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A54928 The spiritual sacrifice, or, A treatise wherein several weighty questions and cases concerning the saints communion with God in prayer are propounded and practically improved by Mr. Alexander Pitcarne. Pitcarne, Alexander, 1622?-1695. 1664 (1664) Wing P2295; ESTC R30533 821,533 890

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not up our goings in his paths our feet would quickly slip Ps 17.5 If his right hand did not uphold us we could not follow after him Ps 63.8 There being 1. from within so much weakness and 2. so much indisposition and deadness yea and 3. so much contrariety opposition and enmity the flesh continually lusting and warring against the spirit and though there were no more this last were enough to render us unable to do Gal. 5.17 The old man waxing strong proveth a tyrant and often bindeth the new man hand and foot and leadeth him captive to the law of sin Rom. 7.23 Nay and 4. From without many and subtile snares and tentations from the world And 5. mighty and strong assaults from the (y) Luk. 11.21 strong-man that (z) 1 Pet. 5 8. roaring Lyon Sathan continually laying siege to the soul and storming it with fierce and fresh assaults from time to time so that we must not with Pelagians and (a) Though Jesuits and Arminians admit a moral per●wasion and som illuminati on of the mind and understanding yet they deny any power and strength to be communicated and imparted to the will and executive faculties Arminians think that the Spirt doth concur with and assist us in our spiritual performances according to that concurrence that is given to natural agents in their operations for they have a sufficient and compleat power and ability in their own rank and order for doing their works and producing their several effects though as creatures they be indigent and dependent both in being and working in esse operari As the infinit arm of the Almighty must uphold them otherwise they must instantly evanish and return to their mother nothing that womb from which they did come so that same arm of divine providence must help them and concur with them otherwise they can do nothing But yet a general concurrence and common work of providence is sufficient to (b) Viz. to actuat determinando and to assist concurrendo actuat and assist them they being in their own kind compleat agents and sufficiently thus proportionated for their several works and operations But the new man is a weak creature and hath no strength of himself to walk he is an incompleat agent and not able to work unlesse he get a continual supply of strength from heaven not only to actuat and assist the little strength and activity he hath but also to compleat and perfect the principle and fountain unless new water be put into our cisterns there can no water be drawn from them and therefore the Spirit doth not only actuat and concur but also supply the weakness impotency and defect of the cause it self in all our spiritual ●ctions And particularly as to prayer both in reference to innate weakness indisposition blindness opposition c. and to outward tentations and assaults there be several things which the Spirit doth perform and to speak now to the present point of corroboration and assistance as distinguished from the two following viz. the illumination and imboldning of the soul which also belong to this general head of supply and help but for distinctions cause shall be handled by themselves we shall not here speak of that common and as I may call it accidental supply which though it be required for the further perfection of the work yet is not necessary for its prevalency and acceptance as variety and plenty of matter decent and apt expressions and what else belongs to prayer as a gift of which we have already spoken But we shall now speak of the proper and more necessary supply whereby the Spirit doth provide and furnish help and assist the soul to all these (c) Spiritus sanctus non solum docet sed etiam monet movet docet rationem monet memoriam movet voluntatem docet ut sciamus sug gerit ut volimus roborat ut possimus Gerhard harm evang cont cap. 76. Illuminat mentem bominis ad intelligendum voluntatem instammat ad amandum virtutem ac robur praestat ad exequendum Dyd Alexandr desp S. apud eundum requisits and gracious qualifications to which the promise is made and which may promove the efficacy and acceptance of prayer and though none of these be common and no crumb of this bread which is the childrens allowance be at any time casten to the dogs all of them being spiritual and good of themselves yet some of them are more essential and necessary then others and in all of them there is a latitude some having these in a greater measure and degree then others yea one and the same supplicant may now find them in a greater and afterwards in a lesse measure and gradual perfection but we will not now stay on a comparison nor enquire what qualifications are necessary to the acceptance of prayer what not but remitting that question to Part. 2. chap. 3. we shall now speak to the point and since the qualification of prayer as of every duty may be measured 1. by the object 2. by its end and principles and 3. by its manner of performance so we shall consider prayer under all these respects and relations 1. Then as to the matter and object of prayer though we have some gift of apprehension and fancy whereby we may find variety of matter yet unlesse the Spirit illuminat the understanding and make a discovery of the excellency and expediency of fit objects how ready are we to mistake as shall be shown in the third particular But here we would show how the Spirit upon that discovery determins the will to close with and make choyce of fit objects and having thus enflamed the heart with love to spiritual objects and moderated our thirst after the creature he sends us to the throne with sutable desires and enableth us to ask what is good for us and agreeable to the will of God Rom. 8.27 Secondly as to the ends and principles we will not separate these two because we are not now speaking of physical principles but of moral viz. those motives which per modum finis do attract and draw alongst the heart and allure it to the duty especially those three which we find conjoyned 1 Tim. 1.5 where also they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the end of the commandment and may also be called the end of our obedience endeavours and performances which are so many evidences and fruits of and means to strengthen them viz. faith (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love and conscience of our obligation and the duty we ow to God both by way of debt as his creatures and gratitude as his favourits and objects of his love and bounty and this our obedience becometh not a task a hard or unpleasant service and work especially since further it is sweetned by love and 2. by the expectation of a new reward whereof faith is an assurance and it is the work of the Spirit of
from one and the same root and may be cured by the same remedy which therefore we will not separat in this enquiry some of these are external and without us others internal and within us or proceed from us and among these some are natural which we cannot totally remove till this our house (d) Levit. 14.44.45 infected with that fretting leprosie be broken down and till we cast off this (e) Rom. 7.24 body of sin and death albeit by watchfulness and the diligent use of the means we may guard against their prevailing but other causes are more voluntary and occasioned by our sloth and negligence or some inordinat affection and lust again some of these do provoke the Spirit to withdraw and to smite us with a judicial stroke but others of these causes do of themselves in a special manner in-dispose the heart for spiritual duties and cast the soul into a sort of lethargy and deadness 1. Then as to the external causes we will not reckon the Spirit of grace as one for albeit upon his withdrawing this evil doth follow yet it is not his work nor is he the proper (f) Removens prohibens non est prop●ie causa nec per se influit in effectum cause of it while he suspends his gracious influences which would preserve life and heat in the affections which otherwise of themselves like water when the fire is removed will return to their native coldness Neither 2. can the (g) Not the world but worldly mindedness and our lusts that fire world be properly called a cause of this malady for if there were no venome within us we would suck no poyson from its flowers yet in that it ministreth fewel to our lusts it may be called a material and occasional cause and albeit the creatures do keep their station and primeval perfection groaning and travelling in pain when they are abused by degenerat man and employed against their Maker Rom. 8.22 yet through our wickedness we make them and they now become to us wofull snares and temptations Neither 3. can (h) Though thus wicked men cannot so properly be called the efficient yet their society example c. may be reck●ned among the moral and formal causes as afterwards here Cause 14. wicked men be said to be the true cause hereof for though by their ill example society persuasion c. they may ensnare us and draw us away with them to sinfull courses which may provoke the Lord and harden our heart yet they can have no direct and immediat hand herein since they have not access unto nor influence upon the heart So that 4. Sathan is the only true and most proper external cause of our indisposition to pray deadness and wandring thoughts in prayer he being alwaies ready as a father to beget and as a nurse to dandle and bring up such an off spring to the dishonour of God and our hurt and mischief that he may either make thee weary of praying or God (i) Isa 1.14 weary of thy prayer and that thou mayest provoke him either not to answer or to answer thee in wrath when we are at prayer Sathan is most busie we may expect to find him at (k) Zech. 3.1 our right hand to resist us there is not a petition we offer up to God but is contrary to his interest and kingdom and therefore as on saith maxime insidiatur orationibus fidelium his main work and design is to cheat us of our prayers he is that fowl that is alwaies ready to catch away any good motion that is sown in the heart by the Word and Spirit Mat. 13.14 19. and when his suggestions cannot do the turn he will offer temptations and distracting objects to steal away the heart or will by his instruments raise some tumult to disturb and divert us as Act. 16.16 17. O! what need have we then not to separat what the Apostle hath conjoyned Jam. 4.7 8. and to watch against and resist the devil when we draw nigh to God But though he be strong and hath many advantages yet (l) 1 Joh. 4.4 stronger is he that is in us and if in his name and strength we carefully resist him he will flee from us ver 7. O! but the chief and main cause is from within this disease flows from our own bowels no infection nor contagion from without could harm us were there not a distemper and many ill humours within neither Sathan nor his instruments nor the allurements of the world could make us halt in our way to heaven were we not cripple and maimed in our own feet The first then and mother-cause the womb where all the other were conceived and the root that sendeth sap to all the branches is our original natural and hereditary corruption that old man and body of sin that enemy to God and all righteousness which lodgeth in the best Saint while on earth and which never is so far subdued and tamed but if we be not upon our guard it will be ready to interpose and to hinder us in all our religious performances this is that Law in the members rebelling against the Law of the mind whereof Paul complaineth Rom. 7.21 This is that flesh that lusteth against and is contrary to the Spirit Gal. 5.17 this is that byass that leadeth us away from and makes us turn aside when we are following after the Lord and hence proceedeth that natural levity and slipperiness that instability and unstayedness of our spirits that we can hardly fix and dwell long upon any spiritual object and that good motions are not so well rooted and abide not so long with us hence wandring and impertinent thoughts break in and that restless sea within still (m) Isa 57.10 casteth up mire and dirt to be a rub in our way when we are looking to the right mark Hence Pauls complaint and where is there a Saint that may not joyn with him When I would do good evil is present with me O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7.21.24 O! what need have we continually to watch over these vain instable and gadding hearts of ours and to look up to him and come in his strength who can unite our heart to his fear and establish it with his grace Heb. 13.9 Psa 112.7 Psa 86.11 c. But 2. if to this native constant and abiding sink and puddle be super-added any grievous sin and actual transgression against light and conscience as this will mar our acceptance So it will exceedingly straiten and dull our Spirits a guilty conscience dare not (n) It s a certain truth which hath been observed by some practical Divines viz. if prayer make thee not leave finning sin will make thee leave praying or make thee pray for the fashion and without life and affection look the judge in the face with such boldness confidence chearfulness and readiness as
be enough bewailed these ravens have sucked all the marrow and fat out of thy sacrifice and have rendred it a vain and unprofitable oblation those (n) Eccles 10.1 dead flies cause thy ointment send forth a stinking savour They will overspread the whole duty command and captivate the man so that now they will not be repelled and thus they become constant abiding and universal these weeds over-grow and choak the good seed and what crop can be expected and thou willingly entertainest these robbers and evil guests and therefore thou art inexcusable This argument concerning wandring thoughts deserved a larger and more particular disquisition had it not been so fully and judiciously handled by others See Mr. Gurnal loc cit pag. 310. to pag. ●32 Morn Exerc. Serm. 19. Mr. Cobbet Part 3. Chap. 2. Only let us adn as in the like case Part 2. Chap. 3 some few passages from these modern Divines whose words may have weight with such disconsolate ones as are daily mourning under the burden of roving thoughts in holy duties Believe it Christian it is not thine (o) 2 Cor. 12.10 inevitable weakness nor thy (p) Mark 14.38 sensible dulness nor thy (q) Psa 73.21 22. lamented roavings nor thy (r) Gen. 15.11 opposed distractions nor thy (ſ) 1 Joh. 5.13 mistaken unbelief it is not any nor all these that can shut out thy prayer if thou dost not (t) Psa 66.18 regard iniquity in thy heart Morn Exerc. Serm. 1. If we fail in the manner of our prayer and if it be a total failing if we pray without faith without any faith at all without zeal and the like farewell to the success of such petitions but if it be a partial failing and that failing strived against and prayed against the case is very different by the evangelical allay we do what we desire to do in Gods gracious acceptation our Advocate strikes in with us and begs his Father to regard the matter and not the manner of our prayers Mr. Newton on Joh. 17.24 pag. 499. Believers prayers pass a refining before they come into Gods hands did he indeed read them with their impertinencies and take our blotted coppy out of our hand we could not fear too much what the issue might be but they come under the correctors hand our Lord Jesus hath the inspecti-of them who sets right all our broken requests and misplaced petitions he washes out our blots with his own blood his mediation is the fine searse through which our prayers are boulted and all that is course and heterogeneal he severes from the pure what is of his own Spirits breathihg he presents and what our fleshly part added he hides that it shall not prejudice us or our prayers This was the sweet Gospel-truth wrapt up in the Priests bearing the sin of the holy offerings Exod. 28.38 Mr. Gurnal loc cit pag. 330. I have the rather added these testimonies because though it be too ordinary for the most part of titular Christians not to regard what they offer to the Lord though they come in their pollution and offer a corrupt thing to the great King yet their heart never smites them they rest in the work done not caring how it be done though the fowls come down upon their sacrifice and eat it up yet they will not be at the pains to drive them away nor do they lay their loss to heart nor mourn for it but though it be thus with the multitude yet the generation of the righteous will take heed what they offer to the Lord they know that their is no road more infested with thieves then that which is between heaven and earth and therefore when they pass that way they put on the whole armour of God imploring the conduct of the spirit and a convoy from heaven to guard them thither that they may with success carry on that precious traffick and they will follow their dull hearts as closely all the while as a Carrier will do the unruly Horse fearing least if for one moment they should not attend and drive their heart should stand still or start aside and yet notwithstanding all their care and diligence their hearts will mis-give them and those cheaters and robbers will draw on a parly and get advantage of them for the flesh will lust against the spirit so that they cannot do what and as they would Gal. 5.17 The law in the members will war against the law of the mind bringing us into captivity to the law of sin so that though to will be present with us yet how to perform we find not and thus the good that we would we do not but the evil that we would not that we do as the holy Apostle complained and lamenteth and where is the Saint on earth that may not take up the same complaint even when he is most spiritual and best employed in meditation prayer c Rom. 7.15 18 19 21 22 23 24. Though carnal hearts do not value a communion with God yet who knows what a sad affliction it is to the children of God to have their fellowship with him thus interrupted I verily believe saith (u) Mr. Burroughs gosp worsh pag. 281. a late Divine there are many that have already good assurance of Gods love in Christ that if God should speak to them as he spake to Solomon bidding him ask what he should give him who for themselves would put up this petition Oh! Lord that I may be delivered from a wandring spirit in holy duties and especially in the duty of prayer that I may thereby come to enjoy a more holy communion with thy self then ever yet I have enjoyed and such would account this to be a greater mercy then if God should give them to be Kings or Queens over the whole world O Christian is thy deadness and wandring thoughts thus thy burden and is it the great desire of thy soul to be rid of them and art thou striving and endeavouring against them I might tell you those glad tidings which one tendered to his friend in the like case who seing him oppressed with such distempers under such sad complaints came cheerfully to him said I can tel you good news the best that ever you heard viz. as soon as ever you are in heaven you shall serve Christ without interruption and weariness which words saith (x) Thomas Shiphard in a letter from new England pag mihi 39. my Author well thought on revived the man Though the Lord will not utterly y drive out these Canaanites out of the land that they may be for our trial exercise and humiliation yet it is through our fault and negligence if they be not brought under the yoke and are not already become tributaries (z) Judg. 3.4 and ere it be long the victory shall be compleat and they shall no more molest any true Israelite ah why should the Saints be too much discouraged they will not stay long in
profit unto salvation nor can ill works do any hurt Sec. Eph. Pagit loc cit Libertines yea and innocent and sinlesse creatures 1. The godly because they not being under the Law but under grace and the immediat direction of the Spirit they cannot be said to transgresse the Law 2. Neither will the wicked be found guilty for they not being obliged to do any thing or to use the means for obtaining of grace nor to mourn for sin repent pray c. they cannot be guilty of the breach of any affirmative at least precept nay say they those who will not follow such a course do run away from Christ to themselves from the Gospel to the Law and the further they go on in that way they must provoke the Lord the more all their performances being an abomination unto him whom without Faith which they have not they cannot please Heb. 11.6 We may not now stay to confute these Dreamers Only for removing what is now objected against the wicked their obligation duty and liberty to pray We would offer these few Assertions Asser 1. The Gospel as it is not opposite unto and destructive of the natural and morall Law so neither doth it abolish or diminish that obligation which the Law at its first promulgation did lay upon the sons of men We are no lesse then the Jews lyable to that curse Gal. 3.10 If we do not obey it in all things how doth the Apostle Rom. 3.21 abominat the Antimonian fancy Do we then make void the law through faith God forbid yea saith he we establish it Turks Pagans Jews and Christians Beleevers and Unbeleevers are all alike under the directive and mandatory power of the Law And therefore since Prayer is a morall duty prescribed in the first Commandement and which Pagans by the dark lamp of nature have discovered as flowing from the dictates of the primaevall Law which God at first did write in the heart of man and doth yet so far abide in man as he is a reasonable Creature that though he hath not a Law yet by nature he may do the things contained in the Law Rom. 2.14 15. There is yet so much light in that old ruinous house as to discover a Deity and to point out this sanctuary and refuge in the time of need and accordingly the most rude and heathenish people have hither run for help in the day of their calamity What ever in their vain imaginations they fancied to be God to it they made their addresse and presented their supplications So that Antimonians would do well to go to School and learn of them the truth of this particular The heathen Mariners Ionah 1.5 6. did prove better casuists they knew better what course to take in that tempest then if they had had those Seducers to have taught them yea such Dreamers should have been a greater offence to them then sleeping Ionah If they thought strange to see one man not busie at prayer in that storm what would they have thought of him who would have told them that they should not pray That they themselves would do better to sleep then to take Gods name in their mouth I think they should not have cast lots for finding out the man for whose cause that evill was upon them but the Antimonian without deliberation in Ionah his stead should have been cast into the Sea Asser 2. As the moral and natural law doth bind and oblige all men so in every man there is some power and ability for doing and performing what it doth hold out unto him as his duty we do not say that men by nature are able to keep any of the commandments in a spiritual manner much lesse that they can perfectly keep the commandments but that they can do the thing commanded they can perform the external acts and the substance of many moral duties Though 1. the principle from which 2. The end to which And 3. the manner of performance be corrupt and naught Asser 3. As the unregenerat are obliged to do having gotten some light to discerne their duty and some power and ability for doing so if they make conscience of their duty and honestly endeavour to improve the little strength and few talents which they have received their labour shall not be lost for albeit gracious habits be not acquired by our labour and industry but immediatly infused by the Spirit of God as without our physicall concurrence and activity so also without any kind of moral-influence and causality by way of merit and deserving on our part yet by frequenting the Ordinances for I do not now speak of those who are without the pale of the visible Church and going about duties as we are able though we cannot do so much as make our selves negatively good and to be without sin yet we may thus become lesse evil and not so indisposed and unfit for grace some thing of the stubbornesse of the will and of its aversenesse from what is good may be removed and some inclinations though moral and not gracious may thus be wrought begotten and stirred up in the heart and the man like the scribe Mark 12.34 may be brought near to the kingdom of God and though the Lord be not tied to such previous dispositions so that he must help forward the work and bring it to perfection when and where these are placed or that he cannot work without such legal and previous preparations yet ordinarly he observeth that method it is his usual way to help us when being sensible of the (h) 1 King 8.38 plague of our own hearts we are wrestling and tugging at duty and seeking after him in the use of the means he hath prescribed So that in carrying on of that blessed work we may take notice of these severall steps 1. God by the common operation of his spirit doth awaken the secure sleeping sinner and lets him see his misery 2. He discovereth to him his duty and the way how he may escape and come out of that state 3. He stirreth him up and setteth him a work 4. After that for a while the man hath wearied himself in thus wrestling by his own strength the Lord humbleth him and layeth him low and makes him despair in himself and see that by his doing he cannot help himself and having thus killed Then 5. he waketh (i) Deut. 32.39 alive and having wounded then he heals and maketh the spirit of bondage a forerunner of the Spirit of Adoption and when the poor sinner is thus as it were hopelesse and helplesse then he pointeth out to him the brasen serpent that he may look (k) Isa 45.22 to it and live And thus wee see how legal performances and the use of the means in the strength received though it be but litle riddeth room in the heart and maketh way to the right embracing and closing with Christ In that 1. it taketh off the heart in great part from vain and sinfull objects
apply most of the characters brought for clearing the former quaeree concerning Sathans suggestions which here will be as discriminative as they are there as 1. if these motions be spiritual as to the motives and end they cannot flow from nature for no (b) Nihil agit supra sphaeram activitatis agent can act beyond its own sphere 2. If they stir us up to do in a right maner c. we will not resume the several particulars only let us presse the last a little further Now the motions of the Spirit do manifestly differ from our natural motions as to their effect upon the heart For 1. they being weak as we have shown Chap. 3. they can make no lively impression upon the heart nor engage the affections and thus they are often choaked and repelled yea albeit when they as in Jehu are animated by self-interest and base carnall ends Sathan also obstetricating and putting his to hand to help forward the work albeit thus they become violent and impetuous yet they are helplesse though they presse the heart to yield yet they furnish no strength for doing in a sutable and spiritual maner though they may add vigour to the outward man in its natural actings and thus also there may be a habit facility and gift acquired for producing the like acts hereafter yet the heart is no whit bettered nor thereby made to fall in love with the beauty of holiness the doing of one duty thus doth not fit and prepare the heart for doing better and more spiritually hereafter but rather indisposeth it by habituating it to do in a formal carnal maner O! but the Spirit of God is the Spirit of power 2 Tim. 1.7 who as he exciteth us to do so also assisteth us in doing and enableth us to do well and in an acceptable maner he helpeth our infirmities and supplieth our weakness Rom. 8.26 1 Pet. 5.10 Colos 1.11 He maketh us beleeve and then speak he will stir up faith to act and thereby fit and prepare the heart to pour out its desires to God Ps 116.10 It s true the Saints may meet with streitnings and ly under much deadness when the spirit begins to move but even then they meet with secret strength and assistance whereby they are supported to hold our and not give over nor to yield to the contrary suggestions of Sathan and the flesh and therefore we should not alwayes measure the Spirits help by sense feeling but when thus it cannot be so sensibly discerned though it truly be afforded yet we cannot make use of it as a mark and sign for clearing the present case till in the issue this mist and darkness be dispelled 2. Then wait and the vision shall come it shall not tarry ere it be long ye shall discern his hand to your comfort and find a sweet sent and savour left upon the heart behind him when he cometh he will leave some myrrh upon the handles of the lock which will make our fingers drop sweetly Cant. 5.5 Lastly as natural motions do not positively amend and make the heart better so neither do they negatively amend it or make it less evill as they add no good to it so they take no evil out of it though the acts of sin may be restrained yet the habits are not debilitated though the streams be stopt yet the fountain still abideth full though some branches be cut off yet the bulk and root suffereth not prejudice but may be all the while growing and enlarging it self O! but the Spirit helpeth with might in the inner as well as in the outward man he helpeth us to do not only some outward acts but also to pull down the strong holds of Sathan and every imagination and high thing that would exalt it self against God Eph. 3.16 2 Cor. 10.4 5. When the Spirit once beginneth to breath upon us then sin in root and branches must like the house of (c) 2 Sam. 3.1 Saul after David did come to the throne daily wax weaker and weaker Vse 1. You have need to (d) 1 Joh. 4.1 try by what spirit ye are acted and led Use 1 and from whence the fire is brought that burneth your sacrifice all is not gold that glisters if your treasure be filled with brass in stead of good coyn you are undone the most miserable have something that looketh like current money wherewith they rest satisfied but when they bring it to the market they are sent away empty the worst of men have not only had some good motions some light and pressing convictions but also good affections some pangs of sorrow and repentance and some flashes of zeal joy and holy desires carnal men will have their fits of seeming devotion and their good moods you may look upon Cain complaining and lamenting his misery Esau weeping for the blessing Ahab humbling himself Felix trembling Judas repenting and confessing his sin Jehu in his zeal for the Lord destroying idolaters Herod and the stony ground hearing the Word gladly Balaam desiring to die the death of the righteous c. And therefore as ye would not be deceived in a business of such concernment put the matter to the tryal 2. Here is matter of praise to God unto all eternity Use 2 O! let us (e) Ps 103.1 call to our soul and summon all that is within us to joyn in this work let us invite the holy Angels to assist us yea let (f) Ps 69.34 heaven and earth sea and land with all their hosts if they had a tongue to speak joyn with us in praising our God for this his mervellous loving kindness towards the sons of men that he will give his Spirit to be our leader and guide our helper and comforter to awaken and quicken us when we are dull to corroborat and strengthen our fainting spirits to help and assist us in our work to comfort and refresh us when we grow weary and thus every way to help our infirmities O ye dull faint weak and disconsolated ones consider what a master ye serve and turn your complaints into songs of praises But remember that abused mercies exceedingly provoke the nearer the Lord draws to us in his kindness if we prove unthankfull our punishment will be more heavy and grievons Let us then look on the warning to the people of Israel concerning that Angel the great Angel of the Covenant who should conduct them to the promised land as if to day it were made to us in reference to this our blessed leader and guide to the heavenly Canaan Beware of him and obey his voice provoke him not least he pardon not your transgressions for my (g) In quo nomen Dei veraciter est quia verus Deus est Gloss interlin in loc name is in him saith the Lord Exod. 23.21 PART II. Of the qualifications of an acceptable prayer ALbeit the levitical Priesthood and material sacrifices did cease and those shadows (a) Heb. 8.13 evanish
had put off her coat and cou●d not put it on she had washen her feet and would not defile them therefore Christ withdrew his Spirit and departs and when she laying to heart and repenting of her folly sought him could not for a while find him she called but he gave her no answer Cant. 5.2 3 6. Thus also while the Spirit of God cryed to Israel and they would not hear and testified to them both by his servants the Prophets and by his motions and inward suggestions but they would not hearken nor obey he withdrew and gave them up to the lusts of their own heart since they would not follow his counsel and directions he left them to themselves and to follow their own counsels Psa 81.8.10 11 12 13. But secondly though the spouse be not so incivil and unmanerly as to hold Christ at the door yet if she do not welcom him and give him entertainment suitable to his worth and kindness his Spirit will not stay if thou dost not make ready and prepare the heart to receive him he will not stay in any other room if the affections be not enlarged and roused up to wait and attend him he doth not value the empty complements of the fancy and imagination if the will which is the mistris and supreme do not welcom him he regardeth not the attendance of the inferiour faculties if thou be in a spiritual lethargy when the Spirit cometh to visit thee if thou meet him with a dead and dull (c) See Sect. 2. heart if thou be fearless of his terrible majesty if thou keep not a due distance casting off that filial reverence and tender respect which is due to so great and compassionat a Lord he will depart and forsake thee res delicatula saith an ancient est Spiritus Dei ita nos tractat sicut tractatur the Spirit of God is tender and sensible of all the affronts and injuries we off●r to him and will deal with us accordingly if we dishonour him he will afflict us and lay us low he will go away and then our (d) If the glory departed with the Ark which was but a symbol of Gods presence 1 Sam. 4 21. far rather when the Lord himself departs glory departs if we do not welcom the Spirit with the whole heart and entertain him with suitable and enlarged affections he valueth not our empty profession and vain oblations Luke-warm Laodiceans will be spued ous of his mouth Rev. 3.16 these who would not (e) Ps 81.10 open their mouth wide to receive his comforts shall have their heart filled with his terrours and shut that it shall not receive his influences But thirdly though there be not a total deadness or laziness though there be some life activity and diligence yet if there be a decay of love and zeal if we do not so cherish and entertain the motions of the Spirit as formerly this may grieve and quench the Spirit if love wax cold and if there be a decay of respect and affection that will bring on some sort of distance between married persons and will hinder friends from conversing so frequently and familiarly together and for this the Lord threatneth not only to remove the presence of his Spirit but also the candelestick and outward ordinances which were the means of conveyance of the Spirit from Ephesus Rev. 2.4 5. because thou hast left thy first love c. As the Spirit may thus be quenched negatively and by omission So 2. positively and by commission as 1. when we prostitute and subject the gifts of the Spirit his work and interest to our selfish and carnal ends desiring a name and taking up a porfession of godliness that with (f) Act. 8.9.19 Simon Magus we may seem some body when we make piety a cloak to cover our pride covetousness c. or use it as a stir●op whereby we ascend to some high place and station in the world c. 2. When we have low and undervaluing thoughts of the gifts and graces of the Spirit though they have some room in our estimation and affection yet if we prefer other things unto them not prizing them according to their worth and excellency nor regarding as we ought the condescension and kindness of the giver we dishonour and grieve the Spirit and he may justly take away those love-tokens thus when we will not lose our favour with man our moyen and interest with the creature our name place and possessions for his truth ordinances c. yea when we so far undervalue these precious things as to be ashamed of them before men when not only fear but also shame will make us dissemble our profession and conceal our graces duties c. may we not be afraid lest as the (g) Luk. 9.26 Son will be ashamed of such when he cometh in his glory So the Spirit when he cometh to manifest himself in the ordinances of life But 3. when not only his gifts and graces his love and his kindness are undervalued but also his commands and authority are despised his motions and sweet insinuations are choaked and opposed while as the contrary suggestions of Sathan the enemy are entertained cherished and cheerfully obeyed must not the Spirit be much displeased and highly provok't with such an indignity would an earthly King endure such an affront nay what friend is he who seeing thee but slight his counsel entreaty and request while thou didst welcom his enemy and gratifie him in what he desired could digest such a disparagement and indignity And 4. so much of illumination which is the work of the Spirit light knowledge and conscience is choaked and opposed by the sinner whatever be the particular transgression so far the Spirit is dishonoured and disparaged and provok't to depart and withdraw nay in every formal disobedience viz. when the command and counsel of God is known there is much not only of contempt but also of rebellion and what will provoke if that do not And thus albeit for distinctions sake we did put a difference between sins some of them being more directly against the Spirit his work and office that being as it were their object yet there is no known sin which may not be said to be against the Spirit of God and his work And thus we come to the second sort of provocation whereby the Spirit is not so directly opposed and quenched his peculiar office and work not being the matter and object of such sins albeit it be (h) The work of the Spirit is thus opposed quasi in obliquo indirectly and as a concurring circumstance but not in recto quasi objectum opposed and choaked by the sinner and here we have a large field if we would come to particulars but the (i) Gal. 5.19 works of the flesh are manifest and their opposition and contrariety to the Spirit of grace and holiness is no less evident Gal. 5.16 If we (k)
The opposition will be more clear if the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be understood impertatively do not fulfill with Bez● in hi● translation which ●areus maketh use of albeit in his Commentary he read them indicatively non per ficietis fulfill the lusts of the flesh we cannot walk in the Spirit the Spirit will not abide with us nor direct our steps for what concord can there be between l●ght and darkness and the Spirit of holiness and the spirit of lust As Doves leave their place when it becomes nesty and unclean So the holy Ghost who in the likeness of a Dove descended upon Christ will not lodge in that heart that is defiled with filthy lusts and is (l) Rev. 18.21 become the habittaion of devils and the hold of every foul spirit and a cage of every unclean and hatefull bird Every reigning sin is another Lord and takes up the house and the Spirit will not dwell in a corner nor (m) Prov. 1.14 cast in his lot with another lord and master yet some do drive the Spirit farther away then others the more gross crying scandalous and conscience-wasting the sin is the more the Spirit is grieved and the distance becometh the greater if David though otherwise a man according to Gods heart fall into murder and adultery it will cost him many a tear and prayer before he recover the comforting presence of the Spirit and his bones must be broken and the Spirit come against him as an enemy before he prove a healer and pour in the oyl of gladness in his wounds Ps 51.3 8. And its observable that this penitent doth first pray that God would create in him a clean heart and renew a right spirit within him ver 10. before he beg the presence and joy of the Spirit ver 11 12. thereby intimating that the Spirit will not dwell in an unclean heart as he had found by his sad experience all the while he continued in his (n) For impenitence is both a continuation and some sort of justification of our sin impenitence Thus you see the cause and if ye find the wofull effects of the Spirits departure O! its high time to consider your wayes and to repent of your evil doings and to seek the Lord till ye find hm this is no state to be rested in ah what stupidness security folly ingratitude and contempt must it be to sit down content while thy God thy husband thy life and happiness is departed ye have taken away my gods said Micah of his idols and what have I more and say ye unto me what aileth thee Judg. 18.24 Ah! shall he weep cry and so bitterly lament the loss of a supposed deity and happiness expected from its presence and shall not we lament when the true God the fountain of real happiness is departed or rather when through our folly and unkindness we have banished and driven him from us O lay to heart thy loss I thy fruitfull vineyard is now become a barren wilderness thou who formerly wast a (o) Cant. 4.12 garden inclosed and fenced art now laid open to all the beasts of the forrest thou who once hadst a (p) ver 15. fountain of living waters how are thy streams now cut off (q) ver 13.16 thou whose plants were an Orchard of pomegranats with pleasant fruits and whose spices did flow out while the north and south wind did blow upon thy garden art now become as the (r) 2 Sam. 1.21 mountains of Gilboa upon which neither dew nor rain doth fall nor fields of offerings Thou who (ſ) Cant. 7.6 5. wast fair and pleasant for delights when the King wast held in thy galleries art now become black and pale while thou livest as a widow in solitariness and art suffered to wallow in the mire when thou art (t) Hos 2.3 stripped naked of all thy ornaments and left in a dry and parched land where there is no water now thy (u) Lam. 4.1 8. gold is become dim and thy visage darker then a coal then who wast fed with manna from heaven and didst (x) Cant. 5.1 eat the honey with the hon●y-comb mai'st now cry out my leaness my leaness while thou pinest away for want of the heavenly influences Oh! who can enumerat the several evils that befall him who is forsaken of God nay though thou wert a Saint and to such only we now speak and though the Spirit did not totally withdraw yet he may so far leave thee that to thy sense and apprehension thou may'st appear to be (y) Hos 2.3 stript naked and set as in the day that thou wast born where are thy comforts and spiritual consolations now where is thy furniture and strength for doing thy duty where is thy armour and shield now thou art exposed to Sathans fiery darts to the snares of an alluring and tempting world and to the rageing and impetuousness of thy lusts which seemed and were in great part mortified and subdued The Saints themselves when the Spirit withdraws are ready to fall 1. upon the least temptation 2. into the most gross and vile sins and 3. without recovery and to live and die in that filthy pudle unless he return as certainly he will do to his own for his great names sake awaken them and pluck them out of the snare Peter David Solomon c. are sad instances of the frai●ty and naughtiness of the strongest Saints when left to themselves 1. how long did David lie in that vile sin of adultery without repentance and 2. with what craft and policy laboured he to cover it and when other covers would not do the turn he added to his adultery murder committing that crying sin with much deliberation and afterwards rejoiced in the death of his faithfull servant Vriah which he had so cunningly pl●tted and contrived 3. Did not Peter once and again deny his Master and relapse into the same sin yea and 4. did he not fall where he seemed to be strongest his zeal for his Master his courage and resolution appeared to be very great when he protested that though all should yet he would not deny him Mat. 26.33.35 and yet at the voice of a damsel he denied him thrice with an oath and cursing the unbelief of Abraham the father of the faithfull Gen. 12.11 12. The passion of Moses the meekest of men Numb 11.15 Psa 106.33 The impatience of Job the pattern of patience Job 3.3 Job 6.8 9. are manifest evidences that the strongest Saints may fall into those sins that are contrary to the graces in which they are most eminent And 5. they may be so far forsaken as to be permitted not only to commit but also to justifie and plead for their sin and with Jonah to say they did well to be angry against God for exercising mercy and forbearance towards others and for removing their gourd Jon. 4.9 10. c. But particularly as to the present case the spirit of
work and engagement herein Page 515 Some directions Page 518 Marks of the prayer of faith as first negatively if we walk not as children we cannot call God Father Page 519 Secondly positively 1. enlargement in prayer 2. frequency 3. calmness and composure of spirit after prayer 4. watching for an answer 5. thankfulness though the particular be not given 6. some intimation of love made to the heart Page 521 We have reason to be humbled for our unbelief Page 529 What faith did Adam in the state of innocency act in prayer and whether he then knew the mystery of incarnation Page 530 If we suppose the Saints in glory to pray whether may they be said to pray in faith Page 531 Whether the unbelief of the promises or of the threatnings be the greater sin Page 533 CHAP. III. Some consequent conditions of prayer first after prayer we must wait and look up to God for an answer Page 535 Secondly we must watch and look in to our selves Page 539 Thirdly we must renew our requests and continue instant at the throne of grace adding prayer to prayer Page 541 Fourthly we must use the means for obtaining what we ask from God our prayers ought not be pretended as a cloak for idleness ibid. Fifthly when the Lord answers our prayers we must return the sacrifice of praise Page 544 What our praise and thanksgiving importeth Page 545 Whether all these qualifications which should go before accompany and follow our prayers be essentially necessary to its acceptance and audience and what be more what less necessary Page 547 Some grounds of encouragement to weak Saints with the concurring testimony of some practical Divines Page 549 PART III. Some practical cases What cases belong to this place Page 552 CHAP. I. How we should in prayer conceive of God and of the persons of the glorious Trinity Page 553 Sect. I. How we should conceive of God when we draw nigh to him Page 553 Humility and reverence necessary here ibid. Concl. 1. Beware of mental idols for representing Gods infinit nature Page 555 Concl. 2. It s no small part of our knowledge to know what God is not ibid. Concl. 3. Yet he calls us to behold his positive perfections Page 556 Concl. 4. In prayer we may select and make choice of such divine attributes and perfections as are most sutable to our condition Page 557 Concl. 5. We may not draw nigh to God but in Christs name Page 558 Concl. 6. But in Christ we may draw nigh with confidence as children to a father able and ready to hear and answer Page 559 It s not presumption but a duty to call God Father ibid. What if we be not assured of our adoption Page 560 Is it not a mocking of God to call him Father when he is not and while we are not in the state of adoption Page 562 Some evidences of adoption ibid. Though we be children yet if we know not our state whether may we in truth and without a a lye call God Father Page 564 Five bonds whereby a child of light walking in darkness may lay hold upon God as a Father ibid. Sect. II. After what maner and order should we direct our prayers to the persons of the glorious Trinity Page 566 The Trinity a great mystery yet clearly revealed as to the thing it self though not as to the maner Page 567 Concl. 1. There is a natural order among the persons of the Trinity Page 568 Concl. 2. There are not three first causes and principal agents but one Page 569 Concl. 3. There is an appropriation of works and attributes but not exclusive ibid. Only in the work of redemption there be something peculiar to the Son Page 571 Concl. 4. We must not so direct our prayers to any one person as to exclude the other two Page 572 Concl. 5. Yet we may so direct our prayers to one as not actually to meditate on the other two Page 573 Concl. 6. In singling out any one of those glorious persons we may reflect upon and improve the appropriation of works and attributes ibid. Concl. 7. Yet we are not so limited thereto as that upon occasion fix upon any one ibid. Whether as we may put up several petitions to several persons So also one and the same petition to several persons Page 574 Concl. 8. Yet usually Christians address themselves to the Father Page 575 Concl. 9. That noble way of conveighing all good to the Sants from the Father through the Son and by the holy Ghost doth not by any natural result flow from that original order that is among those glorious persons Page 577 A voluntary covenant the ground of this dispensation Page 578 The School-distinction of mission not full it wants the most usefull member Page 581 Concl. 10. We are not so oblieged to conceive of God under these personal relations that we may not worship him absolutely as the alone Jehovah ibid. A word of warning caution and exhortation Page 582 CHAP. II. Of the with-drawing of the Spirit deadness wandering thoughts c. Page 586 Sect. I. Of the with-drawing of the Spirit Page 587 How far the Spirit may withdraw from the Saints ibid. Whether the Spirit alwayes worketh as to the conservation of grace so also to it's operations increase and growth Page 588 There may be a total suspension of gracious influences as to prayer and other particular performances Page 589 This suspension may fall under a two-fold consideration 1. as our tryal 2. as our correction and punishment Page 589 The Lord doth not alwayes with-draw for sin but sometimes for c. Page 590 And thus the suspension of grace is either 1. medicinal or 2. monitory or 3. probatory or 4. castigatory Page 591 Yet it is alwayes our duty to examine our hearts and wayes lest c. Page 592 We would distinguish between the comforting and the quickening or assisting presence of the Spirit Page 593 The Spirit may be provoked to depart either more directly and immediatly or more mediatly and indirectly ibid. How the Scriptures express the more direct affronts and indignities offered to the Spirit Page 594 The Spirit may be said to be quenched either positively or negatively by commission or omission ibid. Negatively 1. by not yielding to his motions 2. by not welcoming him nor prising his presence 3. by a decay of love respect reverence c. Page 594 Positively 1. when we prostitute his gifts to our carnal ends 2. when we undervalue and entertain base low thoughts of them 3. when we contemne his Authority and obey Sathan and welcom his temptations notwithstanding the contrary motions and warnings of the Spirit 4. so much of illumination and light so much of conviction and conscience as is choaked so far the Spirit is dishonoured and provoked Page 566 How the Spirit is provoked by every reigning sin Page 597 A word of exhortation Page 598 The Saints danger when the Spirit with-draweth Page 599 How we may
know when the Spirit with-draweth his help from supplicants Page 600 Sect. II. A two-fold deadness and indisposition one privative by the departure of the quickening and strengthening influence of the Spirit another positive into which we are casten by the opiat of sin Page 602 Divers kinds of causes of this evil Page 603 Among externals Sathan is the chief Page 604 But the root of the matter is within us hereditary sin a mother sin Page 605 To which some gross pollution or conscience-wasting sin being super-added the heart must be very much straitned in it's approaches to God Page 606 What are these sins against which the Saints should especially guard Page 607 What be these sins which more formally and efficiently straiten the heart and occasion deadness and wandering thoughts Page 607 1. Earthly-mindedness 2. irreverence and want of fear 3. hypocrisie 4. want of feeling 5. distrust and unbelief 6. excess and surfeiting either bodily or spiritual 7. wantonness and a spirit of lust 8. discontent with our condition family-contention and whatsoever distemper of the passions anger grief c. 9. not watching the heart 10. nor guarding the outward senses 11. taking unseasonable times for performing these duties 12. disuse omission and want of frequency 13. a giving way to a slight and superficial way of performance 14. ill company ibid. Positive directions and remedies 1. strengthen and fortifie the heart with the cordial of love 2. let us rouse up and awaken our sleepy hearts 3. let us beg the quickening presence of the Spirit of Christ bewailing more the want thereof then the want of his consolations 4. let us diligently mark and observe when the Spirit draweth nigh and when he with-draweth 5. when we set upon any duty let us renew our resolutions to hold our hearts fixed at the work 6. in the intervals of prayer let us give our selves unto holiness 1. do not stint thy self to such a measure of holiness 2. imitat the best examples 3. converse much with the Saints 4. frequent the Ordinances diligently and 5. be diligent in thy particular calling 7. arrest thy heart at the present exercise and work 8. remember 1. the greatness and excellency 2. the goodness and bounty 3. the presence and all seeing eye and 4. the holiness justice and terrors of him with whom we have to do 9. use such a gesture as may be most helpfull to raise the heart 10. thou mayest while indisposed have recourse to a set form and then 11. let frequency supply the want of continuance and enlargement 12. whatever success thou meetest with yet leave not off but still follow on to seek the Lord in his Ordinances till thou find him do not faint nor weary for c. Page 620 Sect. III. Whether our deadness and indisposition will excuse our negligence and omission of duty Page 637 Six or seven reasons for the negative ibid. Our deadness should rather send us to then hold us from the throne of grace Page 640 Motives to stir us up to shake off our laziness indisposition negligence c. Page 640 What copy should we set before our eyes as to our diligence and activity for eternal life Page 643 When and what wandering thoughts do nullifie our prayers and hinder their success Page 644 The testimony of some Divines Page 645 Deadnesse and wandering thoughts a grievous burden to the Saints Page 646 Whether we may be too much inlarged in prayer or meditation Page 648 Of the Popish mystical Theology Enthusiasme c. ibid. Whether the Saints be alwayes precisely limited to the present work in which they are imployed Page 650 Whether sincere supplicants use to be be more inlarged in private or publick ibid. Whether it be a mercy to have our prayers answered when we are cold and formal Page 651 CHAP. III. Whether we may pray for any evil either of sin or suffering Page 652 Some distinctions Page 653 We may not pray for any evil either absolutely or relatively ibid. Five arguments Page 654 Objections answered Page 657 Far less may we pray and wish evil to our brethren Page 663 A word concerning the evil of sin ibid. CHAP. IV. Whether it be lawfull to imprecat the question propounded and limited Page 664 It is certain we may 1. pray against the sins and 2. against the plots of the wicked and 3. that we may complain of their cruelty and 4. that we may pray the Lord to break their snare of success and prosperity and 5. that justice may be executed upon malefactors ibid. But we must not curse 1. without a cause nor 2. for our own cause nor 3. our relations Page 665 The question answered negatively and objections obviated Page 666 CHAP. V. What it is to pray alwayes Page 668 The Euchits confuted Page 669 Whether Pelagians taught that it was needless to pray Page 670 Six conjectures rejected Page 671 The exhortation to pray alwayes and without ceasing supposeth a spiritual disposition Page 674 It answereth the question when should we pray ibid. It importeth assiduity and frequency ibid. It requireth 1. constancy and 2. universality 1. in respect of the object 2. in respect of the seasons time and opportunities whether set or occasional Page 676 An omission cannot be imputed to us unless we be called and oblieged to do Page 677 The least that can be allowed for a set course of prayer is twice a day Page 678 What time of the day fittest Page 679 Scripture-instances with some variety Page 680 How we may discern the occasional season of prayer Page 681 What is done in it's season whether set or occasional is said in Scripture to be done alwayes Page 683 There ought also to be an universality in respect of the subject Page 684 Lastly it importeth perseverance Page 684 How much time should be spent and how long should we continue at prayer Page 685 Whether it be lawfull to use repetitions and what repetitions in prayer Page 687 A word concerning ejaculatory prayer Page 691 The Saints have continued for a considerable time at prayer Page 692 An exhoration to frequency Page 693 A word of caution take heed lest custom and frequency make us customary and superficial in prayer Page 695 PART IV. Of the return of prayer CHAP. I. Of the success of prayer Page 695 Sect. I. The Christian is the only worthy and invincible man Page 696 Prayers and tears the arms of the Church Page 697 How the holy Spirit expresseth the power and prevalency of prayer Page 698 Sect. II. The Atheists great objection all things come alike to all answered Page 701 What the Lords hearing of prayer importeth Page 703 Hence several arguments proving that the wicked receive nothing in answer to their prayers Page 704 Why then doth the Lord bestow mercies upon them Ans Page 706 Four wayes of the Lords hearing the prayers of his servants Page 710 A delay to give or denial of the particular askt may be a gracious answer of
want his armour and having his quiver so full of (b) The Promises are these arrows which the bow of Prayer discharges arrows he cannot want his bow give me children else I die said she in her impatience Gen. 30.1 O! But may the Christian well say let me pray or I cannot live What can the poor Pilgrime do if he have no provision Prayer is our money that answereth all things what though we be far from home yet the treasure followeth us it 's within a cry and Prayer can bring from thence what we can stand in need ask whatsoever ye will it shall be given unto you Joh. 16.23 c. Ah! How should a Christian live without his God and without his Saviour and how shall he live without his life that 's impossible O! but our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 And can there then be a distance and separation of him from God Nay pray he must he must look up 〈◊〉 God and lift up his soul to the Throne And thus some of the (c) Veteres cum Damaesceno de Fid. orth lib. 3. cap. 24. definiunt precationem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ancient Doctors have defined Prayer a lifting up of the soul to God Vnto thee O Lord saith the Psalmist while he is presenting his supplication to God Ps 25.1 do I lift up my soul O! but the distance is great and where shall this holy man find a ladder to reach the Heavens O! but he was well acquainted with such a voyage and how quickly as with wings doth he mount up and approach the Throne and close with the King wrestle with him and at length prevail v. 2. c. v. 15. c. And as Prayer is thus so necessary and usefull for us so it is well pleasing and acceptable to God it is his delight Prov. 15.8 Yea sometimes it is put for the whole worship of God one particular because of it's excellency in place of the general as Gen. 4.26 Is 64.7 Mat. 21.13 O! How should we then blush at the impudence of the Roman Clergy who with their Patron (d) Thom. 2.2 quast 83. art 2. 3. Less Swar loc citand alii Sholastici ad locum Thomas Aquinas will question and dispute for and against in these points that are so certain and undenyable As 1. If it be convenient to pray 2. If Prayer be a Religious act and begin their disputes with a videtur quod non as if their trifling objections could render the negative any wayes probable or to have the least appearance of truth Yet herein they carry themselves suteably to their own principles For upon good ground it may be inquired if the Popish Devotion be convenient and if their lip-labour and moving of the tongue without attention and affection as we shall (e) Set part 2. chap. hear themselves confess yea and without understanding while they pray in an unknown language be a Religious act and deserve the name of divine Worship and we may confidently affirm that to dally thus in Gods service and to teach others to do so is a notable injury against the infinite Majesty of God an impious and blasphemous mockrie of the Omni-scient and holy One who must be worshiped in spirit and truth Joh. 4.23 and with the whole heart as too little to offer unto Him if we had more to give and too naughty to be imployed in His worship Nay this doth not only savour of the pagan and heathenish delusion that much babling is acceptable to God Mat. 6.7 but also of the Satanicall superstition of Witches and Charmers who are well acquainted with such sort of prayers as fit engines for accomplishing their hellish designes that kind of prayer being as it were the Devils A. B. C. which he first teacheth his schollars which he will indeed answer because they are abominable to God and that thus he may delude and allure these miserable wretches and keep them in his snare What kind of teachers then must these be that dare affirm that God will hear and accept such Prayers These must be the seducing spirits of whom the Apostle warneth us whose lot hath fallen in the latter times to beware 1. Tim. 4 1. who teach the doctrine of Devils having their conscience seared with a hot iron O! but you will then say what is the Prayer that God will hear and accept For answer we might bring many emphatick sentences and expressions of the ancient Doctours of the Church who in their meditations have rather been taken up with its excellency sweetness and usefulness then its nature and theorie which though they may suffice for stopping the foul mouths of Popish Casuists and Schoolmen yet they are rather Rethoricall commendations then descriptions of this great duty but of late since learning became more polished every one almost who hath spoken to this point hath given as it were a new definition and it were no difficult task in us to do the like But since all the diversitie is rather in words and phrases then in the matter we could wish that all would rest on that which doth most fully and clearly explain the thing and thus as we conceive in our Catechisme Prayer is excellently well (f) Joyning together what is said both in the larger and shorter Catechisme described an offering up of our desires to God for things agreable to his will in the name of Christ by the help of his spirit with confession of our sins and thankfull acknowledgment of his mercies Here 1. we have the act it self specified 2. The subject 3. The matter and object whereabout it is employed 4. The rule 5. The object to which it it directed 6. The incense that perfumes our duty and makes it acceptable And. 7. our help and assistance in this great work or thus In this our christian sacrifice we have 1. the oblation it self 2. The preist that offereth it 3. The thing we sacrifice and offer up 4. The person to whom we present this oblation 5. The manner how the rule whereby we are directed to make choyce of what we should offer 6. The altar And. 7. our guid leader and assistant Of these severally as the Lord shall enable purposing to add a word concerning the end and scope we should aime at in this performance in the qualifications part 2. Chap 1. As to that which followeth in the last words of this description concerning 1. Confession of sin 2. The return of praise for mercies It s certaine these must be joyned and intermixed with our petitions We must confess and then beg pardon and thankfully remember mercies already received that they may be blessed to us in the use and that by our ingratitude we obstruct not the bestowing of future and desired mercies And thus they belong to the compleating and as (g) Per ●●ulationem intellig i● Apostolus 1. Tim. 2.1 orationem prepriissimesum ptam pro petitione quia vero
grace can in faith plead and lay claim to the absolute promises But it is impossible that any man while under an absolute promise and before it be accomplished can know what were the eternal purposes of God concerning his state and it were ridiculous to say that before the performance of the absolute promises he were in the state of grace therefore none can in faith plead these promises Yet he must ask as shall be shown may not God know what will become of us unlesse we in dispair break our own neck We will not now enter on that debate concerning the necessity of legal preparations and their connexion with grace and enquire if these who are under the spirit of bondage convincing and humbling them for their sins may lay claim to these absolute promises For though Scripture and experience I might also add reason hold out the usefulness and expediency if not necessity of such a law-work if we speak of the ordinary method the Lord observeth in working grace in them who are come to years of discretion Yet our Divines do maintain against Jesuits and Arminians that there is not such an infallibilis nexus and necessary connexion between those previous dispositions and the grace of conversion as that the work notwithstanding of these preparations may not miscarry as it did in the hands of Felix Agrippa Herod and others and so efficacious and powerfull is the wo●k of the spirit that it can overcome all opposition so that grace can if we speak absolutely and as to the possibility of the thing make way for it self without such preparations albeit it cannot be denyed that usually it begins in these and that common grace as I may call it for that assistance of the spirit being free may be called grace maketh way to saving but since the spirit of bondage and that legal work is carryed on by the help of the spirit it may be enquired whether there be any promise made to such a work not as flowing from us and as it is our work but as it floweth from the spirit carrying on the soul some steps though not in yet towards the way One thing is certain this is the right way and method and if we follow on and do not draw back we shall meet with mercy There is none in hell who dare say that they took this course and constantly followed it and yet were no better but their conscience can tell them that they did soon weary and fell off that they were negligent and that they thus perished not in the use of the means but through their negligence though the Lord hath not bound himself by any promise yet he will be so far out of the reach of any such challenge that none shall be able to say we perished because we must perish though we had the Gospel preached to us yet it could do us no good But that we may not digress it is certain and none can deny it that if thou hold on in that way thou mayest meet with mercy and if with the dog thou return to thy vomit thou must perish and though thou hast no more but a peradventure a who knows and a may be the Lord will be gracious that is some comfort and encouragment and warrant and ground enough for thee to venture and follow that course others have had no more Zeph. 2.2 Joel 2.14 Dan. 4.27 Amos 5.15 and their labour hath not been in vain Jonah 3.9 10. thou wilt seek no more for thy encouragment in things that concern thy bodily life and estate wilt thou not send for the Physician unlesse thou be assured his pains will be successfull wilt thou not sow unless thou be assured thou shalt have a plentifull harvest and not go to sea unless thou know that thou wilt return safe Ah! shall these trifles make thee venture and hazard sometimes not only thy labour and diligence but also much of state and riches yea and life it self and wilt thou be at no pains for the immortal crown The voyage is more safe in the use of the means thou neither hazardest life nor estate and the success is more certain thou canst not produce one instance nor point out the man who made ship-wrack while he was trading for the pearl of price albeit too many have turned sail and splitted upon the rocks after they had wearied of that trade Thus whatever be pretended the true cause must be thy hatred of holiness and want of care for thy soul and thy undervaluing the undefiled inheritance he who loveth not his work will not want excuses for his idleness Hence our ninth Conclusion must be this grace as to it 's being and existence the habits Concl. 9. or (p) Quia habitus non dat p●sse sed melius facilius operari male ergo vulgo dicuniur habitus gratiosi cum aent simpliciter posse rather faculties of grace that (q) 1 Joh. 3.9 seed of God the radical cause and physical principle of all spiritual actions these absolutely necessary spiritual mercies are not cannot be the object of the prayer of (r) Jam. 5 15. Concl. 10. faith unlesse we will say that unbeleevers may pray in faith and that faith in the subject is not a necessary condition for laying claim to the promise of successe and audience Concl. 10. How we may be said to pray (ſ) A modest enquiry after the sense of the common assertion of Casuists ●practicall Divines c. laid down as a principle to be embraced by all rather then to be examined by any viz. that grace should be prayed for absolutely but the degree conditionally absolutely for what we cannot pray confidently and in faith will be somewhat difficult to conjecture unlesse it be said that to pray absolutely is nothing else but to pray with such fervency zeal and enlarged desires though that heat come only from the furnace of nature a little warmed by the operation of the spirit as that we will not be put off or satisfied till we obtain a grant refusing all capitulation or to have any thing by way of recompence for what we thus desire Thus being in a kind of impatience and commendable implacability not like her who in her passion (t) Gen. 30.1 said give me children or else I die or like (u) Gen. 15.2 him who too rashly and (x) If he had not his eyes fixed on the Messiah who was to be his son unadvisedly though otherwise an eminent Saint said Lord God what wilt thou give me since I go childlesse these longing souls may have such a vehement desire and impatience but more deliberate and upon more weighty and pressing considerations if their heart were opened up we would find this (y) As Queen Mary of England a little before her death said If she were anatomized Calis would be found engraven upon her heart such was her grief for the lose of it written there in capital letters What
presence (h) Gen. 3.10 O! but the Spirit removeth that terror and dread and faith to the fugitive and trembling sinner what Christ by an audible voyce to the paralitick Math. 9.2 Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee and if thou be a Son what needs discourage thee if a child then an heir an heir of God and joynt heir with Christ Rom. 8.17 and so you may ask what you will it will be given to you will the Father withhold any part of the portion from the heir or needs the son be afraid to draw nigh to his kind Father Thus the Spirit of adoption by discovering and witnessing our relation doth enable us to come with 1. boldnesse 2. confidence and 3. importunity crying which is a token as of seriousnesse so of boldnesse and who but the Kings son and child dar cry in his presence (q) Abba is a Syriack word signifying Father coming from the hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from which it only differeth in the termination it may be thought strange that the learned Augustin did herein so grossly mistake as to say that Abba was graecum Vocabulum August epist 178 where we have his dispute rather then an epistle with Poscentius the Arrian Lamentius being arbiter Abba which sheweth the familiarity and confidence which every son hath not the liberty to use but must make choyce of another kind of compellation importing greater distance and reverence Abba Father thus doubling the word to be an evidence of fervency and importunity Rom. 8. 15. Galat. 4.6 It s true this confidence and boldnesse admitteth a latitude but every step and degree of it must come from the Spirit by 〈◊〉 only we can have accesse Eph. 2.18 and therefore that accesse with any measure of boldnesse and confidence mentioned Ch. 3.12 But though it must come from the Spirit yet not alwayes by that witnessing act whereby he testifieth to our Spirits that we are the sons of God Rom. 8.16 but by applying other grounds and making some sort of confidence arise from thence as 1. Sense of our need and wants will banish shame and fear yea and sometimes modesty necessi● as non habet legem necessity shakes off all bonds it made those lepers 2 Kings 7.3 5. venture to go to the camp of the Syrians and Esther go to the King with her life in her hand Esth 4.16 Extreamity will make a dumb man speak will it not open a mouth morally shut while once it opened the mouth of Craesus son which nature had closed I am ashamed to beg saith the unjust steward while he lived in abundance Luk 16.13 but stay till he was stripped naked of all and he can see no remedy his (r) Durum telum necessitas extreamity would banish away his shame If the conscience were once awakned as in the Saints to see our guilt and misery and our need of Christ though we wanted the immediat light of Gods countenance and manifestation of his favour yet would we venture and go boldly to the Throne resolving if we should perish to perish if it were posible there This is the first and lowest step and rather of our boldness to pray then boldnesse in prayer which may 2. be promoved from the sense of our obligation flowing from the command conscience of duty may pull and strongly draw us to the throne in obedience to him who hath commanded us to call upon him and pay him this homage though we be not assured of the successe of our work But 3. and more properly this boldnesse may arise from hopes of successe which though grounded upon certainties viz. the command of him who never said to the seed of Iacob seek ye my face in vain his gracious attributes his mercy compassion forbearance c. his invitations intreaties expostulations promises threatnings and judgments upon the disobedient who will not call upon his name the success that others have met with c. Though the soul doth not doubt of these in the general and as to others yet as to thee while thou sittest in darkness and wants the light of assurance flowing from the inward testimony of the Spirit these can only beget a probable hope and thereby raise up the heart to a proportionable boldness and confidence banishing slavish fear despondency of spirit and such discouragments as may draw off the heart or weaken the hands and thus 1. negatively viz. by removing obstructions the foundation-stone of confidence is laid 2. and positively enlivening and quickning the soul by a rationall expectation of success But betwixt this probable hope and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the full assurance of faith Heb. 10.22 There is a middle and third kind of confidence arising from divine argumentation the Spirit breathing upon and sealing all the propositions of the practical Syllogisme but especially the minor by discovering to us the reality and sincerity of our graces and thus enabling us to assume and say I love and fear God keep his commandments c. From which supposing the knowledge faith of these general discoveries held forth in the major the conclusion concerning our state and condition doth clearly and necessarily flow You will say if the conclusion do clearly follow it must beget as full an assurance as the immediat testimony of the Spirit Ans We will not now compare the immediat and direct irradiation and evidence of the Spirit with the mediate and argumentative reflex by a practical Syllogism in which the word is applyed and from thence a conclusion drawn concerning our state and condition or compare as I may speak the Spirit 's wit-nessing to our spirit and (ſ) Rom. 8.16 bearing witness to our spirit But to the question we grant that a great measure of confidence and boldness may be had both wayes and whensoever the soul can say with her Cant. 6.3 I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine by whatsoever means this assurance be attai●ned h may draw nigh to God in full assurance of faith grounded upon this particular interest in him but often by reason of the small measure of irradiation from the Spirit the assent given to the minor is so weak that it diff●reth not much from a meer opinion having much fear and jealousie mixed with it so that albeit an assent be given to the assumption yet cum formidine partis oppositae and thus the conclusion as the effect must be in part tainted with that imperfection as of the cause and so cannot be the foundation of such a measure of confidence and boldness as m●ght arise from a clear evidence and full assurance But here there is a great latitude concerning which we shall now say no more but that if there be such a measure of assent as doth banish and calm the storm boistrous winds of dispair distrust unquietness anxiety c. and doth carry the soul to trust and stay it self upon God and to adhere rely and depend upon him
and his free grace in Christ held forth in the promises adventuring soul and a l upon it this may prove a sufficient ground of acceptable confidence and boldness which will prevail and will not be sent away from the throne of grace empty Here we may reach a word 1. to the proud Pharisee 2. to the mocking Atheist 2. to the disconsolat 4. to the enlivened and strong Saint First then from this point I may reach a rebuke to him who presuming on his parts and eloquence or with that boast ng hypocrit Luk. 18.11 on his own worth and goodness doth thi●k that he hath at home provision enough for the work and so mindeth nor neither seeketh help from above but dare draw nigh to God in his own strength Ah! what doth the Almighty regard the acting of parts and the moving of the tongue though with much art and elegance He knoweth the mind of the Spirit the meaning of the least sigh and groan poured out in his strength Rom. 8.27 26. but will not acknowledge or hearken to the voice of thy spirit it is too weak whatever conceit thou mayest entertain concerning its might and excellency to wrestle with and overcome the Almighty but (t) Isa 41.14 worm Jacob was strong he got power from above and in it he wrestled with God and at length prevailed and carried the day C●n. 32.25 he prevailed by weeping and supplication Hos 12.4 What strange weapons were these for a conquerour and durst the potsheard strive wiah his Maker the Angel of the covenant appearing in a created shape Ans Yes the Lord alloweth us to fight and wrestle with such weapons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 4.12 to strive as it were in an agony and not to faint nor give over till we get the victory Nay but we must not dare to wrestle with God but by his own strength Deus in Jacobo fuit seipso fortior God did lend Jacob more strength then he did fetch against him he did saith (u) Dicitur ergo Deus vinci a nobis quando virtute spiritus sui nos confirmat reddit in ex●ugnabiles in●o facit ut trium phum agamus de tentationi bus si singula reputamus talis est tunc partitio ut Deusmajore●● partem suae virtu●isa parte nostra staere velit tantum sumat partem magis infirmam ad nos tentandos vel experiendos a●qui si Iacob suo marte pugnass●t non poterat ferre umbram ipsius Dei quin conci●eret redactus suisset in nihilum nisi opposita fuisset major virtus quam bominis hanc similitudinem inquit adducere soleo quando loquor de lucta quotidianis ●ertaminibus quibus Deus exercet pios quod pugnet nobiscum sinistra manu quod nos tueatur dextra sua c. Calvin comment in Hos 12.3 4. Calvin uphold Jacob and continually upholdeth the Saints in all their tryalls and combats with the right hand and fought against him only with the left But you will say Iacob is said by his strength to have power with God Hos 12.3 Ans There can be as (x) Nulius est melior titulus quam donationi●ut vulgo dicunt Deus solet in nos transferre quicq uid con●ulit ac si nosirum esset distinguere ergo prudenter necesse est hic inter vi●tutem bominis quam habet aseipso id est a na●ura eam quam Dominus in ipsum contulit Calv. ibid. Calvin saith no better title then donation what strength the Lord out of his free mercy had bestowed on Iacob during the combat was Iacobs strength the Lord had freely given it to him and doth allow that it be called his O! but there is no prevailing over the omnipotent but by his own strength if thou draw nigh to him in thy pride thou mayest fear his hand he resisteth the proud and will not yield he is angry with them and they shall not be able to stand before him Secondly A word to the blasphemous Atheist who dare mock the Spirit of God rather then the Saints while he upbraideth them with having and being led by the Spirit and if any infirmity be espied in such that must be reckoned in the first place amongst the works of the Spirit It s true there is a generation of vile deluded sectaries who father all their wicked and enormous actings upon the holy Spirit I plead not for such monsters let them bear their own just punishment ignominy and reproach but for any upon this pretence to mock and flout humble self-denied and circumspect Christians who dare not brag of their having the Spirit but labour to maintain and prize his presence and to bring forth these fruits of the Spirit mentioned Ephes 5.9 Gal. 5.22 these mockers do evidence that they have not Spirit for if they had they durst not make a jeer of having it and if thou hast not the Spirit of Christ thou art none of his Rom. 8 9. thou art a dead man the sentence of death is already past upon thee and thou art destitute of the Spirit of life ver 13.10 and thy mocking the Saints is as if the dead could mock the living because they do live and have a principle of life I will not say with a learned (y) Mr. Baxter Divine that to mock the Spirit and to attribute his work as the Pharisees did Christs to the devil is that unpardonable sin against ●he holy Ghost but certainly it is near in kin to it and from thence our blessed Lord took occasion to speak of that sin Mat. 12.31 32. compared with ver 24. and let such mark that this unpardonable blasphemy is there called speaking against the holy Ghost O! but all those who live in the Spirit walk in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 let the fruits of the Spirit appear in your conversation let your goodness righteousness and truth (x) Eph. 5 9. stop the mouth of mockers dare ye also reproach his holy name all the balsphemies of Atheists do not so much (a) Heb. 6.6 put the blessed Spirit as it were to an open shame as the miscarriages of the Saints and these often prove and are called 2 Sam. 12.14 a great occasion to the enimies of the Lord to blaspheme Thirdly Rejoyce O ye (b) Zech. 9.12 prisoners of hope cast off your fears and complaints and do not say my sins are so many my deadness and indisposition for duty so great and my spiritual enemies so strong and fierce that my hope is cut off I have no strength to wrestle with such mighty adversaries and to remove such great mountains of impediments I grant if thou wert Helpless thy condition were Hopeless but all thine enemies are not able to stop the way and to intercept thy supplie from heaven what though creature-help did fail what though those pools were dried up yet thou mightest run to the full fountain the Lord himself is thy helper his Spirit will
with from the hand of Herod and to find the severity of a Judge in stead of the love a Father and yet are there not multitudes Ah! how many are there who have the boldness to deal thus with the father of Spirits Who Judas-like with a (c) Every reigning sin is treason and rebellion against the great King and interoretatively Deicide and Regicide and every sinner doth comply and conspire with Sathan and take up arms for him against his Master and Lord. treacherous heart dare offer to kiss him in whom they live move and have their being who is their Father by creation and who offereth unto them and entreateth them to accept of the inheritance of children Such think themselves to be sons and dare call him father though they have the heart of an enemy such have a kind of faith confidence and hope which is nothing but presumption delusion and groundless imagination suggested by the father of lies and maintained and cherished by their own foolish and deceitfull hearts This their faith is not built upon the word it hath not for its warrant thus saith the Lord but only thus saith the murderer and great impostor thus saith the deceiver and our deceitfull and deceived hearts It doth not arise from the Promises as having no foundation there but only from some principles of Sathans Catechism which he carefully instilleth into the ears and minds of his disciples and among the many articles of that anti-scriptural and cursed Creed this to our purpose is one If we have some form of devotion and now and then speak some few words prayer-wayes it 's no matter how we live our prayers will make amends for all God is mercifull and therefore will Sathan say and they upon his word think he will pity his poor creatures and servants and hear them whensoever they cry to him nay such will be ready to apprehend that it were cruelty and injustice to reject such well-meaning supplicants We may not now confute that soul-destroying delusion but what the Apostle said of doubting Jam. 1.7 may far rather be applied to this mad and desperat presumption and confidence Let not such seeure bold wretches think that they shall receive any thing of the Lord though too many be ready to think they shall receive yet saith the Apostle let them not think so or if they do they will but deceive their own souls and whatever for the present may be the dispensations of a common providence yet ere it be long they shall know and be convinced that they received nothing in mercy and in return to their prayers and nothing from the Lord as their God and Redeemer he was better acquaint with the mind of God and did not mistake who said If Iregard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Psa 66.18 And it was an acknowledged principle that he who was born blind urged against the Jews in his apology for Christ Joh. 9.31 For saith he we (d) Let bold finners consider how gross their delusion must be who contrary to this known truth dare presume and draw nigh in any ordinance without fear know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshiper of him and doth his will him he heareth Neither would the Saints themselves think they were not concerned in this caveat for albeit the Lord will pity them in the day of their trouble and hear their prayers yet if they step aside from the approven path the Lord will hide his face hence the Psalmist having asserted Gods care of his Saints and People and that he would speak peace to such yet he addeth a necessary caution and warning but let them not turn again to folly as if it had been said though they were Gods people his Saints and precious ones who have prayed and wait for an answer yea though they have asked in faith and have met with access and acceptance so that a message of peace is dispatched and is as it were on the way towards them in return to their prayers yet if they should through their folly turn aside from God and in that interim commit some known sin he would recall as it were his former grant and draw back his hand and would not speak peace to them who had made peace with sin Now come we to some positive evidences and marks of the prayer of faith And 1. when the affections are much enlarged when we meet with a gale from heaven filling the sails we may and usually do expect that voyage will prove successfull when God openeth the heart and filleth the mouth with more then ordinary boldness fervency and liberty we readily will apprehend that he purposeth to fill our hands and will not send us away empty according to that word Psa 81.10 Open thy mouth wide but (e) Only he who is said to open the ears Psa 40.6 Isa 50.5 to open the eyes Psa 146.8 and to open the heart whose messenger and interpreter the lips are Act. 16.14 He only can open the mouth to ask aright he only can open it wide both extensively and intensively and make us desire and ask great things greatly grandia granditer ut loquitur August loc cit who is sufficient for such a work unless the Lord put to his hand and I will fill it We may believe he will fill that mouth with songs of praise for his gracious answers which he hath opened so wide in fervent and importunate prayers when we have spiritual boldness in pleading with God we will also have confidence as to the success and therefore these are joyned together and both ascribed to faith Eph. 3.12 We have boldness and access with confidence through faith If the Lord lift up the soul to him if he quicken and inflame the affections with a more then ordinary ardor and zeal we will not readily doubt of our acceptance when fire from heaven thus falleth upon our sacrifice we will be very confident thus Psa 27. we have both Davids fervency and confidence One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seck after c. v. 4. this was his importunity but then his faith did act strongly and vigorously v. 1.3.5 6. I grant our lusts may add wings to our desires and be as oyl to the wheels and make us very diligent in our pursuit there may be a natural and carnal fervency and importunity which will rather add to our fears then make us in faith rest upon Gods word love and care but the difference may easily appear though we will not now prosecute it because that holy zeal and importunity is 1. spiritual as to the motives and end 2. humble and joyned with much self-emptiness and denial 3. tender of Gods gloty and honour and 4. submissive to his will whileas the natural importunity is 1. carnal 2. proud and selfish 3. careless of Gods glory and interest if it might be satisfied and 4 impatient under a frustration and disappointment
is ready to foster divided conceptions concerning the object of worship it may be conceived safest especially in publick and before the multitude not to alter the denomination of the persons in the same petition in the same prayer saith he the generality of people being prone to imagine different objects of worship in such cases Concl. 8. Albeit we may thus fix our minds upon and expresly name and direct our prayers unto any one of these glorious persons yet as our blessed Lord in the dayes of his flesh So Christians most usually adress themselves to the ●ather for he being the first person according to that blessed order that is among the persons of the Trinity there may be several considerations inviting us particularly to fix upon him for thus as the first both immanent and transient act (i) The appointing of the end according to the order of nature is before the election of the means vid. Twiss vind grat lib. err 7. dig 3. pag. 706. both (h) Heb. 5 7. predestination and creation by this appropriation is ascribed to the Father hence sin being a defacing of the image of God which was implanted in man by his creation it must in a special maner be against the Father and his work and thus the Father having in a special maner received the wrong to him upon this particular account satisfaction should be made and reconciliation with him and pardon from him should be askt and thus Christ in his prayers sufferings and in every step of our redemption (k) See Mr. Shepherds select Csse● in a letter from new England pag. mihi 20 21. Albeit there be some expressions of that pious man which would be warily used and which need a favourable interpretation as 1. while he calls the Father as some may think the Son and holy Ghost the original and first cause of all good 2 while he saith that Christ came into the world by his death and intercession to satisfie the Father and not the holy Ghost 3. that we should chiefly eye the Father in our prayers c. Vid. Calv. dicen●em filium esseimproprie ●rea●orem respectu persona vindicatum a Chamier panstrat tom 2. lib. 1. cap. 4 did especially look to the Father and thus the Saints also from to time time most ordinarily direct their worship to the Father in their confessions acknowledging his work to have been defaced by their sins his justice provok't c. in their petitions asking pardon from him his peace and favour c. and in their praises ascribing to him their election adoption c. admiring his wisdom and love in providing such a remedy and so great a salvation for self-destroying sinners c. And this practice is conform to the constant tenour of the Scriptures of the new Testament and albeit in the old while the Prophets and ancient Church of the Jews call God Father they rather thus express his tender bowels and fatherly affection towards them then any internal relation among the persons of the Trinity yet its hard to affirm that all that people the most eminent and knowing among them were ignorant of this appropriation of works and attributes and that they never particularly eyed the Father as the first person of the Trinity But it would be observed while we say that the Father was in a maner primarily and most directly wronged by sin we do not only understand Adam's first sin which did obliterat and deface his image engraven on the heart by his first work of creation and which thus was a base requital of his bounty of whom first in order he had his being and honour not only I say did God the Father receive in some speciall maner the wrong by that first sin of man and by our original sin flowing from it but also by the constant tract of our actual transgressions which as they flow from that common root in us So they reflect upon that bright Sun which the creature at first laboured to obscure and hence it s said If any man sin we have an advocat with the father 1 Joh. 2.1 as being in some special maner wronged thereby yet notwithstanding there be some sins whereby more directly offence is offered to the Son and holy Ghost then to the Father thus the contempt of the Gospel and undervaluing of the blood of Christ do most immediatly reflect upon the Son and his work of redemption and the quenching and resisting of the holy Spirit in his heavenly motions is most directly against the Spirit and his work of illumination and sanctification hence the Spirit thereby is said to be (l) Eph. 4.30 grieved and (m) Isa 63.10 vexed And in that unpardonable sin or rather mass of sins both the Son and holy Ghost are put to an open shame as is expresly said of Christ whom they crucifie to themselves afresh Heb. 6.6 and it is no less evident as the holy Ghost whose works and gifts they abuse and undervalue ver 4 5 6. Hence it hath its name and is particularly called the sin against the holy Ghost Mat. 12.31 Mark 3.29 Luk. 12.10 Thus also notwithstanding of that appropriation of works we will find one and the same work ascribed particularly to divers persons thus our sanctification though appropriated and usually ascribed to the holy Ghost yet it is called of the Father Jude 1. and thus also our reconciliation is ascribed to the Father 2 (n) The words themselves without a commentary do clearly hold out God the Father though as frequently else where expressed by his essential Name Cor. 5.19 20. Joh. 3.16 c. and to the Son Rom. 5.10 11 15. Col. 1.20.21 Joh. 14.16 Eph. 2.13 14. c. Our (o) Calvinus in 2 Cor. 13.14 ostendit quomodo dicam●r reconciliari quum essemus inimici Deo per mortem Christi tamen Deum ita mundum dilexisse ut dares silium suum unigenitum c. Hinc inquit Deum inde nos intuemur nam Deus quantum ad se dilexit ante mundi creationem at cum in nobis nihil cernamus praeter materiam irae ita sit ut respectu nostri initium dilectionis sit a morte Christi reconciliation is ascribed to the Father because of his free grace he elected us to salvation and to Christ because by his death he purchased our salvation and reconciliation and it is ascribed to the Spirit also because it is his proper work to bring us to the Father Eph. 2.18 Concl. 9 Concl. 9. Albeit we do not deny that the Father may be said to work by and with the Son and holy Ghost and the Son with and by the holy Ghost because of that natural procession order and priority that is among those glorious persons yet we humbly conceive that the way of conveying of all good to the Saints which the Scriptures so frequently inculcat and which we should especially eye in all our adresses to God to wit from the
13.12 1 Joh. 3.2 CHAP. II. Of the withdrawing of the Spirit of deadness indisposition and wandring thoughts in prayer their causes and remedy ALL our light and strength our activity life and zeal being the fruit of the free Spirit of grace as hath been shown Part. 1. Chap. 9. We not being of our selves sufficient to think far less to do as we ought all our sufficiency coming from God alone 2 Cor. 3.5 If the Lord withdraw his Spirit and if the Spirit of (a) Rom. 8.10 life do not quicken and enable us for our our duty what deadness and indisposition must there be upon our spirit and how unfit and unable must we be for the work of the Lord and for any part of his worship We shall not then here separate the cause and the effect but we not being meer patients but by our folly and unkindness provoking the Spirit to depart yea and not only thus procuring this sad dispensation but also joyning and actively concurring and taking as it were the hammer in our hands for hardning our own heart shutting our own eyes that we might not see and casting water upon the fire that it might not burn we shall enquire after both sort of causes adding some few things for curing and remedying this evil and for our direction whilewe are under this sad tryal Sect. 1. How far the Spirit doth withdraw and why Joh. 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing Psal 5.11 12. Take not thy holy Spirit from me uphold me with thy free Spirit WE shall not now speak of the case and state of desertion in the general what it is what be its kinds what are the causes what the symptoms and marks what the effects and wofull consequents of that malady and what should be done by way of cure and remedy that were a large field hath been the subject of several excellent (a) Mr. Boltons instructions for a right comforting c. Mr. Goodwins child of light c. Mr. Symonds desert souls case and cure c. Treatises but we shall only meddle with so much of that case as concerneth the present subject and now enquire how far the Spirit doth withdraw his help and assistance from the Saints in reference to their prayers and shall but in a word and very briefly speak to that and to the rest of the particulars in this and the following Sections because they fall in here occasionally and as in the by as also since they very much depend upon the case in the si of which now we cannot speak and the general grounds and purposes which belong to that head As to the first question here propounded how far the Spirit doth withdraw Let us 1. suppose against Socinians Papists and Arminians that the Spirit doth neither totally nor finally leave and forsake any of the Saints 1 Joh. 3.9 Joh. 10.28 29. Jer. 32.39 40. Heb. 13.5 c. 2. From the constant presence of the Spirit we may well collect his constant work and operation there is a necessary influence of the Spirit whereby the Saint● are supported and upheld the life of the new man is preserved and the (b) 1 Joh. 3.9 seed of God is kept from corruption and that influence is never denied or withheld from the Saints when they are at the lowest and in their worst and weakest condition when they have been sadly buffeted by Sathan and dangerously wounded by their lusts and after that little of life which yet (c) Rev. 3.2 remaineth in them is ready to die yet there is a secret hand that supporteth them so that they shall never perish Joh. 10.28 But 3. it is more diff●●ult to determine whether as the Spirit alwayes worketh to the conservation of spiritual life So also to its operation acting and exercise and the work of the Spirit as to the former may be called upholding and conserving grace and as to the latter assisting and concurring grace Ans Albeit we did joyn with an (d) Mr. Symonds case and cure ch 4. pag. mihi 36. excellent modern Divine while he thus resolveth this question God never wholly denieth his assistance to a faithfull soul though some degrees of divine help be withheld so that the soul languish in a sort and sink into a state of deadness and au●ness yet there is life and that both habitual and actual Gods clock never stanos there is no such deliquium gratae no such swoun of the new man in which all acts do cease though a Christian may do less yet still he doth something and though he may lose some help from God yet not all Albeit I say we did grant what is here asserted yet these actings may be so weak and faint that it will be hard to discern and put a difference between them and our natural motions they may be so cold and liveless as if no fire had come from heaven and as if the Spirit of life had never breathed upon the soul nay though something of the new life and of grace might be discerned in those actings yet we could not assent to what is said by this (e) As the Spirit worketh alwayes to the conservation of spiritual life So it worketh ever to the growth of graces A Christian is over growing yea then when he seemeth to himself and others to stand at a stay yea to decline he groweth alway really though nor apparently nor equally idid pag. 26. Author concerning the constant growth of grace unless by growth he understand no other thing but the bringing forth and bearing some fruit though n●ver so small and little but this cannot be the importance of the word while we are exhorted to grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.18 And thus a man may be said to grow while he is lying on his death bed and while he is in the most languishing condition for even then he can elicit some vital acts and bring forth some f●uits of life and yet it would be thought a strange paradox to affirm that such were in a (f) And the instance of plants under the nipping blasts of the winter when the fruit and leaves fall off brought by that Author overturneth his conclusion for though then there be a tendency to growth yet there is no acttual growing but a d●cay growing condition there is no proper growth but when the habit fountain and principle doth receive an addition and increase But 4. what ever be said as to a total cessation from all acts of spiritual life and to an universal withdrawing of all assisting grace though a Saint under the most dreadfull storms and while he is at his lowest were never such an empty vine as to bring forth no fruit and though at no time he were so far deserted as to have all measure of assistance for every spiritual duty withheld yet there may be a total suspension of influence and assistance in reference to some particular performance and that it may be
so in the present case is too apparent and thus some (g) Mr ●ildersh●n● on Ps 51. Mr. Love Tre●t of mortification Divines observe that all the w●●l David wallowed in the mire and till he repented of his murder and adultery his mouth wa● shut and he could not pray and therefore after he had bewailed his sins he begs that God would open his lips and would uphold and streng then him with his free Spirit Psa 51.15 12. Guilt upon the conscience will make the sinner speechless when he comes before the Lord ah what can the rebell say who purposeth to go on in his rebellion dare he say and what el●e can he say Lord though I purpose to break thy holy commandments and to provoke thee to thy face yet withdraw not thy Spirit be not angry pardon my sin c. or if any had the impudence thus to mock the holy Lord would any imagine that the holy Spirit did help and assist him in such an hypocritical bold and foolish performance And since the Spirit may thus be provok't totally to withdraw his help and assistance as to our spiritual sacrifice and the offering up of our desires to God we need not descend to particulars for all that actual help and concurrence with the several steps thereof (h) Vid. loc 337. seq mentioned Part. 1. Chap. 9. may be denied and for a season withheld and suspended It would be here observed that this suspension of the assistance of the Spirit may fall under a twofold consideration 1. as our tryal 2. as our punishment For though he Lord doth not withdraw his Spirit but from sinners yet not alwayes for sin though we be guilty and sin may be called the (i) Causa sine qua non dispositiva imo meritoria cause and occasion of desertion that which of it self deserveth this sad stroke and makes us lyable to this sore trial for in heaven when we shall be free of sin there shall be no night nor ecclipses there shall be no complaint for the want of the influences and the light of this Sun yet the Lord doth not alwayes pursue a quarrel and for our sins withdraw his Spirit but for some other high and holy ends 1. the Lord like a Physitian will take down the body and draw blood to prevent the disease thus the Lord did so far withdraw his assistance from Paul as to suffer the messenger of Sathan to buffet him to prevent Spiritual pride and that he might not be exalted through the abundance of revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 2. As a teacher and instructer of his people he will withdraw his help to teach and warn them of their own weakness and inability and the need they stand in of a continual supply from the fountain thus Peter in the hour of temptation was so far deserted and left that he denied his Master thrice and with an oath Mat. 26.70.72 74. 3. As a soveraign Lord and Master (k) Mat. 20.15 who may do what he will with his own he will withdraw his Spirit for the trial of his honest servants and to give the world a proof and evidence of the reality and strength of their graces thus Job was left to Sathans buffering from within and without as if God had set him up as a mark at which he would shoot all his arrows Job 7.20 so that his soul choosed and had he not been by a secret hand of providence upheld would have embraced strangling and death rather then life ver 15. And yet the Lord all the while was not pleading any controversie against Job but rather offering him to the trial that his sincerity and uprightness might be brought to the light and made more manifest and that we hearing of his patience might learn to imitate it and seeing the issue and period the Lord put to his trial might be encouraged in the day of our trouble Job 1.8 Job 2.3 Jam. 5.11 But 4. though the Spirit doth not (l) Quod ad tritum illud Augustini Prosperi Deus neminem deserit nisi prius deseratur ab ipso Intelligi potest vel de desertione totali finali vel de desertione castigatoria ae quasi paenali si loquamur de homine lapso certum est omnem hominem ●ut loquitur Did. Aluarez de auxil div disp 58. sect 7. prius deseruisse Deum per peccatum actuale v●l orignale quam Deus illum deserat alwaies yet often and most usually he withdraweth for sin according to that threatning 2 Cor. 5.2 If ye forsake him he will (m) Not only in respect of outward blessings prosperity prorection c. but also in respect of inward and sanctifying grace withdrawing both the one and the other forsake you Our kind Father will withdraw and hide his face from his own children when they become unkind and undutifull and then desertion is a paternal chastisement and undutifull and then (n) But rather negative then positive and if we would speak strictly it is rather the suspension of an act but in that it doth flow from the holy counsel and appointment of God we may in respect of its original seu causaluer call it an act u● loquamur cum vulgo act not of meer soveraignty but rather of justice though not pure and vindictive but rather paternal and castigatory and mixed with much love and tending to our good profit and amendment Heb. 12.10 And thus there are as it were four kinds of substractions and withdrawings of the influence of the Spirit viz. 1. medicinal cau●ionary and for preventing of sin 2. monitory and doctrinal 3. probatory exploratory and for trial albeit the former two also in some general sense may go under this name and be said to be for tryal which thus is opposed to punishment which falls under the last sort of desertion which is 4. castigatory and as it were penal and by way of chastisement for sin we will not further prosecute the difference let us only observe that as it is more honourable and comfortable for the Saints to be cast into this furnace then to cast themselves into it to suffer according to the will of God then for their sin So usually there is some one or other circumstance and ingredient in the trial it self that hath much love in it or is some kind of mitigation and extenuation of that sad stroke or some thing in the issue for the greater advantage and establishment of such as have been under the trial thus Paul though buffeted by Sathan yet not foiled but keeps his ground though he was left to wrestle with the temptation yet not to become a prey to it and though Peter fell foully and most deplorably yet he was not left in the mire but instantly recovered by Christs look and though Jobs trial was very sore yet the issue was very glorious and comfortable But though the Lord thus may for holy ends known to
himself but alwaies for the good of his honest servants withdraw his Spirit in some measure from these who have not by their negligence or folly procured it they being most regular and exemplar in their walk yet 1. since most usually the Lord withdraws for sin and 2. since we alwaies deserve and may if the Lord would deal in justice with us by our failings provoke the holy Spirit to depart and forsake us and 3. Since the Lords high and holy ends and designs are secret and cannot well at the first view be discerned by us therefore it is alwaies our duty and should be our work when we meet with straitning deadness c which are the symptoms of the Spirits withdrawing to search after our waies and to examin our hearts that if our conscience condemn us not we may be comforted or having found out the cause and the particular sin for which the Spirit hath withdrawn we may repent and forsake it but we would not rest on a superficial veiw of our waies nor because we cannot at the first discern therefore conclude there is no cause in us but let us according to Elihu his counsel to Job say unto God that which I see not teach thou me Job 34.32 Let us impartially deal with our own heart and ask conscience and set it a work let us again ponder our waies and let our enquiry be more particular and of a larger extent and readily we will espie one of the following causes to have procured and brought on this malady and will perhaps be forced with him (o) Tu me non deseris nisi prior ego te deseram August tom 9. s●liloq cap. 14. fol. mihi 166. sto say Lord thou didst not leave me till I first left thee And thus we come to the second thing propounded what are these sins for which the Spirit is provok't to withdraw and forsake the Saints and not help them in prayer or any other spiritual performance at least not in such a measure or maner as formerly But it would be remembred that this question must be limited to the fourth and last case viz. when the Spirit doth hide his face for sin and when our iniquities separat between us and our God as Isa 59.2 For in the three former Cases when the Lord for our trial and for high and holy ends known to his majesty doth depart albeit then it be our duty to search and enquire whether by our folly we have procured that stroke that seeing our fault we may amend our waies and how ever we may walk more closely and circumspectly and follow after him while he withdraweth from us yet then no such cause can be discerned and found out because as is supposed the Lord in that dispensation doth not pursue a quarel against us 2. We would distinguish between the comforting presence of the Spirit and his quickning and strengthning presence there may be much life vivacity activity fervency and heart-melting in prayer or any other ordinance when through the want of assurance the Saints may mourn and pour out many a sad complaint before the Lord now albeit both those cases belong to the general head of desertion and have some place here in reference to prayer since our enlargement in that duty doth not a little depend upon and might be much promoved by the assurance of our adoption reconciliation and God's favour yet since there needeth nothing be here added to what belongs to the general case we shall remit that part of the question that concerneth the comforting presence of the Spirit to its own place and now only speak of the causes why the Spirit withdraws his help and assistance especially since the causes and cure both of the one and the other will be found the same and alike if not altogether yet for the most part as the Spirit useth to withdraw his comforting when he withdraweth his quickning presence So what means would be used for recovering the quickning may also prove instrumental for regaining the Spirits comforting presence albeit the one may prevent the other and the Spirit may for a while quicken and assist before be comfort Before we descend to particulars it would be observed that the holy Spirit may be provok●t to depart 1. more directly immediatly and by way of affront as when any indignity is immediatly offered to his majesty and holiness or to his work 2. mediatly as it were and indirectly by way of demerit when through our folly we transgress any of the commandments of God and thus more directly sin against him as Law-giver King and Lord rather then as our helper and comforter And here we shall especially speak of the (p) Yet not excluding the second nor denying its-influence in these provocations first sort of causes as being most proper to this place referring the other to the following Section As to the first the Scripture holds forth the unkindness affronts and indignities offered to the Spirit of God under several expressions as of 1. (q) 1 Thess 5.19 quenching 2. (r) Eph. 4.30 grieving 3. (ſ) Isa 7.13 wearying 4. (t) Ps 78.56 provoking 5. (u) Act. 5.9 tempting 6. (x) Act. 7.51 resisting 7. (y) Isa 63.10 vexing 8. (z) Isa 63.10 rebelling against and 9. doing (a) Heb. 10.29 despite unto the Spirit of grace We will not enter upon an explication of these phrases nor particularly enquire after their importance or diffirence but we may at the first view take notice of some kind of gradation from the less to the greater for the most part if not in all according to the order they are here placed and albeit there must be an inequality for according to the measure and degree of the offence the provocation must be the less or the greater yet all and every one of these indignities in whatsoever degree doth deserve and may justly provoke the Spirit to depart but we shall now only instance some few particulars as being the most ordinary and the epidemical distempers of this generation and we shall name them as so many branches of the first head viz. quenching the Spirit which being most general may well be extended to the several particulars As (b) That we may improve the me●aphor and fimilitude used by the holy Ghost fire may be quenched either by with-holding fewel and matter whereon it should feed or by casting water upon it to choak and extinguish it so the Spirit may be said to be quenched either negatively by not cherishing or positively by opposing and abasing his office or work either by omission or by commission 1. Then negatively the Spirit may be quenched these three maner of waies 1. by not opening to him and yielding to his motions thus while Christ came to the spouse door knocking and crying open to me my sister my love my dove my und-filed c. She holds him out pretending trifling excuses for her folly and unkindness why she
prayer and supplication may be for a season totally withdrawn but though the Saints be seldom laid so low yet there may be a partial departure accompanied with many sad effects which may easily be discerned if we reflect upon the several fruits of the Spirit mentioned Part. 1. Chap. 9. and those infirmities which he helpeth and removeth if then 1. thou dost not so prepare thy heart to seek the Lord if 2. thy ends be not so pure and spieitual if 3. thou art unwillingly drawn as it were to the throne rather by the enforcement of conscience then out of love to the duty if 4. thou pray not so frequently nor 5. so fervently and feelingly nor 6. so confidently nor 7. with such complacency and delight if 8. thy communion with God in that ordinance hath not such influence upon thy heart to warm and quicken it and to engage it for the Lord and against sin as sometimes it hath had c. it is an argument that the Spirit hath in part withdrawn It s true the most watchfull and zealous Saints do not alwaies and without interruption enjoy the comforting quickning presence of the Spirit the wind doth not constantly blow after one the same maner upon the most fruitful garden therefore we must not measure our state by some present indisposition unless there be some notable considerable and abiding decay and abatement of our spiritual life but when that is observed we have reason to mourn and to lay to heart our loss and the greater and more eminent and longer continued we should be the more affected and sensible of this evil what a misery and sad judgment was it to Sampson and Saul to have but the common gifts and operations of the Spirit removed from them for as we may suppose Saul never to have had So Sampson never to have been totally deprived of the saving and sanctifying presence of the Spirit we may read their lamentation Jud. 16.28 30. 1 Sam. 28.15 And what is the chiefest measure of gifts and common priviledges and excellencies in respect of the least portion and degree of grace Ah! do not then sit down content when the breathings of the Almighty are withdrawn but go and cry to the (n) Cant. 4.16 north wind to awake and to the south wind to come and (o) If the wind blow not thy ship cannot come to the haven but being tossed to and fro by contrary tides is left to be a prey to pirats blow upon thy garden that the spices thereof may flow out go in faith ye have a promise for your encouragment the Father will give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Luk. 11.13 We will not insist on directions but reserving those in great part to the following Section let us now remember that if the unclean spirit return after he hath been cast out and find the house empty and swept he will enter in again and lay claim to his former possession Mat. 12.44 Nay though the house be not totally desolate yet so much room as he findeth empty he will seek to possess so far as the Spirit withdraweth so much the nearer Sathan approacheth if the Spirit withdraw his holy motions Sathan will improve the advantage and will fill the heart with vain idle impertinent and sinfull motions as Pirats may easily surprize the ship when the Pilot is gone So having entred it and finding it empty they will not fail to loaden and fill it with their trash and stoln wares Sect. 2. What may be the cause of that deadness and indisposition and these wandring thoughts that arise in the heart upon the Spirits departure and what course should be taken for removing this evil and for recovering and maintaining the presence of the Spirit and a praying frame and disposition Psa 81.11 12. But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me So I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels Hos 4.11 Whoredom and wine and new wine take away the heart IF the Sun be set and leave our hemisphere it must be night with us and darkness must cover the face of our earth if the soul be separated from the body the man must be dead and coldness must seize upon the liveless carrion So if the Spirit which is our Sun and life depart what darkness deadness and emptiness must be in the soul But as if it were too little to be dead and destitute of life foolish sinners will kill themselves and harden yet more the heart which already is harder then the adamant or flint and when the sun goeth down they will shut the doors and windows yea and pull out their own eyes that they may not see and thus as Seducers in respect of a total privation of life are said to be (a) Jude 12. twice dead So the Saints themselves many a time in respect of their partial deadness and the gradual departure of the Spirit of life may be said to be twice hardned blinded and indisposed for duty Not only doth sin provoke the holy Spirit to depart and thus morally and by way of demerit it stops the fountain of life but also by its poison and venomous nature it doth pollute and infect the heart it leaveth such a blot and tincture upon the soul as disposeth it for blindness and deadness Sin is not only of it self and formally opposit to grace but it maketh upon the heart as it were efficiently such a contrary impression to grace and matterially indisposeth it for a communion with God and spiritual exercises and thus stealeth and taketh a way the heart Hos 4.11 And albeit every sin hath more or less of this malignant quality in it yet their be some sins which in a special maner do produce this wofull effect after which we shall now enquire having in the preceding Section spoken of the former head viz. of the withdrawing of the Spirit and of these sins which did most directly and immediatly bring on that sad stroke but there being such a connexion between our deadness and the departure of the Spirit of life and the causes and cure of (b) Viz. of the with drawing of the Spirit and of our deadness and indisposition for duty both those evils being much alike and the same we may without any culpable confusion here speak to those joyntly especially since we referred to this place one sort of those (c) Viz those causes which did not so directly and by way of indignity and contempt of his office and work but rather condignly and by way of demerit prrooke the Spirit to depart causes which did provoke the Spirit to depart Before we speak of the remedy we will search after the causes which we shall rather name then enlarge and insist on at any length First then as to the causes of deadness indisposition and wandring thoughts in prayer for all these cursed branches may spring
to the great King 10. Wilt thou also guard the outward senses 11. Wilt thou look after the frame of thy heart and first give a discharge to distracting objects before thou come before the throne Wilt thou choose the fittest season for calling upon God 12. Wilt thou be more frequent in thy adresses to God And 13 Wilt thou be more serious not giving way to laziness and formality 14. Wilt thou labour to keep thy conscience clear having a constant respect to all the commandments and hating every sinfull way yea and the very garment spotted by the flesh 15. Will ye not walk in the counsel of the ungodly yea nor stand in the way of sinners 16. Will ye watch against the wiles of the devil and resist his temptations 17. Will ye take heed least ye grieve the holy Spirit by dallying with his motions and ordinances c. And Will ye observe these qualifications of an acceptable prayer of which we spake Part. 2. and applied several of them to this present case If ye have come this length there are but a few things which I would now further add for compleating the cure of a dead heart and for holding out wandring thoughts in prayer but before I name those other directions I would premise these two things concerning what we have here said as to the removing the former impediments and obstructions and what we are now to add further by way of remedy 1. ye would remember that the Spirit must (m) The Spirit may be present operatively where he is not present sensibly help you to put these directions in practice else they will serve to little purpose he must help you to take the right course for getting his help and must work what ye are directed to do else your endeavours will be fruitless and yet ye must so (n) Our inability must not be pretended as a cloak for our negligence we have received strength which we should improve waiting for the help of the Spirt apply your selves to perform these things and to follow those or such like directions as if ye stood in need of no help and as if of your selves ye could carry on the work and when thou art acting to the utmost of thy strength thou mayst expect a sensible manifestation of the Spirits assistance 2. We must not think that the most active and diligent Saints do alwaies enjoy the quickning presence of the Spirit this state of our pilgrimage is not for a constant abode and the Spirit is a free agent the wind bloweth where it listeth that thou mayest learn not to ascribe thy enlargements to thine own activity and diligence though none but active zealous and circumspect Christians are lively and enlarged in duty as to any constancy or considerable measure yet they do not alwaies enjoy the same influences nor are alike enlarged but though vivacity in duty may thus for a while be lost to thee yet if it be not lost by thee as it will not be reckoned unto thee as being procured through thy fault and negligence So neither will it marre thy after-comfort and enlargement if the Spirits withdrawing be not penal though it be for thy exercise and tryal yet it needs not discourage thee it shall not hinder thy acceptance nor the success and prevalency of thy prayers but if thou procure this stroke through thy folly and sloth and if thou rest and sit down under it securely not being affected with it as not being much concerned in that dispensations if thou do not lay thy deadness to heart and labourest not to be rid of that burden such a sleeping Jonah may fear a storm from the Almighty to awaken him Now come we to these other directions 1. if you would have your heart enlarged in duty labour to get your heart inflamed with love to your Master and his work if ye (o) Vbi est amor non est labor sed sopor Bern. came in love ye would stay with delight when love is the cord that draws any together they will not weary in the mutual fellowship and society of one another but as there will be a longing in absence So a delight and contentment in presence and enjoyment and what makes the husbands presence so uncomfortable to the adulterous wife but want of love love is an uniting affection and pretend what we will the want of love to God is the cause why we weary at his work and in his company for the heart not being fixed by the bond of love nor arrested by delight it gads abroad and would be rid of the duty as of a wearisom burden hence wandring thoughts break in and the duty is marred but in heaven when we shall see God face to face and love him perfectly we shall not weary of his fellowship unto all eternity We will not digress to speak to these motives which may serve to quicken our love but certainly if we loved the Lord as we should we could not it would be an insupportable burden to stay out of his company and we would sooner part with our life then abandon his fellowship and Daniel would let others know that he served such a master as he would not be ashamed to own and go unto notwithstanding all their cruelty and threatnings Dan. 6.10 If the Lord be kind to David and his love of God be sincere then this must be the conclusion that must needs follow (p) The illation seemeth rather to be founded upon his love to to God then the benefits he had received from God though both be named there therefore will he call upon God as long as he liveth Ps 116.1 2. hence also flowed his gladness to go to the hous● of the Lord Ps 122.1 and would he then readily weary while he was in it 2. When thou find'st thy heart indisposed and that deadness hath already seized on it before we set upon the duty we would stir up and awaken our dull and sleepy spirits and rouse them from their drousiness saying to our soul with Deborah when she was employed in praising God Judg. 5.12 awake awake O my sleepy soul awake awake and draw nigh to the provok't King for thy lif● liberty provision protection c. We will not prescribe the several heads of meditation there being here so many several topicks which may with great variety be improven to this purpose only in the general let me entreat that choice may be made of such considerations as may serve most to quicken 1. the sense of thy indigence misery and hazard and thus 2. what may most humble thee and make thee see thy own vileness and insufficiency for doing so great a work 3. what may most inflame thy heart with love to God and his service and 4. what may most quicken thy diligence and activiity while David was thus employed he found life come in to his joynt When I was musing saith he the fire burned Ps 39.3 and then he goes
commend this practice which yet did very much evidence their zeal offered themselves to the flames and though thousands from day to day did suffer yet the number of professors did daily encrease The (i) Sanguis martyrum semen ecclesia ashes of the Martyrs becoming the seed of the Church many strangers did then come in who seeing the zeal and courage of Christians joyned with them in their sufferings owning Christ and his Gospel in these cruel and bloody times but alas how few in our dayes would abide the tryal a little storm would make the multitude of professors to renounce and disown their old Master with whom they resolved to stand but not for him to fall and shall we make such our copy and think it enough to do as they do A third direction is this converse with the Saints their company and society may be very quickning it s not good for the sick to be alone the company of friends may then be very usefull comfortable and refreshing but especially dead Saints may be profited by the society of their living brethren spiritual conference flowing from sincerity experience sense tenderness c. is very qu●ckning and enlivening (k) Ferrum ferro acuricur as iron sharpeth iron So the Saints the countenance of their friends Prov. 27.17 How did the hearts of the two disciples going to Emaus burn within them at Christs heavenly discourse Luk. 24.32 N●y the Spirit of God may come upon a (l) 1 Sam. 10.10 Saul when among the Prophets such may find a temporary work upon their heart and shall a S●int among the S●ints meet with no heavenly impression When they that fea●ed the Lord spake one to another the Lord dr●w ●igh and hearkned and would he come without a blessing Mal. 3.16 While the Disciples were communing about Christs sufferings himself drew near and met them Luke 24.15 and he will never be far from those who are thus employed and such while alone shall not as he said of himself John 16.32 be left alone his spirit will come and visit them Mat. 18.20 When Christ is the subject of our conference he will be an associar and assistant Ah! that Saints now a dayes should be such strangers to this prom●sing exercise and this is one and not the least of the causes why the Saints of old did so far exceed us in z●al activity life and tenderness they could scarce meet together and see one another in the face without a word concerning their beloved but how do we blush to speak of maters of soul concernment lest we should be judged to be hypocrites singular busie-bodies and I know not what I will say no more now but there will be found to be here a mutual causality when Christ is near the heart he will not readily be far from the mouth and again the lips will affect the heart and heavenly discourse will make an impression there 4. Attend the ordinances of life diligently as faith (m) Rom. 10.17 cometh so it is strengthned by hearing though private ordinances must not be slighted yet a special blessing may be expected on Word Sacrament and the publick Ministry our graces comforts strength activity and enlarg●ment are all conveyed through the same channel and if the Word could beget a flash of joy in Herod Ma●k 6.20 if it could quicken and as it were soften that flinty heart will it not make a more deep and lively impression upon a (n) Ezek. 11.19 heart of flesh If the Word can thus beget heat where there was no fire will it not far rather blow up those coals which are already kindled 5 If we would be fervent in spirit let us not be sl●thfull in business Rom. 12.11 Though we must be carefull for nothing Phil. 4.6 yet we must not be idle and negligent he who will not work should not eat 2 Thes 3 10. Immoderate excessive and distrustfull care choaks the spirit as too much oyl the flame and yet moderate care in the fa●●hfull discharge of our particular calling is a notable help against sleep and drowsiness and a preservative against infection as in the body the humours will putrifie without motion and will beget dangerous diseases So the faculties of the soul when not imployed will contract rust and become unfit for action and when they are not set a work either in religious exercises or the duties of our calling Sathan will readily improve the occasion and imploy them in his (o) Nihil agend● homines m●le agero di●cunt work an idle man tempts the d●vil to tempt him Idleness as (p) O●ium pulvinar Satanae 〈◊〉 alesicii principium apud R●us sym inter part 1 sym 53. Otia dant v●tia 〈…〉 one saith is Sathans reposing be● and the mother of all wickedness Ah! this in great part is the cause both of the outward and spiritual poverty of many in this Land who being askt as Iosephs brethren were be Pharaoh 2 Gen. 47.3 What is your occupation could return no other answer but that they were Gentle-men as if by their birth they were licentiated to be idle and to follow no calling or occupation yea and as if a calling would be a reproach to them and a disparagment to their ancestors and education whileas truly and according to Aristophanes his verdict a (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristo●han apud Reu● loc c●● life of idleness better becometh beasts then men and as (r) Ego inquit Cyrus Xenophonteus arbitror decere principem ante ire subditis non vita deside laborum experte sed eo quod ribus provideat laboresque lubenter subeat Reus ibid symb 30. Cyrus said it is more noble and Prince-like to excell and go before others in activity diligence and pains then in sloth idleness and luxury And O! if such would consider that idleness was one of the crying sins of Sodom Ezek. 16.49 Time is too precious a talent to be hid in a napkin and being once past cannot be recalled are potest nullo perbreve tempus emi no gold nor money can buy and redeem it Thus you see how ye should prepare for and come to the work now let us add some few directions which may help to quicken us while we are at the Throne 7. Then limit your heart to the duty and (ſ) Now labour to put in practice that resolution of which direct 5. arrest it at the present work lift up your heart to God and settle it upon him suffer it not to look down to the world or gad about lay a restraint upon thy vain roaving and unstable mind repelling without dispute and inquisition every suggestion and impertinent thought not asking whence or for what it came yea though upon the mater and otherwise it were never so good and necessary yet reject it then with indignation as being unseasonable and coming to interrupt thee while thou art speaking to the great King Albeit such pretended friends
faint not Gal. 6.9 they that wait upon the Lord they shall mount up with wings as eagles they shall run and not be weary and they shall walk and not faint Isa 40.31 O! then wouldst thou have strength and be kept from fainting wait upon the Lord in the use of the means and though for a short moment the trial continue yet be not discouraged hearken to the exhortation and promise Psa 27.14 Wait on the Lord be of good courage and he shall strengthen thy heart wait I say on the Lord Isa 41.10 fear thou not for I am with thee be not dismaid for I am thy God I will strengthen thee yea I will help thee yea I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness saith the Lord. O! do not then quench the Spirit by thy dejection and negligence do not sit down and mourn when thou art called to work but stir (h) 2 Tim. 1.6 up the grace of God that is in thee blow up the coals there is heat within and the help of the Spirit may be at hand though thou do not discern it the wind bloweth when and where it listeth Joh. 3.8 But we must press this point a little more fully in the following Section Sect. 3. Whether our deadness doth excuse our negligence and whether we should pray when we are unfit and indisposed and what will be the issue and success of those prayers that want life and fervency and which are pestred with wandring thoughts Isa 64.7 There is none that calleth upon thy name that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee c. 2 Cor. 8.12 If there be a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath c. WE would not think it worth the while to confute those dreaming Sectaries who plead that we should not draw nigh to God till he send out his Spirit and till we sensibly find some impression from heaven drawing and inviting us to come to the throne but since weak Christians may meet with the like temptations we shall labour briefly to take out of their way that stumbling block and to shew them that their very deadness and indisposition is ground enough for them to draw nigh to the Physitian that they may be healed so far is it from being an obstruction and impediment or a plea for our negligence and omission of duty 1. Because one sin cannot be a plea for another now our deadness and indisposition is our sin and therefore must not be alledged as a reason for our neglect of prayer which is our duty as well as our priviledge 2. This were the ready way to Atheism and to cast behind us all the ordinances of life and to abandon them for ever for if thou be unfit to day and upon that account liest by thou will readily be more unfit to morrow and so from time to time the longer thou stayest away from God the distance will be the greater till at length it become an easie and tolerable burden to continue in that state omission of duty will prove a bad preparation for it but thus thou wilt contract an habit of idleness which thou wilt not easily cast off 3. If thou do not resolve to mock God and slight his work but wilt stir up the little strength thou hast waiting upon the breathings and assistance of his Spirit though thou wert never so weak and indisposed thy oblation coming from a willing mind and according to what thou hast it will be accepted in Christ who pittieth thy weakness and will not reject thy supplication upon the account of thy bewailed infirmities and thou needest not doubt whether such a prayer be more acceptable then no prayer nor ask whether it were better not to pray then to pray no better For it is granted on all hands that the very moral vertues of Pagans were more acceptable then the want of them and that those workers of moral righteousness were less guilty then those other Pagans who omitted them Hence we may well argue from (a) A pari the like that thy performance of duty must be more acceptable then the omission of it especially since there must be some life in thy work if a Saint though weak while there was none in theirs and thou being in Christ through whom thy imperfections will be pardoned and done away 4. The Spirit may draw insensibly he may be present effectively where he is not feelingly he may be stirring up the heart to the duty though thou dost not discern his motion and his help and assistance may be at hand when thou art ready to apprehend he is farthest off and have not the Saints many a time brought a heavy dejected and complaining spirit to the throne and yet have gone away rejoycing and triumphing over their fears and unbelief As the book of Psalms can afford many instances The way of the Lord is strength to the upright Prov. 10.29 The Lord useth to meet them that work righteousness and remember him in their waies Isa 64.5 When we are following our duty and improving the ordinances we lie in Christs way and he will not shut his eyes but will at length pity and heal such weak and impotent ones I may then say unto thee concerning the use of prayer and other ordinances as David did to Solomon in reference to the building of the Temple 1 Chr. 22.16 Arise therefore and be doing and the Lord be with thee 5. Ah! where shall the sick go but to the Physitian What should a troubled spirit do if it may not draw nigh to God for healing comfort and life The Lord commands us to call upon him in the day of trouble and hath promised to hear and deliver us Psa 50.15 and who is he that dare forbid us and threaten wrath while he thus promiseth to pity and show mercy and what trouble is there that is comparable to soul-trouble and what weakness and infirmity is like to a wounded spirit labouring under the fetters bondage captivity under which it hath cast it self by its folly sin and negligence and shall it be to no purpose for such a one to lay out his straits and weakness to God 6. The Lord complaineth when we will not call on him and stir up our selves to lay hold on him Isa 64.4 and will he chide and challenge us when we stir up our hearts to close with him and look up to the throne of mercy (k) Metaphera qua Paulus utitur sumpta est ab igne exiguo vel qui paulatim extingueretur nisi flabellum subiude admovendo lignum novum ingerendo vires resumeret ac flammam proinde meminerimus in usum applicanda esse dona Dei nerubiginem o●losa suppressa contrahaut Calvin in loc and do not say thou wantst the Spirit to help thee as if thou durst not go when thou art not sure of his assistance for he hath promised to give his Spirit to them that ask him
less Nam licet ex duobus malis culpa neutrum paenae tamen minimum est eligendum All the controversie then seems to stand in this Whether we may pray for any evil either of sin or suffering for to one of those two heads may every evil be referred relatively and in reference to some good and necessary end That though neither of these two be good and desirable of themselves yet since God by them and from them may bring good to us and may make them means to humble us and to cause us walk more circumspectly may we not desire and pray for them in so far as they may be subservient to such an end Ans We needed not have moved such a question were it not that some weak Saints upon a mistake may be ready to pray thus for some rod or affliction and that the great school-man (d) Non est intrinsece malum petere hujusmodi mala vel sibi vel aliis nam haec mala erunt simpliciter bona si honesta ratione propter finem simplii●ter bonum appetantur Fatetur tamen hunc m●dum orandi fortasse non esse omnibus consulendum cum ipso Paulus ter Dominum rogaveritue stimulo carnis affligeretur Suar. loc cit lib. 1. cap. 19. Suarez affirmeth that we may desire and ask thus not only evils of suffering both to our selves and others but also temptations As for his arguments they deserve no reply and he makes it his work neither to prove nor vindicat but to explain and illustrat this his assertion But for establishing a right directory of prayer and for preventing a mistake of the weaker we shall 1. bring some arguments for confirmation and then 2. answer such objections as we conceived might readily occur or become an occasion of errour and because the main question will be concerning afflictions for few or none I think will be so impudent as to affirm that we should desire or pray for strength to sin albeit Suarez doth mention temptations to sin amongst those evils he affirmeth we may pray for and speaks of Pauls temptation 2 Cor. 12. as a thing he might have desired therefore we shall speak at greater length of suffering and affliction and only add a word concerning sin and temptations to sin Arg. 1 First As for reasons 1. that which we may deprecat and pray against that can be no fit material and object of prayer but we may deprecat rods and afflictions and pray according to that perfect pattern Mat. 6.13 that we may be (e) How we may and should deprecat evils both of fin and suffering See Mr. Gurnal loc cis pag. 491. seq delivered from evil of whatsoever nature whether of sin or suffering and our Lord Jesus who knew well what to ask what to deprecat not only thus teacheth us by his doctrine and that copy he hath left us but also by his example to deprecat the cup of suffering and affliction Mat. 26.39 I deny not that the Lord can and often doth sanctifie the furnace to his children but they themselves must not choose nor cast themselves into that furnace but if the Lord determine their particular trial and call them in his wise providence to encounter it they should not faint nor repine but should submit to the dispensation and look up to God for the right and sanctified use of it and for some good of and fruit by the trial but that not being the proper and inseparable effect of the rod and the Lord being able by mercies to work the same yea and without any outward dispensation by the immediat operation of the Spirit on the heart why should we make choice of such a rough and troublesom way and take a bitter potion and draw blood when pleasant cordials will do the turn Hence Arg. 2 2. That which is of it self bitter and evil and frequently accompanied with a bad effect and driveth the soul farther from God and to take wicked and desperat courses that cannot be an object of a regular and reasonable desire and as it must flow from inconsideratness So it would appear to take its rise from our pride and a conceit of our own strength to improve the rod aright and to make a better use of it then others who have miscarried under it but humble and considerat Christians would remember how the rod made that King immediatly after his sackcloth 2 King 6.30 to fall upon this desperat conclusion ver 33. this evil is of the Lord what should I wait for the Lord any longer How it sent Saul once (f) 1 Sam. ●0 9.10 among the Prophets to the witch at Endor and at length made him fall upon his own sword 1 Sam. 28.8 1 Sam. 31.4 And how often it made the people of Israel in the wilderness to murmur and rebel against the Lord nay as many rods and tryals as they were exercised with so often did they miscarry and provoke the Lord. Arg. 3 3. Arg. 3. For with-holding and removing of which we should praise and give thanks to God that we may not desire and pray for but it is our duty to praise God for with-holding deserved judgments and keeping our (g) Job 5.24 tabernacle in peace and accordingly the Saints from time to time have made conscience to perform this duty and it is a provoking sin not to acknowledge his bounty nor ascribe to him the praise of these outward mercies and for which he is often provoked to remove them in wrath Hence Arg. 4 4. That which is a token of divine displeasure and of it self the bitter fruit of sin ought not be made the object of our desire and prayer but rods and afflictions are such and do call us to fasting and mourning and to run to the Lord by fervent prayer entreating that he would remove those tokens of his wrath according to the exhortation Psa 50.15 Jam. 5.13 c. And when the Saints remember their former enjoyments Job chap. 29. they look upon them as great mercies and their present affliction as a sore and sad tryal and oh saith Job that I were as in moneths past as in the dayes when God preserved me c. 5. That which we may not procure nor bring on but on the contrary should labour and strive against and use all lawfull means for with-holding when it 's feared and removing when it 's felt Arg 5 and causeth (h) I think few will joyn with Mr Collings in his cordials Part 2. Serm. 11. where he seemeth to candemn all disquietment of spirit all sorrow and trouble for external and temporal things as sinfull unless by sorrow he understand the excess and distemper of that affection which was acted by Christ purely and without sin Mat. 26.38 as for his reason viz. that our nature is so corrupt that we cannot act such a sorrow but we shall sin If it were concludent here it would as well conclude the acting of
sentence and (n) Colos 2 hand-writing that was against thee is taken out of the way and nailed to the cross of Christ so that now thy name shall no more be found in that dreadful catalogue of such as are fitted for destruction for they who are thus left and finally forsaken of God he gives them over to a reprobat mind Rom. 1.28 and giveth them up unto vile affections and to their own hearts lusts and suffers them to walk in their own courses Rom. 1.26 Psal 81.12 he gives them over to be a prey to Sathan and to (o) Eph. 2.2.2 Cor. 4.4 walk according to the course of the world according to the prince of power of the air the spirit that worketh mightily in the children of disobedience c. Since then this is not now thy case nor course thou mayst be confident that by the grace of God thou hast escaped out of that wofull snare and now what needs discourage thee There is no sin nor condition though never so desperat that can exclude the penitent from mercy yea not the sin against the holy Ghost which is unpardonable not because it is greater then the mercy of God or as if there were not worth enough in Christs blood to be a ransom for it but because the Lord in his righteous judgment doth finally forsake all them who fall into this blasphemy so that they shall never repent nor seek after a remedy If then thou dost truly repent and turn from thy evil wayes this is a sure evidence that thou art not thus forsaken nor judicially plagued and therefore be of good courage in following thy duty and seeking after a remedy whatever thou hast been none of the sins that thou hast committed shall be mentioned unto thee nor remembred against thee any more Ezek. 18.22 Ezek. 33.16 But 5. albeit the Lord to magnifie the riches of his free grace may shew mercy to the most vile and wretched sinners and pass by moral civil men yet how few are there of the many thousands who being included in the former ranks are lying under that terrible threatning that do partake of the mercy of God You can tell me of Manasseh Paul c. who yet had not such (p) Though Paul if he had been a hearer of Christ and his Apostles might have enjoyed extraordinary moans yet his education and engagement to the sect of Pharisees did deprive him of that light which did then shine among them means of salvation as we nor despised such convincing and soul-converting Ordinances but what are these in respect of the many millions who from time to time have perished under that sentence and judgment What be some six or seven persons among all the men and women of the world who have been thus guilty for the space of four or five thousand years that is but a poor coal for thee O desperatly secure sinner to blow at though Alexander and Julius Caesar did conquer a great part of the world wilt thou therefore expect to do the same if one in an age or countrey who hath lived for a while as thou still dost hath obtained mercy wilt thou therefore presume and think likewise to be saved why dost thou not then also think that thou shalt not taste of death since Enoch and Elias were translated and taken up to heaven nay were it not a strange and admirable thing to see such escape out of the snare how would they be affected when they heard their deplorable state laid out before them and yet they can hear such a dolefull Sermon and be no more affected therewith then the dasks whereon they sit must not such be past feeling and given over to a reprobat mind and yet not a few of such desperat wretches will profess they trust in God and hope to be saved as well as the holiest Saint on earth But whatever be their bold and mad presumption and how litle soever they regard the faithfull warnings they meet with or fear the threatnings and terrors of the Almighty yet to my observation I never knew nor heard of any in my time except three or four who in any eminent degree came under these characters that to the discerning of judicious Christians met with mercy and this admirable dispensation towards them was mater of astonishment to all who heard of it except such desperat wretches as made a cursed use of it encouraging themselves thereby to continue in their wicked wayes But let none mistake what we say we do not we dare not pass a peremptory sentence concerning the state of others especially those whose guiltiness was not so great notour and scandalous and though we know but a few who grosly and palpably came under these marks who did evidence a sensible and considerable measure of saving repentance and in such a case when it is real it will not be small yet we did not deny but the Lord might have a secret work on the hearts of some on their death-bed which he will not make so discernable to others that all may be afraid to follow such a course of life and that none might presume and delay to the end of the day yet since none may limit the Lord Ministers must not turn their back on such as if their case were altogether desperat but they must warn and exhort them commiting the event and success to him who can abundantly pardon and show mercy when and to whom he will But supposing thee who art thus awakned and pricked in heart who art sensible of thy danger and now on the right way to escape to be one of that small number whom the Lord will make a miracle of mercy I have a sixth word and that a very necessary one to thee beware that thou quench not this as former motions of the Spirit Ah! let not this storm be like the noise of thunder terrible for the time but of short continuance and then thou might'st be afraid least there remain no more sacrifice for thy sins but a certain fearfull looking for of judgment and fiery indignation Heb. 10.26 27. because saith the Lord I have purged thee and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee Ezek. 24.13 If then thou be such a one as is supposed thou wilt not thus draw back after the Lord hath begun to awaken and purge thou wilt take no rest till a saving change be wrought in thee and till thou lay hold on the rock of salvation and then with what inlarged affections wilt thou admire and praise the riches of his goodness and mercy who hath pitied and pulled such a desperat sinner out of the snare thou wilt become a new creature indeed and all who know thee will have reason to praise God for thee and from that time forth thou will walk humbly circumspectly and exemplarly thou wilt often look on the skar of thy old wound
word would be added for preventing their mistake for as dogs are ready to snarch the childrens bread so the children may gnaw the bones that are cast to the dogs as the wicked may lay hold on the promise that belongs not to them so the Saints on the threatning which they need not fear while the Master doth frown and is angry with his slothfull and unfaithfull servant the child may tremble and the hand lift up with a stone to be cast at the dog may startle the tender son though those who are concerned in this sad judgement and threatning are not affected nor awaked while they hear their dreadfull doom yet some of the Lords precious ones may tremble and fear lest this be their case therefore 1. I would have such observe that those characters are not to be understood of one or two particular acts but of a course state trade and continuance in such and such sins for what is the particular sin into which the Lords chosen ones yea and after their conversion may not fall 2. That men and women may go a great length and come very nigh the curse and yet escape there is a certain measure in finding which the Lord hath appointed and proportioned for spiritual as well as for temporal judgements which we can hardly define because it is not one and the same to all and every one and the Lord will use some variety and leave us all in the dark here that on the one hand none might presume to continue one day in their sinfull wayes nor to add one sin more to that cursed heap lest that one sin fill up the measure and bring down the judgement and on the other hand that none should despair so long as the Gospel-offer and the means of grace are continued with them and that others might be charitable and not dare to pass a peremptory sentence against any man as to his rejection reprobation and eternal portion 3. The Saints would not forget to put a difference between that partial haraness that remaineth in the heart after it's renovation and conversion and that total and universal hardness of the heart before the grace of God thaw soften and mollifie it and that judicial hardness and induration wherewith the Lord in his judgement plagueth secure sinners while he giveth them up to the lusts of their own heart which is yet worse then the former it being a load above a load for although the godly may complain as of a body of sin and death yet lodging in them so of much dulness and indisposition for spiritual duties and of much deadness and slightness of spirit under melting ordinances and awakening dispensations yet they have reason to praise God yea even then when they are thus mourning and complaining that they are not lying under that total far less the judicial hardness of heart which is both the sin and misery of cast-awayes Rom. 7.24 25. And though the Saints may be brought very low and not meet with that inlargement in prayer which others or they themselves sometimes have had yet the spirit of prayer is not altogether taken from them as from those who are judicially plagued and deserted for though the wind do not so blow nor fill their sails as formerly yet by a secret hand they are still carried on in their way and held in motion and they may find the spirit to press and stir them up to their duty though they do not so sensibly find his help and assistance in the performance of the duty CHAP. III. An exhortation to continue instant in prayer with an answer to objections ALbeit we might well press this exhortation from what hath been here said concerning the certainty of success and the return of prayer yet we have reserved this Chapter rather to be the conclusion of the whole Treatise then of any one Part and in it we shall 1. press 2. vindicat this duty Sect. I. Several motives for pressing the constant and serious practice of this soul-enriching performance Rom. 12.12 continuing instant in prayer Luk. 18.1 And he spake a parable unto them to this end that men ought alwayes to pray and not to faint WHile we divide and thus compare contemplation with action we spoil both of their excellency and perfection their conjunction is sweet and successfull but a divorce is sad and grievous and who would choose either to want his eyes or his hands and therefore though knowledge especially in maters of soul-concernment be one of the most noble perfections whereof we are capable as being a part of the divine (a) Colos 1.10 Image which we lost in Adam and shall at length be perfectly restored by him who said (b) Rev. 21.9 Behold I make all things new Yet if it be not rightly improven if is be empty and not accompanied with a suteable practice action life and conversation it will do us no good but much hurt it may puff us up and make us boast as if we were non-suches 1 Cor. 8.1 it may make us idle and negligent as if it were enough to know something and as if they were the best Christians who know most thus forgetting that that the true Israelites Motto is homage our happiness doth not like the empty mistaken Pagan philosophical speculative dream consist in contemplation we are called to work knowledge will not do the turn it cannot make us happy yea or draw us out of the category of nothing 1 Cor. 13.2 but the more we know if we be idle negligent and unfaithfull the worse we are and our stripes shall be the moe Luk. 12.47 O! ye who would rather be Christians indeed then accounted such and who (c) Joh. 12.43 Rom. 2.29 love the praise of God more then the praise of men would it satisfie you to know the way to salvation if ye did not walk in it or to hear and speak much of God if ye were strangers to a communion with him and lived at a distance from him And what would it profit you though you knew all that could be said concerning the nature qualifications excellency and use of prayer if ye fail and come short as to the practice of it This was the scope whereat we aimed all along this discourse and in every part of it we laboured to hold forth somewhat for our encouragement help and direction herein and therefore all must be lost labour to the slothsfull and negligent and to such as will not make conscience to continue instant in the performance of this sweet soul-ravishing and enriching duty Ah! who is able to hold forth all the motives and arguments that may serve to stir us up here unto And now in the close we shall only name and briefly hint at some few things looking up to him who only can give the blessing who only can perswade and enable us to pray as we ought and who can help us from fainting in our fervent and frequent addresses to the throne