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A33525 A practical discourse of prayer wherein is handled the nature, the duty, the qualifications of prayer, the several sorts of prayer, viz. ejaculatory, publick, private and secret prayer : with the necessity of, and ingagements unto, prayer : together with sundry cases of conscience about it / by Thomas Cobbet. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1654 (1654) Wing C4780; ESTC R29965 290,377 588

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gainfull 3. In affectionate amplifications of 3 In affectionate amplifications of our vilenesse and of Gods grace our owne vilenesse and Gods mercy and excellency As beggars which use to make very lamentable relations of their owne miseries but yet giving their benefactors all their titles to the full So those in Psal 115. 1. ingeminate the expression of their owne utter unworthinesse Not unto us not unto us And the Publican in his prayer speaks of himselfe as a sinner none else such a one as he Luke 18. 13 14. So the Prodigall in his request to his father acknowledgeth his extreame and unparallelled sinne and unworthinesse Luke 15. 18 19. So those converts Jer. 31. 18 19. Do the like such like amplifications being as so many forcible arguments in their prayer with themselves to further compunction and contrition in them and with God to further their participation of the benefit of his compassions Out of the abundant heart-abasement the mouth speaks As pride is large in speaking for selfe so is humility in declaring against selfe 4. In framing all our pleas in our petions formâ pauperum in the manner of poor 4 In framing all our petitions formâ pauperum undone persons and pleading for mercy in regard of our extreame misery That wee are under wofull captivity and oppression not of Turks and such like but even of spirituall enemies of our soules corruptions of nature temptations of Sathan c. which are far more grievous That we have sustained losses in soule that are almost inreparable lost the goodly patrimony in our first parents of Gods favour and image which never can be sufficiently bewailed yea haply have lost that little light and life and comfort of grace through some ill course we tooke since the Lord set us up againe and trusted us with a new stock of grace yea are strangely runne behind hand with God yea we are extreamely in debt by our sinne to divine justice yea we are afflicted with many spiritual diseases and distempers and sorely wounded in our spirits through some sad foils of the enemies of our souls and in all wee are utterly insufficient to recover our selves yea and helplesse and shiftlesse in the very use of such means as might tend thereunto Wee see indeed that if we could believe that would succour us but yet are not able if wee could so earnestly wrestle for and breath after help of God in Christ we might have relief but see also that of our selves wee cannot doe so much but as wee are able through the might of God Wee tell him of our grievances and plead our miseries and spread them before him and his people if they may move to mercy and so wait his gracious leisure for the same Jeremiah pleads for mercy to him and his people because their backslidings were many Jer. 14. 7. David pleads for pardon because his sin is great Psalm 25. 11. and craveth mercy because a poor shiftlesse stranger and sadly gone to decay Psal 39. 12 13. So Psal 38. 1 2. intreateth the Lord to forbear to go on to afflict him because his arrows stick fast in him he is sorely wounded already ver 2. he is sick in body and spirit ver 3. he is already fallen under a burden that is too heavy for him ver 4. and ver 6. his back is already ready to crack under his pressures and so on with such like sad pleas taken from his forlorn condition he presseth God for mercy in that Psalm 5 In much inward brokenness and relentings 5. In heart brokenness therein of spirit Hence that smiting upon the brest in the Publicans prayer Luk. 18. 13 14. There there lay his sin and misery there was his wound and burden little did men think what he felt and saw Ah that brest of his how had it harboured rebellion formerly against God! his heart within was smitten for it whereof his brest smiting was but a shadow Psal 51. 17. A broken and contrite spirit is the all of his Sacrifice and prayer Surely that heart is low in prayer and brought down to the dust which is broken as it were to dust What ever speech humble ones have in prayer it is sure they have sighes attending If the Dove-like Spirit of Christ breaths in them they will bee breathing out Dove-like moanes and groans in the ears of God The Psalmist speaketh not so much of Gods hearing of the words of the humble as the desires he heareth the desire of the humble If they do fall short at any time through some occasional impediments of expressions yet broken hearted desires expressed in groans are present and stirring and they are to God as prayers Psal 10. 17. The groanings of the prisoners are the prayers of the afflicted and destitute Psal 102. 17 20. in Gods account 6 In a meek and quiet submission and 6. In a quiet submitting to the Lord amidst discouragements bearing all discouragements without quarrelling against God nay awfully clearing the Lord therein If rated like beggars if rebuked if upbraided if delayed if denyed yet putting up all contentedly The reproachful name of a dog moveth not the humble suppliant she taketh it very well and maketh good use of it and doth not mutiny against the Lord Jesus for it Mat. 15. 27. They in Judges 10. hear and bear and take all that well which the Lord in a holy upbraiding way speaketh Judges 10. 11 12 13 14 15. They yeild to all as so and just if worse with them from the hands of God then it is but yet with the leave of his mercy they crave his favourable acceptance of their request ibid. If humble ones come to Christ in prayer or otherwise surely they come with holy dispositions to stoop to any yoak and burden of Christ which he will lay upon them as wel as desire to have their own burdens taken off by him Matth. 11. 28 29. They may indeed plead with God why he carryeth it so towards them as Psal 22. 1 2. but they are clear in it that he cannot but carry it well albeit the particular cause they know not So Psalm 22. 3. But thou art holy and however it cometh about that such divine forsakings are occasioned yet still thou art holy and spotlesse and pure in all thy dispensations 7 In a real preferring others prayers before 7. In a real preferring others prayers before ones own our own Thus the humble Centurion in his request he had to make to the Lord Jesus he thought better of the Jewes prayers then of his own as being in his own sight a most unworthy Gentile Luke 7. 3 7. Not that under this pretence men should in a way of voluntary humility repaire to deceased Saints that is idolatrous humility yea even the madnesse of persons then living So Hezekiah preferreth Isaiahs prayer before his own and therefore sends solemnely to him to lift up his prayer in the case of Judah Isaiah 37. 1 2
Instruments when they make their voice gracious as the Hebrew hath it Prov. 26. 15. If Satan could not or did not set a good face upon his Treacheries to mens souls and cover all with the mantle of good and pious motions he would not so properly be said to deceive the whole world Rev. 12 9. But to come to the Marks of distinction Marks of such like motions when delusive and of discerning of this highest straine of the sophistication of our spiritual enemies through suggestions materially good 1 Such motions materially good which 1. When they do but steal away the heart from prayer steal away the heart from the duty of praier in hand though possibly the Duty be carryed on but in an overly manner by reason of those motions such are Satanical on the contrary motions which tend to farther intentnesse and attentnesse thereon they are of God The Spirit of God is a faithful and wise guide and useth not to lead the Saints about or in by wayes but in strait paths right on by all his motions The Spirit of God leadeth the sons of God in a direct way of crying Abba Father For as many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God And ye have received the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 14 15. Isaiah 30 21. Thou shalt hear a voice behind thee saying This is the way walk in it when thou turnest to the right hand or to the left The Spirit moveth nothing to draw us out of the way of God but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on When a man in prayer hath his imagination working and exercised about good notions for godly discourse for expatiating on some good subject of meditation or preaching and that in such sort as he cannot and doth not mind scarcely what hee is saying or doing before God in prayer these thoughts and motions are delusive 2 Such motions as come into the heart 2. When they are too violent with such violence that they occasion inward hurries of spirit by them and thereby breaking off the very duty sometimes these though materially good yet are delusive and satanical As when in prayer strong motions are suggested pretending to put us upon being affected with sorrow for some past evil or fear about some evil imminent yet so as the same are pressed and followed with such violence that they bend and tend to amazement and swallowing up of spirits these are delusive Such were those motions in Asaphs heart whilst seeking God which so troubled him that he was overwhelmed Ps 77. 2 In the day of my trouble I sought God and verse 3. I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed Such were the motions to the humbled Corinthian when so violent that he was like to be swallowed of overmuch heavinesse about his sinful and sad estate 2 Cor. 2. 7. Satans divices were in it for his own advantage ver 11. Lest Satan get advantage for we are not ignorant of his devices The Lord never useth to maintain contention to cause the spirits of his people to fail Isaiah 57. 16. I will not contend for ever lest the spirit should fail before me nay rather the Spirit of God useth when such troublous motions grow strong and very heavy to put under his hand to revive the Saints spirits when ready to give out through such hurries of sad pressures of heart Isai 57. 15 16. To revive the spirit of the humble for I will not contend for ever lest the spirit should fail before me Hence that Psalm 94. 18 19. In the multitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of my wretched thoughts thy comforts delight my soul The Spirit of the Lord will indeed suggest motions of fear but not such as tend to make us break off through their violence but sweetly rather to draw us to hold on in the way of God Jer. 32. 40. I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me he gently leadeth his flock as a shepherd Isaiah 40. 11. Yea if the motions were to confidence in God or joy in God but with such violence as to drive men into strange extasies they are to be suspected So in motions puting upon just anger for the ground of it but with so much violence as not to be kept within bounds of godly moderation and temperature of compassion so in motions putting upon desires of something in its time way and proportion very desirable but so all upon the spur and with so much imperiousnesse upon the spirit as though all present service of God and all other thoughts must forthwith give room and place to this motion which is enough to prove the same to bee delusive the Spirit of God using to work regularly and calmly even when he worketh most strongly Sure it is that it is not one and the same Spirit that speaketh to a mans spirit which whilst it was but then called upon to speak to the Lord about such a businesse of weight it is now in such haste and hurry called off to run a long tract of mental discourse so hotly and so closely with some other matter but Cheater like rather coming galloping to overtake the honest Traveller and falling in with him he must all on a sudden be over intreated to step aside to take his kindnesse and then he shall be told he shall on again and dispatch his business in time good enough when it proveth rather to the poor Travellers loss in the close on every hand 3 Such motions which are empty notions carrying a shew of Scripture language 3. When they are but empty notions but are not Scripture haply some piece of Scripture joyned with something else whereof the main is left out So the Divel at first sight seemed to suggest that Scripture Psalm 91. 11 12 He shall give his Angels charge over thee c. Matth. 4. 6. but look it over again and you shall see the main limitation of the Promise To keep thee in all thy wayes is left out as something is added of the Divels owne in bringing this to back the temptation of Christ Cast thy self down for it is written He shall give his Angels charge over thee c. Thus here is chaff mingled with Gods Wheat Yea here is a pretence of a Scripture when in the terms of it there was no such Scripture Scripture in the divel or in his Instruments mouth is as the Parable in the fools mouth Prov. 26. 7. Like to the legs of the lame which are not equal but halting It is pretended Thus saith the Lord by the false Prophets Jer. 23. 17. They say The Lord hath said c. but ver 28. God counts it all but chaff a meer empty husk What is the chaff to the wheat The like may be said of Jerem. 28. 13. and 1 Kings 22. 11. they did but pretend the word and counsel of God
iniquity and receive us graciously For in thee the fatherlesse finde mercy The like is done Jer. 3. 23. Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hils truly in the Lord our God is salvation So is the Lord himselfe moved hence to help his people Esay 63 5. And I looked and there was none to help and I wondred that there was none to uphold therefore mine own arm brought salvation to me And Deut. 32. 36. The Lord shal repent for his servants when he seeth their power is gone 5. Plead the greatnesse of our sinnes not to keep us from mercy but to prevaile Our sins have been many and great for it Psal 25. 11. Pardon my sin why so for it is great Psal 41. 4. Heale my soule for I have sinned against thee Jer. 14. 7. Doe thou it for thy names sake for our backeslidings are many we have sinned against thee This is a strong plea when sincerely urged by an humble and contrite spirit It glorifieth God as one that is abundant in goodnesse rich in mercy and one with whom are forgivenesses and plenteous redemption and it honoureth Christ as infinite in mercy Hence also the Lord himselfe when he would stir up himselfe to choice acts of mercy to his poore people he first aggravateth their sin against him to the highest and then expresseth his royall act of grace to them So Esay 43. 22 23 24 25. Thou hast not called upon me O Jacob but hast been weary of me O Israel thou hast not honoured me with thy Sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes and wearied me with thine iniquities I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for my names sake The latter sort of pleas respecting our The good of Gods grace as Gods stirring us up to plead with him selves or the good of grace in us are 1. Gods own stirring us up to pray for such mercies When a petitioner can plead with God Lord I come not to thy blessed Court without thy sending for It was thou which appointedst me to come to thy doore of grace else I had not come thy Spirit moved me thy promise encouraged me so to doe and therefore O Lord I expect the fruit of my comming and request So David pleadeth 2 Sam. 7. 27 28. Lord thou saidest this and that touching my house and therefore hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer And so Psalm 27. 7 8. He pleadeth Thou saidest seek my face and my heart answered Thy face Lord will I seeke And well may this be pleaded in that God useth not so to stirre up and strengthen us to seek him but when he intendeth to be found of us Psalm 10. 17. Thou wilt prepare the heart thou wilt bow thine eare to heare Jerem. 29. 11 13. Then shall ye seek me and finde me when ye shall search for me with all your heart And God maketh it an argument to himselfe that if he say to any inwardly as wel as outwardly seek my face he that speaketh righteousnesse cannot speak thus to them and frustrate their prayers and so bid them seek his face in vain Esay 45. 19. I said not to any of the seed of Jacob seek my face in vaine I the Lord speak right things If Ahashuerus bid his Spouse to ask surely he wil not faile to grant her petition Esther 7. 1. so here And as when Christ called the blind man to come to him to tell him his grievance it was truly said to him by them Be of good comfort rise for he calleth thee Mark 10 49. so it is in this case Secondly our waitings and the expectations Our waiting upon him of Faith which the Lord wrought in us may be pleaded That a King should occasion a petitioners expectation of bounty and faile him were not seemly it were strange Hence Asahs plea in his prayer for help Help Lord why so for we rest on thee 2 Chron. 14. 11. So Psalm 119. 66. Teach me good judgement and knowledge for I have believed thy Commandements And Psalm 25. 2 3. My God I trust in thee let me not be confounded And Vers 5. Lead me forth in thy truth For on thee doe I wait all the day And Vers 20. Let me not be confounded for I trust in thee And Vers 21. Let uprightnesse preserve me for my hope is in thee And Psalm 143. 8. Let me heare thy loving kindnesse in the morning for in thee is my trust And it is an argument with men such a one doth depend upon me and I have passed my word to doe such or such a thing for him and he commeth to meet me according to my own appointment at such a time in expectation of what I promised and therefore I cannot may not must not faile him So it is with God Esay 26. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusted in thee And Psal 10. 14. The poore committeth himselfe to thee Thou art the helper of the fatherlesse Thirdly we may in all humility The breaking of our hearts before him plead our heart-breakings and weepings in sense of want of mercies which we crave and our pantings and faintings after the same As Psalm 39. 12. Hold not thy peace at my tears And Psalm 51. David who groundeth all his pleas onely upon the free grace of the Lord Vers 1. Have mercy upon me according to thy loving kindnesse c. yet Vers 17. he pleadeth the brokennesse of his heart The Sacrifices of God are a broken heart a broken and a contrite spirit O Lord thou wilt not despise It is a moving argument with a compassionate father when his child craveth this or that with teares from him not then to deny him In such a case a father wil be ready to say alas my deare child thou shalt not blubber thy cheekes any longer come doe not thus mar thy face with weeping thou shalt have what thou cravest so doubtlesse is it with the Lord towards his children When Ephraim smites upon his thigh is ashamed and even confounded because he bare the iniquity of his youth Jer. 31. 19. how this took with God we may perceive by what himselfe replieth Vers 20. Is Ephraim my deare sonne is he a pleasant child for since I spake against him I earnestly remembred him still therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy upon him saith the Lord. So Esay 38. 5. Isaiah is bid to goe to weeping Hezekiah and tell him from God I have heard thy prayer I have seen thy teares As if he had said to Isaiah Goe runne to yonder childe of mine bid him not weep so sore tell him he shall have his request So Psalm 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping And V. 9. The Lord hath heard my petition His prayer and petition it selfe spake and his tears also spake aloud in Gods ears and prevailed for
ver 18. Come now and let us reason together c. And then onely it is seasonable to pray when wee lift up our hands and hearts Psal 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayers Josh 7. 10 11. Wherefore lyest thou thus upon thy face Israel hath sinned Job 11. 13 14. If thou preparest thy heart and stretchest out thy hand toward heaven if iniquity be in thy hand put it far away else all that is to no purpose God heareth not sinners h. e. imponitent ones John 9. 31. It is no fit season for us to goe a wooing to Christ if not clear of privy leagues with any of our lusts not is it seasonable to trade with the Lord in prayer if we have any kind of traffique with his proclaimed enemies 3. When wee are under any special 3 When under special hurries of lusts power of passions and distempers and as then not seeing the sinne of them to lift up wrathfull hands is unacceptable and so unseasonable 1 Tim. 2. 3. Lift up pure hands without wrath It is not seasonable to offer up our sacrifice with such common yea wild-fire Such leaven of wrath and malice is apt to sowre our very Mincah and maketh it come as out of due season Such was the petition of James and John to Christ Lu. 9. 54 55. Wilt thou that wee command fire to come down from heaven to consume them Such were Jobs petitions Job 3. from verse 3. to verse 11. Such was that of Jonah chap. 4. 3. Take away my life from me Look as it is in a strong blustring time knocks at the doore are scarce heard if at all so is it here the noyse of our distempers outsoundeth the voice of our knocking 's in such like prayers It were better to pause a while till the blustering noise be abated And as Revel 9. 1 3. Silence was made a while before that the holy incense was offered so should it bee here 4. When our heads and hearts are over-full 4 When under hurries of occasions and even sore charged with carnal occasions and inordinate thoughts about them it is not so seasonable to go abruptly from such a crowd and throng into the holy presence of the Lord without some pause It is most unseasonable to enter upon so holy a discourse with God with so many batlers attending us when there should be but one speaker Eccles 5 1 2 3. Such rashnesse is irregular and therefore unseasonable such a foolish seekers prayer will be no better then a dreame arising from multitude of businesse stuffed with multiplicity of unseasonable impertinent and independent expressions 5. When we come to pray in remediless 5 When praying in remediless cases cases or for persons past recovery Jer. 11. 14 Pray not for this people for I will not hear them when they cry unto me for their trouble 1 Sam. 16. 1. How long wilt thou cry for Saul seeing I have rejected him 6. When wee will be praying at such 6 When praying whilst other ordinances cal for our attendance times wherein other ordinances doe call for our attendance As when we will be praying at home when we should rather bee in the publick assembly or praying in our closets when religious family-exercise requires our presence Now let us consider of prayer-seasons Most seasonable to pray offered by the Lord which hee requireth us to take These opportunities are either generall or special The general opportunity 1 When God is near us more generally by his word of prayer is that general Season of grace held forth in the offers of the dispensations of the Gospel Isa 1. 5 6. Seek him whilest he may be found Whilst God may be found it is a season to seek him Isai 21 12. If you will inquire returne come Whilst the Prophets incourage to come 't is a season to inquire Our calling and cry is but the echo of the Lords call Psal 27. 8. When thou saidst seek my face my heart answered thy face Lord will I seek Its the season of the echo to wait upon the voice a demand of grace upon a former offer of it it s very seasonable This blessed day work is most sutable to the day time of the Gospel and grace of God But besides this general opportunity there are some more special praying seasons Ps 31. 8. For this shal every one that is godly pray unto thee in a finding time as it is in the Hebrew As bountifull Princes have their so the Lord hath his special seasons for petitioners to come in with their suits and have each their dayes of audience Our blessed Father hath his set dayes of paying to each child his portion of mercy blessing upon demand and suit for it Now these special seasons of prayer are of three sorts 1. When God in special sort is near to us Or secondly we in special sort near to him Or thirdly in case of emergencies or special necessities calling for speedy help First when God in special is near to 1 When more specially God is near us ●A us then call upon him while he is near Is 55. 6. The Lord as our gracious king goeth his holy progresse and now he is nearer this people and such and such subjects and now againe he is nearer to others Let each accordingly take and observe their particular seasons of holy approaches to him with their suits If the loadstone be near the very iron moveth the approaches of the Lord to us have or should have this holy magnetical attractive vertue to draw us near to him in Prayer 1. Now the Lord is thus in special 2 By some special act of mercy sort near to us by some special mercy vouchsafed to us as when answering to former prayer or the like Psal 34. 18. The Lord is nigh to them that are of a broken heart Yea but wherein or whereby doth he shew that he is nigh to them It followeth He saveth such as be of a contrite spirit Gods ordering some special favour to his people by his providence is called his visiting of his people The Saints repairing to the Lord with earnest fervent Prayer is called their visiting of the Lord. Isai 26. 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee how tbey have powred out a prayer to thee c. When God first beginneth to give us a gracious visit it is seasonable and sutable for us to give him prayer-visits Exod. 33. 17. And the Lord said unto Moses I will do this thing also which thou hast spoken verse 18. And Moses sayd I beseech thee shew me thy glory Moses made Gods time of giving to bee his opportunity of begging mercy If ever the Saints hearts are filled with love it is when they partake of manifest tokens of the Lords love to them and if ever it be a season of this friendly talking with God or praying 't is then when in such a friendly
meek or submissive to any course that God would take with them Isai 6. 1 2. And they make it the maine of their begging then then in a manner that they might be inlarged and free to speak to God especially to his prais in their freedom Open thou my mouth c. Psal 51. 15. 142. 7 But the other are in a manner wholly sottish and senselesse and speechlesse Mat. 22. 12. and therefore doomed to a place and state of weeping afterwards verse 13. 6. Those are prisoners of hope and 6 Is not finall now and then suffered to walk abroad yea to come into their Lords gracious presence Zech. 9. 12. But these are for ever thence forward excluded Gods gracious presence They are taken away cast out Mat. 22. 13. Heb. 10. 26 27. Those have sometimes some crevices and glimpses of light yea of the light of Gods countenance as through the grates at least Cant. 2. 9 But these are cast into utter darknesse therein to reside and abide Matth 22. 13. CHAP. VIII About inlargements in prayer when saving WE are God willing to dispatch the handling of some other cases in carrying on this weighty duty of prayer The eighth case now to be considered of is touching inlargements in prayer how Case 8. About inlargements in prayer which are saving when they are for the manner they are discerned to be from saving and peculiar principles of grace and differenced from those which are but from natural carnal or common causes In answer whereunto we must premise that persons may be strangely inlarged in prayer sometimes from principles that are not saving The Pharisees made long praiers Mat. 13. 14. But from a principle of hypocrisie ibid. From carnal and sinfull aymes ibid. And for a pretence make long prayers From pride as in those rhetorical ingeminations Matth. 6. 7. from errour as trusting to such inlargements thinking to bee heard for their much speaking ib. id And for those in Is 1 15. they made many prayers or multiplied petitions as the Hebrew phrase imports some from carnal emulation of some famous men in the Church will straine this way some from delusive raptures may be wonderfully inlarged in their expressions in prayer yet none of these in the right Now saving inlargements in prayer may be discerned from those that are common 1. They are free not forced or strained 1 Free Cant. 4. 11. As the droppings of the hony-comb not needing squeezing or as the powring out of water or oyle which runneth downe naturally and freely Isai 26. 16. They powred out a prayer to thee So Psal 102. the Title Not but that such inlargements doe ofttimes issue from foregoing struglings and conflictings with much opposition and many intervening lets yea and are not also without sundry present difficulties yet the spirit is free at such times and as far as it is spiritual it is delightfully drawne forth therein 2. They are sweet solid sappy lively 2 Lively strengthning inlargements as hony or milk Cant. 4. 11. and that not onely to us but to others that joyne with us The Churches lips when exercised in prayer as well as preaching run downe like the best wine causing the lips of those that are asleep to speak 3. They are seasonable inlargements 2 Seasonable As when God in his providence calleth to them in speciall sort whether in way of confession of sins or of Gods mercie or in a way of petition for mercies for our selves or others Thus Solomon Ezra Daniel and Christ were then in special wise inlarged These fruits of the lips of the Saints are brought forth in season Psal 1. 3. 4. They are most what secret closet-inlargements 4 Secret There David prayeth and cryeth aloud there doe they powre out largely their secret whispers Isai 26. 16. in the Hebrew the same word with 2 Sam. 12. 19. as hath been formerly shewed Zech. 12. 10 12 13. 5. They are contrite melting inlargements Zech. 12. 10. Not some few drops 5 Contrite of either but abundance of such a spirits influences it is powred out they are led as with supplications so with weepings adjoyned to their inlarged prayers such were those of Christ his strong cryes were with teares likewise Heb. 5. 7. His lips in praier dropped sweet smelling myrrhe betokening some holy bitternesse or brokennesse 6. They are obediential inlargements 6 Obediential David as he offereth a multiplied free-will offering Accept the free will offering of my mouth so he desired to be taught his further duty and teach me thy judgements Psal 119. 108. As he opens his mouth to expresse his inlarged desires largely so is it out of obediential longings to doe the will of God ver 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed for thy commandements Lastly they are thankfull inlargements 7 Thankfull Psal 51. 15. Open thou my lips that my mouth may shew forth thy praise if his mouth be opened it wil appear in his prayses and Psal 71. 8. the Psalmist's mouth is filled with prayse his prayse is a fruit and concomitant of the delivery of his imprisoned spirit Psal 142. 7. 2. By the matter of them 1. The most 2 By the matter 1 Respecting our sins acceptable inlargements being mostly and best seen in sensible aggravations of our own wretchednesse as in Ezra and Daniels examples Ezra 9. Daniel 9. Jer. 3. 21. the choice matter of their supplications and inlarged prayer is touching the perverting of their way and their forgetting of the Lord Oh how long will a contrite Suppliant be here in making sad commentaries upon his own wretched heart what large declamations will he make against his own sins 2. In sensible amplifications of Gods 2 Gods grace grace and mercy to us as in David of which his Psalmes are a plentifull proofe The love of God maketh him eloquent in setting out the beauty and excellency thereof to the life 3. In spiritual pleas especially for spi-spritual 3 Spiritual mercies mercies of which the prayers of David and of other Gods servants are full 4 In the cases of afflicted tempted ones especially of afflicted Churches Oh! 4 The afflicted or tempted ones cases how large and unwearied is a gracious Nehemiah in such a case hee will spend dayes in dilating upon so sad a theame in the ears of the Lord. Nehem. 1. 3 4. The substance of the largest prayer that is recorded to be made by Solomon concerneth most what the cases of afflicted ones in some kind or other 1 Kings from the 31. verse to 54. 3. By the occasionall rise of them 3 For the occasion of them The inlargement of the Saints in prayer being occasioned 1 By afflictions Afflicted Hannah 1 Afflictions was large and long in prayer insomuch that Eli observing her moving her lips so long saith how long wilt thou be drunken 1 Sa. 1. 14 15. When Davids spirit is so hard bestead then doth he powr