashes under us if the soul lye not down in the dust or to fast from bodily food if the soul be not emptied of self-fulness 2. Godly sorrow A fast day is for afflicting the soul and how is the soul afflicted without true sorrow The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifies a fast is derived from a root that signifies to afflict so essential is the afflicting the soul to the day It was a charge against the Jews Isa 58.2 Behold in the day of your fast ye find pleasure What kind of pleasure it was is not there mentioned but it was some sinful pleasure that was not congruous to the day Daniel speaks of his fast ch 10.3 I sat full three weeks mourning As at our funerals many enter the house of mourning and wear black but there is no mourning within nor no garment of heaviness covers their soul So do many enter the day and duty of fasting but no godly sorrow enters with them into it or attends them in it Every thing is beautiful in its season Eccl. 3.11 A fast day wants its beauty if no true sorrow attends it We make confession of sin but if there be no sorrow we feel not what is spoken and what will words of confession avail Ephraim is said to bemoan himself Jer. 31.18 And God is said to hear it and he bemoaned him also But how can we think God's heart should be affected with our confessions when our own are not The Jews upon their solemn days had their solemn sacrifices A fast day is a solemn day and it is not to be without its sacrifices and the great Sacrifice or Sacrifices of the day is a broken and contrite spirit psal 51. 3. Filial fear Natural fear hath sometimes brought a people to the duty and a filial fear is to be exercised in the performance of it as Jehoshaphat feared and then proclaimed a Fast 2 Chron. 20.3 And so did the King of Nineveh Jonah 2. when God's judgments are abroad we ought to fear and this fear should lead us to meet him in the ways of his judgment by prayer and fasting for all our serving God is to be coupled with fear Psal 2.11 our rejoycing is to be with trembling much more our mourning In a fast day we especially deprecate God's wrath and therefore we ought to have such a sense of it as may cause sacred fear There is no affection of the soul but ought to be
afflict affront and troubles us and wo to them that a child of God upon a mature judgment names in prayer I find not that such a prayer in Scripture return'd empty Jacob in a great strait Deliver me from the hand of my brother Gen. 32.11 from the hand of Esau David in the ascent of Mount Olivet O Lord I pray thee turn the counsel of Ahithophel into foolishness 2 Sam 15.31 2 Chron. 20.10 Prayer twisted the rope for him at Giloh Thus Jehoshaphat in his prayer names Ammon Moab and Edom conspiring against him Thus Hezekiah spreads the railing letter before the Lord Isa 37.14 Psal 83.6 c. Act 4 27. Joseph l. 18. c. 9. Euseb Chron. l. 2. p. 159. Eph. 3.14 Luke 17.5 2 Cor. 12.8 and the Psalmist takes them all in a round Catalogue that consulted against Israel Thus the Church in her prayer names Herod-Antipas and Pontius Pilate whereof the first was sent into perpetual banishment and the latter slew himself It 's of great use in prayer to attend to some special case or single request with arguments and affections suitable For this cause says Paul I bow the knee Suppose a grace deficient in its strength Lord increase our faith or a temptation urgent For this I pray'd to the Lord thrice A great reason why we reap so little benefit by prayer because we rest too much in generals and if we have success 't is but dark that often we cannot tell what to make of the issues of prayer Besides to be particular in our petitions would keep the spirit much from wandring when we are intent upon a weighty case and the progress of the soul in grace would manifest its gradual success in prayer 6. Holy and humble appeals before the Lord in secret when the soul can submissively and thankfully expose it self to divine searching about some measures of holiness and grace wrought in the heart Psal 139.23 Tertal de orat p. 213. The soul cannot bide by the presence of God under flashings of defilement neque agnosci poterit à spiritu sancto spiritus inquinatus neither will the holy spirit own a defiled soul But when a person can humbly modestly and reverently say search me and try my reins and if there be any way of wickedness in me lead me in the everlasting way it vvill be the means of the ebullitions and boilings up of joyful affections and meek confidence at the footstool of grace especially in pleas of deliverance from wicked and proud enemies When David can plead in comparison with and in the case stated between his enemies and himself For I am holy Psal 86.2 14 17. It shews him a token for good or when we plead against the assaults of Satan can we be conscious that we have watcht and prayed against entring into temptation When in the main we can wash our hands in Innocency Psal 26 6. Psal 18.20.7.3 we may then comfortably compass God's altar about In case of opposition and injustice He rewarded me says David in the point of Saul according to my righteousness and the cleanness of my hands before him Or about the truth of the love that is in the heart to God Thou that knowest all things John 21.17 Neh. 14.14 22 Isa 38.3 Isa 26.8 says Peter knowest that I love thee As to zeal for the Worship and Ordinances of God so did Nehemiah As to the integrity of a well-spent life so did Hezekiah or if we cannot rise so high yet as the Church did The desire of our soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee Or lastly when we can unfeignedly plead the usefulness of a mercy intreated in order to the divine glory As when a minister or the Church of Christ for him prays for such gifts and graces Eph. 6.19 Col. 4 3. such knowledg and utterance that he may win souls to Christ and can appeal that it is his principal aim this is glorious 7. Pray for the spirit that ye may pray in and by the spirit Awaken the North and the South to blow upon thy garden that the spices thereof may flow forth Cant 4.16 Then thou mayest invite Christ Let my beloved come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits that the soul may enjoy him and hold sweet communion with him All successful prayer is from the breathing of the spirit of God when he inspires and indites when he directs the heart as to matter and governs the tongue as to utteranee 1 Cor. 2.10 Rom. 8.27 Psal 147.18 Ezek. 47.1 Gerson T. 2. K. K. 4. 49. Zech. 12.10 God graciously hears the sighs of his own Spirit formed in us He sent forth his spirit and the waters flow That I may allude the waters of contrition flow upon the breathing of the spirit and the soul is as it were all afloat before the throne of grace when these living waters issue from under the threshold of the sanctuary Sequitur lachrymosa devotio flante spiritu sancto Devout tears drop down from the spirit's influences Melting supplications follow the infusions of grace by the spirit Then they shall mourn for piercing of Christ says the Prophet and be in bitterness as for a first-born like the mourning at the town of Hadadrimmon where Josiah was slain Then (a) 13.1 2 4 14.8 Isa 66.12 Rich. de S●ult p. 321. in that day what inundations of mercy shall refresh the Church when the Lord will extend her peace like a river and the glory of the Gentiles like a flowing stream great things to the Church and gracious things to the soul Inter orationem suspiria cognoscit holy sighs in prayer give intelligence of great mercies to follow Nay to withstand powerfully all the wiles of Satan one means is Eph. 6.18 to consecrate every part of the spiritual armour by prayer in the Spirit 8. Apply special promises to special cases in prayer For God hath and will magnifie his word of promise above all his name Psal 138.2 John 12.28 when we are under the word of command for a duty we must seek for a word of promise and unite them in prayer When a promise of aid suits to the precept it renders prayer victorious and obedience pleasant when we come with God's own words into his presence when we take his words with us that he would take away all iniquity he 'll receive us graciously Hos 14 2. Gen. 32.9 1 Kings 8.24 Jacob urged that God had bid him return from his Country and kinred Solomon urges the word of promise to David Jehoshaphat urges the a 2 Chron. 20.8 9. word of promise to Solomon Daniel fills his mouth (b) Dan. 9.2 3 with the promise given to Jeremiah he reads and then applies it in prayer First search the Bible and look for a promise and when found open it before the Lord. Paul teaches us to take the (c) Heb. 13.5 6. promise given to
Joshua and then to say boldly the Lord is our helper c. For the special ground of the answer of prayer lies in the (d) Psal 50.15.65.24 performance of a promise Simeon lived upon a promise and (e) Luke 2.29 expired sweetly in the arms of a promise in the breathings of a prayer Sometimes the soul depends for an answer by vertue of the Covenant in general as of that (f) Gen. 17.7 I will be thy God sometimes by the great (g) Joh. 14.26 remembrancer draws water out of some (h) Isa 12.3 well of salvation but in both God's faithfulness is the soul's surety Hence it is that David in prayer does so often argue upon the veracity and truth of God and the Church in Micah is so confident that the (i) Mic. 7.20 mercy promised to Abraham and confirmed in truth to Jacob should be plentifully performed to his people Israel 9. Sober and serious resolutions before God in prayer the 119 Psalm is full of these (k) Psal 119.6 I will keep thy statutes (l) v. 32. I will run the way of thy commandments (m) v. 46. I will speak of thy testimonies before Kings (o) v. 106. I have sworn and will perform it that I will keep thy righteous judgments and other where (p) Psal 80.18 quicken us and we will call upon thy name and again (q) Psal 101.2 O when wilt thou come unto me I will walk within my house with a perfect heart Visit me with answers of mercy to prayer and then the soul makes holy stipulations and compacts of obedience to God Thus Jacob (r) Gen. 28.22 if God will be with me then shall the Lord be my God and resolves upon a house for God and reserving the tenth of all his estate to his service and worship where the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 si if is not to be taken for a single conditional as if God should not bestow what he promised he should not be his God Rivet in loc p. 489. that were a great wickedness but 't is a rational particle or of order and time Because or since God is graciously pleased to promise I will acknowledg him to be the God whom I adore by erecting a Temple and paying tithes to maintain his worship But whatever it is that the soul in distress does offer to God in promise be not slack to perform Gen. 35.3 〈◊〉 ● 4 for many times answers of prayer m●y delay till we have performed our promises (a) Psal 96.13 19. David professes to pay what his lips had uttered in trouble for God had heard him If we break our words to God no wonder if we feel what the Lord threatned to Israel that they should know (b) Num. 14.34 his breach of promise 10. A waiting frame of spirit in prayer I waited patiently for the Lord he inclined to me and heard my cry Psal 40.1 Psal 38.15 Psal 123.2.130.6.143.8 Mich. 7.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I expected with expectation he walkt up and down in the gallery of prayer This is set forth by hope till God hear In thee O Lord do I hope thou wilt hear O Lord my God our eyes must wait upon the Lord our God till he have mercy upon us more than those which watch for the morning and persist praying cause us to hear thy loving kindness in the morning for in thee do we trust and say with Micah I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation my God will hear me Hoping expecting trusting living upon the promise and looking for an answer of peace as he said of prayer sagitta movetur post quietem sagittantis navis quiescentibus nautis Gerson When an archer shoots an arrow he looks after it with his glass to see how it hits the mark So says the soul I 'le attend and watch how my prayer flies towards the bosom of God and what messages return from heaven As the seaman when he has set sail goes to the helm and the compass and sits still and observes the Sun or the pole-stars and how the ship works and how the land-marks form themselves aright according to his chart So do you when you have been at prayer mark your ship how it makes the port and what rich goods are laden back again from heaven Most men lose their prayers in the mists and fogs of non-observation and thus we arrive at the second question 2. Quest How to discover and discern answers to secret prayer that the soul may be satisfied that it hath prevailed with God Let us now consider the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendition or reply to prayer in the text he will return it into your bosoms and as to this in general when the mercy sought for is speedily and particularly cast into your arms Psal 104.28.147.9 Like the irrational creatures in their natural cries seek their meat from God and gather what he gives them and are filled with good When God openly returns to his children there is no further dispute for the worst of men will acknowledg the divine bounty Acts 14.17 when he fills their hearts with food and gladness But when cases are a little dubious 1. Observ The frame and temper of thy spirit in prayer how the heart works and steers its course in several particulars 2 Cor. 1.17 1. A holy liberty of spirit is commonly an excellent sign of answers a copious spirit of fluentness to pour out requests as out of a fountain As God shuts up opportunities so he shuts up hearts when he is not inclined to hear The heart 's sometimes lockt up that it cannot pray or if it does and will press on it finds a straitness as if the Lord had spoken as once to Moses Speak no more to me of this matter Deut. 3.26 Ezek. 14.14 7.2 7 11. or as God spake to Ezekiel though Noah Daniel and Job should intreat for a Nation when the time of a land is come there is no salvation but for their own souls When God intends to take away near relations or any of his Saints unto himself many times neither the Church of God nor dear friends have either apt seasons or hearts to enlarge The bow of prayer does not abide in strength God took away gracious Josiah suddenly 2 Chron. 35.25 the Church had time to write a book of Lamentations and to make it an ordinance in Israel but no time for deprecation of the divine displeasure in it but in Hezekiah's case there was both a season and a heart enlarged in prayer and the prophet crying for a sign of the mercy Holy James might be quickly dispatcht by the sword of Herod-Agrippa 2 Kings 20.11 Act. 12.2 12. but the Church had time for supplication in behalf of Peter When the Lord is pleased graciously to grant space of time and enlargement of heart 't is a notable
such a prayer as this O that the Lord would lengthen this triumphant day and the (c) Jos 10.12 Lord heard his voice The tribes beyond Jordan in a (d) 2 Chr. 5 23. battel with the Hagarites Jehoshaphat in a sore strait (e) 18.31 at Ramoth Gilead Sampson ready to perish at Lehi (f) Judg. 15.18 16 28. with thirst and when blind exposed to contempt in the Temple of Dagon David near (g) 1 Sam. 30.6 stoning at Ziglag and when flying from Absalom in the ascent of (h) 2 Sam. 15.31 Mount Olivet Elisha at Dothan compast with a Syrian host (i) 2 King 6.17 Lord open the young man's eyes In the midst of lawful and laborious callings Boaz to the reapers (k) Ruth 2.4 the Lord be with you we may pray that our Oxen (l) Psal 129.8 may be strong to labour no breaking in or going out nor no complaining in our streets It sanctifies the plow as Jerom said of the fields of Bethlehem quocunque te verteris Psal 144.14 ad Marcellum p. 129 T. 1. arator stivam teneus Alleluja decantat c. The tillers of the field and the dressers of vineyards sang David's psalms it keeps the shop and inclines the hearts of customers it bars the doors it quenches fire it blesseth thy children (m) Psal 147.13 within thee it preserves thy going out and coming in (n) 128.1 Jacob found it to rest upon his children going a journey (a) Gen. 43.14 to Egypt it closes the eyes with (b) Psal 3.5.4 8. sweet sleep it (c) Job 3● 10 Psal 139.18 given Songs in the night and wakens the soul in the arms of mercy It sits at the helm when a (d) Psal 107.28 Jon. 1.6 storm rises at sea it gives strength to Anchors in roads and prosperous gales to the venturous Merchant When in the palace at dinner Nehemiah presents the cup to his prince he presents also a Michtam a golden (e) Neh 3.4 2 Chro. 34 27 Luke 17.5 Gen. 49.18 2 Chron. 2 4. Act. 7 60. prayer to the King of Heaven at the reading of the law Josiah was heard as to some secret cries to Heaven At a holy conference in a journey the Disciples occasionally pray Lord increase our faith Jacob on his dying pillow predicting future events to his children falls into a holy rapture I have wait ed for thy salvation O Lord. At sacred death in martyrdom Zechariah cries out the Lord look upon it and require it and Stephen under a showr of stones melts in prayers for the stony hearts that slung them Lord lay not this sin unto their chage and our blessed Saviour in his greatest agonies makes a tender hearted prayer Father forgive them they know not what they do Luke 23 34. 1 Sam. 1.17 and lastly in the distresses of others Eli puts a sudden petition for Hannah the God of Israel grant thee thy petition In these and many like cases the holy word stores us with patterns for ejaculation in all extremities which I cannot now digest and improve only in a few words lets take a view of the usefulness of such a sudden flight of the soul to Heaven 1. It helps us to a speedy preparative for all duties Lam. 3 4● with such an ejaculation le ts lift our hearts with our hands to God in the Heavens 2. It is a guard against secret sins in the first risings and the first assaults of temptation 3. It suffers not divine mercies to slip by unobserved in a wakeful Christian and proves a fruitful mother of gratitude and praise 4. It sanctifies all our worldly imployments 1 Tim 4. ● 5. it fastens the stakes in the hedge of divine protection and turns every thing to a blessing 5. It s a Saints buckler against sudden accidents a present antidote against frights and evil tidings It s good at all occasions and consecrates to us not only our meals but every gasp of air c. 6. It s a sweet companion that the severest enemies can't abridge us of Outward ordinances and closet duties they may cut off the little (a) Ezr. 9 8. nail in the holy place they may pluck out But no labyrinth no prison not the worst of company can hinder this coelo restat iter in the very face of adversaries we may lift our souls to God No more of this le ts briefly conclude with some uses Vse Vse Cant. 4 12. To convince such of their dangerous state that neglect sacred duties that have no heart-communion that draw no water out of this sealed fountain But all they do is in publick only it 's a suspicious token of hypocrisie since the kernel and soul of religion lies so much in the heart and closet mark the phrase in the text how it varies thy Father that is in secret be sees in secret God's eye is open upon thee in the closet and if thy eye be open upon his thou mayst see a glorious beauty The excellency of grace lies in making conscience of secret sins and secret duties 2. To examine such as perform secret duty but not from a sincere principle like Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.2 that prays but not with a perfect heart like Ahab they mourn but with Crocodile tears such as do it only because they find precept or example for it and therefore to quiet conscience will into secret but converse only in the shell and trunk of a duty that rest in the naked performance but matter not whether they tast of the sweet streams that flow in from heaven in the golden pipe of an ordinance what account can such render that go into their closets but like Domitian to catch flies only Sueton. in Domit. c. 3. and when the doors are shut to the world their hearts are shut to heaven and communion with God He that sees in secret beholds the evil frame of such a heart and will one day openly punish it 3. To excite and awaken all to this excellent duty and to manage it in an excellent manner Would ye live delightfully would ye translate heaven to earth then keep up communion in secret prayer to know him to discern his face to behold the lustre of his eye that shines in secret Remember the glorious person that meets in your closets all the world yields not such a glittering beauty as a gracious person sees when he is in a happy frame at secret prayer Shut your eyes when ye come out for all other objects are but vile and fordid and not worth the glances of a noble soul O the sweetness the hidden manna that the soul tasts when in lively communion with God! Psal 31.19 Part of that which is laid up for Saints in glory let us a little relish our spirits with it 1. Consider what amorous agonies the soul delights to conflict with in serret fears that raise confidence humility that exalts tremblings that embolden bright clouds
〈◊〉 ruler of his own house Kings are Fathers of their own Countries and Fathers are Kings in their own houses in respect of their rule and authority over them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer Odys lib. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem Odys 9. Direction II. N c sibi nec aliis utilis Omne animi vitium tanto conspectius in se Crimen habet quanto qui peccat major habetur Juven Sat. 8. 2. That Prayer be managed to the spiritual benefit of the Family the Master thereof should make it his business to be accomplished with gifts and knowledg suitable to the place where God hath set him Ignorance in a Master of a Family renders him uncapable of the discharge of the duties of his place and is worse than in a Child or Servant Such a Family is lik a body that hath a head without eyes It is a shame to see what little knowledg many Governours of Families have in matters of Religion that when they should instruct and catechise their children and servants need to be catechised themselves The Apostle requireth this qualification in Masters of Families that they should be knowing men so some interpret this place 1 Pet. 3.7 as becomes knowing men Naturally men are endued with greater powers to understand than women are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Viri similite● unà versentur ut scientes decet Beza Piscat Quid est stultius quam quia diu non didiceri● non discere Omnis aetatis homines schola admittit Tamdu● d●scendum est quamdiu nescias Sen. Epist 76. and a Master of a Family hath had more time to get knowledg than Children and Servants have and if he hath not attain'd to more it is his shame and reproach and renders him more contemptible in the eyes of those that are subjected to him who have not that reverent awe of him and his authority as they would have if authority were accompanied with knowledg study then you Masters the Scripture more and the grounds of Religion more that you might be able to manage this duty to the greater profit of all in your Families Direction III. 3. It is necessary also to this purpose that the Master of the Family instruct each member of his house in the principles of Religion that they may be able to understand the matter of the Prayers that are put up to God For if the Governour have knowledg how to ask and those that kneel down with him know not the meaning of his words though commonly used and plain to them that have been instructed how shall they concur in such requests or confessions or say Amen to what they do not understand Or what spiritual profit can they get When you lament Original Sin which you and they were guilty of and defiled with if they know not what this means nor how they are corrupted even from their birth how shall they in Prayer be humbled for it If you pray that you may be justified sanctified or have the Image of God engraven on your hearts that you may have Faith in Christ repentance for sin be converted c. how shall they joyn with you if they have no knowledg of these things when they are ignorant what is meant by the Image of God by faith repentance conversion c. and what benefit can they have by such Prayers as to their own concurrence with you to make these things their own desire when yet they are the things you must daily beg of God That Prayer then might be performed to their spiritual edification lay first the foundation be knowing your selves and make them so too and Prayer will be more advantageously done to you and them Nisi priùs in nob●s ejusm●di● affectus exsuscitamus quos altorum animis impressos volumus frustrà erit quicquld conamur Bowl past Evang. Direction IV. 4. That Prayer be managed to the spiritual profit of those in the Family the Master of the Family should get his own heart in good frame and get his own affections warmed in the duty Do you come to Prayer with a lively heart and quickned affections your selves your heat might warm them Quod enim minister Ecclesiae est in templo id pius pater-familias esi indomo ille publico docendi munere fungitur hic privatim suam instituit familiam ad pietatem ac ho●●statem d●mesticos suos format Gerhard lo. com de Conjug and your earnest importunity might stir them up unto the same let them see you are in good earnest by your fervent praying as becomes men that are begging for such things as the life of their souls the pardon of their sin the favour of God deliverance from hell and for everlasting happiness Whereas if you come to the duty with flat dull and cold affections this will make them so too As you find it with your selves when you are under a dull and lukewarm Preacher you have little workings of affections so your Family will find it under your Prayers if they be such for as a Minister should get lively workings in his own breast of those affections which he would raise in the People so should you in Family duties get those workings of love joy and sorrow for sin which you would desire should be in those that joyn with you for what a Minister is in the Church that you are proportionably in your house Direction V. Orationis Lex ut non aliter quàm eos decet qui ad Dei colloquium in grediuntur mente animóque compositi simu● Calv. Inst l. 3. cap. 20. 5. When you are to set actually on the duty prepare your Family by some short advice to carry themselves as becomes those that are going to speak to the great eternal God at least sometimes and the oftner the better Do not rashly rush out of your worldly callings into the presence of the glorious God say to them to this or the like purpose The God we are going to pray unto is a holy just omniscient God that looks into all our hearts that sees and knows the frame of our spirits that will not be mocked and cannot be deceived All we are sinful Creatures that have broke his righteous Laws and thereby have deserved hell and everlasting torments yet this gracious God holds forth his golden Scepter and gives us leave to approach his presence to beg for pardon and for Christ and grace and heaven Our wants are great and many too and yet our mercies are great and many too come then O come let us with a holy fear of God put up our joynt Petitions that God would supply our wants especially of our souls and make joynt confessions of our sins to God with humble broken penitent hearts and joyntly bless him for the mercies we are all partakers of but let us do all as those that would please God while we pray unto him and not by our
carelesness and sloth provoke him while we kneel before him Thus Job prepared his houshold Solennis erat apud Ethnicos mos l●vandi manus ante sacrificandum ●ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apud quosdam significet when he with them did sacrifice to God Job 1.5 Job sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and offered Burnt-offerings according to the number of them all thus did Job continually Could Job sanctifie his Children could Job give them grace Parents might give their Children portions but can they give them holiness too they might put money into their purses but can they put goodness into their hearts yea they may advise and exhort them to get grace but can they work it too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. Iliad l. 6. Is not this bestowed by God the Author of all Grace How then did Job sanctifie his children The meaning is that Job did what he could to prepare and dispose them for the religious duties they were entring upon So the word Sanctifie is often used Exod. 19.22 Let the Priests sanctifie themselves 2 Chron. 30.25 and the Priests and Levites were ashamed and sanctified themselves 17. many that were not sanctified all is explained by Hezekiah's prayer v. 18. The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek the Lord God of his fathers though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary Direction VI. 6. It will be useful to this purpose Cui aliis in precando praecunáum sedulò perquirat quae apud suos obtinent peccata quibus maximè indigent gratiae quibus exercentur tentationes quae illos cujuscu que generis premunt gr●vamina quae illis imminent judicia quae in illos indies confert Deus beneficia hand aliter suis se inter orandum accomodabit qui non haec omnia in numerato habet Bowl past Evan. that the Master of the Family understand the spiritual condition of every one in the Family that he may put up requests suitable to their condition Let him get a particular knowledg of their wants doubts fears temptations afflictions of soul of their sins as far as is convenient and the mercies of God towards them for as it is for the spiritual benefit of a people that their Minister understand the state of his flock that so he might study for them and preach to them pray for them and with them according as their case requires so it will be for the benefit of a Family to have their particular cases spread before the Lord in Prayer Direction VII 7. Keep seasonable hours for Family Prayer and take the fittest time when all might be most free from distraction and disturbance In the morning put it not off too long lest by worldly occasions it be put quite by Be not too late at night when the Family after weariness by their Callings all the day will be more fit to sleep than to pray Late Prayers are too commonly sleepy Prayers one asleep in one place and another in another and it may be the Master of the Family himself prays between sleeping and waking Be not clubbing abroad when you should be praying at home This is in the power of the Governour of the house to remedy the other being to be at the hour appointed by him Direction VIII 8. Spend so much time in Family Prayer that those that joyn might be affected but not so much as to be wearied with the duty Be not too short nor yet too tedious Not too short for the heart is not easily tuned nor the affections warmed nor the mind brought into frame our wants are many and our sins are many and some time must be spent to get the heart sensible of them and of God's mercies to us To rise up from your knees before these can be probably done is to come away no better than you went unto it This overhasty brevity argues but little delight in the duty and sheweth you care not how soon you get out of God's special presence I doubt such as thus slubber over Family Prayer with so much haste * Vt canis è Nilo do it because they may be said to do it to stop the mouths of others and the mouth of their own Conscience with the work done And yet too much prolixity and length of the duty may have its inconveniencies also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pos and make it to some graceless persons in the Family or to others that are good but wearied in their daily Callings before to be burthensome and they more backward to it But the most do not err on this hand therefore to say little here will be enough and leave it to the prudence of the Governour to consider the persons that joyn and other concurring Circumstances and to act accordingly So much for the Directions for the Master of the Family Secondly The Directions for such as are to joyn in Family Prayer for their greater benefit Let them be careful Direction I. 1. Direct That they be all present at the beginning of a duty and continue till it be ended In some Families there is great disorder in this respect Servants either by reason of the backwardness of their hearts for want of love to and delight in Prayer or by not wisely forecasting their business come when the Prayer is half over or else go out before it is ended or if at the beginning and end yet to look after one thing or other make breaches and interruptions in the Prayer by going out and coming in once or twice or more in the Prayer-time which if possible should be carefully avoided for Family Prayer being ordinarily not very long to lose any part of it cannot but be to the detriment and disadvantage of such persons for when their affections begin to be warmed by these interruptions they are cooled and damped again You should be more willing to go to your Prayer than to your meat when hungry by how much your Souls are better than your bodies and serving God better than feeding of the body If business come when we are eating at our Table we commonly let it stay till we have done what business shall wait upon you in that case let it do so also in the other that you might not lose the benefit of the Prayer Numa Pompilius made a Law amongst the Romans that men should not serve the Gods as they passed by or were in haste or did any other business but that they should worship and pray to them when they had time and leasure and all other business set apart Plutarch Direction II. 2. Direct When you are present at Family Prayer give diligent attention and mind what confessions of sins are made what petitions are put up and what praises are returned to God for mercies received The Devil will be striving that you may be absent in Prayer when you are *
faithless confidence a fond credulous presumption arising from a groundless over easie perswasion of the mercy of God towards us this kind of Presumption may be joyn'd vvith some sense and conviction of sin and the dangerous consequence of it but presently salves all vvith the general air and breath of a Promise misconstrued and misapplied The Mistakes are these 1. This is more Fancy than Faith or Hope 'T is a vain imagination that deludes men into a belief and expectation of that vvhich they are in no likelihood of in no capacity for they promise themselves vvhat God hath never promised cry peace peace vvhen God hath not spoken peace 2. Such an one doth not rightly distinguish between the vvorkings of natural affection towards any good propounded and the rational actings of Hope for the obtaining of it in a probable or certain vvay in the use of due and proper means Heaven glory and eternal Life are good vvords and better things at the first mention of them vve naturally desire them and vvish for them but shall vve be carried away vvith a meer sound of vvords must vve needs have all vve hear of vve shall quickly bring our selves into a fools Paradise this vvay dreaming vve eat and yet awake an hungry there is more ado than so to inherit the Promises vve must prove our title first the Promises give us an interest in Heaven but 't is Christ that gives us an interest in the Promises he opens the mouth of a Promise to speak comfort to us in him they are all Yea and Amen but out of him they all cry no no vve have nothing for you vvho are out of Christ they vvill deny all the vvorld that come not in his Name and never let out any thing of their treasure to such no vvringing out of one drop of solid comfort The bare History or outward Relation of the Mercy of God in the letter of the Word gives us no interest in the things promised the carnal Jews as Paul observes had the Promises and boasted of them but got little by them Christ is the door of every Promise let us not think to make a forceable entry to climb up at the vvindows like Theives to steal out mercy as if vve cared not how vve came by it you vvill find vvhat is so gotten vvill thrive accordingly and quickly come to nothing What I drive at is this 't is not the report of the vvorth or amiableness of a thing but an apprehension of the possibility of it as to us that causes hope till vve are clear in this our hope cannot act rationally if it have no other ground besides our own desires and natural inclinations raised and kindled in us by the specious appearance and ravishing beauty of some taking objects this argues rather vvhat vve vvould have than any likelyhood of obtaining of our vvishes vvhich is of the very essence of hope earnest desires are very apt to run out into a forward presuming hope vve know not vvell vvhy or vvherefore Quae volumus facile credimus 3. Another mistake in this fond credulous presumption is that it takes up promises in its own sense and not in the true sense and meaning of God So the Jews John 8.33 cryed they were Abrahams seed c. and the Promise run in these very words to Abraham and his seed therefore who but they must be included in it but it was the Spiritual seed that God meant not that after the flesh they are not all Israel which are of Israel Rom. 9.6 No sayes Christ you are the Children of the Devil of your Father the Devil John 8.44 and they took up stones and threw at him ver 59. being not able to bear any contradiction to their false hopes So when we read those Promises of salvation to those that come to Christ believe in him call upon his Name we must not understand them as if a bare form of Godliness and crying Lord have mercy upon us would bring us to heaven No My brethren the Mystery of Religion lies deeper than so 't is the labour of the heart that requires the greatest diligence intention and seriousness imaginable strong workings within great agonies and contentions of Spirit in our dealings with God in any duty The life of our Worship does consist in these inward spiritual motions of the Soul towards God This is that coming that believing that praying to which Salvation is promised The grace of Hope enquires after the Secrets of the Covenant the real intent and mind of God in every Promise prayes for a right understanding of all particulars Open my eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law Psal 119.18 Besides the true meaning of a Promise a Child of God is very solicitous to know whether God do indeed mean him and speak to him and offer those pearls to him whether he be a person rightly qualified and under all those due circumstances that belong to persons entertaining such an hope 't is a great comfort and satisfaction to a Believer when God does own his hope and encourage him in it by some sensible demonstrations of his undoubted interest in such and such Promises he hears God saying to him take eat this is thy portion purchased by Christ for thee thou art my Child and this is childrens bread it belongeth to thee While we are musing and praying over a promise God does sometimes feed us out of that promise himself and with his own hand puts many a sweet morsel into our mouths O this is overcoming kindness this is a double a treble welcome to have such fare and the Master of the Feast standing by and looking on and carving to us himself and crying out as it is Cant. 5.1 Eat O my friends drink yea drink abundantly O beloved When we have shut our Bibles and have done with a promise and are setting down the Cup of Salvation out of our hands God many times makes us to mend our draught and go deeper than ever we did drink yea drink abundantly O beloved But presumption is a bold guest thrusts in uninvited catches at this and that in a rude manner The word Presumption notes a taking before-hand before 't is offer'd before 't is due before he is called he runs away with a promise puts his own sense upon it and deludes himself with vain hopes from it and when the King comes to review his Guests shall be cast out into outer darkness Mat. 22.11 12 13. 4. Another errour or mistake in presumption is that it picks and chuses out some Promises and rejects others the priviledges of the Saints it catcheth at freedom from condemnation eternal life and glory but the Promises of Grace Sanctification and Holiness it minds not it hopes to see God without Holiness and to go to Heaven as well as the best it is more for the wages than for the work But the grace of Hope fastens upon every Promise gathers honey out of every flower
the more conspicuous and glorious Hence are those commendations of grace where it is in any eminency So great faith no not in Israel Mat. 8.10 O woman great is thy faith Mat. 15.28 The Scriptures do exhort us to grow in every grace Let these things be in you and abound 2 Pet. 1.8 1 Thess 4.1 More and more we can never have too much Paul prayes Rom. 15.13 that we may abound in hope Presumption does not lye in having too high thoughts of the mercy of God in Christ for that is infinite beyond all our conceptions but in a vain expectation of that from God which is inconsistent with his justice and holiness and contrary to his revealed will 't is not the Great hope but the Groundless hope that is presumption therefore tell the Devil to his face thou wilt hope more and more Psal 71.14 That thy hope is a growing hope so far from being too great that thou dost judge it yet too little daily praying for its further increase this is the way to quench those fiery darts We may observe that when temptations do work so contrary to the Devils intentions that instead of drawing us into evil they incite us to more watchfulness and prove occasions of good and provocations to duty they presently vanish and die the Devil would have it so and usually it is so unless God by a special hand do continue us under them for the further exercise of grace 2. If thy Hope be small and weak the Devil will call it Despair he would make thee believe a little grace is no grace he will argue from thy weakness in grace to thy total want of it If under such temptation thou findest thy spirit sinking ready to faint away rouze up thy self and bespeak thy Soul as David did Why art thou cast down O my soul and take these following directions 1. Consider it is not the degree of grace but the truth of grace to which Salvation is promised 2. Put a just value and estimate upon the lowest degree of grace that it may not seem contemptible and as nothing in thy sight 't is more worth than the whole world a pearl of great price 3. Labour to distinguish aright between the weakness of thy grace and the grace it self that is under that weakness and whilest thou art mourning under one be sure you rejoyce in the other do not throw away one corn with the chaff do not sweep up one groat with the dust behind the door but light thy candle and find it out don't bury thy talent because 't is a single one but be faithful over a little and thou shalt be made ruler over many things Mat. 15.21 4. Consider the many promises that are made to the lowest degree of grace if there be any good thing in thy heart towards the Lord thy God he accepts of the Will for the Deed of the day of small things he will not quench the smoaking flax nor break the bruised reed to whom little is given of them little is requir'd the widow's mite is a great deal in the account of God Therefore think and judg of thy self not according to any thing inherent in thee be it more or less but according to the measure of acceptance thou hast with God 't is his kindness that makes thee great 2 Sam. 22.36 his favour is better than life if he hath wrought that in thee which is beautiful in his fight why should you so much except against his workmanship as to blot all out again drawing the black lines of dismal despair upon the comely features of true and saving hope though weak and small for the present the high esteem God hath of the lowest degree of true grace in his Saints should make them not to droop so much under it but rather be better pleased with what God is so well pleased with 5. Consider how ill God takes it of his children when they suffer them selves to be perswaded by the Devil out of all good liking and esteem of those smaller measures of grace that God hath given them when they are brought out of conceit of themselves and of every thing that God hath done for them as if their case were now desperate Why saist thou O Jacob and speakest O Israel my way is hid from the Lord and my judgment is passed over from my God Isa 40.27 Let me speak my thoughts out My brethren to deny the least measure of grace in us or to us against plain demonstrations and evidences brought to convince us of it is a kind of denying Christ himself which we would be loath to be guilty of for a thousand worlds and yet may not Christ say I have sent in provision into such a soul and have often invited my self to come and sup with him I have come into my garden to gather my myrrh and to eat of my pleasant fruits which my own hand had planted there Cantic 5.1 But I had no entertainment no welcome they would be known of nothing that ever they had from me plead nothing but poverty and bare walls and did I not know it to be otherwise that I have laid in a sufficiency of grace and that there is that in the house which I love and could feed heartily upon I should not take it ill that they set nothing before me but 't is great unkindness not to give me of my own not to entertain me at my own cost but to tell me to my face that all my fruit is rotten fruit all my meat unsavoury meat all my wine adulterated wine nothing fit for them or me to feed upon all is stark nought they are never the better for any thing I have yet done for them to seek of every thing their faith is dead their hope is presumption or else quite vanished into despair their love is cold and false every grace is counterfeit Christ must needs take this very ill many of the Children of God are greatly guilty in this thing I would press this consideration upon those who do too too much indulge themselves in these despondencies still multiplying objections against themselves and meditating evasions how to put off Christ and the promises how to distinguish themselves out of the favour of God I know there is a great deal of pity and commiseration due to such but when other meanes will not prevail they must not take it ill if we endeavour to fright them out of their fears and doubts telling them plainly what an offence what an affront it is to Christ to have all his kindnesses overlook'd and slighted as nothing worth by a froward habitual querulous scrupulosity which is jealous of every thing but it self 6. When the Devil is urging thee to conclude thy weak hope to be down-right Despair instead of disputing with the Devil about the truth of any grace labour through the help of the Spirit to act it in that degree which thou hast attained then if it be as a
children Now if this was duly thought of would it not quiet the heart when the thing is ordered by God shall we dislike and fret at what he doth may not he dispense his blessings where he pleaseth Oh if he will give we should be thankful in the owning of his Goodness if he will deny we must be patient in the owning of his Soveraignty 2. Sometimes this mercy is denyed but better are bestowed God doth not give Children but he gives himself and is not he better than ten Sons as Elkanah said of himself to Hannah 1 Sam. 1.8 There is a better name than that of Sons and Daughters promised Isa 56.3.4 they who have that better name have no reason to murmur because they have not that which is worse They who have God for their Father in heaven may well be content to go childless here on earth If God will not give me the lesser yet if he gives me the greater Good have I cause to be angry surely no more than he hath to be angry with me to whom I deny a brass farthing and give him a purse of Gold 3. Children sometimes are withheld a long time but they are given at last of which we have many Instances The case is never desperate so long as we can submit and wait 't is to be hoped God designs to give us that comfort under the want of which we can be contented 4. If Children be given after froward and irregular desires of them 't is to be questioned whether it be done in mercy and 't is to be feared this frame will very much spoil the mercy What we get by discontent we seldom enjoy with comfort How many Parents have experienced the truth of this they were not quiet till they had Children and less quiet after they had them they proved so undutiful stubborn naught that there was much more of vexation in the having than there was in the wanting of them 5. Many wanting the comfort of this Relation it pleaseth God to fill up the comfort of their other Relations The Husband or the Wife are the better because there are no childrn and so the Lord recompences what is denied in one Relation by doubling the comfort of another Relation 6. Children are great comforts but they are but mixt comforts The Rose hath its sweetness but it hath its pricks too and so 't is with Children Oh the cares fears distractions that Parents are filled with about them they are certain cares uncertain comforts as we usually express it We eye the sweet only of this Relation and that makes us fretful did we eye the bitter also we should be more still and calm 7. Had we this mercy in the height of it fill'd up in all respects according to our desires and expectations 't is a thousand to one but our hearts would be too much set upon it And that would be of fatal consequence to us upon many accounts and therefore God foreseeing this 't is out of kindness and love that he withholds it from us These things being considered as to this affliction methinks they should very much dispose the heart to contentation under it 2. Secondly when dear Relations are taken away by death then it 's a time of Discontent To lose a tender Husband an affectionate Wife an hopeful Child How as to the loss of Relations a faithful Friend oh this is a cutting tryal a very smarting rod under which 't is no easie thing to keep the spirit sedate free from all passion and discomposures Yet as hard as it is Consideration would much facilitate it Consider therefore 1. About the true stating of this affliction 'T is great to us because of the greatness of our affection but otherwise as to the thing in it self is it more than the breaking of a pitcher than the dying or withering of a flower than the nipping of a blossom and vvill any considerate person be much moved at such things as these The Heathen bore the death of his child very well upon this consideration vvhen news thereof was brought to him he was not disturbed for said he I knew I begot my child mortal We forget what these comforts are and then we fret at the loss of them 2. Think of the commonness of this affliction You think never was any sorrow like to yours never did any lose such a Husband or such a Wife or such a Child as you have done alas this is but the fondness and excess of love Many have lost as dear Relations as you have lost let them be what they will you are not the first nor will be the last who are thus exercised When a Mercy is common in our eye we set it too low when an Affliction is singular in our eye we set it too high 3. 'T is God himself who makes this rod If a sparrow doth not fall to the ground vvithout him Math. 10.29 certainly a dear Relation doth not shall we not be silent before him He that gave he hath taken he that hath a greater right to Husband Wife Child than any of the Possessors have he hath seen good to call back vvhat is his own shall any vex at this Dead Relations are not * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lost but restored to their first Owner and though 't is our Affliction to lose them yet 't is † Sustulisti liberos quos ipse dederas non contri stor quod recepisti ago gratias quod dedisti Hier●n ad Julian Non moeremus quod talem amisimus sed gratias agimus quod habuimus Idem mercy that ever vve had them both must be put together and then the heart vvill be quiet 4. Is all taken if not thou hast no reason to complain The child is taken but 't is but one of many but the Husband is yet spared thou must not be impatient for what is removed but thankful for vvhat is continued as Themistocles when Amyntas took away some of his dishes bore it contentedly saying he might have taken all And pray keep down all passion for this may make you lose vvhat you have though it vvill not regain you vvhat you have lost Oh but some will say my only child is dead Is it so thy affliction is the greater but thy contentation must be never the less He that gave an only son to thee may take an only child from thee Isaac vvas an only son and yet Abraham vvillingly offered him up to God 5. 'T was high time for God to make a breach upon you 'T is the vvisdom of God to his he vvill not let them have long what they over love had you loved less the child might have lived longer When these comforts are too much in our hearts they must not be long in our hands It 's infinite mercy that God will secure our love to himself and take that away from us which would take off our affections from him 6. 'T is that temper of soul which
a man chastens his son so the Lord thy God chastens thee In children reason is not fully disclouded they are not capable to govern themselves and are only taught with sensible pleasure or pain so that a father is obliged to joyn correction with instruction to form them to vertue This is so far from being inconsistent with paternal affection that 't is inseparable from it For a parent to suffer a child to go on pleasantly in sin without due punishment is pure cruelty disguised under the mask of pity for by the neglect of discipline he is confirm'd in his vicious courses and exposed to ruine The Apostle therefore adds Whom the Lord loves he chastens As from the severest wrath he sometimes forbeareth to strike so from dearest love he afflicts Humble believers through a cloud of tears may see the light of God's countenance for having elected them by special love to a glorious inheritance above he dispenseth all things here in order to the preparing them for it and all temporal evils as means are transform'd into the nature of the end to which they are subservient So that the sharpest sufferings are really from God's favour since they are beneficial for our obtaining real hap●iness The devil usually tempts men in a paradise of delights to precipitate them into hell God tryes them in the furnace of afflictions to purifie and prepare them for heaven 2. 'T is a strong cordial against fainting to consider that by vertue of the paternal relation He scourges every son whom he receives for no troubles are more afflictive and stinging than those that are unexpected Now when we are assured that there is no son whom the heavenly father doth not chasten we are less surpriz'd and less troubled when we meet with crosses Indeed there is hardly any kind of affliction that may befal us but we have some instance in Scripture of the Saints suffering the same Are we poor and mean in the world we should consider that poverty with holiness is a divine complexion Jesus Christ the holy and beloved Son of God had not where to lay his head Are we under bodily distempers good Hezekiah was struck with an uncomfortable disease as to the quality of it and Gaius had a flourishing soul in a languishing body Are our dear relations taken away Aaron and David lost some of their sons by terrible strokes Are our spirits wounded with the sense of God's displeasure Job and Heman were under strong terrors yet the favourites of heaven Briefly how many most dear to God were called forth to extreme and bloody tryals for the defence of the truth How many deaths did they endure in one torment How many torments in one death Yet they were so far from fainting that the more their pains were exasperated the more their courage and joy was shining and conspicuous as the face of the heavens is never more serene and clear than when the sharpest north-wind blows 'T is the Apostle's inference Seeing we are compassed with such a cloud of witnesses let us run with patience the race that is set before us Vers 8 This is further inforced by the following words If ye be without chastening whereof all are partakers then are you bastards and not sons If God doth not vouchsafe us the mercy of his rod 't is evident we are not part of his fatherly care The bramble is neglected while the vine is cut till it bleeds 'T is a miserable priviledge to be exempted from divine discipline and by ease and prosperity to be corrupted and made fit for destruction Saint Austin represents one expostulating with God O Deus ista est justitia tua ut mali floreant boni laborent In Psal 25. O God is it righteous with thee that the wicked should prosper and the good suffer Dicis Deo ista est justitia tua Deus tibi ista est fides tua haec enim tibi promisi ad hoc Christianus facius es ut in seculo isto floreres in inferno postea torquereris God replyes to him is this your faith did I promise you temporal prosperity were you a Christian for this that you might flourish in this world and be miserably tormented in hell Vers 9 3. The Apostle represents the special prerogative of God as the Father of Spirits and so hath a nearer claim to us than the fathers of our flesh and that he is not liable to those imperfections that attend the earthly relations They for a few dayes chastened us for their own pleasure humane love is a troubled irregular passion mixt with ignorance and prone to errour in the excess or defect Sometimes parents are indulgent and by a cruel compassion spare their children when they are faulty sometimes they correct without cause sometimes when the reason is just yet they err in the manner or measure of the correction so that their children are discouraged But in God there is a perfect union of wisdom and love of discretion and tenderness his affection is without the least imperfection his will is alwayes guided by infinite wisdom If his children offend he will chastise them with the rod of men that is moderately 2 Sam. 7.14 For as in Scripture things are magnified by the Epithet divine or of God so they are lessened by the Epithet humane accordingly the Apostle declares to the Corinthians that no temptation had befallen them but what was common to man 1 Cor. 10.13 but God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it As a prudent Physitian consults the strength of the patient as well as the quality of the disease and proportions his medicine so all the bitter ingredients their mixture and measure are dispenc'd by the wise prescription of God according to the degrees of strength that are in his people 4. The Apostle specifies the immediate end of God in his chastenings But he for our profit that we may be partakers of his holiness This is the supreme excellency of the divine nature and our conformity to it is so valuable that it renders afflictions not only tolerable but so far desirable as they contribute to it In the present state our graces are imperfect and our conformity to the divine purity is like the resemblance of the Sun in a watery cloud very much beneath the perfection and radiation of that great light Now God is pleased to fashion us according to his image by afflictions as a statue is cut by the Artificer to bring it into a beautiful form He is pleased to bring us into divers temptations to try our faith to work in us patience to inflame our prayers to mortifie our carnal desires to break those voluntary bands whereby we are fettered to the earth that we may live with those afflictions wherewith others die And certainly if we make a true
1. Pardoned Persons being taken into Covenant are taken into God's favour Nothing doth hinder God's special favour but unpardoned sin nothing but that which is the only Object of his hatred and cause of his displeasure and this is nothing else but sin Although God's love have many Objects yet his hatred hath but one and that is sin God hateth none of his Creatures as they are Creatures but as they are sinful never did any thing offend or displease God but sin nothing else hath power to enkindle God's anger and to blow it up into a flame When God forgiveth sin his hatred ceaseth his anger is removed and he receiveth them whom he pardoneth into the arms of his special love God's favour is the peculiar priviledg of God's pardoned People Psal 106.4 Remember me with the favour which thou bearest to thy People O visit me with thy Salvation Therefore all pardoned Persons being in God's favour they are Blessed because his favour is the Fountain of Blessedness In his favour there is life Psal 30.5 Yea his loving kindness is better than life Psal 63.3 The favour of an earthly King is counted a great Priviledg but the favour of the King of Heaven is really a great Blessedness The God of Heaven who is so Powerful Wise Faithful Good Merciful hath a special favour and kindness for them and doth love them with an incomparable incomprehensible unchangeable and eternal Love therefore they must needs be the happiest People on the Earth 2. Pardoned Persons being in Covenant are taken into God's family being reconciled by the Cross of Christ Eph. 2.16 they are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God v. 19. And being of God's Houshold they are God's Children 1 Cor. 6.18 I will be a Father unto you and ye shall be my Sons and Daughters saith the Lord Almighty This is a priviledg which rendreth all those above all others most Blessed who partake of it Joh. 1.12 To as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name To them gave he power The Original word signifieth Right or Priviledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is the greatest priviledge in the World to be numbred amongst God's Children hence it is that John writing of it in his Epistle doth break forth into an exclamation of joy and wonder 1 Joh. 3.1 Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God! He seems to be in an extasie of joy at the greatness of this priviledg and the happiness of such as had attained it If beggars were lifted up from the Dunghil to be adopted Children of the greatest Prince upon the Earth it would not be so great an honour to them as this honour and dignity which is conferred upon pardoned Persons in their being advanced into the number of the adopted Children of the great Jehovah the Lord of Heaven and Earth and will any question whether they are Blessed 3. Pardoned Persons being in Covenant are under God's special Providence There is a General Providence that doth attend all the Children of men but God's especial Providence doth attend his own Children and his peculiar People who are reconciled unto him by Jesus Christ such are under God's especial Providence they dwell in the secret place of the most High and under the shadow of the Almighty Psal 91.1 God's Name is their strong Tower unto which they run and are safe Prov. 18.10 God is frequently called their Rock and Fortress Buckler Shield and Deliverer and hath made many Promises unto them of Defence and Deliverance They are under God's special Provision as a Father provideth for his Children so God provideth for his People he provideth for their Bodies When the young Lions lack and suffer hunger they shall not want any good thing Psal 34.10 He promiseth to Feed them and Clothe them and to with-hold no good thing from them and if they always have not as much in the World as they wish they shall be sure to have as much as God seeth they do really need but more especially he provideth for their Souls the Robes of his Son's Righteousness to Clothe them sweet and precious Promises to Feed and Nourish them Jewels of Grace to enrich and adorn them the guard of Angels to attend them himself and his Son to be Companions to them the Peace and Joys of the Holy Ghost to chear them and to sweeten their passage through the valley of the World and the dark entry of Death This is the priviledg of pardoned Persons and surely then they are Blessed 4. Pardoned Persons being in Covenant have free access unto God in Prayer Eph. 2.18 Through him we have access by one Spirit unto the Father Chap. 3.12 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the Faith of him Heb. 4.16 Let us therefore come boldly to the Throne of Grace that we may obtain mercy and find Grace to help in time of need Being pardoned and reconciled through Christ they may with boldness and confidence come daily to the Throne of Grace and there by Prayer and Supplication make known their requests unto God and they shall be sure to have both acceptance and audience God who hath given them a pardon will deny them nothing that is really for their good having interest in Christ who hath such interest in Heaven whatever they ask of the Father in his Name if it is according to his will they may be assured because Christ hath faithfully promised it that he will do it for them Surely then such Persons are happy 5. Pardoned Persons being in Covenant have Communion with God in all his Ordinances not only in Prayer but hearing of the Word Singing and at the Table of the Lord when others rest in the out-side of Ordinances they meet with God there Sin being removed which before made a separation they now attain Communion with God and their hearts close with him as their chief good There is nothing more sweet in the World than Communion with God hence David doth account those most happy that had the liberty of God's House and Ordinances where they did or might enjoy so great a priviledg Psal 84.4 Blessed are they that dwell in thy House And Psal 65.4 Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee that he may dwell in thy Courts he shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy House even of thy Holy Temple Such only are truely Blessed that find satisfaction it is not the Enjoyment of Creatures will give this but in the Enjoyment of and Communion with God in his Ordinances which is the goodness of God's House true satisfaction may be found and therefore pardoned Persons who do attain this are truely and the only Blessed Persons Reas 4. Such must needs be Blessed whose iniquities are forgiven because they
whilst that you continue in your rebellions and wage War still against Heaven by going on still in your trespasses 5. Make your Supplication unto God and be earnest in Prayer unto him that he would forgive you your sins it is against God that your sins have been committed and it is God's Prerogative to remit and pardon and though he pardon freely for his Name 's sake yet he will be enquired after and sought unto for his high favour Isa 43.25 26. I even I am he that blotteth out thy Transgressions for mine own sake and will not remember thy sins Put me in remembrance c. If you would have pardon you must ask it if you would find God's favour you must seek it if you desire the door of Mercy to be opened unto you you must knock at the door by earnest Prayer Mat. 7.7 Hence are David's earnest cryes in Prayer for pardoning Mercy in so many of his Psalms especially Psal 51. in the first verse Have Mercy upon me O God according to thy loving kindness according to the multitude of thy tender Mercies blot out my transgressions v. 9. Hide thy face from my sins and blot out mine iniquities v. 14. Deliver me from Blood-guiltiness O God thou God of my Salvation c. Be earnest in Prayer at the Throne of Grace for this blessedness of forgiveness wrestle with God by importunate Supplications fill your mouths with Arguments plead the gracious disposition of God the multitude of his tender Mercies and the riches of his free Grace plead the Glory of his Name which would greatly be advanced and admired if your great sins might be pardoned plead the merits of Christ and Satisfaction given to his justice by his Son together with his Intercession for you at his right hand plead the promises of the Covenant of Grace and his faithfulness which doth engage him to fulfil them humble believing fervent Prayer will prevail for forgiveness 6. Forgive others if you would that God should forgive you Mat. 6.11 Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors v. 14 15. For if you forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you but if you forgive not men their trespasses neither will your heavenly Father forgive your trespasses If you do not forgive the hundred Pence of smaller offences unto your fellow-servants you will be called to an account and imprisoned in Hell and there tormented for the ten thousand Talents of hainous transgressions which you have committed against your Lord Mat. 18. at the latter end of that Chap. If you bear hatred and malice and revenge in your hearts against others whatever their offences their wrongs or injuries have been you put your selves out of capacity of obtaining pardoning Mercy Do not say I forgive such a one who hath wronged me but I will never forget him for this is a deceit of your hearts whereby you seek to stop the mouth of your consciences that they may not trouble you by these Scriptures for if you do not forget injuries so as to carry it towards such Persons as if they had not wronged you so as to love them cordially and to be ready to shew kindness unto them you do not forgive them and so you cannot be forgiven by God If then you would be pardoned by God you must from the heart forgive others receive the Exhortation of the Apostle Eph. 4.31 32. Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamour and evil speaking be put away from you with all malice And be kind one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you Thus I have finished my Answer unto the two Queries wherein doth appear the blessedness of forgiveness and how this blessedness may be attained and now give me leave to borrow a little room for some Application Application I might speak much here by way of comfort unto pardoned Persons but the most that I have already spoken yea all that I have spoken under the first Query may be turned into a Use of comfort to your selves and therefore referring you thither I shall pass you by and bend my speech only unto you that are unpardoned too many of whom are to be found in every Assembly and therefore I cannot think that this Assembly is free I shall take leave to chide you in a Use of Reproof endeavour to awaken you in a Use of Terror and in the conclusion press you to endeavour after this blessedness of forgiveness in an Use of Exhortation Vse 1. For Reproof Is there such blessedness in forgiveness Whence is it then that so many of you neglect this blessedness in the neglect of your pardon Are not all of you sinners Have not all of you need of forgiveness Will not your own Consciences tell you that forgiveness is a great priviledg And have not Ministers often told you of this priviledg and the way of attaining it Hath not God by them held forth a pardon to you and used many arguments with you that you would accept it Whence is it then that so many of you slight and undervalue it as if it were of no worth Whence is it that so many of you are without pardon when profered when none of you are without sins often committed and those highly aggravated and whereby your Souls are so greatly endangered May not Robbers and Murderers and other notorious Malefactors rise up in judgment against you that are without a pardon When such Persons are apprehended found guilty and condemned though but unto a temporal death they will make all friends and use all means to escape and O! how welcome is a pardon to them And yet though you are all guilty of sin and condemned for it unto eternal death and a pardon is purchased proclaimed and profered unto you there are too many of you that slight and neglect it that have no earnest desire after it and hitherto have not been perswaded by any arguments to make use of the means which God hath appointed with any diligence for the obtaining of it Who is there that to any purpose doth look after a pardon Who do diligently hear for it earnestly pray for it Who do make full and free confession of sin that you may attain remission of it Who do prize Christ and by Faith make application of him that they may have a pardon by him Who do forsake sin which God absolutely requires of all to whom he doth forgive sin Who do when injur'd heartily forgive others as they desire God would forgive them Sinners will not many of your consciences accuse you of unpardoned guilt unto which you have added the neglect of forgiveness And is not your sin hereby doubled and most highly aggravated and the guilt of it fastned upon you Vse 2. Let me tell you by way of Terror for your awakening that God is displeased with all workers of iniquity but he is most highly displeased with you that slight his mercy
upon the greatest falshood that is imaginable Oh take heed of it When you are wronged then complain but do not do it till then and then I am sure you 'l never complain In a word let this Heart-quieting Consideration be much upon your thoughts all is Righteously ordered by God and therefore all must be contentedly undergone by you 3. All is ordered by God wisely He 's a God of Judgment Isai 30.18 We read of the rings Ezek. 1.18 that they were full of eyes take the several rounds and windings of Providence they are all full of wisdom As God at the first made all things with infinite wisdom Psal 104.24 so he doth also dispose and govern all things with infinite wisdom And this holds true not only with respect to the whole Creation in the general lump and mass thereof but also with respect to every part and parcel of the Creation especially to man and to every individual man in the world Now if this was believed and considered it could not but much conduce to make us contented in every condition for certainly it must be most absurd folly in us to find fault with or dislike that which is done by God in admirable wisdom In our worldly affairs vvherein vve have to do wtth men if vve apprehend them to be persons endued with understanding and prudence we can upon this wholly refer our selves and our Concerns to them and quietly acquiesce in vvhat they advise and order The Patient likes the Physick though never so nauseous which his skilful Physitian prescribes If the Pilot be skilful the passenger saith Let him alone he knows how to order the vessel and so in several other Instances And why do not vve in all our Concerns carry it thus towards God vvhose vvisdom and faithfulness doth infinitely transcend vvhat is in man shall we not contentedly rest in vvhat he sees to be fittest and best for us Vain man would be wise Job 11.12 he thinks he could order things better than God doth he vvill be finding faults in God's disposal of him but this his vvisdom is the highest folly What a wise Choice doth God alwayes make for men the Saints shall see it vvhen they come to Heaven if not before may they not therefore quietly resign up themselves to him saying Thou shalt choose our inheritance for us as 't is Psal 47.4 On the other hand vvhat a sad choice do men make for themselves when in their discontent they vvill be their own choosers Rachel must have a Child or she dies she had her desire but it cost her her life Jacob cannot stay God's time for the blessing by vvhich hastiness in what a world of troubles did he involve himself Poor Creature thou needest nothing more to undo thee than to be left to choose thy own condition Didst thou but consider this vvouldst thou not be contented when the vvise God chooseth for thee Qui create noverat ordinare non noverat Aug. Reason with thy self in secret thus Did God know how to make my person and doth he not know how to order my condition He that hath wisdom enough to steer the great Vessels of the World and of the Church hath he not wisdom enough to steer my little Boat He that hath by an unerring Providence brought so many Saints safe to Heaven doth he not know the best way to bring me safe thither also shall he mistake in my case who never yet in all the works that hvve passed through his hands was guilty of the least mistake I say reason thus and 't is to be hoped this will lay all storms of passion Oh what a blessed security of mind should we have in every state did we but live in the steady belief and ferious considrration of God's unsearchable wisdom 4. All is ordered by God graciously Psal 25.10 All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his covenant and his testimonies Is it Poverty Pain Sickness loss of Relations worldly crosses all is in mercy or in order to mercy to God's Covenant-people I do not say that all is mercy to these formally as to the things themselves which befall them but I say all is mercy or in order to mercy Afflictions are not mercy in their formal nature but they are of mercy originally they coming from God's love and for mercy finally God by them designing good and nothing but good to them that love him This is a thing in special to be thought of by those who belong to God Others have the Soveraignty and Righteousness of God to awe them but Saints have the mercy and goodness of God to work their hearts to a quiet submission to his Will And how much is there in this for the furtherance of such a frame of heart in them could they but by consideration draw it out and work it home upon the soul What a Child of God to vex and fret at this or that when all is intended for his good and shall be for good to him according to that great Promise Rom. 8.28 God alwayes knows what is best for his such is his wisdom and he alwayes doth what is best for his such is his mercy what a heart composing meditation is this There 's much in the other Attributes before mentioned to suppress inward perturbations but there 's more in that which I am now upon Is mercy and goodness the ingredient in every condition then be it never so bitter the sense of this must needs sweeten it Is all ordered by a Father in love not to hurt men but to do them good Oh why then should I give way to discontent The truth is it is too low for the Saints in every state barely to be content there 's something higher that they should come up unto namely to rejoyce evermore in the Lord and in every thing to be giving thanks Phil. 4 4. 1 Thes 5.18 So much for the first thing that I would have you fix upon as the special matter of your Consideration in order to the learning of Contentment And I beseech you put it in practice when ever heart-disquietment begins to rise in you sit down consider pause upon it Who it is that orders your Condition and how he orders it irresistibly righteously wisely graciously 2. Secondly Act your Consideration upon the state it self in which you are Consideration about the state it self for out of that much may be fetched to further Contentment Paul our great Instance in the Text weighed and considered every state into which he was brought and by that means he learnt in every state to be content Let us take the same course and through the blessing of God we shall find the same effect How is a Christian to manage Consideration with respect to his state I answer 1. Let him consider that his state is mixt It s neither purely good 'T is mixt nor purely evil but there 's a mixture of the one
with the other 't is sweet and bitter mingled together 'T is not all mercy that 's reserved for Heaven nor all misery that 's reserved for Hell but something of both that 's proper to the middle state of earth Eccl. 7.14 God hath set the one over against the other Prosperity and Adversity Comforts and Crosses Mercies and Afflictions to the end that man should find nothing after him so as to find fault with what God doth or to say this and that might have been better ordered by him Now if men would but let their thoughts dwell upon this how would it tend to the quieting of their minds in every Condition For shall we receive good at the hands of God and shall we not receive evil Job 2.10 Especially when we consider 1. That the good is much more than the evil and 2. That the evil is our desert the good of mere grace We take but a partial view of our condition eying the dark side of it only and then we vex and repine under it whereas did we view the whole and think of our mercies as well as of our afflictions we should not carry it so disingenuously towards God Hezekiah had a sad message sent to him but he received it with all submission because there was a mixture of mercy in it Isa 39.8 Good is the word of the Lord c. for there shall be peace and truth in my days There 's (o) Acquiescendum conditioni suae quam minimè de illa querendum quicquid habet circa se commodi apprehenden dum est Nihil tam acerbum est in quo non aequus animus solatium inveniat Sen. de Tranq Anim. ad Helvid c. 10. no state so sad in which a good man may not pick out something to comfort and quiet him therefore Christian deal wisely and faithfully in this set the good against the bad and there will be no discontent 2. This is to be thought of be the estate what it will 't is but common whatsoever your troubles are you have many sharers and companions therein * 1 Kin. 19 14 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euripid. vide Plut. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 475. The Prophet fancied he was left alone which made him the more froward in his condition but God told him he had reserved some thousands in Israel who had not bow'd their knees to Baal And so some in their tryals are apt to think they are alone their case is singular none so cross'd so afflicted as they when God knows there are many thousands who drink of the same Cup. 1 Cor. 10.13 There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 5.9 Knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world If this was but considered by persons under afflictions their Spirits would not be so disturbed as they are when 't is but with me as 't is with others why should not I be content men will quietly submit to that which is the lot of others as well as their own Ferre quam sortem patiuntur omnes Nemo recusat The Greek Tragaedian brings in one as heightning his misery and crying out Wo is me but why saith he Wo is me when we suffer nothing but what is incident to all Mortals Did we but in time of need revive this upon our thoughts it would much alleviate our grief and obviate all heart-disquietment That which is proper to the present life 3. This state doth but agree and suit with the present life Thou canst not expect it should be much better whilst thou art here below consider this and be content We forget where we are and look for that here on earth which we cannot have and this betrays us to impatience and discontent Did we but remember and urge it upon our selves that this life is the time of Tryals that we are born to trouble here that 't is vanity to expect rest and ease and comfort and felicity in this world surely we should not be much disturbed at any trouble that doth befall us Shall Israel when in the Wilderness murmur if there they meet with hardship Shall they who are at Sea be angry if they meet with storms shall the Traveller be offended at a little bad way in the lower region would we have nothing but serenity and calmness 'T is a thing no less foolish and absurd for Christians to be discomposed in their minds if here troubles and afflictions seize upon them Alas these are inseparable from the present life 4. No state is so bad as it might be ponder upon that It might be worse and it will teach you in every state to be content 'T is bad but it might be worse yea it is worse with many their wants are more pinching than thine their pains more acute than thine their losses greater than thine c. thou hast cause rather to be thankful than impatient in as much as a lesser evil carries mercy in it But why do I instance in these lower matters thy state is an afflicted state but it is not a damned estate 't is chastning but 't is not condemning 't is some temporary cross but 't is not the everlasting curse 't is affliction for a moment but 't is not eternal misery It might be Hell separation from God for ever burning in that fire which is unquenchable thou that art freed from these tremendous things wilt thou fret because of some petty tryals or calamities Oh think of this and be still Shall the malefactor fret at his Judge for sentencing him to some corporal punishment when he might have passed the sentence of death upon him shall the offending son be angry with his father for correcting him when he might have disinherited him Oh Christian this is thy case towards God act thy reason and consideration upon it to suppress all passion 3. The third thing Consideration of the frame of contentment that thoughts must dwell upon and be imploy'd about in order to Contentment is Contentment it self in considering what an happy and excellent frame that is And indeed the due consideration of what it is to be Content as è contra what it is to be discontented is not only a strong motive but also a very proper means to further the exercise and practice of Contentment As to the large handling of this subject the excellency of a contented frame I must not engage therein for that I refer you to others who have done it fully I will but hint a few things for your thoughts to work upon as occasion shall require Contentment therefore 1. Is a frame that carries much grace in it 'T is a holy 'T is a gracious frame 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Laert. in vit Epicuri Gen. 32.10 good and gracious temper of Soul It speaks the creature to have a due sense of God in his Sovereignty