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

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will be his Advocat but if he sin he who came to (e) 1 Joh. 3.8 destroy the works of the devil will not own such a one who doth the devils work But yet for thy comfort O mourning sinner it s written If any man sin c. It s true it is written that thou shouldest not sin these things write I unto you that you sin not saith the Apostle by way of preface and to ward off a mistake that we should not sin is the end and designe of all our rods and mercies of all the Scriptures and of Gods works towards us of Christs death intercession c. But yet if any man sin out of ignorance frailty c. Christ pitieth them he will not desert their cause he will not justifie them in that nor plead for a liberty for them to sin but he will plead for a pardon and that they may be preserved from sin there after Ah then beware thou abuse not this mercy and rare priviledge say not we will sin that Christ may pity us and plead for us it s a sure signe of a gracelesse soul to say let us add sin to sin that grace may abound how doth the Apostle abominat such a vile inference Rom. 6.1 Though the Lord to magnifie the riches of his free grace may make grace abound where sin hath abounded Rom. 5.20 yet if thou wilt cause sin abound because grace hath abounded it is an evidence that grace hath not and if thou continue in that desperat resolution never shall abound to thee and though Christ will plead for sinners yet if thou dare sin that he may plead for thee thou hast reason to fear that thou art none of those for whom he doth or will plead But you will say if Christs intercession be such a sure and exquisite ground of consolation and confidence the people of the Jews must then have been in a sad condition they being destitute thereof Ans There be two extreams which wee should here shun the one making it begin too early the other making it too necessary and laying too much weight upon it As to the 1. Some imagine that Christ before his incarnation did interceed and thus as God for then he was not man he must appear and pray for his people We will not repeat what hath been already said against that opinion only now let us briefly view the arguments already brought or which we conceive may be made use of for that strange as it appeareth to us assertion 1. It may be objected that we have the Mediators reverend interposing represented to us in that parable of vine-dressers interceeding with the master Luk. 13. beside what is holden forth by the typicall services pointing out Christs intercession Ans We need not now run to that acknowledged rule (d) Theologia symbolica non est argumentativa Symbolick Theology is not argumentative We must not extend a parable beyond it's scope and it is certain the (e) See Diodati English Divines Dr. Hammond c. intent of this parable was nothing else but to hold out the Lords long-suffering and patience towards that people and the inevitable ruine of all those who notwithstanding would continue in their unbelief and disobedience And as for the vine-dresser who interceeds that the fig-tree might be spared (f) Quisque suae vineae cultor Theoph. in loc Theophylact thinketh that every man is the dresser of his own vine (g) Cajet in loc Cajetan will have Michael the Arch-angel who saith he was set over the Jews to be their Guardian to be this vine-dresser Others as (h) Cultor vinea suus cujusque Angelus custos Theoph. ibid. Theophylact in his second conjecture will have every mans proper tutelar Angel to be this vine-dresser and intercessor the English Divines do think the faithfull Ministers to be their vine-dressers for they like (i) 1 Cor. 3.6 Exod. 32.31 1 Sam. 12.23 Amos 7.2 5. Paul and Apollo do plant and water the vine-yard and l●ke Moses Samuel and Amos do interceed for the people committed to their charge And Christ as Cajetan thinketh is rather the Lord then the dresser of the vine-yard But though we would yeeld Christs Intercession to be here adumbrated as certainly it was in several types yet that is so far from concluding the point for which it is alledged that it doth sufficiently confute the same For what is typified is not as yet exhibited and therefore these shadows as useless must evanish when we may behold the substance and truth 2. Object Sympathy is a main ground of intercession but there was sympathy flowing from a covenant-relation before the incarnation Is 63.9 In all their afflictions he was afflicted in his love and in his pity he saved them Ergo. Ans These words are spoken of the Father the Angel of whose presence is said to save them and whose Spirit is said to be vexed v. 10. as usually in Scripture the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Father so by the Angel of Gods presence there judicious Interpreters do understand the Mediator the eternal Son of God so that the former words cannot be meant of him according to that appropriation of works and attributes which is frequent in the Scriptures albeit it be certain that as to the thing it self which is here spoken of none of the persons of the blessed Trinity must be excluded And therefore we Answer 2. That this is a metaphorical and borrowed kind of Speech taken from the manner of men as the Jewish Doctors cited by the (k) See the English Divines and Dio. dati on the place English Divines well observe like unto that kind of expression in Deut. 32.10 Psal 17.8 Zech. 2.8 c. And therefore sympathy in the Lord Jehovah as a (l) A rev●rend late Divine whose memory is precious in this Church whose arguments may be abused and drawn a greater length then they will go or were a● we may conceive intended by the Author doth grant what we have here alledged from him and which of it self is most certain and by that concession giveth us ground to interpret his assertion as spoken rather of a symbolick and typical then proper and personal intercession as may also further appear from the several replyes here made to what is objected from him and therefore do we now mention that judicious Divine not that we might confute but that we might thus essay to vindicat his assertion judicious Divine speaking to this purpose saith doth only import 1. That he knoweth the afflictions of his people 2. That he mindeth help to them and so this kind of sympathy cannot infer intercession otherwise all the persons of the Trinity must be said to interceed for us But that sympathy which we made the proper and immediat ground of Intercession was that real humane and proper Sympathy which is in the humane nature of Christ whereby he is said to be touched with the feeling
dogmatical faith and know that there is a God and that he is such as he hath revealed himself in his Scriptures as to his infinite nature and the trinity of persons and those divine attributes and properties which are incommunicable to any creature that Christ is the way and the life that none can come to the Father but by him c. 2. If they believe that their labour shall not be lost he being a rewarder of all them who diligently seek him and particularly as to the present duty they know that he is a (c) Psa 65.2 prayer-hearing God albeit they cannot determine the particular mercy he will give by way of return thereto yet they know that their prayer shall not want an answer and that it is not in vain as those wicked ones did blaspheme Job 21.15 to pray unto him 3. Obj. It is a received axiom among practical Divines 3. Obj. that temporal promises are to be understood cum exceptione crucis hence Mr. (d) Mr. Spurstow Wells of Saluation ch 16. Spurstow laith down this as a rule for the right understanding of these promises that they are to be expounded with the reservation and exception of the cross and if the promises cannot with-hold the Lord from chastning the Saints with rods and afflictions how shall their e prayers be able to do it especially since prayer must be grounded on the promise Ans Albeit there be a truth in that assertion that the Lord may chasten his servants with whatsoever rod he will yet why this should be propounded as a limitation of the promise I know not and I would ask whether the Lord doth at any time afflict the Saints but for their good by this he is distinguished from earthly parents that they chasten many times out of passion and anger and without discretion after their own pleasure but he only for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness Heb. 12.10 And if the Lord never correct us but that by that rod he may promove our spiritual good and holiness can we imagine that he will with hold any temporal mercy we ask from him which is a sort of affliction and correction yea some times very sad and bitter unless he purposed to do us more good by such a dispensation then if we had received what we desired Hence it must necessarily follow that the Lord doth never with-hold what we ask but when it is better to want then to have such a supposed mercy and therefore he must do what is best for us in such a condition and this we may believe and confidently expect in all our addresses unto him and when we get not what we askt we may be perswaded that it was not good and convenient for us at such a season that comparatively it was not good nor so fit and expedient for us as the present dispensation which therefore must not be looked upon as an exception from the promise but rather as an amplification and further extension of the promise and an object of that promise to with-hold no good from them that walk uprightly and to suffer no evil to come near them Hence the same (f) Mr. Spur. ibid pag. 232. Author acknowledgeth that the faith required Jam. 1.6 albeit it be not the faith of a particular perswasion that God will give the very thing it self that we beg of him yet it is the faith of submission by which we resolve our prayers into his will and believe that he will do whatever is best for our good and his glory And this saith he was the faith that our Lord Jesus Christ did put forth in his prayer when he said not my will but thy will be done And thus we are agreed neither do I dissent from what he subjoyneth viz that although God may sometimes assure and encline the hearts of his children that are importunat wrestlers in prayer to be confident of granting the very particular temporal blessing that they seek yet this is a confidence that is rather begotten by the Spirit in the height and vigour of prayer then brought with us unto the duty Sometimes saith he such a confidence may be but it is neither ordinary nor usual We may shut up this particular with the words of zealous Bernard Let none of the Saints saith (g) Nemo nostrum parvipendat orationem suam dico enim vobis quod ipse ad quem oramus non parvipendit eam priusquam ●gressa sit ab ore vestro ipse eam scribi jubet in libro suo unum ex duobus indubitanter sperare possumus quoniam aut dabit quod petimus aut quod nobis erit utilius nos enim quid oremus sicat oportet nescimus sed miseretur ille super ignorantia nostra orationem benigne suscipiens quod nobis aut omnino non est utile aut non tam cito dare necesse est minime tribuit tamen infructuosa non crit quoniam quidem tanta super te cura est Deo tuo ut quoties ignorans queris quod tibi inutile est non te audiat super hoc habet in med devotis cap 6. this reverend ancient undervalue his prayer for he to whom we pray doth not undervalue it before it proceed out of our mouth he causeth write it in his book and one of two we may most confidently expect that he will either give what we ask or that which will be better for us He pitieth our ignorance and will not give when it is not fit or what would not profit us yet such is his love and care that he will not suffer our prayers to return empty but when he giveth not what we out of ignorance not knowing the hurt that might come to us thereby do ask he will make a compensation and commutation and will convert it in a more profitable gift Now we come to some grounds and encouraging considerations which may support our weak faith under all the temptations and objections which Sathan and our lusts (h) Stat nulla diu mortalibus usquam Fortuna titubante fides Silius 11. L. sense and carnal reason can suggest and 1. the infinit mercy and tender bowels of our God if known and duly pondred may silence our unbelief and banish all our fears when we draw nigh to him his tender mercies are (i) Nemo est hominum vel etiam diabolorum qui dicere possit se non esse participem misericordia Dei Zanch. de natur Dei lik 4. q. 3. over all his works Ps 145.9 his mercy is great unto the heavens Ps 57.10 What is said of one stream may well be applied to the great Ocean from which it floweth as a small part what is said of the word of promise and Gods fidelity in accomplishing it Ps 138.2 may truly be said of his mercy and those bowels from which the promises did spring viz. that he hath magnified that attribute above all his name Albeit all his
is ready to foster divided conceptions concerning the object of worship it may be conceived safest especially in publick and before the multitude not to alter the denomination of the persons in the same petition in the same prayer saith he the generality of people being prone to imagine different objects of worship in such cases Concl. 8. Albeit we may thus fix our minds upon and expresly name and direct our prayers unto any one of these glorious persons yet as our blessed Lord in the dayes of his flesh So Christians most usually adress themselves to the ●ather for he being the first person according to that blessed order that is among the persons of the Trinity there may be several considerations inviting us particularly to fix upon him for thus as the first both immanent and transient act (i) The appointing of the end according to the order of nature is before the election of the means vid. Twiss vind grat lib. err 7. dig 3. pag. 706. both (h) Heb. 5 7. predestination and creation by this appropriation is ascribed to the Father hence sin being a defacing of the image of God which was implanted in man by his creation it must in a special maner be against the Father and his work and thus the Father having in a special maner received the wrong to him upon this particular account satisfaction should be made and reconciliation with him and pardon from him should be askt and thus Christ in his prayers sufferings and in every step of our redemption (k) See Mr. Shepherds select Csse● in a letter from new England pag. mihi 20 21. Albeit there be some expressions of that pious man which would be warily used and which need a favourable interpretation as 1. while he calls the Father as some may think the Son and holy Ghost the original and first cause of all good 2 while he saith that Christ came into the world by his death and intercession to satisfie the Father and not the holy Ghost 3. that we should chiefly eye the Father in our prayers c. Vid. Calv. dicen●em filium esseimproprie ●rea●orem respectu persona vindicatum a Chamier panstrat tom 2. lib. 1. cap. 4 did especially look to the Father and thus the Saints also from to time time most ordinarily direct their worship to the Father in their confessions acknowledging his work to have been defaced by their sins his justice provok't c. in their petitions asking pardon from him his peace and favour c. and in their praises ascribing to him their election adoption c. admiring his wisdom and love in providing such a remedy and so great a salvation for self-destroying sinners c. And this practice is conform to the constant tenour of the Scriptures of the new Testament and albeit in the old while the Prophets and ancient Church of the Jews call God Father they rather thus express his tender bowels and fatherly affection towards them then any internal relation among the persons of the Trinity yet its hard to affirm that all that people the most eminent and knowing among them were ignorant of this appropriation of works and attributes and that they never particularly eyed the Father as the first person of the Trinity But it would be observed while we say that the Father was in a maner primarily and most directly wronged by sin we do not only understand Adam's first sin which did obliterat and deface his image engraven on the heart by his first work of creation and which thus was a base requital of his bounty of whom first in order he had his being and honour not only I say did God the Father receive in some speciall maner the wrong by that first sin of man and by our original sin flowing from it but also by the constant tract of our actual transgressions which as they flow from that common root in us So they reflect upon that bright Sun which the creature at first laboured to obscure and hence it s said If any man sin we have an advocat with the father 1 Joh. 2.1 as being in some special maner wronged thereby yet notwithstanding there be some sins whereby more directly offence is offered to the Son and holy Ghost then to the Father thus the contempt of the Gospel and undervaluing of the blood of Christ do most immediatly reflect upon the Son and his work of redemption and the quenching and resisting of the holy Spirit in his heavenly motions is most directly against the Spirit and his work of illumination and sanctification hence the Spirit thereby is said to be (l) Eph. 4.30 grieved and (m) Isa 63.10 vexed And in that unpardonable sin or rather mass of sins both the Son and holy Ghost are put to an open shame as is expresly said of Christ whom they crucifie to themselves afresh Heb. 6.6 and it is no less evident as the holy Ghost whose works and gifts they abuse and undervalue ver 4 5 6. Hence it hath its name and is particularly called the sin against the holy Ghost Mat. 12.31 Mark 3.29 Luk. 12.10 Thus also notwithstanding of that appropriation of works we will find one and the same work ascribed particularly to divers persons thus our sanctification though appropriated and usually ascribed to the holy Ghost yet it is called of the Father Jude 1. and thus also our reconciliation is ascribed to the Father 2 (n) The words themselves without a commentary do clearly hold out God the Father though as frequently else where expressed by his essential Name Cor. 5.19 20. Joh. 3.16 c. and to the Son Rom. 5.10 11 15. Col. 1.20.21 Joh. 14.16 Eph. 2.13 14. c. Our (o) Calvinus in 2 Cor. 13.14 ostendit quomodo dicam●r reconciliari quum essemus inimici Deo per mortem Christi tamen Deum ita mundum dilexisse ut dares silium suum unigenitum c. Hinc inquit Deum inde nos intuemur nam Deus quantum ad se dilexit ante mundi creationem at cum in nobis nihil cernamus praeter materiam irae ita sit ut respectu nostri initium dilectionis sit a morte Christi reconciliation is ascribed to the Father because of his free grace he elected us to salvation and to Christ because by his death he purchased our salvation and reconciliation and it is ascribed to the Spirit also because it is his proper work to bring us to the Father Eph. 2.18 Concl. 9 Concl. 9. Albeit we do not deny that the Father may be said to work by and with the Son and holy Ghost and the Son with and by the holy Ghost because of that natural procession order and priority that is among those glorious persons yet we humbly conceive that the way of conveying of all good to the Saints which the Scriptures so frequently inculcat and which we should especially eye in all our adresses to God to wit from the
given to him and the holy Spirit proceeding from the Father and Son carrieth on the work of salvation in all them whom the Father hath elected unto life and for whom the Son hath laid down his life thus in time effectuating what the Father from eternity had decreed and applying the medicine the Son hath purchased and prepared for us 2. While it s ask't what the Spirit worketh by virtue of this economy Ans When thou comest home to thy fathers house and seest his face either thy curiosity shall be silenced or satisfied but now if thou only askest what we may rather ask what not Are not all the gracious actings of the Spirit and the whole work of sanctification first and last the sweet fruit of this economy covenant and transaction and without which our case had been as bad and desperate as the devils and now the Spirit by virtue of that covenant not only works but creates grace in subjecto inhabili where there was no inclination fitness or preparation till he began to work and not only actuatch grace where he hath wrought it and concurreth with it but also supplieth the defect of the cause and principle it self which still remaineth incompleat till he perfect it in glory which is another kind of providence nor what is afforded to natural agents And holiness sanctification and illumination being the third great work of God which by virtue of that voluntary transaction remained to be wrought towards the sons of men that did lie upon the third person of the blessed Trinity and thus by this eternal covenant holiness was fitly appropriated to the holy Spirit And thus we may see that there is not a full enumeration in the three-membred distinction of mission so often ininculcated in the Schools 1. per imperium or by command which supposeth the subjection of him who is sent 2. per consilium or by counsel and advice which supposeth weakness and ignorance in him who is sent 3. per originem or by natural descent as trees send forth their branches and this say they kind of mission only hath place among the persons of the Trinity but we may doubt if any where in the Scriptures the word mission or sending is put to signifie the natural procession of any of the persons of the Trinity but however from what hath been said it may appear that this three-footed distinction doth halt and wanteth one of its legs ye● and that member which is most usefull and necessary and which as we conceive only hath place in the Scriptures viz. by mutual consent agreement and covenant and none can question that this sort of mission may have place among equals Before we come to the application Concl. 10 let us add this tenth Concl. We are not so limited to conceive of the divine nature under one or more personal properties and distinct subsistences that in prayer or any other point of worship we may not draw nigh to him as the alone Jehovah and true God we are not so obliged to conceive of the divine nature relatively and as subsisting in the Father Son and Spirit as that we may not apprehend him absolutely as God abstracting as it were from the different subsistences of the God-head though not excluding them And thus the Jewish Church used to worship him and for ordinary made their adress to him as that one true and living God laying hold rather on his essential and glorious attributes then on his personal properties or relations But (u) A word of warning and caution 1. It were to be wished now under so full a discovery of this mysterious unity and Trinity that in beholding the infinite nature of the one Jehovah and true God we might adore the glorious Trinity of persons yet not suffering our thoughts so to expatiat and be scattered in musing on three as distinct objects of worship but still fixing our eye upon the unity of the divine nature and God-head which is the formal object of worship and which is not multiplied nor divided in the several persons for as (x) Vna est enim Patris Filii Spiritus sancti essentia quam Graci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocant in quâ non est aliud Pater aliud Filius aliud Spiritus sanctus quamvis personaliter fit alius Pater alius Filius alius Spiritus sanctus Aug. tom 3. de fid ad Pet diac cap. 1. fol 48. Austin saith albeit in the Trinity there be alius alius yet not aliud though there be a distinction of persons yet not of natures nor a distinct object of worship but the same God-head is in all the persons and therefore whether one or mo or none of the persons be named the object of worship is the same and we should in the unity of nature (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 autor expos apud Forhes loo cit cap. 33. behold the admirable Trinity of persons and in that Trinity the glorious unity of nature without division or confusion multiplication or alteration But 2. Albeit we may name any one of the persons particularly as being the true God and a fit object of worship yet we must not imagine any special respect and honour thereby to be given to him as if the other two were less worshiped in that act of worship and therefore albeit the Saints do frequently make their adress to the Father yet 1. they do not exclude the Son and holy Ghost nor 2. imagine that the Son and holy Spirit hath not an equal hand with the Father in all their mercies and thus 3. they do not come to the Father as another and greater God to whom more honour and reverence were due then to the Son and Spirit and 4. they do not apprehend that thereby the Father is engaged more to help them then the other two which are not named 3. As we should not stumble at the Arrian and Socinian cavils against the mystery of the Trinity which is an object of faith so far beyond the reach of our dark-sighted reason and apprehension and is such a depth as our shallow understanding and short measure is not able to sound So on the other hand we would beware least our belief of the Trinity make us encline towards the pagan conceit of plurality of Gods that it tend not nor lead that way as too freqently it doth in the rude and stupid multitude contrarily to the dictates of (z) Vide Scot in 1. sent dist 2. quaest 3. reason it self which hath convinced many Pagans of the impossibility of mo Gods then one which necessary point is so clearly held forth in the Scriptures of truth that he who runs may read Deut. 6.4 Mark 12.32 1 Cor. 8.4.6 c. But hoping that sober Christians will abominat these and such like gross conceptions of God that which we would mainly here take notice of and improve is that gracious economy of the glorious persons of the ever blessed Trinity
the Father can deny him nothing And therefore we shall not need to make a particular answer to the several mis-applications of these Scriptures for making out what they do not bear The intelligent reader may at the first view discern this to be the scope they aim at and that they cannot reach the length to which they are drawn by this accurat Disputer We shall only then in a word propound some few considerations which may help to discover the fallacy of his inferences 1. Albeit there be so many grounds and reasons for the successe and prevalency of Christs intercession yet all of them suppose his suffering and satisfying the justice of God without which there was an (b) Whether this impossibility was moral only and hypothetical or absolute and physical flowing from the nature of God his justice holiness c. we will not now dispute impossibility lying in the way of the salvation and acceptance of sinners Christ as our Surety could not plead and interceed for us till he had paid a price sufficient till the bond was cancelled he could not plead for the liberty of the captive Hence 2. To say that we may build upon his intercession alone seemeth to be directly contrary to that word Heb. 9.22 Without shedding of blood there is no remission of sin We will not enquire what the Lord out of his soveraignty might have done or whether or no he in his infinit wisdom which is a depth we cannot fathom could have found out another way but supposing the eternal appointment to save lost man by a Mediator I cannot see how our Surety could interpose upon another account then the satisfaction of justice or how justice should be satisfied and that just threatning accomplished In the day thou eatest thou shalt die Gen. 2.7 If Adam must not (c) Both the first and second death and especially the last as the most proper wages of sin must be here meant die either legally or personally either he or his Surety in his room and therefore we will find our redemption and salvation so frequently ascribed to his death and blood that we need not name any one place amongst many only look on these few Act. 20.28 Rom. 3.25 and 5.9 Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 20. Heb. 10.19 1 Pet. 1.2 1 Ioh. 1.7 Rev. 1.5 and 5.9 c. But I know not any one place in which our redemption is ascribed to his intercession though it be a most effectual mean for conveighing and putting us in possession of these blessings which he hath purchased to us by his death Yea 2. To affirm that his intercession alone is sufficient is to make though I know this Author will abominat such an (e) Though it may be drawn as a conclusion from the premisses he laith down assertion Christ to have died in vain Was Christ so prodigal of his precious blood as to lavish it out for that which some few words might have effectuated We must not then rob him of the honour of his death that thereby we may extoll him in his intercession And then 3. If he were not a compleat Priest without it the condition of believers under the old Testament must have been most sad and deplorable and the popish Limbus patrum that Prison not heard of till many years after the captives had made their escape must have been a desirable paradise to them who had not a compleat Priest to go between them and the devouring flames and to (f) Rev. 19.15 tread the wine-presse of the fiercenesse and wrath of the Almighty God And as for the time of their misery the popish Doctors must have hit right for since he did not appear in heaven to interceed for us till he ascended and if he was not a compleat Priest without this intercession the time of his ascension must be the (g) And thus the popish Doctors must only have misreckoned some few dayes they ascribing this liberty to Christs descending as they suppose to hell which was not obtained till his ascension into heaven day of their liberty and enjoying that happinesse which was suspended till then 3. We do not deny that Christs intercession is medium applicationis a most effectual and alwayes prevailing mean for obtaining to us and putting us in possession of all the good things he hath purchased for us by his blood but yet without this believers were saved of old and he was a compleat Priest able to make their peace and reconciliation and therefore though his intercession be most comfortable to us yet it is not of such absolute necessity that without it his blood would have been shed in vain the judge of the whole earth could not deal unjustly he would not have kept the captives in prison after their (h) Though Christ by his blood that was to be shed and the satisfaction he had undertaken to make might wel purchase and procure the salvation of believers under the old Testament yet he cannot be said to have interceeded for them who were saved before he assumed our nature and was in a capacity to interceed Intercession cannot have a thing already done and past for its object ransom was paid although he who laid down the money had not taken upon him the person of an Advocat to plead and of an Intercessor to request that justice might be done to him but yet it is very comfortable that our Surety doth alwayes appear for us before the Throne and that he liveth for ever to make intercession 4. We cannot go alongst with this learned Author while he saith that Christ was not a common person representing others in this his last work of intercession more nor in the first of incarnation ibid. chap. 4. pag. 97. For if he interceed for us as our Surety Mediator c. which he grants then certainly as a common and publick person Neither do I see any solid reason why we may be said to die rise and ascend with him which he affirmeth and not also to interceed with him It is true there is some peculiar reason why in his death in some special manner he may be said to stand under the relation of our Surety and so of a publick person because thereby he paid our debt and satisfied divine justice which we had wronged but as to the other particulars he instanceth I can see no difference between them and his Intercession as to the present case and the difference he alledgeth is nought For saith he this last work viz. of Intercession lay not upon us to do What is it not our duty to interceed and pray for our selves but of this enough Only I think it somewhat strange that this Author knowing the point of Christs proper and (i) Viz. As it is distinct from the cry of his blood formal Intercession to be so problematically spoken of by eminent Divines though I see no reason why it should be questioned should notwithstanding make it so necessary a part of
prevaile in him we have accesse with confidence and may come boldly to the Throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Eph. 3.12 Heb. 4.14.16 And there be these three most powerfull grounds of this prevalency whereupon our confidence should be built when we approach in his name 1. The Fathers love and tender bowels towards his only (l) Ioh. 3.16 begotten son Mat. 3.17 Iohn 3.35 and. 5.20 Col. 1.13 Heb. 3.6 the (m) So let enim etiam apud nos multum valere ami●orum dilectio quod propter ipsos etiam absentes mortuos rogamur prompte facimus To let in Joan. 16.23 name of a dear freind though absent or dead will be very prevalent with us for obtaining a favour and shall not the name of Christ who ever liveth with the Father and who hath the same nature and will with the Father being interposed obtain a grant to our desires Was the remembrance of Abraham Isaac and Iacob who were Gods (n) 2 Chr. 20.7 Isa 41.8 friends pleaded as a motive for the Lord to show mercy to their posterity Exod. 32.13 Deut. 9 27. c. And shall the Lord reject us when we come to him in the name of his dearly beloved Son 2. His blood and sufferings that price he hath laid down for all our mercies though we can only plead mercy and grace yet our cautioner hath satisfied divine justice he hath purchased us and all our mercies at a dear rate Act. 20.28 Eph. 1.5 and 2.13 Col. 1.20 1 Cor. 3.2 22 23. c. 3. His intercession and appearing in the heavens pleading our cause with the Father there and s●c●●●ing the cry of his blood wh ch was shed on earth and obtaining to us what he purchased by it See Chap. 5. And thus though we should pray in the holy Ghost Jud. 20. yet not in the name of the holy Ghost the Spirit must help us to pray but he is not our Mediator for whose sake our prayers are accepted I have (o) Jenkin on Jude 20. read of Arrius that one of his haeresies was that he attributed the office of mediator to the holy Ghost but why should we stay to confute that dream and to show that as there is but are God so there is but one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Jesus who gave himself a ransom to red 〈◊〉 l●st men 1 Tim. 2.5 6. For clearing of this point we will show 1. what it is to ask in Christs name 2. why we must as in his name 3. whether the J●wish Church did believe in him and pray in his name 4. we will close with a word of application For the first To pray in Christs name is not a work of the (p) Non enim senum literarum ac syllabarum sed quod sonus ipse sign●ficat quod eo sono recte ac veraciter intellegitur hoc accipiendus est dicere cum dicit in nomine meo Aug. tract 102. in Joan. lips or to say Lord hear us for Christs sake we dishonour Christ and we mock the Father when thus we take his name in vain and mention it in our prayers without reverence and dependance on him for an answer You will say what then doth this phrase import Ans If we perpend it as in the Scriptures attributed either to the Father or Son we will find that it doth signifie as to our purpose for it hath several other significations 1. his (q) Non petimus in nomine magistri quod petimus praeter regulam ipsius mugisterii Aug. tract 73. in Joan. command and appointment as Exod. 5.23 Deut. 18.20 Mat. 18.20 Secondly his help and assistance or our dependance upon his strength and power as Ps 44.5.1 Sam. 17.45 Luk. 10.17 Thirdly his glory as the end of our actions and the dispensations of providence towards us Col. 3. 17. Mat. 18.20 Ps 31.3 Fourthly as it is particularly attributed to Christ especially and most usually it importeth our dependence on him as our Mediator and advocate and our confidence in his merit and intercession as Joh. 14.13 14 and 16.23 c. And in this last sense especially we are said to pray in Christs name For though 1. we must have his warrant and approbation and look to his will and command and 2. though we must expect strength and assistance from him and 3. though we must aim at his glory in all our desires yet while it is required that we should pray in his name these things are as it were presupposed and directly principally and properly is only held forth our dependence on him as our Redeemer Reconciler Mediator and Advocate with the Father in whom alone and through whose merit intercession and satisfaction we expect access acceptance and audience of our prayers Two ancient Doctors viz. the judicious (r) Evigila igitur homo sidelis vigilanter audi quod illic positum est in nomine meo qui promisit ergo tam magnum beneficium qui vocatur utique Christus Jesus Christus significatregem Jesus salvatorem non itaque nos salvos faci●t quicunque rex sed rex salvator as per hoc quodcunque petimus adversus utilitatem salutis non petimns in nomine salvatoris tamen ip●e salvator est non solum quando facit quoa petimus verum etiam quando non facit qnoniam quod videt peti contra salutem non faciendo potius se exhibet salvatorem novit enim medicus quid pro sua quid contra suam sanitatem poscat aegrolus ideo contraria poscentis non facit voluntatem ut faciat sanitatem si autem qui in cum credit aliquid per ignorantiam contra suam salutem petit non in nomine salvatoris petit quia salvator ei non erit si quod ejus salutem impedit fecerit unde tunc expedit potius ut non faciendo propier quod invocatur faciat quod vocatur ut sic intelligamus non p●tere nos in nomine magistri quod pe●imus praeter regulam ipsius magisterit Aug. tract 73. in Joan. vide etiam tract 81. 102. Augustine and (ſ) Nomen filii Jesus est Jesus autem salvator vel salutaris dicitur ille ergo in nomine salvatoris petit qui illud petit quod ad veram salutem pertinet nam si id quod non expedit petitur non in nomine Jesu petitur pater unde eisdem apostolis adhuc in firmantibus dominus dicit usque modo non petistis quicquam in nomine meo ae si aperte dicevetur non petiistis in nomine salvatoris qui nescitis quaerere aeternam salutem Hinc est quod Vaulus non exauditur quia si liberaretur a tentatione ei non prodesset ad salutem c. Greg. mag hom 27. in evang vide etiam Theophylact. in Joan. 16.24 As for Augustine his reason viz. that all other things in
unprofitable task and too high for us and will not have such new wine put into our old bottels till they be renewed lest they break Mat. 9.17.5 Sathan as a cruel exacter may press thee to deal inhumanely and too rigourously either towards thy self or others and though such a work may seem to have much piety and zeal in it yet Sathan doth blow the bellows Thus if tender Christians should find a mighty impulse upon their spirits to pray and fast so long and so frequently as to hazard their health and to neglect their calling and not provide for their family ah how rare a case is this but though multitudes do spare and pamper their bodies to the neglect and ruine of their soul yet some have failed on the other hand and then certainly Sathan is not idle it is he that helpeth forward this cruel zeal Thus he stirred up the Jews in (x) But the command given to him was only for trial there being a ram provided for the sacrifice Gen. 22.13 but they could pretend no kind of command Jer. 7.31 Nay the Lord will rather have no sacrifice then a work of mercy should be omitted far more then cruelty should be exercised Mat. 11.7 imitation as it would appear of faithfull Abraham to offer up their children the Lord commanded them to sacrifice their beasts but Sathan taught them in a mad fit of zeal thus to super-erogat and to sacrifice their sons and daughters which oblations are said to be offered up to devils as for other reasons so haply for this because Sathan did prescribe require and stir them up thereunto Psa 106.37 Thus also he moved Baal's Priests to cut themselves with knives and lancets till the blood gushed out 1 King 18.28 Thus also he driveth blind Papists to afflict and scourge themselves c. and yet this sort of cruelty is far more tolerable then the fury of Anabaptists and other Sectaries who are mercifull to themselves but mad against all others in their zeal for God they could embrue their hands in their neighbours blood and cut off all others that they might enjoy their possessions that they might live as Kings there being no man to say to them (y) Eccl. 8.4 What do ye 6. Sathan moves tumultuously and confusedly holy motions having no dependance one upon another and tending to distract the heart in the present work whether that be prayer hearing the word c. must come from him who likes not the work and who laboureth by all means and that his hand may not be discerned maketh choice of the most fair and specious as being at such a season most probable to mar the work in hand but the Lord prepareth strengthueth fixeth and enlargeth the heart and inclineth it to perform His Statutes and establisheth our goings Psa 10.17 Psa 27.14 Psa 40.2 c. He will not raise but rather expell those storms and mist of confusion that dis-inableth us in His work 7. Sathan will suggest and stir us up to good divisively and partially Sathan when he moveth us to do good being out of his own element his motion cannot be equal and uniform if to some good not to all yea to some for this very purpose that we may be stayed from following some other haply of more concernment However he knoweth that he who is guilty of offending in one point is guilty of all and that God will accept of none of our works unless we have respect to all His commandments Psa 119.6 Jam. 2.10 and therefore if he can set one table of the Law or any one commandment against another he will not withdraw his help for enabling thee to bear that part of the burthen thou hast chosen Thus some seem to be very zealous and diligent in religious performances who neglect their relative duties as they are parents masters servants neighbours c. not unlike to those who were taught of the Pharisees to be liberal in their contributions for pious uses and undutifull to their indigent parents Mat. 15.5.6 But there are others and these not a few who place all their Religion in the duties of the second Table and they have no other charter to happiness but that they are good neighbours they deal justly they wrong no man c. and that Sathan may foster their delusion he will allow them to be very strict and exact in their carriage towards men Ah! what a monstrous kind of Religion must that be to wrong men in nothing and to rob God of all his service and worship except perhaps some outward performances without life and heat to give to man all his due and to God none of his O! but the Spirit teacheth and helpeth us to walk uniformly and to (z) Act. 24.16 exercise our selves alwayes to keep a good conscience both towards God and man 4. As to the rule if there be a mistake as to it if a false rule be set up Sathan will stir us up to be very active for it and zealous in our conformity to it if he can get our zeal wrong placed he will blow up the coal it was he that stirred up Paul to be (a) Act. 26.11 exceedingly mad against the Saints and violently to (b) Act. 22.3 4. persecute them he did cherish that blind zeal in the Jews who Rom. 10.2 3. laboured to establish blish their own righteousness he did kindle that zeal in those false brethren who Gal. 4.17 sought to seduce and draw away the Galatians from the simplicity of the Gospel and he it is who ruleth in Schismaticks Hereticks and all kind of persecutors making them mad against the truth and the sincere Professors of it Nay every motion though upon the matter never so good which tendeth to justifie any sinfull course to harden our heart therein and to feed any distempered passion and lust must come from the evil one and from him it also proceedeth that men are more zealous for their own inventions and superstitious customs then for the commands of God O! but the Spirit teacheth us to be (c) Gal. 4.18 zealously affected alwayes in a good thing to follow the direct on of the word and with (d) Job 23.12 Job to esteem his commandments and the words of his mouth more then our necessary food but every anti-scriptural and erroneous motion is a satanical suggestion proceeding not from the spirit of truth but from the father of lies who can cite Scripture and pretend divine Authority as he did to Christ Mat. 4.6 to back his temptations 5. As to the time 1. Sathan may move us to pray by fits and starts but the Spirit only can make us (e) Rom. 12.12 continue instant in prayer we cannot pray alwayes unless we pray in the Spirit Eph. 6.18 carnal men will not constantly call on God Job 27.10 2. Sathan can move thee to pray unseasonably as while a Judge is sitting on the Bench and God calls him and his place calls him to minister
desi●●d 3. From the return ma●e to Christs prayer once and again (z) Mat. 26.39 42 44. renewed that th● 〈◊〉 ●●●ght ●●●s f●om ●im it is evident that the prayer may be 〈…〉 when the particular is not gra●ced for 〈…〉 or p●●s a ●ay from him but he did drink it o●● 〈◊〉 the ●●●●om and ye● it were blasphemous to imagine that Christs ●●ayer w●● not heard contrary to what h● himself ●ff●●●th Joh. 11 4● Father I know that thou alwaies hea●est me And pa●●icularly as to that prayer the holy Spirit ●●stifieth that he was heard Heb. 5.7 And then 4. in the general the Scriptures of truth do most clearly fully and frequently assert that they th●● s●ek the Lord shall not want any good thing Psa 34 10. the same is affirmed of them that walk vpright●● Psa 84.11 and of them that fear the Lord Ps● 34.9 H●●ce we may well infer since they shall want ●o good thing they cannot want a return ●o their prayers and 〈…〉 answer from their God the Lord doing what is 〈◊〉 for them 〈◊〉 reference to the particular they desired A●d si●●e no 〈◊〉 shall befall the righteous Psa 91.10 P●●v 12.21 c. therefore they shall not g●●●hat 〈…〉 ●hem 〈◊〉 they should ask it upon a mistake 〈◊〉 ●aths of th● 〈◊〉 are m●●c● 〈◊〉 truth ●esu● ha● k●●p 〈…〉 monies Psa 25.10 If all his 〈…〉 such then 〈◊〉 those paths in which he 〈◊〉 in ●●swering th●● prayers those paths must be su●● 〈…〉 of ●●uth and fidelity in 〈◊〉 forming th●●e 〈…〉 answer them when they call upon him There 〈◊〉 ●ever a p●●yer p●●●●ed out in truth at which the God of truth did ●o● drew nigh and to which he did not 〈◊〉 Psa 145.18.19 all his paths are mercy and truth to all true 〈◊〉 who can produce one exception or instance to the co●tr●●y He never said to such sock ye me in vain Isa 45.19 and then there is a considerable word to this purpose Rom. 8.28 We know that all things work together for good to them that love him if we ponder the scope of the place we will find this general truth to have a special relation to prayer of which the Apostle had been speaking in the two preceeding verses where he had shown our ignorance and that we know not what to ask and the need we stand in of light and help and now saith he you having been assisted to do your duty and pray ar●ght you need not be anxious for Gods part and that which lieth upon him to do by way of return for ye may be assured whether he give or with-hold the particular he will have such a care of you as to do nothing but what he will make contribute and work for your good though we know not what to ask yet God knoweth what to give he will not challenge thee for asking what thou apprehended to be good for thee if (a) Especially since his Spirit may concur and assist thee in the pouring out of such a prayer it being our duty to go to God and hold up to him what we conceived to be good and fit for us committing to him to make choyce for us what he knows to be best See Part 1. Chap. 9. Pag. 269. upon the matter it be lawfull and if thy desire be moderate and submissive although as to the particular there may be a mistake flowing from thy ignorance of the event and those following circumstances which thou couldst not for-see but yet the Lord will do what he of his infinite wisdom and knowledge seeth will be indeed good and convenient for thee and we I and ye believing Romans saith the Apostle do know that God will care for them that love him and who in all things do make their requests known to him he will procure their good by the fittest means though the wicked will not know and acknowledge Gods care and fidelity in performing his promises and therefore think it in vain to seek the Lord yet we know and are perswaded of his love and care Surely the knowledge and belief of this point is a differencing mark and character they who have no interest in Gods love and care will not believe it towards others And thus its certain that the Lord alwaies heareth his honest supplicants Si (b) Aug. ●u●i supra non ad voluntatem tamen ad utilitatem If not according to their desire yet for their profit which if our (c) Our desires are often foolish and ●●rtfull desires would not hinder and obstruct they should alwaies be answered what doth our kind Father grudge to give us such empty trifles which he bestoweth in such abundance upon the wicked would he who hath so loved us as to give his only begotten Son to death for us and to prepare an exceeding and (d) 2 Cor. 4.17 eternal weight of glory for us would he with-hold these perishing thi●gs from us if it were not for our good Rom. 8. ●2 Nay if we had not askt as we could have no solid peace either in the having or wanting such a particular that being the fruit of prayer Phil. 4.6 7. So we might have (e) Deus concedit tratus quod negat propitius vid. Aug. loco jam jam citato gotten in wrath what the Lord now in mercy with-holdeth from thee who hast committed the matter to God and hast referred all to his wise free and loving choyce And thus whatever be the particular ends and reasons of which Sect. 4. why the Lord with-holdeth such and such particular mercies as we desired in the general it is evident that his design herein alwaies is to prevent our hurt and promove our comfort and happiness and that all his paths toward us may be mercy and truth by making all things work together for our good And now to the Objection as it is propounded we answer Although al things did come alike to all yet they are not alike to all though in the outward dispensation there appear no diff●rence yet as to the fountain from which such a dispensation did flow the end to which it doth tend the effect fruit use c there is a vast difference for those things which are mercies blessings and pledges of love to the Saints prove snares judgments and an earnest of everlasting wrath to the wicked and what greater difference can be imagined yea not only is there so great an inequality dissimilitude where they seem to be equal and alike but also where there is an inequality and the advantage appeareth to be on the part of the wicked as while we compare them in their prosperity and success and having (f) Ps 73 7● more then their heart could wish with the godly under persecution affliction and sore calamities yet even thus the case is not altered nor the difference and disproportion less for the Saints afflictions wants and tryals are sanctified unto them and are made to work for their good as being