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A80869 An useful tractate to further Christians of these dangerous and back-sliding times, in the practice of the most needful duty of prayer Wherein are discover'd the nature, necessity and successe of fervent prayer: many objections answered, several practical cases of conscience resolved; and all briefly applied from this text, viz. James 5. 16. The effectual fervent-prayer of a righteous man availeth much. Being the substance of several sermons preached in the town of Columpton in Devon. / By William Crompton M.A. minister of that part of Christs Church there. Crompton, William, 1599?-1642. 1659 (1659) Wing C7033; Thomason E2142_2; ESTC R210127 70,200 187

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his thigh was lamed Moses in praying for the people craving leave for himself to enter Canaan how earnest was he with God how doth he work it out The woman in the Gospel was full of this heat Matth. 15.25 She will not be said nay like another Gorgonia she threatens heaven and is modestly impudent and I think it was for that end Christ held her off so long We may see it enjoyned in general Deut. 6.5 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy strength what we do to or for God it must be done cum toto valdè with all our might Pressed and practised in particulars Isa 12.6 Cry out and shout thou inhabitant of Zion Exod. 14.15 Moses cried to the Lord. The Ninevites cry mightily to God Jonah 3.8 It notes the strength of affection Elijah cried earnestly to God Jam. 5.17 Christ as Mediator sent up strong cries to his Father Heb. 5.7 He prayed as he preached He preached 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as one having authority and he prayed likewise powerfully and effectually Paul adviseth the Saints 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to strive together in prayer to God Rom. 15.30 A military word he useth noting such fervency as is for life and de●th as he testifieth of himself that he prayed night and day The Primi●●●● Christians at their services and d●votions with one shoulder were so earnest that they seemed to besiege the Throne of grace to raise a common force and strength to invade and use violence with God in prayer as it is related by Tertullian Apol. 39. In the prosecution of this point I intend this method viz. to ●●ew what prayer and what fervent prayer i● opening and applying the description following Prayer is a fervent expressio● of holy desires to God only by Jesus Christ This is to pray fervently Orationi instare fortiter incumbere Col. 4.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Continue in prayer which implies both intention of minde and assiduity in the exercise First I say it is a fervent expression So much these ordinary tearms used in Scripture do import as calling out of the deep pouring out of the soul and crying to heaven expressed also in other Scriptures 2 Chron. 32.20 Hezekiah the King and Isaiah the Prophet prayed and cried to heaven Luke 18-1 Men ought alwaies to pray and v. 7. the elect cry day and night I shall labour as fully as I can to unfold what I have read and observed touching this fervour in prayer and enquire Qu. 1 First What this fervencie is A. We may conceive the nature of it in these three following branches Ans viz. First It is the very h●at and height of all gracious affections in a Zealous moving o● the soul to God in prayer and for God after prayer where there is no Zeal for him there is little to him and again where there is none to him in our prayers commonly there is none for him in our actions he that is cold in prayer is not hot in any good cause except where self is principle or end Though I do confesse diversity of Degrees in Zeal to God and for God which are diversly manifested and sometimes eclipsed in Gods dearest servants best skill'd and most exercised in prayer Secondly Fervency is the influence and efficacy of the regenerating Spirit of Christ helping his own needy members to pray so as they may be he●●d Rom. 8.26 The spirit helpeth our infirmities 1 Cor. 14.15 I will pray w●●● the Spirit Though you be we k yet the Spirit is willing and strong And so much onely as cometh in our prayers from the renewed part findes accept●●ce with God If the motion be good he will not accept it from an ill mouth nor own these prayers which 〈◊〉 not indited by the Spirit of grace ●nd supplication Thirdly It is a reverently-Zealous manifestation of both the former in words sutable for matter and manner to a renewed mind as may be most beneficiall to the hearers if it be publick the heart is the fountain of this heat and life the tongue is but an instrument and God looks chiefly to the first Moses and Hannah prayed fervently to God and yet spake little or nothing The latter is for mans sake Secondly We enquire when are Qu. 2 men said to be fervent in p●●●er and in dealing with God to use their strength Ans I answer in the ensuing particulars First When they are moved by the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 and 26. compared Ye have received the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father and the Spirit helpeth our infirmities Then a man prayeth with strength when the Spirit helpeth The same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Spirit is attributed both to the Spirit of man and to the holy Ghost or Spirit of God because as that gives motion and operation to the body which of it self could never performe so doth the Spirit of God to those that partake of it Hence of Stephen and others when they performed any notable exploit of grace it is said they were filled with the holy Ghost The heart of man indeed is but as so much cold earth till the Spirit of adoption inflame it and when this is gone all the strength is gone as a wheel that is turned about with an hand if the hand be removed the wheel standeth still The duty is we●k and empty till the Spirit overshadow the soul and then it is a living body We know of old the Symboles of the Spirit were fiery tongues and where this fire is it melts the co●● ice its heavenly flame appears in ●uty As Eliahs body was carried up with a whirlwind and a fiery Chariot to heaven so are gracious souls moved by the Spirit of God in prayer for as its motions are regular in regard of the object so they are vehement in regard of the manner Secondly When men are inwardly heated with a sense and feeling of what they pray for Noahs Ark rose higher as the waters grew higher want will adde sticks to the fire and make the flame more fervent Hence co●e groans unutterable earnest ejaculations like darts shot up to heaven David is an exact pattern for this Psal 42.1 2 3. As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God! my soul thirsteth for God for the living God c. As a child as soon as it comes into the world begins with cries and tears because of its indigency so where there is any spiritual life and heat the first discoveries of it are by sighs and groans Beggars cry earnestly from apprehension of want as the blind man did Luke 18.41 O thou son of David have mercy on me And as the Apostles did Lord save or we perish When a man praies as Rachel whilst she spake to Jacob Give me children or I die or as Hannah 1 Sam. 1.13 who spake in her heart then he is fervent For
wings on which it mounts toward the object desired Holy they must be for Person Principle Matter and End First The Person must be holy Under the Law the Swan which was white in feathers was yet reputed unclean and unmeet for sacrifice because the skin under them was black Religious workings stand in Gods account according to the qualification of the workman either for acceptance or rejection These fervent expressions must come from an holy heart they are not the childe of wit and phantasie but the rapture of an elevated spirit the heavenly dew of a good heart Psal 66.18 If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear my prayer To explain this branch we may enquire fitly First What this holy Heart is Qu. 1 I Answer 1. Ans It is in Scripture discovered to be a broken contrite heart a self-condemning self-crucifying sinne mortifying-heart Prayer comes for mercy and must bring a vessel to hold it and that is a broken heart a paradox in nature but not in grace Deus non infundit oleum miserecordiae nisi in vas contritum the sacrifices of God are a broken spirit An heart that by passing under the hammer of the Law and through the melting fire of the Gospel is divided from the band of sin which is a fruit of that sweet Spirit of grace promised Zach. 12.10 11 12. The Spirit of grace and supplication and whereby they shall look on him whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him c. It hides nothing like a broken vessel le ts all run out opens and spreads all its vilenesse before the Lord As water mire stones heterogeneals which were inseparably congealed in a hard bound frost yet they all lie loose when there comes a kindly thaw so in the heart that was once congealed in the mire and dregs of sin c. and with penitentiall brokennesse is kindly thawed and dissolved the sins that before stuck fast in the soul now lie loose the spirit longs to be rid of them all and so becomes more capacious Broken language if from a broken heart is acceptable 2. It is an humble flexible heart waiting for and ready to receive divine impressions like softned wax and as melted mettle will run into any mould an holy heart will be ready to bend and bow as God will have it Acts 9.6 What wilt thou have me to do As if he should say Lord do but thou command me and I am ready to obey Lord give me ability to do what thou commandest and then command me what thou pleasest as Austin once of himself A carnal heart waits for and embraceth the commands of sin and an holy heart waits for and is ready to receive the commands of Christ to stoop to that service which bears Gods superscription on it 3. It is a chaste clean heart wholly dedicated to God that loveth no evil in motion or action Create in me a clean heart Psal 51.10 Holinesse is a cleansing thing 2 Cor. 7.1 As a good wife is towards her husband such is the holy heart to Christ espoused it is to him The carnal heart hath many lovers but the holy heart hath one whom it loveth even Christ 2 Cor. 11.2.4 It is an heavenly heart Words deeds behaviour not onely in sacred but in civil affairs are heavenly Phil. 3.20 Our conversation is in Heaven i. e. Habitually Corpore ambulamus in terra corde habitamus in co●lo saith Augustine The body is on earth but our heart in Heaven as the pearl that grows in the Sea but shines as the sky O the preciousnesse of an holy heart A person thus rightly qualified for prayer is more honourable more excellent then his neighbour Qu. 2 Secondly Why must Prayer come from an holy heart Ans First Because a carnal heart destitute of renewing grace and spiritual life cannot rise to close with such a spiritual duty A natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.14 Light and darknesse may as soon come together and agree An holy heart may make a carnal prayer but a carnal heart can never make an holy prayer so as to ascend high enough Nothing can work beyond the activity of its own principle A bullet flyeth no farther then the force of the powder carrieth it and where prayers come from nature onely they go no farther then nature can carry them Secondly Reigning sin in the heart out-cryeth your prayers especially the sins of pride and anger Jam. 4.6 God resisteth the proud 1 Tim. 2.8 I will that men every where pray lifting up holy hands without wrath If your sins be hearty your prayers cannot be hearty If the sin of one man may hinder the prayers and endeavours of many how much more will many sins hinder the prayers of one Reigning sin is like many great Ordnance charged and planted on high mountains they make a great noise like thunder which confounds and swallows up lower and smaller cries Sin unto prayer is as Garlick to the Loadstone renders it flat and dead Thirdly The person must be accepted before the prayer and none are accepted but such as are sanctified by faith in Jesus Christ Therefore prayers must come from an holy heart John 15.5 He that abideth in me bringeth forth much fruit Gen. 4.4 The Lord had respect to Abel and then to his offering Prayer from a wicked heart is like a jewel put into a dead mans mouth loseth all its vertue * The Naturalist saith a precious jewel put into a dead mans mouth loseth its worth and vertue so doth prayer in the mouth of a man spiritually dead The prayer of the wicked is abominable Prov. 21.27 But if the tree be good the fruit will be good You must be in Christ before you can do or obtain any good this way Through him we have accesse with confidence unto the Father Ephes 2.18 Fourthly Because the Lord is holy and cannot endure sin especially in Petitioners God hates sin naturally where ever it is like as we hate poison whether it be in a Toad or Princes Cabinet Yea he hateth it more then the Devil Can a Prince endure a Petitioner that shall bring his greatest enemy with him in his hand even into his presence Or can any Petitioner think so to prevail No As in a wound the plaister prevails not whilest the iron remains within so neither can prayer while sin rankleth God will not hear a good motion from a bad mouth He will hide his eyes while your hands are full of blood You love my profest enemies more then me will God say your bosome sins above your requests Therefore go and be reconciled put away your sins and then come and offer Thus much for the first branch the Person must be holy Again Secondly The Principle must be holy Your desires must be the issues of grace dictated by the Spirit of Christ we know not how or what to ask without his assistance Rom. 8.15 26. Here
my will be done And hence that request of Bernard to his friend whom he had advised for strict and holy walking cum talis fueris memento mei i. e. When thou art such a one remember me in thy prayers All Gods family-servants are Israels prevailers with him Secondly They have the Spirit of prayer whereby they are enabled to cry powerfully Abba Father As the Spirit wrought powerfully in those men who were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved by the holy Ghost to speak the Word of God to men so it works powerfully in all righteous men speaking to God The Spirit doth both disponere and excitare give the habit and the act also brings the fuel of good desires into the soul and there sets it a burning so that in a sense they are the prayers of Christ indited by the Spirit put up in his Name and presented by ●his mediation And it cannot otherwise be but that they should find the way back again and reach that bosom whence they came These waters will rise as high as the fountain especially being conveyed by such a Conduit-pipe If the holy Spirit be the Inditer the Son the Advocate the Father the Register of the Saints prayers whatever weaknesses there be if not wilful they cannot non-suit them in that Court He cannot dislike the petition which himself hath framed Prayer is the counterpane and reflection of his own good pleasure and he can no more resist it than his own will Thirdly They have disposed and enlarged hearts though not alwaies alike Utinam eodem ardore orare possim saith Luther The more they pray the better it is with them in that regard The Lord doth enlarge their hearts that they may pray and then by prayer that enlargement is encreased that they may be fitted to receive more blessings Prayer doth not merit mercy but sits us for mercy empties the heart of self and takes in the more of God Fourthly There is nothing that can totally and finally hinder them whilst Christ Heavens Favourite and Master of requests is their friend and husband whilst the blessed Spirit is their assistant and no sin beloved Distracted and weakned they may be but wholly disappointed and kept off they cannot be The Use followes And it may serve First To let us see what to expect from the prayers of too many among us● those birds without wings and messengers without feet good for nothing at all Divide us into four sorts viz. Prophane Civil Formal and penitent We find the first sort pray not at all the second repeat a prayer the third sort make a prayer but the last sort only pray in Faith and power The prayers of unrighteous persons are little worth confundunt opera sermonem their works confute their words s●ith Hierom. And as Tacitus speaks of some words of Tiberius Preclara verba c. They are good words but not sutable to him and the reason he gives is because ad haec caetera non conveniunt his other words and actions are not of the same stamp This we may read in many Scriptures Isa 1.15 When you make many prayers I will not he●r your hands are full of blood Jer. 7.9.16 Will ye steal murther c. and come before me Jer. 14.10 11 12. See the place Secondly What you must do that you may be powerful and effectuall in prayer viz. 1. Get this qualification be righteous men You must lay aside all your sins not for a time only as 't is said of the snake that she laies aside her poyson whilst she drinketh Or as the Persians who kill all their venomous creatures one day in the year and after that suffer them to swarm as before nor blot out the old score to begin a new one as 't is said of Lewis the eleventh of France that when he had done evil he would kisse his crucifix and then God and he were good friends as he thought and so might go to his old work again but for ever in desire and endeavour Is not this the fast that I have chosen to loose the bands of wickednesse and to undo heavy burdens and to let the oppressed go free that ye break every yoke Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry c. Isa 58.7.55.7 Let the wicked forsake his way c. Then shall thy light break forth as the morning c. Then thou shalt call and the Lord shall answer thou shalt cry and he shall say here I am Your stubbornnesse and pride must submit or else never hope to speed all your time and strength is spent in vain When you spread forth your hands to me I will not hear I will hide mine eies from you while your hands are full of blood Sin is a devil in the air to hinder the ascending of prayer a thick cloud to stop the Sun-shine of mercy That which was noted of Co●sar may be here applied when one that was up in Arms against him yet at the same time sent him a Crown Coesar sends back the Crown with this message Let him return to his obedience and then the Crown may be accepted Certainly whatever means we use to obtain favour and prevail with God remaining in our sins had we Crowns to dedicate to his honour all would be in vain Then turn from sin 2. You must pray in a time while he will be found Isa 55.6 and call upon him while he is neer In giving you peace and liberty in the Ordinances while the Spirit strives lovingly and the Angel moves the water God cals waits Grace is dispensed the door is open whilst the day continues a time may come when he may not be found a black night may come and hide his gracious presence the Sun and the Stars may be turned into blood Lose not opportunity be gathering Manna whilst it fals call upon him Say his own beauty mercy goodnesse moved you Where these are joined there is a promise of good successe they neve● yet failed this better deserves then any an affix of probatum est saepissimè 1. When they are join'd in Persons so that the petitioner be penitent and the penitent a petitioner such as see their s●ns convictingly and distinctly such as bewail and flie to the fountain opened for sin and for uncleannesse may run and re●d comfort Isa 1.18 Matth. 21.22 Jo●n 15.7 A penitents prayer doth presuppose a promise though not alwaies in particular yet alwaies in general which is sufficient 2. When they are general in a Nation when those that sit in the throne as stars in the superiour Orb le●d the way and give light and influence in the power of godlinesse splendour of grace and gracious performances to deny themselves in all hurtful vanities and pr●y fervently as did Jehosaphat 2 Chron. 20.3 c. When there is a Court-reformation and a Country-reformation when young and old in City Church and State reform and cry fervently to God when all join in acting as well as in