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A20735 A godly and learned treatise of prayer which both conteineth in it the doctrine of prayer, and also sheweth the practice of it in the exposition of the Lords prayer: by that faithfull and painfull servant of God George Downame, Doctr of Divinity, and late L. Bishop of Dery in the realm of Ireland. Downame, George, d. 1634.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1640 (1640) STC 7117; ESTC S110202 260,709 448

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were a figure of Christs sacrifice that for the merit thereof the prayers of them which did offer the sacrifice might be accepted 3. Thirdly as the high Priest once a yeare entred the sanctuary bearing on his shoulders the names and on his breast twelve stones the tokens of the twelve tribes prayed for the people who stood in the courts of the house even so Christ being entred into the heavenly sanctuary maketh intercession for us Heb. 10. 19. Apoc. 8. 3 4. Therefore as Augustine saith If you require a priest he is above the heavens where he maketh intercession for thee who in earth died for thee He is the onely way by whom we have accesse unto God John 14. 6. he is the onely Mediatour by whom we have accesse with boldnesse Ephes. 3. 12. he alone in whom God is well pleased with us and appeased towards us Rom. 3. 25. so that coming in his name neither the sense of the dreadfull majestie of God nor the conscience of our own unworthinesse shall dismay us He is the altar Heb. 13. 10. on which the sacrifice of our prayer or praise being offered is thereby sanctified vers 15. He is as Ambrose saith our mouth by which we speak unto the Father our eye by whom we see the Father our right hand by which we offer our selves to the Father without whose intercession neither we nor the Saints have ought to do with God And herein especially the prayers of true Christians do differ from the prayers of others that we call upon God in the name and mediation of Christ alone The use of all is Heb. 4. 16. and 10. 19. that seeing we have such an high Priest who maketh intercession for us that we should with boldnesse and assurance of faith offer up our prayers unto God For 1. the Spirit of Christ helpeth our infirmities Rom. 8. 26. 2. God the Father justifieth and accepteth of us in Christ v. 33. Who therefore shall lay any thing to our charge who can condemn us seeing Christ died for our sinnes and rose again for our justification and now sitteth at the right hand of God making intercession for us v. 34. and with the odours of his own sacrifice perfumeth our prayers making them acceptable unto God Revel 8. 3 4. CHAP. XVI Of the manner how we are to call upon God IN the fourth place we are to intreat of the manner how we are to call upon God The manner is set down Rom. 8. 27. according to God that is as S. John speaketh according to the will of God 1. John 5. 14. So I said in the definition That invocation is a religious speech of the faithfull made unto God in the name of Christ according to the will of God where by the will of God we are to understand not his secret will and counsel which we know not but his will revealed in his word Prayer is therefore made according to the will of God when in our prayer those things are performed which God in his word prescribeth to be performed in prayer This and the former point are of great moment for when a man prayeth and is not heard it is as Bernard saith because aut praeter verbum petis aut propter verbum non petis that is because thou prayest either beside the word or not for the word whereas on the other side we have this confidence in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us 1. John 5. 14 15. Now for the manner of prayer there are duties to be performed not onely in the action it self but also out of the action that is to say both before and after In the action of invocation the duties respecting the manner belong either to the internall form or externall The former are the inward duties of the soul the latter the outward speech and gesture of the bodie Unto the speech referre words quantitie qualitie voice In the soul we are to consider what is required first in generall and then in particular In generall it is required that our invocation be a speech of the soul and therefore as I said in the beginning some define prayer that it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the communication of the soul with God Others that it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the ascending of the mind unto God David expresseth his prayer to be a lifting up of his soul unto God Psal. 25. 1. and 86. 4. and elsewhere he calleth it a pouring forth of the soul before the Lord as Anna also speaketh 1. Sam. 1. 15. So that true prayer is not the lifting up of the voice of the eyes or hands alone but a lifting up of the heart with the hands unto God that is in the heavens Lam. 3. 41. To the same purpose in the Scriptures we are directed to pray in the heart Col. 3. 16. and in the spirit that is the soul Ephes. 6. 18. to pray with the whole heart Psal. 111. 1. that is with an upright heart Psal. 119. 7. with unfeigned lips Psal. 17. 1. in truth that is in sinceritie and uprightnesse of heart Psal. 145. 18. The necessitie of this praying in truth appeareth 1. By testimonie of our Saviour Christ John 4. 24. God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and truth 2. By all those testimonies even now cited wherein we are stirred up to lift up our hearts and to poure forth oursouls c. 3. If the Apostle require servants to perform their duties to their masters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as unto the Lord how much more is it our duty to the Lord himself to perform our service from our hearts 4. The uprightnesse and sinceritie of the heart is the soundnesse of all our worship and service of God without which it is hypocrisie therefore David professeth that he would call upon God with an upright heart Psal. 119. 7. and with lips unfeigned Psal. 17. 1. and to the same purpose we are exhorted to seek the Lord with an upright heart Deut. 4. 29. Jer. 29. 13. 5. The promise of hearing our prayer is restrained to this praying in truth Psal. 145. 18. The Lord is near to all that call upon him to all that call upon him in truth for bodily exercise profiteth little 1. Tim. 4. 8. and the Lord respecteth especially the voice of the heart As for those that call upon him with their lips and not with their hearts the Lord abhorreth their prayer and taketh himself to be abused by them and therefore he reproveth them by his Prophet Isaiah chap. 29. 13. This people cometh near me with their lips but their heart is farre from me and elsewhere he complaineth of the hypocrites of his people that when they howled unto him they cried not with their hearts which he calleth speaking lies Hos. 7. 13 14. for what else doth a man but lie when he speaketh otherwise then he thinketh
Christians as our Saviour hath taught us Our Father Give us c. The which as it doth teach us our duty so to them that do it it ministreth comfort Frater si pr●… te solo oras solus oras pro te si pro omnibus omnes orant pro te Brother if thou prayest for thy self alone then thou alone prayest for thy self if thou prayest for all then all pray for thee And not onely for the faithfull are we to pray but for all men in generall that is for men of all sorts and conditions those onely excepted who have sinned against the holy Ghost for whom there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne b●…t a fearfull expectation of judgement and violent fire which shall consume the professed enemies of God Hebr. 10. 27. For these we are not to pray 1. John 5. 16. Of the rest there is a distinction to be made in respect both of their outward and inward estate In regard of outward estate some are publick persons some are private We are to pray for all but especially for the publick and those which be in authority 1. Tim. 2. 1 2. And as private persons are to pray for the publick so contrariwise the publick for the private 1. Sam. 12. 23. In regard of the inward estate some are faithfull some are faithlesse We are to pray for all but especially for those which be of the houshold of faith Psal. 122. 6. Ephes. 6. 18. Gal. 6. 10. The faithlesse are the enemies of God and some of them the enemies of our Church and countrey and some enemies to our selves and shall we pray for such Although now they be the enemies of God yet hereafter they may become friends and be reconciled unto him whereof our prayer may be a means And therefore howsoever we are to pray against their wicked practices we are to pray for their persons that they of enemies may become friends of infidels faithfull of hereticks and schismaticks sound Christians of wicked and profane religious and holy for this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour who willeth that all men should be saved and come unto the knowledge of the truth 1. Timoth 2. 4. Examples of them who have prayed for the wicked are very many in the word of God As of Abraham for the Sodomites Gen. 18. Moses for the rebellious Israelites Exod. 32. yea for Pharaoh and the Egyptians Samuel for Saul the man of God for Jerdboam 1. Kings 13. But why seek ●… examples We have a commandment to pray for such as have sinned not unto death and a promise to procure mercy for them 1. John 5. 16. and a complaint of God when this is not performed Ezek. 22. 30. Prayers made for the wicked are many times without fruit If they be without fruit though they be to them idle yet not to thee Thy prayer shall return into thine own bosome Psal. 35. 13. according to that Mat. 10. 13. When ye come into an house salute it or wish peace unto it if the house be worthy let your peace come upon it but if it be not worthy let your peace return to you As for those that be our enemies Though the Schoolmen teach that we are not or at least need not specially to pray for them yet our Saviour Christ hath commanded us to love our enemies to blesse them that curse us and to pray for them who despitefully use us and persecure us So Jer. 29. 7. Rom. 12. 14. And this was practiced by our Saviour Luke 13. 34. by Stephen Acts 7. 60. To this kind of praying for others we are to referre Blessing which is a speciall kind of prayer of the superiour for the inferiour Heb. 7. 7. As of the Prince 1. Kings 8. 55. of the Priest Num. 6. 23 24. of the parents Gen. 9. and 27. and 49. To which the Lord hath given great force insomuch that the prolonging of the childrens life and dayes seemeth to be attributed to the parents in the fifth commandment that they may prolong their dayes c. And therefore not without cause are children taught to crave the blessing of their parents the rather because as it is our duty to pray for others so also to desire others to pray for us Which hath been done not onely by the inferiour and weak in grace as 1. Sam. 12. Jam. 5. 14. but also by the chief Saints of God as by Paul in many places of his epistles as Rom. 15. 30. Eph. 6. 19. But when we desire others to pr●…y for us we must adde our own prayers and our indeavour and our repentance if sinne hath separated between God and us otherwise the prayers of others though never so godly will not avail us Jer. 15. 1. Ezek. 14. 14. Prayer against others is Querimonia or Imprecatio Complaint is intercession against others laying forth the evil that they do or intend against us Rom. 11. 2 3. 1. Kings 19. 14. Psal. 3. 1 2. and 22. 7 8 12. Isai. 37. 14. Acts 4. 29. Imprecation is that intercession against others whereby we do not onely declare their malum culpae evil of sinne but desire their malum poenae evil of punishment And hereof are three degrees The first when we pray not against their persons but against their counsels and practices that God would confound them and bring them to nought So David prayed against Achitophel 2. Sam. 15. 31. Secondly when we pray the Lord to inflict some temporall affliction upon them that they may be humbled and brought to repentance Psal. 83. 16. Fill their faces with shame O Lord that they may seek thy name Job 34. 36. Optat Elihu Jobum tamdiu affligi donec justitiam Dei agnoscat à responsionibus blasphemis qualibus impii utuntur abstineat Elihu wisheth Job so long to be afflicted till he acknowledged Gods justice and absteined from blasphemous answers such as the wicked do use Thirdly when we pray for their utter destruction Psal. 55. 15. But here it may be demanded whether these kinds of imprecations be lawfull and agreeable to charity and whether also they be imitable Of the first there is no question seeing it is made not against their person but their sinne Now it is profitable not onely for him that prayeth but for the other also that is prayed against that his sinne may be restrained and his wicked practices prevented Nor is there any great question to be made of the second if it be made in hatred of the sinne and love of the person that the sinne by the affliction may be mortified and the sinner saved Concerning the third we are to distinguish between such imprecations as are generally conceived against the wicked and obstinate enemies of God and those which are particular For of the first there is no question to be made that they be warrantable and lawfull as they are generally propounded without having a
c. Psal. 78. 19. who live as if there were no God Tit. 1. 16. that say he is a Spirit but desire not to worship him in spirit that he is just and yet desire not to fear him c. II. How Gods name signifying his glory is hallowed by us ●… SEcondly the name of God signifieth his glory Which we do sanctifie whenas we glorifie God in our hearts mouthes and lives And this is the most principall signification of this petition We glorifie him in our hearts 1. When in the affections of our hearts we desire the procuring and advancement of Gods glory above all things as being more dear unto us then our own good 2. When as in the purpose of our hearts we intend the glory of God in all things putting into our hearts to give glory to his name Mal. 2. 2. In our mouthes we glorifie him when we make the glory of God the matter and end of our speech The matter when in our speech we set forth the praises of God whose name is to be exalted above all prayse Neh. 9. 5. For to prayse him is to glorifie him Luke 2. 20. Psal. 50. 23. and to make his prayse glorious Psal. 66. 2. We make it the end of our speech when therein we intend the glory of God either by the profession of a necessary truth Josh. 7. 19. or by a speech seasoned with grace tending to the glory of God or the good and edification of our brethren which is subordinate thereunto Col. 4. 6. In our lives we glorifie God 1. When in all our actions whatsoever we aim at the glory of God according to that 1. Cor. 10. 31. 2. When by our godly lives we do not onely glorifie God ourselves John 15. 8. but give just occasion to others of glorifying him Matth. 5. 12. 1. Pet. 2. 12. Vses 1. In prayer Wants to be bewayled 1. Our pride and vain-glory seeking our selves and our own prayse 2. The neglect of Gods glory the main end of all things which ought to be more dear to us then our salvation Such we are that except the Lord endue us with this grace we neglect his glory and so live in vain 3. Our suppressing of Gods prayse our unthankfulnes 4. Our idle and unsavoury speeches 5. Our manifold slips in our lives whereby God is dishonoured All which are faults incident to the best of us and therefore we had need earnestly to pray that God may be glorified of us 2. Sam. 12. 14. Graces which we desire 1. Zeal of Gods glory 2. Thankfulnesse 3. A desire to glorifie God by a godly life 2. Vses in our lives As we are in prayer earnestly to desire that we may give glory to God so in our lives we must endeavour both in our hearts tongues and works to glorifie him c. Otherwise if in our mouthes we desire that we may glorifie him and in our hearts neither desire it nor intend it if we altogether seek ourselves and our own praise if we use to suppresse the praises of God and to smother his truth if our ordinary speech be idle and unsavoury our lives dissolute from whence no honour can arise unto God and in truth desire not to be freed from these sinnes nay on the contrary if in stead of intending Gods glory we seek his dishonour in stead of sounding forth his prayse we blaspheme his holy name in stead of professing and defending his truth we oppugne the same in stead of savoury speeches they be rotten and infective in stead of causing the name of God to be glorified we cause it to be blasphemed our prayer is little better then mockery of God And yet such is the prayer of very many which with their mouthes desire that they may glorifie God and yet desire not his glory in their hearts nor seek it in their lives but rather practice such things whereby the name of God is dishonoured and blasphemed The glory of God is most dear unto him and so must be to us Acts 12. 22. His glory he will not lose III. The name of God signifying his titles how it is hallowed THirdly the name of God doth signifie his titles the titles I say of the Deity Attributes and Persons This name of God is sanctified when as it is holy and reverend so it is used of us It is used of us either by taking it into our mouthes or by taking it upon us We sanctifie it in our mouthes and so in our writings when as we make an holy and reverent mention of the titles of God Which we do when we mention them in a serious matter after a reverent manner to a holy end For the most holy and dreadfull name of the Lord our God Deut. 28. 58. must not be used to trifles and ridiculous matters neither may we lightly take up the most reverend name of God which we are not worthy to take into our mouthes neither must the glorious name of God be mentioned but to his glory either mediately or immediately And hereunto we are to referre two sorts of usurpation of Gods name and titles by Blessing and Swearing aright Blessing is either of God or man The blessing of God is the praysing of God of which we have spoken Example Rom. 9. 5. and 1. 25. 2. Cor. 11. 31. Blessing of men in the name of God which the Scripture calleth the putting of Gods name upon them Num. 6. 27. is a duty to be performed by all to all even unto enemies Rom. 12. 14. Matth. 5. 44. whereunto referre salutation but especially to be performed by superiours Hos. 7. 7. to their inferiours in the commonwealth by Princes and Magistrates David 2. Sam. 6. 18. Solomon 1. Kings 8. 55. In the Church Num. 6. 23 24 25. Melchisedec Gen. 14. 19. In the family by parents unto which the Lord giveth great force c. By swearing we make a holy and reverent mention of the name of God whenas we swear in truth judgement and righteousnesse Jer. 4. 2 c. We take upon us the name of God when his name is called upon in us as Gen. 48. 16. i. when we call our selves by his name and professe our selves to be the children of God Isai. 43. 6 7. which began to be done in the time of Seth after the birth of Enosh Gen. 4. 26. 6. 2. In these last times those of the Church of God do invocate the name of Christ Acts 9. 14 21. 1. Cor. 1. 2. and are called by his name Christians Acts 11. 26. and are baptized into his name Thus we sanctifie the name of Christ when as we walk worthy our calling whereby we are called Ephes. 4. 1. and a●…orn the doctrine of Christ our Saviour in all things departing from iniquity as it is 2. Tim. 2. 19. Vses in prayer 1. Graces to be desired 1. That we may use the titles of God reverently 2. That we may swear by his name alone in judgement truth and righteousnesse 3.
That we may walk worthy our calling 2. Wants to be bewayled 1. Irreverence in using the titles of God 2. Rash swearing 3. Not walking worthy our calling Vses in our lives As we pray that we may sanctifie the name of God so must we be carefull in our lives 1. To be mindfull of God and to mention him in matters serious to a good end after a reverent manner We mention not our prince without some shew of reverence how much more ought we to bow the knees of our hearts when we mention the glorious name of our God Example Rom. 9. 5. 2. To use blessing and not cursing Rom. 12. 14. 3. To swear by the Lord alone in truth judgement and righteousnesse 4. To labour by all means to walk worthy our calling even as it becometh the saints Ephes. 5. 3. Otherwise if our practice be and we continue therein either not to mention God at all which the Scriptures call the forgetting of God and it is a signe that God is not in their thoughts in whose mouthes he is not seeing out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh or else by mentioning his name to pollute it either in respect of the matter mentioning it in jests and ridiculous matters And in the name of God O God O Lord Good God Jesu Lord Mercy God c. or of the manner either by carelesse light and unreverent using of Gods name without fear or conscience sense or regard of God or by superstitious using of the titles doing more reverence to the words then unto God himself and sticking not to blaspheme his name by wicked swearing like to the souldiers Matth. 27. 39. Or in respect of the end when the name of God is mentioned to wicked yea to devilish ends as inchantments c. or by cursing which is a most horrible profaning of Gods name or by wicked swearing or by living unworthy their calling for so they take the name of Christ upon them in vain and profane it Considering Luke 1. 73. Tit. 2. 14. 2. Tim. 2. 19. In vain therefore they professe themselves the sonnes of God whilest they behave themselves as the sonnes of men Gen. 6. 2. or rather as the sonnes of the devil And besides they cause the holy name of Christ to be blasphemed If this I say be our practice and we continue therein and yet pray that we may sanctifie the name of God we play the hypocrites IV. How the name of God as it signifieth his Word is sanctified FOurthly the name of God doth signifie his word whereby he is especially known Which is sanctified by the Ministers when it is purely powerfully and profitably taught by the people when it is heard with reverence attention good conscience and purpose to practice it by all when in our hearts we do holily meditate thereon and are inflamed with a desire of practicing it Psal. 119. In our tongues when we apply it to those uses whereunto it is profitable 2. Tim. 3. 16. In our lives when we knowing it do perform it Vses in prayer Wants to be bewailed 1. The want of preaching where it is wanting 2. The neglect and contempt of the word a capitall sinne of these times 3. The little practicing of it where it is known especially in these dayes ubi scientiae multum conscientiae parùm where there is much science little conscience Vses in our lives In our lives we are to endeavour to sanctifie the word of God if Ministers by dividing it aright if people by saving hearing thereof by meditating on it by desire to do it by applying it to its right uses by yielding simple obedience unto it Otherwise if we desire it may be sanctified and yet we profane it and please our selves in so doing either preaching it unprofitably or hearing it without reverence attention or purpose to practice it if neither in our hearts we care to know nor have desire to practice it if we abuse it to confirm errours and confute the truth to impenitencie jests superstition and charms c. if we profane it either by neglect or contempt Mal. 1. 12. Amos 2. 7. Prov. 30. 9. Levit. 22 31 32. in word we desire to sanctifie it but in deed profane and pollute it V. How the name of God is sanctified as it signifieth the Doctrine of religion FIfthly it signifieth the doctrine of religion and the worship of God In which respect his name is sanctified when as we walk in his name Mich. 4. 5. For religion is the way by which we go to heaven Isai. 30. 21. and therefore in the Scriptures is often called the way When as therefore we walk in this life so as that our life doth answer to our profession it is in this sense said to signifie the name of God As we professe the Christian religion so our life is answerable to our profession if denying all ungodlinesse and worldly lusts we live soberly righteously and godly in this present world Looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Tit. 2. 12 13. Our religion is the truth in Christ which if we be truly taught we must put off the old man Ephes. 4. 20 c. Our religion is the light and we professe our selves children of the light and so must we walk Ephes. 5. 8 10 11. In this way we must walk in respect of God uprightly in respect of men inoffensively Duties in prayer Wants to be bewailed 1. Our backwardnesse in religion 2. Our hypocrisie 3. Our scandalous conversation Duties in our lives In our lives we are to desire and to endeavour that we may adorn the profession of religion by renouncing all ungodlinesse c. to set God before our eyes that we may walk uprightly as in his sight to walk inoffensively Heb. 12. 13. Otherwise if we professe religion and renounce not our sinnes nor put off the old man if we call our selves the children of the light and yet walk in darknesse we profane the name of God and his religion And this is done 1. In respect of God by hypocrisie 2. Tim. 3. 5. when as the profession of religion is pretended to worldly or wicked respects 2. In respect of men by the profane and dissolute life of common Christians and by the falls and scandals of them that would seem the best professours If we continue in this course and please our selves therein we cannot make this prayer in truth c. VI. How the name of God signifying his works is hallowed SIxthly the name of God signifieth his Works whereby he is known and that both of creation and administration The creatures are sanctified First by an holy and religious meditation and mentioning of them 1. To the glory of God acknowledging in them the wisdome justice power and goodnesse of God glorifying him being known in his works as God Rom. 1. 21 22. 2. To our good when we imitate and flie such things
happy whose sins are forg●…ven but those that are poore in spirit are happy Matth. 5. 3. therefore their sinnes are forgiven Whereas contrariwise if we be proud and have a Pharisaicall concei●… of our selves it is a fearfull signe that we remain in our sinnes John 9. 41. Luke 18. 14. II. If we would have forgivenesse of our sinnes we must believe in Christ. For by faith alone we have jus●…ification and remi●…sion of sinnes Acts 26. 18. because faith alone apprehendeth the merits and righteousnes●…e of Christ whereby we are justified Now this and the former must go together We must be cast down in our selves acknowledging our selves that we are no better in our selves then the firebrands of hell and yet withall we must relie upon Christ and his merits being perswaded that notwiths●…anding our manifold sinnes yet the Lord will receive us i●…to his love and favour imputing unto us the righteousnesse of his Sonne and cove●…ing us therewith as with a garment If thus we believe in Christ we need not doubt of the pardon of our sins because Christ having satisfied the justice of his 〈◊〉 for all the sinnes of 〈◊〉 which believe in him the remission therefore of sinnes to them that believe is a work not onely of mercy but also of justice 3. If we would truly make this prayer viz. in hatred of sinne have any assurance to our own souls that our sinnes are forgiven we must repent of those sinnes which we desire to be remitted and forsake those sinnes which we would have the Lord forgive Ezek. 18. 21 22. At what time soever c. Prov. 28. 13. He that confesseth his sinnes and forsaketh them c. And therefore as Isaiah exhorteth chap. 55. 7. let the wicked forsake his way c. If therefore we would effectually crave the pardon of our sins we must have a true purpose of heart and resolution to forsake them And if we would have assurance that according to our prayer our sinnes be forgiven we must have a true endeavour to leave them and to perform the contrary duties If therefore we have neither purpose in our hearts nor ●…ndeavour in our lives to forsake our sinnes we may not look that the Lord will pardon them If in my heart I regard wickednesse c. Psal. 66. 18. For the Lord heareth not sinners that is who do not repent of their sinnes nor have a true purpose to leave them John 9. 31. Prov. 28. 13. 4. If we make this prayer in faith and truly believe in God for the forgivenesse of our sinnes this perswasion will have this effect in us to make us fear to sinne and by sinne to displease and dishonour God There is mercy with thee that thou mayest be feared Psal. 130. 4. The bounty of the Lord must draw us to repentance Rom. 2. 4. Nay further those that believe their sinnes are forgiven them and are perswaded of Gods love and favour shed abroad in their hearts by the holy Ghost they cannot choose but love him much who hath forgiven them much Luke 7. 47. and shew forth their love in keeping his commandments 5. If in prayer we unfeignedly desire faith and assurance of the forgivenesse of our sinnes then we will be most carefull in our lives to use and to use aright the means of begetting and increasing this faith as the hearing of the word receiving of the Sacraments c. 6. If we truly desire reconciliation with God in Christ then will we se●… in all things to please him For if we please our selves in displeafing him as the very nature of sinne is to displease God how can we perswade our selves that we are reconciled unto God or desire so to be 7. If we would have any assurance that our sinnes are forgiven we must be ready to forgive our neighbours the offenses which they commit against us For if ye saith Christ Matth. 6. 14. forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you but if ye do not c. But of this more in the reason Here therefore is discovered the hypocrisie of those men 1. who crave pardon of sinne in a Pharisaicall conceit of their own perfection freedome from sinne 2. who have no true hatred of sinne nor purpose to leave it 3. who please themselves in displeasing God and yet would seem to desire reconciliation with God 4. who desire faith and yet neglect and contemne the means 5. who with the ungracious servant looking to have pardon of ten thousand talents of his master would not remit a small debt to his fellow-servant Matth. 18. 28. whom he ought to have loved for his Masters sake c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These words are a solemn profession unto God of our brotherly love serving both to confirm our faith in obteining pardon and also to 〈◊〉 our love to God who hath forgiven us much in the love of our brethren for his sake For whereas divers men making this prayer for pardon of sinne either do not believe at all the pardon of their sinne or else deceive themselves with an opinion of faith not loving him of whom they look for pardon nor their brethren for his sake but with the ungracious servant Matth. 18. 28. exact small debts of their brethren and revenge offenses committed against them as though they could love God and yet hate their brother therefore our Saviour teacheth us to adde to the petition this protestation that if we be able to make it in truth we may be assured of the forgivenesse of our sinnes and not be deceived as many are in our assurance First therefore because we are so full of infidelity and di●…idence that we are hardly brought to believe in particular the forgivenesse of our own sinnes and consequently to make this prayer in faith our Saviour teacheth us to use this notable argument not so much to move God as to confirm our selves drawn from the lesse to the greater As we ●…lso forgive c. or as it is more plainly set down in Luke For even we also forgive c. And the reason standeth thus If we who have not so much pitie in regard of thine abundant mercy as is a drop of water in comparison of the Ocean sea if we I say be readie to forgive the offenses and inj●…ries done against us then no doubt thou wi●… forgive our offenses which we from the bottom of our hearts confesse unto thee with deprecation of pardon But even we Lord whose mercy is as nothing in comparison of thine ar●… readie to remit offenses committed against us and therefore as we earnestly crave pardon so we do unfeignedly believe that thou wilt forgive us our sinnes The connexion of the proposition is necessarie For as we say Quod in minori valet valet etiam in majori That which is of force in the lesser is of force also in the greater If a drop of pity in us doth wash
away the offense of our brother how much more shall the multitude of his mercies wash away our offenses And our Saviour reasoneth elsewhere Matth. 7. 11. If yee which are evil can give good things to your children how much more c. If therefore our consciences do testifie unto us the truth of the assumption That we are readie to forgive them that offend us we may also be assured of the truth of the conclusion That God also forgiveth our sinnes 2. Whereas many abuse the mercy of God whereof they presume for the pardoning of their sinnes dealing unthankfully with God in cruelty revenge exercised upon their brethren and so deceive themselves with a conceit of faith and assurance of the pardon of their sinnes when indeed their sinne is not pardoned therefore our Saviour Christ would have this protestation added that it may be a touchstone to trie whether we have remission of sinne and assurance thereof For as our Saviour saith that he to whom much is forgiven loveth much Luke 7. 47. and he that loveth God truly cannot but love his brother for Gods cause For as John saith 1. Epist. 4. 20. If any say that he loveth God and hateth his brother he is a liar c. and chap 5. 1. Every one that loveth him that hath begotten doth also love him that is begotten of him And Love covereth the multitude of offenses Prov. 10. 12. Therefore if we will not forgive our brethren that offend against us it is an evident argument that we do not love them If we love not our neighbour certain it is that we love not God If we love not God it is a certain signe that we do not believe in him nor are perswaded of his love towards us in the forgiving of our sinnes If we believe not this Christs righteousnesse and merits are not imputed unto us to our justification and remission of our sinnes And therefore if we be not willing and ready to remit offenses committed against us it is a certain signe that our sinnes are not forgiven of God As contrariwise our brotherly love in remitting offenses is a sure token of the forgivenesse of our sins For as our Saviour saith Matth. 6. 14 15. If ye forgive men their offenses then will your heavenly Father also forgive you Some expound these words as if in them we did alledge a cause why God should forgive us or as though our forgiving of our brethren did merit forgivenesse of sinnes at the hands of God As the Papists also expound that speech of our Saviour Luke 7. 47. Many sinnes are forgiven her for she loved much Whereas in truth the love either of God or of our neighbour for Gods cause is an effect and so a signe of Gods love towards us in forgiving our sinnes We love God because he loved us first 1. John 4. 19. And so doth our Saviour in that place argue not from the cause to the effect but from the effect to the cause as also appeareth by the opposition in the latter part of that verse but to whom lesse is forgiven he loveth lesse and by the parable of the two debtours ver 41. whereof he loved more to which more was forgiven So that our love is not the cause of forgivenesse but the forgivenesse of our sinnes is the cause of our love and therefore our love an effect fruit and signe of the forgivenesse of our sinnes Again our justification and remission of sinnes is free proceeding from the mere love of God without any desert of ours Rom. 3. 24. howbeit it is deserved through the merits of Christ. And surely if our forgiving of offenses were the cause why our sinnes be forgiven then may we thank our selves for our justification neither should we need to pray that God would forgive us for Christs merits but for our own deserts And lastly the Apostle Paul exhorteth us to forgive our brethren as to a fruit and effect of Christs forgiving us Ephes. 4. 32. Col. 3. 13. Forgiving one another even as Christ hath freely forgiven you In these words therefore is not set down the cause of the forgivenesse of our sinnes but an argument from the lesse to the greater to confirm our faith in the assurance of the forgivenesse of our sinnes that lesse being also an undoubted fruit and sure signe of the remission of our sinnes But now let us consider the words particularly and so come to the uses By our debters is meant such as have offended or wronged us or as the Apostle speaketh Col. 3. 13. against whom we have any quarrel But what debters am I to forgive may some body say I can be content sometimes to put up an injury at the hands of my better but I cannot brook that my equall should crow over me or that mine inferiour should be too sawcie with me I can be content to remit some offenses but great indignities I cannot put up Answ. Our Saviour speaketh indefinitely and generally without difference of debters so that whosoever is our debter we must forgive him if we would have assurance that God hath forgiven our sinnes But this is more plainly expressed Luke 11. For even we also for give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one that is indebted to us So that our love must not be partiall neither is it if it be indeed for Gods cause in whom we are to love our friends and for whom we are to love our enemies May not a man therefore require and exact his debts of his debter if he would have God forgive his debts Our Saviour doth not speak of the debts of money or goods but of trespasses offenses and wrongs which in the Chaldee and Syriack tongue are called debts c. As for due debts of money and goods them thou mayest exact of those which are able to pay 〈◊〉 so that it be done without using rigour or seeking extremities What is meant by we forgive We forgive God alone forgiveth sinnes how then can we be said to forgive our debters We must distinguish both of the debt which is forgiven and also of forgiving In every offense committed against the neighbour two parties are offended God mediately and the neighbour immediately And so it may be considered either as a transgression of the law of God and so it is properly called sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as it 〈◊〉 or hindreth the neighbour and is called an injury or wrong As therefore it is a transgression of the law of God no man can remit it but as it is an injury or wrong done to a man he may remit it Again God is said to forgive a sinne when he is content not onely to forget the fault but also to forgive the punishment for the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to the sinner Man is said to forgive an 〈◊〉 not when he remitteth the punishment due unto it by the law of God for that is not in