Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n prayer_n zeal_n zealous_a 132 3 9.8957 4 false
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
A22562 Three treatises Viz. 1. The conversion of Nineueh. 2. Gods trumpet sounding the alarum. 3. Physicke against famine. Being plainly and pithily opened and expounded, in certaine sermons. by William Attersoll, minister of the Word of God, at Isfield in Sussex. Attersoll, William, d. 1640. 1632 (1632) STC 900; ESTC S121173 371,774 515

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

grace never considring how they pray neither before whom they pray neither have any feeling at all of their owne wants and necessities and therefore no mar veil if they receive nothing ● Ier. 47.10 but go away empty as Ier. 48. Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lord deceitfully such do most of all deceive themselues These are they that draw nigh to God with their mouthes and honour him with their lippes but their hearts are farre removed from him Causes of cold prayers in vaine doe such worship him Math. 15. If any desire to know what are the causes of such could and livelesse prayers they are these especially first ignorance of the nature of God of his piercing eye and of his powerfull hand and of his glorious presence filling all places and searching all hearts and beholding all persons how they stand before him Secondly want of faith the root of all evill Heb. 4.2 for our prayers do not profit because they are not mixed with faith in them that make them as the Apostle speaketh of hearing the Gospel Heb. 4. For faith is the life of every part of Gods worship Thirdly confidence in the flesh and not trusting in the living God and looking for all good things from him Such are they that trust in their wealth and boast themselues in the multitude of their riches which as ranke thornes do so choke them and as heavy burdens do so presse and oppresse them that they cannot lift up their hearts to God Eph. 5.5 from whence our helpe cometh A covetous man which is a worshipper of Images can never make a fervent prayer he is so taken in the snare of his owne substance whereby he is drowned in perdition and destruction Fourthly the corrupt iudgement of the sinful world that hate zeale to the death and cannot abide such as are zealous but as the frendship of this world is enmity with God Iam. 4.4 so whosoever will be a friend of the world maketh himselfe the enemy of God Iam. 4. So the beholding of the prosperity of the wicked men that either pray not at all or else if they pray are neither hote nor cold but are newters or indifferent men who if they prospe● here regard not what become of them hereafter that say 1 Cor. 15.32 let us eate and drinke for to morrow we shall dy 1. Cor. 15. But our hope is not in this life onely but we must looke to the recompense of reward and cast a sure and steadfast ancre in heaven Lastly to lye in some knowne sinne This either stoppeth our mouthes that we cannot speak or powreth water upon our prayers that our praiers have no heat in them but are frozen with the cold of our corruptions Our daily prayer therefore must be to God the searcher of all hearts to clense us from our secret sinnes Psal 19.12 Secondly learne from hence what it is that seasoneth every worke of God preaching hearing receiving the Sacraments prayer and the rest without zeale they are nothing worth Prayers are not commended for their length nor for often repetitions of one and the same thing Math. 6.7 for the heathen thinke to be heard for their much babling neither are they accepted because they are cunningly and curiously compiled as if we were Orators not Christians pleaded at the barre for our f●e not shewed the fruit of our faith sought to please the eares of ignorant men not to pierce the eares of the eternall God The Apostle would not preach to men in the entising words of mens wisedome 1 Cor 2.4 but in demonstration of the spirit and power and shall we dare to speake unto God in a florishing and foolish stile to tickle the eare as if we ment to shew our skill in Rhetoricke rather then commend our suites to God That which giveth a grace to our prayers is the spirit of zeale without this they are as sounding brasse they can profit us nothing neither ascend to the presence of God Lastly in every duty labour to be zealous For as it is in prayer so it is in the worship of God zeale is the salt that seasoneth the same and without it every worke hath lost his Savour It is strange to consider how in worldly duties the more earnest a man is the better he is accounted and accepted He that is earnest in his masters businesse is judged a good seruant he that is earnest in his Prince affaires is rewarded as a good subject he that is earnest in his fathers cause is esteemed as a good child onely in the matters of God wherein we should be most forward who should be master and Father and King and all unto us I wot not how his servants children and subjects are reviled and reproched for their zeale Neverthelesse we must not be offended nor discouraged for the taunts and evill reports of the world but be ready to walke through good report and evill report that we may please him who hath set us in his seruice Onely we must learne how to direct our zeale aright for there are extremes on both sides As it may be too cold so it may be too hote and fiery the meane is best that we may be aright zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 There is an ignorant zeale Ioh. 16.2 Gal. 1.14 there is an idolatrous zeale Phil. 3.6 such was theirs that cut and mangled themselues till the blood gushed out Act. 26.11 1 King 18.28 and that would burne their children in fire and offer them in honour of their devilish goddes Ier. 7.31 here is an hypocriticall zeale such as was in the Pharisees that did compasse sea and land to make one a proselite that is one of their owne sect Math. 23.13 There is a zeale more damnable and vile than all the rest of such who contrary to their own conscience and knowledge do violently resist and maliciously oppose themselves against the Gospel and the professors thereof this was in the cursed and proud Pharisees that opposed themselues against our Saviour committed the sin against the holy Ghost which shal befor given neither in this life nor in the life to come Math Math. 12.32 12.32 That our zeale therfore may be good Rules to be observed to make our zeale good first the matter must be good Gal. 4.18 our zeale is good if the thing be good otherwise if the matter be evill the more earnest it is more sinful it is his indeed rather choler then zeale Secōdly true zeale beginneth with our selues and in our selues frō thence proceedeth to others They are the most skilful Physians and best able to heale others who have wrought a cure upon themselues Luk. 6.42 against this rule do all hypocrites offend Thirdly we must make greatest account of the greatest matters Math. 23.23 Such do erre herein that are hote hasty in matters of ceremony but altogether cold in matter of substance these
sorts of the Ministery of our selves of our families Dan. 9.3.7.8 of our fathers of our Princes of our people and of our whole land For all our fasting is nothing worth without this Fasting is no part of Gods worship but onely joyned to prayer to be an helpe unto it or as a wing to mount is up toward heaven and make it ascend into the presence of God Prayer is avaylable without fasting because it is a lifting up of the heart to him but fasting never without prayer because it goeth not beyond the outward man Prayer is a spirituall exercise of our faith wherein as in an acceptable sacrifice God delighteth but fasting is a bodily exercise which in it selfe pleaseth not God who is a Spirit Ioh. 4.24 and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and truth God being of a spirituall nature requireth a spirituall service and agreeable to his nature And cry mightily vnto God This is the life and the very quintessence of all the great abstinence before commanded For what had it availed to cover themselves with sackcloth and ashes and to abstaine from food had they not used prayer to God to crave mercy and forgivenesse at his hands Yea this is the end of private or publike fastes that we should call upon God the more fervently and effectually They are not prescribed as hath beene shewed as parts of Gods seruice for whether we eate we are never the worse or whether we abstaine we are not at all the better in respect of any religion or holinesse that consisteth in them but onely as they are meanes to further us in his seruice Now in these words we must observe three things the matter the manner and the object that is their prayer their zeale and the person to whom they prayed their prayer is noted by their crying their zeale by doing it mightily the person to whom they prayed unto God Let us consider these in order The first is the matter they prayed they cryed the end is that thereby God might turne away from his fierce wrath Doct. This teacheth us that prayer is a principall meanes appointed and sanctified of God to remove his judgements Prayer is a meanes to remove Gods judgments This is as it were the tongue or voyce of repentance The prayer of this people was more worth a thousand times than the crying of the beasts and the loud noyse of men women and children They cryed they cryed mightily they cryed to God This the heathen by the light of nature have confessed The Marriners acknowledged this to be the only meanes to obtaine mercy at the hands of God Ion. 1.6 and to remoove his judgement when they were like to perish So did Pharaoh he was glad to fly to it in his misery and calamity Exod. 8.28 Pray for me and for my people to the Lord that this plague may depart So it was with Ieroboam little better than the former 1 King 13.6 1 King 13. So it was with Simon the forcerer they all thought it was the readiest way to remove his judgments from falling upon them Behold sundry examples of this truth in traveilers in captives in sicke men in sea-men and sundry other troubles of which the Prophet saith They cryed unto the Lord in their troubles Psal 107.6.13 19.28 Amos. 7.2.3 4.5.6 and he delivered them out of their distresses We see this oftentimes in Moses the servant of the Lord when he praied for the Israelites Exod. 32. Numb 14. Yea so forcible were his prayers with God that they after a sort tyed up his hands that he could not smite but said Exod. 32.10 Let me alone that I may destroy them So Gen. 19. he said to Let I can doe nothing till thou art gone and Exod. 17. Gen. 19.22 the prayer of Moses prevailed more for the overthrow and destruction of the Amalekites than the sword of Ioshua and the people The reasons are Reas 1 first it hath a promise of blessing to such as use it a right Math. 7. Psal 50. We do not beat the aire nor build upon the sand our labour in the fire Psal 50.15 when we pray unto him but we lay a sure foundatiō upon the certaine rocke of his promise Math. 7.7 which shall never faile us who hath said Aske and ye shall receive Secondly our sinnes cry up to heaven pierce the cloudes Gen. 18.20 4.10 come into Gods presence and call for vengance Gen. 18. Our prayers cry to God for mercy and drowne the noise of our sinnes that the cry of them cannot be heard though they cry never so loud Thirdly we obtaine not because we aske not aright Iam. 4. We aske and receive not Iam. 4.3 we seeke and find not but the cause is not in God the fault is in our selves Vse 1. This reproveth such as pray not at all Vse 1 nor desire to have conference with God as if they stood in no need of him as if they enjoyed all things by their owne labour as if they did not live and move by his blessing as if it were not in his power to stoppe our breath when we must goe hence and be no more and as if any thing could do us good without a sanctifying of the creature to our use Psal 14.4 whereas he can take away the staffe of bread whensoever it pleaseth him All these should be motives to move us to paryer Rom. 10.13 The Prophet maketh this the note of Atheistes they call not upon the Lord. If a man should be waighed in this ballance alas how many would be found to light and if whosoever would be saved must call upon the name of the Lord how many are there that stand not in the state of salvation because they know not what prayer meaneth it is a stranger to them and they unto it Secondly it is our duty to practise this duty to call upon his holy name But it may be said what needeth prayer God hath foreappointed what to do and our prayer cannot altar Gods purpose decree which is unchangable I answer we do not pray to chage Gods decree but to shew our obedience faith toward God It pleaseth him to try them this way whether as his children they will depend upon him or not Again it may be said He knoweth what we need what need we then to put him in mind as if he had forgotten to shew mercy I answer we do not pray to teach God any thing that he knoweth not neither to bring to his remēbrance what he hath forgotten yet this ought to be farre from discouraging of us in prayer and from stopping our mouthes Math 6.8 9. that it rather openeth them wider for asmuch as therefore we ought to be encouraged in prayer because our heavenly father knoweth whereof we have need and thus our Saviour reasoneth your father knoweth your necessities after this manner therefore pray ye
Thirdly continue in prayer supplication without ceasing and never give over to be his remembrancers such praier evermore hath mercy joyned with it This doth our Saviour teach Luk. 11 8. 18.1.5 Math. 15.22.24.26 I meane this perseverance by sundry parables of the poore widow of the vnjust judge Luk. 18. of the friend that did lend three Loves Luk. 11. by the example of the woman of Canaan who followed our Saviour and would not give him over till she had obtained Math. 15. And the rather ought we to do so because sometimes God will proove our faith patience obedience and constancy sometimes to make us more earnest in prayer for we are to dull cold must be stirred up sometimes to teach us the value and price of the graces of his spirit because such as are soone and easily obtained are oftentimes dispiced or at least lesse regarded and not so carefully preserued sometimes to make us more watchfull and heedfull that we might not easily loose them when we have them The Prophts themselues complaine oftentimes that God heareth them not that they have called day and night and are weary of their crying Wherefore not that he will not heare much lesse that he cannot heare but that his mercy might the more appeare for the greater our necessity is the more is his power and mercy seene sometimes he delayeth us Iudg. 7.2 to teach us to renounce all confidence in the flesh as Iudg. 7. the Lord said to Gideon The people that are with thee are to many for me to give the Midianites into their hands least Israel make their vaunt against me and say mine hand hath saved me so would it be with us if we had alwayes helpes at hand 2 Cor. 1.9.10 and 2 Cor. 1.9.10 that we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead Lastly sometimes we are differred that our danger being the greater wherein we are his glory might be the greater in our deliverance As the skill of the Phyfition is most seene in most desperate diseases and of the Surgeon in the deepest woundes for what great knowledge in his art doth he shew in curing the scratch of a pin or a little razing of the skin so the power of God is most of al seene in delivering of us from troubles dangers wherein we have lienand languished a long time and from thence also ariseth his glory Lastly it is our duty to give thankes to God when he hath heard us as Psal 50. I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Our owne wants and necessities constraine us oftentimes to remember the former precept Call upon me but our deliverances cannot make us remember the latter clause thou shalt glorifie me We are ready with the Lepers to opon our mouthes for mercy but our mouthes are soone shut when we should give him the glory Luk. 17.12 and we quickly forget his goodnesse with the same Lepers There is no triall of our selues by prayer in our wants for it is often forced not free wrested not voluntary but rather by our thankesgiving whether we make conscience of our duties to God or not Forced prayer is no prayer As he loueth a cheerefull giver so he loveth a cheerfull prayer O how often was the Prophet David in praising God! how doth he provoke his owne heart not to forget his benefits and others O that men would praise the Lord for his goodnesse Psal 116.12.103 107.8 and for his wonderfull workes to the children of men Cry mightliy Hitherto of the first point the matter or substance of the Kings cōmandement they must all zeale The pray Doct. from the highest to the lowest the second point solloweth Prayer must ●e seruent the maner of their pray mightily this noteth their danger was certaine in a manner present therfore their prayer must not be cold Hence we must obserue that it is not enough to pray but prayer must be earnest fervent Hereunto commeth the double and trebled commandement of Christ to aske to seeke to knocke which repetition importeth and imposeth upon us this fervency True it is that prayer joyned with fasting ought to be earnest too fold but though it go alone without fasting yet it must not go alone without fervency of spirit The Apostle Iames speaking of ordinary prayer teacheth that the prayer of a righteous man prevail●th much Iam. 5.16.17 if it b●forment not otherwise This he proveth by the example of Elias ●e prayed earnestly that it might not raine and it rained not on the earth by the space of three yeares and sixe m●●●th● c. And least any should pretend that he was a great Prophet and in high favour with God no marveil therfore if his prayer prevailed who raised the dead to life and brought fire from heaven as also he obtained that the heaven should be as brasse and the earth as jron but all cannot be like to him every Christian cannot be an other Elias besides his prayer was extraordinary The Apostle answereth that notwithstanding his great graces yet he was a man subject to the same passions infirmities that others are and yet God heard him And true it is his prayer was extraordinary in regard of the manner we cānot pray that the heaven should not give rain nor the clouds senddown their shewres because we have not that spirit which he had but we must have the spirit of Sanctification to pray ●ervētly as he did or else we shal never be heard as he was The reasons Reason 1 first God looketh not onely what we do when we come before him but how we do it he regardeth the ma●ner as well as the matter not only that we do good things but that we do them well For as we must take heede not only what we hear● Mar. 4.24 Mark 4.24 Luk. 8.18 but likewise how we heare Luk. 8.18 so we must looke to our selues that we pray what we pray but withall how we pray seeing we must faile neither in the one nor in the other Secondly the Lord only loveth zealous servants that ●erue him faithfully and servently as he is sayd to love a cheerfull giver 2 Cor. 8. Thirdly cold suiters among men teach them to deny such suites If a man come to our dores and b●g coldly as if he cared not whether he speed o● not who will take any pittie or have compassion on such persons and shall we thinke that God will regard those that regard not in what cold and carelesse manner they present themselves before him Lastly he is cursed that doth any worke of the Lord negligently yea such as are luke-warme shall be sp●●ed on● of his mouth Rev. 3.16 R●● 3. Such are they that ca●e not which ●●dge for w●rd whether they obtaine or not obtaine These are dead prayers without life as of dead men without breath This reproveth such Vse 1 as come negligently to the throne of
disability or prophanenesse or from contempt or from deriding of all good things in such as delight in them or from posting it over to the Minister or from lying in some knowne sinne or from an evill custome and continuance without reading or praying in their houses To conclude this point we must obserue two rule First it is not enough to bid others pray for us as did Pharaoh Ieroboam Simon Magus and some others but we must pray our selues We must learne this knowledge As Parents will not have their children require others to request them to grant such things as they want but will accustome them to come boldly themselues so it is with our heavenly Father He will not have us to depend upon others to speake unto him for us but he will have us come to his throne our selues with such reverence and boldnesse as behoveth children to come to their fathers Secondly we ought not to pray in company onely for that many times is hypocrisie The greatest sort rest in comming to the Church in hearing the Word in receiving the Sacraments in being present at the prayers of the Church and in doing as others do but over and above this we must pray in secret between God and our selues that he which seeth in secret may reward us openly He that never prayed but in company never prayed in sincerity If we have the spirit of supplicatiō we must sequester our selues from others for private meditation as our Saviour both instructed others and practised himselfe Math 6.6 Touching others he willeth us to enter into our Closet and shut the dore Math. 6. and to pray to our father in secret Luk. 6.12 And touching himselfe He went out into a Mountaine to pray and continued all night in prayer and was oftentimes a●one by himselfe as we shewed before Lastly come often to Gods throne as children do to their father accounting it a necessary duty Iam. 5.13 not arbitrary or left at our liberty as Iam. 5. Is any among you afflicted let him pray Neither let any man pretend the difficulty The more hard it is the more excellent and the greater labour should we employ to be able to do it If an earthly Prince should make Proclamation among the lowest meanest sort of his subjectes that whosoever would come to begge such a mannor at his hands and put up his petition for it shewing his case and laying open his poverty there is none so simple or so shallow but he would find wordes and matter enough to plead for himselfe Why then are we not so wise for the soule as we are for the body for the life to come as for this present life for heaven as we are for the earth for eternall things as we are temporall Let us therfore draw neere to God and he will draw neere vnto us he is more ready to heare then we are to speake to grant then we are to aske to open then we are to knock True it is he is often found before we seeke after him and when we aske one blessing he is ready to grant many yea more then we desire and we make an end of asking before he doth of granting Gen. 18. yet if we enioy the things of this life when we refuse to pray for them and resolue not once to open our mouthes unto him all such blessings are turned into curses as he threatneth Mal. 2.2 Yea let them turne every one from their evill wayes It was not enough for these Ninevites to pray to pray fervently to pray unto God but they must turne every one from his evill way This is necessary to be annexed as a companion to the former For as fasting is nothing worth without prayer so prayer is nothing worth without repentance Doct. This teacheth that no prayer is acceptable to God No prayer accepted but of the righteous Psal 145.19 but the prayer of the penitent of such as walke before him in holinesse and righteousnesse The Prophet teacheth that he will fulfill the desires of them that feare him 1 Tim. 28. he will heare their prayers also and saue them as if he should say theirs and no others The Apostle willeth that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting Iam. 5.16 Thus also another teacheth that the prayers of a righteous man availeth much If then it be not the prayer of a righteous man it is not the prayer of faith and without faith it is unpossible to please God Heb 11.6 The reasons are many that shew the causes wherefore God regardeth not a wicked mans prayer Reas 1 Ioh. 9.31 For first God heareth no sinners Ioh. 9 but if any be a worshipper of God and doth his will him he heareth Secondly sinne separeteth from God and divideth between him and us Esay 59.2 2 King 4.40 and defileth all our prayers This the Prophet teacheth Your iniquities have separated you and your God and your sinnes have hid his face from you that he will not heare As then the children of the Prophets having gathered wild gourds cryed out there is death in the pot so when we mingled our prayer with the sowre herbes of iniquity we may cry out death is in our prayer Thirdly our persons must please God before our Prayers can be accepted Gen 4.5 Mal 1.8 3.3 God had no respect to the person of Caine because he was of that evill one and came in hypocrisie into his presence and therefore he accepted not his offering but unto Ab●l and Tit. 1.15 to his offering he had respect so the Apostle teacheth that to the pure all things are pure but unto them that are defiled and unbeeving is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled To apply these things to our selues Vse 1 First it teacheth that the prayer of the wicked is abominable before him the ungodly are not accepted in his sight If we incline our hearts to wickednesse the Lord will not heare us Psal 66. Psal 66.18 nay the more we pray the more we sinne if we be impenitent Therefore the prayers of such are abominable as Solomon teacheth in many places He assureth us that the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord Pro 15.29 28. ● but the prayer of the upright is his delight and after the Lord is farre from the wicked but he heareth the prayer of the righteous and chap. 28. he that turneth away his eare from hearing the Law even his prayer shall be abomination Albeit such may and do often cry in his eares with a loud voyce Ezek. 8.18 yet he will not heare them Ezek. The wicked therefore are out of hope of obtaining for their comfort the things that they pray for nay they farther provoke God to the confusion of their faces by their mock-prayers This answereth an objection which the wicked may make God hath commanded us to pray and hath
subordinate unto him Secondly God hath set his whole delight on his to love them above all other people Deut. 10.15 21. and doth great things for them that hee hath not done for the whole world beside Hee hath given his owne Sonne for them and to them which is the fountaine of all his love Joh. 3.16 For he so loved the world Ioh. 3.16 that he gave his onely begotten Sonne that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And 1 Joh. 4.9 10. in this was manifested the love of God toward us because God sent his onely begotten Sonne into the world 1 Ioh. 4.9 10. that we might live through him Herein is love not that we loved him but that he loved us and sent his Sonne to be the propitiation for our sinnes From hence flow all spirituall and eternall blessings as reconciliation and atonement sanctification and likewise our justification consisting in the forgivenesse of sinnes and the imputation of his righteousnesse unto us yea hence doe flow temporall blessings to us as they are blessings so that he careth for us as the Eagle for her Birds Deut. 32.11 12. and tendreth us as the apple of his owne eye Zach. 2.5 Thirdly this truth further appeareth unto us by the titles given to the faithfull For as the Names of God set forth his nature toward us so also doe the names that are given to the Godly The names that he giveth are not like names given by men who onely hope or desire to finde them as they are named but they often prove the contrary as we see in Abshalom who had his name of his Fathers peace but hee sought the destruction of his Father It is not so with God he doth not deceive neither can bee deceived in calling his Children by their names They are called sometimes the Lords portion Deut. 32.9 Exod. 19.5 and the lot of his inheritance Deut. 32. Sometimes his chiefe treasure above all people though all the earth be his Exod. 19 5. sometimes his Sonnes and Daughters 1 Ioh. 3.1 begotten of him to a lively hope of an inheritance unspeakable and glorious 1 Joh. 3.1 sometimes the Spouse of Christ Hos 2.19 23. Ioh. 15.24 Hos 2. sometimes his Jewels Mal. 3. and sometimes also his friends labouring to doe whatsoever he commandeth them Joh. 15.14 All these titles and testimonies teach us how dearely hee loveth and accounteth of his people The uses of this point serve Vse 1 partly for information partly for instruction and partly for consolation First for information or bettering of our knowledge we must consider that from hence wee have boldnesse and confidence in prayer to approach neere to the Throne of Grace that he will give us whatsoever we aske according to his will Hence it is that in the Lords prayer we are willed and warranted to begge the sanctifying of his Name the comming of his Kingdome c. and whatsoever serveth for his glory or our owne good and to call him by the name of our Father Matth. 6. ● to stirre up our faith to come with assurance and without doubting to be heard and helped Will a Father deny his Childe any thing that is good for him God is our Father and we his Children he our Shepheard and we his Flocke hee the Creator and we his creatures Hee seeth what wee have need of and hee knoweth better then our selves what is good for us so that we may boldly come in faith and not waver as the Romanists would have us to doe Now to the end we may approach and appeare before him aright and come unto him as to a Father we must come partly with cheerefulnesse and boldnesse and partly with awefulnesse and reverence And these two must be compounded and mingled together boldnesse with reverence and reverence with boldnesse that we may pray and make supplication to him with a reverent boldnesse and with a bold kinde of reverence lest boldnesse severed from reverence breed basenesse and contempt and reverence severed from boldnesse turne into a slavish and superstitious feare To worke in us boldnesse and willingnesse the Scripture layeth before us the promises of God whereupon we must build as upon a sure foundation To strike in us reverence it propoundeth sundry threatnings and admonitions which we ought to call to minde so often as we goe to praier to prepare us thereunto First we must acquaint our selves with the gracious promises of God which he hath made to us in his holy Word that our dull and dead spirits may thereby be quickned and our unbeleeving hearts may be fully perswaded that hee will deliver our soule from death Psal 116.8 our eyes from teares and our feet from falling For as the amiable Word of a Father implieth a readinesse and willingnesse in God to shew mercy so it should stirre up in us a forwardnesse to come unto him and to aske whatsoever wee want The Scripture is full of such heavenly promises Psal 50.15 Matth. 7.7 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will heare thee Psal 50.15 Matth. 7.7 If wee humble our selves in his presence and turne from our sinnes and wicked waies then He will heare in Heaven 2 Chron. 7.14 15.2 Esay 65.24 and be mercifull unto our sins 2 Chron. 7. If we seek him He will be found of us 2 Chron. 15. Before we call he will answer and while we speake he will heare Esay 65. If we which are evill can give good gifts to our children Luke 11.13 how much more will our heavenly Father give the holy Ghost to them that desire him Rom. 10.22 Luke 11 He that is Lord of all is rich unto all that call upon him Rom. 10. Draw neere to God and He will draw neere to you Iam. 4.8 Iam. 4. All these are so many encouragements to draw us and to drive us to God who by these and a thousand such other promises inviteth us into his holy presence Againe on the other side we must consider that the Scripture withall giveth us sundry advertisements and threatnings to admonish us to come to him with feare and reverence The name of a Father is a title of familiarity but familiarity many times breedeth too much boldnesse and boldnesse breedeth contempt and contempt a base estimation of God and therefore it must bee seasoned with other considerations lest wee come to him in vaine and to our owne hurt Hence it is that as Christ our Saviour teache thus to call God our Father when we fall down before him so withall he willeth us to remember that he is in Heaven that is of infinite glory power and majesty Let us therefore have before us these and such like meditations If I regard wickednesse in my heart Psal 66.18 26.6 Prov. 1.28 15.8 21.27 the Lord will not heare me Psal 66.18 26.6 and often in the Proverbs They shall call upon me but
afterward when the passion is past they are haile fellow well met with them This kind of reproofe seeldome or neuer doth any good it is so sharpe and biting So then to conclude this point reproofe must not be too cold neither to hote and hasty As Physicke that is ministred if it be too cold it never worketh but if too hote that it be ready to skald the mouth the patient will never suffet it to descend into the stomacke but both of them instead of doing Good doe hurt so it is in the matter of reproofe which is the Physicke of the soule to cure the diseases thereof when it is seasoned with wisedome and discretion and the golden meane observed between too much and too little but if it be given too cold Aurea mediocritas Horat. lib. ● Ode 10. 1 Sam. 2.24 we can looke for no benefit to come thereof as we see in the practise of Eli toward his sonnes 1 Sam. 2. on the other side if it be applied too hote as the Disciples would have dealt with the Samaritans Luk. 9.54 to call downe fire from heaven to consume them at once no man will suffer it to go downe into the bowels of the belly but distasteth the reproofe and the reprover Thirdly they that would be meanes to bring others to repentance or to godlinesse must first be such themselues for asmuch as otherwise we shall seeme to draw them in jest to speake one thing and to meane another not indeed and in truth to desire that which we make shew off For what man I pray you will be disswaded from drunkennesse by the perswasion of a drunkard or who will regard the words of a blasphemer when he findeth fault with swearing The person reprooved never regardeth or esteemeth any such reproofe he never layeth it to his heart but heareth it as words of course and scoffeth at such folly as one ready to cast the reproover in the teeth with the common proverbe Luk. 4.23 Physition heale thy selfe If we would doe any good with our reprooving and seeke the amendment of such as goe astray we must first cast the beame out of our owne eye Math. 7.5 and then we shall see cleerly to cast out the mote out of our brothers eyes Hence it is that the Apostle saith Rom. 2.21 Thou that teachest an other teachest thou not thy selfe c. Such therefore as goe about to perswade others to a love of the truth and of the house of God where the truth is published must give an example to others and be a patterne and president thereof themselves and so lead them the way Thus the Prophet fortelleth the people should do under the Gospel Zach. 8.21 Let us goe speedily to pray before the Lord and to seeke the Lord of hostes I will goe also as if they should say Come friends come neighbours let us goe to the house of God to pray to heare his word to sanctifie his Sabbaths to learne his wayes and I will goe with you I will beare you company Thus also doth the Prophet David Psal 111. as appeareth in the title compared with the beginning of the Psalme Praise ye the Lord I will praise the Lord with my whole heart otherwise we shall be like the Statues in the high way which point the way to others but never remove out of their place themselves or like our common ringers who helpe to bring others into the Church and then depart themselves Lastly as we must call upon others so we must be content to be called upon by others especially such whose calling is most familiarly to converse together as children servants and such like They must not as the manner is thinke amisse to be often admonished by their Parents Masters or Superiors or esteeme it any disgrant or reproch to be pricked forward by the goad of exhortation much lesse say with the obstinate and refractory Let us breake their bandes Psal 2.3 and cast their cordes from us but stoop downe our neckes to the yoake of God and submit our selves to discipline even from our youth The Apostle Saint Peter saith 2 Pet. 1.12 I will not be negligent to put you in minde of these things though ye have knowledge and be established in the truth already This answereth the Objection of some men that boast they are able to admonish themselves and they know those things already sufficiently for albeit they to whom Peter wrote were well grounded and established in the present truth yet he would not cease diligently to admonish them And the Apostle Paul though he were perswaded of the Romans that they were full of goodnesse Rom. 15.14 filled with knowledge and able to admonish one another yet was he bold by writing to put them in mind of these things Phil 3.1 and it did not greeue him to write the same things to the Philippians because he knew that for them it was a sure and safe thing So that such as are best furnished and well stored with good knowledge with grace and goodnesse oftentimes find they have need to be whet up and put forward and if such as are most forward and furnished need the spurres to be clapped to their sides much more others that are children in knowledge backward in good things rude and raw in the doctrine which is according to godlinesse 8. Let man and be●st be covered with sackcloth and cry c. Here we have the summe and effect of the Kings Proclamation that as the danger was common to all which hung over their heads so the meanes must be common to turne away the judgment Doct. they must joyntly together put on sackcloth and call upon God This teacheth Prayer and fasting ●ust go together us that fasting and prayer must be joyned and goe hand in hand together The truth of this appeareth by sundry examples in the old and new Testament as Iudg. 20 23. 2 Chro. 20.3.6 Math. 17.21 Luk. 2.37 1 Cor. 7.5 Ioel. 2.15.17 The reasons are evident for first Math. 19.6 Whatsoever God hath coupled together no man must put asunder This is a generall rule belonging to all Gods ordinances which he hath united Secondly fasting considered in it selfe is an outward ceremony and cannot touch the conscience neither doth the kingdome of God consist therein Rom. 14.17 1 Tim. 4.8 but it is a bodily exercise that severed from the spiritual profiteth little 1 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 14.17 Thirdly the Conjunction of these is the right and ready mea●es to turne away the wrath of God from us as Ezr. 8. I Proclaimed a fast that we might humble our selves before our God Ezr. 8.21.23 and seeke of him a right way for us and for our children and for all our substance Fourthly to make our prayers more available and effectuall and that the Lord might be intreated of us Ezra 8.23 The use hereof is first Vse 1 to overthrow the Popish fastings which consist in
nothing but in outward abstinence from flesh onely as for humiliation of our selues before our God and afflicting of our spirits as for solemne prayer and amendment of life they are dead and buried as if they were the carcasse of fasting there is deepe silence of them as of things impertinent and utterly from the purpose Thus albeit they retaine the name of fasting yet they have altered the nature of it and albeit they make it meritorious yet was it but a notorious mocking of God a dishonouring of him and a deluding of his people Secondly we receive from hence encouragement in performance of these duties yea comfort and assurance that God will spare us and save us returne to us if we returne to him and turne away his wrath from us Ezr. 8.23 as he did from these Ninevites This we see how the Lord performed Ezr. 8. We fasted and besought our God for this and he was intreated of us Where we see fasting and praying ioyned together and this benefit they found thereby this was the successe they obtained a blessing the Lord was intreated of them If we practise these as we are commanded we have his promise of mercy If he be not intreated it is because we seeke him not aright neither are sufficiently humbled before him but provoke him more by our fasting then we did before and so adde sin unto us O how great are our provocations of the Almighty when his ordinances sanctified to withdraw his wrath shall be meanes to draw it farther upon us and how farre doe our evill workes kindle his indignation against us and encrease his plagues cause him to double his strokes upon us when our best actions performed amisse serve for no other end but to turne us farther out of his favour and to keepe his mercies from us so that we deserue justly a new plague for our fasting if God were not gracious unto us For what are our meetings in many places for the most part but a mocke-fast as if we meant to despite God to his face or as if we met together according to every mans fansie and not warranted by publike authority nor urged by our owne necessity Some are feasting while others are fasting Some keepe it indeed as they doe keepe the Sabbath neither resting from their labours not attending the worship of God and so they make conscience of neither Some come sweating and blowing into the house of God from their owne workes without any preparation of themselves or consideration of the worke of God where about they goe Some are only fore-noone men some againe onely after-noone way Some beginne when others have halfe ended others end when some have halfe begunne Others come to Church betimes but they bring the Devill at their elbowes that lulleth them fast asleepe so as they learne nothing and serue as Cyphers onely to fill up a place for being present they were as good be absent nay better be absent because they should lesse dishonour God shew lesse contempt of the word and give lesse scandal to their brethren Call you this a fasting to the Lord Call you this an afflicting of our selves or of our soules Call you this a solemne repentance Nay where is he almost that once mindeth amendment of life or calleth his sinnes to remembrance or who saith to the eternall God the Lord of heaven and earth the King of Kings as that servant sayd to his Lord and Master an earthly King Gen. 41.9 I call to mind my faultes this day See then the causes why we are not heard We use the meanes but God regardeth us not as Iam. 4. Iam. 4.3 Yee aske and receive not because ye aske amisse and we doe not performe them aright Behold then the true cause why Gods judgments often continue and his hand is stretched out still we remaine still in our sinnes We fast from food but we fast not from our offences We abstaine from the pleasures of the things of this life Heb. 11.25 but we abstaine not from the pleasures of sinne which are but for a season What should it profit to put on sackcloth upon the body and not to put off the pride of heart to abridge out selves of naturall sleepe and to be spiritually asleepe in sinne to put off our best apparell and not to cast off the old man which is corrupt through the deceivable lustes Object It will be objected it hath beene usuall with Moses and the Prophets and the people of God when his hand was heavy upon them by famine or pestilence or the sword they fasted and prayed and the plague ceased why is it not so with us we have fasted but our plague continueth is God changed or is there any alteration in the Almighty Answ I answer there is some difference betweene the old Testament and the new between his administration under the law and under the Gospel For in the time of the law he crowned the obedience thereof more and oftner with temporall blessings as he recompensed the disobedience with temporall judgements whiles the joyes of heaven and the torments of hell were more darkly shadowed whereas now in the sunne-shine of the Gospel we behold Christ Iesus with open face the Kingdome of heaven is set open to all beleevers and the judgment of the great day of the Lord to which the vngodly are reserved is made manifest and therefore his wrath is not now so fully and plentifully revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of men neither doth he reward with earthly blessings so commonly such as serve him But to passe this over as not so proper for this place let us enter into our selves let us search and try our own wayes and we shall find the true cause in our owne hearts For how should we thinke or perswade our selves that God should cease his hand presently when we encrease our sins dayly Is it not just with him to multiply his judgments upon us when we multiply sin upon sin or should we looke to have him repent of the evill when we will not repent of our evill We should doubtlesse see an other manner of successe and blessing of God upon our praying and fasting and humiliation if we did as the people of God were wont to doe we should speed as they were wont to do the Lord would deale with us as he dealt with them but forasmuch as we be not like to them in the one no marvaill if we be not like them in the other Lastly seeing the people of God were wont in solemne times of humil●ation and professing of their repentance to joyne together prayer and fasting the one giving the right hand of fellowship to the other let us stirre up our selves to call upon his name but how Not as ordinarily we doe but as our fasting is extraordinary so ought our prayers to be also in regard of continuance in regard of zeale in regard of confession of the sinnes of all