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A53275 The generation of seekers, or, The right manner of the saints addresses to the throne of grace in two treatises : the first being a sober vindication of the spirit of prayer, with the resolution of diverse practical cases related thereunto : the second a plain exposition of the Lord's prayer, with notes and application, mainly intended as a directory to those who desire to attain the gift of prayer. Oldfield, John, 1627?-1682. 1671 (1671) Wing O221; ESTC R31049 228,802 474

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this day of fear and trouble what brought it forth how wrought it You see it produced prayers supplications strong crying tears ardour and vehemency in prayer Object You have abundantly proved that the Saints in their troubles were much in prayer but what is this to the purpose How appears it that they had the Spirits help Might not nature and a desire of self-preservation prompt them to this course Will not even wicked men pray and cry under troubles Answ True Nature may do much It can make an Ahab put on sack-cloth and humble himself and go softly It can make a Pharaoh in a strait beg Moses his prayers c. yet if you take along these two considerations it will be evident that they were assisted by the Spirit of supplication 1. Consider how they prayed and that with extraordinary fervour strong cries and importunate wrestlings this speaks that they were strengthned with might by the Spirit in their inward man A natural man can bowl upon his bed observe that and Hos 7. 14. they can assemble themselves f●r corn and wine note what they pray for It is but howling it is but lazy upon their beds it is but for corn and wine but now read the prayers of the afflicted Saints you may see an impress of Divinity upon them they even breathe out that Spirit by whom they were indited Oh the confidence mixt with humility Oh the strength and sinews Oh the sweet infinuations pressing importunities c. that may be observed in them 2. But if this be not sufficient consider in the next place how they sped what success and acceptance they had with God what their efficacy and ver●ue was what gracious returns they had Now when God causeth his ears to hear it is an argument he first prepares their hearts No prayer is Psal 10. 17. acceptable to God but what is the breathing of his own Spirit The Text tell you he kn●weth that is accepteth is well pleased with the mind of the Spirit God can distinguish betwixt what is ours and what is his own That twofold intercession of Christ in Heaven and of the Spirit in our hearts is jointly necessary to procure the acceptance of our prayers with God Now look back upon the Instances I have given Jacob David Paul c. yea see how graciously God answered their requests whence it is evident those prayers were the operations of his own Spirit Thus of the first Proposition 2. As to the second that it is a singular Priviledge and comfort to Gods afflicted children to have the Spirits assistance in prayer it is already in a great measure proved in what hath been said to the several Cases proposed yet something I shall add as to the advantage of it in afflictions which I shall discover in five or six sweet effects of it in an afflicted state but know this that when I have said all your own experience will make you say as the Queen of Sheba concerning 1 Kings 10. 6 7. Solomon Behold the half was not told me It is an inexpressible advantage● Sampson's riddle is in this sense verified the Judg. 14. 14. Spirit of prayer out of the eater brings meat and out of the strong sweetness Particularly 1. The Spirits help in affliction carries in it much of Evidence The Spirit of supplication is the Spirit of Grace When in our afflictions Zech. 12. 10. Rom. 8. 15. we can cry Abba Father it shews that we have received the Spirit of Sons Hereby we have a singular proof that we Gal. 4. 6. are Christs for as it holds Negatively that If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his So Positively he that hath the Spirit is Christs for as many as are led by the Rom. 8. 9 14. Spirit of God they are the Sons of God And what more lenifying or sweetning ingredient can be put into the bitter cup of affliction What an allay is this to the saddest sharpest Trouble It were easie here to cut this River into many streams and to shew what abundant comfort in affliction flows from the assurance of our Adoption but I forbear particulars Only to hint something Hence we know we are in the hand of a loving tender-hearted Father who doth not Lam 3 31 32 33. afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men much less his own children who will not cost off for ever but though he cause grief yet will have compassion according to the Isa 63. 9 multitude of his mercies who is himself afflicted in our afflictions Hence we may be assured that our afflictions shall be proportioned timed limited so as we shall be able to bear them that they shall be for our good that we shall have deliverances and that in the best season c. So that the very reflection upon our prayers put up in faith humility and fervency doth much alleviate our burden and if not take away yet much abate the bitterness of the Cup. 2. Which follows upon the former It brings case with it it may well be called hearts case Experience tells us if we have but a faithful friend to whom we may impart our grievances and freely unbosome our selves it much lightens our burden And what friend like God By this means Hannah cased her 1 Sam. 1. 18. grieved heart and cheered her sadded countenance This hath been the Saints practice David still had recourse to God by prayer and you may in many Psalms observe how the case is changed and his soul refreshed before his prayer be ended he got renewed strength In the day when I cryed thou answeredst Psal 138. 3. Psal 55. 22. me and strengthnedst me with strength c. Hearty servent prayer is one way of casting our burden upon the Lord and in so doing he hath promised to sustain us and surely he cannot but have much case under whatever burden who hath an almighty arm to lean upon How often had the backs and hearts too of Gods persecuted servants been broken if they could not have poured out their souls to God I noted above from the Title of that Psalm that it is the practice Psal 102. of the afflicted and almost overwhelmed people of God to pour out their souls before the Lord. Other friends sometimes can and will not sometimes would and cannot relieve us 2 Kings 6. 27. If the Lord do not help thee how can I But God wants neither pity nor power to help Yet I here speak not so much of actual deliverance as of that inward quiet and serenity which prayer brings into the soul 3. The Spirit of prayer administers a ground of strong confidence to a soul under affliction The more servent in prayer the more lively are its hopes the stronger its confidence either of support under or deliverance from its afflictions however that thereby some special good shall accrew to it And it cannot be otherwise for there are many
This Title speaks our Interest in God and his affections and bowels towards us Confidence and boldness is necessary in prayer Jam. 1. 6. Wee must ask in faith not wavering and what Relation more apt to beget it than when wee can come to God as children to a Father 3. It helps against that backwardness and unwillingness which wee are naturally subject to wee are apt to withdraw from that duty unwilling to begge Now this title sweetens the duty to us and invites to it Little children take delight in speaking to their Father when they have nothing else to say yet they will be calling Father God would have us delight in duty and therefore hee teaches us to come to him under this most endearing and encouraging Title As himself takes delight in the approaches of his people Cant. 2. 14. Let mee see thy Countenance let mee heare thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy Countenance is comely so hee would have us come chearfully and therefore puts this Appellation into our Mouths and teacheth us to call him Our Father Use 1 See then that prayer is not a task but a priviledge 't is an address to God under the sweetest Relation Wee come not to deal with a severe Judge with a rugged and austere Master nor with an offended irreconcileable enemy Nor yet with a stranger in whom wee have no interest and with whom wee have no acquaintance No but wee come to a Father Think with what affections with what hopes and expectations what courage and confidence a child goes to a loving and tender Father yet with what awe and reverence and thus mayst thou goe to God in prayer How seldom doe wee consider this or act up to it wee come not to the duty as our priviledge or to God as Our Father There are three tempers of Spirit partly hinted before very unsuitable to this Priviledge 1. A lumpish backward and withdrawing Spirit when wee must be drag'd and forced to prayer when neither apprehension of the priviledge nor conscience of duty will bring us before God How unsuitable is this to the Spirit of Adoption which teacheth us to cry Abba Father And yet which of Gods children doe not sadly experience this distemper often upon them Oh let us be ashamed of it bewayl it and labour against it what shall not the Title of Father invite us and beget a willingness yea an holy forwardness and eagerness to this duty Bespeak thy lumpish Spirit what ô my soul hath infinite Majesty condescended so low to become thy Father and engage thee so to call him and will not this sweet Relation draw thee into his presence Were it a enemy a stranger with whom thou hast to loe well mightst thou be backward but who would not delight to converse with a Father such a Father 2. A diffident and distrustfull Spirit This much unbeseems the Relation of Children to a Father especially such a Father wee should not ask tremblingly having a Father to ask a Son in whose name wee are taught to ask a Spirit to indite our petitions and so many Promises to plead Jam. 1 6. Ask in faith nothing doubting Qui frigidè rogat docet negare A cold asking begs a denyall God allowes and wee may use an humble boldness and familiarity Isa 45. 11. Ask of mee things to come concerning MY SONNES and concerning the work of my hands command ye mee that 's a high expression and shews how condescending God is and how humbly confident wee should be 3. A careless irreverent Spirit Hee is little sensible either of the Majesty of God or the Relation in which hee should approach to God that comes irreverently into his presence W●e forget the Relation of Father when wee despise or irreverently take the name of God into our Mouths when Mal. 1. 6 7. Hebr. 12. 28. wee doe not serve God with reverence and Godly feare wee doe not serve him acceptably nor suitably to our Relation Is this to come to God as a Father when you come rushing into his presence without any awe or dread of his Majesty upon your Spirits dare you laugh and gaze and trifle in prayer dare you carry more irreverently and lightly than you would in the presence of some Earthly Potentate or in the presence of your earthly Parent Oh how unbeseeming is such carriage to the Title and Relation in which you approach unto God Remember how great your priviledge is and how disingenuous it is so to abuse it Use 2 Then it concerns all that would come to God in prayer to endeavour to make out their Adoption see that you be Children else how can you cry Abba Father As all are not endued with Ability for prayer so all are not in a Capacity to come to God aright Oh see that you can make out your Relation I might here be very large in laying down Tryals and evidences of sonship but I should make this part too bigge for the rest of my intended building besides I have lately in speaking to the Priviledge of Adoption spoken to this at large I shall content my self with 3. Characters of a Son which if found in you you may conclude your selves to be Children indeed 1. The first note of a child is Resemblance to his Father It is not alwayes so as to earthly but it is so as to our Heavenly Father God begets all his children as Adam Gen. 5. 3. his in his own likeness after his image They have the Spirit of God by which they are changed from glory to glory into the image 2 Cor. 3. 18. Eph. 5. 1. of God they are followers of God as deare children mercifull as their heavenly Father holy haters of sin lovers of Righteousness Now where shall wee find this Character impressed May wee not say of many as John 8. 44. Yee are of your Father the Divell What shall wee say of those that manisest to the world that they hate God and goodness of the common swearer c. Doe not these bear the very image of Sathan are they not as contrary to God as darkness to light with what face canst thou call God Father since thou hast no part of the Image of God upon thy Soul Well if you would be sure to speed in your addresses proove your selves Children by your Resemblance to God 2. Obedience is the Character of a Child there 's a Spirit which makes them plyable to the Fathers commands they are begotten unto obedience 1 Pet. 1. 2 14. True they are not perfectly brought under there are in them unruly lusts they have in them flesh as well as Spirit yet there is a Law in their minds they delight in the law of God Rom. 7. Eph. 2. 2. and 5. 6. according to the inner man they are a willing people Psal 110. 3. whereas the wicked are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Children of disobedience or such as will not be perswaded to yield obedience to God Try then is
his intercession Without this prayer is abomination to the Lord. Now meer gifts do not eye Christ sueh think to be heard for their gifts sake as the Heathens for their much-speaking they think the Rhetorick Matth. 6. 7. Arithmetick Logick or Musick of their prayers shall find acceptance or indeed they do not much look at God whether he hear or not I deny not but such may make as frequent mention of Christ and may have his name as much in their mouths as any but there wants Faith in Christ 2. Purity of heart is the other great qualification Jam. 4. 8 9. Cleanse your hands ye sinners purifie your hearts then Draw nigh to God And 1 Tim. 2. 8. we must lift up pure hands without wrath or doubting For as David saith If we regard iniquity in our heart the Lord will not hear our prayers Psa 66. 18. See John 9. 31. But now the meerly gifted person hath little regard to get or keep his heart pure any further than as the vanity or impurity of his heart may hinder the outward exercise of his gifts he little confiders what a holy God he draws nigh to who cannot endure iniquity Whereas the Spirit of prayer makes a man mainly solicitous about audience Such as have it in exercise would not willingly go away without their answer and therefore labour so to posture themselves and to be under such qualifications as that they may speed in their addresses to God Especially they are solicitous about the two great Qualifications before mentioned 1. That they both have and improve Interest in Christ The Spirit of prayer doth as naturally lead the soul to Christ as the Needle touch't with the Load-stone turns North or South It teacheth us the wisdom of the men of Tyre and Sydon to make Christ Act. 12. 20. our Blastus our Intercessor And 2. It makes them careful to approach the Majesty of Heaven with some degree of heart-purity and this not only while the duty is performed but before and after also knowing that an unholy heart is unfit to serve a holy God withal In a word the Spirit of Supplication is also a Spirit of Sanctificatiou and therefore helps the soul in some measure to live as it prayes whereas the gift of prayer may lodge in an impure heart It were easie to add other differences as this The gift of prayer faints and gives out when it meets with opposition but the Spirit of prayer gathers strength and encreaseth its importunity Again the gift of prayer is useful to others but the Spirit of prayer brings comfort and advantage to ones own soul c. But I proceed to the third thing 3. The Third thing which carries some resemblance to the spirit of prayer and therefore is to be distinguished from it is the urgings and pressings of natural Conscience It is undenyable that Prayer and Invocation of a Deity is a piece of Natural Worship I mean attested by the light of Nature It is one of the more immediate conclusions flowing from the consideration of Gods Nature of our Relation to him and the necessity of supplies from him that God is to be called upon For if God be the Supream Good the Fountain of all Good and if we can have nothing but by his leave nor any thing that is good for us without his love In a word if our whole dependance be upon him as to our Being Sustentation Comfort and Happiness all which right Reason will teach us Will it not undenyably follow that he is to be prayed to Will not Nature teach us so much in point of Duty since he is our Maker and Soveraign and in point of Ingenuity since he is our Benefactor Now even Natural Conscience having to the light of Reason the light of Scripture and express injunction of God added it cannot but sometimes urge and press to the duty and upon our palpable neglect accuse and trouble How these urgings may be distinguished from the Spirits motions is the Question to be resolved Only let it be premised which I would also should be understood concerning the gift of prayer that where the spirit of prayer is there may be also urgings of Conscience yea the Spirit makes use of Conscience to put us upon duty So that the sense of the Question is Whether it be mierly the urging of a natural conscience or whether the Spirit of God by its gracious incitements sets conscience on work to move us to this duty And here 1. Natural Conscience doth not ordinarily and constantly press us but upon some extraordinary occasion whether upon some powerful conviction wrought upon it by the Word or the impression of some awakening Providence as the Marriners in Jonah Jon. 1. 5. being startled by the Storm fall to their prayers Thus Pharaoh entreats Moses to pray Exod. 9. 28. for him when terrified by Gods Judgements and Simon the Sorcerer affrighted by Acts 8. 24. Joh. 3. 6. Peter's words desires his prayers Natural conscience rather drags us to God as a severe Judge than drawes or allures us to come to him as a loving Father Whereas the Spirit of God though not alwayes alike yet ordinarily invites the soul into Gods presence and bespeaks it with words of love and sweetness And though I deny not but it may set in with such Convictions and Providences yet not then only it makes use of Precepts Promises Mercies and other occasions as was shewed before to move us to this duty 2. Nor doth Natural Conscience bring in assistance It puts the soul on but puts no strength into it whence the duty is not spiritually performed but slubbered and shuffled over The water cannot rise higher than the fountain The best that is born of John 3. 6. the flesh is flesh A man may be vehemently urged but when he sets out his leggs fail him like some sick person that finds his Appetite craving yet when he comes to it can eat nothing his Stomack turns against every thing that is set before him There is a great dislike and disrelish of the duty within Terror puts him on corruption puls him back little he can do and indeed he cares to do but little he hath no heart to the work and therefore gets it out of hand as soon as he can only something he must do else he shall not feel quietness in his Job 20. 20. belly But the Spirit of God as we shewed before puts on to the duty and sets in with us It not only bids us stand on our Ezek. 2. 2. feet but enters into us and sets us on our feet and then takes us by the hand and teacheth us to go So that the soul is carried out and carried on with some degree of cheerfulness though not without many pull-backs and much opposition or if it doth not make us chearful yet it makes us in some measure careful If the soul cannot express its wants it can vent it self
6. 18. Praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance Let none cavillingly object That we are bid here to pray alwayes but yet in the Spirit for besides that it is doubtful whether the Spirit of God be meant here it follows not hence that we must never pray but when moved by the Spirit We ought indeed alwayes to beg the assistance of Gods Spirit but if God in justice withhold his Spirit must we therefore neglect our duty But more of this by and by Daily prayer is enjoyned us in that pattern which our blessed Saviour hath prescribed us and so much was typified by the Morning and Evening Sacrifice As for the Practice of the Saints Psal 55. 17. Evening and Morning and at Noon will I pray and cry aloud Dan. 6. 10. Daniel kneeled upon his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his God as he did aforetime Note that it was his constant practise It were casie to add more here but this may suffice to convince those that are not wilfully blinded I would only add that this Opinion would destroy all stated publique prayer since we cannot tye up the Spirit to our times yet there are frequent injunctions for it in the Word Let that one Text suffice 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Object Will any yet urge the Text in hand and tell me that without the Spirits help we know not what to ask and therefore our prayers will be but vain bablings or taking Gods name in vain I answer 1. True indeed we cannot pray as we ought without the help of Gods Spirit but I urge Is the Obligation destroyed when assistance is denyed No this shews us the sad condition of every carnal and unregenerate person and all such as have not the Spirit what a sad Dilemma they are in If they pray not they sin by neglecting a manifest duty if they pray they sin by an ill management of it This should make us hasten out of that doleful state and I would add here that there is aliquid tertium a third way I say not that we are absolutely bound to pray without the Spirit nor yet to neglect the duty because we have not the Spirit but we are speedily to go to Christ and accept him on Gospel Terms that the Spirit may be poured out upon us from on high that we may have the spirit of grace and supplication given us 2. I may further answer that though God sometimes vouchsafe his Spirit to stir up his people to prayer yet this is not to be presumed or constantly expected or depended on It s help is not alwayes Antecedent to the duty but comes in upon our endeavours Our work is to do what we can in hope that God will by his Spirit enable us to do what of our selvs we cannot He that sits down resolving to do nothing till the Spirit put him on doth Tempt the Lord and unwarrantably expect what God hath no where absolutely promised I would therefore say to the Christian that complains of deadness and indisposition as David to Solomon Arise 1 Chron. 22. 16. and be doing and the Lord will be with thee It may be observed how low and disconsolate David is in the beginning of some Psalms and yet how full of Faith and Confidence in the close May we not rationally think that the Spirit of God raised him up and came in upon him while we was meditating or praying I shall but lay this one thing before those that oppose this Truth Do you forbear to plow or sow till God bid you till he come and tell you He will bless your labours and send rain and seasonable weather c. Or do you forbear Food or Physick till God give you assurance that he will bless the creatures and make them nourishing and healthful No but you plow and sow eat and drink c. expecting Gods blessing He that ploweth ploweth in hope 1 Cor. 9. 10. And should we not do the like in spirituals not stay till we have a particular command or impulse of the Spirit but take all opportunities to read hear pray c. in expectation both of Gods assistance in and his blessing upon our endeavours CHAP. V. A Fourth Case concerning the help of the Spirit in prayer may be this Case 4. What is on our part to be done that we may enjoy this great Priviledge that our prayers may not be the meer expressions of our lips or workings of our own hearts but the breathings of Gods Spirit A Question which deserves our serious thoughts though I shall dispatch it in a few words leaving many things to your own meditation and enlargement Answ 1. We can do nothing to merit or engage the Spirit of God to attend us in our prayers You have already heard that the Spirit is a free Agent not working by constraint or necessity nor can all our endeavours oblige him to us Far be it from us to imagine that we have any of that preparatory or congruous Merit the Papists dream of whereby we may deserve the graces of the Spirit All grace is the free and undeserved gift of God we may put that Question to those that have the greatest measures of grace Who maketh thee to differ 1 Cor. 4. 7. from another and what hast thou that thou didst not receive i. e. freely undeservedly Now if thou didst receive it why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it i. e. Why dost thou boast as if it were purchased by thy own endeavours or deservings 2. Yet something may be done in order to our receiving or being capable of the gifts and assistances of the Spirit that is in the doing whereof God may graciously bestow his Spirit not because we deserve it but because he hath graciously promised to bestow it and hath made that the condition upon which he will give his Spirit 1. The first and great condition is That we accept Jesus Christ according to the tender of the Gospel The Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father is the Priviledge Gal. 4. 6. of Children Because ye are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Observe here He is called the Spirit of his Son not only because the father hath not given his Spirit John 3. 34. 14. 16. by measure that is above measure unto him but because he procures the sending of the Spirit with all the gifts and graces of it It will not here be necessary to descend into that intricate Labyrinth Whether the Spirit as to some of its graces and operations be not received into the soul before its actual close with Christ the Affirmative whereof as to the order of Nature seems to me unquestionable But as to the Case in hand it is sufficient to know that the Spirit of Supplication is only their Priviledge who are Sons and Sons none
Woollen of mens supposed super-erogatory Merits with the clean white Linnen of the Saints The Spirit will no longer be an Intercessor in our hearts than we rely upon Christ alone as our Intercessor in Heaven I am confident the Spirit never went along with prayers put up in the name of the virgin Mary Peter Paul c. Abide then in this Doctrine 2. Abide in the Faith of Christ I mean a personal applicatory Faith whereby we depend on Christ and his merits for acceptance of our persons and audience of our prayers It is not enough that we assent to the Doctrine but we must also rely on the merits of Christ We can no longer pray in the Spirit than we pray in Faith If we stagger in our affiance we shall want our wonted assistance 3. Abide also in the love of Christ maintain a singular and superlative esteem of him in your hearts count him the chief of ten thousand altogether lovely To abide in Christ is to continue and abide in his love But John 15. 9 10. what is this to the purpose in hand How will this procure the Spirits continued assistance in prayer Very much Love to Christ is one of those sweet and fragrant flowers indeed of his own planting wherein the Spirit is much delighted Observe that Text If a man love me be V. 23. will keep my words and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him How else do the Father or Son make their abode in a soul but by the Spirit Where then the Love of Christ is there the Spirit takes up his abode and where he abides he cannot be idle and unimployed He is like some friend that though they come but a visiting will further and not hinder business though indeed his coming to the John 14. 16. soul is not to give us a visit but to abide with us for ever And so much in answer to this fifth Case CHAP. VII IN the two last Cases I have proposed something 1. In order the Attainment of the Spirit of prayer 2. In order to the Preserving and continuing it The next will be Case 6. What may I do to recover the Spirits help and enablements its quickning motions its lively stirrings and assistances when they are withdrawn I need not say much of the usefulness or necessity of this Case What I spoke of the former is easily applicable hither The frequent complaints of Gods people concerning their indisposition coldness straitness and inability to prayer sufficiently tell us that it is needful to propose what may be thought effectual in this Case Something is fit to be premised though in effect it hath been hinted before 1. We may be said to lose or want the Spirits assistance either 1. As to that degree of liveliness and ability which we have formerly found There may be abatements of that fervour enlargement and vigour of affections that we have exercised in prayer This is the common experience I believe of all Christians They do not alwayes enjoy the same measure of divine enablement sometimes they sail swiftly Wind and Tide favour them at other times their motion is very slow they drive heavily much ado to bear up against the Wind and Waves 2. Sometimes we may seem wholly to want the Spirits assistance not one good motion no heart to pray I say not that we may lose the Spirit as to its Indwelling but as to its operations there may seem a Cessation of any lively breathings As in a Swoon the breath may be stopt the pulse not beat sensibly so that one may not feel himself alive and may be judged by others to be dead Though as Paul said of Eutychus Act. 20. 10. his life is in him Now I would be understood to speak to both these What is to be spoken may respect both the remission and abatement of degrees and also the intermission or cessation of acts of Spiritual life Both sorts need Counsell 2. The Spirits Return must be an act of free grace and indeed of rich grace For I suppose it will be granted that the Spirit withdraws not but upon some great Provocation though God may have as you have heard very gracious ends in such desertions yet I can scarce think he doth it till we have justly deserved it and in a manner driven a way his holy Spirit Now you may easily see that to sin against the Spirit of God after we have enjoyed his presence found the sweetness of his assistance and known the advantage thereof must needs be a very provoking sin it carries in it much of ingratitude and dis-ingenuity Solomon's sin was the more hainous because 1 Kings 11. 9. his heart was turned away from the Lord his God who appeared unto him twice How ill then must God needs take it that thou shouldst grieve his Spirit and abuse his goodness who hath appeared so often so sweetly and comfortably to thy soul Who hath helped thee at many a dead lift and put many a good motion into thy heart and held thee up in duty So that thy sin is not a little sin it calls for a deep humiliation it may cost thee many a deep sigh many a brinish tear before thou recover thy former state Nay possibly God may set just cause never to return to thee in that degree of enlargement and those gracious manifestations which thou hast sinned away Thou maist lay down thy head in sorrow though thy eternal condition be secured This I say not to break any bones or to discourage any from using means but to let them know that its dangerous to grieve the Spirit of God and that it requires the utmost of their diligence and industry to recover from under such desertions And now I come to lay down something in answer to this Case Direct 1. Thy first work must be to endeavour to find out the sin or sins which have robbed thee of this Priviledge Search and search again till thou findest out the Achan that hath thus troubled thy soul Here I cannot reckon up every particular sin that may possibly be a cause of the Spirits withdrawment but only hint what probably may be and ordinarily is the occasion of it It is not every miscarriage that grieves away the Spirit then who should enjoy that Priviledge The Spirit helps our infirmities It pitties us under weaknesses therefore meer failings do not provoke God to take away his Spirit Nor yet every greater sin if speedily repented of You can scarce imagine a sin more hainous for the nature than Peter's or more aggravated by its circumstances Yet it appears not that he lay under desertion he wept bitterly and it is not likely his tears were prayerless and no sooner is our Saviour arisen but he must have the Tidings with the first Such things intimate that he fell not under desertion His repentance was as speedy and serious as his sin was hainous Well what
prayer 1. A Spur to it for who would not look on it as a singular priviledge that hee might upon all emergencies have recourse to any great Earthly Monarch how much more should wee take delight in approaching to God when thou feelest thy heart dull and backward to this duty what a quickning consideration may it be to think that it is the Majesty of heaven that thou conversest with in it Nor must we think as that profane wretch I have heard of who being upon a sick-bed used this as an argument for deliverance that if God would now heare him hee would trouble him no more that our frequent addresses trouble God No the oftner if wee come aright the welcomer hee bids us ask and chides us for not asking John 16 23 24. 2. But then it may be a Curb to all rovings and extravagancies al rashness and irreverence ' T is the God of Heaven to whom thou addresses Who would not fear befo● him Eccl. 5. 2. God is in Heaven and thou on Earth therefore let thy words be few It ill beseemes us to be sawcy though wee may be humbly bold with God So much of much more that might have been spoken shall serve for Application of this Truth I come now to a more particular Consideration of the description of God in this Preface And 1. By his Relation to us Father which is amplified by the Ground and extensiveness of it for both are implyed in that word Our 2. Doctr. They that come to God aright in prayer must come to him as to a Father Relation to and Interest in God is necessary to make prayer prevalent wee must be able to cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. If yet call on the Father 1 Pet. 1. 17. There must be some hopefull ground of such a relation as a ground of confidence in prayer Explic. Now God is called Father considered 1. Personally or Hypostatically viz. as the first person of the Trinity so hee is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ as having begotten him from eternity by an ineffable generation A mystery to be beleeved by faith not apprehended by reason Thus hee is called Eph. 1. 3. Heb. 1. 5. c. 2. Considered Essentially the whole Trinity God in three Persons but One in Essence and so hee is Father either 1. In regard of Creation and Sustentation of all his creatures especially the rationall creature Mal. 2. 10. called the Father of Spirits Heb. 12. 9. of all things 1 Cor. 8. 6. thus the Heathens stiled their Jupiter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Father of Gods and men 2. In respect of Adoption hee is the Father of those whom hee takes into speciall Relation and this 1. Either Externall when a people are called into a profession of God and the True Religion thus the whole body of the Jewish Nation Rom. 9. 2. to them belonged the Adoption See Exod. 4. 22. and Deut. 32. 6. And in this sense the whole body of a Nation professing Christianity and baptized and partaking of Gods Ordinances may be called the children or people of God This is indeed a great mercy yet a man may perish from under this priviledge The children of the Kingdom may be cast out Matth. 8. 12. 2. Or Internall when a man hath not only the title but the Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 5. Eph. 1. 13. This may be described An Act of God's free grace in Christ taking us into the number and entitling us to all the priviledges of the Sons of God 'T is not an empty title but a reall priviledge Christ is the head and roote of it the Elect and they only the subjects free grace the inward mooving cause on God's part the word and Spirit are the instruments begetting and sealing it Gods glory in conjunction with mans Salvation the end of it Now in this sense wee are to understand it here Our Father not only as createing and upholding us not only as wee are baptized and partake of Church-priviledges but as wee are begotten by his Word and Spirit born again not of flesh nor of blood c. John 1. 13. Object But may none pray unto God or call him Father but those that are assured of this Adoption Answ Our Common Relation to God as his creatures and our Relation to him as Members of the visible Church may be urged as Arguments in prayer even those that had speciall Relation to God make use of them Psal 138. 8. Isa 63. 19. Wee may plead for mercy upon those accounts but wee are not to rest in them God may heare our prayers but wee cannot have assurance that hee will heare them till wee can come to him in this way of Speciall Relation other pleas may prevail but this will never fail us Confirmation Now for proof of this wee have the practise of the Saints both of the Old and New Testament they come to God under this Relation Isa 63. 16. and 64 8. Ier. 3. 4 19. So Christ himself Matth. 11. 25 26. John 17. 1 5. and 21 24 25. This is the Genius and Spirit of Christians Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 1. 17. Even Idolaters used to come to their Idols with this appellation Jer. 2. 27. they say to a stock Thou art my Father c. Reas The Reason in generall may be because there is not a more suitable Title either for God to have or for us to give him in our addresses to him by prayer 'T is suitable in regard both of his Majesty and greatness and of his mercy and goodness it s a singular help against those miscarriages that are incident to us in prayer as 1. It helps against irreverence and rash presumption there 's a naturall impress of Awe and Reverence upon the Spirits of children towards a Father there are indeed other Titles more apt to beget feare and trembling but none more effectuall to strike an awfull reverence of God upon the soul this will make us rejoyce with trembling Psal 2. 11. and fill us with Reverence and Godly fear Hebr. 12. 28. 2. It helps against Feare and Unbelief this Relation fils the soul with boldness and confidence Had wee been taught to call him King of glory wee should have been dasht out of Countenance with his Majesty if wee had called him The Lord of Hosts it would have made us tremble at his power or if hee had been stiled Judge of the world wee might have feared his justice But the Title of Father begets boldness and gives encouragement what may not a child hope to obtain from a loving and tender Father 'T is the lowest Title to which humility could condescend and the highest to which love could aspire This begets assurance that hee will give us if not what wee ask yet what is best for us A Father will not in stead of bread give a stone nor in stead of a fish a Serpent nor in stead of an egge a Scorpion Luke 11. 11 12.
they are invested with by Christ and what an everlasting spring of Consolation he is to those that are savingly ingraffed into him even against all that might trouble or terrifie them And because there are two principal springs whence all the sorrows of Gods people flow viz. 1. The Reliques of Sin within 2. The Pressures of Affliction without The Apostle layes in comfort against each of these severally Against sin remaining from v. 1. to 17. Against afflictions pressing from v. 18. to the end of the Chapter The Text is one of those Cordials to prevent faintings under any kind of suffering though not less Soveraign against the stirrings of corruption and indeed very precious and heart-cheering to those that enjoy it namely that they have the Spirit of God to help them in pouring out their complaints and begging what 's needful for them at the hands of God Though I intend not the distinct handling of every particular Truth coucht in these words yet it will not be amiss to open them that you may be the better able to glean up not those single cars only but whole sheaves of Gospel-Truth which I shall leave behind me In the words then is set forth a precious Priviledge of Gods people which though enjoyed in other Cases yet is especially besteading in a day of affliction namely the Spirit enabling to and assisting in the duty of prayer Particularly observe in them 1. Our Insufficiency to pray without the The Analysis in De●dates 4th Edit Spirits help for we know not c. 2. The Spirits Sufficiency to quicken and direct us and that both 1. As to the matter of the duty with groanings unutterable 2. As to the manner according to the will of God 3. As to the acceptance And he that searcheth the hearts c. This seems to be the most natural division of the words Yet for more orderly explication we may observe these five particulars in which though there be not so much Art or Method yet it may better serve our present purpose and give occasion to a more particular opening of the Text which I shall do as I mention the Particulars 1. The Author of the Priviledge that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Spirit which what else can it mean but the Spirit of God especially since it s emphatically pointed out in the following clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit it self c. Should any Caviller urge that in Prov. 18. 14. The spirit of a man will sustain his Infirmities and therefore why may it not be understood here of ones own Spirit The Answer were easie That there is a vast difference betwixt sustaining in that Text and helping in this There the Spirit De●d that is the vigour firmness and alacrity of the soul do uphold and bear up a man in his corporal weaknesses What 's that to spiritual infirmities ignorance unaptness and inability for duty What can the natural vigour of a mans own spirit contribute to the help of these Besides that other Texts conspire with this in the sense I give Eph. 6. 18. Praying alwayes In the Spirit per Spiritum Beza in locum as Beza renders it thus glossing Paul would have prayers to proceed from the Holy Ghost Or if that Text may admit of another sense In the Spirit that is ex intimis Add the consent of Expositors animi penetralibus as the same Beza making it parallel with that in Eph. 5. 19. making melody in your hearts Yet methinks that in Jude 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praying in or by the Holy Ghost is above any just ground of exception and cannot without manifest violence be otherwise understood but of the Holy Spirit of God the third person of the Trinity whose Graces they must exercise in prayer So that I take it for undoubtedly true that by Spirit here is meant the Spirit of God who is the Author of this precious Priviledge 2. Here is the Priviledge it self and that is expressed in two or three words very emphatical 1. Helpeth our Infirmities But that expression reaches not the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helpeth-together Vicissim onus attollit Beza ex altera parte ne sub eo fatiscamus He takes by the one end lifts against us lest we sink under the burden Infirmities that is the defects imperfections corruptions that cleave to us in our prayers 2. There are other two words both of one root v. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he maketh intercession for v. 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the same Their import is thus much to deal with a Judge Magistrate or any in authority about any business to be Advocate to plead a cause Sometimes against another as the same word is used Rom. 11. 2. Acts 25. 24. But here for on the behalf of another to procure that the person in authority may be propitious and favourable to obtain that one may bring in his plea and may be heard by the Judge Which yet is so to be understood not as if the Holy Spirit did intercede with the Father or Son for us as the Arians affirmed but that he Beza excites us to pray and as it were dictates sighs and expressions to us Whence he is said to cry Gal. 4. 6. and by it we are said to cry Rom. 8. 15. Of this more anon 3. Here is the manner of this Priviledge for so I choose to call it how the Spirit makes intercession viz. with groanings which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cannot be uttered Some will thus interpret without speaking as they render that word that is say they The vertue of their prayers consists not in number or artifice of words as the Hypocrites Matth. 6. 5 7. but in lively feelings and ejaculations of the Spirit This is pious but it seems to put some force upon the word Rather it signifies ineffable inexpressible or as we render that cannot be uttered Now some things are said to be unutterable for their greatness 2 Cor. 12. 4. Paul wrapt up into the third Heaven heard unspeakable words which it is not lawfull 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or possible for a man to utter In this sense 1 Pet. 1. 8. the joy of Believers is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 said to be unspeakable not to be expressed for the greatness of it Some things in regard of our weakness when through Infirmities we cannot express our sense and meaning both may here be understood Which cannot be uttered i. e. whose fervour Deod endeavour and efficacy proceeding from a supernatural motion of the Spirit cannot be apprehended or expressed Thus we by Quia ingenii captum longè excedunt Calv. reason of infirmity are like children which cry but cannot tell where our ailment is we can complain and mourn like Doves of the Valleys but are not able to express fully and particularly what is our grievance Thus it is sometimes with a child of God especially under
sad afflictions bound up as to expression and cannot go forth Psal 88. 8. He remembers God and is troubled he complains and his spirit is overwhelmed Psal 77. 3. Yet even this is prayer and from the Spirit of God Not that this is the only way of the Spirits assistance sometimes he fills the mouth as well as the heart enables the soul to vent it self in full and suitable Confessions and Petitions to approach God with an holy confidence But here the Apostle if we so take the words seems to speak of the lowest assistances of the Spirit when 't is worst with a child of God in his own apprehension when under heavy pressures and cannot pour out his soul yet he can sigh and groan out his sorrows can chatter as the Crane or Swallow mourn as a Dove and yet even this when from the Spirit is comfortable This sense seems to agree best with what follows in v. 27. 4. Here is also the suitableness and necessity of this Priviledge intimated in those words our infirmities and we know not c. Could we pray as we ought if we had Gifts and Graces at command it were no great matter but we have need of such a Helper having 1. In general such a multitude of infirmities within and therefore needing enablements from without And 2. In particular being ignorant both as to the matter and manner of the duty neither knowing what nor how to ask as we ought 5. Here is the advantage and benefit of this Priviledge in v. 27. where there seems to be a Prolepsis or prevention of an Objection If these groans be unutterable might some say What advantage then is there in them Yes very much for though men do not yet he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit So that here is the advantage the heart-searching God understands the sense and meaning the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Affectus illos benignè accipere ut agnitos probatos Calvin desires and breathings of his own Spirit can put broken and inarticulate sighs together and spell out what they need yea before they ask he knows so as to pitty and supply according to that Matth. 6. 32. Your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of these things The Reason whereof follows because he maketh Intercession for us according to the will of God that is as in the former Verse to pray as we ought He regulates our prayers both as to the matter and manner of them 6. I might add a sixth viz. the connexive Particle likewise also i. e. add hither This may suffice for opening the words each particular would yield profitable Doctrines but I resolve to confine my self to these two 1. To pray in the Spirit is the Priviledge of Gods children Gods children have the help of Gods Spirit in their addresses to God by prayer 2. From the Relation of the words to the Context The Spirits help in prayer is a singular Priviledge and Comfort to Gods children in affliction The first of these I shall not handle in an ordinary Sermon-Method but speak to it by propounding and resolving six or seven Cases as the Lord enables Some of which may explain and confirm the Doctrine and others be instead of Application I hope this Method will not be less profitable or practical than that which I usually follow CHAP. II. Case 1. WHerein consists this Priviledge or how may the Spirit be said to help in prayer This being clearly and distinctly resolved will make way to other Questions To which I shall answer 1. Negatively 2. Positively 1. Neg. The Spirit doth not assist in that Enthusiastical way as some have dreamed I am far from asserting such impulses of the Spirit as some pretend to Particularly 1. The Spirit inspires not ordinary Christians as it did the Prophets and Apostles in the delivery of the Scriptures Holy men of old were moved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 carried acted by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 21. So that their Prophecies Sermons Prayers recorded in Scripture are purely divine Words Matter Method from the Spirit of God and therefore infallibly true free from any fault indiscretion or mistakes in matter form phrase c. 'T is not so with Christians Notwithstanding the Spirits assistance their prayers may have many failings much corruption indiscretion disorder rashness c. mixt with them 2. Muchless doth the Spirit so help as if we were meerly Passive and the Spirit were active as if the Spirit only made use of our tongues as the Devil uses the Organs of Non quòd ipse revera suppliciter se ad precandum vel gemendum demittat c. Calv. in loc per vos intra vos those he possesseth to vent his lies and blasphemies withal This is a grosser conceit and absurdity than to be charged on the Spirit of God It may seem indeed Mat. 10. 20. as if the Spirit used the Organs of the Apostles our Saviour tells them It is not ye that speak but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Yet that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in you is no more as Beza notes than by or within you that is he gives expression courage elocution Or as v. 19. he gives in that hour what they shall speak So that not the Spirit but they speak though extraordinarily enabled at such a time both as to courage wisdom and elocution Thus it was with the See Acts 24. Apostles but the help vouchsaft to ordinary Christians lies not much if at all in the guidance of the Tongue or outward Organs 3. Nor doth the Spirit help more or otherwise in prayer respectively than in other duties of Religion Some I am perswaded fancy as if those that talk of praying in or by the Spirit had a conceit of some singular help in that duty above others Not so the same help is respectively vouchsaft in other duties You read of singing walking serving God in the Spiri● The Spirit no less helps a Minister in preaching his people in hearing singing meditation holy conference c. according to the nature and requisites of those duties than in prayer that is consider what Graces and Qualificacations are necessary in those duties and the Spirit doth equally furnish Christians therewith as with praying qualifications So that I am far from tying up the Spirit to any extraordinary Energy in this above other duties 4. Nor doth the Spirit so help in this or other duties as if other subordinate helps were unnecessary I do not believe that our Saviours command Matth. 10. 19. Take no Vid. Calv. in loc thought what ye shall speak excludes all premeditation but only that they should not be anxiously solicitous what to answer they should not wrack themselves with fore-thoughts about it muchless doth the Spirits ordinary assistance exclude other helps as study preparation premeditation Though the Apostles were extraordinarily inspired yet they stood in need of Christs teaching Luke 11. 1.
Gods familiars and in a sense enables us to speak to God face to face freely familiarly confidently as a man with his friend I shall urge no more but leave these with you bese●ching the Lord to set them home upon your hearts CHAP. VI. Case 5. THE next Case shall be this What are we to do that we may have the Spirits Assistance in prayer continued to us the Affinity of this and the next with the former will make my labour the less in giving Answer As to the usefulness of this now under our hand It is I believe the general experience of praying Christians that they have their Ups and Downs now enlarged anon bound up Sometimes they can wrestle and continue in prayer with ● holy fervency without flagging or ●ainting By and by a damp is upon their souls they are in their own sense faithless and heartless Bernard's Complaint is theirs That the Rara hora brevis mora Spirits lively assistances are short and seldome Their cold fits are much longer than their hot ones This dashes their comforts and often makes them question their sincerity they are ready to say with Rebeckah If it be so why am I thus If indeed I have the Spirit Gen. 25. 22. of Supplication as I sometimes hope Why am I thus dead heartless indisposed When they have assistance and enlargements then are they ready to say as Peter It is good to be here with Jacob Gen. 28. 16 17. Surely Mat. 17. 4. the Lord is in this place This is no other but the House of God and this is the Gate of Heaven Then how full of faith and comfort 'T is full Tyde with them neither expressions nor affections nor graces wanting and then they are apt to think surely I shall never be so dull and senseless again Such impressions surely can never wear off such a flame never go out But alas a few dayes may be a few hours experience tells them these are but short-liv'd A low Ebb follows this high Tyde then are they tongue-ty'd heart bound go into secret there they can neither feel out-goings to God nor in-comes from him Join with others alas they he like Stones no rubbing or chasing will beget any warmth in 1 Sam. 28. 15. them In their own sense much like Saul God answers them neither in one way nor another Then how dejected and disconsolate Oh what would they give for the least degree of those enlargements and meltings they have formerly experienc't That they could but give vent to their sorrows in hearty sighs and groans That they could but pour out their souls with that child-like confidence as sometimes they have done Now therefore its worth our serious enquiry what may be done on our part to have the Spirits company and assistance for under such Ebbings and withdrawmen's a child of God cannot but conclude it is his own fault some grievous miscarriage hath deprived him of that sweet Guest 1. Therefore I shall premise this that as the bestowing so the continuance of the Spirits motions and lively operations is the meer indulgence of Heaven God can be no more bound to continue it than he was to bestow it Think not then to oblige God by any thing you can do 2. And further I premise That the Lord vouchsafes or with-holds his Spirit as he sees best for his people It were not best for a child of God to have alwayes a full Tyde to live under the constant smiles of Heaven and to have continual raptures enlargements Where would be room for the exercise of Faith as it is the substance of things hoped Heb. 11. 1. for evidence of things not seen What must become of Hope and Patience O how should we manifest our waiting and longing for Christs return if he should alwayes abide with us How must we know where and what we are how weak how insufficient to think a good thought How must we be kept from pride and swellings and puffings above measure if we be not sometimes left to our own weaknesses So that it is not for us to be peremptory or absolutely to desire alwayes such degrees of grace such measures of assistance and enlargment we may humbly desire and endeavour in the use of means but we must not be peremptory for them nor impatient under the withholding of them In this case we must learn of our blessed Saviour O my Father Matth. 26. 39. if it he possible let this Cup pass from me nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt 3 I premise this also that ordinarily some miscarriage in us provokes God to withdraw his Spirit Saul's mis-government and 1 Sam. 16. 14. disobedience caused the Spirit of the Lord i. e. that Spirit of Government which God had endued him withal to depart from him David as we noted before upon his fall found some withdrawings which makes Psalm 51. 11 12. him pray Take not thy holy Spirit from me establish me with thy free Spirit Possibly we have not carried as we ought towards this blessed Guest and therefore he withdraws himself These things premised I now address my self to give a direct Answer to the Case propounded 1. Then if thou wouldst have the Spirits Assistance continued beware of those things which may grieve away the Spirit or wither and shrink up its gifts and gr●des damp not out this holy fire Quench not the Spirit 1 Thess 5. 19. It is observable when the Apostle bids us not grieve the Spirit he adds as an argument whereby you are sealed unto the day of Eph. 4. 30. Redemption which seems to have a double force Either thus Be not so disingenuous as to grieve him that comforts you by assuring you of eternal happiness Or thus Take heed you grieve him not if so you will have the worst of it he will grieve you by withdrawing his assuring Testimony from you and leaving you in the dark as to your eternal state This I humbly conceive to be genuine and according to the mind of the mind of the Holy Ghost in that Scripture So that you see our grievings of the Spirit causes his withdrawments as to assurance and so it doth likewise as to assistance If you fall asleep in the lap of sowe Dalilah-lust you will find your Lock will be out God will depart from you and then you will be weak as others It would be infinite to speak what might be said under this Head I shall only instance in two or three Particulars 1. Beware of Pride in enlargements If God lift you up in vouchsafing extraordinary enlargements take heed you do not lift up your selves that is the next way to be laid low He that begins to think himself something shall quickly find that he is nothing in himself This is to abuse your mercy Gods and is that you might give him glory not take it to your selves and it would be to your own prejudice if it should be
sins then then do most probably cause the Spirits withdrawment I answer 1. Sins that carry much of the will in them presumptuous sins when light is held prisoner and captivated by lust 2. Or sins long lien in when we wallow as the Swine in the mire of sin It is supposed David lay some Moneths in the sin of Murder and Adultery before he repented and he intimates as you have heard that he wanted the joy of Gods salvation he felt decayes and fears tho taking away of Gods Spirit O● 3. Sins more directly against the Spirits guiding or assisting when we will not take its directions hearken to its counsels or when we abuse its grace and assistances See then whether thou hast not cause to charge such kind of sins upon thy self Hast thou not shut thine eyes against some beam of spiritual light Hast thou not known the will of thy heavenly Father as to some sin which thou oughtest to abandon or duty which thou oughtest to set upon and yet neglected to do it If such sins be upon thee thou maist probably conclude they are those that have grieved the Spirit Again Is there not some sin that hath been thy old acquaintance that thou hast lien and lived in a long time what sin or sins are they that like Rehoboam's young Counsellors have been brought up with thee Those also may have robbed thee of the Spirits gracious assistance But especially S●● if thou hast not refused the Spirit as a guide when it called thee to duty hast thou not neglected put it off slubber'd it over When it hath disswaded thee from some sin or perswaded to some duty Hast thou not pulled away the shoulder Hast thou not withstood its motions Been like green Wood that didst not take fire by those heavenly sparks So for its assistances hast thou not quenched discouraged slighted them When he hath called to open and put in his fingers by the hole of the door thou hast seigned excuses Worldly concernments have called thee another way Or may be when he hath breathed upon thee and carried thee above thy self in any duty thou hast grown proud secure and applauded thy self instead of ascribing glory to God See if some or many of these or the like be not found in thee Nor rest in a general discovery for its easie to say in general that such sins are ours but labour to be as particular and distinct as possibly thou canst Recollect times and places when thou hast been especially guilty Remember what good motions thou hast had and rejected Such a time God by his Spirit gave me a lively Touch Oh I felt the Babe spring within but how did I smother it Such a time I came off proud of my enlargement Such a time I had clear discoveries powerfull convictions strong impulses but gave them cold entertainment dismist them with fair promises and ineffectual purposes c. These O! these are grievous to the holy Spirit of God Direct 2. Humble thy self before the Lord confess and give glory to God Accept of the punishment of thine iniquity and Lev. 26. 42. this with all seriousness with real grief shame and self-abhorrency aggravate thy sin before the Lord acknowledge how gracious he hath been in vouchsafing thee such experiences and how ingrateful thou hast been in slighting and abusing them Shall I put words into thy mouth but O that they may not be meer words Oh that they may be the very sense of thy soul and breathings of thy heart Let these therefore be the workings of thy soul Righteous art thou O Lord and just are thy judgements What can be more highly agreeable to the Rule of Justice than that from Matth. 13. 12. him that hath no● should be taken even that which he hath Especially when the having was without desert but the taking away is most justly deserved What sawest thou in me O gracious God that thou shouldst ever bestow so high a favour on me That thy blessed Spirit should ever take up its abode in such a filthy polluted soul That it should strengthen my hands and enable me to wrestle and prevail with thy glorious Majesty Oh the heavenly transports the kindly meltings the over-powring motions that my soul hath felt the sweet sallies and Eruptions of my Spirit in prayer when quickned and enlivened by thy grace How could I run the way of thy Commandments Psal 119. 32. when thou hadst thus enlarged my heart Being thus drawn how could I Cant 1. 3. run after thee Having continual supplies of new strength by thy blessed Spirit how could I mount up with wings as an Eagle run and Isa 40. 31. not be weary walk and not faint Then was Prayer the delight of my soul yea even to pour out my soul in tears for sin was to me as the Dew of Hermon and the dew that Psal 133. 3. descended upon the Mountains of Sion Those waters distilled by the fire of thy Spirit became Wine of consolation to me Those groanings not to be uttered how did they ease my heart How often have I with Hannah come before thee in bitterness of soul with a sorrowful Spirit but being through thy grace enabled to pour out my soul before thee I have gone away and my countenance hath been no more sad But O monstrous Ingratitude This rich this superabundant grace have I turned into wantonness these precious experiences and peculiar vouchsafements have been made fuel for pride and security I have rob'd thy blessed Spirit of its glory and gloried in that as mine the praise whereof was wholly due to him Yea Lord many a time have I quencht the Spirit and powred water upon those sparks of good motions which he hath cast into my soul Even then when I have known his voice yea when he hath knockt with much importunity I have chosen rather to lye slugging upon a bed of ease than to rise and open though I had known by former experience that he was no empty handed guest What could I expect less than what thou hast inflicted for Should the Majesty of Heaven alwayes put up such abuses Should I think to grieve the blessed Spirit of God from day to day and yet have his company and assistance as before No Lord thou art righteous but I am wicked and shouldst thou for ever hide thy face shouldst thou leave me under a prayerless sensless frame and let me grow into a seared condition shouldst thou make me at last lie down in sorrow yea in the lake of fire and brimstone for ever it were but what I have deserved Alas how many thousands are in those flames that never sinned at that rate that I have They knew not and did not and therefore deserve a few stripes but I have known thy will nay thy gracious Spirit hath stirred me up to do it yea hath offered his help in the doing of it yet I have refused and slighted his offers and therefore deserve
iniquity I will do no more This is to comply with Gods end in such dispensations When the Father takes the Rod in hand his expectation is that the Child should be grieved for his fault and become more observant of him That soul that under such withdrawings grows more plyable is in the way of Recovery Therefore resolve thus I have already grieved the holy Spirit by neglecting his assistance abusing his grace vouchsafed I will not add this more to continue stubborn to his commands I will not thus add Job 34. 37. Rebellion to my sin I have already found that it is an evil and bitter thing to abuse and grieve the Spirit his presence is unspeakably sweet his absence a want unconceivable None but those that have had experience can conceive either the happiness of the one or misery of the other So much may suffice in answer to this Case Let the dejected soul set upon these things and add perseverance to performance then will the Issue be comfortable at least profitable Either God will return in a way of assistance and enlargement or will so sanctifie this severity that it shall end in mercy and turn to thy eternal advantage CHAP. VIII Case 7. THere is yet one Case more to which I desire to speak something viz. Whether set and stated Forms of Prayer are Impediments to the Motions and Assistances of the Spirit By Forms I mean a tying up ones self or being tyed up by others to words and expressions not to vary from them but constantly to use the very same without variation Not only to have some Modell Method or naked Heads in our minds which we may enlarge upon more or less or to which we may add or alter as our occasions and necessities require but to utter the very same Words and Syllables constantly in our addresses to God by prayer Now here I meet with some on the one hand who utterly decry all use of forms as unlawful or highly inconvenient as unbeseeming a Christian and restraining the Spiof Prayer by neglecting to make use of those gifts and helps which the Spirit ordinarily bestows upon Christians yea they think it next an impossibility to perform the duty with any affection or acceptance in that way Others on the other hand ●re so devoted to forms that they condemn and deride all conceived prayer as if none could attain to that ability as to express their own or others wants to God except they have a form of words yea they charge all extemporary conceptions as guilty of Tautologies Extravagancies I reverence and savouring of Enthusiasme I shall declare my thoughts in the following Conclusions nor indeed mine only but the judgement of others that have been esteemed Pious and Orthodox who have gone a middle way betwixt these extreams nor need I add much to what is said Prop. 1. Set and stated forms are lawful and may be useful and helpful to some Christians yea in some cases necessary Touching their lawfulness much is said by others I shall briefly hint at it The approved practice of the S●ints in Scripture especially the See Numb 10. 35 36 6. 23. forms of Blessing and Thanksgiving prescribed in Scripture and the Psalms the Titles of some shewing that they were composed for the publick use of the Church to be sung upon occasion and what are they but forms of prayer and praise Yet some of those that stick at the lawfulness of a form of prayer will not stick to use those without scruple and the experience of many may tell them that the use of those are no restraint upon the Spirit but a help to raise and enlarge our hearts Yea it is remarkable when the Apostle bids us be fill'd with the Spirit he immediately subjoyns Eph. 5. 18 19. speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs q. d. you cannot give vent to the Spirit in a better way than Vi● Sydenham's Exercitation on Infant-Baptism and singing Psalms by singing and making melody in your hearts to the Lord and as Zanchy with others have observed the three Titles of the Psalms in that Text as also in Col. 3. 16. are the very same that are given to David's Psalms lest we should think the Apostle mean't some others of humane or extemporary composure But to return to the thing in hand I would add this as to the lawfulness of a form God hath made prayer our daily and constant duty but he hath no where forbidden us to use the same words or enjoyned us to use no other but our own extemporary conceptions Except therefore the Dissenters will say that to use a form is to destroy the very Essence of prayer which will scarce be proved they must grant a form lawful and warrantable Moreover I say it may be useful and in some cases necessary I will say little more to this than what is said by a Reverend Author who is not to be suspected of too Ames Cas Lib 4. C. 7. Q. 4. much inclination to Forms or Ceremonies 1. Some even amongst Christians and Professors are so rude and ignorant though it may be spoken to their shame that they cannot tolerably express their desires in prayer Must such utterly neglect the duty Is it not better during their gross ignorance to use the help of others gifts and composures than not to pray at all or to utter that which is sensless and impious I speak it not to excuse their ignorance or that that they should be encouraged to rest satisfied herein but for the present necessity 2. Some again though they can do it privately and so far as my suffice in their secret addresses to God yet when they are to pray before others want either dexterity and fitness of expression readiness of utterance or confidence to use those abilities they have whom yet I will not excuse from a sinful bashfulness and for expression though it is partly a gift of the Spirit yet it may be in a great measure acquired and improved by reading meditation and exercise 3. It is possible that some bodily distemper or sodain distraction may befall such as are otherwise able which may beclowd their minds weaken their m●mories and dull their parts that they may be unfit to express themselves in extemporary conceptions This may happen in case of Melancholy cold Palsies or the like distempers I may add what the fore-cited Author notes that it is profitable for some to have their desires and meditations regulated by such helps for all that have expression cannot so methodize their thoughts in praying with others as to avoid disorder and confusion I conclude then that in the Case aforesaid or the like a form may be profitable and helpful Nor is it a tying up the Spirit but if conscionably used may be both attended with the Spirits assistance and find acceptance with God Prop. 2. Yet it will not hence follow that any should satisfie themselves in such stated
as to concern their prayers in their Brethrens necessities A duty practised by all the genuine children of God See Psalm 25. ult and 51. ult and 122. 6 7 8. and 137. 5. Neh. 1. 4 5. Isa 62. 1 7. Ephes 1. 16. 1 Thess 1. 2. Phil. 4. c. Col. 2. 1 2. And lest you should think that this is only the duty of publick officers as Paul was the injunction is upon all and for all Eph. 6. 18. Use 1 This blame our private-Spiritedness especially in our single addresses to God are not our private approaches to the Throne of grace too private in this respect how little doe wee interest others especially the community of the faithfull in our prayers how unbeseeming Saints is this narrow-spiritedness Our prayers should be like the Sun whose beames and influences are universally communicated or rather wee should be like our heavenly Father who causes his Sun to shine Matth. 5. 47. how seldom doe wee say Our Father with any Enlargement of heart towards others nay so far wee are I feare from remembring the common concernments of the Church that wee are too little mindfull of our Relations families Neighbourhood Christians this is not a right Gospel Spirit wee follow not our pattern when wee thus confine our devotions 2. Let us therefore put on bowels of Brotherly tenderness and compassion that wee may put up hearty prayers for others for all the Saints the way to attaine this generall Spiritedness is to look more at the grand concernments of Gods name and honor then will our prayers be more publick when wee prefer the glory of God which is chiefly bound up in the publick concernments of his Church before our owne welfare To put you upon getting this frame consider 1. Nothing is a better evidence of your reall membership in the Church 't is naturall to the members of the Spirituall body to 1 Cor. 1● 25. 2 Cor. 1● 28. have the same care one for another Herein Paul prooved himself a lively member by his care of all the Churches and where this care is it will vent it self as Pauls did in earnest prayers for the whole Churche's welfare 2. Consider how advantagious this is how infinitly your charity will be multiplyed in its returns upon you by thus putting our prayers into the common stock wee become interested in the common stock and this is indeed a singular benefit flowing from that Article of the Communion of Saints hereby all the Saints are our Factors as wee are theirs and Oh what a thriving trade may be driven by thus making our prayers a common stock Qu. But must wee pray for none but those of whom wee have ground to hope that God is their Father Answ For these wee must especially pray yet for others also that God may be their Father for wee know not what is in the womb of Gods decrees towards those that are yet vile and profligate Sinners Our Saviour prayes not only for those that did but also for those that should beleeve on his name John 17. 20. The Church must travell in birth of those that are yet unborn even for unconverted nations for Sisters that have no breasts Cant. 8. 8. But so that a difference be made in our prayers for them and the faithfull and our petitions suited to their condition CHAP. III. Which art in Heaven WEe have heard something spoken to the first part of the Preface wherein God is described by his Relation to us I proceed to the second part which describes him by his Eminency above us and this is by the designation of the place where hee eminently shews himself I shall not unnecessarily enlarge but keep mee within the bounds of my intended brevity and my eye upon the mark I first proposed viz. to teach you to pray Take what I shall say to this in this single Observation Doctr. 5 In our addresses to God by prayer wee must come to him as in heaven our addresses to God must be directed thither This Sal●mon minds us of as a Curb to rashness and vain-babling Eccles 5. 2. and hither good Jehoshaphat directs his prayer 2 Chron. 20. 6. 'T is needless to multiply Scripture-proofs rather let us explaine How wee are to conceive God to be in heaven And then give Reasons of the point Explic. And 1. we are not to goe to as God if confined or locally circumscribed in heaven 'T is a piece of Atheisme to limit God there Joh 22. 12 13 14. To suppose God confined within the circuit of heaven and not to regard what is done on earth is the next way to become an Atheist There 's little difference betwixt no God at all and a God so limited nor Secondly Are wee to imagine which would follow upon the former that God must locally descend from heaven when hee heares or gives answer to our prayers his being in heaven doth not nor must is in our conceptions of him suppose him at a distance from us on earth wee must remember that of David Psam 139. 1 12. that hee is present with us that hee hath beset us behind and before c. that hee is intime nostro intimior nearer us than wee are to our selves And as they sung of old hee is extra caelum non exclusus intra coelum non inclusus that hee is so in heaven as not included and so out of Heaven as not excluded a circle whose center is every where and circumference no where in a word wee are not to frame any conceptions of God from his being in heaven prejudiciall either to his generall presence in all places or to his speciall presence with his people in their addresses to him But Thirdly By his being in heaven wee are to understand that more speciall and glorious manifestation of himself which hee there vouchsafes to the Angels and glorified Spirits the more immediate exhibitions and discoveries of his glory such as none but they enjoy in this sense hee is said to 1 Tim. 6. 16. dwell in the light which no man can approach unto whom no man hath seen nor can see So that in this sense wee are to call upon God as in Heaven And this Reas 1 1. To distinguish God from and declare his eminency above all other false Gods and dunghill-deities which are on earth and confined to their places whence they cannot moove 2. For it is sufficient to name these things To beget in our hearts awfull and reverentiall apprehensions of the divine Majesty the place speaks his sublimity and he speaks in us humility This is the Emphasis of that Scripture Eccl. 5. 2. God is in heaven and thou art on earth therefore let thy words be few q. d. Speake with that reverence as becomes his eminency and thy distance 3. To take off our thoughts from the gross Idolatrous conceptions of a visible deity such as the Heathens fancied and from the carnall Jews conceit of Gods confining himself to a place as
8. when the most High devided to the Nations their inheritance when hee separated the Sons of Adam hee se● the bounds of the people according to the number of his people Israel i. e. he so disposed of other Nations into their Inheritances as was most for the advantage of his own peculiar people or Hee had a speciall respect to his owne people in his generall disposals of others Thus it must be in this case To this purpose presecuters must be cut off Christian Magistrates raised up Kings and Potentates of the world must be rebuked for his Prophet's and people's fakes Psal 105. 14. Hee must overturn overturn overturn One Monarchy must Ezek. 21. 27. succeed another and that again must be translated to a third and that to a 4th Nation and all this to make way for the Stone Dan. 2. 45. cut out of the Mountain without hands which must break all in pieces Thus God makes his owne design of all men and Kingdoms and transactions that are in the world not by policy or an after-game but by over-ruling the grand affairs of the world which is his generall Kingdom So that this Kingdom is undoubtedly included in this Petition 2. For the Kingdom of grace there is no doubt but it is here chiefly intended both in it self and as a means to the Kingdom of glory God hath appointed the Means as well as End Faith Repentance Sanctification new obedience are the condition of our raigning with him in glory Luk. 15. 5. John 3. 36. For the effecting of these the Gospel must be preached 1 Cor. 1. 21. Nor can the Gospel effect them without the Spirit 's efficacious concurrence Now this in part at least is the Kingdom of grace when the word not only runs but is glorified when God by his Spirit so goes out with his Messengers that Sathan fals from heaven as lightning the works of the Divell are destroyed and poor souls rescued from him and translated into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God and that this may be is undoubtedly the import of this Petition 3. Then for the Kingdom of glory as being the end and consummation of both the former it must need be included since hee that wills the means wils the end nor is it only intended obliquely or by the By but directly and ultimately as being the consummation of mans happiness so that the coming of the Kingdom of Providence in subordination to the Kingdom of Grace and of this in order to the Kingdom of Glory and of this again as the End and complement of both is the scope and import of this Petition Come How can it be said to come in any sense I Answer Wee are not so to understand it as if it should remove or be removed from another place but as wee say The Sun comes into the house meaning not the body but the beams of it so for the Kingdom of God to come is that in its effects and power it be extended to us that wee may feel the day of his power that as it is Rev. 11. 17. hee would take to him his Kingly power and reign That hee would so order the affairs of the world as it may appear and men may acknowledg There is a God that reigneth in the earth and so as may tend to his Churches advantage What the fuller import of this word is will be shewed in the Application Now had wee designed a full handling of things many Observations would flow from the particulars coucht ' in this Petition as That God hath a Kingdom That this Kingdom comes to places and people That to have it come is a desireable mercy That prayer is a speciall means for the procuring of it c. But I shall as I promised content my self to resolve the Petition it self into a Doctrinall Proposition which take thus Doctr. 7 The coming of Gods Kingdom should be the joynt Petition of the whole and the particular of every member of the Church As they doe rejoyce that God doth Rev. 11. 17. and 19. 6. so they should pray that God may reign that hee will shine forth in his glory and exert his power for the spreading of his Kingdom into all the world It were easy were it necessary to produce Scripture-precepts and examples for the confirmation of this point but this were but to light a candle in the Sun shine I shall briefly resolve a two-fold Query and then apply it Quest 1. To what purpose is such a Petition Can wee imagine it will come sooner or later for our prayers nay Is it not every where in generall at least and therefore what need to pray for it Answ This is but the cavilling of Carnall Reason and indeed such as would if it were hearkned to soon make us leave off praying at all for wee may at the same rate argue about any thing wee pray for Either God hath determined it shall be or not if hee hath decreed it shall bee then our prayers are needless if not they are vain and ineffectuall but know vain man that our prayers are nevertheless required as was shewed in answering the like cavill against the former Petition in order to the effecting of what God hath decreed And for this in particular 1. Shall not Gods Children hereby testify their love to God Is it not an expression of our loyalty when wee heartily pray for the prosperity of our Soveraign and for the speading and flourishing of his Kingdom But. 2. What room for such a cavill when wee have an express command and injunction in this standing pattern When wee have Scripture-precept and pattern for our obedience and imitation And promises to encourage us such as that Luke 11. 13. hee will give his Spirit by which hee manageth his Kingdom to them that ask him Quest 1. Why or upon what account should this be the Petition of Gods children To hint but a Reason or two Reas 1. In order to the accomplishment both of the former and following petition for neither will men sanctify the name of God nor yield obedience to the will of God till they feel the power of God and hee set up his Kingdom of grace in their hearts Then is Gods Name sanctified when both the Godly celebrate his power and Kingdom as Rev. 11. 17. and 19. 6. and the wicked are forced to acknowledg it as Dan. 4. 34 37. and 6. 26 when hee executes judgment in the earth rescuing the oppressed from the power of the oppressour c. And then will Gods Will be done by men when by his grace hee overpowers their wills and brings them into complyance with his owne 2. Wee are therefore to pray for the coming of Gods Kingdom both upon the account of that advantage that will accrue to us by its coming and of our inability to goe to it without its coming to us For the advantage of it you will better discern it when wee more particularly unfold it in the