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A09365 The whole treatise of the cases of conscience distinguished into three bookes: the first whereof is revised and corrected in sundrie places, and the other two annexed. Taught and deliuered by M. W. Perkins in his holy-day lectures, carefully examined by his owne briefes, and now published together for the common good, by T. Pickering Bachelour of Diuinitie. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one of the heads and number of the questions propounded and resolued; another of the principall texts of Scripture vvhich are either explaned, or vindicated from corrupt interpretation.; Cases of conscience Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Pickering, Thomas, d. 1625. 1606 (1606) STC 19669; ESTC S114066 314,224 686

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preferment and such like Now touching things spirituall that are moore necessary to saluation we are to pray for them absolutely without any exception or condition But for things lesse necessary to saluation and for temporall blessings we must aske them at gods hand with this condition if it be his will and pleasure and so farre forth as he in his wisdome shall iudge to be most expedient for vs. Herein we must follow the example of Christ who in his agonie prayed to his father to take that cuppe from him yet with this condition Not my will but thy will be done The reason is this Looke how far sorth God commands vs to aske and promiseth that we shall receiue so far forth are we warranted to aske and may hope to receiue Now God commands vs to aske and promiseth vs the first sort of spirituall things freely and simply without any condition or exception But the other sort of spirituall things that are lesse necessary and temporall blessings he promiseth vs with condition and therefore in like sort ought we to aske them The second Rule is We must not in our prayer bind God to any circumstances of time place or measure of that grace or benefit which we aske V. Our praiers being thus framed as hath beene said are to be presented and offered to God alone and to none but him For first none els can heare all men in all places at all times and helpe all men in all places and at all times but onely he Againe the spirit of God makes vs to pray and in prayer to call him Abba father Furthermore all praier must be grounded vpon the word wherein we haue not the least warrant either expressely setdowne or by consequent implyed to preferre our sutes and requests to any of the creatures VI. Praier is to be presented to God in the name merit and mediation of Christ alone For we our selues are not worthie of any thing but shame and confusion Therefore we cannot pray in our owne names but must pray onely in the name of Christ. Our praiers are our sacrifices and Christ alone is that Altar whereon we must offer them to God the father For this Altar must sanctific them before they can be a sacrifice of a sweete smeiling sauour vnto God Hence it is that not onely our petitions but all other things as Paul wisheth are to be done in the name of the Lord Iesus Coloss. 3. 17. And Christ himselfe saith Whatsoeuer you aske the Father in my name he will giue it you Ioh. 16. 23. VII There must be in praier Instancie and Perseuerance The heart must be instant not onely in the act of praier but afterwards till the thing asked be granted This Instancie is commended vnto vs in the parable of the widdow and the vnrighteous iudge Luk. 18. 1. Hereunto the Prophet exhorteth when he saith keepe not silence and giue the Lord no rest c. Esa. 62. 7. And S. Paul in like manner wisheth the Romanes to striue with him by praiers to God for him Rom. 15. 30. VIII Euery true praier must haue in it some thanksgiuing vnto God for his benefits In all things let your requests be shewed vnto God in praier and supplication with giuing of thanks Phil. 4. 6. Christ himself gaue directiō touching this in that forme of prayer which he taught his Disciples For thine is the kingdome power and glorie Sect. 3. The third sort of conditions are those which are required after prayer and they are specially two The first is a particular faith whereby he that praieth must be assured that his particular request shall be granted Mark 11. 24. Whatsoeuer ye desire when ye pray BELEEVE that ye shall haue it and it shall be done vnto you And that he may haue this particular faith he must first haue that whence it ariseth namly true iustifying faith standing in a perswasion of his reconciliation with God The second is that a man must doe and practise that which he praies for and he is not onely to pray for blessings but also to vse all lawfull meanes that he can whereby the blessings he asketh may be obtained For example As thou praiest for the pardon of thy sinns so thou must leaue thy sinns and vse all good meanes whereby the same may be mortified and crucified And the like is to be done in all other things which we aske of God Thus we haue the first Question of conscience resolued touching Praier that then the praier is acceptable to God when he that prayeth obserueth as much as in him lyeth all these conditions before in and after praier II. Question Whether may a man lawfully make Imprecations that is to say pray against his enemies and how farre forth is it lawfull Sect. 1. For answer to this we must marke and obserue sundry distinctions and differences First we must distinguish betweene the cause and the person that defends and maintaines the cause The euill cause which an euil man defendeth is to be condemned of vs wee may alwaies and that lawfully pray against it but we may not in like sort condemne and pray against his person Secondly we must distinguish of the persons of our enemies Some be priuate enemies some publicke Priuate I call those which be enemies of some particular men and are against them in regard of this or that cause or matter and yet are not enemies of God or of his truth Publike are those which are not only our enemies but the enemies of God of his kingdome of his trueth and relion Now we may not pray against priuate enemies we may as before pray against their euill cause but not against their persons Math. 5. 44. Blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which hurt you and persecute you And we are commanded to loue our enemies as our selues Againe publicke enemies of God and his truth are also of two sorts either Curable or Incurable Curable are such as offend of ignorance or some other humane frailty so as there is some hope of their conuersion and repentance We must not pray against the persons of these but onely against their dealings and badde causes and pray for their persons and for their conuersiō Thus Christ praied for those that crucified him Father forgiue them and Stephē Act. 7. for them that stoned him Vncureable are those that sinne obstinately and of malice so as there is no hope of their amendment and conuersion And further for the better answering of this Question we must marke another distinction There are two sorts of men that are to make praier vnto God Some that haue extraordinary gifts as the Prophets and Apostles Now he that is an extraordinarie man hath and must haue these two gifts namely first a spirit of Discerning to discerne and iudge whether the person against whome he praies be incureable or no and secondly a pure Zeale of Gods honour and glory The
man is ingrafted into Christ and thereby becomes one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph 3. 17. Now whosoeuer is by faith vnited vnto Christ the same is elected called iustified and sanctified The reason is manifest For in a chaine the two extremes are knit togither by the middle linkes and in the order of causes of happinesse and saluation faith hath a middle place and by it hath the child of God assured hold of his election and effectuall vocation and consequently of his glorification in the kingdome of heauen To this purpose saith S. Iohn c. 3. v. 36. He that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life And c. 5. v. 24. He that beleeues in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life This is the Ground Now for answer to the Question diuerse places of Scripture are to be skanned wherein this case of Conscience is fully answered and resolued Sect. 1. The first place is Rom. 8. 16. And the spirit of God testifieth together with our spirits that we are the sonnes of God In these words are two testimonies of our adoption set downe The first is the Spirit of God dwelling in vs and testifying vnto vs that we are Gods childrē But some will happily demaund How Gods spirit giues witnesse seeing now there are no reuelations Answ. Extraordinarie reuelations are ceased and yet the holy Ghost in and by the word reuealeth some things vnto men for which cause he is called truly the Spirit of Reuelation Eph. 3. 5. Againe the holy Ghost giues testimonie by applying the promise of remission of sinnes and life euerlasting by Christ particularly to the heart of man when the same is generally propounded in the Ministerie of the word And because many are readie presumptuously to say they are the children of God when they are not and that they haue the witnesse of Gods Spirit when in truth they want it therefore we are to put a difference between this carnall conceit and the true testimonie of the Spirit Now there be two things whereby they may be discerned one from the other The first is by the meanes For the true testimonie of the holy ghost is wrought ordinarily by the preaching reading and meditation of the word of God as also by praier and the right vse of the Sacraments But the presumptuous testimonie ariseth in the heart and is framed in the braine out of the vse of these meanes or though in the vse yet with want of the blessing of God concurring with the meanes The second is by the effects and fruits of the Spirit For it stirrs vp the heart to praier and inuocation of the name of God Zach. 12. 10. yea it causeth a man to crie and call earnestly vnto God in the time of distresse with a sense and feeling of his owne miseries and with deepe sighes and groanes which cannot be vttered to cra●e mercie and grace at his hands as of a louing father Rom. 8. 26. Thus did Moses crie vnto heauen in his heart when he was in distresse at the red sea Exod. 14. 15. And this gift of praier is an vnfallible testimonie of Gods Spirit which cannot stand with carnall presumption The second Testimonie of our Adoption is our Spirit that is our conscience sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost And this also is knowne and discerned first by the greefe of the heart for offending God called Godly sorrow 1. Cor. 7. 10. secondly by a resolute purpose of the heart and endeauour of the whole man in all things to obey God thirdly by sauouring the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 5. that is by doing the workes of the Spirit with ioy and chearefulnesse of heart as in the presence of God and as his children and seruants Now put the case that the testimonie of the Spirit be wanting then I answer that the other testimonie the sanctification of the heart will suffice to assure vs. We knowe it sufficiently to be true and not painted fire if there be heate though there be no flame Put the case againe that the testimonie of the spirit be wanting and our sanctification be vncertaine vnto vs how then may we be assured The answer is that we must thē haue recourse to the first beginnings and motions of sanctificatiō which are these First to feele our inward corruptions Secondly to be displeased with our selues for them Thirdly to beginne to hate sinne Fourthly to grieue so oft as we fal and offend God Fiftly to auoid the occasions of sinne Sixtly to endeauour to doe our dutie and to vse good meanes Seuenthly to desire to sinne no more And lastly to pray to God for his grace Where these and the like motions are there is the spirit of God whence they proceed and sanctification is begun One apple is sufficient to manifest the life of the tree and one good and constant motion of grace is sufficient to manifest sanctification Againe it may be demanded what must be done if both be wanting Answ. Men must not dispaire but vse good meanes and in time they shall be assured Sect. 2. The Second place is the 15. Psalme In the first verse whereof this question is propounded namely Who of all the members of the Church shall haue his habitation in heauen The answer is made in the verses following and in the second verse he sets downe three generall notes of the said person One is to walke vprightly in sincerity approuing his heart and life to God the second is to deale iustly in al his doings the third is for speech to speake the truth from the heart without guile or flatterie And because we are easily deceiued in generall sinnes in the 3 4 and 5. verses there are set downe seauen more euident and sensible notes of sinceritie iustice and trueth One is in speech not to take vp or carrie abroad false reports and slanders The second is in our dealings not to doe wrong to our neighbour more then to our selues The third is in our companie to contemne wicked persons worthy to be contemned The fourth is in our estimation we haue of others that is to honour them that feare God The fift is in our words to sweare and not to change that is to make conscience of our word and promise especially if if it be confirmed by oath The sixt is in taking of gaine not to giue money to vsurie that is not to take increase for bare lending but to lend freely to the poore The last is to giue testimonie without briberie or partialitie In the fift verse is added a reason of the answer he that in his indeauour doth al these things shall neuer be mooued that is cut off from the Church as an hypocrite Sect. 3. The third place of Scripture is the first Epistle of Iohn the principall scope wherof is to giue a full resolution to the conscience of man touching the certainty of his
in the historie though the doctrine it selfe be as ancient The Scripture contains a continued historie from age to age for the space of 4000 yeares before Christ euen from the beginning Humane histories that are of any certentie or continuance begin onely about the time of Ezra and Nehemiah As for those which were written before they are onely fragments and of no certentie The second propertie is Consent with it selfe in all parts both for the matter scope and ende The writings of men doe dissent from themselues by reason of ignorance forgetfulnes in the authors But the word of God agrees with it selfe most exactly and the places that seeme to disagree may easily be reconciled which shewes that holy men by whome it was penned were not guided therein by their owne priuate iudgement but were directed by the wisdome of the spirit of God Sect. 5. The fift reason is drawne from the Contraries The Deuill and wicked men are in iudgement and disposition as contrarie to scripture as light is to darkenes I prooue it thus Let a man read any booke of Philosophie and labour to be resolued of any one point therein he shall neuer be tempted to infidelitie But if the same man reade the bookes of Scripture and labour to vnderstand them he shall haue within himselfe many motions and temptations not to beleeue and obey it Now what should be the cause thereof but that these bookes are the word of God which the Deuill laboureth to oppugne with might and maine Againe consider the same in the practise of wicked men They will not brooke the rebuke of their sinnes namely their Idolatrie blasphemie and other notorious crimes by scripture but will seeke the blood and life of him that shall sharply taxe and reprooue them And hence it was that wicked Kings so persecuted the Lords Prophets Yea further let it be marked that these wicked men that are tainted with these horrible crimes and cannot abide the word nor teachers thereof to the death haue commonly fearefull endes Now the opposition of Satan and wicked men to the word shewes the scriptures to be a most holy word and indeede the very word of God Sect. 6. The sixt reason is taken from sundrie testimonies First of holy Martyrs in the Olde and New testament who haue giuen their liues for the maintenance of this word and sealed the same with their owne hearts blood yea suffered the most horrible and exquisite torments that the wit of man could deuise and that most patiently and willingly not beeing daunted or dismaied The stories of Martyrs in all ages confirme this truth especially of those that suffered before in and after the times of the tenne bloodie persecutions And. vnlesse they had beene supported by a d●●ine power in so good a cause they could neuer so many of them haue suffered in such manner as they did The second is the testimonie and consent of Heathen men who haue recorded the very same things at l●ast many of the principall that are set downe in the Bible If this were not so man should haue some colourable excuse of his vnbeleefe And these things which they record were not all taken out of the Scripture but were registred to memorie by Historiographers that liued in the times when they were done Such are the stories of the Creation and Flood of the tower of Babel of the Arke of Abraham and his possessions of Circumcision of the miracles of Moses of the birth of Christ and the slaughter of the young children of the miracles of Christ of the death of Herod Agrippa and such like And these we take for true in humane stories much more then ought we to doe it in the word of God The third testimonie is of Miracles The ●octrine of scripture was confirmed by miracles wrought by the teachers thereof the Prophets and Apostles aboue all power strength of nature and such as the Deuill can not counterfeit as the staying of the sunne and the raising of the dead c. The fourth is the testimonie of the Holy Ghost which is the argument of all arguments to settle and resolue the Conscience and to seale vp the certaintie of the word of God If any shall aske how this testimony of the Holy Ghost may be obtained and beeing obtained how we may discerne it to be the testimony of the Holy Ghost and not of man I answer by doing two things First by resigning our selues to become truly obedient to the doctrine taught Ioh. 7. 17. If any man will doe my fathers will saith Christ he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God Secondly by praying vnto God for his Spirit to certifie our consciences that the doctrine reveiled is the doctrine of God Aske faith our Sauiour Christ it shal be giuen you seeke and ye shall find knock and it shall be opened vnto you For he that asketh rece●●eth Mat. 7. 7 8. Againe Your heauenly father will giue the Holy Ghost to them that desire him Luc. 11. 13. And If any man lacke wisdome let him aske it of God who giueth to all men liberally and reprocheth no man and it shall be giuen him Iam. 1. 7. Sect. 7. Now hauing set down the proofes of this point before I come to the next Question some speciall Obiections against this doctrine are to be answered and resolued For there haue not beene wanting in all ages both Atheists and others who haue professedly excepted against it and of set purpose haue vndertaken to call the written word of God into Question Such were Celsus Lucian Iulian Porpherie Apelles and others From whome some of latter times hauing receiued the poison of Atheisme and prophanesse haue not ceased as much as in them lyeth to oppugne sundry parts and portions of holy scripture Their principall reasons and exceptions I will propound and answere one by one And first they except against that which is written Gen. 1. 16. where it is said God made the sunne the fourth day Now say they the sunne is the cause of the day and therefore there could not be three daies before the sunne was created considering that the effect is not before the cause but the cause before the effect I answere First we must put a difference betweene cause and cause For of causes some be the highest some subordinate vnto them The highest and first cause of all creatures is God himselfe from whom all things at the first immediately flowed without any relation to their causes in nature And thus were the first second and third daies created and appointed immediately from God and distinguished from the night by an intercourse of light ordained by him for that purpose But the subordinate and inferior cause of the day in order of nature was the sunne and that by the same appointment of God and this cause was not set in nature as the cause of the day before the fourth day of creation for then it pleased him
extraordinary man that is qualified with these two gifts may pray not onely against the cause of him that is an enemie to God but against his person Thus Dauid did especially in the 109. Psal. which Psalme is full of terrible curses against his particular enemies and typically against Iudas For he had the spirit of discerning by which he knewe that they were incurable enemies and a pure zeale of the glorie of God which made him breake out into such imprecations So Paul praies Gal. 5. 12. that they might be cut off which troubled the Church c. 2. Tim. 4. 14. he praies directly against the person of Alexander the coppersmith that had don him much wrong The Lord reward him according to his workes Which must not seeme strange for Paul had in that imprecation the Spirit of prophecie and consequently both the spirit of discerning and of pure zeale and therefore he might pray against him as he did But for Ordinarie men such as haue nothing but ordinarie gifts and want the spirit of discerning and haue also a zeale mingled with choler stomack anger and hatred they may vse no extraordinarie praier against the person of any man All that they may doe is to pray that God would restraine their malice hinder their badde practises and turne them to his glorie and the good of his Church Therefore Act. 4. 29. when there had beene a Councell holden at Ierusalem against the Apostles Peter and Iohn in the first beginning of the great persecution of Christians in the primitiue Church it is said that they departed from the assembly and praied together with the rest of the Church in this manner And now O Lord behold their threatnings c. Wherein they praied not against the Councell nor against the men that sate in counsell but against their proceedings courses deuises and threatnings And their practise may be a patterne for ordinary men to follow In Luk. 9. 54. the Disciples asking our Sauiour Christ whether they should call for fire from heauen to destroy his enemies he sharply reprooueth them for their intemperate heate against the Samaritans and tells them that they had not that extraordinarie Spirit to effect such a thing because they were but ordinarie men Ordinarie men therefore may not pray against the persons of Gods enemies The Pope at this day is a professed enemie to Christ and his Gospel yet no man may pray against the person of the Pope but onely against his state kingdome and regiment which is Antichristian whereby he sets himselfe against God and his kingdome Sect. 2. Vpon the answer to this question there followeth an other Sundrie Psalmes of Dauid are Psalmes of imprecation wherin Dauid curseth his enemies fearefully especially in the 109. Psalme now all these psalmes were penned for our vse It may therefore be demanded how we may vse these and such like when we read or sing them Ans. I. We must not vse them as Dauid did namely as praiers against the persons of our enemies but onely as prophecies against the enemies of God wherein the punishment of incurable men that were enemies to God and his truth is foretold For wee haue not as Dauid had an extraordinarie spirit or a pure zeale therefore we cannot pray as he did II. I answer whereas these Imprecations were directed against particular enemies we may vse them in some sort as praiers but how as generall praiers against all the incureable enemies of God not against any particulars among the Iewes Turkes or Papists As therfore as we may vse these Imprecations as praiers so we must vse them without any particular application to the persons of any particular men III. Question What be the particular Circumstances of Prayer Ans. There are chiefly foure I. The voice or speech II. The gesture III. The place where IV. The time when Sect. 1. Concerning the Voice this Question may be mooued Whether a Voice or words are ●o be vsed in prayer or no Ans. Prayer is either Pub●cke or Priuate In publike prayer a forme of wordes must alwaies be vsed in a knowne plaine and distinct voice The reasons are these First the Minister is the mouth of the whole Congregation in prayer as he is the mouth of God to the people in preaching Now as the Minister is their mouth to God in prayer so the people must giue their assent and approbation to his prayer by the word Amen But there can be no professed and publique assent without a voice Secondly God is the Creator not onely of the soule of man but also of his bodie and we blesse God not onely with the heart but also with the tongue therefore the whole man must pray in publicke Now in priuate prayer made in priuate and secret places by priuate persons the Voice is profitable but not simply necessarie It is profitable because it stirreth vp the affections of the heart it serueth also to keepe the wandering minde in compasse to expresse the affection and to procure attention of the heart to the prayer Yet it is not simply necessarie For a man is not bound in co●●cience to vse a forme of wordes in all his prayers Moses prayed he spake neuer a word and yet it was a prayer for the Lord saies vnto him Exod. 12. 15. Why criest thou Anna praying in the Temple her lippes did mooue onely her voice was not heard and yet shee is said to pray 1. Sam. 1. 13. Againe the Spirit is said to pray in the Elect with groanes that cannot be vttered and yet the Holy Ghost giues them the name of prayers Rom. 8. Paul biddes vs pray continually which is not to be vnderstood of a continuall vse of a forme of words but of the groanes and sighes of the heart which may be made at all times Out of this Question ariseth another Whether it be lawfull when we pray to read a set Forme of prayer for some thinke that to doe so is a sinne Ans. It is no sinne but a man may lawfully and with good conscience doe it Reasons First the Psalmes of Dauid were deliuered to the Church to be vsed and read in a set forme of words and yet the most of them are praiers Secondly to conceiue a forme of praier requires gifts of memorie knowledge vtterance and the gifts of grace Now euery child and seruant of God though he haue an honest heart yet hath he not all these gifts and therefore in the want of them may lawfully vse a set forme of prayer as a man that hath a weake backe or a lame legge may leane vpon a crutch It is alleadged that set formes of praier doe limit and binde the Holy Ghost Ans. If we had a perfect measure of grace it were somewhat but the graces of God are weake and small in vs. This is no binding of the Holy Ghost but a helping of the spirit which is weake in vs by a crutch to leane vpon therefore a man may with good conscience
rooted in the heart that it cannot be remooued thence Your ioy shal no man take from you saith Christ. It must needes therefore be true and sound yea able to swallow vp all matter of griefe and heauinesse whereas the other is neuer sincere but with the sweetnes thereof hath alwaies mingled some bitternes Euen in laughter saith Salomon speaking thereof the heart is heauie When the face of the wicked man shineth and his countenance is pleasant euen then is he inwardly sorrowfull and his minde is troubled Lastly the ioy of the Spirit is eternall abiding in the mind of man not onely for the terme of this life but for euer in the world to come So is not the reioycing of the world in earthly things for it is fading and deceitfull as the things themselues be wherein it is placed it hath the beginning in corruption and endeth with this present life The examples of the two rich men in the Gospel doe manifest this truth And to this purpose is the speech of Zophar in the booke of Iob that the reioycing of the wicked is very short the ioy of hypocrites is but a momēt c. By these fiue properties may we put a true difference betweene earthly and heauenly reioycing and consequently discerne of them euen in our seleues And if we perceiue this ioy of the Spirit rightly con●ceiued and grounded in the right vse of the word and Sacraments as also in the exercises of inuocation faith and repentance to take place in our soules and consciences we shall finde it of force to moderate and alay the very terrours of death And so much for Preparation Now the helpes to be vsed in the time of death are manifold the summe of all may be reduced to two heads Meditations and Practises Touching Meditations we must in the first place consider Death in a double respect one as it is in it owne nature and another as it is changed and qualified by the death of Christ Death in it owne nature is a Curse or fore ●…er of comdemnation the very gates and suburbs of Hell it selfe but beeing qualified by Christ it is a blessing an end of all miseries a full freedome from all dangers a short passage vnto ioy an entrance into euerlasting life a quiet sleepe voide of all annoyance by dreames and fantasies And the graue a resting chamber yea a bed perfumed by the death of Christ for the bodies of all the Elect out of which when they awake they shall be admitted receiued into the presence of God in heauen Secondly we are to consider that there be three degrees of eternall life The first whereof is in this world before we die and it is then whē we begin to repent beleeue in Christ and to be assured in conscience that God the father is our father Christ our redeemer the holy Ghost our comforter For this is eternall life to know God and him whome he hath sent Iesus Christ. The next degree is in death for death cuts off al sin originall actuall death frees vs from al wordly miseries death prepareth the bodie that it may be fit to enter into eternall happinesse together with the soule which is alreadie in heauen The last degree is when bodie soule reunited goe both together into eternall and euerlasting glory Our third meditation is that that there is a mysticall vnion and coniunctiō betweene Christ and euery beleeuer that not onely in regard of soule but of bodie also which beeing once knit shall neuer be dissolued but is eternall Wherevpon the dying dead rotten and consumed bodie remaineth still a member of Christ abideth within the couenant and is and shall be euer a temple of the Holy Ghost Thus Adam and Abraham which are dead so many thousand yeares agoe yea euery true beleeuer from them to the end of the world shall arise at the last day in body to glory by the power of their coniunction with Christ. In the winter season we see the most trees voide of leaues buddes and blossomes so as they seeme to vs to be dead and yet neuerthelesse there is a sappe in the roote of them which in the Spring wil ascend reuiue the decaied brāches Euen so it is with our bodies which though they be corrupted rotten burnt or eaten with wormes or deuoured by wild beasts so as they may seeme to be vtterly perished yet there is as it were a secret and hidden sap in them by reason of their vnion with Christ by which they shall be raised reuiued and quickned being made like vntothe glorious bodie of Christ their head with whome they shall raigne and liue for euermore Helpes in practise are two First he that will beare with comfort the pangs of death must labour that he may die in faith and that is done by laying hold of the promise of God touching forgiuenes of sinnes and life euerlasting by Christ. All these saith the holy Ghost died in faith namely Abel Enoch No● Abraham and Sarah all laying hold of the promise of life by Christ. When Iacob on his death-bed was blessing of his children he brake forth into this heauenly speach O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation In which words it is plaine that his faith rested on the mercie of God and by hope he waited for his saluatiō our Sauiour Christ saith As Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him might not perish but haue life euerlasting Out of which words the forenamed duty may be learned that looke as the childrē of Israel being stung with fiery serpēts that vnto death we● healed by looking vp to the brasē serpēt erected by Moses so whē we are stūg with sin death we must euer remēber by faith to looke vpon Christ. But specially when we are dying then it is our part to sixe the eies of our soules by faith vpon him and thereby shall we escape death and be made partakers of eternall life and happinesse Notable is the example of Christ who as he was man alwaies fixed his trust and considence in his fathers word especially at his end For when he was dying and the pangs of death seazed vpon him he cries vnto the Lord My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and againe Father into thy hands I commend my spirit which words are full of faith and doe bewray what great affiance he placed in his fathers loue c. When Dauid in an extremitie saw nothing before his eies but present death the people in tending to stone him at the very instant as the text saith he comforted himselfe in the Lord his God but how by calling to minde the mercifull promises that God had made vnto him and by applying them vnto his heart by faith And Paul saith of himselfe the rest of the faithfull that they receiued the
for the Thessalonians that God would sanctifie them throughout and preserue their whole spirit soule and bodie Of which place amongst many this exposition may be giuen The Apostle speaking of men regenerate and sanctified makes three parts in them bodie soule and spirit and by spirit we are to vnderstand not the conscience but the gift of regeneration and sanctification which is the whole man bodie and soule opposed to the flesh which in a naturall man is called the olde man Rom. 7. And the praier which Paul makes in the behalfe of the Thessalonians teacheth vs in effect thus much that though corruption remaine in the regenerate after regeneration yet in respect of diuine acceptation he is accounted as righteous and so continueth his sinne by the mercie of God in Christ not beeing imputed to him to condemnation And so much for that point Now these Grounds of comfort and others of the like nature may serue to sustaine and vphold the hearts of the children of God when they shall be pressed and troubled in consideration of their estate in this life which cannot till death be fully freed from much weakenes and manifold imperfections CHAP. XII Of the fift Speciall Distresse arising from a mans owne bodie THe fift and last kind of Temptation or Trouble of minde ariseth from a mans owne bodie Before I enter to speake thereof one Question in the meane time must be answered namely How the bodie beeing an earthly substance should trouble or annoie the minde considering that the minde is not bodily out spirituall for nothing can worke aboue it owne power and it is against reason that that which is bodily should either alter or trouble a spirit For answer hereunto these things must be considered Sect. 1. First of all the actions of man though they be sundrie yet they all proceede from one onely fountaine and common cause the soule and are done by the power thereof The bodie of it selfe is not an agent in any worke but as it were a dead instrument in and by which the soule produceth all actions and workes Secondly though all the actions of man come from the soule yet the most of them are such as be performed by the bodie and the parts thereof and by the spirits that are seated in the bodie as by instruments Indeede some actions of the soule and minde are done without the helpe of the bodie but I say that the most of them are wrought by the bodie and spirits therein contained And yet notwithstanding the Spirits in thēselues are no agents at all but the onely agent in any worke is the soule it selfe For example the vsing of the outward senses as of sight hearing tasting touching smelling as also of the inward as imagination memorie c. all this is done by the braine and the parts of the braine as proper instruments All affections both good and bad come from the soule but yet they are done and acted in and by meanes of the heart and vitall spirits So also the powers of life and nourishment proceede from the soule and yet they are done and wrought by the liuer and other inward parts as instruments whereby the soule nourisheth the bodie In a word there is no naturall action in man but for the effecting thereof the parts of the bodie are vsed as it were the hands and instruments of the soule and all this comes by reason of the vnion of the bodie with the soule whereby they make one person Hence it followeth that when the bodie is troubled the soule is also troubled Now the bodie affecteth and hurteth the soule and minde not by taking away or diminishing any part thereof for the soule is indivisible Nor by depriuing it of any power or facultie giuen it of God for as the soule it selfe and the parts thereof so also all the faculties of the same remaine whole and entire without abating or diminishing But by corrupting the action of the minde or more properly by corrupting the next instrument whereby the minde worketh and consequently the action it selfe This may be conceiued by a comparison A skilfull artificer in any science hauing an vnfit toole to worke withall though his skill be good and his abilitie sufficient yet his instrument wherewith he worketh being bad the worke which he doth must needes be an imperfect worke Howbeit the toole takes not away the skill of his workemanship nor his power of working onely it hinders him from shewing his skill and doing that well which otherwise he should and could doe well In like manner the bodie beeing corrupted hinders the worke of the soule not by taking away the worke of the soule or the abilitie of working but by making it to bring forth a corrupt worke because the instrument which it vseth is corrupt and faultie And thus we must conceiue of all the annoyances of the soule by the bodie The Temptation followeth The bodie causeth the trouble of minde two waies either by Melancholie or by some strange alterations in the parts of the bodie which oftentimes befall men in what sort we shall see afterwards For troubles of minde thus caused are more common and as noysome as the most of the former Sect. 2. Touching that which comes by Melancholy sundrie things are to be considered for our instruction and for the Remedie of that euill 1. And first of all if it be asked what Melancholy is I answer it is a kinde of earthie and blacke blood specially in the splene corrupted and distempered which when the splene is stopt conuaies it selfe to the heart and the braine and there partly by his corrupt substance and contagious qualitie and partly by corrupt spirits annoyeth both heart and braine beeing the seates and instruments of reason and affections 2. The second is what are the effects and operations of Melancholie Ans. They are strange and often fearefull There is no humour yea nothing in mans bodie that hath so straunge effects as this humour hath beeing once distempeted An auncient Diuine calls it the Deuills bait because the Deuill beeing well acquainted with the complexion and temperature of man by Gods iust permission conueies himselfe into this humour and worketh strange conceits It is recorded in Scripture that when the Lord tooke his good Spirit from Saul wherby he did carrie himselfe well in the gouernment of his people and an euill Spirit came vpon him he was in so fearfull a case that he would haue slaine him that was next vnto him how so surely because God in iustice withdrew his spirit from him and suffered Satan to enter into the humour of choler or melancholie or both and by this meanes caused him to offer violence to Dauid Now the effects therof in particular are of two sorts The first is in the braine and head For this humour being corrupted it sends vp noysome fumes as cloudes or mists which doe corrupt the imagination and makes the instrument of reason unfit for vnderstanding and
2. Ans. That this field was bought twice First by Abraham and then afterward recouered by Iacob that he might maintaine his fathers possession 3. Answ. That Abrahams name is here put for his posterity as Israels name is otherwhere giuen to his children yea not only to his children but also to his fathers Isaack and Abraham For Exod. 12. 40. it is said The abode of the children of Israel while they dwelt in Egypt was 430. yeares which cannot be true vnlesse the abode of Abraham and Isaack be therein included Now if the name of the successour may be giuen to his auncestors much more may the name of the auncestors be giuen to the posteritie CHAP. IV. Of Religion THe third Question concerning man as he stands in relation to God is touching Religion where it is demanded What is that Religion that is due vnto the true God Answ. The name Religion is not alwaies taken in one and the same sense For sometime it is vsed to signifie the whole bodie of doctrine reuealed in the written word that teacheth and prescribeth whatsoeuer is to be beleeued or practized as necessary to saluation Otherwhiles it is put for the inward vertue of the mind where the same doctirne is beleeued and the duties therein required practised and performed to the Maiestie of God And beeing thus taken it is called by the name of Pietie or Godlinesse in the Scripture And in this second sense I take it in this place Now Religion or Pietie hath two distinct parts The first is knowledge of God the second the worship of God These two are notably described by Dauid in his last will and Testament wherein he commends vnto Salomon his sonne before all other things the care and ioue of Religion and Pietie the summe whereof he reduceth to these heades the knowledge of God and worship of God 1. Chron. 28. 9. And thou Salomon my sonne KNOWE thou the God of thy father and SERVE him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind According to this difference of heades are the Questions concerning religion to be distinguished and these are principally two First how God is to be knowne and then how he is to be worshipped I. Question How God is to be conceiued in our mindes when wee performe any seruice or worship vnto him FOr answer hereunto this ground is first to be laid that we must not neither can possibly knowe or conceiue God as he is in himselfe For God in himselfe is infinite and therefore incomprehensible in regard of vs. But we are to conceiue him so as he hath doth reveale himselfe to vs in his creatures principally in his word The truth herof may appeare in this one example to alleadge no more when Moses desired to see the glory Maiestie of God for a further confirmation and assurance of his calling answer was made him by God that he could not see his face but he should see his back parts as he passed by him The meaning of this answer is that God would manifest his glorie vnto him by his effects by which as by a glympse or imperfect representation he might discern some part of his Maiestie so farre forth as he was able in the infirmitie of flesh and blood to behold the same But the perfect and full sight thereof no creature was euer able to attain vnto it beeing reserued for the life to come when not before they shall see him as he is in himselfe face to face This Ground beeing laid the full answer to the Question I propound in foure rules I. Rule When we are to pray or to worship God we must not conceiue him in the forme of any earthly or heauenly bodily or spirituall creature whatsoeuer for thus not to conceiue him is a degree of conceiuing him aright II. Rule God must be conceiued of vs not by his nature but by his attributes works By his attributes as that he is infinite in mercie iustice goodnes power c. By his works of creation and gouernement of the world of redemption c. Thus the Lord reuealed himselfe to Moses Exod. 6. 14. I AM hath sent me vnto you that is one which hath his beeing in himselfe and of himsefe that giues being to all creatures by creation and continues the same by his prouidence one that giues a beeing and accomplishment to all his mercifull promises When the Lord appeared to Moses he shewed not his face vnto him but passed by him with a voice The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gratious long suffering and plenteous in goodnes and truth In which place the Lord proclaimes his name by his attributes So in the prophecie of Ieremie I am he that shewes mercie iudgement and iustice in the land The same Daniel confesseth in his praier when he saith O Lord God which art great and fearfull keeping couenant and mercie toward thē that loue thee keepe thy commandements And lastly the author to the Hebrewes He that comes to God must beleeue that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seeke him III. Rule God must not be conceiued absolutely that is out of the Trinitie but as he subsisieth in the person of the Father Sonne and the Holy Ghost so he must be knowne and conceiued of vs. The auncient rule of the Church is that the vnitie must be worshipped in Trinitie and the Trinitie in Vnitie By this doe the protestant Churches differ from all other assemblies of worshippers The Turke conceiues and worships a God creator of heauen and earth but an abstracted God which is neither Father Sonne nor Holy Ghost The Iew worshippeth God but out of Christ and therefore a feigned and Idol God The Papist in word acknowledgeth and so worshippeth God but indeede makes God an Idol because he worships him not in a true but in a feigned Christ that sits at the right hand of the father in heauen and is also in the hands of euery Masse-priest after the words of cōsecration But the Protestant knowes God as he will be knowen and consequently worships him as he wil be worshipped in Father Sonne and Holy Ghost IV. Rule When we direct our praiers or any worship to any one person we must include the rest in the same worship yea further we must retaine in minde the distinction and order of all the three persons without severing or sundring them for so they are named and propounded in the Scriptures The reason is because as they are not seuered but conioyned in nature so they neither are nor must be seuered but conioyned in worship For example the man that praies to God the Father for the forgiuenes of his sins must aske it of him for the merit of the sonne and by the assurance of the Holy Ghost Againe he that praies for remission of his sinnes to God the Son must pray that he would procure the Father to graunt his pardon and withall assure it by his
spirit He also that praies for the same to God the Holy Ghost must pray that he would assure vnto him the remission of his sinnes from the father by and for the merit of the Sonne CHAP. V. Of the second part of Religion touching the worship of God and first of the inward worship II. Question How God is to be worshipped and serued FOr the full answer hereof we must remember that the worship of God is twofold inward or outward Inward is the worship of the mind the heart the conscience will and affections for man by all these ioyntly and seuerally performeth worship and seruice to his creator The outward is that worshippe whereby the inward is testified outwardly in the speach and actions The former of these two is the spirituall worship of the inward man and the very ground and foundation of all true worship of God for God is a spirit and therfore must be worshipped in spirit that is in the the minde conscience will and affections Indeede all the worshippe of God is spirituall euen that which we call outward yet not of it selfe but by vertue of the inward from which it proceedeth Sect. 1. The heades of Inward worship are two Adoration of God and cleaving to God For as they are two different actions of the heart so they may fitly be termed two distinct parts of Gods worship This distinction is in some part propounded by Moses where he exhorteth the Israelites to feare Iehovah their God to adore him to cleaue vnto him and to swear by his name Adoration is that part of Gods worship whereby a man vpon a vile and base estimation of himselfe as beeing but dust and ashes submits subiects his soule to the glorie and Maiestie of God This hath two principal groundes in the heart which if they be wanting there can be no true worship of God The first is Abnegation or deniall of our selues when we esteem our selues to be meerely nothing The second is exaltation or Advancemēt of Gods maiesty aboue all the things in the world Exāples of these we haue many in the scriptures as of Abraham who called God his Lord and himselfe dust and ashes of the Angels whome in a vision the Prophet sawe standing before God with one wing couering their feete which signified the abasing of themselues and with another couering their faces which betokened their adoration of the maiestie of God Of Daniel when he confesseth To thee O Lord belongeth righteousnes it selfe but to vs shame and confusion of face Lastly of the woman of Canaan who calls Christ Lord and her selfe a dogge Now in Adoration there are foure Vertues Feare Obedience Patience Thankefulnesse Feare is a great part of the worship of God which I prooue by two places laid together Esa. 29. 13. Matth. 15. 8 9. wherein Feare and Worship are taken for one and the same thing for that which Esay calls Feare Matthew calls Worship Now in this feare there be two things that serue to distinguish it from all other feares First it is absolute for by it God is reuerenced absolutely Saint Paul exhorteth to yeelde tribute feare and honour to the Magistrate not for himselfe but for God whose minister he is And our Sauiour saith Feare ye not them which kill the bodie and are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and bodie in hell As if he should say I allow and command you to feare men onely for God who hath set them ouer you but feare God for himselfe Secondly it makes a man first of all to feare the offence of God and then the punishment and iudgement For it is not a feare of the offence alone but of the offence and punishment together and of the offence in the first place Mal. 1. 6. If I be a Lord where is my feare And where it is saide in Matthew but rather feare him that is able to cast bodie and soule into hell fire there is commanded a feare of God in regard of his anger We feare the sword of man and that lawfully why then may we not feare the punishment of God If it be said this is a seruile feare to feare the punishment and agrees not to Gods children I answer slauish feare is when a man only fears the punishment not the offence of God or at least the punishment more then the offence The second vertue of Adoration is inward Obedience of the hidden man of the heart The Lord preferres this obedience before all sacrifice 1. Sam. 15. 22. This standeth in two things First in yeelding subiection of the Conscience to the commaundements threatnings and promises of God so as we are willing that it should become bound vnto them Secondly when the rest of the powers of the soule in their place and time performe obedience vnto God And by this meanes doe we bring into captiuitie euery thought vnto the obedience of Christ as Paul speaketh 2. Cor. 10. 5. The third vertue of Adoration is Patience which is when a man in his afflictions submitteth his will to the will of God and quieteth his heart therein because God sendeth afflictions This was Dauids counsell Be silent before the Lord and alwaies waite vpon his pleasure And his practise when in trouble he resigned himselfe into the hands of God and said Lord if I please thee not loe I am here doe with me as seemeth good in thine eyes This patience is a part of Gods worship because it is a kind of obedience The fourth vertue of Adoration is Thankfulnesse to God which shewes it selfe in two things First in an acknowledgement of the heart that our selues and whatsoeuer we haue is Gods and proceedeth from his blessing alone Secondly in a consecration of our bodies soules liues callings and labours to the honour and seruice of God Thus much of the first head of Inward worship or the first action of the heart standing in Adoration Sect. 2. The second Action of the heart in Inward worship or the second part thereof is Cleauing vnto God Now we cleaue vnto God by foure things by Faith Hope Loue and inward Inuocation By Faith I meane true iustifying faith whereby we rest vpon Gods mercie for the forgiuenes of our sinnes and life euerlasting and vpon his prouidence for the things of this life Thus Abraham beeing strengthened in this faith and relying by it vpon Gods promises made vnto him gaue glorie vnto God Rom. 4. 20. This Sauing faith is the very roote and beginning of all true worship For Loue which is the fulfilling of the Law must come from it 1. Tim. 1. 5. The second is Hope which followes and dependes vpon faith and it is that grace of God whereby with patience we waite the Lords leisure for the performance of his promises especially touching redemption and life eternall If we hope saith Paul for that we haue not we
doe with patience expect it Rom. 8. 25. The third is Loue of God which hath two effects in the heart First it makes the heart to cleaue vnto God and to be well pleased with him simply for himselfe In this manner God the father louing Christ testifieth that he was well pleased in him Matth. 3. 17. Secondly it mooues the heart to seeke by all meanes possible to haue true fellowship with God in Christ. This the Church notably expresseth in the Canticles The fourth is Inward praier or Inuocation of the heart and it is nothing els but the lifting vp of the heart vnto God according to his will by desires and grones vnspeakable Or it is a worke of the heart whereby it flies vnto God for help in distresse makes him a rocke of defence When the children of Israel were afflicted They remembred that God was their strength and the most high God their redeemer Psal. 78. 35. Of this kinde of prayer Paul speakes when he saith pray continually 1. Thess. 5. 17. For solemne prayer conceiued and vttered in forme of words cannot alwaies be vsed but we are to lift vp our hearts vnto God vpon euery occasion that by inward and holy motions and affections they may be as it were knitte vnto him Now to conclude this point touching Inward worship we must remember that it alone is properly simply and of it selfe the worship of God and the Outward is not simply the worship of God but onely so farre forth as it is quickned by the Inward and grounded vpon it For God is a Spirit and therefore the true worship that is done vnto him must be performed in spirit and truth Ioh. 4. 24. CHAP. VI. Of the outward worship of God and the first head thereof Prayer THus much of the Inward worship of God The Outward is that which is performed by the bodie externally eitherin word or deede To this belong many particulars which I will reduce to eight seuerall heads I. Prayer II. The hearing of the word preached III. The vse of the Sacraments IV. Outward Adoration V. Confession VI. An Oath VII Vowes VIII Fasting Touching Praier conceiued and vttered by the voice there are many Questions of Conscience the principall whereof are foure I. Question How shall a man make a lawfull and acceptable praier to God Ans. The word of God requires many conditions in making praier to God they may all be brought to three heads Some of them goe before the making of praier some are to be performed in the act of praier some after praier is ended Sect. 1. Conditions to be obserued before praier are three First he that would make such a praier as God may be pleased to heare must repent Esa. 1. 15. God would not heare the praiers of the Iewes because their hands were full of blood that is because they had not repented of their oppression and crueltie Ioh. 9. 31. God heares not sinners that is such as liue and lie in their sinnes and turne not vnto God by true repentance 1. Ioh. 3. 22. By this we know that God heares our prayers if we keepe his commandements I adde further that the man which hath before-time repented must againe renew his repentance if he desire that his praiers should be accepted For the very particular sinnes of men whereinto they fall after their repentance doe hinder the course of their praiers from hauing accesse vnto God if they be not repented of And for this cause the worthie men of God the Prophets in the old Testament doe vsually in the beginning of their praiers still humble themselues and confesse their sinnes as we may see in the example of Daniel chap. 9. v. 5 6 c. and of Ezra chap. 9. v. 6. c. Secondly before a man make a praier he must first if neede require be reconciled vnto his brother If thou bring thy gift to the altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee leaue there thine offering and goe thy way first be recōciled to thy brother then come and offer thy gift Matt. 5. 23. When ye shall stand and pray forgiue if ye haue any thing against any man c. Mark 11. 25. Thirdly he that is to pray must prepare himselfe in heart and mind as one that is to speake familiarly with God In this preparation foure things are required First the mind is to be emptied of all carnall worldly thoughts Secondly there must be in the minde a consideration of the things to be asked Thirdly a lifting vp of the heart vnto the Lord Psal. 25. 1. Fourthly the heart must be touched with a reuerence of the maiestie of God to whome we pray Eccl. 5. 1. Be not rash with thy mouth nor let thy heart be hasty to vtter a thing before God For the neglect herof the Lord threatneth to bring a iudgment vpon the Israelites Esay 29. 13. 14. Sect. 2. The second sort of Conditions are those that are required in praier and they are in number eight I. Euery petition must proceed from a liuely sense and feeling of our owne wants and of our spirituall pouertie For without this no praier can be earnest and hartie and consequently become acceptable vnto God For example when we pray that Gods name may be hallowed we must in making that petition haue in our harts a sense of the corruption of our nature wherby we are prone to dishonour the name of God II. Our praier must proceede from an earnest desire of that grace which we want and this desire is indeede praier it selfe Moses vttering neuer a word but groning in the spirit vnto God in the behalfe of the Isralites is said to crie vnto the Lord. Exod. 14. 15. We know not saith Paul what to pray as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sights that cannot be expressed Rom. 8. 26. III. The petition must proceede from sauing and true iustifying faith The reason is because without that faith it is impossible that either our persons or our praiers or any other action we doe should please God Heb. 11. 6. IV. Euery petition must be grounded vpon the word of God and not framed according to the carnall conceit and fansie of mans braine And this is the assurance that we haue in him that if we aske any thing ACCORDING TO HIS WILL he heareth vs. 1. Ioh. 5. 14. Now we haue a double ground of our praier in Gods word a commandement to make the praier either generall or particular and a promise that our requests shal be granted Here we must remember two rules First Things to be asked are either spirituall or temporall Spirituall are such as concerne God whereof some are more necessarie to saluation as remission of sinnes faith repentance and such like some are lesse necessarie as hope ioy in the feeling of Gods mercie in distresse c. Temporall things are such as belong to this life as meate drinke clothing
vpon defect of memory and vtterance c. vse a set forme of prayer Sect. 2. The second Circumstance is the Gesture Concerning which it is demanded what kind of gesture is to be vsed in praier whether kneeling standing sitting or the holding vp the hands or head to heauen or bowing the body to the earth Answ. God in his word hath not prescribed any particular gesture of the body and therfore our consciences are not bound to any in particular Besides that Religion stands not properly in bodily actions and gestures Yet touching gesture the word of God giues certaine generall rules to be obserued in prayers both publicke and priuate In Publicke praier these rules of Gesture are prescribed First when publicke praier is made in the congregation our gesture must alwaies be comely modest decent Secōdly all gesture vsed publickely must serue to expresse as much as may be the inward humility of the hart without hypocrisie Now these kinds are manifold Some concern the whole body as the bowing thereof the casting of it downe vpon the ground some againe concerne the parts of the body as lifting vp of the head the eies the hands bowing the knees c. Touching these the scripture hath not bound vs to any particulars but in them all we must haue regard that they serue alway to expresse the humilitie of our hearts before God Thus haue the Holy men of God behaued themselues yea the Holy Angels standing before the Arke doe couer their faces in token of reuerēce of the maiestie of God Esay 6. 2. Thirdly we must in publicke praier content our selues to followe the laudable fashion and custome of that particular Church where we are For to decline from customes of particular Churches in such cases often causeth scisme and dissensions In priuate praier done in priuate and secret places there is more liberty For in it we may vse any gesture so it be comely and decent and serue to expresse the inward humility of our hearts An auncient writer is of opinion that it is an vnreuerent and vnlawfull thing to pray sitting But both the learned before in and after his time haue iudged his opinion superstitious specially considering that Religion stands not in the outward gesture of the body and it skills not much what that is so the inward humility of a syncere heart be expressed therby Sect. 3. The third Circumstance is the place Where Question is made In what place we must pray Answ. In regard of conscience holines and religion all places are equal and alike in the New Testament since the comming of Christ. The house or the field is as holy as the Church And if we pray in either of them our prayer is as acceptable to God as that which is made in the Church For now the daies are come that were foretold by the Prophet wherein a cleane offering should be offered to God in euery place Mal. 1. 11. which Paul expo●…ds 1. Tim. 2. 8. of pure and holy praier offened to God in euery place To this purpose Christ said to the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4. 25. that the tyme should come when they 〈◊〉 not worship in Ierusalem or in Samaria but the true worshippers of God should worship him in spirit and in truth wheresoeuer it be Yet neuerthelesse for order decency and quietnes sake publicke prayer must be made in publicke places as Churches and Chappels appointed for that vse And priuate praier in priuate houses and clozets Mat. 6. 5. Now the opinion of the Papist is otherwise For he thinkes that in the new Testamēt hallowed Churches are more holy then other places are or can be and doe make the prayers offered to God in them more acceptable to him then in any other and herevpon they teach that priuate men must pray in Churches and priuate prayers must be made in Churches if they will haue them heard For proofe hereof they alleadge the practise of some particular persons in the Scriptures Of Anna who praied priuately in the temple Luk. 2. 37. Of Dauid who in his exile desired greatly to haue recourse vnto the temple And of Daniel who is saide to looke out at the window toward the temple and pray Dan. 6. 10. Answ. These places are abused by the Popish Church For there is great difference betweene the temple at Ierusalem in the old Testament and our Churches in the new That was built by particular commandemēt from God so were not our Churches That was a type of the very body and manhood of Christ. Heb. 9. 11. And of his misticall bodie Col. 2. 7. Againe the Arke in the temple was a pledge and signification of the couenant a signe of gods presence a pledge of his mercie and that by his owne appointment for it was his will there to answere his people but the like cannot be shewed of our Churches or Chappell 's It will be saide that the Sacrament is a signe of Gods presence for in it God is present after a sort Ans. It is true Christ is present in the Sacrament but when not alwaies but then onely when the Sacrament is administred And the Administration beeing once ended Christ is no more present in the Elements of bread and wine And in the very act of celebration he is not carnally but spiritually present Sect. 4. The fourth Circumstance is the Time Quest. What are the times in which men are to make prayers vnto God For answer to this question it is first to be considered that there is a twofold manner of praying and consequently two kindes of prayer The first is the secret and sudden lifting vp of the heart to God vpon the present occasion The second is set or solemne prayer The first sort of praiers haue of auncient time beene called Eiaculations or the darts of the heart And the time of this kind of prayer is not determined but is and may be vsed at any time without exception This point I make plaine by these reasons The first is the commandement of God 1. Thess. 5. 17. Pray without ceasing Eph. 6. 18. Pray alwaies with all manner of prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watch thereunto with all perseuerance for all Saints In both these places by praier and supplications Paul vnderstandeth the sudden lifting vp of the heart vnto God Secondly whatsoeuer we speake thinke or doe we must doe all to the glorie of God Now God is glorified when we doe in all things from our hearts acknowledge his power wisdome iustice mercie prouidence and goodnes And these we doe acknowledge when we daily and howerly lift vp our hearts to him in petition for some blessings and in thanksgiuing for his mercies Thirdly we are subiect to innumerable infirmities frailties and wants so as we cannot of our selues so much as thinke one good thought therefore we are euery day and hower to lift vp our hearts to God partly in praier partly in giuing of thankes that he would
make a daily supplie by his grace Fourthly Satan seekes by all meanes to ouerthrow our soules continually and in that regard it behooueth vs alwaies and vpon euery occasion to lift vp our hearts to God for his mercifull protection Fiftly the gift of faith must grow and increase in vs day by day And the meanes whereby it groweth and thriueth in vs are the exercises of faith not seldome and rare but daily and continually vsed Now of all the exercises of faith none is more exceilent then Invocation and Thanksgiuing The Second kinde of prayer is set and solemne when a man sets himselfe apart to pray vnto God vsually and feruently or when men come reuerently and solemnely together into the congregation to call vpon the name of the Lord. The word of God appoints no set time for this kind but leaues it to the libertie wisdome and discretion of men And the ground of this Libertie is this There is now no difference betweene time and time in regard of Conscience for performing the worship of God and the duties of religion the Saboth onely excepted but the principall and onely difference is in regard of outward order and conueniencie whereby one time may be thought fitter then an other and that must be discerned by the wisdome of men In the New testament the distinction of daies and houres is taken away Paul was afraid of the Galatians because they made difference of daies times moneths and yeares in respect of holines and religion Gal. 4. By this doctrine we may see what to iudge of the Romane religion touching set times of prayer They prescribe certaine houres which they tearme Canonicall and they distinguish them in this manner The first they call the Matutine before the sunne rising The second the Prime from the first houre of the day to the third The third from thence to the sixt hower The fourth from the sixt to the ninth The fift from the ninth to the twelfth which they call the None The fixt is in the euening about the Sunne-setting The seuenth and last is after the Sunne-setting which they call the Completorie Now in these seauen prescribed howers by the doctrine deliuered I note three notable abuses First in that the Popish Church binds men in Conscience to obserue them vpon paine of mortall sinne Whereas in regarde of Conscience there is no difference of times Secondly they bind the Masse-priest the Deacon Subdeacon and the Beneficed man onely to Canonicall houres whereas those houres differ not from others in regard of performance of Gods worship neither are these men more bound to pray in them then others Thirdly that a man may say and read his Canonicall houres this day for the morrow and in the morning or after dinner for the whole day wherein we may see their grosse superstition IV. Question touching prayer is How their mindes are to be pacified which are troubled by sundry accidents that fall out in their praiers These Accidents are principally three First when they should pray they cannot frame or conceiue a forme of praier as other men doe For remoouing of which trouble let them remember this one thing That the vnfeigned desire of the touched heart is a praier in acceptance before God though knowledge memorie and vtterance to frame and conceiue a forme of prayer in words be wāting Ps. 10. 17. God heares the desire of the poore that is of humbled persons and them which are in distresse Psal. 145. 19. God will fulfill the desire of them that feare hi● he also will heare their cry and will saue them Rom. 8. 26. We know not how to pray as we ought but the Spirit of God that is the spirit of adoption maketh requests for vs by grones sighes which cannot be vttered Where we may obserue that the prayer of the Holy Ghost which must needes be an excellent prayer is made by grones which cannot be vttered in words The second Accident is that they finde them selues full of heauines and deadnes of spirit and their minds full of by-thoughts and wandting imaginations This trouble may be remooued vpon this ground that the defects of our prayer shall neuer condemne vs if we be heartily displeased with our selues for the same and by prayer and other good meanes doe struggle and striue against them Rom. 8. 1. There is no cōdemnation to them that be in Christ. In which place it is not saide They doe nothing worthy of cōdem●ation but thus There is no condemnation to them being in Christ though they deserue it neuer so much The third accidēt is that though they pray they receiue not the fruit of their praiers For the remooueall of this distresse we may consider these foure things I. The man that is thus troubled is to examine himselfe whether he hath made his praier to God aright or no For if he pray amisse he may pray long and neuer be heard Our Sauiour would not grant the request of the sonns of Zebedeus because they asked they knew not what Matt. 20. 22. Iam. 4. 3. Ye aske receiue not because ye aske amisse that ye might consume it on your lusts Paul prayed three times and had the repulse because he asked things inconuenient for him to receiue therefore answere was made My grace is sufficient for thee 2. Cor. 12. The man therefore that would make a praier aright must haue respect vnto the matter and forme thereof as also to the disposition of his owne heart If he faile in any of these then God will not heare or if he doth he heares in iustice II. Though men make lawfull praiers vnto God aske things that are to be asked and which God will grant yet God will sometime deserre the accomplishment of their praiers and not giue eare vnto them at the first Dauid prayed night and day and yet was not heard Psalm 22. 2. Againe his eies failed his throat was drie while he waited for his God by prayer Psal. 69. 3. The Angel Gabriel said to Zacharie Luk. 1. 13. Thy prayer is heard Now in all likelihood that prayer of Zacharie was made long before euen in his youth yet it was not granted him till he was olde The Lord deferres the graunt of our requests vpon good reason For hereby he stirreth vp the dulnes of our hearts and quickeneth our faith and hope Againe he makes vs when we enioy the blessings desired to haue them in higher estimation and to be more thankefull vnto him yea in the want thereof to striue the more earnestly with him by praier for them The woman of Canaan was repulsed and called a dogge by our Sauiour Christ not for that he intended to reiect her prayer but to stirre vp her faith to make her more earnest in asking as also more thankefull for the benefit when shee had receiued it III. The Lord vseth to graunt our petitions two manner of waies First by giuing the very thing we aske Secondly by giuing something answerable
therto when he grāteth not the thing it selfe Thus Christ was heard in that which he feared Heb. 5. 7. He prayed to be deliuered from that cuppe which notwithstāding he drank of How thē was he heard Though he had not that which he asked yet God granted him the thing which was proportionable to his request namely strength and power whereby he was inabled to ouercome the woefull pangs of that death IV. We must thinke this sufficient that we can and doe pray vnto God though we neuer haue any request in this world graunted For by whose grace haue we alwaies continued in praier but by the gift and grace of God Paul in the like case was answered by God My grace is sufficient for thee that is thine infirmitie shall not be remooued content thy selfe in this that thou art in my fauour and hast receiued my grace by which thou doest withstand this Temptation To this purpose S. Iohn saith If we know that he heareth vs whatsoeuer we aske we know that we haue the petitions graunted which we desired of him 1. Ioh. 5. 15. His meaning is if we can perceiue and discerne that God listneth to our praiers hereby we may assure our selues that he graunts our requests Now by this we may perceiue that he doth listen and giue eare to vs because the grace whereby we pray is from him alone CHAP. VII Of the second head of Gods worship the hearing of the word preached THus much touching the first head of Outward worship namely Prayer Nowe followes the next which is the Hearing of the Word preached The Questions concerning this point are of two sorts Some concerne the Preachers of the word and some the Hearers The first sort I omit and reserue them to a more proper place For the second sort concerning Hearers one Question may be mooued How any man may profitably to his owne comfort and saluation heare the word of God The necessitie of this Question appeares by that speciall Caueat giuen by our Sauiour Christ Luk. 8. 18. Take heede how ye heare Ans. To the profitable hearing of Gods word three things are required Preparation before we heare a Right disposition in hearing and Duties to be practised afterward I. In Preparation sundrie Rules of direction are to be obserued First Rule We must be swift to heare Iam. 1. 19. And this we shall doe by disburdening our selues of all impediments which may hinder the effectuall hearing of the word These Impediments are especially three all which are named by the Apostle Iames together with their seuerall remedies The first is Presumption when the hearer presumes of his wisdome knowledge and abilitie to teach if neede were his teachers The remedie hereof is to be slowe to speake that is not to presume of our owne gifts thinking our selues better able to teach others then to be taught by them For so the Apostle afterwardes expoundes himselfe when he saith My brethren be not many masters Iam. 3. 1. let not priuate persons take vpon them to become instructers of other men but as Paul saith 1. Cor. 3. 18. If any man among you seeme to be wise let him be a foole that he may be wise that is let him be willing to learne euen of his inferiours And in this regard let him follow the practise of Naaman who submitted himselfe to the aduise and counsell of his maide The second Impediment is troubled affections specially rash anger either against the Teacher or others The remedie of this also is laid downe in the place before alleadged Be slow to wrath v. 19. The third is superfluitie of malitiousnes that is the abundance of euill corruptions and sinnes which hearers shall by experience find in their owne hearts and liues This Impediment hath many branches principally three 1. Hardnes of heart noted by the stonie ground in the parable of the lower Matth. 13. 20. 2. The Cares of the world signified by the thornie ground v. 22. 3. The itching eare 2. Tim. 4. 3. when a man will heare no other doctrine but that which is sutable to his corrupt nature not beeing willing to frame his heart to the word but to haue the word framed to his wicked heart The remedies of this Impediment are these First euery hearer of the word must lay apart all supersluitie of malitiousnes that is cut off as much as in him lieth all corruptions both of heart and life Hence it is that God speaketh thus to the wicked man Psal. 50. 16. What hast thou to doe to take my word in thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed and hast cast my words behinde thee To this purpose the Prophet Ieremie exhorteth the Iewes to be circumcised to the Lord and to take away the foreskinnes of their hearts c. Ier. 4. 4. And Moses by Gods commandement was to sanctifie the people three daies before they came to heare the Law deliuered by himselfe in Mount Sinai Exod. 19. 11. Again euery man will and ought to haue a care to prepare himselfe more or lesse to the receiuing of the Lords Supper which dutie is as well to be performed before the hearing of the word considering that in substance it differeth not from the Sacraments they beeing the visible and preaching the audible voice of God Secondly euery hearer must receiue the word with meekenes that is with quietnes subiect himselfe to the word of God in all things Esa. 57. 15. I dwell with him that is of an humble spirit to reuiue the spirit of the humble c. The second Rule of Preparation Wee must lift vp our hearts in praier to God that he would giue vs the Hearing eare This hearing eare is a gift of God inabling the heart when it heareth to conceiue and vnderstand the doctrine taught and to yeeld obedience thereunto The third Rule The hearer must in hearing set himselfe in the presence of God Now therefore saith Cornelius to Peter Act. 10. 33. are we all here present before God to heare all things commanded thee of God The reason is because God is alwaies in the congregation where the word is preached II. The second thing required to profitable hearing is a right disposition Wherein two rules are to be obserued First when the word of God is in deliuering euery hearer must heare with iudgment But some will say many preachers bewray faults and infirmities in their preaching To this Paul answereth notwithstanding Despise not prophecie 1. Thess. 5. 20. Yea but what if they deliuer vntruthes Paul answeres againe in the next verse Try all things and keep that which is good and Saint Iohn to the like purpose 1. Ioh. 4. 1. Beleeue not euery spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God Her●… by the way we must remember one cau●at There be three kinds of iudgement The one is a priuate wherby euery priuate person may iudge of the doctrine which is taught For he must not heare hand ouer-head but iudge of that which he heareth