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spirit_n abandon_v david_n saul_n 57 3 10.0323 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A01139 The groanes of the spirit, or the triall of the truth of prayer Foxle, George. 1639 (1639) STC 11250.3; ESTC S114872 54,217 260

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the third place if ever thou wouldst pray to break off thy sins and to part with thy prophanesse for as I have shewed a sinfull course familiarity with God cannot consist or stand together A corrupt tongue or leprous throat maketh a harsh noise in the eare of God remēber that the Lord is far from the wicked and though they cry to him he wil not harken to them Fourthly thou must avoid and abandon all prophane idle and unprofitable company for as thy living in a corrupt ayre or with contagious bodies will increase the habit of thy corrupt disposition till thou be utterly consumed so lewd and wicked company will more and more contaminate thy soule and spirit so that thy breath shall stink worser and worser in the nostrills of God As the soule in the Law that touched any abominable unclean thing and ate of the sacrifice was to bee cut off from Gods people so the conversing and familiarity with unclean cursed company cutteth a soule off keepeth it off from familiarity with God in prayer Therefore saith the wiseman Enter not into the path of the wicked and goe not into the way of evill men The Prophet David washing his hands in innocēcy that he might compasse the Altar of the Lord abandoneth all vain persons resolveth not to sit or converse with the wicked for as thou must avoid evill company and hate them that regard lying vanities so thou must associate thy selfe to the godly Hee that walketh with the wise shal be wise hate the evill saith the Prophet and love the good The meerely moral man doth counsel thee to converse with such as will make thee better as men by constant conversing with natives of a Nation doe learne the language of the nation so by sorting thy self with beggers thou maist happily learne to beg Fiftly thou must intreat the godly earnestly to pray for thee and to beg thee of the Lord esteem much of their praiers which be of that efficacy to convert a sinner from his waies and to save a soule from death hiding a multitude of sinnes If thus thou dost and God affecteth the hearts of his people to pray for thee there is good hope that thou shalt come to pray for thy selfe and for others also for the Sonne of many prayers cā hardly perish but so long as thou dost scoffe mock at the prayers of the Saints or hast them in light esteem the spirit of prayer or supplication will not come nigh thee Yet with this begging of the prayers of the Saints thou maist learne to beg thy selfe The people of Israel desired Samuel to pray for them when they had sinned but they praied also for themselves but Pharaoh desired Moses to pray againe and againe for him but hee would never learne to pray for himselfe neither did he at all desire Moses his prayer till the hand of God was the second time upon him for at the first he did not A great many doe never desire the praiers of Gods people if they desire them at all it is not till Gods hand be so heavy upon thē that they know not what to doe Sixtly thou must attend the meanes of the word read preached and conferred upon for thou shalt never learne to speak to God except thou hearest God speak unto thee hee that turnes away his eare from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be abomination It is not a set manner in a secret corner nor the best penned praier that thou canst get by hart without a diligent attendance on the word especially preached that ever will teach or inable thee to pray For faith commeth by hearing And because wee believe therefore we speak As the lame man in the Gospell lay still by the Poole of Bethesda which was the meanes appointed for recovery till the power of God had wrought upon him so thou must still attend the meanes till God smite the heart unvail the eyes touch and untie the tongue to this duty of prayer Seventhly and lastly enquire learn of God's people and they can tell thee what unvaluable profit what sweet pleasures what unspeakable consolation what peace-passing understanding what height of honour what heaven of happinesse they find in this familiar conference with God aske and they will tell thee as a Father observeth that of all vertues they can find none but this compared to incense Secondly they can tell thee on experience that it is the best guard against all assaults of Sinne and Sathan All kind of Divels are kept out and cast out by this When the evill Spirit came upon Saul David alayed and abandoned it by playing on his harpe that harpe saith one was devout Prayer Thirdly if thou wouldst know what is the best trading Gods people will tel thee there is none like Prayer For no state time place person or opposition can intercept thrift if thou art disposed to pray thou maist ever be imploying thy stock and that with the returne of encrease thou maist gain more by Prayer in one houre as one saith well then all the Merchants in the world in a thousand yeares Fourthly wilt thou know what is the very best physick Gods people can tell thee by experience that none is like Prayer It healeth the infirmities of the body and the diseases of the soule and the Praiers of the faithfull shall save the Sicklie and the Lord shall raise them up and if he have committed sinnes they shall be forgiven him Fiftly if it be enquired what is the greatest honour that mortall man can obtaine unto Is it not this for a man to talke familiarly with God as with his friend And such honour have all the Saints and they only What honour were it for a poore meane despicable man to come to be so inward with a great Monarch to have his eare at his pleasure and to goe into the bed-chamber when hee list without repulse or interruption of any So is it with Gods favorites how despicable and despised soever they be amongst men Hee that will be inward with God saith one let him pray frequently let him read diligently for when we speak with God when wee read or heare God speaketh to us Sixtly if thou wouldst be provided of the best armes against thine enemies of the best safest refuge in distresse the speediest deliverance out of trouble the Saints can assure thee upon experience that there is none like this witnesse Moses Hester Iehosaphat and the rest Seventhly wouldst thou command all the armes of creatures as heaven earth and all the creatures therein yea even the Angels themselves the people of God wil teach thee that Prayer is the only word of command By this Elijah did open and shut the heavens By this Moses tied and untied the hands of the Almighty by this Iacob made the Lord to stay with him so that hee could not depart till hee had blessed him Eighthly and lastly
THE GROANES OF THE SPIRIT OR THE TRIALL of the Truth of PRAYER 1 Ioh. 3. 21. 22. Beloved if our hearts condemne us not then have we confidence towards God and whatsoever wee aske we receive of him Cor in thuribulo Oratio pura OXFORD Printed by Leonard Lichfield are to be sold by Iohn Allen in Lecester An Dom. 1639. TO THE NOBLE AND much honoured Company of HIERVSALEM'S ARTILLERY all increase of skill Successe and Valour AS the Saints were not after the flesh so the weapons of their warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to bring downe all the strong holds and mighty imaginations of divels and men plotted cunningly against the Israelites of God yea all the forces of the flesh and the world must faint and fly upon the use of these Armes Of this compleate glorious Armature Prayer is a speciall part yea it is the very evergetical manifestatiō of the pow-of all the rest Jt putteth on all the other parts it keepeth the whole armature close to a man it sanctifieth all the rest to their several uses it guardeth all the rest of the golden furniture from theeves and robbers it daunteth the Divell and the Divels limbs it carrieth the armed Souldier through out all forces and furies as a victorious Conquerour And hence is that saying of the Ancients Supplications and Teares are the Armes of the Saints As the power and excellency of this spirituall peece is unexpressible by tongues of men or Angels so am I the least of all to be called of so high heavenly a faculty but since it hath pleased him that hath mercy on mee to teach mee the use of it though in much weaknesse and to guide mee as a weake pensill in his draught of the truth of it to whom should J then commend it both for the Touch Tuition but to the Military Forces of the new Hierusalem who are experimētally acquainted with this peece of proofe To you then my deare thrice noble Fellow-Souldiers the Trained Band of heaven the Artillery men of the most High I dedicate my selfe and this litle Treatise accompting it my only happinesse if I be but a door-keeper of the Company bear with the feeblenesse of my hands in the unsheathing of this Sword man you it with a holy and undaunted courage and it will maintain you Times call you all to the breach stand close one to another hold fast what yee have and let no man take your Crowne Lay about you with this fiery shaking blade upon all within you without you that oppose Christ his Kingdome Walk worthy of so high a gift make not this good commodity to be ill spoken of part not with your Armes and you shall overcome If these my poor pains may adde any thing to your skil the greatest recōpence I crave is to have a share in your cūning Your fellow-Souldier and Servant in love GEORGE FOXLE TO THE READER AS there was never more sleight in venting bad commodities under false glosses nor never more falsehood in counterfeiting of coine to make it goe currant then in these our daies so never more cheating tricks in the venting of shews and shapes of holy performances under the colour of true and essentiall duties in this selfe-cosening age of ours Instance in this duty of prayer under the shadowes and shew whereof the Divell masketh himself even as an Angell of light All that are of any religion wil seem to pray but a few pray indeed It is an easie thing under the meanes especially of quick wits to drawe a faire picture or dumbe shew of prayer but the Spirit only can make a living prayer As nothing is liker true friendship then flattery so nothing liker Piety then Hypocrisie nothing liker Prayer then painted words but words without quickning power of the Spirit are no prayer at all All that are of any knowledge within the pale of the Church will acknowledge the indigested prayer of the brutish ignorant to be but babling and also the prayers of such as worship a strange God or the true God after a false manner to bee but sin but that a man may have fit wordes a fluent phrase patheticall expressions yet no prayer that seemeth a Paradox but that so it may be I have shewed at large in this Treatise wherein I have endeavoured to cleare by proper and distinct notes the true Being of Prayer from all Semblances of prayer And where the comfort in prayer ariseth from the sense of the spirit in prayer I have delivered as I may the meanes of attaining the sense of the Spirit together with incouragements and motives to goe on in prayer though sense be not present And lastly I give directions how they that want the Spirit of supplication shall labour for it Though my insufficiency in every particular may appeare to an Artist in the faculty yet to Gods glory bee it spoken I have gone along by the light and feeling of some sparkles of the Spirit but with matter of much sorrow for my shallownesse in the duty Take heed then Christian Reader how thou prayest for it is Sathans main imposture to get thy heart to deceiue thee in this duty which is the lock and key of all other duties read and consider impute the failings to me and give God the Glory if any thing pleaseth Yours to use in Christ G. FOXLE THE CONTENTS of this Treatise WHat Prayer is 2 How a man may know when hee prayeth in the Spirit 3 How the sense of the Spirit in Prayer may be attained 4 How a man should hold on in the duty without the sense of the Spirit 5 How they that want the Spirit of Prayer should labour for it THE GROANES OF THE SPIRIT 1. What Prayer is AS there is no evill of sinne nor plague of punishment more feareful dangerous then the Spirit of slumber so there is no better preservation against it and medicine for the cure of it then the Spirit of Prayer The best of Gods people are taken with some dregs of this I sleepe saith the spouse but my heart waketh All had need therefore to be awaked and there is no better meanes to awake us then to hear God speaking to us and to set our selves a talking to God These be the two meanes indeed that abandon all that breake off familiarity with God and keepe and increase acquaintance with God let that counsell of our Saviour ever be with us watch and pray It is the best meanes for watchmen to keepe themselves awake by talking and so rouse their Spirits by conference This Prayer is the best medicine the safest refuge the truest messenger and the most mighty prevailer with God To stirre us up then to so excellent and necessary a duty in so dangerous secure and backsliding time I have made bold to hang out a litle light that they that have erred from the way as who doth not may returne they that are in