Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n holy_a person_n son_n 20,542 5 6.1434 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A68718 A key of heaven the Lords Prayer opened, and so applied, that a Christian may learne how to pray, and to procure all things which may make for the glorie of God, and the good of himselfe, and of his neighbour : containing likewise such doctrines of faith and godlines, as may be very usefull to all that desire to live godly in Christ Iesus. Scudder, Henry, d. 1659?; Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635. 1633 (1633) STC 22122; ESTC S1717 241,855 822

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

most apt to enkindle the desires and helpe the faith of them that do pray If many and generall requests be to be put up then such titles and names must bee used that may perswade them they shall be heard in all If some particular petition be to be pressed then such names and descriptions of God are to be used as may helpe the heart in that particular Abrahams servant being to pray for successe in his masters businesse saith Ge● 24 12. O Iehovah God of my master Abraham I pray thee send me good speed this day and shew kindnesse unto my m●●t●er Abraham When Peter did intricate God to make choice of an Apostle to supply the place of Iudas hee saith Thou Lord Act. 1.24 which knowest the hearts of all men shew whether of these two thou hast chosen When David prayeth against the enemies of God and his children hee saith O Lord God to whom vengeance belongeth Psal 94.1 O God to whom vengeance belongeth shew thy selfe And when hee doth magnifie Gods name and would incire all people to pray unto him and praise him he speaketh to him in this description of God O thou that hearest prayer Psal 65.2 unto thee shall all flesh come For a wise choice of apt names Reason 1 titles to represent God with doth argue knowledge of God and wisedome to make use of his different attributes both which knowledge wisdome being mixed with faith doth much please and delight God to behold in his children The representing of God to Reason 2 the minde in convenient and meet names and notions is verie needfull for it will set the heart and keepe it in good plight working aw and reverence fervencie uprightnesse and confidence all which are requisite in prayer Vse It behoveth therefore every one that would make a good entrance into prayer without which he is not like to make a good proceeding to acquaint himselfe with the true understanding of the manifold names and descriptions of God recorded in Scripture and then let them make choice of the fittest titles of God to name him by according as there shal be especiall cause or use of his power wisedome mercie truth or justice c. Then to use such names as may best expresse those attributes which are especially to bee exercised in the granting of their requests Thus much of the whole description of God being cōsidered joyntly now followeth the consideration of each part of the description Father hath relation first to Christ the second person in Trinity whereby our Saviour directeth us unto a consideration of the three persons in Trinity and to the order of directing of prayers ordinarily viz. to the Father whence the doctrine is In prayer God is to be known Doct. 5 and conceived of in the distinction of persons Father Sonne and holy Ghost to whom prayer must be directed ordinarily in this sort scil to the Father by the Sonne through the helpe of the holy Ghost Christ saith Ioh. 16.23 Whatsoever ye shall aske my Father in my Name he will give it you The Apostle giveth thanks to God and the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ Ephe. 5.20 We call God Abba Father by the Spirit which maketh our intercessions for us Rom. 8.15.27 For such is the divine dispensation of God the Father Reason Son and holy Ghost that though they are but one indivisible essence and whatsoever any one doth out of himselfe the very same doth the other also Ad extra yet they sustaine different persons and offices that I may so speake and do the same things in a different and distinct order yet so as the naming of one doth not exclude but necessarily include the other In prayer the Father sustaineth the person and place of him that is offended by sinne that must be appeased and doth heare and grant requests If we sinne we have an Advocate with the Father Which sheweth plainly that the Father in especiall sort must be appeased and sought unto The Sonne supplieth the place of a Mediator and intercessour by whom requests ascend and become acceptable to the Father He is that golden altar Ioh. 16.23 upon which the prayers of all Saints are offered and caused to ascend as incense Revel 8.3 No man can come to the Father but by him Ioh. 1● 6 He is appointed of God to be a Mediatour and being God and man is both a fit and all-sufficient Mediator between God and man Without him no mans person or best actions can be acceptable because of the many imperfections Wherefore all prayers must be offered up by Christ Iesus The holy Ghost doth supply the office of a teacher and of one that helpeth our infirmities and in us Rom. 8.26 to make our intercessions and requests for us that they may be offered to the Father by the intercession of the Sonne For we know not what we should pray for as we ought and if the Spirit do not worke together in our prayers there would be no goodnesse at all in them no not so much as truth and uprightnesse without which Christ Iesus will not offer them to his Father for us Therefore prayers must bee made in the Spirit through the helpe of the Spirit Now because of this order of persons in the Deitie the Father being first and because of the different places they sustaine in the worke of our salvation the counsell and will of all three is that the Father should be prayed unto and worshipped in the onely mediation of the Sonne through the Spirit and therefore it is that the Father is here named not the Sonne or holy Ghost But because of the indivisible essence of the Godhead the naming of the Father doth necessarily imply the calling upon both Sonne and holy Ghost also If God must be known and Vse 1 worshipped in the distinction of the persons in Trinitie then it is impossible to represent God by any image as the Papists do For by what visible likenesse can an invisible Spirit which is truly not imaginarily distinguished into three persons and different manner of subsisting be likened or resembled The Papists that come to Vse 2 God by the mediatiō of Christ but in part joyning to Christ the mediation of Saints are hereby confuted For there is no Mediatour but that one person by whom God is our Father They come a distinction saying Christ is onely Mediatour of redemption but not the onely Mediatour of intercession that so they might leave a roome in which they might place the mediation of Saints but this is to sever what God hath joyned For the Scripture knoweth no Advocate or Intercessour but him who is the Redeemer 1. Ioh. 2.12 scil Christ Iesus the righteous who is the propitiation for our sinnes And it is as proper to the Mediatourship that Christ onely should make intercession at the right hand of God as to die and rise againe for the elect Rom. 8.34
Ob. If they say we pray to living men to make praiers and intercessions for us why not rather to the Saints departed who are more perfect Sol. I answer when we desire the living to pray for us we do not give any religious honour unto the living but they do properly give religious worship in praying to the dead which honour is due to God onely Besides the living know what we need the dead do not and in using the living we do not make them mediatours betweene the Father and us that he should helpe us for their worth and merit thus Christ onely is Mediatour but we onely request them to intreat the Father for Christs sake to helpe us Lastly Iam. 5.14 the Scripture doth warrant men to request the prayers of the living and doth acknowledge onely one Mediatour betweene God and man even there where it requireth that living Saints should make prayers and intercessions for all sorts of men 1. Tim. 2.1.5 All which think they know Vse 3 God but yet are altogether ignorant of the distinction of the persons must hereby know that they do not yet know God distinctly and if they worship God without any consideration of Christ by whom and of the holy Ghost through whose helpe they pray in the spirit if they do not expresse or imply thus much in prayer they do notwithstanding they professe the true God turne him into an Idol For in all true worship the unity is worshipped in Trinitie and Trinitie in unity without dividing the Godhead or confounding the Persons Vse 4 Every one that would worship God aright must therfore first learne to know him to be one only true God distinguished into the Father Sonne and holy Ghost but herein much warinesse and sobriety must be observed that none seeke into this mysterie of mysteries to understand above that which is meete namely above that which the Scripture hath revealed it being an object of faith to bee beleeved and not possible by reason to bee fully comprehended In conceiving of the distinction of persons take heed of two extremities first we must not conceive that there is an essentiall difference betweene them as if all the three had not one and the same nature Secondly we must not imagine that there is onely a rationall or imaginarie distinction whereas their different order and manner of subsisting and different manner of working declareth that there is a reall or true difference betweene them So that the Father as Father is in no respect the Sonne and the Sonne as Sonne is in no respect the holy Ghost and the holy Ghost as holy Ghost is in no respect either the Father or the Sonne When God is thus conceived of and knowne aright then in the same order as he doth subsist he must ordinarily be worshipped according to the direction of our Saviour in this patterne Stephens directing of his prayer to Christ was upon the beholding of Christ Iesus standing at the right hand of God Act. 7 ●● it being a speciall and extraordinary occasion This argueth that it is not unlawfull to direct prayer to the second Person or third Person upon especiall cause but yet ordinarily this rule and order in worshipping GOD must be observed First we must direct prayer unto the Father of lights the giver of every good and perfect gift Secondly we must offer up praier and praise by Christ Iesus who offereth up incense with the prayers of all Saints Rev. 8.3 by whom wee have accesse to the throne of grace Heb. 4.15.16 to finde grace and helpe in time of need Thirdly wee must use all meanes to obtaine the holy Spirit of grace and supplications We must pray for it and heare the Gospell which is the ministerie of the Spirit preached Then we must cherish stirre up the good motions thereof taking heed that wee doe not grieve it or quench it by any evill conversation Let us get an holy acquaintance with it that it may make heartie requests for us For prayers cannot be sweet incense if they be not mingled and anointed with holy oyle which is the anointing of the Spirit which as it teacheth all things 1 Ioh 2.27 as Iohn speaketh so especially it must teach us to pray aright Wherefore whensoever you pray enter into consultation with the inward man what you should aske and how consult with the word denie carnall reason and presumption of your owne abilities in prayer then shall the Spirit make your requests for you which by you must be seconded and 〈…〉 and truth put up to the Father by Christ Whosoever shall in this manner direct his praier to the Father by the Sonne through the Spirit albeit I cannot promise him that his heart shall be so inlarged that he shall satisfie himselfe in prayer yet I can assure him he shall alwaies be able to offer up such sighes and desires as shall please God and prevaile more with him then shall the praiers of others who without the spirit of prayer by the meere helpe of nature art can command both words and varietie of matter at their pleasure Vse 5 This directing of prayers unto the Father in the name of the Sonne through the holy Ghost may remove the greatest discouragements that any Christian can meet with when he goeth about to pray It is not majestie nor infinite justice in God nor greatnesse or multitude of sinnes in man nor any unworthinesse of his person nor yet his insufficiencie to thinke a good thought nor yet the feeling of himselfe that many times hee knoweth not either what or how to pray can dishearten him if hee doe but consider that hee prayeth to God who is God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and that he may pray in this order namely hee prayes to the Father of Christ who is his Father he prayes in the name of Jesus Christ who hath satisfied his Father for all his sinnes and daily doth make intercession for him and hee praieth in the Spirit who helpeth his infirmities and maketh requests for him though it bee sometimes but with sighes and groanes which are not distinctly uttered Rom. 8.26 By this meanes there is life and spirit in our prayers and God doth and will accept them for he knoweth the meaning of his Spirit and will accept the worke of his Spirit in us through Christ though wee bewray our many imperfections Father in the second place hath through Christ relation to all the members of Christ who are here willed to say Our Father whence note Doct. 6 All true Christians have the Lord of heaven and earth to their Father J ascend to my Father and your Father saith Christ Ioh. 20.17 I will be a Father unto you and ye shall be my sonnes and daughters saith the Lord Almighty 2 Cor. 6.18 Reason 1 They have received the adoption of sonnes Gal. 4.5 and are all the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.26 Reason 2 They are all
1. Pet. 2.9 It is the glory and happinesse of a man to bee holy like unto God Holinesse is an infallible and peculiar marke of a childe of God Therefore Gods people are called the people of his holinesse Isa 63.18 Ier. 2.3 And Israel was holinesse to the Lord. Let us purge our selves therefore from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God then shall wee approve our selves to be worthy persons even the sonnes and daughters of the Lord almightie Moreover if the fruit of our Christian profession be holinesse Rom 6.22 the end wil be eternall life Vse 4 If God bestow holinesse upon any man though hee have neither personablenesse nor wealth nor wit nor worldly honour besides let him not be impatient for what he wāteth but let him rejoyce and give thanks for what he hath for he hath that which maketh him to bee esteemed in the judgement of wise men and of the wise God a worthy and excellent person And if we consider the worth of holinesse it will move us to beare the afflicting hand of God with patience and cheerefulnesse For the end of his chastening is saith the Apostle that we might be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12 10 than which nothing is more profitable nothing more honourable The second Petition Thy kingdome come In the first petition prayer is made that God onely may be set up to be knowne and acknowledged to be as he is most holy most glorious to whom all things as to their proper end are to bee referred This is the chiefe desire of a Christian out of which all other petitions issue forth into which they doe all emptie themselves Gods Name cannot be knowne and thereby hallowed except God make himselfe knowne to bee that High and holy one that onely Potentate King of Kings Lord of Lords to whom holinesse and glory doth belong Wherefore petition is made that hee would please to advance his kingdome as a meanes to shew his excellencie and glory that men may yeeld it unto him The comming of this kingdom is the subject of this petition Kingdome in the largest sense signifieth the governance and rule of a people under one head or King But here it is limited by particular reference to God saying Thy kingdome which importeth that administration of governement which God doth exercise either immediately by himselfe or mediately by Christ in preserving and ordering all things so as may set forth his soveraignty to the glory of his holinesse in perfectiō of goodnes power wisedome mercy justice c. This kingdome of God is Vniversall over all creatures called the kingdome of power or providence Psal 103.19 is Speciall respecting the Church in this life called the kingdome of grace in the life to come called the kingdome of glory In this petition kingdome signifieth Gods kingdome of power grace and glory each one serving unto or following upon the other and all three doe set forth his holy Name the hallowing whereof was in the first petition prayed for Kingdome of his providence is desired because it doth both set forth Gods excellencie and doth minister matter means for the better erecting of the kingdome of grace The kingdome of grace is desired because GOD therein doth most admirably shew himselfe and it maketh way to the kingdome of glory being the beginning and entrance thereinto The kingdome of glory is desired because it is the perfection of the kingdome of grace and when all enemies shall be vanquished and all subjects gathered and advanced to the highest honour 1 Cor. 15. ●8 then God shall be all in all and shall be knowne and acknowledged to be all in all and then his Name shall be perfectly hallowed and glorified Kingdome here is called Gods kingdome as it is a government different from and a government over the kingdome of men but especially as it is opposed unto the kingdome and dominion of sinne and Sathan For the throwing downe of Satan is according as Saint Iohn heard by a voyce from heaven the comming of salvation Rev. 12.10 and strength and the kingdome of our God and the power of his Christ As his kingdome goeth downe Gods kingdome is set up This kingdome of God is either essentiall and inseparable eternally equally belonging to the Father Sonne and holy Ghost or it is Deputative and separable according as by the dispensation of the blessed Trinity it was conferred upon the second person in Trinity as he i● the Mediatour betweene God and his creature The administration of this kingdome is either immediate namely when the Father from himselfe by the Sonne but not as Mediatour doth through the holy Ghost communicate himselfe to the creature and doth governe all things or else it is mediate namely when the Father from himselfe by the Son as Mediatour betweene him and his creature doth communicate himselfe to his creature and doth governe all things God did immediately governe all things in the world untill that by Adams transgression sin entred into the world and in like immediate manner shall hee governe when sinne shall cease to be in the world namely after that Christ shall have put downe all rule and authority and power and hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father at the end of this world But ever since sinne hath beene in the world and since it hath pleased God to enter into a new covenant with man namely into the covenant of grace which hee established in Christ the whole governement as well that which is vniversall which concerneth the powerfull conservation and wise disposing of all things for the manifestation of the glory of God and for the use of man as also that speciall government which concerneth the Church was conferred upon the second Person and hath beene administred and is yet to be administred by him as Mediatour untill the time of the redelivery of it unto his Father We may conceive the reason why God did governe the world after mans fall not immediately as before out by his Sonne deputed to be a Mediatour betweene him and man to be this because hee in his holy wisedome held it not befitting the purity and holinesse of his nature to communicate himselfe to his creature defiled with sinne otherwise than by a Mediatour This government Christ Iesus tooke upon him and administred as he was first by designation and afterwards actually by hypostaticall union God and man Not as God onely for in that respect the kingdome was as naturall and essentiall to him as it was to the Father and holy Ghost nor yet as man onely for the humanity alone was not capable of such an universall absolute and spirituall dominion invested with power from himselfe to send forth the spirit and to subdue principalities powers and spirituall wickednesse so as to trample all enemies under his feete This government of Gods kingdome by Christ the Mediatour was first made knowne to the Church
to whom Fatherhood and the beginning of all things is ascribed without excluding but necessarily including the other two namely to God the Father the first person in Trinitie the naturall and eternall Father of Christ Iesus who by adopting us in Christ and by begetting us againe by regeneration through the Spirit * Ioh. 20.17 is our Father Thus the Apostle Paul conceived of God when he prayed first he conceived of God as Father of Christ saying Eph. 3.14.15 I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ then he sheweth how hee conceived God as the father of the elect when he saith Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth are named So did the Apostle Peter conceive of God 1 Pet 1.3 when he gave him thanks saying Blessed be God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ Which art in heaven Heaven signifieth the heaven of heavens the third heaven where Christ sitteth at the right hand of his Father By the excellencie of this place above others is set forth the majestie and excellencie of him that sitteth therein God doth not so inhabite the high and holy place but that he dwelleth also with him that is of a contrite spirit Isa 57.15 1 Kin. 8.27 Mat. 5.34.35 Psal 11.4 And the Heaven of heavens cannot containe him But because heaven is Gods Pallace and throne in comparison of earth which is but his footstoole and because from thence he doth manifest his glory more remarkeably then from any other place revealing his will power Iam. 1.17 and Godhead in his workes of mercy as David saith Psal 57.3 Psal 102.19.10 Rom. 1.18 He shall send from heaven and save me and in workes of justice as the Apostle saith The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse therefore hee will that his being in heaven should as by a signe set forth his glorious Majestie Also his being in heaven doth distinguish him from earthly fathers Luk. 31 13. and putteth difference between him and false * Psal 136.26 Ion. 1.9 gods This description of God by his place is all one with that which the Apostle setteth downe at large calleth him 1. Tim 6.15.16 Onely Potentate King of kings Lord of Lords who onely hath immortalitie dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto c. If this short description be well weighed it will appeare that there could not possibly bee a a more briefe and more apt description of God meet to be represented to the minde of him that is to pray then this which in more words may be thus expressed O Lord God which art Father of Christ Iesus and through him Father of me and of all beleevers we coming to thee in the name of Christ and being moved hereunto by thy spirit of Adoption whereby we call Abba Father we are well assured that thou wilt accept of our praiers praying for our selves and for our brethren and sith thou onely art God which dwellest in the high and holy place from whence cometh every good gift and art Almightie as thou art God to answer thy willingnesse as thou art Father wherefore we call upon thee and do thou vouchsafe to heare us Our Note here that a man must have faith and be in state to call God his Father else he is not sufficiently qualified for prayer Learne therefore Whosoever would make an acceptable Doct. 1 prayer must be Gods childe he must have a right to call God Father and must come to God as a childe to his father Therefore David when hee prayeth approveth himselfe to be Gods childe saying If I regard iniquitie in my heart the Lord will not heare me Psal 66.18 The sacrifice of the wicked is an abhomination to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight saith Solomon Prov. 15.8 It was a true speech of him which said We know that God heareth not sinners but if any man be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Ioh. 9.31 Reason 1 For the person of a man must be accepted else his sacrifice cannot be good and acceptable for while the tree is naught Mat. 7 18. the fruit cannot be good Thornes cannot send forth grapes Mat. 7 16 neither can thistles beare figges Reason 2 All acceptable prayers are put up in Christs name and are accepted through his mediation Now he is Advocate for none but those for whom he is a propitiation scil beleevers according to his prayer I pray not for the world c. Ioh. 17.9 Reason 3 No man can pray untill he have the spirit of prayer Zac. 12.10 to cause him to mourne kindly for his sinne and to call Abba Father which spirit God sendeth to none but to his sonnes Gal. 4.6 Everie one that cometh to Reason 4 God must beleeve that God is and that hee is a rewarder of them that diligently seeke him Heb. 11.6 They must have faith How shall they call on him on whom they have not beleeved Rom. 10.14 The promise of acceptance Reason 5 and of a gracious hearing is made to the godly Psal 32 6. Psal 34.15.17.18 Iam. 5.16 and to the righteous whose prayers are said to be prevailing If a man have not good assurance Reason 6 that hee is the childe of God he can never answer those strong objections which the devill will urge to keepe him from prayer but if he can shew that God is his Father and that God hath commanded him to pray no objection of Satan can discourage him Vse 1 Hereby all that do not righteousnesse and that love not their brethren for by this they are discerned not to be children of God Ioh. 3.10 but of the devill must understand that if they continue in this their wicked condition and yet pray they deale presumptuously and to them God saith Psa ●0 16.17 What have ye to do to take my covenant in your mouth seeing ye hate instruction Secondly they may learne what to judge of their praiers God accepteth them not for they be no better then either howlings or cries wrung from them by pinching necessitie Hos 7.14 or meere hypocritical mocking of God abhominable sacrifices of which the Lord saith Your incense is an abhomination Isa 113.15 and when ye make many prayers I will not heare It is all one with him as if * Isa 66.3 ye did blesse an Idoll so long as ye chuse your owne waies such as ignorance superstition contempt of religion prophanenesse pride drunkennesse whoredome deceit lying unbeliefe impenitencie and such like God abhorreth all service done to him so long as their soules delight in their abhominations Consider this O ye that forget God saith the Lord lest I teare you in pieces and there be none to deliver Psal 50.22 Thirdly let all impenitent and ungodly persons take notice in how miserable a straight they are and into what a labyrinth and maze their sinne hath brought
true and adding of false Sacraments may be abandoned It must also be desired that the censures and keyes committed to the Church may be exercised with such discipline that the good may be encouraged the evill may be shamed and cut off from communion with the Church and that to the working of true awfull credit of the Church and advancement of the kingdome of Christ Iesus And that this authoritie may not bee abused for the maintaining of error disgracing or thrusting the best members out of the Church as did the Pharises who made and executed this Canon Ioh 9 2● That if any did confesse that Iesus was the Christ he should be put out of the Synagogue Or as Diotrephes who did cast men out of the Church 3. Ioh. 10. for receiving the brethren The other externall meanes of establishing and governing this kingdome are the officers both civill and Ecclesiasticall The civill are the King or supreame Magistrate in any place and such as have lawfull authoritie under them whose office is to countenance and order whatsoever things or persons may promote Christs kingdome Isa 49.23 Therefore they are called nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers of the Church which office David and the godly kings of Iudah did performe Prayers must bee made for them but especially for our owne King and governours under him that they may so governe that their subjects may live in all godlinesse 1. Tim. 2.2 and honestie that like zealous Nehemiahs they may rule for the praise of them that bee good Rom 13. and for the terror of them that do evill that they set up and maintaine the onely one true religion among their subjects We must pray likewise against Anarchie when none reigne but every man liveth as he lusteth Iudg. 21.25 Also against evill government when Magistrates maintaine false religion or irreligion or else do tolerate them to the corrupting of the true The Ecclesiasticall officers whose office is to dispence the Word to administer the Sacraments and to have the chiefe ordering of the censure of the Church also such assistants as may help the other in their government Touching these it must bee requested that God would send forth labourers into his harvest Mat. 9.38 that he would increase their number that hee would give them gifts and skill to divide the word of truth aright Psal 132.9 that he would give them grace and will to feede their people with knowledge that he would deliver all such from unreasonable men that they may have liberty to preach the Gospel of the kingdome Lastly that they may bee of unblameable conversations ensamples to their flocks in good works Prayer likewise must bee made for all other that beare office in the Church that they may also have the mysterie of faith in pure conscience that they may also be diligent in discharging their office Contrariwise we must pray against having no ministerie government in the Church also against a false ministerie as that of Pope Cardinals Priests Iesuites c. Also against evill Ministers and officers Ezek. 34.3 Isa 56.16 which either cannot or will not teach or governe according to their place or teach idly rule remisely or teach erroniously or rule amisse Now albeit the kingdome of God may be come in respect of the externall meanes thereof yet if the internal means which is the holy Ghost and the effectuall working thereof be not come neither can the Magistrate with his sword nor the Minister with the word availe any thing to the converting of any one Christian or winning of one soule to this kingdome Wherefore it must be desired that the holy Spirit of God would effectually accompanie the outward meanes of gathering and building up the elect to the enlightening and translating them from the power of darknesse into the kingdome of his deare Sonne and that they may increase in knowledge and everie good grace according to the mightie working of his glorious power that the Word Sacraments and Discipline the weapons of this warfare may be mighty through God to pull downe strong holds and cast downe imaginations and high things which exalt themselves against the knowledge of God and may bring into captivitie every thought to the obedience of Christ In respect of subjects of this kingdome praier must be made that their number be increased and perfected that the fulnesse of the Gentiles may come and that the Iews the two sticks Iudah and the children of Israel his companions Ezek. 37.22.24 and Ephraim and the children of Israel his companions may bee united and gathered into Christs sheepfold and may have one King the Lord Christ the sonne of David that so all Israel may be saved as it is written Ro. 11.26 Isa 59.20 Also that being gathered they may be loyall to their King and at peace and loving one to another that there be no Schismes and divisions in this kingdome As for enemies to this kingdome not only Satan and sinne the chiefe which stand in direct opposition to Christ and the Spirit but all such men as are slaves to sinne and Satan and confederates with them are to be prayed against whether they be open foes or false friends which by force or fraud go about to undermine and resist the kingdome of Christ The most notorious of these are Antichrist the arch-enemie of the Church of the Gentiles Ezek. 38.16 and Gog and Magog the arch-enemie of the Church of the Iews All locusts which warre under their king Abaddon Rev. 11.9 All false Christs and false Prophets spoken of Matth. 24.24 which shall endeavour to seduce the Iewes and hinder their conversion Also everie member of the kingdome of darknesse must be resisted and prayed against Here is onely the place for imprecation and praying against men The case of imprecation But because Christians are commanded to love their enemies and to blesse them that curse and pray for them that persecute them speciall care must be had how any man pray against another Wherefore it shall bee needfull to observe some distinctiōs from whence rules of imprecations may be observed 1 Praier is made against enemies of Christs kingdome either in generall or against particular persons 2 Distinction must be put betweene the persons of evill men and their evill acts 3 Distinction must bee put betweene one evill person and another by their acts some sin the sinne unto death irrecoverably some who now are enemies yet are curable and belong to Gods election 4 Difference must be put betweene a mans owne private cause and the cause of God 5 Difference must be put betweene evils temporall and eternall 1 These things observed rules of direction doe follow First that every Christian may and must pray against the enemies of the Church in generall so David Psal 104.35 Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth 2 The sinnes acts and counsels of the enemies of grace are alwaies
Scripture is that we should abhorre that which is evill and cleave to that which is good Rom. 12.9 Reas 1 For Iustification and Sanctification are so inseparably conjoined that no man hath his sins forgiven who hath not withall the fruit of it unto repentance and holinesse of life here in this life This I shall make evident by these arguments following 1 It is one part of the new Covenant of grace that men should be holy and for that cause God hath not onely required holiness to be shewne on their part but hath promised as well to write his Law in the hearts of his people Heb. 8.10.12 as to be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and not to remember their sinne 2. It is one end to which God hath chosen men in Christ to be holy Eph. 1.4.5 and without blame before him in love as well as to be adopted children by Christ to obtaine everlasting life 3. It is the end of the office and comming of our Saviour Iesus Christ and of the merit and efficacy of his death resurrection and intercession not onely that beleevers should obtaine forgivenesse of sinne and everlasting life but that so many as the Father gave unto him might beleeve repent and live holily and righteously in this present world Tit. 2.14 hee purging them to himselfe to be a peculiar people zealous of good workes 4. It is the end of the Scriptures not onely to lay the foundation of faith for the remission of sinnes that through consolation thereof Ioh. 15 4. Ioh. 17.7 Eph. 5.26 beleevers might have hope but also to sanctifie and cleanse them from the filthinesse of their sinnes that they might be holy and without blemish 5. It is the end of everie Christian mans profession and calling 1. Thess 4.7 not only to beleeve and hope to be saved by Christ but also to be holy and to become the servant of Christ 6. It is the end why God sendeth his Spirit into their hearts and causeth it to dwell in his children Rom 8.16 not onely to be a spirit of adoption to witnesse to their spirits that they are Gods children but also to be a spirit of sanctification to worke out the stony heart Ez●k 36.26 27. and to frame in them a new heart causing them to walke in his statutes and to do them 7. It is the end of the Sacraments the seales of the new Covenant not onely to signifie and seale remission of sinnes by Iesus Christ but also that by him all that beleeve in him being ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection Rom. 6.4 5 6. should dye unto sinne and walke in newnesse of life These things considered it is most apparant that justification and sanctification are never severed in one and the same partie wherefore he that prayeth for and expecteth to be justified must also pray and indeavour to approve himselfe to be sanctified A second generall reason why all Christians should pray for and labour after holinesse is because if a man be not holy and righteous in this life he is not capeable of true glory and happinesse in heaven in the life to come and that whether we respect God or a mans selfe remaining in his sinne God will not admit him let him make what claime hee can unto the kingdome of heaven his put off shall be Luk 13.27 Depart from me I know you not ye workers of iniquity For without holinesse no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 But suppose it were possible that a sinfull man might be admitted into heaven heaven would be no heaven to him The place persons and exercises there would be tedious and a vexation unto him For all things there are things of God holy and spirituall most contrarie to the disposition of a natural and carnall man 1. Cor 2.14 God saith The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God they are foolishnesse unto him To whom Gods ordinances and presence in them as in hearing praying and praising God and to whom holy company and holy conference is tedious in this life the same heart and affections remaining even these and the like things would be an hell to them even in heaven For to make a man happy even in heaven it is needfull that the faculties and powers of his soule be so fully rectified and perfected that hee may comprehend and enjoy the object that thing wherein mans happinesse doth consist Now though Gods presence in his glory and in his goodnesse which is the object of mans happinesse is alwayes in heaven yet if the understanding the will and the affections of a man be not sanctified and thereby made capeable of and suteable to the object what content and joy can he take therein It is with the reasonable soule in the apprehension of intellectual and spiritual things as it is with the senses in bodily objects Colours though never so orient and various yet they can give no delight to a blinde or ill-affected eye Sounds though never so melodious cannot delight a deafe or ill-affected eare Meat and drink though never so well relished and delicious cannot delight him whose pallat is out of taste nay the best do savour and taste ill with such a one Even so the most spirituall things in heaven would be so farre from delighting a carnall and unholy man that they would seeme to his fancy very foolishnes and they would be to him a very vexation Vse 1 It is therefore an intolerable fault for a man to professe the name of Christ and yet to live ungodly Num. 23.10 this is the fault of too many who desire to have their sinnes forgiven but desire not to have them mortified they desire to go to heaven like cursed Balaam when they dye but endeavour not to be holy while they live But as if this were not enough to be sinfull themselves many do make a jest at all conscionable living in others and a scorne of all that endeavour to keep a good conscience in all things and yet will expect that Christ shall save them How hath the devill deceived these men yet thousands are justly given over to this strong delusion If any of you shall happen to cast your eyes on these lines consider the Doctrine in hand and learne that for certaine he that is not holy in this life shall not bee happy in the life to come For whomsoever God justifieth Rom. 6. those he sanctifieth and whosoever have faith to partake of Christs merits do by the same faith partake of the vertue of Christs death to the killing of sinne and of the vertue of his life and resurrection to the quickening of the inward man And at the day of judgement all that professe Christ and yet obey not the Gospell of Christ 2 Thes 1.8 shall be burnt in flames of Gods vengeance as well as those which know not the Gospell and professe it not at all For
of adoption and be a beleever that he know God in Christ being converted having repented Rom. 10.14 and is in that state of grace that he can call God Father Secondly Prou. 19 2 Ioh. 4.22 he must be indued with competent knowledge of those things which are required in an acceptable prayer A Catalogue whereof here followeth The discussing of all which or of most of them you shall finde scattered in this Tract as the Text of the Lords Prayer doth minister occasion 1 Prayer is to bee made to God onely Requisites in prayer 2 In prayer God is to be represented to the minde as an incomprehensible Spirit Majesty and Deity therefore without the use of any Image conceiving also to be omnipotent and gracious able and willing to reward them that come unto him 3 Prayer is to bee made to God in the name of Christ Iesus our onely Mediatour and Advocate 4. The matter of all Petitions must be lawfull according to Gods will warranted by precept president or promise 5 A man must pray with understanding he himself knowing what he doth aske 6 Prayer must bee made with a sincere and holy intention of the heart intending it as an holy worship of God as well as a meanes to procure good to a mans selfe from God 7 Prayer must be made with a sense of what we want and with a sensible desire of that which we pray for 8 In prayer there must be a diligent and in endeavour a constant attention first to God keeping the heart lift up towards him as also to the things uttered in prayer that the minde be upon them Likewise that hee attend and take heed to himselfe with what disposition and affection he doe pray He should looke to himselfe that his spirits be composed and his thoughts gathered in and as much as may bee kept in from wandring and distraction This is to be watchfull in prayer 9 There must bee an holy earnestnesse and fervency and importunatenesse in prayer more or lesse according as the matter of prayer doth more or lesse concerne Gods glory and mans good 10 Prayer must bee made with holy devotion and religious adoration expressed in humble and reverent gestures and carrying of the body beseeming the greatnesse and holinesse of God to whom wee pray 11 In prayer a man must propound a right end to himselfe namely that hee may of Gods free grace obtaine the thing desired that therewith he might honour God and doe him more service but not for vaine glory to be seene of men not for charmes not that hee may have wherewithall to spend upon his lusts nor yet to merit thereby as Hypocrites Wizards prophane persons and some Papists doe 12 Prayer must be void of superstition whether in respect of place or number as in needlesse and vaine repetitions upon Beades as Papists doe or any other waies 13 He that prayeth aright must pray in faith he must beleeve that God doth heare him and that for Christs sake he wil grant him all the petitions which he hath thus endeavoured to make according to his will waiting confidently untill God do fulfill them Lastly unto petitions must be joyned praise and thanksgiving This generall preparation must be alwaies readie through an habitual knowledge of those things which are required in an acceptable prayer A particular and immediate preparation is this When a man intendeth to pray he must sequester himselfe from all other businesse and thoughts that he may apply himselfe to meditation Wherein he entreth into consideration of what he is going about what is required in prayer how things stand betweene God and him what his sinnes are that are then to bee repented confessed and prayed against and how they are and may be aggravated also what speciall graces and good things he is now to pray for what evils to pray against likewise he is to consider what favours God hath shewed him what good things he hath bestowed upon him for which he is to praise God give him thanks also hee must consider the grounds and warrant which he hath to approach to the throne of grace in prayer These things prosecuted and well digested a man shall be much the fitter to pray To what prayers particular preparation belongeth Prayers are either continued or onely ejaculatory uttered in a secret and sudden lifting up of the desire to God Immediate and speciall preparation belongeth onely to continued prayer A mans occasions allow him sometimes more time sometimes lesse and he is better disposed to meditation at one time then at another he may accordingly be longer or shorter in preparation But in every continued and set prayer there must be at least this preparation A man must take himselfe off from all other businesse and thoughts and in that instant consider and set before the eye of his faith the majestie holinesse all-sufficiencie and goodnesse of God and so with an heart humble in the sense of his owne unworthinesse but lift up to God in hope of his mercie he is to powre out the desires of his soule unto him in the name of Christ Iesus according unto the requisites of prayer before mentioned Pray after this manner In that the Lord doth here exhort to the right manner of prayer and not to the dutie it selfe it was because he tooke it for a thing granted by all men that they must pray for not the Pharises onely but the heathen did pray wherefore it must bee granted of all that Doct. 3 It is the dutie of all men to pray There were never any but if they held there was a God they held also that he was to be prayed unto Aske seeke knocke saith Christ Mat. 7.7 Pray without ceassing in every thing give thanks 1. Thessal 5.17 18. In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made knowne unto God Phil. 4.6 Reason 1 For prayer is a most holy honorable service and a chiefe worship of God wherein man doth homage unto the Lord and doth glorifie him Psal ●0 23 For in prayer the Lord is acknowledged to be God to be good gracious merciful omnipotent omniscient Vnto whom any man prayeth in him he beleeveth on him hee trusteth In confession of sinne Gods law is acknowledged to bee holy and God to be just In praying aright in the name of Christ by the Spirit the distinction of persōs is acknowledged These and many other things concerning God are really professed in making requests and are particularly expressed to the honour of Gods name in praises and thanksgiving Prayer is very beneficiall unto Reason 2 man for it is a remedie against all evill and a meane to procure all good As for evill of punishment as paine povertie and the like Ion. 3.8.10 either it doth prevent it as in the case of the Ninivites or removeth it Psal 107. They cry to the Lord in their trouble and he saveth them out of their
distresses Or if the affliction abide prayer doth ease the heart and procure patience and strength to beare it and it doth sanctifie the crosse causing it like good physicke to work for the good of the inward man As for eternall punishment prayer is the means of forgivenesse Psal 32.5 I said I will confesse my sinne saith David and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sinne As for evils of sin and temptation Christ Iesus hath prescribed prayer for a remedie against it Mat. 26.41 saying Watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation An hearty prayer hath alwayes strength either to remove the temptation or to draw from God sufficiencie of grace to resist it as it did for the Apostle who had this answer of his prayer My grace is sufficient for thee 2. Cor. 12 9 Prayer is a meane to obtaine all good things temporall therfore we are bid to say Give us this day our daily bread 1. Tim. 4.5 it sanctifieth maketh good things to be good to them that have them As for spiritual good things the Lord saith Iam. 1.5 If any man lacke wisedome let him aske of God that giveth to all men liberally and upbraideth not The Spirit of grace is obtained by prayer Your heavenly Father saith Christ shall give the holy Spirit to them that aske him Luk. 11.13 There is a necessity of praier Reason 3 both because God hath commanded it and his promises unto man are with this condition of prayer Aske Mat. 7. and ye shall have Though God can helpe if we never aske him yet usually he will not if men ask not You have not saith Iames Iam. 4.2 because ye aske not And though a man have never so much meanes these without prayer can do him no good For to the making of a thing good the word and prayer is required it being Gods ordinance 1. Tim. 4.5 that what meanes soever bee used prayer must be one and that of the quorum as we speake for in all things prayer must bee made Philip. 4.6 Ob. The Lord knoweth what every one n●edeth and he saith that * Isa 65.24 before they call I will answer therefore prayer may seeme to be needlesse Sol. The end of prayer is not to informe God of any thing which he knoweth not The use of prayer though God need not thereby to be informed or to perswade God to do any thing whereto he is not of himselfe most willing neither is it a meanes onely to procure good things for a mans selfe but a chiefe end of prayer is that man might expresse his obedience in performance of his dutie it being a part of his holy worship wherein a man professeth his owne frailty and nothingnesse without God and that he holdeth God to be the fountaine of all goodnesse even the giver of every good perfect gift and that hee is perswaded of his goodnesse power and truth towards him also he professeth that he is sensible of his wants and that hee doth depend on him and will be thankfull to him when hee shall please to supplie them For prayer maketh way for praise and thanks Besides prayer to God doth fit men to use those things which they obtained by prayer for God and according to his will considering that upon their suit to him they do enjoy them What though God know what we need our Saviour doth not from thence conclude we must not pray at all Mat. 6.8.9 but therefore take heed how you pray And Gods readinesse to answer before they call is an argument why they should pray For if God bee so gracious that so soone as a man doth in heart desire his helpe he beginneth to answer before he call and as he saith Whiles they are speaking I wil heare then we should not say therefore we need not pray but therefore we wil pray and speake to him because such is his readinesse to heare that we shall be sure to speed Ob. God hath long since decreed what men shall have whether much or little therefore prayer is needles for God cannot alter his purpose Mal. 3.6 I am God saith he and change not Sol. I grant God hath decreed before all worlds what to give and what not but at that time also he decreed the meanes that should come betweene his decree and the execution thereof one of which meanes is prayer without which he never intended ordinarily after hee hath given the first grace to give any thing with a blessing in mercie to any man For to whom he giveth saving grace he alwayes giveth the spirit of supplication Zach. 12.10 and looketh that they should upon all occasions stirre it up in them and improve it for the obtaining of those good things which God hath intended and promised to them God had decreed to give the Gentiles to Christ yet God said to him Aske of me Psal 2.8 and I will give the heathen for thine inheritance Daniel knew certainly the time that God had decreed to deliver his people out of captivitie Dan. 9.2.3 but this did not cause him to forbeare prayer but it quickened him to fast and pray that they might bee delivered For God who had made knowne his decree by the Prophet that after seventie yeares he would cause the Iews to returne out of Babylon and that he had thoughts of peace towards them to give them an expected end hee said also to them Ier. 29.10.11.12.13 then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you And ye shall seek me and finde me when ye shall search for me with all your heart And I will turne away your captivity c. The Prophet David though it was revealed to him that God would establish his house and kingdome upon his seed yet the rather prayeth saying Thou O Lord of hoasts 2 Sa. 7.27 God of Israel hast revealed unto thy servant saying I wil build thee an house therfore hath thy servant found in his heart to make this prayer unto thee God had not onely decreed but had promised to his people that he would give them a new heart and a new spirit c. and that he would cause them to walke in his statutes and outwardly also to blesse them so that their land should bee to them as the Garden of Eden yet saith he for this will I bee inquired of by the house of Israell Ezek. 36.37 It is granted that prayer cannot neither doth it change Gods purpose when yet without prayer he will not give for his purpose was to give when they should pray but not before prayer maketh the change not in God but in him that prayeth fitting him and making him capable of the gift who till then was not sufficiently qualified for it Many have more then heart can wish yet pray not at all Object They are onely outward things and common gifts
Answ and these they have uncertainely without a blessing with them They have them but as fruits of his common goodnesse providence Psal 36.6 Psal 145.9 God knowing what imployments he hath for them amongst men and not as fruits of his speciall love promise and mercy God giveth them oft-times in wrath with a curse Tit. 1.15 they are impure unto them they make leane soules increasing their sin Psal 92.7 fatting them but it is to the slaughter it is that they may bee destroyed for ever whereas on the contrary all that pray aright shall in the best time have what is best for them with Gods blessing as a token of his speciall love unto them Vse 1 It is therefore a great fault in all those that shall under any pretence omit and neglect prayer then which fault I know none more common For except it be when all other helpes faile and they bee in a desperate extremitie who in comparison seeketh unto God by prayer When they be sicke to the Physitian or to the Surgeon onely but not to God by prayer yea some runne to Witches and Wizards to charmes to the divell to any thing rather then unto God If they be in want then they betake them to their friends to their hands to their wits yea to c●asening and shifting but never looke up to God and the like in all other cases The same course they take for their soules If the comming to Church and formall hearing the word receiving the Sacraments and the prayers of others will save them they will not alwaies be wanting in these externall devotions but as for prayer any more then a little lip-labour which indeed is no prayer they are meere strangers to it Causes why men call not upon God This neglect of prayer commeth from prophanenesse and pride of heart from confidence in the creature and from selfe-dependance which causeth them to be unwilling to come into the presence of the holy God or to be beholding to him For this cause God in justice casteth them into want They have not Iam. 4.2 because they aske not or if he give unto them without asking he giveth it with a curse it is impure unto them Tit. 1.15 as before you heard There are some so prophane that they omit prayer in contempt and with deriding all which conscionably performe it But as for those which have got into the scorners chaire and have made themselves unworthy the pearle of a reproof I leave them to the considerations following They carry in their faces the very brand of an Atheist for it is his guise not to pray himselfe but would shame him which maketh God his refuge Psal 14 4 6. And how can they be called Christians to whom the description of the heathen doth so properly agree Ier. 10 25. The Prophet Ieremie describeth the heathen by this that they were families that call not on Gods Name and these he holdeth to be meete persons upon whom God should poure out his fury and fiercenesse of his indignation But I leave these and come Vse 2 to speake to Gods owne children who even in this point of prayer are much to blame For many of them make too little account of this pretious dutie How seldome doe they set about it how loath to come to it how cold and livelesse in it and how soone wearie of it Is it any marvell if they be full of crosses and be impatient under them Is it any wonder that the world doth so oft overcome them and the divell so oft foile them when they are so seldome and so weake in prayer This failing proceedeth from want of faith in God from too much confidence in the arme of flesh and meanes here below and from poring too much upon the prosperitie of those Psal 73.7 who without prayer have more then heart could wish and by laying their owne crosses in which they lie notwithstanding they have praied too close unto themselves From these and the like causes as lying in some sinne unrepented of or the like it is that you are unwilling to pray and when you doe pray your edge of praier is quite taken off But enter I pray you into Gods sanctuarie that you may see confesse and bewaile your folly and learne with that Psalmist to say Psal 73.28 It is good to draw neere to God and to put your trust onely in the Lord. Vse 3 Let all that professe the name of God bee exhorted not to conceive of praier as a thing arbitrarie and indifferent but as of a necessarie duty as hath beene proved in the Doctrine Are any afflicted Iam. 5.13 let them pray Are any in prosperitie let them pray and praise God In what condition or state soever ye are pray For besides that it is Gods command and his immediate worship Manifold motives unto prayer we by prayer injoy an holy communion with God taking sanctuarie under his wings We edifie our selves also in our most holy faith and in all other the saving graces of Gods spirit when we pray in the Holy Ghost for by it all the weapons of our Christian warfare all the good gifts of God and meanes of our salvation become usefull and good unto us By prayer either we shall prevent Gods iudgements and corrections or bee made able to beare them and be made much better by them By prayer wee shall obtaine pardon and repentance of sins past and strength to resist temptations of sinnes to come In thus doing we shall have all such good things as be needfull for us with a blessing upon them or with contentednesse without them grace and peace in this life perfection of grace and glory in the life to come Would wee doe good to our enemies and to our friends and would we doe our selves good would we be beneficiall to the Common-weale and Church then let us pray 2 Chron. 30.20 Gen. 25.21 Mark 9.25 Mat 15.28 Mat. 8.13 Gen. 24.12 For Kings have prayed for their subjects husbands for their wives fathers for their sonnes mothers for their daughters masters for servants servants for masters and all have beene heard in that which they praied Prayer because it is ordained by God and hath his promise calleth in and ingageth Gods power truth for him that maketh it and so through God becommeth omnipotent What hath beene or can be too hard for Prayer Exod 14.15.16 It hath caused the Sea to divide it selfe and become an high way to Gods people also together with the Whale Ionah 2 1.1.10 Iosh 10.12 to give up Ionas alive and set him ashore It caused the Sunne to stand still yea to goe backe It hath loosed chaines and unlocked Prisons Act. 1● 5.7.11 and iron gates and delivered the prisoners What hath not prayer done what will it not doe in the behalfe of the Church or of any of Gods chosen Nothing so deepe but with this bucket we may draw
borne againe by the Spirit of adoption whereby they have the image of God renewed in righteousnesse and true holinesse and so are become his children by the regeneration of his Spirit wherewith he hath sealed them for his owne Whereas the men of the Vse 1 world doe entertaine in them a base opinion of all that indeavour to keepe a good conscience in all things therein approving themselves to bee Christs Disciples indeed and the very children of the most high hereby they may see their errour their insolencie and their extreame malice and folly Can there be a more notorious folly and madnesse then this when the children of the bond-woman Ioh. 8.44 nay of the devill for herein they doe his lusts shall account of and use the children of the free-woman yea of the everliving God as the filth of the world and the of-scouring of all things 1. Cor. 4.13 How doe these men by defaming the children therein despise God their Father But let them take heed how they despise or misuse the least of those little ones that have indeed given their names to Christ Iesus It is hard kicking against pricks Act. 9.5 It is not safe touching the Lords anointed Psal 105.15 Zach. 2.8 the very apple of his eye And know as base as they be Their Angels and ministring spirits doe alwaies behold the face of their Father which is in heaven Mat. 18.10 Vse 2 Hereby all men should learn of whom to esteeme most honourably whom to make choise of for their yoke-fellowes their servants or their companions also in whom they should most delight and to whom they should shew most love and goodnesse even to true Christians whom David calleth The Saints that bee upon the earth Psal 16.3 and the excellent and well hee might for they have the God of excellencie to their Father If true Christians have God Vse 3 to their Father this should move all men to become Christians indeed to beleeve and to order their conversation aright for such onely the Doctrine meaneth It is the highest advancement and honour that man is capable of to bee called and to bee indeed the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty Iohn doth admire such love in God and such advancement of men that men should be called the sonnes of God 1 Ioh. 3.1 All Christians should be like Vse 4 God Holy as he is holy for it becommeth children to be like their father They should honour and obey him If I be a Father where is mine honour saith God Mal. 1.6 As obedient children they must not fashion themselves according to the former lusts of their ignorance but as hee which hath called them is holy 1 Pet 1.14.15 so they should be holy in all manner of conversation Disobedience of children to their Parents was in the law of the Iewes punishable with death disobedience therefore unto our heauenly Father is much more dangerous They should likewise submit themselves unto his fatherly chastisements Heb. 12.5.7.10 they must neither despise them nor faint under them but must indure them patiently because God therein dealeth with them as with sonnes for their profit that they might be partakers of his holinesse They need not carke and care but in all things they may and must with boldnesse and assurance of helpe repair to God being assured of his fatherly affection towards them for to whom doe children flie in their need but to their Parents We have seene those that bee evill give good gifts unto their children how much more will our heavenly Father give good things even his holy Spirit Luk. 11.13 to them that aske him Lastly it is the joy and comfort Vse 5 of every Christian to consider that they have this honor that they may call God Father and aske him blessing What manner of love hath the Father bestowed in this saith Iohn 1 Ioh. 3.1 that wee should bee called the sonnes of God That wee the sonnes of men of meane men of mortall men of sinfull men yea the very children of the divell should be advanced to bee the sonnes and daughters of God Almighty While vainglorious foolish men vaunt and brag of their gentry and earthly Parentage let us with an holy exultation of spirit rejoyce in this that wee have God to our Father This doth comfort the heart in povertie sickenesse paine disgrace and in all distresses when we know wee have a Father that will not forsake us though our naturall Parents should Psal 27.10 that though tender mothers may forget their sucking children and sonnes of their wombe yet God will not forget his Isa 49.15 hee is wise and almightie and will helpe in the best time he alwaies knoweth what we have need of If wee be children then heires of God and joynt heires with Christ Rom. 8.17 When we duely thinke of this no afflictions can dismay us for we hold them not worthy the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 wee shall by this helpe our selves against heart-eating cares for we have a father and wee know it belongeth to Parents to provide and lay up for their children 2 Cor. 12 13. When we think of this that we are Gods heirs it will keepe us from grieving at and enuying the prosperity of the wicked we will be well content God should give his moveables where he please so long as the birth-right and inheritance is ours for we are begotten to a lively hope of an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in the heavens for us 1. Pet. 1.3.4 Whatsoever our estate be in the world we may and ought to comfort our selves with these thoughts Which art in heaven God is described by his being in heaven not onely to shew where he is for he is a God at hand and a farre off Ier. 23.23 24. and filleth heaven and earth but as the majestie of Kings may be set out by their glorious palaces and thrones so heaven Gods most glorious throne doth here set forth his majectie and the perfection of all his infinite excellencies Whence learne Doct. 7 God to whom prayer is made who is Father to all true beleevers is an heavenly majestie invisible perfect and infinite in power goodnesse and all other heavenly excellencies one whose dwelling is in the heavens When God would set forth his owne greatnesse and goodnesse at once Isa 57.15 he saith Thus saith the high and loftie one that inhabiteth eternitie whose name is holy I dwell in the holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble c. The Church doth helpe her faith by casting her thoughts upon heaven the habitation of Gods holinesse and of his glory and thereby gathereth arguments of Gods perfect love to them and power for them when she saith Where is thy zeale and thy strength c. and from the same consideration doth preferre Gods
knowledge and care of them above the knowledge and care that Abraham could have of them saying Isa 63.15.16 Doubtlesse thou art our Father though Abraham bee ignorant of us c. Thou ô Lord art our Father our Redeemer thy Name is frō everlasting The Apostle calleth him King eternal 1. Tim. 1.17 immortall invisible only wise God And he doth call Christ who is one with the Father Blessed and onely Potentate the King of kings Lord of lords 1. Tim 6.15.16 who onely hath immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto that is in heaven to whom be glory and power everlasting These places shew plainly that Gods being in heaven doth set out his purenesse of being his soveraigntie his infinite power goodnesse omniscience truth mercie justice and all other his infinite excellencies His dwelling in heaven Reason and declaration of his power from thence both by his word and works of creation preservation and redemption of man do prove that he is God and in these works his majesty power and all other excellencies of God are written in such great letters that any one may runne and reade them How can any thinke of this Vse 1 God and not be ravisht in his soule with a most high admiration of his glorious and most excellent heavenly majestie Likewise it should cause al men to reverence feare love and obey this Almighty this infinitely good and glorious God whose throne is in heaven who is our heavenly Father Also it should cause us to the utmost of our power whensoever we draw neare to him in any of his ordinances to come in sort beseeming his holy and heavenly majestie putting off all earthly mindednesse and putting on of heavenlinesse lifting up our hearts to God in the highest heavens How doth this discover the Vse 2 sinfulnesse of those that call Gods omniscience providence and power or any other his attributes into question as they in the Psalme saying Psal 94.7 The Lord shall not see c. And as those that said Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the wildernesse c. Can he give bread Can he provide flesh for his people The Psalmist calleth these brutish men and foolish and the Lord did shew that he could send them bread and flesh Psa 105.15 Num. 11.33 and withall leannesse into their soules so that they were not better but worse by it And he could furnish a table and also while the meat was in their mouthes he could in his wrath smite the fattest of them Psal 78.31 Make no question therefore what God can do for he can do any thing but this one to deny himselfe and ceasse to be infinite this he cannot do Vse 3 How terrible should the apprehension of Gods heavenly majestie be to all that live in any knowne sinne willingly For they live in the hatred and displeasure of him who shall send his Sonne in the glory of his majestie Mat. 16.27 who shall come in flaming fire to execute vengeance upon all those that know not God 2. Thes 1.8 and obey not the Gospell Mat. 10.28 who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell fire Vse 4 The consideration of the heavenly majestie omnipotencie and all the other most excellent attributes of God as also the consideration of heaven the place of his speciall habitation doth teach us many lessons concerning prayer First that we should not be rash with our mouthes or our hearts hastie to utter any thing before God Eccles 5.2 For God is in heaven we upon earth saith Solomon A man therefore must be considerate and well prepared before he speake unto him according as I have shewed at large page 30. Secondly this invisibility and incomprehensiblenesse of God our heavenly Father doth teach us that he is not imaginable so as to be likened to any visible thing Wherefore he that prayeth must not represent God not so much as in his thought and phantasie much lesse to his eye in the likenesse of a man or of any other creature The Orthodoxe Christians in all times have beene opposite to the making of any image of God the Father Sonne and holy Ghost either severally or of the Trinitie joyntly but especially to the setting up of any image of God in any place where God was to be worshipped knowing that the beholding of the image doth readily and unavoidably beget a false and carnall conceit of God misleading the imagination turning God into an idoll Rom. 1.23 changing the glory of the incomprehensible and incorruptible God into the image of a finite and corruptible man For indeed by reason of mans pronenesse to idolatry and of Satans deceiveable cunning suggestions and instigations as also for that an image cannot possibly set forth the incomprehensible Being and glory of God but yet leaveth a strong impression that God is present in the image and that he is like unto it therefore it is impossible for any man to represent God to himselfe by an image though it be but to put him in remembrance of God but that he shall quickly become an idolater According to the doctrine of our Church namely Idolatry is to images Hom. Tom. 2. pag. 4● especially in Churches an inseparable accident God saith that the children of Israel saw no manner of similitude on the day that he spake to them in Horeb Deut. 4.15 16. c. out of the midst of the fire Isa 40.18 And to whom will you liken God or what likenesse will you compare unto him saith the Spirit by the Prophet Isaiah Wherefore when we pray we must not conceive of him in the likenesse of any thing but as an incomprehensible Spirit Father Sonne and holy Ghost from whom by whō through whom and to whom are all things God blessed for ever one alwayes to be admired and adored but not possible to bee delineated or comprehended by any imagination of man What though God did sometimes manifest his presence by things visible as to Moses in the burning bush Exod. 3.2 Exod. 24.15.16.17 and to the children of Israel in the cloud and in the likenesse of devouring fire Gen. 3.8 1. Sam. 3.4 1 Kin. 19.12 as also he did to Adam to Samuel and to Eliah by the sound of a voice And what though in a mentall vision God appeare as a majesticke * 1. King 22.19 judge sitting upon a throne in such appearances as might set forth to Micaiah Dan. 7.9 to Daniel and to Iohn Rev. 4.2 3 the soveraigntie eternity puritie severitie and all-sufficiencie of God And what though the holy Ghost descended upon Christ like a * Mat. 3.16 Act. 2.3 dove and upon the disciples in cloven tongues like fire These were onely acts of particular dispensation usefull for the present occasiōs but not to be patterns to set forth God thereby for our imitation For notwithstanding that God appeared in divers
fashions to the Patriarches before the Law yea the second person in Trinity appeared to Abraham Gen. 18.1.3.22 Gen. 32 24. and to Iacob in shape of a man yet in the * Deu. 4.16 law God expresly forbiddeth the representing of him by any similitude whether of man or of any other thing Wherefore neither can any act of Gods particular dispensation in his apparitions to man since the Law bee a dispensation to us who are bound to keepe the Law For it is our duty to obey Gods Law not to follow the examples of Gods owne particular dispensation he being a Law to himselfe and under no Law It is true Christ Iesus was a very man in all things like to us sinne onely excepted was crucified upon a material crosse capable of portraiture yet no image can set forth Christ as he is our Saviour and as he is to be worshipped For an image can onely set forth his bodily shape and his outward state of humiliation These images therefore debase Christ who now is glorified And who so shall now represent Christ to his mind according to the likenesse of an ordinary man or in the likenesse of Christs manhood as it was in his state of debasement the same turneth Christ into an idoll For he is to be conceived of in the minde and to be worshipped not as a meere man whose body onely the image can but uncertainly represent but as God and man and as man now glorified subsisting not as other men do but in the second person of the Deitie Faith apprehendeth more of Christ than the eye can represent or if an image could represent more than it doth yet we have not Gods institution for it but against it Thirdly sith God is in heaven wee learne that we must not needlesly multiply words before him when wee pray but that our words be few This same thing the Holy Ghost inferreth saying God is in heaven and thou upon the earth therefore let thy words bee few Eccl. 5.2 The meaning is bee not rash and inconsiderate but ponder as well your words that you may know how to utter your minde to God as to consider the matter what to speak unto him namely you must use such words and so many as may aptly and sufficiently expresse your desires to God without superfluity of speech and without needlesse and heartlesse repetitions and unnecessary digressions This vain repetition of words babling Mat. 6.7 our Saviour forbiddeth Against this rule Papists doe grosly offend in measuring out their prayers not by weight but by number as they will say so many Pater-nosters so many Avie-maries so many Dirges c. to obtaine their desires of God according as they are prescribed in their Rosaries and they presume to be heard by the merit of their much babling In like manner do offend all those which utter their minde to God with affectation of fine words as if they would court God or on the other side in a loose and carelesse expression or though using apt words yet they utter them without understanding or affection Quest But may we not at all make long prayers nor repeat the same petitions which will require many words Answ The case touching long prayer When there is cause wee may use long prayers we may use repetitions and therefore many words in some prayers namely when the matter of our prayer is large and when in repetition of the same things we do indeed renew and double our desires and do withall expresse a farther degree of seriousnesse and earnestnesse of our heart in putting up the said desires The examples of the prayers of David of Salomon Psal 51. Psal 119. 1 Kings 8.22 to 53. Dan. 9. Luke 6.12 of Daniel and of our blessed Saviour Christ Iesus who spent whole nights in prayer and therefore must needs use many words do give us a sufficient warrant But words in prayer without matter many words and repetitions without understanding and without new affections Mat. 6.7 and when men think they shall the rather bee heard for their Oratory or much speaking or when men make long prayers that they may bee thought to have a large gift in prayer or when they do it under any colourable pretence to serve their base ends Mat. 23.14 in these and in like cases long prayers and many words in prayer are unlawfull Fourthly the consideration of this infinite heavenly Majesty and goodnesse of our God and father doth teach us that when we pray unto him wee must performe it with holy adoration and devotion with all holy reverence alwayes inwardly in our hearts as also outwardly when time place and ability serveth with reverent and apt gestures of the body Reason 1 For Christ hath redeemed both our soules and bodies therefore wee must serve him and glorifie him in and with our body and spirit 1 Co. 6.20 which are Gods Reason 2 Though the essence of prayer consisteth in the desire and lifting up of the heart which must therefore be looked unto that it be rightly affected and though God be a Spirit and is not moved with bare bodily gestures Vse of befitting gestures in prayer yet befitting gestures are of speciall use in prayer as partly to help the inward man making the spirit more apt and lively and the minde to bee more attentive to what we are about and partly to expresse the inward devotion and affection of the heart But how far is a man bound in conscience to use outward gestures Quest and what gestures must wee use The worship of God consisteth not in outward gestures Answ The case touching gestures in prayer and when a gesture is not by him commanded it is not properly any part of Gods worship And the Scripture hath not commanded any particular gesture to bee used alwayes in prayer therefore the conscience is not bound to any thing certaine thereabout but left free to observe what in Christian discretion is fittest to be done In Scripture we read of variety of gestures in prayer as bowing the knees Eph. 3.14 Psal 95.6 Iohn 17.1 1 Tim. 2.8 2 Chr. 6.13 Mar. 11 25 Luk. 18 13 and prostrating the body this is most usuall and when we can conveniently is fittest to be used also lifting up the eyes and hands stretching out of the hands knocking the breast looking downe to the earth standing Luk. 24 30 Isa 38.2 sitting at meat and lying in the bed all these postures of the body have been used indifferently Rules touching gestures Yet some rules consonant to Scripture may bee given for our better direction In short ejaculations and in secret praier while a man is in company Neh 2.4 or on his way in his journey or the like in these cases bodily gestures are neither fit nor usefull No gesture is to bee used but such as is apt to stirre up or holily to expresse a right affection to God ward as either
humblenesse and submission of minde or griefe and contrition of heart for sinne or fervency or joy hope and confidence in God or the like The knees are bowed and the body prostrate to shew humble submission a sad countenance and teares serve to shew contrition lifting up eyes and hands expresse the lifting up the heart to God in the heavens in hope and confidence of a gracious hearing Salomon stretched out his hands to expresse his earnestnesse and fervency and the publican smote his breast and would not looke up to heaven that hee might signifie his sorrow and the sense of his unworthinesse In publique prayers a man must use such gestures as are prescribed by lawfull authority or if none bee prescribed such as are in common use in the particular Church in which hee doth live they being free from superstition The not observing this rule is the mother and nurse of much variance and sometimes of schismes in the Church of God In private prayer alone every man may use such gestures as his heart doth prompt unto him provided alwayes that they bee decent and beseeming the holy presence of God and the holy action in hand such as may stirre up and continue right affections in him and may also serve to expresse the right disposition of his heart when he prayeth If a man sit giving of thanks at his meat or at other times when hee prayeth being disabled that hee cannot kneele or stand up then for that sitting is not a gesture of reverence it is convenient that with i● hee expresse reverence and devotion in some other gesture or meanes such as is in use and may bee joyned with sitting I will end the answer to this case about gesture in prayer with these cautions That no man please himselfe in his greatest bodily devotion Cautions concerning● gestures in prayer when it is severed from inward truth and devotion of the heart as if God were well pleased with it for that is grosse hypocrisie When a man is disabled that hee cannot kneele or lift up his hands or performe other acts of holy reverence in prayer this must not discourage him nor yet breed a scruple in him whether hee may pray or whether his prayer shall be accepted for as I said gestures are not of the essence of prayer and it is truth in the inward parts which God loveth and accepteth And when a gesture cannot bee used but with paine to the body or to the endangering of health or distraction of the minde in prayer God requireth it not for gestures are then to be used when they do further Mat. 12.7 and not hinder the heart and spirit in Gods service And in this case God preferreth mercy before sacrifice The case touching the place of prayer Fiftly the consideration of Gods heavenly majesty and specialty of glorious residence in heaven doth teach us that prayer may bee made to God in all places all places here below are alike distant from heaven and God can heare as well in one place as in another Wherefore our Saviour breaking downe the partition wall which stood betweene Iew and Gentile saith Iohn 4.21.23 Neither in Ierusalem nor in that Mount as if they should bee more holy places than other should men worship the Father but the houre cometh and now is that the true worshippers should namely in all places worship him in spirit and in truth According to that of the Apostle I will that men pray every where 1 Tim. 2.8 lifting up pure hands without wrath or doubting But is not the Church a better place to pray in Quest and is not God more present there than elsewere and are not private prayers which are made there more acceptable to God than if they were made in other places I answere Answ Papists and popishly affected say so but without good ground But to resolve this case difference must be put between publique prayers and private In the time of the Gospell in the primitive Church while it was under cruell persecution any place agreed upon by the Ministers and people to assemble in for Gods publique worship was a publique place though it were a chamber in a private mans house for for a long time Christians had no other Churches Tertul. Apol cap 39. but common houses But when the Church was at peace houses were built of purpose and dedicated to God for his publique worship which therefore both in borrowed and in proper speech were well called Temples houses of God or Churches Places publique or private are in themselves alike holy and alike fit for prayer respectively namely the publique place for publique and the private place for private prayer For since the death of Christ all religious difference of place is taken away And Gods presence is not tied to one place more than to another Yet because Churches are set apart for Gods service in that respect they are to bee had in speciall esteeme and reverence so as to be wel and sufficiently maintained and repaired and kept comely with all such outward beautie and ornaments as are beseeming the pure worship of God Also they are to be resorted unto by all sorts diligently at times appointed for the publicke worship of God where all are to behave themselves reverently before the Lord And out of the case of necessitie these Churches are to bee imployed onely for religious uses Touching esteeme of Churches a meane must be kept betweene two extreames wee must not prophane them with Atheists nor yet superstitiously idolize them with the Papists When men are not necessarily hindered Churches are to be frequented where publicke prayers may be best made and are like to bee best heard not because the place it selfe hath more holinesse than any other but because God hath in special sort placed his name in those his holy ordinances which there are performed and is there present Mat. 18.20 according to his promise in speciall sort all the while that the congregation and people of God with whom we joyne in the Church are in the act of performance thereof The Apostle had the Church in such esteeme that from the holinesse thereof he endeavoureth to convince the Corinthians of the greater sinne 1. Cor. 11.22 saying Despise ye the Church of God but by Church he meaneth not the place of assembling but the congregation assembled Also it is better to pray in the assembly of the Church because there we have the helpe of the Minister and the examples of others devotions besides that there is an uniting of the desires of many unto God who delighteth in the joynt prayer of many in such assemblies As for private prayer private places not the publicke are fittest for them Therefore our Saviour warned his disciples that they should not like the Pharises make their private prayers in publicke places Mat 6.5.6 as in the Synagogues or corners of the streets but in private as in the closet c. If
Gods childe and Christs brother Mark 3.35 Hee that doth the will of God the same is my brother sister and mother saith Christ Sixtly God will heare their prayers Ioh 9.31 If any man will doe his will him he heareth And seventhly to such belongeth the salvation of God Psalm 50.23 Be ye intreated therefore by the mercies of God to give your selves both in bodies and soules to GOD. Prove what is that good Rom. 11.1.2 that acceptable and perfect will of God Thinke thus with thy selfe It is sufficient nay too much that I have spent the time past of my life according to the will of men and of the flesh in all manner of wickednesse but now that I am quickned and professe better things now that I am redeemed from my former conversation I will therefore strive and pray that I may live according to the holy will of him that hath redeemed me Thinke thus God will have his will fulfilled by me in obedience or hee will have it fulfilled upon mee in his just vengeance Let every man therfore use all meanes to know and doe the will of God And as much as in us lyeth we must cause others to know and to doe it We have Christs example who also speaking of mans duty saith Ioh. 13.17 If yee know these things happy are yee if yee doe them Now that wee may doe the will of God Meanes inabling men to do Gods will wee must first be ingrafted into Christ and must abide in him drawing grace and vertue from him by the exercise of our faith as the branch doth from the Vine Ioh. 15.5 then wee shall doe Gods will bringing forth much fruit in him Secondly we must deny our owne wisedome and our own will Pro. 3.5 Pro. 23.4 and we must not consult with flesh and bloud but with the word of God and the inward man in which dwelleth the Spirit of God Gen. 22.3 Thus Abraham became able to doe as hard a piece of service as any man can be put unto in offering his onely sonne Isaack the sonne of his hope Rom. 4.19.20.21 who as he beleeved in God in a thing impossible to reason without reasoning against it so did hee performe a commandement of killing his sonne in naturall reason seeming unnaturall unreasonable and impious this he did by resting onely upo the word of God to which he was obedient Heb. 11.19 Thirdly wee must doe our utmost that we may know the will of God else how can wee doe it to this end wee must heare reade and meditate on the holy Scriptures which have the power of God working with them to inlighten the minde with knowledge and to incline the will to obedience Fourthly pray unto God who onely can and will informe the understanding Phil. 2 13. and give both to will and to doe at his good pleasure Thus Paul prayed that the Colossians might be filled with the knowledge of his will Col. 1.9 and that they might walk worthy of the Lord in all well-pleasing David likewise prayed saying Ps 119 8● Quicken me after thy loving kindenesse so shall I keepe the testimony of thy mouth And the Church saith Cant 1.4 Draw mee and we will runne after thee If we will pray and seeke with all our might as we would for hid treasure Pro. 3.4 ● then shall we understand the feare of the Lord and then shall wee know Hol. 6.3 if we follow on to know the Lord. Then shall we also be able to doe the will of God Phil. 2.13 For he will worke all our workes for us and we shall be blessed in our deed Iames 1.25 As in heaven Observe here that the patterne of perfect obedience is taken from heaven whence we may collect Doct. 2 In heaven is all perfect obedience there is no failing there no not in the least circumstance 1 Cor. 13.12 Now I know but in part saith the Apostle but then that is when hee should come to heaven I shall know as I am knowne Peter speaking of the new heavens saith that therein dwelleth righteousnesse 2 Pet. 3.13 Reas 1 1 Cor. 6.9 For heauen is the holy place into which no unrighteous person can enter for when there were disobedient persons in heaven namely the divell and his Angels which kept not their first estate heaven did vomit them forth never to be burdened with them or the like againe In heaven there are no tempters Reas 2 for there are none but God Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12.23 therefore also no temptations unto sinne The thoughts of this will moderate griefe for those our Vse 1 friends which die in the Lord. For the place whitherto death hath made a passage for them is the heaven spoken of in the Doctrine which doth secure us that they are there where they are made perfect where they shal neither offend nor be offended Doth not the meditation Vse 2 hereof worke in Gods children not onely contentment but a longing to lay downe this tabernacle to be translated hence when the Lord shall please sith the exchange will be so happy It is but a parting with a sinfull miserable earth for this heaven wherein dwelleth perfect righteousnesse It is leaving mortality for life sinne for grace and misery for glory in that place where they shall neither bee actors nor beholders of sinne where there is no sinne either to infect or vexe them Vse 3 When we are wearied and almost fainting in our combat against sinne and this wicked world if we would but consider that ere long if we do hold out manfully a while this sinne and flesh shall annoy us no more For when death commeth it is the portall to this heaven spoken of in the text which death doth as certainely separate sinne from soule and body for ever as if doth the soule from the body for a while For our place is this heaven where are the Angels the patternes of our obedience and when we come there we shall be as the Angels Luke 20.36 and shall ever be with the Lord. As in heaven Here Christ doth send us to the best and perfect examples whence note In proposing examples for imitation Doct. 3 men must propose the best such as are perfect and heavenly The examples of Angels and those that be perfect must bee imitated of men on earth Therfore when Paul would have the Corinthians follow him it was with this condition as hee followed Christ or because he followed Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 In the following such examples Reas 1 men shall alwaies have cause to proceed on and grow better and better and shall still be going forward towards perfection for such examples are perfect Reas 2 When men looke upon these perfect copies the sight of how much they come short of what they should doe taketh downe pride which else would arise from the sense of what they haue done
act in respect of the Father Son holy Ghost in the first act of Faith and conversion of a sinner whereby the person of a man stands justified before God and shall without intercision of justification and losse of this favour of God stand before the barre of Gods tribunall and is and alwaies shall be absolutely justified and acquitted from all sinnes past present to come because all obligations hand-writings against him are in that act cancelled and blotted out he forgiving all trespasses Colos 2.13.14 Yet it must be knowne that of this act there is as it were a double sentence First in Court of heaven at which time the elect in Christ have their names inrolled in the booke of Gods effectuall calling and are numbred among the just which sentence can never be revoked or blotted out this is that which was passed with God that I may so speake after the manner of men in the first act of conversion Secondly this sentence of forgivenesse is passed in the court of the conscience of him that had the former sentence pronounced for him in heaven This sentence is the second act of the holy Ghost wrought in this manner First after that a sinner is cōvinced of his guiltines of sin and of his damnable condition because of his sinne then forgivenesse is offered and pronounced to the eare in that gracious promise of salvation to all that beleeve in Christ Iesus which promise is proclaimed in the ministerie of the Gospell in which light of the Gospell he sheweth unto a man possibility of salvation setting before him I speake of men of yeeres and understanding Christ the meanes of salvation and by this meanes the holy Ghost worketh faith in Christ then confession and griefe for sinne then prayer to aske forgivenesse and grace to live godly and then doth witnesse to his spirit that he is accepted of God Thus sentence is pronounced in the conscience from whence ariseth sense of Gods love which is called the shedding abroad of the love of God in our hearts by the holy Ghost Rom. 5.5 also sense of the loving countenance of God Psal 4.6 7. which is the signe of his loving kindnesse and is that speech of God by which he doth say to our soules he is our salvation and then ariseth in our hearts peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost This sentence of forgivenesse unto the conscience hath different degrees it is sometimes more cleare in the apprehension of the soule somtimes more dimme yea sometimes quite blotted out in the counterpane of our release or copie of our acquittance as it was with David Psal 51. so that a person perfectly just before God hath sometime little or no sense or apprehension of it in his owne conscience but doubteth whether he be in state of grace or no. Which happeneth because of the staine and guilt of new sinnes which guilt abideth in the conscience untill a man do confesse his sinnes repent and aske forgivenesse and by a renewed faith apply forgivenes by which meanes the evidence of his pardon is againe by the holy Ghost exemplified and sentence by this new application is againe pronounced in his conscience whence ariseth new assurance of salvation and renewed joy in the holy Ghost This is that justification which for distinction sake Divines call justification by parts or continued or repeated justification or new application of one and the same justification which justification though in respect of the sentence pronounced in heaven is one individuall act whereby a man standeth alwayes just before God yet in respect of the pronouncing of that sentence to the heart it is not actually applyed neither can a particular sinne be said to be everie way actually forgiven untill after it have beene committed is confessed and repented of nor untill forgivenesse be asked and until the holy Ghost hath made new application thereof unto the conscience through renewing of faith by which a man doth againe and againe as new sinnes are committed apply the merits of the bloud of Christ unto his soule Also it must be knowne that the sentence of pardon which is passed in heaven with God is not fully executed untill the last degree of it when sentence of absolution shall be pronounced by Christ Iesus Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world Matt. 25.34 It must moreover be conceived and held that notwithstanding this distinction of justification betweene an absolute justification in respect of God and a justification by parts in respect of application to mans conscience there are not two kindes of justification a first and a second as the Papists hold but one and the same justification considered in different respects In respect of Gods actuall acceptation of a mans person justification is absolute but in respect of the actuall application and manifestation of Gods acceptation unto a mans conscience justification is by parts and degrees When a man alreadie justified asketh forgivenesse he doth not ask a new justificatiō but a second or new application of pardon unto the conscience of those particular sinnes which are daily committed together with continuance of Gods favour and more cleare evidence that he is sealed up unto the day of redemption The third thing to be spoken of for the better understanding the word forgive concerneth the effects following the apprehension thereof these are Peace of conscience Rom 5.1 Ro. 14.17 and joy in the holy Ghost These things touching justification and remission of sinnes being opened we may understand what is prayed for when we say Forgive sinnes Wee pray first that those which belong unto Gods election but are not yet converted may be accepted of God through Christ Iesus God not imputing their sinnes to them but unto Christ whereby they are freed from the curse We pray likewise that Christs righteousnes may be imputed to them that they beleeving in Christ might bee saved and for that cause pray that they may beleeve Secondly wee pray that our selves and others being justified and accepted into favour it would please the Lord to continue this his favour and that he would signifie and make the same knowne to our hearts and consciences daily by a new testification of the holy Ghost accompanied with a new application of pardon for new sinnes daily committed and that wee may have more and more assurance of our perfect redemptiō at the day of judgement and that we may have peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost in the meane time The particular circumstances in this Petition come next to bee laid open which are three First the connexion of this Petition by this copulative and that is As well forgive sinnes as give daily bread The second is the person who is to forgive that is God the Father through the satisfaction and mediation of the Sonne by the application of the holy Ghost Thus much is implyed in forgive in which
Thes 3.5 J sent to know your faith lest by some meanes the tempter have tempted you But to say that God doth thus tempt any man is blasphemy for Saint Iames saith Iam. 1.13 God tempteth no man because he cannot be tempted to evill But to leade into temptation taken in the good sense as it proceedeth from God is onely such an act or acts of Gods soveraignty and wise providence concerning man whereby it so commeth to passe that a man is exposed to the temptations either of Sathan of other men or of a mans owne euill lusts who are the proper and onely actors of temptation unto sinne In this act of leading into temptation allusion may in part be made unto the acts of a Generall of an Army who may according to his discretion lead which band he pleaseth and set them in the Forlorne hope the place of greatest danger and may keepe which band he pleaseth in the Reserve or in some Fort the place of greatest safety It may likewise be somewhat resembled by an act of the Moderator of the games of combats where none might enter the lists and play their prize but according to the permission and appointment of the overseer and moderator of those exercises The Lord God hee is the great Lord of hosts and is the over-seer and over-ruler of the great Theater of the world who doth at his pleasure moderate and order all actions therin in perfection of wisedome to his owne glory Evill is either evil of punishment which is temporall prayed against in the fourth petitiō eternall prayed against in the fift petition Or evill of sinne which is referred either to persons or actions When this word evill noteth out a person in Scripture it signifieth the divell who because he is of himselfe so exceeding evill and doth make it his worke to infect all men with evill he is called the evill or the evill one So he that Math. 13.19 is called the evill one in the Greeke is v. 39. called the divell Some would restraine this word evill that it should meane the divell as if hee onely were prayed against in this petition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that because this word evill in the Greeke hath his article joyned with it which giveth an emphasis to evill pointing at some speciall evill one which is the divell I doe grant that sometimes these articles do give a speciall force unto the words to which they are annexed yet for the most part the Greekes use to adde them rather for a grace and ornament of speech and are so used seven or eight times at least in the Lords prayer So that seeing there is no necessitie in respect of the word evill to understand the divell onely and because evill of sinne is most opposite to sanctification I thinke that it is not Christs meaning to restraine the word evill unto him Evill hath respect to actions and then by evill is meant any irregularitie or swarving in any action contrary to the will of God to which will of God evil of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly standeth in opposition in which sense it must be taken in this petition and if wee put any emphasis in the article it may as wel denote evill of sinne in generall as any particular evill yet here I doe not exclude the divell as if hee were not meant at all to be praied against but doe include both him and evill men and the evill world the euill heart and all other things so farre as they are movers and inticers unto evill In this very sense are the same words used by Christ saying Father Ioh 17.15 keepe them from the evill or from wickednesse So 1 Ioh. 5.19 The world lyeth in euill or wickednesse And that of the Apostle Rom. 12.9 is without all exception Abhor 〈◊〉 that which is evill cleave to that which is good Evill is here taken indifferently for all manner of evill of sinne and whatsoever doth conduce unto it Deliver implyeth two things First preservation from falling into sin Secondly helpe of God to rise out of sin by repentance both these deliverances are here meant Keeping from evill in Christs prayer Ioh. 17.15 and deliver from evill in this prayer have one meaning When Paul saith Rom 7.24 Who shall deliver he meaneth who shall give mee power against this body of sinne And that Gods giving of repentance is deliverance from evill that saying of the Apostle 2 Tim. 4.25.26 maketh it manifest where Gods giving men repentance verse 25. is all one with recovering themselves out of the snare of the divell which evil is without our question prayed against in ●hose words Deliver us from evill Vs in both clauses leade us and deliver us noteth out the same persons mentioned in the fourth petition scil our selves all our brethren that live upon the earth That we may understand the meaning of this Petition more fully more cle●ly it is to be considered what grace of God it is which is he● prayed for by vertue whereof a man may be delivered from the evill here deprecated First wee pray that God by an act of his gracious providence would free us if it might be from the very temptation unto sinne namely that wee may be delivered and kept from seducers corrupters that they may not tempt us unto evill according as Saint Paul prayed that Satans buffeting 2 Cor. 11.7.8 the prick● in the flesh might depart fro● him Wee may pray that God would please not to leade us unto temptation Moreover sith GOD hath thought it meete that his owne children should bee exercised with manifold tentations and the flesh the world and the divell conspire to assault us with temptations it cannot be but we shall daily bee tempted Wherefore prayer also is to bee made unto God that he would not leade us into temptation that is hee would bee pleased to uphold us and that hee would so effectually worke in us by the grace of his spirit that we may not be insnared by it and held under the power of it so as to be overcome made to yeeld to commit that sinne to which we are tempted This speciall and effectuall grace is it which is requisite both that we may resist temptations and that wee may have both will and ability to live holily righteously in the whole course of our life By this effectuall grace I understand not onely such a work of the holy spirit of God that inlighteneth the minde and which cureth the will by an immediate influence so farre as onely to raise the will from its naturall propensitie to evill to a meere indifferency to resist a temptation to evill if a man will and to imbrace a motion to good if he will But it is such a powerfull worke of the Spirit that it causeth the will so to decline evill that it will resist the temptation if he can and
perseverance that GOD should afford first his prevenient superoperating grace to begin the good worke in the will of man whereby the will being an active power doth suboperate and actually will to beleeve will to repent and to resist a temptation to live godly and to persevere and also that it is needfull that God do afford a subsequent prevailing grace whereby a man under God by his helpe may indeed beleeve repent resist a temptation and doe what may be pleasing in Gods sight and also persevere this is evident both by the Scriptures namely Philip. 2.13 and elsewhere as also by the experience of the best children of God God hath given the Apostle grace to will for hee saith Rom. 7 1● 18.19 to will was present with him when yet he wanted power to doe the good which he would for he saith also how to perform that which was good hee found not The Spouse had grace to wil to runne after Christ yet in the sense of her inability actually to runne she prayeth thus Cant. 1.4 Draw me and we will runne after thee Our Saviour saith Ioh. 6.44 none can come to him except the Father draw him That man commeth to Christ that is beleeveth in him this is the formal and proper act of man but that hee is wrought to this act this is of God by his grace as effectuall as if he were forcibly drawne Now if God should give onely a lesse measure of grace that is if he onely raise the will to an indifferency to will if a man will and shall suspend the concourse of his gracious power requisite to the act of willing and doing that which is good untill the will by its owne liberty now restored by grace shall determine whether it will choose or refuse to will or to doe man in this state shall never partake of that gracious concourse whereby a man should actually will or doe any thing that is truely morally good for man in this state will never determine to will or to doe that which is good but rather the contrary For since mans fall the remaines of inbred sinfulnesse even in the regenerate which doth so easily beset him Heb. 12.1 together with the addition of the weight of a temptation these will if God adde no more then a generall concourse of his power which hee affordeth to the substance of al mens actions good or bad or if hee onely be ready to yeeld a speciall gracious concourse to the doing of a good worke which hee is a like ready to yeeld unto all upon supposition that their will shall first determine to wil or to doe it the weight I say of the disposition of the flesh lusting against the spirit the weight of the temptation will cause that the wils indifferency to good shall cease and the will of man will actually determine for that which is evill Whence it must of necessity follow that every man will inevitably fall into sinne and will live and dye in it and so no man can possibly be saved for wee may well reason thus If our first father Adam who had not in his will two contrary principles flesh and spirit who had not two contrary dispositions and propensities fighting weighing one against the other as every man even he that is most regenerate now hath But if Adams will was habitually and perfectly well disposed to the choise of good only having not the least propensity to evill and had no weakenesse but what was common to him as a creature namely a possibility through freedome of his will to choose the evill and to refuse the good if he would it being possible that he might be deceived in judgement yet because when he was tempted though with no other temptation but such as by his habituall grace he might easily have resisted God left him to the liberty and power of his owne will and did not afford him a speciall helpe by his grace he was overcome of the temptation Let it now be considered if Adam in state of innocency and in a state of perfection if when he was left to the liberty and power of his will the temptation caused his will that was in equall balance to will and to make choise of that which was evill being overcome of the temptation is it possible that any man living who shall have onely grace to will and do well if he will who shall have no more grace of God till first he himselfe hath determined to will that which is good shal ever actually withstand daily temptations or being fallen shall ever rise out of his fall for hee never will will either to resist the temptation or by repentance to rise out of his sinne The matter of this petition and the words being explained they carry this sense O Lord God which lovest good and hatest evill thou which over-rulest and disposest all things by thy divine providence now that of thy mercy thou hast delivered me and all other of us that beleeve from the punishment of all our sinnes past in forgiving all our trespasses do not now we beseech thee expose us unto the temptations of the wicked world of the divell or of our owne evill hearts but that whensoever they assault us to entice us or enforce us to evill we may by the power of thy grace and might resist and overcome them And whereas through our frailty we are fallen and daily doe fall into sinne Lord give grace unto us to rise out of our sinne by hearty repentance For this cause vouchsafe unto us thy holy spirit that good motions may be put into us and may be strengthened in us that by the deeds thereof we may mortifie the deeds of the flesh Let the same good spirit also frame us unto and uphold us in an holy course of new obedience that we may serve thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life to the glory of thy most holy Name in doing thy will Lead us not c. It is evident that sanctification and holinesse of life is the principall thing aymed at in this petition whence if we observe with it the conjunction and which joyneth this to the other petition wee learne Jt ought to be the desire and Doct. 2 endeavour of all Christians as well to be holy in this life as to be happie in that which is to come As well to have power against sinne as pardon of it as well to be sanctified as justified Christ prayeth for all that did should beleeve saying J pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world but that thou shouldest keepe them from evill Ioh. 17.15 and verse 17. Sanctifie them with thy truth David speaking of presumptuous sinnes saith to God Let them not have dominion over me Psal 19.13 The like prayer he maketh against all sinnes saying Order my steps in thy word and let not any iniquity have dominion over me Psal 119.133 The whole tenor of
when such shall say to Christ when the doore of heaven is shut against them Lord Lord open to us he shall say to them Luk. 1● 25 26 27 28. I know you not whence you are if they reply we have professed thy name he doth make the same answer as before saying I know not whence you are depart from me all ye workers of iniquity There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth when they shal see all the godly in the kingdome of God and themselves thrust out Vse 2 Gods owne children must here be put in remembrance of that too too little holinesse that many of them shew forth in their lives and of their too much pride voluptuousnesse worldlinesse and prophannesse and how that they shew forth little more then a bare forme of godlinesse shewing little or no power thereof in their lives I do intreat these men to consider seriously of the reasons of this point and of the motives to an holy life prosecuted in the next Vse and to say each with himselfe How do I by my sins grieve and dishonour God how do I discredit my holy profession how do I grieve and hinder the godly how do I open the mouthes of the wicked and how do I hurt my self and interupt my peace with God and how do I play the foole in making choice of the crooked damnable wayes of the devill leaving the straight and saving pathes of Gods commandements Thinke this with thy selfe then humble thy selfe then pray and endeavour a reformation Vse 3 This should incite all that professe Christianity to labour in prayer to God and to take paines with their owne hearts that they may get more and more power over their corruptions and more and more grace that they may shew forth true godlinesse in their conversations amongst men To induce you hereunto consider besides the reasons already given in the doctrine these motives following First all Christians should endeavour to bee holy in their conversation out of the due respect which they owe unto God 1. Out of love and in conscience of duty 1. Thess 4.3 1. Pet 1.15 16. 1. Ioh. 3 2● Mat. 5.16 because it is the will of God our sanctification that we should be holy as he is holy 2. Because holinesse pleaseth him and 3. because he is glorified by it Whereas a wicked life of such as professe his Name Isa 63.10 doth much grieve his holy Spirit Isa 3 8. Heb. 3.10 and doth provoke the eyes of his glory I was grieved with this generation saith he Also they dishonour him as he saith to the Iew by breaking the Law dishonourest thou God Secondly consider that an holy life doth adorne the Gospel Tit. 2.10 and true religion of God but a vicious behaviour of men that professe Christianity 1. Tim. 6.1 doth cause the very religion and doctrine of God to be blasphemed Thirdly consider the different fruits of an holy and of an ungodly conversation in respect of our neighbours with whom we shall converse 1. Pet. 2.12 1. Pet. 3.1 A constant good conversation is a meanes to winne unto the power of godlinesse those which yet are strangers to the life of God and it doth rejoyce the hearts and doth confirme and increase the forwardnesse in grace of those which are already the children of God Moreover an unblameable life doth muzzle the mouthes 1 Pet. 2 15 and put to silence foolish men or if they be so maliciously wicked that they will needs speake of such holy persons as of evill doers they shall be in the end ashamed 1. Pet. 3.16 for falsely accusing their good conversation in Christ But the ungodlinesse of those which professe Christ doth much grieve and oft times doth corrupt in part and infect even those that bee truly good and doth harden the wicked in evil and giveth them just cause to complaine and exclaime against them Fourthly consider the good or evill which accrueth or befalleth to a mans selfe according as his life is holy 1. Tim. 4.8 or sinfull Godlinesse hath the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come Psal 34.9 10. Wherefore holinesse of life will either keep a man from crosses and afflictions and will remove such as are alreadie upon him Psal 34 19 1 Sam 3.18 Psal 119.71 Rom 8.28 Deu. 28.8 Phili 4 11. or will make him able fruitfully and patiently to beare them causing all things to work together for his good It will likewise procure all plenty and prosperity or it will cause contentment in adversity Also by adding unto a mans faith an holy righteous and sober life he doth make unto himselfe his calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1.10 from whence ariseth peace of conscience Rom. 5.1 and joy in the holy Ghost in this life and according to his holinesse Matth. ●5 28.46 such shall be the extent of his eternall glory in the world to come But a sinfull life pulleth downe Gods judgements upon a man and maketh them to abide long and causeth impatience under crosses causing likewise a purblinde judgement barrennesse 2 Pet. 1.8 9. and much unfruitfulnesse in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ This carelesse falling into sinne and lying in it causeth even in the elect doubtings of their being in state of grace Psal 77. and in Gods favour and of their salvation as also desperate feares through horrour of conscience And if a man have onely a forme of godlinesse but denyeth the power of it by a bad conversation he is unto God abhominable Tit. 1.16 and is exposed not onely to be accursed in every thing hee puts his hand unto Deut. 28 20. in the things which concerne the outward man 2. Thes 2.11 12. but to be further given over to Apostacie through strong delusion being to every good worke reprobate that in the end hee may be damned because though he made a profession of beleeving he yet tooke pleasure in unrighteousnesse Fifthly consider holinesse it selfe in respect of the nature thereof as it is compared with and standeth opposite to wickednesse Eph. 4.24 Holinesse is a likenesse and conformity to God our heavenly Father it is his very image renued in us which according to him is created in righteousnesse and true holines But sinne is enmity to God Rom. 8.7 Ioh. 4.44 a conformity to the very devill The wayes of holinesse are all heavenly holy spirituall equall Rom. 7.12 and good but the wayes of wickednesse are all earthly unjust Iam. 3.15 sensuall and devillish I referre the judging here of to any that is in his senses and hath but the use of right reason when he is himselfe namely whether workes of piety mercy righteousnesse and sobriety be not farre better then acts of prophanenesse cruelty unjustice intemperance and uncleannesse let any man instance in himselfe in particulars All these motives considered is there not cause why wee
should desire and labour to be holy namely for its owne sake for our neighbours sake for our owne sake for Religion sake but chiefly for the honour and glory of our God even for Gods sake Mean●● e godly For this cause we must learne to know the wayes of godlines by frequent reading and hearing the Word which Word as it is the rule so it is the ministry and meanes of obtaining the Spirit of God which is the Author of godlinesse Moreover though the Word and holy Spirit dwell in us we must stirre up this Spirit and be very circumspect and watch unto well-doing praying unto God to give us both to will and to do that which is according to godlinesse and lastly let us converse much with those that live holily Who so doth thus shall be able in some good measure to subdue his wickednesse and shal increase in true holinesse Leade thou and deliver thou The person prayed unto here to be understood is God without whom no man can be delivered from evill Vnto him our Saviour sendeth his Disciples to make this petition Whence observe Whosoever would be preserved Doct. 2 from sinne or delivered out of it and would leade a godly life must obtaine it wholly of the gift and free grace of God The Lord must give grace else no man can be holy Ioh. 15.5 Without me you can do nothing saith our Saviour I am the Lord thy God which teach thee to profit which leadeth thee by the way which thou shouldest go saith the Lord Isaiah 48.17 It is God which worketh in you both to will and to do at his good pleasure saith the Apostle Philip 2.13 And he saith The God of peace shall tread Satan under your feet shortly Rom. 16.20 Man is of himselfe insufficient Reas 1 to thinke so much as a good 2. Cor. 3.5 thought much lesse is he able to make himselfe holy Before his conversion he is dead in sinnes and trespasses and in the very power of sinne and Satan who taketh him captive at his will After his conversion 2. Tim. 2.26 he is fraile and disposed of himselfe to returne to his former evill conversation if the Lord do not support and enable him to stand by his grace The way of man is not in himselfe it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps Iere. 10.23 If man cannot order himselfe in the smaller things which concerne the outward man much lesse can he dispose himselfe in the greatest which concerne the inward in the matters of sanctification If God do not prevent man with his grace he cannot so much as will that which is good and being prevented if God pursue him not with his grace he shall but will in vaine Rom 7.18 to will may be present with him and yet he may not find ability to do that which is good this was the Apostles case and the case of Ephraim Ier 31.18 For when we have done what we can and do as much as lyeth in our power which yet wee must not bee wanting in yet conversion actuall resisting of temptation and new obedience is out of our power any further then wee are holpen by Gods free grace The adversaries unto holinesse Reas 2 are most subtill and mightie they are principalities powers and spirituall wickednesses that if they be not resisted by a stronger even by the power of Gods might Eph. 6.10 12 13. they will prevaile unto ungodlinesse man cannot be able to withstand in the evill day As God onely is able to overcome Reas 3 sinne and give grace so God hath in his wisedome reserved it as a part of his divine prerogative himselfe to bestow it For he knew wel that if man could conferre grace or could attaine it by any meanes without him or having obtained some initiall or preparative grace may then have the prime stroke in the doing of a good worke by his owne free-will then al the praise thereof would be given to man God should have none and man would grow so proud that he would claime heaven by merit and flesh would glory in his presence 1 Cor. 1.29.30 if God were not mans sanctification as well as his redemption Vse 1 First this confuteth the Popish doctrine of free-will which teacheth that a man hath power of himselfe without Gods speciall grace to resist temptation This also confuteth those that do not acknowledge that God wholly and of his free grace and meere good pleasure doth bestow the gift of faith repentance perseverance to any man but according to their works at least according to this work namely if they will what is this if not Pelagianisme condemned by the Orthodox long since who opposed those men which held that God giveth grace to men according as they dispose themselves thereunto for want of which disposition hee denyeth it to others Thus making the act of faith either not at all to bee the worke of God any more then by concurrence to the substance of the act or to make him to be the lesse principall worker of it and withall that what God in the second place doth he is held to do it according to mans worke preceding which taketh away the chiefe praise from God and giveth it to a mans selfe because it suspendeth faith repentance and every good worke upon the determination of man● will Indeed man neither doth nor can beleeve or repent untill first hee himselfe determine in his will to beleeve and repent but this hee cannot do before that God hath wrought this determination in his will by the grace of his holy Spirit by which also hee enableth him actually to beleeve to repent and to do the things that are acceptable in his sight God first doth worke the power then the will and also the deed God inclineth and swayeth mans will to follow his and doth not expect and stay untill man doth will and then follow it It i● impossible to the working of mans will that God having given him a power to will should expect that man should first produce the act of willing and then should graciously concur to the said act For what need shall there be of Gods concurrence to draw forth the act of a mans will when he hath willed alreadie Moreover if God by his grace did onely give a man power to will and to do if he will and if God shall there wait and proceed no further by the helpe of his grace untill men have willed then the efficacie of mans willing doth depend not upon Gods purpose and upon Gods grace given according to the purpose of Gods will but it doth depend originally and principally upon mans wil and hereby man shall be made a converter of himselfe before God have converted him and it may rather be said contrary to the Apostle that man worketh in God the will and the deed Phili. 2.13 then to acknowledge that God worketh in man the will and the
in his holy wisedome decree to permit it Moreover there could be no faultinesse in such a decree because that in it was set such an order that neither the coming of things to passe by Gods permission nor that which should come to passe by his working should either offer violence to the wills of the reasonable creatures or should take away the liberty or contingency of second causes but doth establish them rather For Gods decree doth determine the creature to worke according to its nature that as all naturall agents as that stones should descend if they be not upheld and that fire should burne combustible matter should worke necessarily so all voluntary agents should worke freely and contingently The liberty of the creature together with the sinfulnesse of the act of the creature may and doth well stand with the decree of God Indeed upon supposition of Gods decree to permit Adam to fall it followed by necessarie consequent that Adam would fall yet was it not necessarie that Adam should fall necessarily But rather upon supposition of Gods decree Adams fall by eating the forbidden fruit which God permitted him to do came to passe freely and contingently that is with a possibility of the contrary namely of forbearing to eate of the forbidden fruit This was because God had made man a rationall and voluntary agent to worke contingently and freely according to the freedome of his will and not to be forced thereto by any necessity The decree of permitting sinne doth not lay any necessity upon any man to commit sinne Sinne hath not relation to Gods decree as the effect hath to its cause but onely as a consequent of it and as an object whereabout the decree is conversant Gods fore-knowledge of what shall come to passe and his will to permit it to come to passe are sufficient to denominate a necessity or certaintie of event that the same thing must needs come to passe but neither his fore-knowledge or his will that a thing shall come to passe by his permission maketh God the author of that which is fore-knowne or permitted but to produce a thing that maketh God to be the author of it As for sinne there is no operation of God concerning it as it is sinne but rather negation or suspension of that grace which if God did bestow would keep man from committing of it Gods decree to permit sinne doth not destinate any man to sinne for destination is the ordaining of a person to a certaine end an evill action cannot be the end to which a man is ordained And this decree of permitting sinne and of leaving him in his sinne and then of damming him for sin all which presuppose that God decreed to create man yet from hence it doth not follow that God made any man to the end hee might damne him the end of his creation and of all the parts of Cods decree was the manifestation of his owne glory He made all things for himselfe Prov. 16 4. Now if man might fall by Gods permission and yet God is free from being author of sinne then who can have any colour of exception if after man is fallen God do leave him in his sinne and shall condemne him for his sin especially sith that though Gods decree to leave a man in state of sinne and to reprobate him from faith and other graces needfull to salvation be absolute and without any cause out of God but of his meere will and absolute pleasure yet he never decreed to reprobate or destinate any to damnation absolutely nor yet doth he execute or damne any but for his sinne God never doth save or damne any absolutely but as they are found to be in Christ or as they are found to be in their sinnes out of Christ For God did not absolutely elect any unto salvation nor absolutely reject any to damnation but he decreed to save only those which should actually by his Spirit beleeve in Christ repent and persevere in an holy life to the end if they be of yeares of discretion and such as by secret union of the Spirit should by a way unknowne to us partake of and belong to Christ if Infants within the covenant of grace And he decreed to damne onely such as should persevere in their sinne and infidelity For the promise of salvation and the threat of damnation is made respectively onely to such Yet know that God of his meere will and pleasure did absolutely elect some and did determine to give them the grace of faith in Christ repentance towards God and perseverance in holinesse of life and likewise absolutely to reject others therefrom and to leave them in their sinne and infidelity Thus God is cleared from being any author of sinne or yet to blame if he proceed in rigour in the eternall punishment of some for sinne I will last of all shew that God was no deficient cause in Adams sinne though he did decree to permit it and did work accordingly either by denying his grace or by concurring with him to the substance of the act which was sinfull In all this God did not carry himselfe otherwise than an absolute Lord and a most holy God might rightfully do What though God made the forbidden fruit of an alluring nature pleasant to the eye and good for food as it seemed to Eve and was called by an alluring name a Tree of knowledge of Good and evill What though God exposed Eve unto the temptation of the Serpent and Adam to the temptation of his wife What if God restrained the good Angels that they did not as otherwise they might assist Adam against Satan and against his temptation by minding him of his duty to God and of the falshood and malice of the devill and how much he was but lately beholden to God And what though God left Adam and Eve to themselves without giving thē actuall assistance of his grace any more than what he gave them in their creation to preserve them from falling which he gave to the good Angels and denyed to others What hath God done in all this which he might not do For notwithstanding all this there was a naturall and true possibility in Adam and Eve to have forborne to eate of the forbidden fruit in spite of Satan though hee did his utmost that he could Adam and Eve did eate the forbidden fruit as freely without compulsion as ever before they had eaten of any other tree in the Garden No compulsion but bodily appetite leading them to eate of the common fruit and partly bodily appetite and partly affectation of being like God in knowing good and evill seducing them to eate the fruit which was forbidden There remained I say a true possibility in Adam to have stood For by vertue of the graee of God received in the creation he could not only have abstained from every outward action forbidden him of God but to abstaine from it in a gracious manner for that both outwardly and
hee would have him doe Thus the harlot tempteth by her words Prov. 7. by her eye-lids and by her dalliance A man tempteth himselfe when the lust of his owne evill heart doth minister matter of thoughts of sin to be committed or when by the sense of some outward object the evill heart taketh occasion to present evill thoughts unto the minde Sometimes all these tempters conspire together in one and the same temptation and most commonly Satan and the evill heart combine in those temptations which are most mischievous But wee need not so much inquire who tempteth as to know how to resist the temptation These tempters prosecute their temptation in this sort If the partie tempted be of himself a slave to sinne and is given over unto sinne and is already disposed to a particular sinne then there needeth no more but a bare suggestion or motion to it that is enough to cause such a one to commit it But if a man be indued with the Spirit of grace or of restraint then all the devices that the wit of man and subtiltie of the divell can finde out shall be used both in the proposing of the temptation and prosecuting thereof Then an eye shall be had to all aduantages that may be taken either from a mans naturall disposition or from his sexe or from his different condition of life and calling from his estate in the world be he rich or poore noble or base or from his estate in grace bee hee a babe or strong man in Christ or from observation in what thing a man is least armed or from observation what a man doth esteeme or disesteeme most also from place time solitarinesse company whatsoever particular circumstance shall fall out it shall be taken to the greatest advantage to further the temptation making use of the infinite varieties of evill unto which and of the manifold varieties of meanes by which a man may bee tempted In moving a man to like that which is evill there is alwayes a face and appearance of good set upon it and in moving a man to dislike that which is good a vizard of evill is put upon it or if notwithstanding the motion the evill to which a man is moved will appeare sinfull then they will present considerations that it is but once or for a short time that they shall hold that evill course also how the best men have fallen and have notwithstanding beene saved how that God is mercifull c. And withall motives shall bee fetcht from the credit profit or pleasure that shall be attained upon yeelding and on the other side from disgrace losse or pain that may follow upon not yeelding to the temptation It is not in the power of man to finde out the windings and turnings the sleights and devices the cunning reasonings and subtilties that sinne by its agents can and doth use to circumvent and insnare mankinde Sinfull inventions are so deepe that most wise Salomon professeth he could not find them out no not in either sexe for so he saith The inventions or sinfull devices of one man of a thousand have J found out but the inventions or sinfull devices for thus the supply of the defective sētence is to be made of one woman among all those have I not found Eccles 7.27 28 29. Where the word rendred account should be rendred reasoning or invention or device of sinne for it is the same word which in v. 25. is translated reason namely of wickednesse folly and is the same which ver 29. is translated inventions which of necessity must bee meant the same which the Apostle 2 Cor. 2.11 calleth devices Now that it appeareth what a temptation is also who are the tempters and that sinne by her agents Satan and sinfull men is most craftie and cunning in tempting it remaineth that we should chiefly learne how wee may bee preserved from being insnared by it Now because the tempters are so strong and subtill it is necessarie that wee call unto our aide a stronger wiser then our adversaries which onely is the Lord who can restraine them from tempting deliver al such that are tempted Wherefore heartie prayer must be made to him as our Saviour teacheth us that hee would not leade us into temptation but deliver us from evill And because he resisteth temptations in us by his Spirit by putting into us good motions to the contrary prayer must be made unto God that he would give unto his holy Spirit which may worke effectually in us against temptations Whosoever is good before God and pleaseth him whosoever shall take heed that he doe not grieve this Spirit quench the good motions of it they praying for it shall bee sure to have it Luk. 11.13 and shall escape the hurt of the temptation when the sinner shall be taken by it Eccles 7.26 Yet it is not enough that we be reconciled to God and doe keepe our peace with him and have his holy Spirit dwelling in us for though God could subdue al our sinnes and resist all our temptations for us without our owne helpe yet he will have us to resist by exercising the whole reasonable man in the conflict against sinne for which cause he giveth his word to direct us and the manifold graces of his Spirit to arme us Eph. 6.13 that wee our selves may by the power of his might withstand temptation in the day thereof Now that we may withstand temptations it shall be good to observe this order First to looke to our owne heart Pro. 4.23 for that is the hold and fort of the soule if that be not true to us wee are sure to be foiled in every temptation wherefore wee must have it in an holy suspition so farre as to cause us to examine and search it daily to finde out those trecherous and deceiveable lusts that lurke there Ier. 17.9 Eph. 4.23 and when by the light of the word wee have found any evill lusts then wee must not stay till they assault us but let us assault them and use martiall law let us presently accuse them our selves for harbouring of them then we must confesse and bewaile them before God and condemne and crucifie them then wee must make particular and daily application of the bloud of Christ unto the heart and it wil purifie it and purge the conscience from dead works that we shall serve the living God And let us never leave purging the heart untill we can say it is not set upon any earthly thing eyther to love it or feare it for if it be as he that will be rich so he that will have pleasure and will have glory of men shall fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 which drowne men in destruction A man must by the worke of Gods Spirit through the use of the Word never leave working upon his heart untill hee have brought it to a firme
or as a bird touched with lime-twigges it taketh away the life and comfort of spirituall exercises as of hearing praying and receiving the Sacrament he cannot set about them with any nimblenesse of spirit while he lyeth in any sinne Sinne unrepented of taketh Reas 3 root and infecteth further and further it will increase it selfe and beget other sinnes Reas 4 While a man lyeth in sinne he may look every houre when God shall inflict some fearefull judgement or other and then the remembrance of a sinne unrepented of proveth more heavie and more stinging then the judgement it selfe Whereas though a man have sinned yet if God have given him repentance and have recovered him out of his sinne he may come before God with boldnesse and can performe exercises of Religion with chearfulnesse and shall either prevent crosses or remove them or they shall do much good to his soule while they lye upon him Vse 1 This is to reproove all such who as they care not how they fall into sinne so they care as little how they be delivered out of it yea though God call them to repentance and give them space to repent yea though sometimes God awake them by his judgements and by checks of conscience and doth offer them his Spirit to turne them unto him yet neither his patience nor bountie doth leade them to repentance They will say Lord deliver us from evill but refuse to be delivered This their hypocrisie aggravateth their impenitencie and their impenitencie aggravateth all such sinnes as are not repented of for it is a fault to commit any sinne but when it is not repented of this sinne is continued yea doubled and multiplied for everie day they should turne from their sinne as ordinarily as they seeke their daily bread No sinne so dangerous as impenitencie for therefore the sinne against the holy Ghost is unpardonable not in it owne nature but because they that commit it cannot be renewed unto repentance Heb. 6.6 Impenitencie therefore though it be not the sinne against the holy Ghost yet it must needs be a fearefull sinne For he that liveth and dyeth in impenitencie is as sure to bee damned as he that sinneth against the holy Ghost Let all that refuse to forsake their sinnes looke for Gods visitation Ier. 5.3.7.9 as he saith in Jeremy They have refused to returne c. How shall I pardon shall I not visite for these things and shall not my soule be avenged on such c. Vse 2 It doth therefore concerne every man having fallen into evill for who is it that sinneth not to use all means to repent and recover himselfe of his fall and then do his best to hold on a steadie course of new obedience Have not men in prison cause to seeke for deliverance and if any man be fallen into a lapse after a sicknesse hath he not cause to seeke for recoverie of his former health such is the estate of every sinner untill he have repented But let this repentance bee true and sound proceeding from griefe for sin and hatred of sinne not turning from one sinne to another or a bare leaving of sinne but it must be a conscionable turning from evill to good It must be in the bent and intention of the soule and in our whole endevour a turning from all sinne as well as from any one even from as many as wee can come to the knowledge of as well from secret as open as well from beloved sinnes and such as are in credit in the world as from any other Ezek. 8.31 We must cast away all our transgressions saith the Lord. It must be speedie while it is to day lest our hearts be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne It must be constant Heb. 3.15.16 as daily as we aske daily bread If we would but enter into our hearts and consider what wee have done when wee have sinned how wee have transgressed an holy commandement thereby have grieved the holy Spirit disgraced our holy profession and have offended a mercifull Father and a severe Iudge who yet if we will turne will have mercy but if we refuse to turne he will punish and wil not pardon the thoughts of these things would worke griefe and hatred of sinne and hope of pardon from whence would follow repentance never to be repented of if withall we pray heartily saying Deliver us from evill for with all the meanes we do use prayer must be one for as we cannot repent without Gods helpe so he will not helpe and give us repentance except we aske it From evill By evill is meant sinne Our Saviour would have his Disciples pray against sinne under the name of evil Whence we may learne Sinne is evill and God would Doct. 8 have all men when they thinke of sinne represent it to their minde in the name and notion of an evil yea of the most evill thing It is called evill Rom. 12.9 where it is said Abhorre evill Ioh. 5.19 The whole world lyeth in evill Thus David in confessing his sinne unto God doth affect his heart with shame and remorse saying Against thee have I sinned and done this evill in thy sight Psal 51.4 Sinne is absolutely contrary Reas 1 unto God who is goodnesse it selfe yea enmity to him Rom. 8 7. therefore it is the evill of evils Sin doth separate a man frō the Reas 2 greatest good Isa 59.2 It doth separate a man from God No other evill bee it imprisonment poverty disgrace in the world sicknesse death doth separate a man from God he may enjoy God and may have a blessed communion with him notwithstanding the worst of these evils which he cannot do while he lyeth in his sinne Wherefore sinne must needs be the greatest evill Reas 3 Sinne is the cause of all the evill of punishment that any creature is subject unto for sin brought man under the curse and will hold him under it except the mercy of God through the merit of Christ do deliver him Reas 4 Sinne doth give denomination unto all things that are truly evill causing them to be called evill Gal. 1.4 the world is therefore called evill because it is a sinfull wo●ld Men are called evill men 2. Tim. 3.13 because they be sinfull men And because the devill exceedeth all other in sinne he is called the evill one Matth. 13.19 Vse 1 Is sinne evill how then hath it bewitched and deceived most of the sonnes of men for they account nothing evill but what bringeth losse to their estate and shame to their name and paine to their body or some other misery to their outward man as touching sinne many are so farre from judging it to be evill that because they conceive it serveth for their pleasure gaine or credit of all courses they thinke none so good as those that are sinfull What man so vile but thinketh his course good and thinketh all are fooles that are not of his minde The Papist is
by beleeving a man doth set to his seale that God is true 4 By fearing him So saith the Prophet 1. Pet. 3 1● Sanctifie the Lord of hasts himselfe let him be your feare and let him be your dread Isaiah 8.13 5 Also by loving him trusting in him and zeale for him for there is the same reason that all the affections of the heart should be for him as well as any one Iob 1.21 6 By confessing with the mouth that he is just in all his judgements so doth Daniel saying Dan. 9.14 The Lord our God is righteous in all the workes that he doth for we obeyed not his voyce Iosh 7.19 Thus Achan is bid to give glory unto the Lord. 7 Also by acknowledging his mercie goodnesse power Rom. 15.6 Rev. 19.7 c. in praises and thanksgiving He that offereth praise glorifieth me saith God Psal 50.23 8 By contending for God and his truth Isa 59.4 9 By ordering the conversation aright both in doing and suffering Herein Ioh. 1● 8 saith our Saviour is my Father glorified that ye beare much fruit Therefore he exhorteth his disciples unto good works that as lights they may shine before men and glorifie their Father which is in heaven Mat. 5 16. Philip. 1. And Paul was assured Christ should bee magnified in his bodie whether by life or by death And Peter was foretold by what death he should glorifie God Ioh. 20.19 10 Lastly by regarding his holinesse in his titles word and holy ordinances in his holy day the Sabbath and in his children whom he hath made to be an holy people In all these our estimation and speech of them our carriage towards them and use of them must be with speciall respect to God whose holinesse they carrie upon them alwayes putting difference betweene these things and all other which have not the like respect of holinesse Though we cannot in all these hallow Gods name as wee would yet wee must endeavour it that we may be able with the Church to say The desire of our soule is to thy name Now we know the particulars let us give God glory every way and let us make it the end of our life Motiv●s to hallow Gods Name to know and acknowledge him to be holy It is Gods right as you have heard we were created and redeemed to that end and wee have examples of the best David saith he would speake the praises of the Lord and saith Let all flesh blesse his holy Name for ever and ever Psal 145.21 Christ Iesus hath gone before us in seeking his Fathers honour and not his owne It was Ioabs praise so to order the battell 2 Sam. 12.28 that his Lord and king might have the glorie of the day and not himselfe Ought not all Gods subjects to respect their God more than he did or could respect his king Excellently spake Ioseph that the honour of interpreting dreames might not be given to him It is not in me Gen. 41.16 God shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace In like manner Daniel would not assume to himself the power of revealing secrets but saith Dan 2.26.28 There is a God which ye●●alleth secrets The Apostle Iohn when he was in the Spirit heard everie creature which is in heaven and on the earth and such as are in the sea saying Blessing honour glory Rev. 5.13 and power be unto him that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lambe for ever and ever These examples are for our learning so that we must alwayes say with the Psalmist Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name give glorie If God be glorified by us Ioh 13.32 he also will glorifie us Them that honour me I will honour 1. Sam. 2.30 saith God Thus it may be learned what are the desires and endeavours to which the first petition doth leade us Before I passe to the second one thing must be observed from Christs choice of the word hallowed rather than any other Hallowed When Christ would signifie that God was to be esteemed acknowledged with the absolutest honour that could be he saith hallowed that is let thy Name be known and acknowledged to bee holy Whence we may inferre that Doct. 2 Holinesse is the highest title of honour and glory that can belong to any person yea to the most high God As any person or thing is more holy so is it more honourable When the Seraphins would give God the greatest honour and glory they crie Holy holy Isa 6.3 holy is the Lord of hosts The foure living creatures say Holy holy holy Rev. 4.8 Lord God almighty It was the honour of Ierusalem to be an holy Citie It is the glorie of the third heaven to be the high and holy place Isa 57.15 As men were more holy Psal 16.3 so did David count them more excellent For such whom hee calleth Saints he also calleth excellent And when Christ Iesus will present his Church unto himself a glorious Church he will sanctifie it Eph 5.26.27 Reason and present it holy and without blemish Because holinesse in God is the rectitude and perfection of his power mercie justice and all other his attributes which if they were not all holy could not be good much lesse goodnesse neither could he be God if he were not holy yea holinesse it selfe And as for other things the more they partake of holinesse the more like they are to God and are therfore the more glorious Man at the first was therefore most glorious of all creatures here below because hee was made according to Gods image most holy Vse 1 If holinesse be the highest most honourable title that can bee given then most blasphemous are the Pope and Papists the one for taking to himselfe the other for giving to him a prophane beast and impure Antichrist the title of holinesse in the abstract For the title of holinesse cannot simply be given to any but to God without blasphemie Vse 2 Hereby wee may learne whom to esteeme most honourable most excellent and most worthy our love and goodnes not the most witty most wealthie most beautifull or most noble by birth but as any man is more holy so is he to be held and regarded as most truly honourable Which being so the proud sinfull world erreth foulely in counting themselves the onely men of worth and esteeming the holy ones of God to be base and of no reckoning If to be holy be so honourable and glorious this must perswade Vse 3 men to follow after holinesse Heb. 12.14 Honour is the sharpest spurre to pricke men forward unto any action let it force us upon this of seeking to bee renewed after God in righteousnesse and true holines Be holy Lev. 19.2 saith God for I the Lord your God am holy No honour like this of being an holy man a chosen generation an holy nation