Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n behold_v glory_n lord_n 7,688 5 4.9645 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A32819 A serious examination of the independent's catechism and therein of the chief principles of non-conformity to, and separation from the Church of England / by Benjamin Camfield ... ; in two parts, the first general, the second more particular. Camfield, Benjamin, 1638-1693. 1668 (1668) Wing C383; ESTC R6358 213,588 410

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the goings out thereof and the comings in thereof and all the ordinances thereof and all the forms thereof and all the lavvs thereof and write it in their sight that they may keep the whole form thereof and all the ordinances thereof and do them One vvould guess by these allegations the Catechist and his Brethren vvere far from being avovved enemies to setledforms of worship But that these are allusions only vvhich they are accustomed to cant vvith The former Text relates to the Tabernacle which God appointed Moses to make vvith the appurtenances thereof Act. 7.44 The later is not so easily resolved upon amongst Interpreters what Temple it was to be referr'd unto Grot. in EZek. cap. 40.2 It seems most probable that the Prophet EZekiel received the pattern of the Temple in a Vision as it was when Nebuchodonosor destroyed it and that to this purpose that the Jews might understand hovv great a glory of their Nation they had forfeited by their sins and that vvhen God should restore them from their captivity they might have before them a Sampler to imitate as far as they were able And if any object that the description here made of it doth not exactly square and agree with that of Solomon's 't is answered That those many Kings who came after Solomon did out of the great tributes and gifts brought into the Temple add much unto it by the ornaments of it yea and changed the use of some things about it But I need not lay any stress upon conjectures When we have the priviledge to be taken into the Mount with Moses and behold God's pattern or receive a Vision of it with Ezekiel we shall be certainly obliged to conform unto it but in the interim that vvhich is obtruded upon us by some for it vve can entertain for no other than a dream of men of strong imaginations 9. Those Scriptures which point unto the spiritual worship required by God under the Gospel † See the explication of this text farther in this book hereafter John 4.21 23 24. Woman believe me the hour cometh when ye shall neither in this mountain nor yet at Jerusalem vvorship the Father but the hour cometh and now is vvhen the true vvorshippers shall vvorship the Father in spirit and truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and truth Heb. 10.19 20 21 22. Having therefore boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his flesh and having an high priest over the house of God Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water 1 Cor. 14.20 Brethren be not children in understanding 2 Cor. 3.7 8 9 10 11. where the Apostle compares the ministration of the Spirit with the Law and preferrs it as more glorious If the ministration of death written and ingraven instones was glorious so that the children of Israel could not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance which glory was to be done away how shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious For if the ministration of condemnation be glory much more doth the ministration of righteousness exceed in glory for even that which was made glorious had no glory in this respect by reason of the glory that excelleth for if that which was done away was glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious The whole design of which place is to prefer the glory of the everlasting Gospel above that of the Legal dispensation which was to give way to it Catech p. 56.17 58 59 60. Now these places are alledged by the Catechist to prove That the decency and comliness of Gospel-worship doth not in the least depend upon the observation of any external rites or ceremonies But the mistake lies in making that the only excellency and requisite of Gospel-worship which is indeed it 's principal and chiefest qualification The case one would think were very plain We are not our selves naked bodies nor yet ghosts or spirits but spirit and body united together The soul and spirit is the most considerable and ruling part in us and yet the body is a part also though subordinate Our duty then is readily chalked out by the Apostle 1 Cor. 6 10 Glorifie God in your body and spirit which are Gods in body and spirit together Chiefly indeed in and with our souls and spirits which are chief within us but not with our souls only 'T is part of our reasonable service Rom. 12.1 to present our bodies also a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God Yea whilst we live in Society 't is our greatest concernment in reference unto others by our visible and bodily and external devotions to declare a reverent sense of God and affection to his honour We cannot glorifie God among men but by the sensible expressions of our religion and therefore God in the second Commandment mentions these and the ordering of these is the proper matter of humane cognizance and government to busie it self about In the first place we must have Grace in our hearts that we may serve God acceptably but then it is but fitting that we discover that inward grace by the external acts of a becoming reverence also Let us have grace Hebr. 12.28 29. that we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear for our God is a consuming fire St. Paul thought it fit not only to provide that the Church at Corinth might serve God understandingly and with the spirit but after this decent manner also the man uncovered 1 Cor. 11. and the woman covered Nor is it fitting that the honour of God's publick worship should in this particular be left to the uncertainties of every clownish and fantastick humour 10. It is said to be the main design of the second commandment Catech. p. 62 63. to forbid the making unto our selves any thing in the worship of God to add unto his appointments whereof an instance is given in that of making and worshiping Images To this purpose we are frequently referr'd unto Exodus 20.4 5. Thou shalt not make unto thy self any graven image or any likeness of any thing that is in Heaven above or that is in the Earth beneath or that is in the Water under the earth Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor serve them for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God c. It may seem neer akin to adding unto the Word of God for any to presume to turn the body of a precept into an instance only The main design of the commandment is plainly against Idolatry God's jealousie therefore is in this case said to be moved when we do as the wife that admits
neither will they be perswaded though one arose from the dead 2 Tim. 3.15 16 17. That from a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures which are able to make thee wise ●●to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousness that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works 1 Pet. 1.19 it should be 2 Ep. We have also a more sure word of prophesie whereto ye do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place Psalm 19.7 8.9 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul making wise the simple Isa 59.21 My spirit which is upon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever This last is Gods covenant to continue his Spirit in conjunction with his words throughout all ages in his Church And not to bestow a particular reflection upon the rest the genuine result of these Texts is no more than what all Protestants agree in That we are obliged to attend vvith reverence unto the H. Scripture in whatsoever it speaks That we are diligently to read and peruse it to that purpose and That it is our onely and perfect rule in all the matters of faith and good life necessary to our salvation which is the great end for which the Scripture was given unto us That nothing is to be received as an Article of Divine Faith or Law in it self binding the conscience which is not according to the written Word and from thence to be derived But then it cannot from hence be groundedly inferr'd That we must have express warrant out of the Scripture for every thing which we either believe or do or in those circumstantials which are not any where thereby determined farther than the prescribing of some general rules of piety and prudence whereby our Governours ought to determine them and enjoyning obedience to all that are placed under them to their good orders agreeable thereunto 2. Those Scriptures which use the negative argument of God's not commanding a thing as a reproof and condemnation of it Jerem. 7.27 it should be v. 21 22 and 23. Thus saith the Lord Put your burnt-offerings unto your sacrifices and eat flesh i. e. Eat of those offerings which were to be wholly consumed no less than of other sacrifices Levit 1. for I spake not unto your fathers nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt-offerings or sacrifices but this commanded I them saying Obey my voice H. Grot. in loc Annot in L. 4. Rel. Christ If that be true which some ground upon this place viz. That God issued forth no command of sacrifices till after their worshipping the Golden Calf they were warranted only by custom arising from a voluntary devotion then we have gained so many fresh instances to be added unto those before alledged against this general principle now examined but I will not lean any thing to that supposition It seems rather that Sacrifices were before that required The Israelites begg'd liberty to go out to sacrifice by Divine directions and Pharaoh gave it them and God commanded the Sacrifice of the Paschal Lamb Exod. 3.18 and 8.8 and 12 13. The meaning then of God by the Prophet here may be only this That God preferr'd obedience before sacrifice as is elsewhere declared 1 Sam. 15.22 and manifested as much See Deut. 4.22 23 14. when he gave the Law at Mount Sinai requiring moral observances audibly from them without the mention of burnt-sacrifices the prescriptions whereof Moses afterwards himself received and so the negative hath only a comparatiue force in it I spake not nor commanded concerning Burnt-offerings i. e. not so much not in comparison with Obey my voice as it is both said and explained in the Prophet Hosea Hosea 6.6 I desired mercy and not sacrifice and the knowledge of God more than burnt-offerings Thus there are the more weighty St. Matt. 23 23. and considerable things of God's Law and those of a lesser size the one such as ought chiefly and especially to be done and yet the other too not to be left undone Others gloss on the words that God did not command sacrifice from them in such a manner and with such evil dispositions as they brought it And this is certainly the meaning of that expostulation in the first of Isaiah Isa 1.12 Who hath required these things at your hands from whence too some of our Catechist's way have taught That nothing is to be done but what God requireth Whereas it is evidently the design of that place Not to disclaim the Act spoken of but the Actors in their manner of performance and the emphasis lies not upon these things which were plainly matters of Divine appointment but upon your hands Who hath required these things at your hands even your hands that are full of bloud verse 15. The scope of the place is not to disown the things themselves the Worship given but the corruption of the worshippers as it is elsewhere said The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 Let us then see if the other places that belong to this head have more in them for our conviction Jer. 7.31 They have built the high places of Tophet to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire which I commanded them not neither came it into my heart And again Jer. 19.5 They have built the high places of Baal to burn their sons with fire for burnt-offerings unto Baal which I commanded not nor spake it neither came it into my mind The meaning of these phrases here used is questionless this which I forbad them for the matter spoken of is an abomination expresly forbidden by God Levit. 18.21 And the same answer belongs to two other Texts Deut. 17.3 Where the Idolater is thus described Who hath gone and served other Gods and worshipped them either the Sun or Moon or any of the host of Heaven which I have not commanded i. e. manifestly which I have forbidden Exod. 20.4 So Levit. 10.1 'T is the accusation of Nadab and Abihu that They offered strange fire before the Lord which he commanded them not i. e. which he had forbidden them having commanded them to use the fire upon the Altar which to that very purpose was to be kept burning and not to be put out Levit. 1.7 8. 6.12 13. 16.12 God therefore having appointed his own fire the using of any other in the room of it could be no other than a violation of his appointment In all these places then there is a figure of speech which the Rhetoricians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
employment or state of preheminencie is also a concession so farr from endammaging our cause that it furnisheth us with a plea of Apostolical warrant and authority for Prelatical Episcopacy But I will conclude this Chapter with a note from our observing Whitgift of these zealous contenders for equality in the Ministry Arch Bishop Whitgift defence of Answ to the Adm. Tra●t 8. p. 299. Though they pretend saith he equality in words yet they mean it in others not in themselves for they would have him to be the best rewarded and most reverenced that hath the most and best gifts which every one of their chief Captains perswades himself to have So that in the end there would be as great a doe after their manner Which of them should be chief as ever there was betwixt the Bishop of Rome and other Bishops or betwixt Canterbury and York in times past In the mean time you may easily understand if you please that notwithstanding they themselves would be exempted from the jurisdiction of Arch-Bishop Lord Bishop c. yet do they challenge to themselves as great jurisdiction over their Parishes or congregrtions and as lofty dominion over Princes Nobles and all as ever the Pope did over the whole Church CHAP. VII Dr Hammond's account of Church-government Church-power originally in Christ and personally exercised by him on earth This power described by Christ negatively and affirmatively The Apostles Christ's successor's Their office not Temporary and to end with their persons proved from Christ's affirmation and promise and the histories of those times The assumption of Matthias to the Apostolacy The seven Deacons James the just made Bishop of Jerusalem and call'd an Apostle Timothy and Titus ordained by St. Paul with power themselves to ordain others They and other Bishops successors of the Apostles and therefore also call'd Apostles The Angels of the seven Churches of Asia Concordant testimonies out of Antiquitie The Council of Chalcedon Polycrates Irenaeus Tertullian The manner of succession cleared Commission required in all Church-officers from them that received it immediately from Heaven or their successors NOw for the Reader 's satisfaction in this matter of the Government of the Church I will subjoyn a clear relation extracted from the elaborate writings of our Learned See Dr. Hammond Letter of Resol uaere 5. Dissertat alibi and Judicious Hammond It cannot be denyed that Christ Jesus was sent down in our humane flesh to exercise in his own person and so to found an office of Government on Earth as it was prophesied of him Isa 9.6 Isa 9.6 and 61.1 61.1 That the Government should be upon his shoulder and that the Lord had anointed which the Chaldee Paraphrase generally renders by exalting him and as a preparative to that that the Spirit of the Lord was upon him to preach the Gospel c. Which Prophesie is acknowledged to be fulfilled in Christ St. Luke 4. 18. 21. St. Matt. 3. 16. That Spirit of God upon his being baptized by John immediately descending upon him Now what this office was is by Christ himself set down first negatively then affirmatively St. Luke 12. 14. St. John 18. 16. Negatively That he was not constituted a Judge of civil interests and that it was not a Kingdom of this world which he pretended to And so all pretension of right from him to interpose in or disturb civil governments or judicatures or to make any change in the Principalities of the world is utterly disclaimed in the foundation Affirmatively First in the general that he came to call sinners to repentance to save that which was lost to bring the spirits and souls of men into a regular compliance with the Laws of God to rule reign in mens hearts by faith And then in particular First To preach and reveal the Will of God Secondly To gather proselytes and admit them by Baptism into his Church the Society of those who profess the Faith of Christ Thirdly To confirm and farther build up and instruct those that are thus admitted 4. To remove those from the priviledges of that Society who walk unworthy of them by that means most probably to ●educe them Fifthly To receive these upon testification of their repentance into the embraces of his arms the communion of the Church again And lastly to communicate this power to others in what measure he thought expedient In all respects he is said to be sent into the world St. John 17.18 19 20 21 sent by his Father as Governours are said to be sent by the Supreme Ruler 1 St. Pet. 2. 14. St. Matt. 9. 6. 28 18. with Commission to that purpose to have power on earth to forgive sins to have all povver deliver'd unto him in Heaven and Earth and particularly St. John 13. 33. Heb. 3. 1. 13. 20. 1 St. Pet. 2. 25. to be the Teacher and Lord of his Church or Disciples our High-priest and Apostle the great shepheard of the sheep and so the only Pastor and Bishop of our souls What Christ had thus received from his Father by his Mission or Commission he exercised in his own person as long as he remained on the Earth preached the Gospel instituted Rites called and entertained Disciples by them received and baptized Proselytes or Believers commanded them and used their ministry their voluntary not constrained obedience designed some to certain offices and only for a time the Seventy as Harbingers in one journey of his to assist or be useful to him others he invested with a weightier and more lasting authority left them his successors on earth sent them as he was sent by his Father gave them the same Commission which he had received to be executed in the same manner by them and each of them after his departure as Joshua succeeded Moses in his Office and Power All which is in every branch of it clear from the express words of Scripture They that had this Commission from Him were in his life-time called Apostles that title denoting Proxies or Procurators which act in the name and stead of him whose Proxies they are according to the known rule of the Jews Apostolus cujusque est ut quisque Every ones Apostle is as himself to which our Saviour seems to referr St. Matt. 10.40 making himself his Father's Apostle or Proxie and the Twelve St John 17. 18 20 21. his But at his departing from the world then he solemnly instated his power on them and sealed their Commission to them as it had been sealed to him by his Father This also is very distinctly and particularly set down in H. Writ through the several branches of this power St John 5. 23. St. Matt. 19. 28. St. Luke 22. 30. 1 Cor. 6. 3. 2 Cor. 10. 6. St. Mat. 10. 6. St. John 20. 23. Isa 22. 22. Rev. 3. 7. St. Mat. 16. 19 St. Mat. 19 28. St. Luke 22. 30. St. Mat. 21. 42. Ephes 2. 20. St. John 5. 24. 17 18.
our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ Rom. 1.7 1 Cor. 1.3 2 Cor. 1.2 1 Cor. 1.3 2 Cor. 1.2 c. Gal. 1.3 Eph. 1.2 Phil. 1.2 Col. 1.2 1 Thess 1.1 2 Thess 1.2 Philem. 3. Grace Mercy and Peace 1 Tim. 1.2 2 Tim. 1.2 Titus 1.4 and his acoustomed farewel his wish at parting Rom. 16.20 1 Cor. 16 2● c. and taking leave is this The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all Amen Rom. 16.20 1 Cor. 16.23 Phil. 4 23. 1 Thes 5.28 2 Thess 3.18 Philem. verse 25. somewhat enlarged 2 Cor. 13.14 varied Gal. 6.18 Eph. 6. 23.24 contracted Col. 4.18 1 Tim. 6.21 2 Tim. 4.22 Tit. 3.15 Consult we next the Apostolical Exhortation unto Timothy for the providing a publick Liturgy I exhort saith St. Paul that first of all Supplications Prayers Intercessions and Giving of Thanks be made for all men for Kings and for all that are in authority that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all Godliness and Honesty 1 Tim. 2.1 2. 1 Tim. 2.1 2. q. d. In the first place Dr. H. paraph● I advise thee and all other Bishops under thy inspection that you have constant publick offices of devotion consisting 1st Of Supplications for the averting of hurtful things sins and dangers 2dly Of Prayers for the obtaining of all good things which you want 3dly Of Intercessions for others And 4thly Of Thanksgiving for mercies already received and all this not only for your selves but in a greater diffusion of your charity for all mankind for the Emperours especially and Rulers of Provinces under them to whom we owe all our peaceable living in any place in the exercise of Religion and a vertuous life and therefore ought in reason to pray and give thanks for them Now how can this exhortation be more properly and effectually complied with than by the making of certain Forms of Prayer with Thanksgiving suitable to those Heads and appointing the use of them Two Texts of Scripture more shall conclude this catalogue of citations Revel 4.8.12 The four Beasts rest not day and night saying Holy Holy Holy Revel 4.8.12 Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come And the 24 Elders worship him that liveth for ever and ever saying Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory and honour and power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were-created Revel 15.3.4 Revel 1● ● 4. And they who had gotten the victory over the beast verse 2. sing the song of Moses the servant of God and the song of the Lamb saying Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almighty Just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints Who shall not fear thee O Lord and glorifie thy name for thou only art holy c. He certainly must have a fore-head of brass who after these Scripture-patterns and warrants for Set Forms of Prayer dare presume to deny their lawfulness or declaim against their expediencie And by the way I have also cleared sufficiently the justifiableness of imposing and prescribing of them It savours rankly of a spirit of disobedience to refuse the doing of that upon our Superiour's command which we may do lawfully of our selves And to determine this Quaery in a word Where-ever there is Publick Prayer performed in a Congregation he that speaks doth thereby prescribe a Form for the time unto all that hear and joyn with him and it were worth the while to know Why that priviledge should be denied to a greater authority which they cannot avoid the granting to a less Briefly then to the Catechist's Arguments 1. 'T is contrary saith he to one principal end of Prayer it self which is that Believers may therein apply themselves to the Throne of Grace for spiritual supplies according to the present condition wants and exigencies of their souls Rom. 8.26 Phil. 4.6 Heb. 4.16 1 Pet. 4.7 I answer That publick prayer is to provide for publick and common wants private and secret prayer for private and personal wants and yet both publick and private wants may be comprized in a Form of Prayer the publick in a Form prescribed the private in a Form premeditated But for the private and personal wants of every particular to be regarded in Publick Prayer is a thing that never was and never will be practicable farther than as particulars are provided for under certain general heads whereto they may be referr'd For the Texts of Scripture cited Rom. 8.26 The Spirit 's helping our infirmities I design to speak to in the next Chapter Phil. 4.6 is only an injunction of the duty of Prayer upon every occasion Heb. 4.16 is an encouragement to come boldly on all occasions to the Throne of Grace 1 Pet. 4.7 requires from us watching unto Prayer Which may certainly be done by premeditation and a carefulness over our own Spirits that we be not discomposed for that service There is nothing in all these Texts against the using of Set Forms of Prayer 2. 'T is contrary to the main end that our Lord Jesus Christ aimed at in supplying men with gifts for the discharging the work of the Ministry tending to render the promise of sending the H. Ghost which is the immediate cause of the Churches preservation and continuance needless and useless Eph. 4.8 12 13. I answer That among all the Gifts mentioned in H. Scripture we meet with no such thing as a Gift of Extempore-Prayer and were there any such yet is it no more injury unto that than to other gifts to be confined in the exercise within such bounds and limits as tend to order and edification For God is not the author of confusion but of peace as in all Churches of the Saints 1 Cor. 14.33 Not is the promise of the H. Ghost render'd needless and useless who hath other weightier effects to promote than this and who doth as well direct and assist the Church in composing and prescribing a Form of Prayer for publick use as any private Minister for his present Auditory Eph. 4. whereto we are referr'd speaks only in the general of Gifts by Christ bequeathed unto men but names not the Gift of Prayer much less asserteth it to appertain unto every Minister But the Catechist had before told us Cat. p. 174. it will be said That Christ bestows on the Ministers of the Church Gifts and ability of Prayer for the benefit and edification thereof citing Rom. 8.15 16. Gal. 4.6 I answer That in these two Scriptures mention indeed is made of the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father but that nevertheless is at no odds with saying Our Father which art in Heaven Nay 't is possible it may relate unto it And besides these Texts concern not more the Ministers priviledge than the Peoples referring in common unto Christians 3. It will render the discharge of the duty of Ministers unto several precepts and exhortations of the Gospel for the use
have a degree of Elocution in them beyond the Rhetorick of words and phrases 'T is not necessary that there be so much as an audible groan much less that whining effeminacy by some indulged to for the Spirit is here said to make intercession 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with groanings unuttered And certainly the Spirit of true Devotion is often most when the tenor of the voice is still and void of affectation as we observe the Water to be deepest where it runs with the least of noise and murmur This then I assert in the negative That we have no vvarrant to expect from the H. Spirit an immediate inspiration of the matter and words of Prayer and I will confirm it by a three-fold Argument 1. Were it otherwise neither John the Baptist nor our B. Sauiour need have taught their Disciples any Forms of Prayer as they did This pains were superfluous if it were the office and work of the Spirit immediately to inspire the matter and words of prayer To what purpose were this waste And I think he may as reasonably deny the Sun to shine at noon-day who will affirm the Lord's Prayer to be no Set Form whereas the words are evidently moulded into a Prayer and enjoyned by our Saviour St. Luke 11.1 2. in their use for such When ye pray say Our Father And this injunction given too in answer to their request Lord teach us to pray as John also taught his Disciples Now Were it the Office of the Spirit to put words and matter immediately into mens thoughts and tongues Christ should have given instead of this answer When ye pray say Our Father that which he elsewhere gave for their encouragement when arraigned before Heathen-Governours Take no thought how or what ye shall speak for it shall be given you in that same hour the Spirit of my Father shall speak in you 2. Were this conceit true of the Spirit 's immediate dictating of the matter and words of Prayer then every Prayer should be of as good and authentick authority as the H. Scripture it self For whence is the Divine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Holy Scripture and why do we afford it so absolute a reverence but because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given by inspiration from God The Prophets and Pen-men of it spake and wrote as they were moved and acted by the H. Ghost Now if the Spirit did immediately help every person that prayeth to the matter and words of Prayer we must needs affirm Every Prayer to be in like manner by inspiration from God and every man that prayes to be moved and acted by the Spirit and to speak as he is moved by the H. Ghost Were this so it might prove I confess of considerable advantage unto some and help them to new Scriptures for their wayes and actions directly contrary to the old which we know to have been truly inspired of God But far be it from us to canonize all the extravagancies to say nothing worse of some mens prayers pretending most highly to the Spirit as of equal authority with the holy pure and infallible Word of God 3. Were it the Office of the H. Spirit immediately to suggest unto every one that prayes the matter and words of Prayer it were then impossible for any number to joyn together in offering up the same prayers and petitions unto God For let the Speaker or Minister pray never so much Ex-tempore as 't is call'd and without premeditation and by the Spirit 's inspiration as is pretended yet his very Prayer will be the hearer's direction and help both to the matter and words of Prayer and as much a confinement for the time as any other Form made and prescribed to their hands The most Extempore-Prayer is as I have before also intimated an absolute set Form to all but the utterer of it and therefore 't is the meerest non-sense in the world to exclaim against Praying in Publick by a Form when there can be no Publick Prayer managed without it It is not then to be expected from the H. Spirit that he should immediately furnish us with the matter and words of Prayer That for negative And from thence 2. The affirmative follows If not immediately then of necessity mediatè by the use of proper and fitting means conducing thereunto For there is no third way to be conceived of The Spirit 's help as to the matter and words of Prayer i. e. the Gift of Prayer must be either immediate without the use of means or mediate by the use of means conducible thereunto I will not deny but the Apostles might sometimes pray by the extraordinary and immediate inspirations of the Spirit as they received immediately other extraordinary gifts But I have already discountenanced our expectation of any such gift immediately from the Spirit We may as justly pretend to an immediate gift of Tongues whereas it is our lot by the use of fitting and ordinary means to attain to a part of that perfection which God sometimes bestowed without the use of these means extraordinarily The Children of Israel were fed with Manna from Heaven in the Wilderness but when they came to Canaan they lived upon the sweat of their own brows the fruits and encrease of their own labour Now these proper means by the diligent use of which the Spirit furnisheth us with the matter and words of prayer are consideration of our wants premeditation of the things we are to ask of God the improvement of our natural faculties of reason and utterance good instruction c. And among the rest those useful Forms which are recommended to us from pious and good men or prescribed by Authority the Common-Prayers of the Church Thus if we are qualified for Prayer by the help of our natural parts our knowledge and memory of divine truths our invention and elocution the Spirit may be said by these to help us to the materials and words of Prayer viz. remotely inasmuch as every good gift is from him and through his blessing And thus sometimes whilst we are giving our selves to meditation in order unto Prayer the Spirit may set our sins before our eyes and bring to our remembrance fitting truths to be thought upon And thus also by the help of Forms composed to our hands The Spirit no question help'd the Baptist's Disciples to the matter and words of Prayer by that Form which John the Baptist taught them and the Spirit help'd Christ's Disciples to the matter and words of Prayer by that absolute and perfect Form of Prayer which our B. Saviour taught them and we also have received And thus the Spirit in like manner may be said to help us to the matter and words of Prayer by those excellent Forms of Common-Prayer publickly enjoyned by the Church wherein we live For What an excessive vanity and dotage is it for particular persons to conceit themselves so highly in favour with the Sacred Spirit as to be assisted in order to
the matter and words of prayer themselves and yet deny this priviledge to a company of men as pious and learned as themselves to speak the least and more modest and humble than they and so the more likely to be taught by Him gather'd together in the name of Christ But hitherto of the Gift of Prayer which concerns the matter and words of it Secondly It is Grace which is most confiderable in Prayer for there may be this matter and words of Prayer and yet no praying all the while 'T is the Heart and Soul of man that prayes in God's account and Prayer by him is weighed by the exercise of proper graces and not of natural gifts or improvements Fancy or Elocution Non vox Psalm 62.8 sed votum Prayer is the pouring forth of the heart before God If the Soul of the Supplicant be not chiefly engaged in it the Soul and Life of Prayer is wanting It was one of the Sentences written in the Jewish Synagogues Prayer without Attention is like a Body without a Soul That which is most considerable in Prayer is as I said the exercise of inward graces proper thereunto Hebr. 12.28 Let us have grace saith the Apostle whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and with godly fear This therefore is the principal work of the H. ●pirit in reference unto Praier to awaken and enliven excite assist and strengthen those graces that are therein to be employed These two Titles are connexed Spiritus gratiae precum The Spirit of Grace and Supplications Zech. 12.10 he is the Spirit of gracious supplications the Spirit of supplications chiefly as the Spirit of that grace which animates them When St. Paul therefore had exhorted the Ephesians to be filled with the Spirit and in the power thereof Ephes 5.18 19. to speak to themselves in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual songs he adds in the close that which is indeed the principal and most to be heeded by them Singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord or as his phrase is to the Colossians Coloss 3.16 Singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. The gracious melodie of the heart is the great demonstration of the H. Spirit 's assistance of and agencie within us To this purpose He is said to help against our infirmities Rom. 8.26 27. and make intercession for us with groanings unuttered with sighs unexpressed as was before shewed and it follows He that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit The Spirit 's agencie is chiefly in the heart and therefore exposed chiefly to the Searcher of hearts The Spirit of Prayer then is where-ever there is an Heart exercising the graces which are proper unto Prayer where-ever there are those gracious dispositions and affections actuated be the Form of words premeditate by our selves or prescribed by others it matters not save that where the Form is prescribed there is one grace more to be exerted viz. the grace of obedience The great benefit we have from the Spirit as to Prayer lyeth inwards in such works as these are 1. The fixing of our intentions to the work we are about driving away of wandring roving and impertinent thoughts that we may wait upon God without distraction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without avocations that we may mind what we are about that we may serve God with a fixed heart as the Psalmist speaks of himself Psalm 57.7 Psal 57.7 and therefore he prayes elsewhere in this Form of words Vnite my heart to fear thy Name and 86.11 Psalm 86.11 q. d. Gather together the scattered and dispersed parcels of it unite and fix my divided-thoughts that I may attend to thee only in thy worship and serve thee with an entire and single heart and thoughts combined together This is a work too great for our strength without the gracious assistance of the H. Spirit of Prayer to govern and keep close our spirits to what we are about that so we may be fervent in Spirit while we are serving the Lord. The due fixation and composure of our thoughts to what we are about is the benefit of the Spirit of Prayer who thus assists us in the stirring up of our selves to the duty and recollecting of our wandring thoughts in it And this believe it is the prime part of the grace of prayer There is none saith the Prophet Isa 64.7 that calleth upon thy name that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee Upon which place Forerius well notes That it avails little Qui consurgat seipsum excitet exsuscitet magno animi conatu Parvi enim refert frigidè precari dicere or● tenus Domine Domine Vera Oratio est cum sui-ipsius exsuscitatione tanquam ad rem setiam magni ponderis excutere desidiam avocare ab aliis omnibus animum magnâ animi contentione ad deprecandum Deum accedere Hoc qui facit tenet Deum seu apprehendit quasi manu ne elabatur tenet ut sententiam revocet neque priùs abeat quàm nobis benedicat ut fecit Jacob ob quod Israel vocatus est quasi in Deum praevaluisset Sic teneba● Moses Deum illae enim voces Dimitte me ut irascetur futor meus c. quid aliud sonant nisi quod à Mose fortiter teneretur Forer in Loc. to pray coldly and to say with the mouth only Lord Lord. True Prayer is with the stirring up of a man's self as to some serious and weighty matter shaking off sloth and calling the mind from all other things and coming to pray unto God with great endeavour of mind He that doth this holds God or takes him as it were by the hand and suffers him not to go without a blessing as Jacob did for which he was called Israel a prevailer with God And so did Moses hold God for those words Let me alone do intimate as much 2. The assistance of the Spirit of Prayer lies in this as to our understandings the illumination of our minds in the distinct apprehension of the matter and words of Prayer the causing of an inward sense and feeling of what we think or say in Prayer awakening in us feeling apprehensions of the Divine Attributes which we ascribe unto God of the worth excellency and necessity of the things we ask of God of the indignity unworthiness baseness and aggrauation of the sins we confess to God of the certaintie and assurance of the promises upon which we hope for audience from God c. And in this sense we pray in the Spirit vvhen vve pray with Vunderstanding also 2 Cor. 14.15 if I may borrow the Apostle's phrase which properly belongs to another matter as I before noted viz. the praying so as to be understood by others 3. The assistance of the Spirit of Prayer concerneth the affectionate part of the Soul and the employment of that in Prayer the causing of our hearts to burn
for the regulation and preservation thereof This sixth Gospel-Institution might very well have been referr'd to the first and I shall content my self to have there shewed the weakness of the foundations here again built upon Only we may observe that by the Catechist's distribution of this power of discipline between Minister and People the Authority which he leaves in words wholly to the Elders See Ch. 10. is little more than a power of executing the Brotherhood's decrees to whom he saith the power of tryal judgment consent or dissent appertains a power yet without authority which looks very like a contradiction However he tells us VVomen are barr'd and excepted from this duty of the body of the Church and consequently these female-members of the Church perform not that obedience unto the Lord Christ which is required in the rest as to this Institution acting in compliance with their Guides and Rulers with the consent of the Brethren only without any previous rational consideration of their own and so if his reason hold are ruled without their knowledg and against their will and by a blind obedience which is not saith he in any thing acceptable unto Christ I admonish these good women therefore once more to stand up for their priviledges of Church-membership and refer them to what hath been already noted Chap. 12. But a word or two ere we part of the places of Scripture here referr'd to as a proof that this power of discipline is so far by Christ committed to the body of the Church the male-members 1. All that can be observed from Acts 15. is this that the Brethren consented unto what the Apostles and Elders determined and appointed verse 6. The Apostles and Elders came together to consider of this matter and therefore all that speak to the case are 1. Peter verse 7. 2. Barnabas and Paul verse 12. and then 3. James the Bishop of the place concludes with his sentence whereto they all agree 'T is expresly said of the Multitude verse 12. All the multitude kept silence As for the multitude gathered together at Antioch verse 30. needs must the Church be assembled since the Letter written was directed to be read unto them for their satisfaction But then that the multitude of the Brethren thought it their duty to meet together as fellow-tryers and judges of the difficult question about Mosaical Ceremonies is weakly inferr'd from Act. 21.22 See this place before quoted P. 1. Ch. 5. Where James the Bishop of Jerusalem tells Paul how much the multitude of Jewish converts were offended at his preaching down Circumcision and Non-conformity to their approved Customs and since it could not be but that they would hear of his presence there was a necessity to call them together that he might vindicate himself before them and remove the prejudice they had concerning him verse 22. What is it therefore The multitude must needs come together for they will hear that thou art come Nor is it likely that the devout women more zealous and forward usually than others Act. 13.50 were excluded from this multitude and then if the Catechist have observed right there is a must for them too as well as the Brethren they also have a Duty and concernment to look after the administration of Church-discipline 2. For 1 Cor. 5. Where saith the Catechist the multitude are blamed who applied not themselves to this duty The matter is the Excommunication of the incestuous Corinthian That which S. Paul chargeth upon them in general is That there was so notorious an offender among them as one that had married his Father's wife and they yet demean themselves so unconcernedly as if it had not been a crime deserving censure and reproach But then as to the judging part he takes that to himself verse 3. I verily as absent in body but present in spirit have judged already as though I were present concerning him that hath done this deed i. e. Though I am not present with you yet by virtue of that authority which belongs to me being sufficiently assured of the truth of the fact I have already pass'd sentence on him that hath thus offended He doth not expect their tryal and judgment and consent as the Catechist would order the matter but gives the doom without it commands them to see it inflicted ver 4.5 In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ when ye are gather'd together and my Spirit with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ to deliver such an one to Satan i. e. That in a publick Assembly gather'd in the name of Christ in which you are to suppose me vertually present among you by authority of Christ committed to me and from me to you ye proceed to excommunicate him And then farther it is to be noted that this speech of St. Paul might have a prime reference to the Ministers of the Church of Corinth for his Epistle was written to the whole Church the Pastors as well as the Flock However there cannot be from hence inferr'd any thing but that the matter was to be done according to St. Paul's charge and command and by virtue of his authority in the presence of the whole congregation women no dobut as well as men or at most all the whole congregation for the freeing themselves from the scandal of allowing his wickedness appearing in some way of declarative suffrage and consent which consent of theirs entitles them by way of interpretation so far to have acted in this censure but no way intimates that the Apostle's excommunication had not been valid and efficacious without their consent Certainly the power of binding and loosing was never given by Christ to the promiscuous multitude nor do we ever read that he required their consent as necessary to the validity or efficacy of it And this is all I shall add of this matter Two or three short reflections more shall end this Chapter and Book together And First I take notice of a three-fold Directory * One more was observed before Chap. 10. prescribed by the Catechist for the exercise of Church-discipline a thing not becoming so profess'd a Champion of Christ's prescribing the very manner of his own Institutions The first Directory is for private admonition in four particulars Cat. p. 195. 196. Cat. p. 195. 196. Especially four things are to be diligently heeded 1. That the whole duty be so managed that the person offending may be convinced that it is done out of love to him and affectionate conscientious care over him that he may take no occasion thereby for the exasperation of his own spirit 2. That the persons admonishing others of their offence do make it appear that what they do is in obedience to an Institution of Christ and therein to preserve their own souls from sin as well as to benefit the offenders 3. That the admonition be grounded on a rule which alone gives it authority and efficacy 4. That there be a readiness manifested