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A53275 The generation of seekers, or, The right manner of the saints addresses to the throne of grace in two treatises : the first being a sober vindication of the spirit of prayer, with the resolution of diverse practical cases related thereunto : the second a plain exposition of the Lord's prayer, with notes and application, mainly intended as a directory to those who desire to attain the gift of prayer. Oldfield, John, 1627?-1682. 1671 (1671) Wing O221; ESTC R31049 228,802 474

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6. 18. Praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance Let none cavillingly object That we are bid here to pray alwayes but yet in the Spirit for besides that it is doubtful whether the Spirit of God be meant here it follows not hence that we must never pray but when moved by the Spirit We ought indeed alwayes to beg the assistance of Gods Spirit but if God in justice withhold his Spirit must we therefore neglect our duty But more of this by and by Daily prayer is enjoyned us in that pattern which our blessed Saviour hath prescribed us and so much was typified by the Morning and Evening Sacrifice As for the Practice of the Saints Psal 55. 17. Evening and Morning and at Noon will I pray and cry aloud Dan. 6. 10. Daniel kneeled upon his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his God as he did aforetime Note that it was his constant practise It were casie to add more here but this may suffice to convince those that are not wilfully blinded I would only add that this Opinion would destroy all stated publique prayer since we cannot tye up the Spirit to our times yet there are frequent injunctions for it in the Word Let that one Text suffice 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Object Will any yet urge the Text in hand and tell me that without the Spirits help we know not what to ask and therefore our prayers will be but vain bablings or taking Gods name in vain I answer 1. True indeed we cannot pray as we ought without the help of Gods Spirit but I urge Is the Obligation destroyed when assistance is denyed No this shews us the sad condition of every carnal and unregenerate person and all such as have not the Spirit what a sad Dilemma they are in If they pray not they sin by neglecting a manifest duty if they pray they sin by an ill management of it This should make us hasten out of that doleful state and I would add here that there is aliquid tertium a third way I say not that we are absolutely bound to pray without the Spirit nor yet to neglect the duty because we have not the Spirit but we are speedily to go to Christ and accept him on Gospel Terms that the Spirit may be poured out upon us from on high that we may have the spirit of grace and supplication given us 2. I may further answer that though God sometimes vouchsafe his Spirit to stir up his people to prayer yet this is not to be presumed or constantly expected or depended on It s help is not alwayes Antecedent to the duty but comes in upon our endeavours Our work is to do what we can in hope that God will by his Spirit enable us to do what of our selvs we cannot He that sits down resolving to do nothing till the Spirit put him on doth Tempt the Lord and unwarrantably expect what God hath no where absolutely promised I would therefore say to the Christian that complains of deadness and indisposition as David to Solomon Arise 1 Chron. 22. 16. and be doing and the Lord will be with thee It may be observed how low and disconsolate David is in the beginning of some Psalms and yet how full of Faith and Confidence in the close May we not rationally think that the Spirit of God raised him up and came in upon him while we was meditating or praying I shall but lay this one thing before those that oppose this Truth Do you forbear to plow or sow till God bid you till he come and tell you He will bless your labours and send rain and seasonable weather c. Or do you forbear Food or Physick till God give you assurance that he will bless the creatures and make them nourishing and healthful No but you plow and sow eat and drink c. expecting Gods blessing He that ploweth ploweth in hope 1 Cor. 9. 10. And should we not do the like in spirituals not stay till we have a particular command or impulse of the Spirit but take all opportunities to read hear pray c. in expectation both of Gods assistance in and his blessing upon our endeavours CHAP. V. A Fourth Case concerning the help of the Spirit in prayer may be this Case 4. What is on our part to be done that we may enjoy this great Priviledge that our prayers may not be the meer expressions of our lips or workings of our own hearts but the breathings of Gods Spirit A Question which deserves our serious thoughts though I shall dispatch it in a few words leaving many things to your own meditation and enlargement Answ 1. We can do nothing to merit or engage the Spirit of God to attend us in our prayers You have already heard that the Spirit is a free Agent not working by constraint or necessity nor can all our endeavours oblige him to us Far be it from us to imagine that we have any of that preparatory or congruous Merit the Papists dream of whereby we may deserve the graces of the Spirit All grace is the free and undeserved gift of God we may put that Question to those that have the greatest measures of grace Who maketh thee to differ 1 Cor. 4. 7. from another and what hast thou that thou didst not receive i. e. freely undeservedly Now if thou didst receive it why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it i. e. Why dost thou boast as if it were purchased by thy own endeavours or deservings 2. Yet something may be done in order to our receiving or being capable of the gifts and assistances of the Spirit that is in the doing whereof God may graciously bestow his Spirit not because we deserve it but because he hath graciously promised to bestow it and hath made that the condition upon which he will give his Spirit 1. The first and great condition is That we accept Jesus Christ according to the tender of the Gospel The Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father is the Priviledge Gal. 4. 6. of Children Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Observe here He is called the Spirit of his Son not only because the father hath not given his Spirit John 3. 34. 14. 16. by measure that is above measure unto him but because he procures the sending of the Spirit with all the gifts and graces of it It will not here be necessary to descend into that intricate Labyrinth Whether the Spirit as to some of its graces and operations be not received into the soul before its actual close with Christ the Affirmative whereof as to the order of Nature seems to me unquestionable But as to the Case in hand it is sufficient to know that the Spirit of Supplication is only their Priviledge who are Sons and Sons none
Duty p. 19. and this 1. With reference to the matter Where 1. It teacheth to prefer Spirituals before temporals 2. Amongst spirituals to ask what 's most needful 3. Brings one matter suitable to each part of prayer 4. Suggest's arguments 5. Something 's brings Scripture expressions to remembrance pag. 10 24. 2. With respect to the manner 1. By enlarging affections 2. Exciting graces as 3. As to the souls continuance in the duty it helps against discouragements Confidence Humility pag. 24 25. 1. From God 2. From our selves 3. From others pag. 26 27. CHAP. III. The II. Case HOw we may distinguish the motions of the Spirit from those things that carry resemblance to it pag. 28. I. From Satanical Impulses which are 1. Violent and unreasonable 2. Vnseasonable in three things 3. Ineffectual pag. 29 30. To which is added 1. A necessary Caution pag. 34. 2. A profitable Question answer'd pag. 35. II. From the Gift of prayer 1. The Gift is but the outside of the Duty whence Two consequences and two contrary to those as to the Spirit of Prayer 2. The Gift alone swels 3. Lookes more at performance than success and therefore neglects 1. Interest in Christ 2. Purity of heart which the Spirit mainly looks at pag. 36 -43. III. From the Vrgings of natural conscience Which are 1. Only upon some extraordinary occasion 2. Without assistance brought in 3. Easily discharged 4. Little looks at the Issue of Duty pag. 43 -47. IV. From the good Moods and Fits which sometimes come upon a meer natural man which differ from it pag. 47. 48 49. 1. In their Root and cause 49. 50 51. 2. In their Fruits and consequences 1. They leave a man what he was before 2. They encourage to more looseness after 3. Make us proud 4. Are eas●ly put off p. 51-56 CHAP. IV. The III. Case WHether want of the Spirit 's assistance will excuse our neglect of the Duty pag. 56. Where Prop. 1. A man may want the Spirit 's Assistance either 1. When he is utterly voyd of the Spirit p. 57. 2. When he wants the actual motions and help of it p. 58. 2. The Assistance of the Spirit is God's gratious vouchsafement ibid. 3. Prayer is a duty indispensably arising from our Relation to God and therefore depends not upon the vouchsafement or withholding of the Spirit ibid. Proved by Arguments 1. The contrary Assertion fights against all other duties as well as prayer pag. 59. 2. That which is a punishment of sin cannot be an excuse for the neglect of duty p. 60. 3. The precepts for prayer injoyn assiduity and the Patterns of the Saints agree thereto p. 61. Obj. But we cannot pray without the Spirit 's help p. 62 Answ 1. Yet the Obligation is not destroyed when assistance is denyed c. Answ 2. The Spirit 's help is not alwayes Antecedent to the duty but comes in upon our endeavour 62. 63. CHAP. V. The IV. Case WHat is on our part to be done that we may enjoy the help of the Spirit in prayer p. 63. 1. We can do nothing by way of merit to engage the Spirit 's help ibid. 2. Yet something may be done upon which God may graciously vouchsafe his Spirit p. 64. 1. Accept Jesus Christ upon Gospel-Termes ibid. 2. Purge out these corruptions which damp the Spirit p. 64 65. 3. Begge the Spirit 's help p. 66. 4. Meditate p. 67. 5. Stir up what gifts and graces we have p. 68. Obj. None of these things can be done except we have the Spirit p. 69. Answ 1. Man is not a meer stone ib. p. 70. 2. The Spirit comes in with such directions given by a Minister p. 71 72. Here are added two Motives 1. From the misery of not having the Spirit p. 73 -76 2. The dignity of This Priviledge p. 76 77. CHAP. VI. The V. Case WHat is to be done that we may have the Spirit 's help Continued to use p. 78. Premised 1. As the bestowing so the Continuance of this mercy is the meer indulgence of Heaven p. 79. 2. God vouchsafes or withholds his Spirit as he sees best for his people p. 80. 3. Yet ordinarily some miscarriage in us provokes God to withdraw p. 81. To the Case 1. Beware of those things which may grieve away Spirit ibid. As 1. Pride in enlargements pag. 82. 2. Self-sufficiency ibid. 3. Corruption Cherished p. 83. 4. Lazyness and sluggishness ib. and p. 84. 2. Let the Spirit 's motions find ready and hearty entertainment p. 85. 3. Make the best improvement thereof p. 86. 1. In holy wrestling p. 87. 2. As an Evidence to this great Truth p. 88. 3. As an Inducement to frequency and constancy in the duty p. 89 90. 4. Into Thankfulness p. 91. 4. Beg earnestly the Continuance of it ib. and pag. 92. 5. Be willing to follow the Conduct of the Spirit pag. 93 94. 6. Abide in Christ i. e. 1. In the Truth of Christ 2. Faith in Christ 3. Love of Christ p. 94 -97 CHAP. VII The VI. Case WHat is to be done for the recovery of the Spirit 's help when withdrawn p. 98. Premised 1. We may be 〈◊〉 to be deprived of the Spirit 1. As to that degree in which we have had it ibid. 2. Wholly as to our own apprehension p. 99. 2. The Spirit 's return must be free grace and rich grace ibid. To the Case 1. Endeavour to find out what sin or sins may have deprived thee of it Commonly 1. Sins against light 2. Customarry sin long continued in 3. Sins more directly against the Spirit p. 100 -103. 2. Humble thy self and beg pardon p. 103 -106. 3. Earnestly beg the return of the Spirit p. 106 -108. 4. Desist not from duty under these withdrawments pag. 109. 5. Make much of and be very thankeful for any degree we have ibid. 6. During the Spirit 's with-drawments be very plyable to his commands p. 110 111. CHAP. VIII The VII Case WHether stated and straited formes hinder the Spirits operations p. 112. Prop. 1. Stated formes are lawful and may be useful and helpful yea necessary In Case 1. Of gross ignorance 2. Inability to express our selves before others 3. Some kind of distempers which craze the memory c. p. 115 -116. Prop. 2. Yet hence it follows not that any should satisfy themselves herewith or that others should impose them p. 116 117. Reas 1. A prescribed form doth that which is of the nature of prayer less perfectly p. 118. 2. In it we cannot so particularly express our emergent wants or desires to God ibid. 3. The Spirit is wont in Prayer to excite special affections which a form much hinders pag. 119. 4. In a form Oscitancy and Sluggishness is more apt to seize upon us ibid. 5. A prayer accommodated to present emergencies must needs stir up more kindly affections p. 120 121. So that a conceived Prayer 1. Leaves the soul more freedom to exert present affections 2. affords more opportunity of
he thought of and things cast in which he sees himself to stand in great need of The like I might say of Prayer for others and of Thanksgiving 4. In Petitions the Spirit not only teacheth what to ask but how to plead And herein lies much of the Spirits assistance in furnishing a soul with powerful and prevailing arguments You may observe what sinews what strength of Argument is coucht in the prayers of the Saints in Scripture as in the prayers of Moses David Daniel Jehoshaphat Sometimes from the Nature and Attributes of God his Goodness Truth Faithfulness Sometimes from the Promises Sometimes from their own misery and helplessness yea the Spirit teacheth to make an argument of that which seems to make against them Psal 25. 11. Pardon my sin O Lord for it is great Here is an argument from the greatness of sin which might rather plead against him yet there is much s●rength in it Either thus Thou art a God of great mercies and therefore it is suitable to thy nature to 〈◊〉 great sin Or thus Lord I see my sin I am sensible of the hainousness of it and therefore am a fit subject for a pardon The woman of Canaan is a fit and famous Instance How doth she invert Christs arguments and makes that a plea for her which is urged against her Matth. 15. 22. Surely this holy Art is taught by the Spirit of God Amongst which arguments suitable Promises are most frequent and prevalent Promises and Prayers differing only as the figures of Hollingworth's Gods Spirit on the Throne 6 and 9 as a good man hath wittily observed the one pointing downwards towards us the other upward towards God 5. I may add here though it is the least part of this great Priviledge that the Spirit of God though it doth not guide the Tongue infallibly yet it doth sometimes carry a child of God even above himself in fulness and suitableness of expression helps him to clothe his petitions in Scripture-phrase and fills his mouth with words as well as his heart with affections But this may suffice as to the Spirits help in the matter of prayer 2. It helps not only for matter but for manner also Something to this lies in those words of the Text Groanings which 〈◊〉 be uttered which as was said in the Explication is the lowest way though not the least effectual To hint a few particulars 1. It helps by enlarging the affections Words are but the outside of prayer Sighs and groans are the language God understands and delights in The Spirit teacheth importunity draws sighs from the hearts ●ears from the eyes Parts may teach eloquence and the neat ordering of our prayers and nature it self may furnish with some flashly and spurious affections But the Spirit wings the affections enlargeth the heart This causeth reachings-forth of the soul after God and enables it to wrestle with a holy violence sheds abroad the love of God in the heart widens the desires spiritualizeth our joy grief anger zeal and the rest of the passions All which are necessary instruments in prayer 2. It helps by exciting and exercising its own grades here is its most proper work these lie as sparks under the ashes till the Spirit of God blow them up as it works grace so it must set it at work It is said Act. 5. 5. Sathan filled their hearts to lie c. So the Spirit fills the hearts of Gods people to pray Here we have need of the Spirits help to lift else our hearts and graces would lie unstirred and unexercised To instance in one or two of many leaving the rest to your own meditation 1. It fills the soul with a holy confidence teaches to cry Abba Father Rom. 8. Sometimes in the duty Psal 20. 6. Now I know that the Lord saveth his Anointed Sometimes after Hannah's countenance cleared from former sadness discovered the confidence of her soul that her Petition should be granted How often have the Saints risen off their knees with raised expectations as if the things askt were already given in 2. Yet it keeps the soul in a humble awfull frame makes it serious and full of reverence Lust would deal basely and affrontingly with God but the Spirit makes us take beed to our feet and teacheth us not to be rash with our mouths or hasty to utter any thing before God Eccles 5. 1 2. Makes us Take beed to our wayes that we offend not with our tongue Psal 39. 1. restrains petulancy and extravagancy of wit and words teaches to avoid swelling words of vanity and so far as we enjoy its assistance it helps us to utter our desires in words of truth and soberness This of much more that might have been spoken concerning the Spirits assistance with reference to the manner of the duty 3. As it helps in the matter and manner so it enables to persevere not only sets us in but carries thorow and enables us to pray and not ●aint not to let the Lord Luk. 18. 1. go till he bless us Now here there are many things to discourage and take us off against all which the So●rit doth mightny strengthen and fortifie a Christian according to that prayer of Paul for the Ephesians That they might be strengthened with might by the Eph. 3. 16. Spirit in the inward man I shall briefly touch upon two or three which are most obvious and troublesome to Gods children 1. It helps us to persevere in prayer notwithstanding Exod. 31. 10 11. Gen. 32. 26. Jer. 14. 11 13. Matth. 15. 22. discouragements from God Though God bid Moses let him alone and Jacob let him go though he forbids the Prophet Jeremy to pray for the people though our Saviour gives harsh and discouraging answers to the woman of Canaan yet they follow on It teaches to answer Objections to read love and pity in Gods heart when we can see nothing but frowns in his face to catch faster hold when he seems to throw us off to interpret Gods answers by terrible things contrary to the natural import and to believe and expect contrary to our sense and experience to hope against hope c. 2. Against discouragements from our selves Unbelief short-spiritedness and the like corruptions which would make us break out as he 2 Kings 6. 33. This evil is of the Lord why should I wait upon him any longer Oh but the Spirit strengthens our faith lengthens out our patience bespeaks us in the language of David to his own soul Psal 42. ult Why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me 3. Against discouragements from others from the world or from the Devil How would men scoff or jeer us out of our attendance on God What profit is it that you Mal. 3. 14. keep his Ordinances in that you walk mournfully before the Lord of Hosts What get you by all your whining prayers your creeping into corners c. Here the Spirit comes in
bemoan his case tell his tale and lay open his misery and want before him Do you think this man though never so simple and ignorant would lose it for asking Or would he come only bluntly and briefly thus I pray you Sir give me this Farm No undoubtedly without any help or learning he would find plenty both of reasons and words with many moving terms and passonate eloquence to unfold his distressed estate and to stir up compassion He would tell him the Story of his hard and cruel usage by his former Landlord how he had first raised his Fines then his rents c. and at length turned him out of all into the wide and hard-hearted world And therefore upon the knees of his much vexed and broken heart he bigs and entreats that he would be good to him else he and his Wise and his many poor Children are like all to go a begging If he would please to give him succour and a resting place in his great distress and misery he and all his should be bound to pray for him and do him their utmost service faithfully so long as they lived Want of earthly necessaries would enforce and furnish the simplest man in the world to speak thus or in the like manner How much more then if a man had sense of his spiritual miseries and wants would he find words enough with fervency of Spirit to sue unto the Lord of Heaven Thus that Pious and Learned man with more to that purpose Misery felt will teach both Rhetorick and importunity Whence that Proverb had its original Qui nescit orare discat navigare He that cannot pray let him go to Sea The Storm could teach those Marriners in Jonah every Jonah 1. 5. Hos 5. ult one to call upon his God In their affliction they will seek me early Dir●ct 3. Exercise and conscientious practice is a singular help to improvement This in all things Arts Sciences and Mechanick imployments begets dexterity This the Apostle prescribes to Timothy Exercise 1 Tim. 4. 7. thy self unto Godliness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word borrowed from Wrestlers who practised naked and imports both industry and frequency Godliness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word principally imports the Worship of God whereof prayer is a special part Without this it is impossible to arrive at any good measure of ability And here it would be expedient for those that desire praying gifts to be much in secret not meerly that they may exercise it as a gift but that they may with more freedom pour out their soul to God or to joyn with some bosome friend before whom they may with less fear or shame fac'tness use what gifts they have Nor will be amiss to have some Heads or expressions laid in as a foundation to build upon amongst which what can be more full than the pattern which our blessed Saviour hath prescribed of the use whereof I have spoken elsewhere Direct 4. Joyn thy self in society with those that are able and best qualified this way Propose such for thy imitation Others gifts exercised are as you have heard very edifying And hence it is that those that have had their Education in prayerful families though sometimes vile and debauch't in their practices have attained great abilities in that kind He that walks Prov. 13. 20. with wise men shall be wise Nature it self leads us to the imitation of and conformity with those we converse with If Joseph in Pharaoh's Court could learn the Court-Oath however some excuse it Why may not we by conversing with praying Christians get praying abilities Examples are the shortest cut to attain any kind of Art though I would not have Christians only art in prayer or as Simon Magus desire the gift that they may make advantage of it but desire it for thy eternal good It is to be sadly lamented that some otherwise godly and practical Christians yet having spent their younger years in prayerless families can never be brought to the practice of this duty except in a form and this is it that makes the gift of prayer not only rare but to be scorned and derided as a piece of Fanaticism Therefore joyn thy self to prayerful Christians Direct 5. But above all earnestly as thou canst beg of God a serious gracious heart without which couldst thou pray with the tongue of men and Angels it would profit thee nothing Yea it would be a Talent of Lead to sink thee deeper into Hell This will both furnish thee for and engage thee in the duty This will lay such a necessity upon thee that bashfulness or what else hinders thee will be laid aside And it will furnish thee with such affections and graces as will suggest tolerable expressions such as neither God will reject nor good men dare despise Since prayer rightly performed is grace exercised and affections dictate expressions Where these are there will not not be a total defect of those No sooner is Paul converted as is above noted but Behold he prayes Labour therefore to lay Acts 9. 11. the foundation of praying abilities in sound conversion Get the Spirit of God to sanctifie renew and quicken thee and thou shalt not want its assistance in what measure God shall see it convenient for thee In particular Beg to have thy heart convinced of the necessity of the duty and then beg ability to perform it then pray that God will heal thy sinful bashfulness that thy stammering Tongue may speak plainly c. Thus I have in speaking to these seven Cases occasionally touch't upon most of that practical matter which would have fallen under several Doctrines if I had handled the Text in an ordinary Sermon-Method I hope through Gods blessing it may not be less profitable to your souls in the review of it as it hath not been less pains to me in the composing of it CHAP. IX THE Second Doctrine from the Relative consideration of the words remains to be spoken to which was this Doct. The Spirits help in prayer is a singular Priviledge and Comfort to Gods Children in affliction The ground of the Doctrine is clear The scope of the Apostle is to comfort Believers under pressing afflictions Having therefore laid down other grounds of comfort he brings in this with a connexive Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 likewise also q. d. add this also as a special ground of comfort that the Spirit it self helpeth The Doctrine for the more distinct handling falls into two Propositions 1. That God vouchsafes the Spirit of prayer to his afflicted children 2. That it is a singular comfort to enjoy it I shall touch upon each severally and then apply them together To the first Saints under trouble have the Spirits help in prayer When a load of afflictions is on their backs God sends his Spirit into their hearts teaching them to cry Abba Father then especially though not only I would be understood thus 1. Not alwayes in a full measure with
precious Promises made to prayer Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will Psal 50. 15 bear thee And ye shall seek me and find me Jer. 29. 13. when ye shall search for me with all your heart And it shall come to pass that before Isa 65. 24. they call I will answer and whiles they are yet speaking I will hear How can a soul but grow in hope as he feels the Spirit of prayer more and more powerful in him In the fear of the Lord is strong confidence Prov. 14. 26. Prayer is a singular part of the fear or worship of God and causes confidence Prayer hath had such attestations from Heaven and is propt up with such promises in the Word that when it is spiritually performed it cannot but elevate the soul to a high pitch of expectation Psal 22. 1. 6. The Psal ● 1. 6. Church prayes earnestly for the King and then concludes with confidence Now know I that the Lord saveth his anointed he will hear from his holy Heaven with the saving strength of his right hand When God prepares Psal 10. 17. the heart it is a certain pledge he will cause his ear to hear We may argue in this Case as Manaoh's Wife If the Lord were pleased to kill us he would not have received Judges 13. 23. a burnt-offering and a meat-offering at our hands So if the Lord would not hear our prayers he would never put such a Spirit of Supplication into our hearts 4. The Spirit of prayer also se●cheth in support under affliction it draws down strength from Heaven as in that of David before mentioned In the day when I cryed thou Psal 138. ●3 answeredst me and strengthnedst me with strength in my soul Strong cries bring fresh supplies of strength and procure ability to bear Paul when he prevails not for the removal of that Thorn in the flesh yet hath this comfortable 2 Cor. 12. 8 9. answer My grace shall be sufficient for thee q. d. I will not remove thy burden but I will renew thy strength This is promised in that sweet Scripture They Isa 40. 31. that wait on the Lord and prayer is a singular way of waiting shall renew their strength Faith Hope Love Parience and every other grace is exceedingly strengthned by prayer and in this respect it brings case as was shewed above as a man at full strength can with a little finger bear away what a Child cannot lift Paul could do or suffer all things through Phil. 4. 13. Christ strengthning him this strength is derived by prayer rightly performed Therefore is it that he prayes so earnestly that God would strengthen the Ephesians with Eph. 3. 16. might by his Spirit in their inward man 5. By this also the sanctification of afflictions is procured It not only procures strength to bear but grace also to improve It is the true Philosophers-Stone that turns all it toucheth into Gold Like the skilful Apothecary it makes out of Poyson an Antidote against Poyson As every creature so 1 Tim ● 4 5. every cross and trouble is sanctified by prayer so that they become blessings to us Prayer draws our the vertue of that great Gospel-promise that all things shall work together Rom. 8 28. for good And who knows the benefits that are brought to Gods people by sanctified afflictions How are corruptions mortified graces refined envigorated and purged from their drossy mixtures How are the after visits of Heaven rendred abundantly sweeter and which I would especially instance in by pressing afflictions sanctified we learn to press more into the Divine presence where the Spirit of prayer is it rises higher by afflictions as Noah's Ark did by the encrease of the waters Let not therefore the ignorant world wonder that the Saints in the midst of pressing afflictions 1 Pet. 1. 6 8. can rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory for the Spirit of prayer going along with those afflictions turns them into singular advantages Well may they count it all Jam. 1. 2 3. joy when they fall into divers Temptations knowing that the trying of their faith worketh Rom. 5. 3 4 patience and patience experience and experience hope which maketh not ashamed This effect David found that his Corrections became Psal 119. 67. Instructions Before I was afflicted I went astray but now have I kept thy word and therefore saw cause to say It is good for 71. me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy Statutes yea to acknowledge that in faithfulness God had afflicted him Now 75. this happy fruit is the product of prayer God may indeed turn the afflictions of a wicked man to good but it is by teaching him to pray Manasseh when he was in affliction besought the Lord his God and 2. Chron. 33. 12 13. humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers and prayed unto him and he was entreated of him Afflictions stir up prayer and prayer sactifies afflictions and sactified afflictions may be put into the Catalogue of our choicest blessings 6. And this also when the Lord sees it good procures a happy issue and deliverance It is the means which God hath appointed The sorrows of Death compassed me and the pains of Hell gate hold upon me Then called I upon the name of the Lord Psal 116. 3 4 7 8. and the issue was God dealt bountifully with him delivered his soul from death his eyes from tears and his feet from falling Prayer rightly performed hath this certain effect to procure deliverance with one only exception unless God in his infinite Wisdom see it more for his glory and for our spiritual and eternal good to be kept still in the surnace and this is such an exception as every gracious soul will gladly admit of But I may yet rise higher The Spirit of Prayer not only procures deliverance but deliverance in mercy deliverance sanctified and that is a pledge of eternal deliverance Others may be delivered but theirs is not so much a Preservation as a Reservation to some sadder calamity but there is this in Deliverance procured by prayer that the soul may be assured God intends him good by it These are a few of those infinite advantages which the Spirit of prayer brings along with it to Gods afflicted servants but it is impossible to enumerate all These are but as a cluster or two in comparison of the full Vintage Do but look over the precious promises made to the people of God in their straits take notice how many how great things are promised and so many are the Advantages which the Spirit of prayer brings with it for that is the key which opens those Treasuries that sets those Conduits a running and drains out the sweetness and vertue of them Thus you have each part of the Doctrine confirmed and made good Let us now see what Improvement may be made of
as to concern their prayers in their Brethrens necessities A duty practised by all the genuine children of God See Psalm 25. ult and 51. ult and 122. 6 7 8. and 137. 5. Neh. 1. 4 5. Isa 62. 1 7. Ephes 1. 16. 1 Thess 1. 2. Phil. 4. c. Col. 2. 1 2. And lest you should think that this is only the duty of publick officers as Paul was the injunction is upon all and for all Eph. 6. 18. Use 1 This blame our private-Spiritedness especially in our single addresses to God are not our private approaches to the Throne of grace too private in this respect how little doe wee interest others especially the community of the faithfull in our prayers how unbeseeming Saints is this narrow-spiritedness Our prayers should be like the Sun whose beames and influences are universally communicated or rather wee should be like our heavenly Father who causes his Sun to shine Matth. 5. 47. how seldom doe wee say Our Father with any Enlargement of heart towards others nay so far wee are I feare from remembring the common concernments of the Church that wee are too little mindfull of our Relations families Neighbourhood Christians this is not a right Gospel Spirit wee follow not our pattern when wee thus confine our devotions 2. Let us therefore put on bowels of Brotherly tenderness and compassion that wee may put up hearty prayers for others for all the Saints the way to attaine this generall Spiritedness is to look more at the grand concernments of Gods name and honor then will our prayers be more publick when wee prefer the glory of God which is chiefly bound up in the publick concernments of his Church before our owne welfare To put you upon getting this frame consider 1. Nothing is a better evidence of your reall membership in the Church 't is naturall to the members of the Spirituall body to 1 Cor. 1● 25. 2 Cor. 1● 28. have the same care one for another Herein Paul prooved himself a lively member by his care of all the Churches and where this care is it will vent it self as Pauls did in earnest prayers for the whole Churche's welfare 2. Consider how advantagious this is how infinitly your charity will be multiplyed in its returns upon you by thus putting our prayers into the common stock wee become interested in the common stock and this is indeed a singular benefit flowing from that Article of the Communion of Saints hereby all the Saints are our Factors as wee are theirs and Oh what a thriving trade may be driven by thus making our prayers a common stock Qu. But must wee pray for none but those of whom wee have ground to hope that God is their Father Answ For these wee must especially pray yet for others also that God may be their Father for wee know not what is in the womb of Gods decrees towards those that are yet vile and profligate Sinners Our Saviour prayes not only for those that did but also for those that should beleeve on his name John 17. 20. The Church must travell in birth of those that are yet unborn even for unconverted nations for Sisters that have no breasts Cant. 8. 8. But so that a difference be made in our prayers for them and the faithfull and our petitions suited to their condition CHAP. III. Which art in Heaven WEe have heard something spoken to the first part of the Preface wherein God is described by his Relation to us I proceed to the second part which describes him by his Eminency above us and this is by the designation of the place where hee eminently shews himself I shall not unnecessarily enlarge but keep mee within the bounds of my intended brevity and my eye upon the mark I first proposed viz. to teach you to pray Take what I shall say to this in this single Observation Doctr. 5 In our addresses to God by prayer wee must come to him as in heaven our addresses to God must be directed thither This Sal●mon minds us of as a Curb to rashness and vain-babling Eccles 5. 2. and hither good Jehoshaphat directs his prayer 2 Chron. 20. 6. 'T is needless to multiply Scripture-proofs rather let us explaine How wee are to conceive God to be in heaven And then give Reasons of the point Explic. And 1. we are not to goe to as God if confined or locally circumscribed in heaven 'T is a piece of Atheisme to limit God there Joh 22. 12 13 14. To suppose God confined within the circuit of heaven and not to regard what is done on earth is the next way to become an Atheist There 's little difference betwixt no God at all and a God so limited nor Secondly Are wee to imagine which would follow upon the former that God must locally descend from heaven when hee heares or gives answer to our prayers his being in heaven doth not nor must is in our conceptions of him suppose him at a distance from us on earth wee must remember that of David Psam 139. 1 12. that hee is present with us that hee hath beset us behind and before c. that hee is intime nostro intimior nearer us than wee are to our selves And as they sung of old hee is extra caelum non exclusus intra coelum non inclusus that hee is so in heaven as not included and so out of Heaven as not excluded a circle whose center is every where and circumference no where in a word wee are not to frame any conceptions of God from his being in heaven prejudiciall either to his generall presence in all places or to his speciall presence with his people in their addresses to him But Thirdly By his being in heaven wee are to understand that more speciall and glorious manifestation of himself which hee there vouchsafes to the Angels and glorified Spirits the more immediate exhibitions and discoveries of his glory such as none but they enjoy in this sense hee is said to 1 Tim. 6. 16. dwell in the light which no man can approach unto whom no man hath seen nor can see So that in this sense wee are to call upon God as in Heaven And this Reas 1 1. To distinguish God from and declare his eminency above all other false Gods and dunghill-deities which are on earth and confined to their places whence they cannot moove 2. For it is sufficient to name these things To beget in our hearts awfull and reverentiall apprehensions of the divine Majesty the place speaks his sublimity and he speaks in us humility This is the Emphasis of that Scripture Eccl. 5. 2. God is in heaven and thou art on earth therefore let thy words be few q. d. Speake with that reverence as becomes his eminency and thy distance 3. To take off our thoughts from the gross Idolatrous conceptions of a visible deity such as the Heathens fancied and from the carnall Jews conceit of Gods confining himself to a place as
putting up suitable Petitions 3. More calls out and imployes the soul 4. Is singularly helpful for Edefication 5. Better discovers to a man the present frame of his heart p. 122 123. These things applyed to the Case 1. By a fourfold Distinction 2. Then the direct Answer given p. 124 -128. A Question added viz. What may be done for the attainment of present abilities in prayer p. 128. Answ 1. Acquaint thy self with the Word of God pag. 129. 2. Retire into thy own heart pag. 129 130. 3. Exercise p. 131. 4. Joyn in society with able Christians p. 132. 5. Earnestly beg a serious gracious heart p. 133 134. CHAP. IX THe second Doctrine In two Propositions p. 135. I. Saints usually have the Spirit 's help in Trouble How this to be understood Confirmed by a single argument viz. That the Saints in Trouble have prayed more and more feruently c. Strengthned by a two fold consideration 1. How they prayed 2. How they sped p. 135 -142. II. The Spirit 's help in Prayer is a singular Priviledge and Comfort to God's afflicted Servants p. 142. Reas 1. It carries in it much of Evidence 2. It brings ease 3. Confidence 4. Support 5. Sanctification 6. A happy Issue and deliverance when God sees it good for us p. 142 -149. CHAP. X. BOth Parts of the Doctrine applyed together p. 150. I. To those that want the spirit of prayer and such 1. Who scorne and deride it the sin and folly of these detected ibid. 2. Who care not for it p. 151 152. Where considerations representing their sad condition especially if Trouble come 1. Afflictions come upon such armed with sad Temptations to make them run Either 1. To helpless helps 2. Distressing helps 3. Sinful helps Or 4. To break out into blasphemy c. p. 153 -160. 2. Such ordinarily lose the benefit of affliction p. 160. 3. It 's a probable evidence of a soul in a state of wrath p. 161 162. 4. The whole weight of an affliction lies upon himself p. 163. CHAP. XI 3. SVch as want it at least in their own sense and complian of the want of it p. 164. 1. Supposing they want it there is hope of it's return ibid. 2. It 's to be hoped they do not altogether want it p. 165. For. 1. Whence are those complaints 166. 2. Can they not pray with groans c. p. 167. 3. Have they not some fits of enlargement p. 168 -171. CHAP. XII II. TO those who have experience of this great Priviledge pag. 171. And these 1. Such as are not yet in affliction p. 171. Advised to cherish and make much of the Spirit Considering 1. They may suffer afflictions pag. 172. 2. As they now carry towards the Spirit so will He then carry towards them pag. 173. 3. Supposing they should scape Trouble yet the Spirit 's help is upon other accounts needful p. 175 176. CHAP. XIII 2. Such as being in affliction experience this mercy p. 177. Counselled 1. To improve it to the utmost 1. In begging a blessing upon affliction 2. As an alleviating consideration 3. As a preservative from taking offence at the Cross pag. 178 -180. 2. Not to straiten or slacken their returns of thankfulness for this mercy because of their Troubles p. 181 182. CHAP. XIV 3. SVch as having been in Trouble have enjoyed this mercy p. 183. Exhorted 1. To beg and use the same help in praise which they had in prayer p. 184. 2. To turn this experience into Obedience in point of 1. Ingenuity p. 185. 2. Prudence p. 186. 3. To declare and communicate this experience to others in affliction p. 186 187. 4. In all their addresses to the Throne of grace to make use of the Spirit 's help pag. 188 -190. THE CONTENTS Of the Second TREATISE CHAP. I. THe excellency and difficulty of Prayer p. 191 -194. The occasion of the Lord's prayer According to Matthew p. 194-197 Luke p. 194-197 The end of the Lords Prayer chiefly for a pattern or directory pag. 197. Evinced by 5 Arguments 1. Our Saviour's words in Matthew After this manner 2. The difference in the two Evangelist's relation of it 3. The Apostles neither used nor praescribed it 4. The nature and brevity of it 5. The nature and end of prayer pag. 197 -202. CHAP. II. THe Vsual Division of the Lords Prayer into the Preface Taken up and followed p. 202. Substance Taken up and followed p. 202. Conclusion Taken up and followed p. 202. The Preface describing the Object of prayer 1. From his Relation to us Our Father 2. From his eminency above us Which art in Heaven pag. 203. From the Preface 1. Doctr. Our prayers are to be directed to God and him unly p. 203. Proved by Arguments 1. God commands it 2. The standing practise of the Saints confirms it p. 203 204. Reas Prayer ascribes to God those attributes and gives him that glory which he will not have given to another p. 204. Use 1. Detest that Religion whieh teacheth to share this honour to Angels and Saints The absurdity whereof evinced since he to whom we pray must be 1. Lubens 2. Sciens 3. Potens All which in the degree requisite belong only to God pag. 205. 206. Obj. We may make Saints and Angels Mediators Answered in 3. particulars pag. 206 207. Use 2. See the infinite goodness and condescension of God in this pag. 207. Use 3. Try whether we pray to God only That is whether to God as our Object End though not so proper to this place p. 207 211. Use 4. Take this at once a Spur to curb in This duty pag. 211. 2. Doctr. They that come to God aright in Prayer must come to him as to a Father Explained God is a Father considered Personally or Hypostatically So the first person of the second Essentially the whole Trinity and to in respect of Creation Sustentation Adoption External Adoption Internal p. 212 213. Quest May none pray to God but such as can call him Father by Adoption Answered p. 214. Confirmed by the Practise of the Saints in Scripture p. 214. Reas There is not a more suitable Title for God to have or us to give him For it helps against miscarriages in Prayer As. 1. Irreverence 2. Vnbelief 3. Backwardness and unwillinness pag. 215 216. Use 1. Then Prayer is not so much a Task as a Priviledge which shews how unsuitaeble that threefold Distemper above mentioned is to this Duty 216 -219. Use 2. Prove and Try our Adoption Notes of a child 1. Resemblance to His Father p. 219 -221. 2. Obedience to His Father p. 219 -221. 3. Dependance on His Father p. 219 -221. Use 3. Exhortation All that call God Father carry as children 1. In your more imme●●● addresses to God 2. In the whole course of your lives p. 221 222 3. Doctr. They that come to God as a Father must bring Christ along with them Our Father i. e. In Christ pag. 223. Proved by 1. The Types of
heart down his Spirits saint yet he rises again and renews encreases his importunity Thus I have laid down something whereby the good fits of Nature may be discerned from the grace of the Spirit of Prayer And this may suffice to be spoken in answer to the second Case wherein we have endeavoured to distinguish betwixt the Spirit of prayer and those things that seem to have some affinity with it CHAP. IV. I Shall now proceed to the Resolution of a third Case relating to the Spirits Assistance in prayer in answer to which as to all the following I shall speak with more brevity than to the former and with as much plainness as the Lord shall enable me Case 3. Whether will the want of the Spirits Assistance excuse our Neglect or Non-performance of the Duty A Question worthy our serious consideration For though it be look't upon as the opinion of a few brain-sick persons that we must never pray but when moved by the Spirit yet methinks they may seem insanire cum ratione to have at least some show of Reason for this Assertion For this is undeniable and the Text in hand clears it that without the Spirits moving assisting influence we cannot pray as we ought our prayers are not acceptable but when they are the breathings of Gods own Spirit For as it is here v. 27. God knows the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mind meaning savourings breathings of his Spirit i. e. so knows as to accept and on the other hand he knows the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mind the motions and Eph. 2. 3. desires of the flesh so as that they are abominable to him Now shall we say that a man is bound to do that which is displeasing and odious to God What delight can God take in a prayer proceeding from a carnal heart The Sacrifice of the wicked is Prov. 15. 8. abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight So that it may seem to have some colour of Reason that where the Spirit is wanting the obligation to the duty ceaseth though upon due consideration it will appear but a colour Therefore to make my way clear I shall go by steps in resolving this Case Prop. 1. A man may be said to want the Spirits assistance either 1. When he is utterly void of the Spirit of grace while he is in a state of Nature and unregeneracy Such are said to be in and Rom. 8. 5 8 9. Jude 19. after the flesh to be carnally minded not to have the Spirit of Christ in whom the Spirit of God hath laid no foundation of a saving work 2. Or when he wants the actual quickning motions and assistances of the Spirit though he hath a saving work begun and his life be whole in him yet he is in a spiritual Swoon hath no warmth no motions or stirrings heaven-ward little differs from a meer carnal person That it may be thus for a time the sad experience of some of Gods precious servants will testifie Prop. 2. The Assistance of the Spirit is Gods gracious vouchsaftment and meer indulgence God is not a debtor to any If he withhold it none can charge him of injury or injustice and if he vouchsafe it none can say they have obliged God thereunto The Spirit is a free Agent and blows where it listeth It is Gods Spirit and John 3. 8. not ours and he may say to us as in Matth. 20. 15 May I not do what I will with mine own The Influences of the Spirit are like the Influences of Heaven Who can blame God justly if it do not rain or shine when he would have it Prop. 3. Prayer is a duty indispensably arising from our Relation to God as we are his creatures endued with reasonable souls having our whole dependance upon him So that our Obligation to the duty is lasting and ceases not while we are in the body compassed about with infirmities necessities temptations in respect whereof we continually stand in need of Gods help We are taught every day to say Give us this day our Mat. 6. 11. daily bread Whether therefore we have or have not the Spirits assistance the duty is duty still the necessity of it and obligation to it is permanent not variable according to the vouchsafements or witholdings of the Spirit and therefore it is sinful to neglect the duty upon pretence that we have not the Spirits enablements This I hope might satisfie any unprejudiced Judgement but because I would make things as Practical as I can I shall add something further to evince the Absurdity of their Opinion that make our Obligation to the duty void where the Spirit helps not But of this briefly Arg. 1. This assertion as strongly fights against all other duties as this of Prayer for without the Spirits Assistance we cannot perform any duty pleasing to God And indeed thus far have some already improved it Hence they will neither read nor hear c. but when the Spirit moves them So that this conceit however it may carry some shew of Reason in it seems to be a piece of the Devils Sophistry devised to subvert the practice of Religion an Invention much like the Pharisees Corban whereby Mat. 15. 5. they disobliged Children from their duty to Parents Nay what a door would it open to all wickedness licentiousness atheistical and vile practices and then all must be charged on God because he gave them not his Spirit to restrain and sanctifie them Can any thing be more blasphemous or more tend to the subversion of Religion Arg. 2. That which is a punishment of sin cannot be an excuse for the neglect of duty now the withdrawing or withholding the spirit's assistance is often a just punishment for sin for our grieving slighting quenching the Spirit c. When we improve not it's offered help reject it's motions or arrogate to our selves what we should ascribe to it's gracious enablements or the like how justly may God withhold it This seems to be David's case when he had fallen so grievously it is probable he found a want of the quickning comforting influences of Gods Spirit and therefore prayes Take not thy Holy Spirit from me q. d. I feel decayes Psal 51. 11 12. and withdrawings Oh do not wholly deprive me of its Indwelling Again Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit He felt weaknesses and faintings and therefore prayes to be upheld But now did David forbear to pray Nay doth he not pray more importunately Were that opinion right then a man might by some horrid provocation grieve away the Spirit of God and then he should be disobliged from duty than which what can be more absurd and impious Arg. 3. But to put all out of question The Precepts concerning this duty enjoyn constancy in it and the patterns of the Saints agree to those Precepts 1 Thess 5. 17. Pray without ceasing Eph.
enlargements of affection and expressions sometimes they can only chatter and figh out their souls grievances yet even these silent mournings are loud cryes in Gods ears 2. Except this be their trouble that they are under desertion and withdrawments of the Spirit which God sometimes sees expedient to exercise his people withal yet even then there is as you have heard a secret assistance which makes a soul though he thinks himself cast out of Gods sight yet resolve Jon. 2. 4. Job 13. 15. to look again towards his holy Temple and though the Lord kill him yet with Job to trust in him But in other troubles and for the most part the Spirit is then most powerful in the heart of a Believer when afflictions are most pressing For confirmation I shall only lay down this That the Saints in their troubles have ordinarily prayed more and more fervently and importunately they have then doubled their diligence and plyed the Throne of Grace with restless cries have given God no rest This will easily appear in a few instances of some of the most faithful servants of God Jacob is a famous instance when he hears of his Brother Esau's approach with Gen. 32. 9 10 11 12. four hundred men at his heels he is not without cause greatly afraid and distressed and see how sweetly and with what sinewy arguments he bespeaks God there he goes through many Topicks of Invention claims Relation to and Interest in God upon the account of a Covenant struck betwixt God Gen. 32. 9. and his Ancestors O God of my Father Abraham Then fastens on that Name Jehovah the Lord which imports Gods eternity and immutability Next pleads a twofold word of God 1. Of Command Thou saidst unto me Return unto thy Counttey q. d. I am now performing an act of obedience and therefore expect protection I am doing thy Commandment and therefore expect thy salvation 2. A word of Promise and I will deal well with thee q. d. If thou give me up into the hands of my merciless and hard hearted Brother it will look like a falsification of that Promise V. 10. thou hast made me Then he sweetly insinuates himself into Gods favour by a grateful commemoration of the former kindnesses that God hath shewed him and his utter unworthiness thereof I am not worthy of the least of all thy mereies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed unto thy servant Th●s having as I may say V. 11. sweetned God and made way for his request he puts up his particular suit Deliver me I pray thee from the hand of my Brother which he again enforceth by minding God of his word of promise And thou saidst V. 12. I will surely do thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the Sea which how shall it be performed if thou now permit my bloody-minded Brother to come and smite me and the Mother with the Children Whence can this proceed but from the Spirit of Supplication Yet this is not all Jacob is left alone his Wives and Children being passed over the V. 22. Brook Jabbok and now he will have the other bout with God he will keep a night on 't a man wrestled with him till the breaking of the day I will not trouble you V. 24. with Niceties you may expound this by that of the Prophet He had power over the Hos 12. 4. Angel and prevailed how he wept and made supplication unto him There was something of corporal strugling as the word shews Jacob goes halting away but the main business was prayer thereby he holds the Angel thereby he conquers and obtains this Testimony stampt for a memorial upon his new name as a Prince thou hast power with G●d and with men and hast prevailed V. 28. Here is an afflicted Saint and you see he is a wrestling and victorious Saint Whence had Jacob this strength but from the God of Jacob He wrestled both in and against Jacob and as he said In Jacobo Ma●t in Jude v. 20. Deus est seipso fortior God in Jacob conquers himself I have insisted upon this Instance for your imitation I shall leave others to your own meditation and enlargement Job notwithstanding he is much taken up with complaints yet is not wanting this way Read his whole tenth Chapter and see what variety and strength of Argument he urg●● God withal David much in the deeps of affliction and no less in the exercise of this duty Out of the depths have I cryed unto thee O Lord Lord hear my Psalm 130. 1 2. 12. 2. 28. 1. voice O my God I cry in the day time but thou hearest not and in the night-season and am not silent Vnto thee will I cry O Lord my Rock be not silent unto me But what should I insist upon particulars Peruse the Psalms what ever strait you find David in still prayer is his asylum and the more pressing affliction the more vehement his aff●ctions the more importunate his prayers Do enemies pursue him with words of hatred reproach him charge him wrongfully Do friends forsake him deal deceitfully falsifie their Trust Is he driven from his own Palace into a Wilderness by a rebellious Son Is he hunted as a Partridge upon the Mountains by an envious Father-in-law Is he fallen into grievous sins and fears Gods wrath and feels the withdrawments of his Spirit In all these and all other troubles that befell him still you find him crying pressing in unto God humbly supplicating and powerfully pleading What should I mention H●man and Asaph if they are the Psal 77. 88. Authors of those Psalms who being under sad pressures strugling with distractions and despair vent themselves this way Or Hannah who in the bitterness of her Spirit poured out her soul before the Lord Or Paul who being buffeted by the Messenger of Satan prayed thrice that it might be taken from him When the Word represents it as the very Genius of the Godly For this shall every one that is godly pray unto 2 Cor. 12. 8 9. Psal 32. 6. Psal 102. thee And the Title of the Psalm A prayer of the afflicted when he is overwhelmed and poureth out his complaint before the Lord that is the godly afflicted whose practice i● so to do One Instance more and that i● our blessed Saviour who had not the Spirit by measure He being in an agony prayed Luke 22. 44. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more servently he extended prayer And in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications will Heb. 5. 7. strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death and was heard in that he feared Every word here hath an Emphasis in it In the dayes of his flesh and those were dayes of trouble In that ●e Vid. Calvin in locum feared viz. with a Natural fear left he should be overwhelmed with trouble Now
this day of fear and trouble what brought it forth how wrought it You see it produced prayers supplications strong crying tears ardour and vehemency in prayer Object You have abundantly proved that the Saints in their troubles were much in prayer but what is this to the purpose How appears it that they had the Spirits help Might not nature and a desire of self-preservation prompt them to this course Will not even wicked men pray and cry under troubles Answ True Nature may do much It can make an Ahab put on sack-cloth and humble himself and go softly It can make a Pharaoh in a strait beg Moses his prayers c. yet if you take along these two considerations it will be evident that they were assisted by the Spirit of supplication 1. Consider how they prayed and that with extraordinary fervour strong cries and importunate wrestlings this speaks that they were strengthned with might by the Spirit in their inward man A natural man can bowl upon his bed observe that and Hos 7. 14. they can assemble themselves f●r corn and wine note what they pray for It is but howling it is but lazy upon their beds it is but for corn and wine but now read the prayers of the afflicted Saints you may see an impress of Divinity upon them they even breathe out that Spirit by whom they were indited Oh the confidence mixt with humility Oh the strength and sinews Oh the sweet infinuations pressing importunities c. that may be observed in them 2. But if this be not sufficient consider in the next place how they sped what success and acceptance they had with God what their efficacy and ver●ue was what gracious returns they had Now when God causeth his ears to hear it is an argument he first prepares their hearts No prayer is Psal 10. 17. acceptable to God but what is the breathing of his own Spirit The Text tell you he kn●weth that is accepteth is well pleased with the mind of the Spirit God can distinguish betwixt what is ours and what is his own That twofold intercession of Christ in Heaven and of the Spirit in our hearts is jointly necessary to procure the acceptance of our prayers with God Now look back upon the Instances I have given Jacob David Paul c. yea see how graciously God answered their requests whence it is evident those prayers were the operations of his own Spirit Thus of the first Proposition 2. As to the second that it is a singular Priviledge and comfort to Gods afflicted children to have the Spirits assistance in prayer it is already in a great measure proved in what hath been said to the several Cases proposed yet something I shall add as to the advantage of it in afflictions which I shall discover in five or six sweet effects of it in an afflicted state but know this that when I have said all your own experience will make you say as the Queen of Sheba concerning 1 Kings 10. 6 7. Solomon Behold the half was not told me It is an inexpressible advantage● Sampson's riddle is in this sense verified the Judg. 14. 14. Spirit of prayer out of the eater brings meat and out of the strong sweetness Particularly 1. The Spirits help in affliction carries in it much of Evidence The Spirit of supplication is the Spirit of Grace When in our afflictions Zech. 12. 10. Rom. 8. 15. we can cry Abba Father it shews that we have received the Spirit of Sons Hereby we have a singular proof that we Gal. 4. 6. are Christs for as it holds Negatively that If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his So Positively he that hath the Spirit is Christs for as many as are led by the Rom. 8. 9 14. Spirit of God they are the Sons of God And what more lenifying or sweetning ingredient can be put into the bitter cup of affliction What an allay is this to the saddest sharpest Trouble It were easie here to cut this River into many streams and to shew what abundant comfort in affliction flows from the assurance of our Adoption but I forbear particulars Only to hint something Hence we know we are in the hand of a loving tender-hearted Father who doth not Lam 3 31 32 33. afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men much less his own children who will not cost off for ever but though he cause grief yet will have compassion according to the Isa 63. 9 multitude of his mercies who is himself afflicted in our afflictions Hence we may be assured that our afflictions shall be proportioned timed limited so as we shall be able to bear them that they shall be for our good that we shall have deliverances and that in the best season c. So that the very reflection upon our prayers put up in faith humility and fervency doth much alleviate our burden and if not take away yet much abate the bitterness of the Cup. 2. Which follows upon the former It brings case with it it may well be called hearts case Experience tells us if we have but a faithful friend to whom we may impart our grievances and freely unbosome our selves it much lightens our burden And what friend like God By this means Hannah cased her 1 Sam. 1. 18. grieved heart and cheered her sadded countenance This hath been the Saints practice David still had recourse to God by prayer and you may in many Psalms observe how the case is changed and his soul refreshed before his prayer be ended he got renewed strength In the day when I cryed thou answeredst Psal 138. 3. Psal 55. 22. me and strengthnedst me with strength c. Hearty servent prayer is one way of casting our burden upon the Lord and in so doing he hath promised to sustain us and surely he cannot but have much case under whatever burden who hath an almighty arm to lean upon How often had the backs and hearts too of Gods persecuted servants been broken if they could not have poured out their souls to God I noted above from the Title of that Psalm that it is the practice Psal 102. of the afflicted and almost overwhelmed people of God to pour out their souls before the Lord. Other friends sometimes can and will not sometimes would and cannot relieve us 2 Kings 6. 27. If the Lord do not help thee how can I But God wants neither pity nor power to help Yet I here speak not so much of actual deliverance as of that inward quiet and serenity which prayer brings into the soul 3. The Spirit of prayer administers a ground of strong confidence to a soul under affliction The more servent in prayer the more lively are its hopes the stronger its confidence either of support under or deliverance from its afflictions however that thereby some special good shall accrew to it And it cannot be otherwise for there are many
more glorified and wee more shamed so in petition though God knows what wee want yet hee would have us sensible of our wants and shew him as it were the grieved place Ja. 1. 5 If any man lack Wisedome and so of any other grace or goodthing let him ask it of God c. Thus it is in Thanksgiving wee must be particular in acknowleging mercies 1 Thessa 5. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in every thing give thanks Wee are to summe up as wee can the particular mercies of God Psalm 139. 17 18. how doth David in that Eucharisticall Psalm viz. 18. amplify upon every circumstance of his deliverances so that though this be full and every way absolute as a pattern yet it is not sufficient to attaine all the ends of prayer which doubtless it should have been had Christ intended it properly as a form to be constantly used in the very words and syllables of it I owe as much Reverence to it as those that are the most Z●alous contenders for it but I cannot see that our Saviour intended it for more then a platform for our imitation and direction CHAP. II. HAving spoken to these two things I now enter upon the handling of it wherein I shall propose to my self the same end that our Saviour had in giving it viz. to teach you to pray Nor shall I handle every particular Truth which would arise from the words but only such as may direct us in prayer and those in such a Method as I conceive most helpfull to that duty The Usuall and most naturall Division of this excellent Directory for prayer is into 3. Heads 1. The Preface 2. The substance or body of it 3. The conclusion or Doxology In the Preface Our Father which art in Heaven wee have the Object of prayer or him to whom wee must pray described by way of Compellation and that 1. From his Relation to us Our Father 2. From his eminency above us which art in Heaven The first Lesson for our direction in prayer will arise from the whole Preface as Describing God to whom wee pray 1. Doctr. Our prayers are to be directed to God and him only A Truth I hope unquestionable amongst us and therefore needs the less to be insisted on yet because wee may possibly meet with those that may endeavour to shake this foundation let mee fortify you with an Argument or two and then a Reason God command ' s it as a speciall part of that worship which is due to him as God and therefore not to be yielded to any other Psalm 50. 15. Call upon me● Amos 5 4 5 6 8. Seek not to Bethel Seek the Lord Seek him that maketh the 7 Starres Isa 8. 19. When they shall say unto you seek unto them that have familiar Spirits should not a people seek unto their God for the living to the dead q. d. that were a most vaine and impious thing The Decree passed in the Court of Babylon for 30 dayes Dan. 26. 7. viz. that none should ask a petition of any but of the King is past in Heaven for ever in reference to the great God and everlasting King No prayer or Petition as part of worship is to be put up to any other but to him alone 2. Wee have the universall standing practise of the saints of the Old and New Testament for our direction and imitation Is there the least syllable of their praying to Angels Saints or other creature How are they described Psalm 24. 6. The generation that seek the face of the God of Jacob. Psalm 99. 6. 22. 5. To whom doth Paul bow the knee Eph. 1. 17. or our Saviour direct his prayer John 17 This is the frequent title of the Saints they are such as call on God's name not on any other Acts. 2. 21. Rom. 10 12 13. 1 Cor. 1. 2. 2 Tim. 2. 22. What is said to the Contrary of the Patriarch's Abraham's and Jakob's praying to Angels c. scarce deserves confutation and is abundantly done by others yet I shall hint at it by and by Take this Reason Reas Therefore must wee pray to God alone because prayer ascribes to God those attributes and gives him that glory which hee will not have ascribed or given to any other Isa 42. 8. By prayer wee acknowledge God's omniscience for to what purpose is it to pray to him that knows not what wee want or cannot heare us When wee pray wee ascribe to him omnipotency that hee is able to fulfill our requests Mercy and goodness to incline him to heare us Truth and faithfulness to perform his Promises wee ascribe to him the glory of our trust and dependence for how shall wee call on him in whom wee have not beleeved Rom. 10. 14. Now can God who is especially jealous about his glory and worship take it well that wee should rob him of these things which are the Jewels of his Crowne Is it a light matter to give to the Creature that which belongs only to God What can be greater injury to God or more gross Idolatry Use 1 Let us then improve this Truth 1. Into a detestation and abhorceny of that Religion which teacheth to share this honor due to God alone with Angels San●s or Images perhaps to wicked men Tray●ors and Reb●ls Thomas Becket c. as some of those were which the Church of Rome hath Canoniz●d should you be assaulted with Temptations to that Religion have recourse to this pattern tell them that tempt you that the unerring Guide hath taught you to call upon God only that you cannot say to any other but God only Our Father c. that hee to whom you pray must have those three properties which none but God can have 1. Hee must be Lubens willing to heare and help and who is like unto God in this Mich. 7. 18. What care so open as God's 1 Pet. 4. 12. What help so neare at hand Psalm 46. 1. But suppose any other willing yet 2. Hee must be Sciens one that knowes what you want and who but the all knowing God can see into your Souls and know what you stand in need of Matt. 6. 32 Yea hee must know better then your selves for wee are very often ignorant of our wants and necessities and ask what is hurtfull in stead of what is needfull The Physician must have more skill then the Patient else there is little hope of doing him good But 3. Hee must be Potens able both to heare from Heaven to Earth to understand all languages yea the secret sighs and groanes of our hearts Rom. 8. 26. Moreover hee must be able to discerne betwixt those that pray in sincerity and those that pray in hypocrisy and hee must be such a one as can Simul Semel at once heare all suites and petitions in and from all parts of the world and who but God alone can doe all this 1. nor only must hee be able to heare but 2. to help
prayer 1. A Spur to it for who would not look on it as a singular priviledge that hee might upon all emergencies have recourse to any great Earthly Monarch how much more should wee take delight in approaching to God when thou feelest thy heart dull and backward to this duty what a quickning consideration may it be to think that it is the Majesty of heaven that thou conversest with in it Nor must we think as that profane wretch I have heard of who being upon a sick-bed used this as an argument for deliverance that if God would now heare him hee would trouble him no more that our frequent addresses trouble God No the oftner if wee come aright the welcomer hee bids us ask and chides us for not asking John 16 23 24. 2. But then it may be a Curb to all rovings and extravagancies al rashness and irreverence ' T is the God of Heaven to whom thou addresses Who would not fear befo● him Eccl. 5. 2. God is in Heaven and thou on Earth therefore let thy words be few It ill beseemes us to be sawcy though wee may be humbly bold with God So much of much more that might have been spoken shall serve for Application of this Truth I come now to a more particular Consideration of the description of God in this Preface And 1. By his Relation to us Father which is amplified by the Ground and extensiveness of it for both are implyed in that word Our 2. Doctr. They that come to God aright in prayer must come to him as to a Father Relation to and Interest in God is necessary to make prayer prevalent wee must be able to cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. If yet call on the Father 1 Pet. 1. 17. There must be some hopefull ground of such a relation as a ground of confidence in prayer Explic. Now God is called Father considered 1. Personally or Hypostatically viz. as the first person of the Trinity so hee is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ as having begotten him from eternity by an ineffable generation A mystery to be beleeved by faith not apprehended by reason Thus hee is called Eph. 1. 3. Heb. 1. 5. c. 2. Considered Essentially the whole Trinity God in three Persons but One in Essence and so hee is Father either 1. In regard of Creation and Sustentation of all his creatures especially the rationall creature Mal. 2. 10. called the Father of Spirits Heb. 12. 9. of all things 1 Cor. 8. 6. thus the Heathens stiled their Jupiter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Father of Gods and men 2. In respect of Adoption hee is the Father of those whom hee takes into speciall Relation and this 1. Either Externall when a people are called into a profession of God and the True Religion thus the whole body of the Jewish Nation Rom. 9. 2. to them belonged the Adoption See Exod. 4. 22. and Deut. 32. 6. And in this sense the whole body of a Nation professing Christianity and baptized and partaking of Gods Ordinances may be called the children or people of God This is indeed a great mercy yet a man may perish from under this priviledge The children of the Kingdom may be cast out Matth. 8. 12. 2. Or Internall when a man hath not only the title but the Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 5. Eph. 1. 13. This may be described An Act of God's free grace in Christ taking us into the number and entitling us to all the priviledges of the Sons of God 'T is not an empty title but a reall priviledge Christ is the head and roote of it the Elect and they only the subjects free grace the inward mooving cause on God's part the word and Spirit are the instruments begetting and sealing it Gods glory in conjunction with mans Salvation the end of it Now in this sense wee are to understand it here Our Father not only as createing and upholding us not only as wee are baptized and partake of Church-priviledges but as wee are begotten by his Word and Spirit born again not of flesh nor of blood c. John 1. 13. Object But may none pray unto God or call him Father but those that are assured of this Adoption Answ Our Common Relation to God as his creatures and our Relation to him as Members of the visible Church may be urged as Arguments in prayer even those that had speciall Relation to God make use of them Psal 138. 8. Isa 63. 19. Wee may plead for mercy upon those accounts but wee are not to rest in them God may heare our prayers but wee cannot have assurance that hee will heare them till wee can come to him in this way of Speciall Relation other pleas may prevail but this will never fail us Confirmation Now for proof of this wee have the practise of the Saints both of the Old and New Testament they come to God under this Relation Isa 63. 16. and 64 8. Ier. 3. 4 19. So Christ himself Matth. 11. 25 26. John 17. 1 5. and 21 24 25. This is the Genius and Spirit of Christians Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 1. 17. Even Idolaters used to come to their Idols with this appellation Jer. 2. 27. they say to a stock Thou art my Father c. Reas The Reason in generall may be because there is not a more suitable Title either for God to have or for us to give him in our addresses to him by prayer 'T is suitable in regard both of his Majesty and greatness and of his mercy and goodness it s a singular help against those miscarriages that are incident to us in prayer as 1. It helps against irreverence and rash presumption there 's a naturall impress of Awe and Reverence upon the Spirits of children towards a Father there are indeed other Titles more apt to beget feare and trembling but none more effectuall to strike an awfull reverence of God upon the soul this will make us rejoyce with trembling Psal 2. 11. and fill us with Reverence and Godly fear Hebr. 12. 28. 2. It helps against Feare and Unbelief this Relation fils the soul with boldness and confidence Had wee been taught to call him King of glory wee should have been dasht out of Countenance with his Majesty if wee had called him The Lord of Hosts it would have made us tremble at his power or if hee had been stiled Judge of the world wee might have feared his justice But the Title of Father begets boldness and gives encouragement what may not a child hope to obtain from a loving and tender Father 'T is the lowest Title to which humility could condescend and the highest to which love could aspire This begets assurance that hee will give us if not what wee ask yet what is best for us A Father will not in stead of bread give a stone nor in stead of a fish a Serpent nor in stead of an egge a Scorpion Luke 11. 11 12.
Reason to the over-powring light of the Word and given thee a convincing discovery of the transcendent sweetness of Communion with God and Jesus Christ in duty which impression while it continues fresh upon thy soul may wind it up to a high pitch of Natural or Artificial fervency as a Reverend Divine of ours hath well distinguished Bolton ubi supra 1 Sam. 21. 7. Or else some extraordinary tie upon thy soul may for the time put life into thy Devotion a very Doeg may be Qui se clauserat in domo Domini ut solveret votum suum Arab. sometimes detained before the Lord it is supposed in conscience of some Vow or some express Devotion The worst of men may have their devout moods but alas it is but from some outward impulse So that Try what thy state is if thou art a stranger to the Spirits converting regenerating sanctifying work it is not to be thought he doth actually stir thee up to duty The Spirit only moves to duty those whom he fits for duty He is first a principle of life within then of action without 2. But that which may more sensibly distinguish those fits of goodness from the Spirits motions are the different fruits and consequences There may be as much seeming fervour and zeal in those good fits while they continue but they are not attended with such fruits as the other To instance in some 1. When these are over the man is but what he was before while the pang is upon him Who more heavenly and devout Who speaks greater things of God and Christ the sweetness of duty the advantage of holy walking the pleasures of communion with God But alas it is but as the Morning Hos 6. 4. Cloud and as the early Dew it goeth away Quantum mutatus a illo Here he is quite another man Was he loose debauch't prophane before You 'l find him Stuppeae flamma Cato so still Was he drunken riotous voluptuous before So is he again as soon as the fit is over Alas it was but a meer blaze It is quenched as Towe as the fire of Thorns and then he neither prayes nor cares for prayer or if he keep up a form it is without conscience or affection Now where the Spirit hath furnished a soul with praying abilities it sanctifies that soul there is some care of a conversation answerable and though there may be abatements yet the soul seels and complains thereof whereas Cant. 5. 5. the other fits down contented in the neglect of duty Where the Spirit puts in his hand by the hole of the door he leaves sweet-smelling Myrrh upon the handles of the Lock which inflames the soul though for some time it may lie under indisposition with enlarged desires after his return But there are no such complaints under deadness or breathings after quicknings in the other 2. These fits are often encouragements to more loosness afterward The soul being puffed up with a high conceit of his own performances as having thereby mightily engaged God an ordinary attendant on his flashy devotion thinks he may take some liberty he hath super-crogated by his prayers and now may sin the more freely much like the Harlots speech I have peace-offerings Prov. 7. 14 18. with me This day have I payed my vows Come let us take our fill of love q. d. I have performed an extraordinary piece of devotion and now I am at liberty to begin a new score This is far from those who are endued with the Spirit of Prayer Have they found extraordinary assistance Hath the Spirit lift up their hearts and wound them to a higher pitch than ordinary This draws out thanksgivings to God Thus they think Oh what need have I to watch against sin How carefull should I be left I damp out these flames by earthly mindedness lest I take cold after such heats Yea the remembrance of what they have been enabled to confess and beg becomes a tie upon them to restrain them from committing the sins confessed and a spur to put them upon pursuit of the graces they have begged these are the genuine fruits of the Spirits enlargements I deny not but the Devil and our own corruption may make use of these as a Temptation to slacken our diligence afterwards but it is not ordinarily so Those fits and flashes ordinarily bring forth such fruits 3. Which I toucht upon in the last these good fits puff up Man is naturally a self-admirer and if he hath any thing above ordinary he prides himself in it The most civilized and moralized amongst the Heathens though they sometimes spake meanly of themselves could never get victory over that self-applauding humour It sticks very close to nature nothing but grace can subdue it nor that perfectly till we be made perfect For each to esteem others better than themselves is the hardest thing in the world Si quid in tota vitâ difficile hoc in primis Nam Regis intra se quisque animum habet c. as Galvin upon Phil. 2. 3. But to the purpose Such as have only Nature elevated come off more proud whatever shew of humility they may make in the duty Whereas the genuine effects of the Spirits assistance as we shewed before are to lay the soul low in its own eyes and indeed there is not a better evidence that our enlargements are spiritual then when we are enlarged in the sense of sin and misery and thence become enlarged in our apprehensions of Gods goodness and mercy 4. These good fits are easily put off How small a Temptation will hire such from duty How easily are they discouraged How soon is their patience spent God must either come speedily or they will be ready to say with that blasphemer This evil is of 2 Kings 6. 33. the Lord what should I wait for the Lord any longer they are ready to expostulate with God as if he did them an injury Wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not Isa 58. 3. Wherefore have we afflicted our soul and th●u takest no knowledge A cross Providences puts a dash upon their devotion they will sometimes verifie that which the Devil falsly suggested against Job Doth Job fear God for nought Hast thou not made a hedge about Job 1. 9 10 11. him and about his house But put forth thy hand now and touch all that he hath and be will curse thee to thy face Their devotion was not so hot as their passion will be high when God crosses their wills I say thus it is sometimes with such But now where the Spirit enables the soul gathers strength by opposition follows a flying God disappointments set an edge upon his prayers and call his patience into exercise He will close in with God though he go halting away His resoultion is Though he kill me Job 13. 15. I will trust in him I will pray to him and though there may be a damp upon him his