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A55752 Riches of mercy to men in misery, or, Certain excellent treatises concerning the dignity and duty of Gods children by the late Reverend and Faithfull Minister of Jesus Christ, John Preston ... Preston, John, 1587-1628. 1658 (1658) Wing P3306; ESTC R13568 328,523 450

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debt And the strength of the argument is thus If Christ had not risen again but been still in the power of the grave and kept under by the enemy of our salvation the poor believer might have been justly afraid his debt had not been paid but Christ being risen and out of hold he is out of doubt As when the debtor sees the Kings Son that was his surety at liberty and in the Kings Court he fears not but his debt is paid so when the poor believer sees Christ set free from the power of the grave c. he knows God hath accepted the payment he hath made as sufficient for him Let us therefore look upon our selves as having a part in Christ and know whatsoever he did it was for us even for every true believer so that he rising again we rise again which being so it manifests that God hath accepted Christ his payment if any thing could hinder it must be death and the grave but Christ being risen they have lost their power and so none able to condemn Rom. 6. 9. Christ rose for us never to dye again and therefore that we should never dye eternally A third reason is taken from the sitting of Christ at the right hand of God which puts all out of question that he paid our debt when he laid down his life in that he is risen and ascended up to his Father Now God would never have admitted him to sit at his right hand had the work been unfinished but now being ascended to the right hand of his Father where he is advanced to the highest pitch of honour glory and Majesty and that in our Nature sitting in full authority King of heaven earth there for ever by his spirit to gather and guide all his children and quell the power of their enemies it is apparent that our Sureties payment is accepted so that now nothing can condemn a Believer not his conscience nor any thing else can condemn him and therefore he may triumph over all accusations In the fourth place add unto all this that Christ doth not onely sit at Gods right hand but so as that he also maketh intercession for every true beleever having not onely power but even the same good will and mind that ever he had to do them good consider this well whether thou beleeving needest to fear the face of any enemy whatsoever The poor man that was indebted to the great King For whom the Kings son was pleased to undertake and satisfie when he sees him come out of prison set at liberty in his fathers Court in greater honor and not onely so but highly favoured of the King his father and continually requesting him for that poor man What needs he now care for all his enemies He need not be affraid to look all officers in the face c. Is this the secure and happy estate of every true believer out of himself in Christ. Then see the necessity of using all those means and that constantly whereby Christ our Blessed Redeemer is pleased to communicate himself and this his grace unto us Faith is a special gift and grace and comes from God in Christ and Christ he comes onely in the meanes which are channels and conduit-pipes Therefore if thou wouldest have this grace and be strengthened and increased therein even as thou wouldest have thy soul thus dignified use carefully all the means As The word which is the Scepter of Christs Kingdome submit thy soul to it If thou wilt have an excellent spirit such a one as Ioshua had pray to God for it and take heed of grieving the spirit of God by continuing in the practice of any known sin which is as water that quenches the fire but rather cherish thy faith and put fuel unto it by constant consionable hearing reading prayer meditation receiving the Sacrament holy conference and watching over thy heart For if thou put fuel to thy faith and keep away that which may quench it thou shalt clearly see this blessed truth and find the power of faith in this that hath been said Therefore as thou wouldest have this confidence and comfort in thy heart and soul use the means for it The dilligent hand becomes rich in Gods ordinary providence and so mayst thou in this grace if thou use diligence there is no way else Therefore whilst thou hast time use the means give attendance to the word and all those heavenly meanes before mentioned It s true indeed Christ hath freed himself by dying rising again and bring at the right hand of God and this I believe saith the poor soul in the midst of his fears temptations and troubles of mind but how should I bee comforted in knowing that I am freed from all that danger and condemnation which my sins do deserve Yes upon this ground every beleeving soul and so thou if thou doest believe mayest be sure to be freed as Christ himself is freed and that even because Christ undertook and did all this for the poor believing soul and he had not done it but for him Esai 9. 6. To●us a child is born to us a Sonne is given All he did was for us and for our Salvation so that if Christ hath any happiness thou believing in him mayest be assured of it as Christ himself All Gods intentions towards thee are founded in love else how should that be true Iohn 3. 16. God so Loved the world c. Christ also took all upon him for our sake even to redeem and save us he needed not have done it for himself for he was God in glory c. lift up therefore thy heart by faith and beleeve this and thou shalt find it true though we miserable wretches are unworthy of any such mercies yet is God worthy to be believed Look on Christ and consider who he is and reflect it upon thy self and if thou canst believe the Lord Jesus hath done all this for thy sake To help and strengthen thee to this First Consider Christ did it for us that believe as a surety we were all bannk-rupts in the law of God for want of obedience thereunto now Christ the surety of mankind comes and undertakes for us and hath done i● Hebrews 7. 22. He was made surety of ●a better testament Therefore think on him alwayes as thy Surety in glory Christ there is said to be a Surety of better things then the legal Rites were even of the New Testament wherein whatsoever is contained it is for us and there it is treasured up ask and thou shalt have seek and thou shalt find All he did he did as my Surety all the evil he took away and all the good he purchased it was for me A second means or help to strengthen thee if thou art one that art humbled for sin and desirest more and more to believe is to know that God hath bound himself and sworn to it and he is true though every man
within I speake of those actions which are actions of mercy be you mercifull therefore as your heavenly father is for that is a sign that you have the same spirit that he hath when God cometh into the heart of any man he receiveth the spirit of the father And therefore as you would have a witnesse and testimony to your selves that you are the sons of God be you merciful There is a natural mercy I confess found in those that have not mercy indeed but this God accepteth not because such mercies are but counterfeit to the true mercy Labour to be merciful as God is to abound in mercy that every one may fare the better for you wherever you dwell and whatsoever you doe let all your actions be works of mercy so will God accept them and be ready to render mercy to you again INWARD STRENGTH The desire of a Christian. Text EPHES. 3. 16. That you may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man THese words are a part and indeed the sum of that excellent and divine prayer that Paul made for the Ephesians the principal thing that the Apostle prays for is this that they may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man and this the Apostle sets down in such a manner that he answereth all doubts that might hinder the Ephesians from obtaining this gracious priviledge For first they might demand this of Paul you pray that we may be strong in the inward man but how or what means shall we use to get this strength the Apostle answereth to this and tels them the means to be strong in the inward man is to get the spirit that you may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man Secondly but they might demand But how shal we do to get the spirit The Apostle answereth to this you must pray for him for your selves as I do for you for I pray that he would grant you the spirit that you may be strengthened in the inward man and thus you must do for your selves be earnest in prayer to get the spirit which he hath promised to those that ask it Thirdly They might demand but what should move God to give us his spirit and to hear our prayers To this he answers that the moving cause is the riches of his glory that you may be strengthened in the Inward man Fourthly they might demand yea but what shall we be the better for this strength if we get it To this the Apostle answereth in the verses following then saith he you shall be able to comprehend with all saints what is the length and the height the depth and the breadth of the riches of the love of God towards you in Christ. Now in that the Apostle above all other good that he wisheth unto them prayes for this that they may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man I gather this point That which is to be desired of every Christian and to be earnestly sought for is this that they may be strengthened in the Inward man I gather it thus Saint Paul was now to pray for some special good to the Ephesians and considering what might be most profitable and advantagious he makes choice of this above all other good things making it the sum and substance of his prayer that you may be strengthened by the spirit in the inward man I shall not need to prove this by any other places of scripture because the place in hand sufficiently proves the point as being the main scope and intent of the spirit of God in this place to shew the necessity of this doctrine of strengthening the inward man But for the fuller explaning of this point we will first shew you what this strength is and then wee will come to the uses There is therefore a twofold strengthening 1 There is first a natural 2. There is a supernatural Strength First I say there is a Natural strength and this is when a man is naturally strong or able either in the parts of his body or in the guifts of his minde as for example a man that hath a strong memory this is a natural strength or in other qualities of the minde or else when a man is strong in the parts of his body these are natural strengths but this is not the strength that is here meant Secondly there is a Supernatural strength and this is two fold The first is a Supernatural strength which is received from the evil spirit which is when Satan shall joyn with the spirit of a man and adds a Supernatural strength and so makes him to doe more or suffer more then otherwise by Nature he were able to doe With this spirit are all the enemies of the Church strengthened Paul himself before he was committed was strengthened by this spirit Some men have more then a natural strength to undergo torments and yet not to shrink at them but this is not the strength here meant But there is a Second supernatural strength which comes from the sanctifying spirit whereby a Christian is able to do more then naturally he could doe and this is the strength which is here meant in this place and with this strength all the Saints are strengthened that is this was the strength that Eliah Stephen Iohn Baptist the Apostles and the rest had this made them speak boldly in the name of Christ. But you shall the better understand what this strength is if you doe but consider the particulars which are these The first particular wherein this spiritual strength is seen is this if a man chearfully thrive under many afflictions that is when they can rejoyce under great troubles and tryals they have this strength as Acts 5. 41. it is said of the Apostles that they departed from the Councel rejoycing that they were thought worthy to suffer rebuke for the name of Christ he that bears some troubles hath some strength but to bear great troubles is required great strength that is to stand fast to Christ to profess his name as the holy Ghost saith in Rev. 2. 13. there where Satan hath his throne must needs be a great Supernatural work of the spirit The Second particular is this in the hour of temptation when the storms arise and the flouds lift up their voyce the heart is stablished being founded upon the rock so that the gates of hell cannot prevail against it all Satans darts fall upon such a state as an arrow upon a rock the heart is fixed like mount Zion The third particular wherein this spirituall strength is seen is this when a man doth believe though hee have all reason and strength against him this is to be strong in the inward man but to go further that you may the better know what this strength is I wil give you a definition of it It is a general good disposition or right habit a temperature or a due frame of the mind wherby it is enabled to
which are means for the getting of the spirit Neglect none of the means because you know not in which nor when the spirit will come it may be he will come now and not another time it may be he will breath upon you at such a ordinance and not at another In Acts 9. whilest Peter was Preaching unto them The holy Ghost came upon them that heard him So be diligent in waiting upon the means and the holy Ghost at one time or other will come Again he could have sent the spirit to Cornelius without the sending for Peter in Acts 10 But Peter must be sent for and he must Preach unto him and then he shall receive the holy Ghost Thus much for the means and for this time CHRIST the best INHABITANT Text EPHES. 3. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith I Have chosen this Text by reason of this Sacramental occasion which doth represent Christs dwelling in us and it is the second head of Pauls Prayer The first was That they might be strengthened in the inward man This That Christ may dwell in their hearts by faith Having in the former discourse opened the words I shall not need to adde any thing here The point hence arising is That it is a great prerogative of which all the Saints are partakers that they have Christ to dwell in their hearts The Apostle prayeth for it being directed by the spirit of God in his prayer and therefore we should esteem of it as of a great priviledge And as of that of which all the Saints are partakers because it is necessarie to salvation none are saved without it Now for the better understanding of it I will first of all shew you these two things 1. What it is to have Christ dwell in our hearts 2. What benefits we receive by his dwelling in them For the first what it is to have Christ to dwell in our hearts To this I answer That then Christ dwells in our hearts when as he works in them in another manner then he did before he hath other works and we see other effects then formerly First he shewes himself kinde and favourable to us inlightning giving comfort refreshing framing and ruling ou● spirits that be●ore he did not and he doth not in others he is said to dwell in the Temple because his eyes are upon it his ears are there open to hear the prayers of men his mercy seat is there T is true God fills heaven and earth yet he is said to dwell in the Temple because there he manifesteth his peculiar presence so the phrases of the Scripture are to be understood Go not up for God is not with you That is he will not assist you God dwells where he assists he dwells not where he helpes not That you may understand this consider these four particulars First where a man dwells he must come to the house and abide in it so Christ comes into the hearts of believers in whom he dwells and unites himself to them and their hearts to him And that is done by a double act of the Spirit First he humbleth and convinceth men of sin he makes some alive and us to be dead the way to life is death as the corn dies that it may live And this the spirit of bondage doth by putting an edge to the Law by making men desirous of Christ. Secondly the Spirit of adoption that unites us that perswades us that Christ is ours Love makes the union Faith is the agent in this union but it doth it by love as fire is said to heat though the qualitie doth it immediately when after sound humiliation we believe reconciliation with Christ there is a love to Christ then there is a union That is the first word he unites himself to the heart and it to him Secondly It is not enough for a man to come to the place to be conjoyned to it for a time but he must continue there else he dwells not there but is a stranger a dwell ●r must continue Christ abides with us for ever according to that everlasting Covenant which he hath made with 〈◊〉 Is 55. 3 He hath made an everlasting Covenant with us even the sure mercies of David He never seperates himself from us after he comes he continues for ever But it may be objected though Christ will not depart from us yet we may depart from him To this I answer that he will not suffer us to depart from him Ier. 32. 4. I will make an everlasting Covenant with them That is I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me we are knit together without separation he never departs from us nor we from him The reason why we continue in the state of grace is not because grace is of an unsatiable nature for it is a creature and may vanish as all other creatures do But it never failes because it is in Christ and supported by his arm of omnipotencie The light in the air may quickly perish but if the sun be ever with it it never perisheth ●o the water of a stream may fail but if there be a spring to supply it it never fails grace may perish as it did in Adam but men ingrafted into the second Adam can never fall because Christ is never severed from them we have his word for it he keeps us by his power There is an everlasting Covenant on both sides The Sacrament se ls this unto us That God hath made a Covenant that he will never depart from it and we set our seal by it that we will never depart from him Gal 5. 3. He that is circumcised is bound to keep the whole Law So he that receives the Sacrament is bound he engages himself to keep the Law of faith and he receives that oath when he was baptized Thirdly where a man dwells there he must delight else he is not said properly to dwell there a man that is imprisoned is not said to dwell in the spirit because he delights not in it Now Christ is said to dwell in us because he delights in us Esai 62. 4. Thou shalt no more be called forsaken but Hephsebah because the Lord delighteth in thee presence argues delight God delights in the Saints therefore he dwells in them he works in them that which is pleasing to them Artifex amat opus proprium He loves his own workmanship Thus First God delights in them as in those that are beautiful Cant. 4. 1 2 3. Thou art beautiful my Love thou art fair Thou hast Doves eyes thy teeth are like a flock of sheep which are shorn which came up from washing thy lips are a thread of Scarlet thy Temples like a piece of Pomegranate Secondly as one delights in a garden so God delights in them Cant. 4. 12. because he hath
So that though he durst not justifie himself in his own righteousness and integrity of life yet did not this hinder from the assurance of his salvation before God in Christ for Iob 19. 25. 26. I am sure saith he my redeemer liveth c. whom I my self shall see and mine eyes shall behold and no other for me So that though he stood not upon the righteousness of works for himself yet he was assured in Christ of Eternal Salvation The second example he brings is of David Psalm 26. 1. who saith Iudge me O Lord for I have walked in mine Innocency to show what a holy and righteous man he was and yet saith Bellarmine for all that he doubts of his Salvation as appears Psal. 19. 12. where he saith Lord who can understand his errours cleanse me from secret faults Now if he had secret sins that he feared might hinder him how then could he have assurance We deny that because he that truly believes and repents all his sins both secret and open are pardoned known and unknown he confesses and repents of all and therefore they are forgiven Rom. 8. 1. Labouring to know his sins and forsake them though he cannot know them all yet is he accepted So the not knowing of our sins particularly hinders not our assurance of salvation though David knew them not yet had he assurance of the pardon of his secret sins and faults as well as other in Christ. I but he was afraid he might be blinded in them and so he might doubt saith he We deny not but he might fear for we say none can be assured of Salvation but he that fears to offend As a good child fears to offend his father Now his fear hinders not his fathers love fear of Gods favor indeed may hinder assurance but not fear to offend him Fear of sinning against God keeps him that his assurance is the stronger the child of God that falls into sin when he casts off his fear and trembling least he should offend against God dashes and weakens the strength of his assurance and the more a man fears to sin the more it keeps him in the favour of God 2 Sam. 12. 12. David had assurance from God by the very prophet c. Ps. 32 when he confessed his sinnes he prophesied that God forgave them besides Psalm 73. 25. he testifies to all the world that he had none in heaven but his reconciled God alone all which shewes how strong assurance David had notwithstanding all his fear Again in the third place he brings that of Paul 1 Cor. 4. 4. where he saith though I know nothing by my self yet am I not thereby Iustified Whereby Bellarmine would prove that Paul could not be assured For Answer hereunto we must know that the Apostle there speakes not of the justification of his person but his office and that not before God but men who though he knew he had used all faithfulness in his doctrine yet I stand not upon that saith he for he acknowledged that God might find and see faults enough that way but because Christ had done such things for him c. God had accepted of his sincere obedience in Christ nothing could hinder his assurance of Gods approbation and love to him which he testifies Rom. 8. 34. shewing his assurance that nothing could seperate him from the love of God in Christ so that none of these holy men Iob David nor Paul howsoever they durst not stand upon their works yet in regard of Gods love in Christ they were all assured of their salvation and so may every true beleeving soul. What comfort else could we have at the day of death First Satan who at first was an angel of light yet fell away saith he But to that we answer Satan he had never a covenant made with him in Christ we speak onely of believers Secondly Adam But that is nothing to the purpose likewise because before his fall he was never in this covenant of grace He had ability to stand if he would but he never had that promise before his fall which wee have in Christ As namely that we shall continue and never depart away God putting his spirit in us Thirdly Saul To which we answer that he was never a truly righteous man though he was called to be a king and had a new heart fitted with endowments for his kingly office yet were his graces but common graces nor peculiar and special saving graces Fourthly Salamon Bellarmine holds that he perished yet he saith that he was a man beloved of God 2 Sam. 12 25. Therefore say we he fell not totally and finally he lost not all grace because he had still so much grace as kept him from falling finally as we may see by his book or repentance Fifthly David Bellarmine saith he fell totally But that is not so he lost not all when he fell into sin as appeareth Psalm 51. 12. Though the operation of his faith ceased yet lost he not the substance and habit thereof for there was a spirit of prayer and repentance still left he had a conflict within that made him so earnestly pray restore me to the joy of thy salvation c. where note he prayes not simply for salvation for that he was assured of but for the comfort of it and his prayers we know were the prayers of faith for they brought him joy and comfort So that then he had not lost all his faith Sixtly Peter But he also lost not all which to hold were directly contrary to that of our Saviour Luke 22. 32. where he tels Peter that he had prayed to the Father that his faith might not fail him and it is a priveledge Christ hath purchased for every beleeving soul that howsoever he may be grievously and continually tempted on every side yet shall his faith never utterly fail because Christ hath prayed for it Seventhly He brings Simon Magus But we deny him to be a true believer he was at the best but in the gall of bitterness his heart was stark naught and therefore for him to fall away it is no wonder Lastly Iudas whom we deny to be given to Christs keeping to eternal salvation though he was given him as an Apostle for Christ to prevent all declared plainly that he was the son of perdition from the beginning so that there is indeed no strength in all these to weaken and hinder the assurance of him that truly believes onely the Devil stirs up all his instruments by all means to discourage him if it were possible but he shall never prevail The use of this in the third place is for trial namely that we should examine our selves to finde if we have this insulting and triumphing faith whereby we may be able to look up to God in the day of tryal and hold out If a man have base and counterfeit coyn in his
those that are bruised reeds who complain with Paul that they cannot do as they would they are unable to pray and perform good duties as they would they find themselves still weak they are able to grapple with an easy lust but a strong one is too hard for them they are able to creep but not to run the way of Gods commandments Go to the word be conversant there and it will strengthen thee though insensibly as daily sucking makes a child battle though they see it not so if one be conversant in the word he will grow stronger by it and will make himself as a grey-hound comely to run and run apace not onely in plain wayes and like a child that cannot get up a pair of stairs but it will make him climb the craggiest rocks and will make him a victorious King able to overcome strong temptations as St. Paul said to the people when they asked him how they should do when he was gone he said I will commit you to God and his word of grace intimating that if they had that it were no matter whether they had him or no. Therefore if one have lost his first love his first beauty and colour let him go to the word and it will bring it again because it takes away the sickness that takes away the colour onely some cautions must be observed First It must be constantly read it is not enough when we are hindred of other businesses then to take a bo●k in our hands by accident but it must be read constantly his is commanded the King who hath the greatest bu●…s Deut. 17. 18 Ios. 1. 10. The word is commanded to be read day and night if we must read it day and ●ight the least that we can do is to read some part of it ev●ry day The best way therefore is to bind our s●lv●s 〈◊〉 as 〈◊〉 priv●te prayer so to reading for it is a part of the ●…rifice this is evi●●nt in David that did edee●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his appointed food he had rather miss his meat th●n this Word he had rather keep a constant course in reading the word then in his appointed food Secondly It must be read with delight and meditation Psal. 1. 2 The blessed man delights in Gods Law and meditates in it day and night viz. he reads and doth delight in that he reads and meditates in it for both go together and therefore he is like the tree planted by the waters side that brings forth his fruit in due season but he that reads it without delight is as a dry tree that sucks no sap from the root and hence it is that meditating is put for reading Ios. 1. 8. Thou shalt meditate in it day and night and so I take all places to be meant where meditation is commended for want whereof a man is confused in those things that he most delights in and will be excellent in therefore the word must be read with delight Thirdly It must be read with prayer if we receive not our ordinary food without prayer much less spiritual why then should we read the word without it the means indeed hath a nourishing faculty inherent in it but yet we must pray or else it will not put forth his force the word bath a nourishing facultie going along with it whereby it nourishes but the holy Ghost must work and cooperate and unless he do so it cannot profit and this is the reason why many hear and profit nothing because the holy spirit works not with it and it works not because they pray not for it that so they may have it Luke 11. 13. God will give his holy spirit to them that ask him had we not need then to pray as David did Psal. 119. Lord teach me thy statutes and open mine eyes to see the wonders of thy Law he reads it but he knowes that prayer will fetch down the spirit pray then for it for that puts a nourishing faculty into the Word and the word nourisheth not without it If we do thus it will strengthen us if we be weak and heal us if we fall into a consumption of grace Fourthly It must be read or heard in faith that was the reason that it nourished not and why it did not strengthen because it wanted faith look what seed is thrown into baren ground it takes no root downward nor brings no fruit upward such is the word to an unfaithful heart but look what seed is sown in good soil and that is fruitful so is it with the word being heard with faith 1 Thes. 1 2. 13. It wrought in all those that believed as if he should have said it is believing of the word that makes it effectual otherwise it is as the shining of the Sun to blind eyes and falling of rain upon rocks Though they of themselves do lighten and be enough of themselves to lighten and make them fruitful yet the fault is not in the Sun nor the rain The word is a sword but faith sets an edge on it to divide between the marrow and the bones that makes it lively without which it is a dead word there is no life at all in it See it in particulars the word saith Thou shalt not steal Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain did you believe this and seriously consider this that it is Gods commandement it would be effectual unto you to make you beware were that in Rom. 7. duly considered that the least sinne keeps on in the state of damnation it would make them look about them and try whether they were in the faith or no. If that in Gal. 5. were seriously considered that whosoever is in Christ hath crucified the flesh and the affections of it that if any lust be alive in us we are not Christians Were this well weighed it would make natural men know that they were in a damnable estate It is profitable therefore in reading of the word to joyn with it such disjunctions as these which follow either it is the word or it is not if it be then it is true or not true If true then infallible for so it is if it be the Word of God and thus ought we to build on it and guide our course of life by it Prov. 12. 13. if that were considered viz. That none should be established by wickedness then men would not get goods by inordinately and by unlawful means nor in an indirect manner if that 1 Cor. 6. 9. were considered that no fornicators nor adulterers shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven if this I say were believed and applyed in particular men would not continue in it nor rest tell they were washed and sanctified if threatnings in the word were throughly believed they would make us fear if the promises were believed they would make us rejoyce if the commandements were believed they would make us obey Concerning outward things if one bring another newes of any true good if he
us strength when we have not that we give over The power of grace therefore is alwayes seen in that it enableth us to go through the work to perform it Therefore the world is exceedingly deceived in the misapplication of that distinction the Lord accepts the will for the deed I say the misapplication of that is the cause why there is so much laziness and dulness in men that they do not set themselves to go through with holy duties for say they we have a desire and a purpose and the Lord accepts the will for the deed You are exceedingly deceived the Lord indeed will accept the will for the deed when there is such an impediment as that you cannot proceed for what is the occasion of that speech of the Apostle to the Corinthians when they had liberal minds to supply the necessities of the Churches and yet they wanted money in this case saith the Apostle the Lord accepts the will for the deed Wilt thou say now therefore because thou hast a good desire to serve God to pray to keep to Gods truth to keep thy heart close to him and thou hopest the Lord will take the desire for the deed and yet thou wilt be negligent in them what impediment hast thou If thou wouldest bestow time in prayer if thou wouldest bestow time in working on thy heart to warm it and to quicken it to duty thou shouldest have the deed as well as the will what hinders thee then where therefore there is no impediment the Lord will not accept the will for the deed Look how much will there is so much deed there will be when the will is wrought by the spirit of God the deed will follow I am able saith Saint Paul not onely to purpose and intend but to do all things If thou hast the power of grace in thee as he here exhorts Timothy to be strong thou wilt go through with the work I say if thou hast the power and strength of grace in thee thou hast strength and ability to do all these things Again as the power of grace is seen in enabling thee to do so further it is seen in this that when thou hast begun to do it keeps thee from fainting in well-doing Another man will have some fits in well-doing but he is uneven he is unlike himself Now herein the power of grace is seen that though a man be sometimes transported through the violence of corruption and passion and the like yet grace brings him back again that is he is not quite carried away with temptations as the chaff with the wind but he is held with a strong anchor that though he float up and down and be off and on in degrees yet he is not carried clean away Therefore you shall see 2 Pet. 3. ult take heed saith he that you be not drawn away from your stedfastness but grow in grace c. As if he should say this is the power of grace that it will keep a man that though he do sin and forget God and have some such falls as David had yet herein is the power of it that it never lets a man go quite but still it brings him back again This is much for the comfort of those that are upright hearted for some man might say alas though I do purpose and have performed and kept on in a good course yet I am apt to fail back again to my old sins and am ready to return to my old courses It is true thou mayst do so but yet herein be assured that the strength of grace will be manifested in thy heart to k●●p t●…e from falling from thy steadfastness it will keep thee along it will not suffer thee to go quite away thou wilt not depart from the Lord Ier. 32 40 I will plant my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me As for example take Saul and David Saul was in a good course a great while and he made many turnings aside yet the Lord kept him by the common assistance of his spirit yet at length he went quite away from the Lord. But now David how many turnings aside had he how many great infirmities had he yet he had the sure mercies of David the strength of grace kept him along that he never departed from the living God he never went aside so as he returned no more Therefore if thou find this that though thou fall yet thou art returning again that thy heart is never at rest till thou hast gotten the Lord again it is a sign that thou hast the true touch of the spirit As the needle we know that is touched with the load-stone it never is at quiet till it find the north point again Lastly As the strength of grace is seen in enabling us to do and in keeping us from fainting so it is seen in the particular things we do in those good duties that we perform the hearing of the word communicating the partaking of all the holy ordinances in all the duties belonging to Gods Worship herein I say the power of grace is seen For as everything is in its being so it is in its working look what being and essence it hath such is the work of it Now take those that are common and counterfeit graces which are not sound and right they are able to reach the form of good duties but not the substance but where there is true lively grace there a man is able to do the thing indeed that is he can do holy duties as he ought to do them This is the property of grace that it enableth you to do the things you do with a pure heart for my brethren it is grace that purifieth the heart it is that which makes the inside clean other things may cleanse the hands and the head Philosophy education and parts of morality but the power of grace is such as that when you come to do duties it purifies the heart because grace makes a man wise Now a wise man will be sure to look to the foundation that is to look to the heart wherewith he performs every duty the foundation is all in-all a wise man will see with what heart he performs every duty the outward performance is but as the top of the building the foundation is the principal Besides grace puts a treasure into a mans heart and makes him prize that treasure and where a mans treasure is there his eye will be he will look therefore to his heart in the performance of duties Besides it teacheth a man to exalt God as God in his heart and when he is so exalted he is more to him then a thousand witnesses It enableth him to seek praise with God and not with men Again it gives a man light whereby he can discern of the secret failings of his heart Another man that hath not light he cannot see them he can see grosse enormities but it is grace onely that makes us to see
small moats inward failings it is grace therefore that makes the inside clean And not onely so but it makes us perform duties in a holy and lively manner it enableth us to do them to purpose To perform them in a holy manner for this is to perform duties in a holy manner when the heart is apprehensive of the presence of God in the businesse onely for holinesse is to sequester a thing and to appropriate it for the use of God onely so when thou comest to perform a good duty if thy heart be altogether looking upon the Lord so that nothing without have to do with it if nothing else come in and take up thy heart not the sight of men or the opinion of the creature or the by-respects of any thing none of these come and take a part of thy heart and use it ●s it were that is to perform a duty in a holy manner Otherwise whatsoever takes away the heart or sets it on work abates this holinesse for then the heart is not made peculiar to God in the performance of a duty for it meddles with common things Grace I say enableth to do this because grace sanctifieth that is it makes a man really and in good earnest appropriate and sequester his heart and minde to the Lord so that he onely looks to him to serve him holily in all duties so is it when we pray or preach or do any publique or private duty this is the holinesse of the heart when it is done onely to the Lord. Again I say it makes us perform duties not onely in a holy but in a lively manner for grace is the life of the soul. Where this life is not we may do duties but they are but dead works Vital actions are onely proper to grace because onely grace works life a man never comes to perform a work that is a living work but so far as it comes from grace grace is the fire of the holy Ghost Grace is to the soul as the lively and natural heat is in the body which onely acts it and makes it to do the works thereof So grace in the soul is that onely which begets livelinesse in duties wherewith they are to be performed Lastly I add it makes us perform them in a holy lively and substantial manner that is to do them to some purpose Take another man he doth these duties but to what purpose are they when we come to pray and to do these duties they are then done as they should be when the end is obtained then every businesse is done when the end of it is effected otherwise it is not done we do not say a thing is done because a man hath been about it but because he hath obtained that end for which he took the businesse in hand Consider now what is the end of the duties you do what is the end of your praying what is the end of your hearing is the end of your hearing edification is the end of your praying to be strengthened in grace prayer is a lost prayer except the heart be strengthened by prayer except the heart be made better and more composed into communion with God you pray not in the holy Ghost Now then examine your selves by this grace onely enableth a man so to pray that he shall grow more heavenly in every prayer whensoever any other prayer is made without this power of grace it is lip-labour it doth the heart no good And so for keeping of the Sabaoth The Sabaoth is made for man that is it is made for mans use for mans benefit for mans advantage What is the advantage we get by a Sabaoth That wee may be built up and grow in grace and in knowledge and the like Now a man without saving grace may abstain from all bodily labour and servile work on the Sabaoth day and be occupied in holy duties but to keep it so as to get advantage by it so as to get growth in knowledge and in grace so that he shall have a greater stock of grace laid up in his soul by the use of the ordinances upon that day this grace enableth a man to do So when a man comes to hear to purpose to hear so as to please God in his hearing to hear so as to get something into his heart by hearing this onely grace enableth to You know what our Saviour saith Luke 18. Take heed how you hear for to him that hath shall be given intimating that when you hear aright you have more given in then you had before Grace now enableth a man so to do the duty that there is not onely the task the businesse the work done and passed over but it is done to purpose So when you come to receive the Sacrament what is the end of your receiving onely to come or to come with some outward reverence or shews of devotion c No the utmost end of receiving the Sacrament is to get more strength of grace to get more assurance of Faith to get more perswasion of the love of God towards you that your sinfull corruptions may be more healed that the grace that is in you may be more enlivened I say grace enableth to do this and herein the power of it is seen for without the power of grace you may do all these things but not to purpose I cannot enlarge these thing but to finish this point I beseech you in a word consider whether you have the strength of grace in you or no otherwise you receive the Sacrament in vain And let no man think I will make up this with my absence and fit my self against another time that is not the way Not to sacrifice as well as to sacrifice amiss was a sin he that came not up to the passeover as well as he that came uncircumcised was to be cut off he that would not come to the feast as well as he that came not with the wedding garment they were both lyable to judgement therefore I say take heed And if there were no other argument to move men not to defer their conversion this were enough that if a man come without grace to the Sacrament he eats and drinks his own damnation if he defer to come he provokes the Lord to anger and if he come unworthily without grace he provokes him to anger likewise 2 TIM 2. 1. Thou therefore my son be strong in the grace which is in Christ Iesus THe next point that we are to handle out of these words is this That All grace is recived from Iesus Christ. We can receive no grace but from him and in him there is enough to be had There is none but from him we know nothing but what we are taught by him as a Prophet whatsoever we do is lost labour except it be made acceptable through him as a Priest we are able to overcome no lust to do no duty but through the power we have from him as a King Besides I
thee and keeps in thy affections that searcheth thy heart and thine inward intentions that requireth other aims and ends It is another thing to do this it is a very hard thing for a man to cross himself to deny himself Let any man examine himself in those things to which he is strongly enclined when he shall find in himself that he hath such and such opportunities in such and such companies in such and such occasions how hard a thing it is for him now to stick to the rule and to subdue and mortifie his sinful lusts I say the power of godliness doth this And again it doth not suffer you to do holy duties in a customary manner but you do them in another manner you do not onely pray but your prayers will be frequent and fervent And so for hearing your hearing will be in another manner it will be hard and difficult though the form be easie And because it is easie therefore it is that men content themselves onely with a form of Religion but deny the power of it Again Thirdly another cause of it is this Satan resists you not when there is but a form nor the world opposeth against thee when there is but a form For Satan knowes that the form of Godliness alone will never hurt him and therefore he doth not trouble men nor is he busie to withdraw men out of that form by any temptation but now when he comes to a man that sets upon godlinesse indeed there he will not be idle but be ready to betray him every way and will leave no temptation unattempted because he knoweth that the power of godliness plucketh a man out of the power of Satan And as Satan resists not so the world doth not much resist it because it doth not much cross the world for the world will surely resist that which crosseth it By the world I mean the multitude of men the common sort of men I say such as these resist not the form of godliness because it crosseth them not Indeed the power and life of godliness is very cross to the World those that are strict to practise indeed according to their knowledge that have Religion not onely in shew but in truth that walk exactly and precisely according to the Rule these men go a contrary course to the world they go against the crowd and against the stream of the world and therefore the crowd of the world goes against them for the world loves her own now a form of godliness may be notwithstanding a man may be the worlds own but when a man hath the power of godliness he is not the worlds own but he is anothers and therefore is it that men hate and oppose and cry down the power of godliness Hence it is too that men are so discouraged in labouring after the power and that it is so rare among men because the world so opposeth and hates it And not onely so this is not all but the flesh resists it the flesh doth not much resist the form because there is no great contrariety between the form and the flesh therefore you see carnal men Papists c. that know not the power of godliness they will be very exact in all formal performances of duties But now the flesh resisteth the power of godliness it runs with a strong stream against it it fighteth against it So that hence it is you see that the power of godliness is so rare because that the devil the world and the flesh resist the power and they do not so to the form And this is the third cause why the form is so common and the power and life is so rare and seldom found amongst us We will add yet one cause more of this general disease why we have the form without the power that is because in men there is a common light which will go so far as to approve of the formality of Religion but they want so much light as to distinguish of the power and life of Religion to approve that I speak now of a mans own heart not of others There are two things in Religion there is a formality a common care of worshipping God a form of godliness And there is besides this the life and the power that which is called the new creature that which is called regeneration that which is called the change of the heart Now a man that hath the common light that is not yet sanctified he can go so far as to approve the first to say it is good in me and it is good in others it is fit that God should be worshipped something should be done A man hath as much light as the moral Law and as a common illumination can afford him And therefore we see men that are not yet regenerate that are not acquainted with the life of Religion they can approve of moral honesty of just dealing between man and man of a common care of serving of God which indeed is good and excellent onely we find fault with this that there is no more if there be no more it is but a form Now I say the common light which every man hath will go so far as to approve this But come now to the life and power there is required a sanctified light a peculiar light which is given but to few no man hath it till he be regenerate and born again till God hath put it into him by his holy Spirit Now because this light is rare it is but thin sown hence it is that there are but few that find out the beauty and excellency of the power of godliness but rather dislike it and disapprove it because they have not light enough to see it But the common light is frequent and ordinary and hence it is that the form of godliness is common whereas the life and power is rare And you may add this to it that is the reason why men are so shie of it every man wonders at it as things that are rare every man wonders at them as we do at new fashions as men gaze at new Stars and Comets The form because it is common it is therefore approved it passeth amongst men without wondring but the other is rare and seldom found and therefore it is gazed at and wondred at and pointed at But though this be common among men and brings men but to the form of godliness yet the Lord requires the power of godliness it is not the form alone that God regards And what need we add any reason for this you know men regard not complements and shews they look to reallities Therefore we will rather hasten to make some use of it If this be so that the form of godliness is so common without the power let every man look the more carefully to it that it be not his case In epidemical diseases that run over a people or a City or a Country if a man have but the beginning of
him So there is a time wherein Christ and thy own cause go together when Religion and thy own credit go together but when they are parted and severed one from another then consider which thou followest whether thou hast the same diligence and solicitude in the business of Christ when there is no interest of thy own joyned with it Moreover consider what thou doest when thou hast to do with people that are ill deserving for if thou do what thou doest for Christ though men do not answer thy pains but carry themselves in a contrary manner to thee yet if it be done for Christ thou wilt continue to do it That was the tryal of Saint Pauls faithfulness when the Jewes set themselves against him and would have pulled him in pieces yet he continued in the same faithfulness in his service of Christ and the Church If you shall give over because men use you ill it is an Argument that you did what you did not simply for Christ. If you do what you do to get the love and credit and applause of men when you miss of that you will then give over and that is a sign of insincerity Again when an action is done consider what it is that runs in thy thoughts when the business is past consider about what thy mind is most solicitous whether about thy credit to think what am I thought of or about thy riches or honor what have I gotten by it Or whether art thou solicitous whether the business of Christ hath succeeded whether the affairs of the Church hath prospered for herein is the tryal of a man A man is content to be a losser for Christ when he is willing to lose that which is dearest to him As one saith it is a mans excellency to be content to lose his credit with men rather then his conscience towards God so I say when a man is careless what becomes of whatsoever belongs to him but all his solicitousness all his study and taking care is for the business of Christ. This was Saint Pauls case too he cared not so the work went on what became of himself So you see here what the condition is that is required to seek the things of Jesus Christ you must seek them diligently and faithfully that is you must seek them as you seek your own things for when a man hath any thing to do of his own he doth it willingly and diligently and faithfully after that manner you ought to do the things of Jesus Christ. But you will say this is a hard and difficult thing for a man to seek the things of Jesus Christ after this manner who is able thus to do them So to do them in sincerite and with diligence and faithfulness as not to mingle any self-respect or aim at his own ends I answer it is true and the holiest men that are have some such tincture in their best actions but they are not to be discouraged so it be not the chief but they are to be humbled and to strive against it And this use by the way you may make of it that a man may see how little cause he hath to be puffed up or to be conceited for his best actions if he consider how unfaithfully he hath done them how unwillingly how negligently But I say though these things be in us we are not to think that the things we do are presently done in hypocrisie The thing that we are to look to is that those aimes and respects to our selves that are mingled with our best actions do not prevail that we do not allow them in our selves But you will say how shall we bring our hearts to this not to seek our own things but the things of Jesus Christ In a word this you must do you must give your own selves to Christ when a man hath once given himself to Christ he will be ready to give all that is his In 2 Cor. 8. The Apostle had occasion to speak of their readiness to supply the necessities of the Saints and he gives this as a reason thereof because they had given themselves to Christ. So the way to prepare your hearts to seek the things of Jesus Christ is to give your selves to Christ. Therefore no natural man can do it because he makes himself the end he sets himself up for his end because he hath not given himself to Christ. But a regenerate man is able to give all to Christ because he hath already given himself to Christ. But you will say what is it to give a mans self to Christ When a man is perswaded of this that Christ will take care of him and provide better for him then he can himself he is willing to submit to Christ and give himself to Christ. A man will never go off of his own bottom till he be assured of a better foundation And partly also it is done by changing a mans opinion of himself for every unregenerate man hath a different opinion of himself to that which he hath when he is regenerate One man thinks that that which consists in his private and outward happiness and safety and therefore his profit or credit or whatsoever may make up that that he reckons himself and that he will build upon But when a man is in Christ his opinion is changed there is a new part a regenerate part in him and where that is in a man that he reckons to be himself What a man hath an opinion to be himself whatsoever makes up that self that he will draw to himself When a man reckons the regenerate part to be himself he is willing to be a loser by all other things so that that self may be a gainer because he knowes that all this while is no loser in himself so long as he growes in grace and keeps a good conscience so long as he knowes and is perswaded that God will take care of him far better then himself can do so long the building up of himself goes forward and he takes care for nothing else besides This is for a man to give up himself to Christ. Secondly it is not enough to give up a mans self to Christ for though his heart be prepared to seek the things of Christ yet he must give diligence to intend it he must pray that God will set it into his heart and keep it in his heart that upon all occasions when he is put to it he may seek the things of Jesus Christ that as you have it 1 Chro. 29 It is Davids prayer Lord saith he I beseech thee to keep this in the purpose of the heart of this people for ever When they had offered willingly he knew that that was an extraordinary matter and would soon slip out of their minds thereforehe prayes that God would keep it in the purpose of their hearts for ever Now when a man seekes his own things it is natural for a man
Apostle Paul 2 Cor. 5. he gives this reason why he sought the things of Christ with the neglect of himself The Love of Christ constraineth me saith he As if he should say though I undergoe much scorn and discredit and losse in the world yea I am content to be thought to be out of my wits to be accounted any thing for the love of Christ constraineth me that is it makes me ready to do any thing seeing it is for Christ and his advantage I am willing to be so accounted of Now how came he to this love of Christ why thus we judge saith he that if Christ died for us c. So that if you would bring your hearts not to seek your own things but the things of Jesus Christ you must labour to have your hearts enflamed with the love of Christ and that you may do so use the means that Saint Paul layeth down he died for me he is worthy of it he deserves it of me he hath done this and this for me therefore there is reason I should no longer live to my sel● therefore there is reason I should seek his things that I should do his work Thus to stir up our hearts to love the Lord Jesus is the means ●o prepare us to seek him And so you see the business we have to do we are to seek the things of the Lord Jesus willingly diligently and faithfully And also what it is that prepares and disposeth the heart so to do First to give up our selves to Christ. Secondly to labor to have it kept in the purpose of our hearts Thirdly to have faith in the promises and providence of God Lastly to have Love to the Lord Jesus And so much for this point and for this time PRAYERS PREVALENCY 2 CHRON. 32. 24 25. And in those dayes Hezekias was sick unto the death and he prayed to the Lord who spake to him and gave him a sign but Hezekias did not render according to the mercies bestowed upon him but his heart was lifted up and wrath came upon Israel WE made some entrance into these words in the morning In those dayes Hezekiah was sick to the death Those words we have done withall And he prayed to the Lord hence we observed this That Prayer is the chief means to obtain any thing at Gods hands It was the means whereby Hezekiah obtained his recovery when he was sick to the death So it is a general rule that prayer is the chiefest means of all other to obtain any thing at Gods hands The reasons of it we gave in the morning we came to apply it And the first Use was this If it be the chiefest means of all other therefore we should learn to esteem of our prayers more then we do to set them at a higher rate to know what the efficacy of prayer is When prayers are performed in a customary negligent manner when men think it may be they will be answered and it may be they will not it may be they will do them good it may be not no marvel if they misse of the effect If men did believe that prayer were so effectual to bring their enterprizes to passe they would surely be more frequent and fervent in this duty We shewed you in the morning what the efficacy of prayer was we purpose to repeat nothing Onely there is an objection or two that we will answer and so passe from this point First This may be objected how can prayer be so effectual a means to obtain any thing at Gods hands when the Lord is purposed to do what he will do and how can the intreaty of a weak man change the purpose of God or altar his mind he knows what we have need of before-hand before we ask and God is subject to no alteration To this I answer It is true when we seek to the Lord by prayer he is not changed by any of our petitions that we make to him but the change is wrought upon us because we are made more fit to receive mercy from him then before we were As for example When a patient desires his Physician to give him a cordial to give him some restoring physick something that is pleasant to him The Physician delayes and defers he will not for the present hearken to his request at length he doth it Why is it not because the Physician is altered but because there is an alteration in the patient he is now purged and vomitted his body is cleansed and so made fit to receive the cordial therefore the Physician yields to his request there is some suitablenesse now between him and the physick which he requires there is no alteration in the Physician but in the patient So when we seek any thing at Gods hands we do not cause him to alter his mind but there is a change wrought in us so that when we think we bring God to us by our prayers we rather bring our selves to God That is when we contend with God in prayer and use arguments to perswade him those arguments perswade our selves to repentance to faith to more obedience and willingnesse to serve him and so our hearts are drawn more near to him when we think we draw God near to us in this action we draw our selves near to him and when our hearts are drawn near to him when our faith is strengthened by the arguments that we use then the Lord is moved to do that which before he was not moved to do Not because he is altered or any way changed but because the change is in us we are more fit to receive the mercy that we beg for then before Again Secondly it may be objected many obtain mercies and blessings at Gods hands without prayer therefore it seemes that prayer is not so great a means to obtain mercies because they are ours sometimes without prayer I answer it is true men may have and have usually many great mercies bestowed upon them without prayer but there is a great deal of difference because that mercy which is obtained by prayer it comes with a blessing and it comes by vertue of the promise that the Lord hath made And it is one thing to receive the same mercy in a way of blessing and another thing to receive it i●…n ordinary course The same comfort may come to one man with a blessing and may be conveyed to another man with a curse There is a two-fold way of Gods bestowing of mercies One is when he conveyes them to a man by vertue of a promise Another is when he bestowes them by a common providence When God dispenseth mercies by a common providence thou must not think thy self to be such a gainer in the receiving of such a mercy when thou hast not sought the Lord for it it may be thou hast more cause to judge thy self better in the want of that mercy Ahab had been better to have wanted a vineyard Ieroboam
had better to have wanted the Kingdom Gehazi had better to have wanted Naamans courtefie there goes a curse with those things that we have in that manner when we have them without prayer or when we have them by a common providence when we receive them in the neglect of this duty and yet in the mean time we may have as much as others And though this be that which men are ready to object yet this is the way to forfeit all that they have As you know when men will be ready to take in their goods at the Custom-house and to steal the Custom oft-times it is the way to lose all the whole fraight and to for feit their whole venture So it is here when we use the means that God hath appointed and walk in his way and observe his ordinances then we shall have mercies at Gods hands And when God bestowes them not in mercy as a blessing for so he doth not except you seek to him you must needs conclude that you not onely have them as a curse but in having them out of his way you forfeit all the rest Therefore I say prayer indeed is the means to obtain any thing at Gods hands Hezekiah prayed and he was delivered But here one causion is to be added and that is that it is not every kind of prayer it must be such a prayer as the Lord looks for at ●ur hands it must be a prayer so qualified as he hath appointed for though it be true that prayer be the key that opens the door into the Lords treasury and when we go about to open this lock we must have this key otherwise we go in a wrong way yet faith is the hand that must turn this key There are certain conditions required in prayer Every customary formal ordinary prayer will not prevail with God No 〈◊〉 Saint Paul saith I serve him night and day but I serve him in the spirit you must pray in the spirit that is when you pray to the Lord you must pour forth your spirits to him in your petitions your suites that you make to him must not be such only as your understandings dictate to you but the will and affections the intentions of your souls must go together in the performance of the duty otherwise it is but an hypocritical performance of the duty For this is hypocrisie when a man is neither willing to omit the duty altogether nor careful to do it in that manner that he ought Therefore you must know that you may make a prayer that is but the expression of your 〈◊〉 and will he think you receive such a prayer as th●… No your prayers must be an expression of those holy ●esir●● that arise from the regenerate part it must be the voice of the spirit in you that is the voice of the regenerate part stirred up and acted by the Holy Ghost When your prayers are such prayers though it be true 〈◊〉 flesh is mingled with them they will prevail for ●hat is still required Therefore I say every prayer will not prevail it must be such a kind of prayer as God appoints Now why hath God appointed prayer It is that our hearts may be quickened and drawn near to the Lord that our hearts may be put into a fitter frame of prayer And therefore when thou shalt pray and thy heart never a whit the warmer never a whit the nearer drawn to God by it the business is not done For the same rule is true in this as in other things a business we say is not done when the end is not obtained when the enterprize is not brought to pass So I say you have not prayed say what you will express what you will except your hearts are made warmer by it and drawn nearer to God by it and brought to a better frame by it When you edifie your selves this is the prayer God accepts Therefore we must take heed of that common errour that because we hear that prayer will prevail therefore we use some certain formalities and make some petitions and so we do make account to prevail with God this is the common errour of people we are deceived in this it is not every kind of prayer that will do it An ordinary prayer would not have recovered Hezekiah and restored him to health It was the fault of Gehazi when he had got the staff he thought to recover the child but he wanted Elisha's spirit A man may make a prayer to God but when he wants the spirit of prayer he cannot expect an answer for the promise is not made to such Therefore when we deliver this point to you that prayer is an effectual means to prevail with God for any thing you must understand that those conditions must accompany it that the Lord requires And so much for this point he prayed to the Lord Who spake unto him We must be very brief in this because we hasten to the next verse Two things we may observe out of these words First That We ought to observe what answer the Lord gives to our prayers You see the Holy Ghost notes it here he prayed to the Lord and the Lord gave him a good answer he told him that the thing he desired should be done I say we should learn when we seek to the Lord to consider what answer we have from him Otherwise we do as children that shoot arrows and consider not where they light When we send our prayers and consider not what answer they have it is an argument that we do it not in faith we do it not diligently but in a negligent manner When a Fowler layeth baits and snares to catch birds if he believe them to be effectual he will be still looking to them to see whether any thing be taken or no to see what successe he hath When we come to call upon the Lord we should consider whether our prayers prevail what success they have You see Elias when he prayed to the Lord he sent his servant to see what answer the Lord had given and he sent him seven times to see whether any cloud appeared he was very dilegent to consider whether the Lord gave him any answer to his prayers Whensoever therefore we call upon the Lord we should observe that For indeed in this our walking with God doth consist when we converse with the Lord from day to day as we ought It stands not in this onely that we open our minds to him and make our requests known to him but that we should consider what the Lord doth unto us back again If the Lord grant our requests we ought to take notice of it that we may praise him and give him thanks If he do not answer them that we may consider what the cause is Many causes it may be there are why the Lord doth not hear It may be thou doest not pray aright It may be thou retainest the love of some
particular sinne in thee It may be God doth it for the tryal of thee It is good for thee to observe When any thing falls upon men amisse and contrary to their expectation or to their prayers they are ready to attribute it to other causes it is good rather to say that thou hast prayed amisse and that is the cause of it When a man is distempered in his health either he will say that he hath not taken physick or else it was not physick fit for him it is still forgotten whether he hath prayed to God or whether he hath prayed amisse In Iames 4. there the cause is given you have either not prayed or prayed amisse you ask and receive not because you ask amisse therefore you do not obtain It may be I say that that may be the cause why thy prayers are not heard that thou prayest amisse Therefore you should do in this case as a fisher-man doth that hath cast a bait and hath waited long and nothing taken he takes up the angle and sees whether or no the bait be well placed and whether things be in the right order or no. When we see we do not obtain any thing at Gods hands by our prayers that we have sought the Lord and got no answer let us look well to our prayers and see whether there be not something amisse there Besides it may be when thou prayest thou art mistaken in the thing thou askest it may be the thing thou desirest is not good for thee for there are many cases wherein we seek to the Lord wherein we are perswaded that if we had it it would be good for us but if it were granted it may be it would be our undoing The Lord denies many things to a man in mercy as he grants many things to men in judgement It may be thy great advantage that though thou pray and pray earnestly yet thy requests are denied Again it may be the Lord hath done the thing but in another manner then thou expectest many times the same thing is done though not in the same fashion A man desires money and riches it may be the Lord denies him that and gives him meat and drink and cloathing A man desires his enemies may be at peace with him God denies him this it may be but he gives him a helmet to bear it off and so for other things I say it is to be considered that the Lord may do the same thing in another manner though it be not in the same kind that we expect Besides God may do it by another means then we look for Commonly we pitch upon some means which we think if it fail all is gone but the Lord may go another way to work I will instance no more in these things for this is not the thing that I must stand upon Onely I say that when we make our prayers to God we must consider what answer we have of them And this we should do upon this occasion of Thanksgiving when we have sought to the Lord in prayer and fasting as we have done we are now to consider what answer the Lord hath given he hath removed the judgement we must set it down among the memorandums of his mercy that he hath heard our prayers and healed our land But I say I must not stand upon this The second thing that is to be observed is this And the Lord spake to him Observe that When we pray to the Lord he is exceeding ready to hear As we see he was ready hear to hear Hezekiah And so David and Asa and Iehoshaphat so he will do to us to the end of the world when men seek to him Onely this must be considered that the Lord hath an ear open to our prayer but if it be no prayer if it be but a lip-labour if it want the conditions of prayer the Lord rejects it And this is not because he hearkens not to it but because it is no prayer Therefore make account when thou goest about to pray that God doth encline his ear to hear that is he doth not onely hear the prayers of his servants but also of those that are carnal men of those that are strangers and that are without the covenant as yet As you shall see 2 Chron. 12. It is said that Rehoboam and the Princes humbled themselves and sought to to the Lord and Rehoboam was not upright hearted yet because he and the Princes did humble themselves the Lord did not destroy them but sent them deliverance So did he to Ahab he heard him And so it may be the Lord hath done with us in removing this judgement though it may be our prayers and our humiliation and fasting have been but overly and perfunctory yet it may be the Lord hath heard us for he is ready to hear prayers Although mens hearts be not humbled aright in their prayers yet when men are humbled in any manner before him to shew that he is ready to hear prayers he hears them And this is a thing that should wound our hearts and break them more then any thing in the world to make us see that the Lord is patient and long suffering that though the humiliation of men he not sound and according to what he expects yet he is ready to remove the judgement And this use we should further make of it that if the Lord hear when humiliation is not found what wil he do when our prayers are servent and sound when our humiliation is perfect This is a thing that we ought to take notice of that when the Lord is so ready to hear we should be encouraged to pray and to seek unto him For when the Lord shall do as he hath done with us when he shall stay the plague when he shall say to it as he doth to the raging sea thus far thou shalt go and no further when we look upon this and observe this dealing of the Lord we should have a store house of such experiments as these that we may learn thereby to know the Lord and to trust him that we may be encouraged thereby to seek unto him For when such actions as these are slighted we take his name in vain and the Lord will not hold us guiltless if we take his Name in vain no more will he if we pass by these actions of his without taking notice Therefore it is well that such a day as this is set apart that we may remember it and consider what answer the Lord gives our prayers and acknowledge it but I will not stand to enlarge this The next words are And he gave him a sign You know there is a double ground of asking a sign One is when a man asks a sign to tempt the Lord. As the Iewes asked a sign not out of a desire to profit by it but because they would see what the Lord would do and this Christ denyed them this is a sinful asking of
a sign There is another asking of a sign when it is to confirm our faith when the intention is good and the heart is upright Thus Hezekiah asked a sign and the Lord gave him a sign hence observe that The Lord tenders a weak faith He will not quench the smoaking flax nor break the bruised reed but he is ready to supply it when it is but as a grain of mustard-seed When Hezekiah had not faith enough to believe what the Prophet had told him from the mouth of the Lord the Lord added a sign But I come to the next words And Hezekiah did not render according to the mercies the Lord bestowed upon him Whence this is the observation I will deliver to you that When the Lord bestowes a mercy he looks for praise and thankfulness and that it should bear a proportion to the blessing received For so the words are brought in Hezekiah prayed and the Lord answered him and gave him the thing he desired but Hezekiah rendered not to the Lord according to the Mercies bestowed upon him implying that the Lord looked for something at his hands he expected that he should be thankful Hezekiah was ready to glorifie himself when the Amhassadors came from the King of Babylon and he did not render according to the mercies received This the Lord observed and it is set down noting that when the Lord bestowes a mercy he looks that we should be thankful and that our thankfulness should be according to the mercies This is a point that needeth no proof that the Lord looketh for thankfulness Onely I will shew you why this is a thing that the Lord makes so great account of You must consider that this duty of thankfulness of all other that we can offer to the Lord it is the most free it is the greatest testimony of sincerity and ingenuity in us for when we pray to the Lord it may proceed out of self love but when we are thankful that comes out of love to the Lord prayer may tend to our own profit but thankfulness tends to Gods Glory therefore we should be the more abundant in this duty because the nature of this duty is such as is more commendable it is more free it is a testimony of more sincerity and ingenuity in us Besides it is a duty that stirs us up more to think well of the Lord and to speak well of him for when we come to give thanks for mercies it pitcheth our thoughts upon his goodness and upon the great works he hath done for us and this causeth us to think better of the Lord and makes us the more willing to obey him and therefore it is an acceptable duty Again it is a commendable thing Psal. 33. 1. Rejoyce ye righteous for it is a comely thing to praise the Lord. That is it is a duty of that nature that it is not onely comly at some times as things are comely commonly with reference for nothing in it self is comely but in reference to such and such things but now thankfulness is of that nature that it is alway beautiful and comely at all times because it i● simply so and therefore it continues for ever You know it is the commendation of love that it shall continue when prophesie and faith and other graces shall faile so it is the commendation of thankfulness that even in heaven it is comely for there we shall praise the Lord for ever But now you must know that the Lord doth not onely look for thankfulness but that we should render according to the mercies we have received so that in our thankfulness there must be these four conditions First you must consider that when you come to give thanks for any mercy to the Lord it is not such a free-will offering as that you may chuse whether you will do it or no but you must know that you are bound to it therefore this word yielding here it shewes that it was such a debt as Hezekiah did owe to the Lord. When you are to give thanks therefore you must not go about this duty as if you might do it or not do it and it is no great matter but that it is such a thing as the Lord requires For when the Lord bestowes any mercy upon us he keeps this property still in his own hands to have thanks rendred to him Sutable praise and thanksgiving is the rent and fine as I may say which the Lord would have us give him for all the things we enjoy Now when we do not give him praise we with hold that from him which is his due As when a rent is due to a Land-lord and is not paid him you detain that from him which is his right And you see in this verse that when Hezekiah did not render according to the mercies received wrath came upon him When wrath shall come upon a man for neglecting of a duty it is an argument that it is not so free as that he might neglect it if he please but that he must do it of necessity This is the first thing that you are to consider that the Lord requires it exactly at your hands it is a thing that you owe to the Lord. Secondly you must render according to the mercies received that is there must be a suitableness and proportion between your thankfulness and the mercies bestowed Wherein two things are to be observed One is when you have many mercies you must be much in thankfulness when all that you have are mercies you must alway be giving thanks You shall see it 1 Thes. 5. In all things give thanks for that is the will of God towards you that is it is not enough to be thankful to God for some mercies no nor for mercies in general to say God be thanked for all his benefits and so to name them in the gross but in all things give thanks that is for every particular thing for every mercy received And this is a special thing and a thing that we are exceedingly apt to fail in that we do not give thanks for all things If we could come once to take notice and to particularize the variety of mercies that we have received they would be as so many sparks to kindle a flame of love and to knit us to the Lord when as it may be mercies in the general will not so much affectus And besides when we give thanks so in the general onely we are apt to forget them but when we give thanks in particular for things this quickens us and keeps us near to the Lord. Therefore you must remember this that in your giving thanks you are to remember every thing in particular to render to the Lord according to the mercies bestowed Again Thirdly according to the mercies received This is another condition that the extent of your thankfulnesse be according to the greatnesse of the mercies For you shall observe in the
he conceiveth to be impossible to be attained for he must look upon it as a thing possible to be had afore it can be said that he can will it But Christ is revealed to men in the Church and so propounded not as a thing impossible but as a thing possible now it cannot be said onely that they cannot will but that they will not will and therefore when as men complain that it is impossible to will here is the glory of Gods justice made manifest because there is a freedom in the manner of refusing they might have had Christ if they would It is objected that the Covenant that is made by God seemeth to be made with the elect onely and therefore the condition belongeth onely to them how can Christ belong to all seeing the exhortation and commandement must not exceed the Covenant for the benefit is propounded to the Elect and the condition to be required of none but of such as are within the covenant To this I answer that there is a Covenant of grace and that is double either a general covenant propoudned without exception Let whosoever will come and believe in Christ he shall be saved here is none excluded and that none are excluded out of this general covenant this reason will shew Baptism the seal of the Covenant is to be administered to all within the Church to Infants though afterwards they do not actually and visibly believe Now God would not appoint that the seal of the Covenantshould be given to those to whom it doth not generally belong But secondly there is another Covenant of grace which belongeth peculiarly to the elect for in this God doth not onely promise to give salvation if men believe but he promiseth to give them ability to believe as may be seen Ier. 31. 33. Ezekiel 36. In the first place God promiseth that he wil put his law in their inward parts and that they shall not teach any more every man his neighbour but they shall all know me from the least to the greatest and so the like in other places where God promiseth the thing and ability of performing of it which belongeth onely to the Elect But the other general Covenant belongeth to all without exception Lastly it is here objected that the prayer which Christ made before his death was but onely for some I pray not for the world but for those that thou hast given me out of the world and therefore the death of Christ belongeth to such onely as he made intercession for To this I answer that the intercession and prayer of Christ doth not fall upon his death to make that belong to some and not to others for that is not mentioned in the intercession but the prayer falleth upon the persons to whom his deathis effectual and therefore he prayeth that some may have ability to come that they may believe and be saved though others have not I pray for them I pray not for the rest that belong not to my election Therefore where you finde any other intercession of Christ in any other place you must understand that it falleth not on the act of his redemption but on such to whom his death is made effectual for Christ is made the second Adam and by his death he hath set open the gates of heaven to all that believe but to some he giveth ability to come and to others he denieth it So much for the clearing of this point the use of it followeth And first if Christ be offered to all freely without exception and also seeing God hath commanded and beseech men to come and receive him then let us take good heed of refusing of it for if there be no greater mercy then the offer of Christ so then there is no greater curse followeth then if it be refused For the clearing of this point we are to know that we are all by nature enemies to God and this enmity we encrease by our personal rebellions and so we are become liable to the curse man now being in this condition God sendeth forth his messengers to beseech men to be reconciled assuring them that the pardon is general no matter what they are or have been but if they thirst after Christ he is for them but indeed you must take whole Christ as well as Priest or Prophet as a King to rule over all your affections hereupon some take him and others will not they think the condition too hard and therefore they will not forgo their profits and pleasurs and their liberties falsly so called and therefore notwithstanding this year of Jubile they love their old master still that is the lust that they serve and they would rather be bored in the ear to serve them perpetually they love the flesh-pots of Egypt and loathe this spiritual Manna notwithstanding it is the most precious and excellent that ever was offered to mankind Now this I say of all the sins that can be committed Original sins All our personal rebellions provoke not God so much to anger as the rejection of his Son for this contempt of the Gospel we know how angry God was with those that refused to come to the Marriage of his Son they had in many things carried themselves stubbornly against God aforetime yet God was never so angry as now he was now angry to the death A resemblance of this we have in the Iewes before they entered into the land of Canaan when they refused the offer that God made to them nothing angered God so much as this they had committed grosse idolatry and many great rebellions yet the refusing of Gods mercies in offering them that good land provoked God more to wrath then all the rest and now he sweares in his wrath that they should not enter into his rest and so cut them off but Caleb and Ioshua and God was angry afterwards with them many times yet his wrath came not upon them to the uttermost till they had refused Christ because the Gospel was preached so freely and Christ offered unto them and they refused it therefore the wrath of God came upon them as it is to be seen at this day This is a point that we had need to put you in mind of because many when they look back upon their former wayes and see what they have done consider not what they do when they do refuse Christ Iesus and the pardon that hath been offered how they have taken the grace of God in vain whereas I assure you whatsoever your sins be sins often committed against conscience and knowledge which are the circumstances that aggrevateth sin they are nothing to the rfeusing of the pardon offered in Christ. To this end consider that when Christ is offered it is not such an offer as when a man offereth a thing if it be not taken the party offering looseth nothing but it is such an offer as when the thing offered is spilt and lost if it be not