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A36465 The doctrine of practicall praying together with a learned exposition on the Lords prayer / by George Downam. Downame, George, d. 1634.; Downame, George, d. 1634. Godly and fruitfull exposition of the Lords prayer. 1656 (1656) Wing D2060; ESTC R25565 260,703 451

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come uponus and upon all his chosen servants The means are to be prayed for of the coming of Christs kingdome II. Now because this kingdome cometh by means we are also to pray for them The means are either outward or inward The outward are the preaching of the word and Christs government by his min●…ters The preaching of the word which is the Gospel of the kingdome of God is such a notable means of the coming of the kingdome that it is called the kingdome of God For whereas there be three degrees of this coming our Vocation Justification and Sanctification every one of them ordinarily is wrought by the preaching of the word We are called outwardly by the Gospel We are justified by faith faith cometh by hearing of the word Rom. 10. 17. We are sanctified by the word of truth by the preaching of the word we are begotten unto God Therefore we are to pray that the word of God may have a free passage and be glorified 2. Thess. 3. 1. and also that the preaching of the word and Gospel be not taken from us or as Matth. 21. 43. that the kingdome of God be not taken from us but continued to us and our posterity And because there cannot be preaching of the word except there be preachers Rom. 10. 14. we are taught to pray Matth. 9. 38. that God would send forth labourers into his harvest that he would furnish them with Vrim and Thummim gifts sufficient Ephes. 6. 19. that he would clothe them with righteousnes Psal. 132. 9. that he would open unto thē a doore of the word that they may speak the mysterie of Christ Col. 4. 3. And because there cannot be ordinarily learned guides and scribes taught unto the kingdome of God except they be first trained up in good literature we are to pray also for the Universities and schools of the prophets which are the seminaries and seed-plots of the Church The second outward means is the government of Christ by his servants both in the Church and Commonwealth In the Church by the Ministers and governours exercising in the name of Christ admonition suspension excommunication For whom we are to pray That they may execute their offices according to the will of God as shall most serve for the advancement of the spirituall kingdome of Christ and defacing of the kingdome of sin and Satan That the people submit themselves to the censures of the Church and be reclaimed thereby In the Commonwealth by Magistrates who are Gods ministers also c. Rom. 13. whom God hath advanced that they might be nursing-fathers and nursing-mothers to the Church Isai. 49. 13. For whom also we are to pray 1. Tim. 2. 2. That after the example of David Josias Ezechias they may reform religion defend the truth profession of it suppresse idolatry and superstition punish sinne c. That the subjects may live in all obedience unto them as unto the ordinance of the Lord. The inward means is the operation of Gods Spirit in the souls of men For it is the Spirit of God which maketh the outward means effectuall and without which neither the preaching of the word nor the other means of government will any whit prevail 1. Cor. 3. 7. Deut. 29. 4. It is the Spirit of God who in the ministery of the word knocketh at the doore of our hearts and inlighteneth our minds to understand it John 16. 13. he leadeth us into all truth 1. John 2. 20 27. he teacheth us he openeth our hearts to listen unto it as he did the heart of Lydia Acts 16. 14. he maketh the word the savour of life unto life For without the Spirit the word is a dead letter the Scripture a seale●… book without him we cannot say that Jesus is Christ without him we cannot pray c. He mollifieth our hearts and worketh in us that godly sorrow working repentance never to be repented of which stirreth up in us earnest desires and maketh us to call upon God with sighs unspeakable and is therefore called the Spirit of supplication He worketh in us the assurance of our reconciliation with God which we call faith and is therefore called the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father c. He sanctifieth us throughout mortifying sinne and raising us up into newnesse of life Ezech 36. 26 27. working in us all sanctifying and saving graces and is therefore called the Spirit of grace and so every grace is called by the name of the Spirit because it is a gift of the Spirit as the Spirit of wisdome and revelation Ephes. 1. 17. Isai. 11. 2. In this petition therefore we desire that the Lord would grant us his Spirit which he hath promised Luke 11. 13. and that by this Spirit he would rule and reigne in us and quicken us that being animated thereby we may behave our selves as members of Christ c. ruled and guided by his sanctifying Spirit The impediments of Gods kingdome to be prayed against III. Lastly because the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let it come seemeth to import and presuppose some obstacles and impediments whereby this kingdome is hindered we do also pray that these may be removed The impediments are these First the three main enemies of our salvation are also the chief oppugners of the kingdome of grace the Devil World and Flesh. The devil seeketh by all means the ruine of the Church in generall Revel 12. and also of the particular members Whilest this strong man possesseth his hold that is every naturall man all things are at quiet but when the Lord by his word and Spirit draweth any out of the kingdome and power of darknesse then he bestirreth him and by all tentations both by himself and his instruments he seeketh to entangle him in sinne When the seed of the word is sown in the hearts of men he carrieth it away as the birds do the corn which fall on the wayes Matth. 13. 19. or he blindfoldeth them that they shall not see the light of the gospel Ephes. 4. 4. or if they understand it he carrieth them away captive to the obedience of his will If they be called to repentance he perswadeth them to deferre it They may repent hereafter as well c. If to amendment of life he telleth them that if they be elected they may live as they list if rejected they cannot be saved If to humiliation that it is a doctrine that belongeth to notorious sinners c. Moreover he opposeth himself to the Ministers and their ministery Zech. 3. 1. he suborneth false teachers and is a lying spirit in their mouthes Therefore we pray that the Lord would bind Satan dissolve his works and tread him under our feet Rom. 16. 20. The second is the world and the lusts thereof which choke the seed of Gods word Matth. 13. 22. the glorious shew of this world 1. Cor. 7. 31. By these Satan as by nails naileth men to the earth that
Pro. 21. 13. Whereas contrariwise those that be mercifull shall find mercy with God Matth. 5. 7. Then shalt thou call and the Lord shall answer thou shalt cry and he will say Here I am Isa. 58. 9. If we love not in word and tongue alone but in deed and truth hereby we may have confidence before God 1. John 3. 18 19. Secondly to Want of love in forgiving offenses and contrariwise Mark 11. 25. When ye stand praying forgive if ye have ought against any that your Father also which is in heav●…n may forgive you your trespasses But if ●…e do not forgive 〈◊〉 will your Father which is in heaven forgive your trespasses Thirdly to the Not-hearing or hearkening to the word of God For as we heare so we shall be he●…rd Prov. 28. 9. He that turneth 〈◊〉 his care from 〈◊〉 the law his prayer shall be abominable For as we speak unto the Lord in prayer so the Lord speaketh unto us in the preaching of the word and therefore good reason it is that if we will not heare the Lord when he speaketh unto us he should not heare us when we speak unto him as the Prophet Zacharie saith chap. 7. 13. It is come to passe that as he cried and they would not heare so they cryed and I would not heare saith the Lord. On the other side If the word of Christ abide in us we may ask what we will and it shall be granted us John 15. 7. If men harden their hearts against the word of God the wisdome of God hath threatned not to heare them Prov. 1. 24. He covereth himself with a cloud that our prayer should not passe through Lam. 3. 44. But if men humble themselves before God and tremble at his word being of humble and contrite hearts the Lord hath promised to heare Psal. 66. 2. and 34. 18. and 51. 17. The prayer of the humble pierceth the clouds Ecclus 35. 17. If men choose not the fear of the Lord the Lord will not heare them Prov. 1. 28 29. on the other side He will fulfill the desire of them that fear him he will also heare their cry an●… will save them Psal. 145. 19. Neither doth the Lord refuse to heare those alone who are open and notorious sinners but those also which making outward profession of pietie do play the hypocrites Job 27. 9. Will God heare the cry of the hyp●…crite when trouble cometh upon him To which purpose there is a notable saying of David Psal. 66. 18. If I regard wickednesse in my heart saith he the Lord will not he●…re m●… Whereas contrariwise if men would walk uprightly before God he would deni●… u●…to them nothing that is good Psal. 84. 11. Wherefore it behoveth every one that nameth the name of Christ to depart from iniquitie 2. Tim. 2. 19. and to purge his hands from sinne Jam 4. 8. and to wash them in innocencie Psal. 26. that so he may without doubting lift up holy hands unto the Lord 1. Tim. 2. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Tim. 2. 22. Heb. 10. 22. with true hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience Mala conscientia januam nobis claudit An evil conscience shutteth the gate against us Calv. Institut 3. 20. 7. § But against this doctrine it may be objected That the Lord many times heareth the wicked when they call upon him and therefore that the promises made to prayer are not peculiar to the godly but common to them with the wicked For answer hereunto we are to remember That prayers are made unto God either for spirituall blessings belonging to a better life or for temporall blessings apperteining to this corporall life The former are peculiar to the children of God as belonging to their inheritance and are never bestowed on the wicked who never have so much grace as truly to desire them and therefore if they do at any time ask them they do pray in hypocrisie asking with their lips that which they do not desire with their hearts nor labour for in their lives As for temporall benefits I cannot deny but that the Lord many times in respect of them doth grant unto the wicked their hearts desire But yet even in these also there is great difference betwixt the Lord his hearing of the godly and the wicked For in temporall matters the Lord heareth men either as a gracious and loving Father or as a mercifull Creatour or as a severe Judge 1. In speciall favour as a gracious Father in Christ he heareth his faithfull children ever subordinating their good to his own glory not alwayes satisfying their carnall or worldly desires but alwayes granting their requests as shall be most for his glory and their spirituall and everlasting good under which conditions our prayers for temporall blessings ought alwayes to be framed and being so conceived they are ever granted 2. As a mercifull Creatour the Lord heareth men crying unto him in their extremity And thus he heareth all sorts of men but especially the godly for he is the saviour that is the preserver of all men but chiefly of the faithfull 1. Tim. 4. 10. The godly have a promise of deliverance when they call upon God Psal. 50. 14 15. and 145. 19. and 91. 15. and 34. 17 19. So have not the wicked Psal. 51. 16. and 18. 41. Yea in many places as ye have heard he threatneth that when they cry unto him in their trouble he will not heare them The affliction and deliverance of the godly do both turn to their singular good Rom. 8. 28. and being delivered they glorifie God consulting with themselves what to render unto the Lord for his benefits and t●…king the cup of salvation that is of thanksgiving for their salvation and deliverance Psal. 116. 12 13. The wicked not being bettered by their affliction are many times delivered according to their desire the Lord giving them over as incorrigible Isa. 1. 5. Jer. 2. 30. and when they are delivered they seek not to glorifie God nor repent of their sinnes but return to their vomit making shew of repentance no longer then the hand of God is upon them And so both their affliction and deliverance through their own default turneth to their ruine Notwithstanding deliverance out of affliction when men cry unto God is a common benefit the Lord hearing and delivering men of all sorts as a mercifull Creatour and Preserver as is testified Psal. 107. where it is often repeated that divers sorts of men when th●…y cry unto the Lord in their trouble he doth deliver them out of their distresse But because many are unthankfull the holy Ghost doth as oft repeat this exclamation O that men would therefore praise the Lord for his goodnesse and declare the wonders which he doth for the sonnes of men For though the Lord doth hate the wicked in respect of their sinnes and therefore many times doth refuse to heare and to deliver them yet he loveth them as his creatures and
To avoid tentations and occasions of evil To shake off slothfulnesse and diligently to employ our selves either in good exercises or in the works of our callings 2. To resist tentations and to withstand them 3. To be vigilant and watchfull Mark 13. 33. 1. Pet. 5. 8. Ephes. 5. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to walk circumspectly to shake off security to keep a watch over our senses To make a covenant with our eyes Job 31. 1. To desire the Lord to turn away our eyes from beholding vanities Psal. 119. 37. 4. To get unto us the whole armour of God as the shield of faith c. Ephes. 6. 12 13 18. 1. Thess. 5. 8. II. More particular 1. To deny our selves to crucifie the fl●…sh and not to satisfie the lusts thereof to abstein from fleshly lusts 1. Pet. 2. 11. 2. To renounce the world and the desires thereof 1. John 2. 15 16. 3. To resist the devil not to yield to his motions but rather practice the contrary not to believe his perswasions 1. Pet. 5. 9. Jam. 4. 7. 4. To hate all sinne as we desire to be delivered from all To retein no one sinne with Herod To think no sinne small To abstein also from all shew of evil 1. Thess. 5. 22. To desire full deliverance Phil. 1. 23. Cupio dissolvi I desire to be dissolved Rom. 7. 24. Quis me liberabit Who shall deliver me Hypocrisie discovered Here then is discovered the hypocrisie of those 1. Who pray that God would not lead them into tentation and themselves runne into tentation as those that go to playes and give themselves to idlenesse 2. Who by security and idlenesse make preparation for the unclean spirit Matt. 12. 44. 3. Who take thought for the flesh to satisfie the lusts thereof Rom. 13. 14. 4. Who are addicted to the world and the desires thereof as pleasures profits 1. Tim. 6. 9. Those that will be rich fall into tentation c. and preferments 5. Who have made a covenant with hell Isai. 28. 15. who pray to be delivered from sin and yet will not forsake their sinne as their drunkennesse whoredome usury c. but harden their hearts and therefore shall fall into evil Prov. 28. 14. who are so farre from desiring full deliverance from evil by their dissolution and translation out of this life that rather they have placed their paradise here upon earth The Conclusion HItherto we have spoken of the petitions Now followeth the Conclusion of the Lords prayer in these words For thine is the kingdome the power and the glorie for ever and ever Amen For howsoever this clause is omitted of the Latine interpreters and is rejected by Erasmus yet was it added by our Saviour and registred by Matthew For first the Greek copies have it secondly the Syriack Paraphrast translateth it thirdly the Greek writers expound it as Chrysostome and Theophylact and fourthly it is not onely consonant with the rest of the Scriptures but also in this prayer hath a necessary use For we have heard that praise is to be joyned with prayer and in prayer two things required fervencie and faith Now as the petitions especially conteined a specification of our desires so this conclusion conteineth partly a confirmation of our faith joyned with praysing God in these words For thine is the kingdome and the power and the glorie for ever and ever and partly a testification both of our faith and of the truth of our desires in all the former petitions in the word Amen Our Saviour teacheth us to confirm our faith by three reasons For that they be reasons the word For signifieth And reasons they are not so much to perswade God that he would grant our requests as to perswade and assure our selves that we shall obtein The reasons are taken neither frō our own worthinesse nor from the dignitie of our prayers for if our faith were to be grounded thereon we should neither dare to pray nor hope to be heard but from the nature attributes of God that we might know that the obteining our requests dependeth not upon our own worth but on the power and goodnesse of God The reasons I say are drawn from three attributes of God viz. his eternall Kingdome eternall Power eternall Glorie His is the kingdome therefore he hath right to give us whatsoever we desire His is the power and might therefore he is able to grant our requests His is the glory both of giving all good things and also of all good things given and thereunto our requests do tend and therefore he is ready and willing to grant our requests for the manifestation of his own glorie And this we shall the easier believe if we consider to whom we ascribe these things namely to our heavenly Father whose s●…at is in heaven and his kingdome ruleth over all Psal. 103. 19. who is in heaven and doth what he will Psal. 115. 3. who sitteth on the heavens as his throne full of majestie and glory and rideth on the heavens for our help Neither doth the right power and glory of giving benefits temporall and concerning this life alone belong unto God but also of everlasting blessings in heavenly things after this life is ended For his is the eternall kingdome eternall power and eternall glorie signified in those words for ever and ever which are to be referred to all the three attributes What kingdome here signifieth But first of his kingdome Which here signifieth 1. generally the universall kingdome of God which some call the kingdome of his power whereby he ruleth and governeth all things Psal. 103. 19. 2. Chron. 20. 6. and in regard whereof the right of all things belongeth to him Deut. 10. 14. Psal. 24. 1. This then teacheth us two things 1. That our heavenly Father is the absolute Lord and owner of all his creatures who as he is the Creatour so is he also the possessour of heaven and earth in whose hand all good things are to bestow as it pleaseth him This therefore must encourage us with assurance of faith to make our requests to ou●… heavenly Father of whom we cannot ask any good thing whether spirituall or temporall which is not his to bestow And therefore it is well said of Seneca Audacter Deum roga nihil eum de alieno rogaturus Ask boldly of God seeing thou canst ask nothing of him which belongeth to another 2. That our heavenly Father is the sovereigne King and absolute Lord and Governour over all his creatures ruling the good and overruling the evil to whose commandment all the good creatures obey and at whose beck they are ready to do us good And as for the wicked either men or angels they are so overruled by the almighty providence of God that when they seek to annoy us they are against their purpose made the instruments of God to do us good And whereas our Saviour teacheth us to say Thine is the kingdome we are to observe that the
to be performed after prayer 144 25. Of the Subject matter of our prayers and what is required thereunto namely that it be good and according to Gods will 146 That being unable to pray we are assisted by the Spirit 147 Chap. 26 Of the circumstances of prayer 150 Of Publick prayer 151 Of Private prayer in the family and alone 154 27. Of the time of prayer 156 The Euchetae confuted 157 28. Concerning the Place of prayer 161 The vanity of Pilgrimages 163 29. Of Prayer or Petition and what is required unto it 164 Prayer and thanksgiving must be joyned 165 What things are required in prayer 167 We must pray in sight and sense of our wants 169 We must pray with fervency of de●…ire 172 30. Of Faith which is chiefly required in prayer 173 We must pray in faith and submission to Gods will 176 31. Of duties to be performed after prayer 178 32. Distinctions of prayer in regard of the object 181 For whom we must pray 184 Of prayer against others 188 Of Imprecations 189 33. Of the reall object of prayer or the things to be prayed for 191 We must pray for temporall blessings 193 34. Of Deprecation 195 Of Confession of our sinnes 196 How this Confession is to be made 197 35. Of Thanksgiving 201 What is required in Thanksgiving 202 36. Speciall duties required in Thanksgiving 206 37. Of the outward expressing inward thankfulnesse by praysing God 212 38. Duties to be performed before after thanksgiving 216 ¶ The chief things handled in the second part of this Treatise viz. The exposition of the Lords Prayer THe generals of Invocation applyed to the Lords Prayer 226 The Preface 231 How God is called Father ibid. Of the name Father and what duties it teacheth us 234 What is meant by the word Our 237 The meaning of these words Which art in heaven 244 The division of the Petitions 251 The meaning of the first Petition 252 How Gods name is sanctified by us 255 How Gods name signifying his Glory is sanctified by us 257 How it is sanctified signifying his Titles 259 How it is sanctified signifying his Word 263 How it is sanctified signifying the Doctrine of religion 264 How it is sanctified signifying his Works 265 How God himself sanctifieth his name 269 The second Petition handled 271 What Gods kingdome is 272 What it is for Gods kingdome to come 275 Christs kingdome cometh by means 279 The impediments of Gods kingdome to be prayed against 282 Uses concerning the coming of Gods kingdome 289 Of the coming of the kingdome of glory 293 We must expect and pray for the second coming of Christ 294 How we must expect the second coming of Christ 298 The third Petition explained 301 Of the will of God and things which he willeth 303 How Gods will is done on earth 307 How Gods will is done on earth as in heaven 310 The matter and manner of our obedience 314 315 Wherein our obedience resembleth that of the Angels 319 The exposition of the fourth Petition 324 Why we ask temporall blessings before spirituall 325 What is meant by Bread 327 What is meant by daily bread 330 How God is said to give us daily bread 333 c. Duties to be performed by them that ask daily bread 339 340 c. The fifth Petition expounded 350 We must be justified before we can be sanctified 352 That our sinnes are debts 355 What is meant by forgiving our trespasses 359 By this petition we are put in mind of our misery and Gods mercy 361 No man can satisfie Gods justice for his sinnes 362 Severall duties arising out of the fifth petition 368 369 Our forgiving no cause of Gods forgiving us 376 How we can be said to forgive 379 Reasons moving us to forgive 385 c. The sixth petition expounded 390 Those whom God pardoneth the devil tempteth 391 The necessity of this prayer Not to be lead into temptation 392 Of probations and trialls 1. by prosperity 2. by afflictions 394 395 Of divers sorts of temptations 396 1. Of the flesh ibid. 2. Of the world 397 3. Of the devil 400 Of the divers sorts of the devils temptations 401 c. How God may be said to tempt 406 Satan can neither tempt or overcome without Gods permission 409 That temptations are good for Gods children 410 How we must pray against the temptations of the flesh the world and the devil 413 414 415 c. The Conclusion of the Lords Prayer both authenticall and necessary 419 Our faith confirmed by this Conclusion 420 What is meant by thine is the kingdome 422 423 What is meant by the power and the glory 424 425 Everlasting kingdome power and glory belongeth to God 427 What the word Amen signifieth 429 CHAP. I. Of the definition of prayer and of the persons who are to pray AMong all the duties of Christianitie as there is not any more honourable in it self more glorious to God more profitable and necessary for us then the exercise of prayer and invocation so is there none wherein we do more need direction and instruction and consequently nothing wherein my labour in speaking and yours in hearing may better be imployed For as Chrysostome saith Pulcherrima est scientia veréque Christiano homine digna quae docet rectè precari That is the most excellent knowledge and truly worthy a Christian man which teacheth rightly to pray In treating whereof I purpose by the help of God to observe this order First I will set down the doctrine of invocation and then explain that absolute form or pattern of prayer prescribed by our Saviour Christ wherein the practice of the doctrine is conteined The doctrine must first be generall and common to both the sorts of invocation viz. prayer and thanksgiving and then speciall and peculiar to either The generall doctrine consisteth of such points as are either more substantiall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or accidentall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The substantiall points are all of them comprised in this definition Invocation or prayer is a religious speech of the faithfull directed unto God in the name of Christ framed according to the will of God by the help of the holy Ghost concerning good things apperteining to his glory and our good The phrase of invocating or calling upon the name of God sometimes signifieth the profession of the true religion whereby we take the name of God upon us and are called after his name as Gen. 48. 16. and 4. 16. Isa. 63. 10. Acts 9. 14. 1. Cor. 1. 2. And first as touching the name This part of Gods worship is usually in the Scriptures expressed by the phrase of calling upon the name of God and therefore is fitly called invocation that is calling upon God whether it be by way of praying or praysing In which generall sense the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tephillat is sometimes used 1. Sam. 2. 1. Psal. 86. 1. Isa. 56. 7. Domus orationis
called on the name of the Lord. But let us come to their objections To the first I answer That we do teach that remission of sinnes is obteined by prayer and that to that end our Saviour hath taught us to crave remission and hath acquainted us with the example of the Publicane who by prayer obteined justification as David Manasseh and the faithfull and penitent sinners in all ages have done which hindreth not but that we are justified by faith alone For it is not every prayer but the prayer of faith as S. James calleth it which is impetratory I say it is the prayer of faith which by prayer obteineth pardon To the second Where our Divines define faith to be a full and certain perswasion of Gods love towards us in Christ forgiving our sinnes c. they define it in the highest degree and perfection thereof whereunto we must alwayes aspire But there are two principall degrees of faith The first is an assent to the truth of Gods word and more especially to the promises of the Gospel assuring salvation to all that believe in Christ. This assent in the judgement to the Law and Gospel if it be true lively and effectuall worketh in the heart and will a lothing of our sinnes a resolution to leave them a desire of grace and a hungring and thirsting after Christs righteousnesse and a resolution to acknowledge Christ to be our Saviour and to rest upon him alone for salvation And howsoever those who have but this degree cannot say that they are assured of forgivenesse and salvation yet their desire of grace proceeding from this lively faith expressed in their prayer is acceptable before God and obteineth that which is desired Now they which have this degree must proceed to the second For seeing the promises belong to them concerning justification and salvation they ought to apply them to themselves And look how sure a man may be that he believeth that is giveth a t●…e and lively assent to the doctrine of the Gospel so sure ought he to be of the remission of sinnes and salvation by Christ. And of this assurance there are degrees according to the measure of grace received To conclude therefore this point We ascribe to faithfull prayer efficacie to obtein that which we desire in the name of Christ according to the will of God and by the Scriptures do demonstrate the efficacie of prayer which now we are to shew by the wonderfull effects which by prayer have been brought to passe CHAP. V. Of the great and wonderfull efficacie of prayer AS first in the elements the earth the water the aire the fire At the prayer of Moses the earth opened her mouth and swallowed up Korah Dathan and Abiram with their families Numb 16. At his prayer also the hard rocks sent forth rivers of waters Exod. 17. Samson having slain a thousand Philistines with the jaw-bone of an asse Judg. 5. 18 19. whereupon the place was called Lehi which signifieth a jaw-bone and being ready to perish with thirst by prayer obteined a well of living water which continued to posteritie which the Lord opened unto him in Lehi not the jaw-bone but the place so called which for a perpetuall monument of the efficacie of prayer he called En-hakkore the fountain of him that prayed At the prayer of Moses Exod. 14. the waters of the red sea gave place to the Israelites and overwhelmed their enemies But come we to the aire Elias being a man subject to the like passions with us which the Apostle James noteth chap. 5. 17 18. that we might in like manner hope to be heard prayed a prayer that is prayed effectually that it might not rain and it rained not on the earth for three yeares and six moneths and he prayed again and the heavens that is the aire gave rain and the earth brought forth her fruit Concerning fire we have two examples of the same Elias the former 1 Kings 18. where by prayer he brought down fire from heaven to consume the sacrifice the latter 2. Kings 1. where also by prayer he brought down fire from heaven to destroy the two captains with their fifties But leaving the elements let us in our cogitations ascend into heaven For most admirable is that example Josh. 10. 15. where at the prayer of Joshua for he is said to have spoken to the Lord and the Lord to have hearkened to his voice the sunne stood still in the middest of heaven for the space of one whole day untill the Israelites were avenged on their enemies And no lesse admirable is that example of the Prophet Isaiah 2. Kings 20. 11. at whose prayer not onely the shadow in the sunne-diall but the sunne it self in the firmament went back ten degrees Isa. 38. 8. Ecclus 48. 23. Neither is the efficacie of prayer seen upon those creatures alone which are without sense but upon those also which are indued with sense and reason Jonah when he was swallowed up of the whale and lay in the belly thereof as in a grave for the space of three dayes and three nights having cried to the Lord de profundis he was restored safe to land Jonah 2. As touching men the efficacie of prayer appeareth in the deliverance not onely of particular men but also of whole cities and countreys from the fury and force of their enemies were they never so mightie or so many When Peter was by Herod cast into prison and kept by foure quaternions of souldiers lying in the night before he should be put to death between two souldiers bound with two chains the keepers also before the doore keeping the prison at the instant prayer of the Church which effectually prayed for his deliverance the Lord sent his angel to set him at libertie Acts 12. 5. Elias the Prophet being armed with the spirit of prayer when Ahaziah the king had sent three captains of fifties one after another to apprehend him he not onely brought down fire from heaven to destroy the two first with their fifties as I said before but also he brought the third captain upon his knees humbly intreating him that his own life and the lives of all his companie might be precious in his sight 2. Kings 1. Elisha also upon whom the spirit of Elias was doubled when Ben-hadad king of Syria had sent an armie of men with horses and chariots to apprehend him the armie having by night environed the citie where the Prophet was and besieged it by prayer he had them in his power striketh them blind leadeth them to Samaria and having by prayer opened their eyes that they might see their present danger he victualleth them and sendeth them away as vanquished Now for the defense and deliverance of whole peoples and common-wealths such is the efficacie of prayer that those who are indued with the spirit of supplication may not unworthily with Elias and Elisha be called the horsemen and chariots of Israel By prayer Asa 2.
not because ye ask amisse that ye might consume it on your lusts The end must be good or the prayer is bad The end must be that God may be glorified Psal. 50. 15. The third limitation is in respect of things God hath promised to give good things to them that ask Matth. 7. 11. But if the thing which thou desirest be not good either in it self as if it be unlawfull or not to thee as if it be unprofitable it is not within the compasse of the promise nor ought to be within the compasse of thy desire Or if it be good perhaps it is not yet good for thee to have it but in due time thou shalt find grace In the former case the Lord seemeth to denie in the latter to delay our suits and yet in both he doth grant our prayer if it be rightly conceived For first we must not circumscribe God or prescribe unto him the time and means but so desire that our request may be granted as he shall judge most fit both for his glorie and our good Secondly when as the good things which we ask are either necessarie to salvation or otherwise the former we are to ask absolutely and absolutely we are to believe that we shall obtein them Yea know this for thy comfort that if God hath given thee grace to ask spirituall and saving graces effectually thou hast alreadie obteined for the sincere desire of any grace is the beginning of that grace which is so desired But those blessings which are not necessary to salvation whether spirituall or temporall we are not to ask absolutely but with condition if the obteining thereof may be for Gods glory and our good So shall we be sure to obtein our desires of the Lord who alwayes heareth his children if not ad voluntatem according to their will yet ad utilitatem for their profit as wise parents deal with their children seeming many times to denie to his children in fatherly love that which in anger and indignation he granteth to others Perhaps therefore as Augustine saith negat tibi propitius quod aliis concedit iratus In mercie he denieth that to thee which in anger he granteth unto others And therefore the hearing of our prayers is not to be measured by sense but by faith CHAP. VII Of the profit of prayer THe third question Whether any further profit is to be expected from prayer besides obteining our requests The profit is twofold the one of reward freely bestowed by God on him that calleth on his name the other the increase of grace wrought in them by Gods Spirit who give themselves to prayer As touching the former Though by reason of our wants and imperfections in prayer the Lord if he should deal in rigour with us might justly reject our prayers yet such is his mercie that he doth not onely cover our wants and for the intercession of Christ accepteth our prayer but also granteth our desire and not onely that but because prayer is a dutie of pietie and a principall part of that worship whereby we glorifie God he doth graciously reward it godlinesse having the promise of this life and that which is to come Our Saviour therefore promiseth Matth. 6. 6. that when we call upon God though it be but in secret and private prayers and much more in publick our heavenly Father will reward us openly The Lord is rich to all that call upon him for whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved Rom. 10. 12 13. For the other By the frequent and religious exercise of this dutie our faith and affiance in God is increased our experience of his bountie and goodnesse towards us in hearing us confirmed our love to his majestie augmented Psal. 116. 1. our hope nourished our patience exercised By it we grow in acquaintance with God and tast how good and gracious the Lord is By it we learn being Gods daily suiters so to behave our selves as not to be ashamed to appear before him By it we elevate our minds above earthly cogitations to mind things that are above and to have our conversation in heaven By it we grow into assurance of our election because the same spirit which is the spirit of supplication is also the spirit of adoption whereby we cry in our hearts Abba Father and which testifieth to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God and if sonnes then also heirs c. But the Papists not content herewith ascribe two other fruits to their prayers that they are also Satisfactorie for their sinnes and Meritorious of eternall life Satisfactorie as being penal works and therefore both voluntarily undertaken and by their Priests injoyned by way of penance So that this exercise which is so honourable and so profitable as you have heard being also a chief prerogative to the faithfull to have free accesse to God is to them a punishment or work of penance to satisfie for sins But their prayers performed with these conceits of satisfaction and merit are sacrilegious and derogatorie to the all-sufficient satisfaction and merit of Christ though otherwise they were commendable But the impietie of their assertion will better appear if we take a brief survey of their prayers For first whereas our prayers ought to be directed unto the Lord alone they pray to Saints and Angels yea before images and crosses and by their prayers commit most horrible idolatry 2. Neither do they pray in the name and mediation of Christ alone but unto him joyn other mediatours of intercession by whose merits and intercession they desire and hope to be heard 3. The most of them pray without understanding for that which they utter in prayer as praying in an unknown language and consequently pray without attention or actuall intention which they say needeth not without faith or hope without reverence 4. They number their prayers upon beads oftentimes by most grosse ●…attologie repeating the same words perswading themselves that the more Pater nosters Ave Maries and Creeds for those also are prayers with them they shall mumble upon their beads the more satisfactory and meritorious their prayers b●… Now their prayers being thus every way abominable and odious what horrible impudencie and impietie is it to obtrude such prayers upon God not onely as acceptable service unto him but as satisfactory and meritorious by which they can merit nothing but damnation and for the wickednesse whereof they shall never be able to satisfie but with endlesse torments Let this suffice us that prayer is of so great profit and admirable efficacie that our prayers rightly conceived and made are alwayes heard and granted that besides the benefit of obteining our prayers have their reward with God and notable fruits conferring and increasing Gods graces in us CHAP. VIII Of a threefold necessitie of prayer NOw I come to the necessitie of prayer which is necessary by a threefold bond of necessitie 1. Necessitate praecepti necessitie of
so much more meritorious and satisfactorie is most grosse battologie I conclude with the Apostle 1. Cor. 14. 37 38. If any man think himself to be a prophet or spirituall let him acknowledge what the prophet hath written concerning the use of a known tongue in the service of God to be the commandments of God But if any saith he be ignorant let him be ignorant The like may be said of those who praying in their mother-tongue do not understand what they say For the prayer which is made without understanding is also without faith without feeling without true devotion neither is it a lifting up of the mind but of the voyce unto God and a bare recitall of a set form of words without any inward grace such as parrots might be taught to make Wherein many are so grosse that they use the Creed and the ten Commandments for prayers and recite them with the like devotion as they do the Lords prayer I deny not but that it is good for the simpler sort to meditate both of the Creed of the Decalogue the one conteining the summe of that which we are to believe the other comprising the summe of that which we are to do likewise to pray unto God that he would increase our faith in the one and our obedience to the other But neither of both is to be used as a form of prayer because in neither we do either ask any thing which we want or give thanks for that which we have received Let men therefore which would call upon God labour for knowledge and understanding For a prayer of five words such as was the Publicanes prayer Deus propitius esto mihi peccatori God be mercifull unto me a sinner uttered with understanding is better then a prayer of an houre long not understood CHAP. XVIII Of faith which is required in prayer SEcondly in the mind is required faith For faith being a perswasion and therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the proper seat thereof is the mind Howsoever it is to be granted that where this sound perswasion and assurance is in the mind it worketh affiance and hope in the heart as a proper fruit and necessarie effect thereof And therefore in the phrase of believing in this affiance is implyed For to believe in God is not onely to believe that there is a God and that he is such an one as he hath revealed himself in his word but also that he is such an one to me as that the Father is my Father c. and consequently that therefore I repose my trust and affiance in him In invocation there is a double faith required The one more generall apprehending the main promise of the Go●…pel whereby we stand righteous before God in Christ whereby we are to be perswaded that both we and our prayers are accepted of God in Christ The other more speciall apprehending the speciall promises made to our prayers whereby we are perswaded that our speciall request shall be granted unto us The former because it doth generally belong to all invocation as well thanksgiving as prayer is now to be intreated of The other specially belongeth to prayer and therefore in the speciall doctrine of prayer is to be considered The former is that perswasion or assurance of the soul whereby we believing in Christ are in the same measure perswaded of Gods love towards us in Christ and therefore are incouraged to come with confidence to the throne of grace not doubting but that both we and our pray●…rs are acceptable unto God in Christ Heb. 4. 16. And this assurance of faith is grounded partly on the will and love of God and partly on the merits and intercession of our S●…viour Christ. On the will of God 1. in generall appearing in his commandments injoyning this dutie and his gracious promises For if God hath commanded us to call upon him and hath graciously promised to heare us why should we doubt but that this our service is acceptable unto him 1. Thess. 5. 17 18. Pray continually in all things give thanks for this is the will of God the acceptable will of God in Christ concerning you But chiefly on the promises of God is our faith to be grounded Which promises are either generall and those not onely that he will heare and accept but also graciously reward this exercise of piety performed to him Matth. 6. 4. Godlinesse hath the promise both of this life and of that which is to come or speciall for the granting of that which we desire as Gen. 32. 9 12. Exod. 32. 13. 2. Sam. 7. 27 28. 1. Chron. 17. 25. Secondly in particular that the thing which we either pray or praise be good as being referred to Gods glory and our good For if it be not good we are neither if we have it not to desire it and much lesse to pray for it nor if we have it to praise God as the authour and giver of it We must have warrant in Gods word that the thing for which we call upon God be such as God hath promised to give otherwise our prayer is turned into sinne And in this sense the Apostle saith Let every man be perswaded in his mind for whatsoever is not of faith is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Likewise our faith must be grounded on the love of God and goodnesse First in generall that is Psal. 5. 7. his bounty and readinesse to heare and reward all those that call upon him Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God For he t●…at cometh to God must believe that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him Rom. 10. 12 13. The Lord is rich towards all that call upon him Psal. 86. 5. Thou art plenteous in mercy to all that call upon thee Isa. 65. 24. Secondly in particular to our selves in Christ John 16. 27. Rom. 8. 32. and 5. 5. and 8. 15 16. Psal. 55. 16 17. I will call upon God the Lord will save me Evening and morning and at noon will I pray and he will heare my voice Psal. 4. 3. The Lord will heare when I call unto him Psal. 56. 9. When I cry unto thee then shall mine enemies turn back this I know for God is for me Psal. 86. 7. In the day of my trouble I will call upon thee for thou wilt answer me In the merits of Christ whereby we are accepted and in his intercession whereby our prayers are made acceptable Heb. 10. 22. And in this sense also we are to pray in the name of Christ that is not onely with desire that for Christs sake we may be heard but also with perswasion and some measure of assurance that for Christs sake we shall be heard John 16. 23. To call upon God in the name of Christ implyeth two things 1. To desire that for Christs sake we may be heard 2. To believe that for Christs sake we shall be heard That
our Liturgie calling them shreds and wishing that in one continued prayer all our requests should be joyned notwithstanding the wisdome of those learned and godly men who out of the most ancient Liturgies compiled ours is to be commended who considering that our long continued prayer would to the greatest sort seem tedious and breed distraction and wandring thoughts have set forth many short prayers to avoid wearisomenesse and to keep the mind of the people attentive CHAP XXIII Of the qualitie of our speech in our prayer and of the form which is to be used AS touching the quality of our speech As we need not to be curious in respect of the style because God looketh to the uprightnesse of the heart rather then the elegancie of the speech so must we not be more carelesse negligent for the manner of speech then we would be if we were to speak to any mortall man And because we are but too carnall let us make use of Malachi's rule chap. 1. 8. Offer it to thy Prince that is Let us examine our selves whether we be as carefull to speak unto the Lord as we would be unto a Prince and herein also let us shew that reverence which we ow unto the Lord. The godly in the Scriptures have been very exquisite and accurate in those prayers and Psalmes which are recorded in the Scriptures Concerning the form it may be demanded Whether we may use a set form of prayer for that is denied by our Separatists insomuch that they hold it unlawfull to pray in that set form which Christ himself hath prescribed But they are plainly confuted by the words of our Saviour Luke 11. 2. When ye pray say Our Father c. unlesse they will persist in their contradiction against Christ himself forbidding us when we pray to say Our Father Besides that prayer of Christ there are other set forms in the Scriptures prescribed to be used in the Church of God The whole book of the Psalmes was penned and committed to Asaph and other musicians as is mentioned in divers of their titles to the end that they might be sung in the congregation More especially the ninety second Psalme was penned to be used on the Sabbath-day and the hundred and second Psalme is A prayer of or f●…r the afflicted when he is overwhelmed and poureth out his complaint before the Lord. But why may not a set form be used Because the faithful praying in the holy Ghost as Jude speaketh v. 20. must pray as they are moved by the Spirit and not as they are provided beforehand The assistance of the Spirit is seen not so much in helping our invention The gift of invention or conceiving a prayer is a gift of the Spirit but a common gift and not a proper grace of the sanctifying Spirit for a man of a present wit and good speech wanting the spirit of sanctification may do much that way especially if he be studied in Divinity as in these three 1. in rectifying our judgement teaching us to ask that which is good for us especially in time of affliction For we being led by sense know not what to ask but the Spirit helpeth our insirmities and teacheth us to pray according to God asking those things which tend to his glory and our good 2. His help is seen in inslaming our affections teaching us to pray with sighs and grones that cannot be expressed v. 26. And to the same purpose the Prophet Zacharie foretelleth that the faithfull by the spirit of grace and supplication shall be moved when they look upon him whom th●…y have pierced to mourn as one mourneth for his firs●…-born sonne Zech. 12. 10. 3. The spirit of Adoption crieth in our hearts Abba Father that is teacheth us to pray in faith and to call upon God as our Father in Christ Rom. 8. 15 16. Gal. 4. 6. Moreover where they say that they must pray as the Spirit moveth them they seem with the Enthusiasts to look for extraordinary inspirations and are in the number of those which tempt God for this conceit of theirs as well taketh away all meditation and preparation beforehand as set prayers But we are to follow the counsel of the Wise man Ecclus 18. 23. Before thou prayest prepare thy self and be not as one that tempteth the Lord. The promise made the faithfull that they should not need to study beforehand what they should speak but that they should speak as the Spirit should move them is to be understood of the extraordinary gift of Gods Spirit wherewith they were filled in inspiring them in their preachings apologies and prayers without their own study and industry Wherefore as in preaching to neglect study and to expect extraordinary inspiration of the Spirit that we may speak ex tempore as the Spirit moveth when a man is not upon some present exigent and necessity put to it is to tempt God so likewise in prayer And therefore we must not presume 〈◊〉 it be upon some present necessity to conceive a long prayer especially prayer ex tempore without some former study and meditation used either against the instant or in former times but we must come prepared either with some set form which notwithstanding with help of meditation we are to vary upon occasions or with such a form as we have conceived in our meditation that so we may with David call our prayer our meditation Neither do I doubt but that a good desire vow or promise made in prayer upon former deliberation is more accepted of God and is like to be more constant and may likewise be uttered with better fervency of affection and begged with more assurance of faith then that which is rashly uttered upon a sudden And therefore Salomon saith Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any word before God Eccles 5. 1. Neither do I condemn all that seem to pray ex tempore For as his faculty is to be commended that is so well studied in Divinity and exercised in preaching as that he is able to preach as it were ex tempore not that he casteth himself upon extraordinary inspirations but is inabled by the help of his former studies and exercise so is his faculty to be commended who is so well studied in Divinity and exercised in applying the severall parts of religion to the use of prayer that he is able as it were ex tempore to conceive a prayer not that in so doing he casteth himself upon the extraordinary inspiration of the holy Spirit but is inabled by the help of his former studies and meditations Now if I be asked the question Whether is better a set form of prayer or a prayer conceived I answer by distinction For if they speak of such a prayer as is conceived ex tempore without former study and meditation by such an one as expecteth extraordinary inspiration meaning to pray as the spirit shall move him I answer that a
either expressed or understood Gen. 24. 12 c. Psal. 102. 2. Now as I said we do by prayer effectually crave that which we do well that is lawfully and profitably desire at the hands of God Lawfully when we desire that which is good and to a good end For if it be not good which we desire then is our desire unlawfull and we sinne in going about to make God the authour of sinne God hath promised to give good things to them that ask Matth. 7. 11. But if they be not good they are not within the compasse of Gods promise nor ought to come within the compasse of our desire If not to a good end our desire is not lawfull nor our prayer acceptable Jam. 4. 3. Ye ask and receive not because ye ask amisse that ye may consume it upon your lusts But as the thing must be good in it self so also it must be good unto us that is expedient and profitable for God as a most wise Father doth not alwayes grant his children their desires for many times they ask that which would be hur●…full for we know not what to ask as we ought Rom. 8. 26. But he heareth them alwayes though not ad voluntatem to their will yet ad utilitatem to their profit And therefore when he seemeth not to satisfie our particular desire he graciously heareth our prayer if it be rightly conceived Fo●… we ought all to be of that mind which some of the heathen expressed in their prayer mentioned in Plato and in the Greek Epigramme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good things great Jove pray or pray not impart To us but bad though crav'd from us avert CHAP. XXIX Of duties to be performed after prayer ANd these are the duties to be performed in the action of prayer Out of the action before is required preparation wherein we are to meditate of such things as may help and further us for the exercise of such duties as are required in the action which I have already noted in the particulars After our prayer is ended we must quietly rest in the good will and pleasure of God not doubting but the Lord as he hath heard our prayers so in his good time will grant the same as shall be most for his glory and our good And this is the meaning of the word Amen where with our Saviour hath taught us as it were to seal up our prayers for thereby as we signifie the consent of our desire so also the assent of faith This was Davids disposition Psal. 3. 4 5. I did call unto the Lord with my voice there is his prayer and he heard me out of his mountain there is his assurance that he was heard I laid me down and slept there is his quiet and secure resting in the good will and protection of God who did sustein him So Psal. 4. 6 7 8. Psal. 5. 3. In the morning I will direct my prayer unto thee speculabor and I will look and wait untill thou shalt grant my desire And such also was the disposition of Hannah after she had prayed 1. Sam. 1. 18. Secondly as we crave good things at the hands of God so we our selves must endeavour to attein unto them by all good means possible For otherwise our prayer is a tempting of God as if we would have our desire granted as it were by miracle and a fruit of no faith or unfeigned desire of the thing asked For if we did truly believe and unfeignedly desire the thing which we ask we would leave no good means unattempted for the obteining thereof As for example when I pray for faith or any other spirituall grace I must besides my prayer use all the good means carefully which the Lord hath ordained for the begetting and increasing of those graces in us as the hearing of the word preached receiving the Sacrament reading and meditating in the word c. To this purpose there are many worthy sayings of the heathen as of Aeschylus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God delighteth to be present with him that laboureth and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When as any man useth his indeavour God also putteth to his hand and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Manum admoventi invocanda sunt Numina Divine powers are to be invocated by him that putteth to his own hand To which purpose is that proverb of Varro Dii facientes adjuvant God assisteth labourers Adag 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thirdly if having prayed and used other means we do not obtein our desires let us before we go any further labour to find out the cause If the fault be in our prayer because we did ask amisse Jam. 4. 3. as that we did not pray in faith or in fervency c. we must endeavour by the assistance of Gods spiri●… which we are to crave to amend that fault If the fault be in our selves as that we lie in some sinne not repented of we must by repentance wash our selves and then renew our prayers unto God Isai. 1. 16 18. It may be we neither so greatly desire the thing which we ask while we want it neither would so highly esteem it when we have it as it deserveth and therefore the Lord deferreth the granting of our suit that our desire being deferred might be more fervent and the thing so hardly obteined might both the more highly be esteemed and the more carefully kept So Augustine Deus differt nostra postulata ut discamus grandia grand●…ter desider are God deferreth to grant our requests that we may learn to desire greatly great things Fourthly having used the means and endeavoured to remove the impediments we are to persist and persevere in prayer without fainting To which purpose our Saviour propounded the parable of the widow and the judge Luke 18. 1. giving us to understand that those things which we do not obtein at the first by reason of our perseverance and importunitie shall be granted To which purpose also serveth the parable of the two friends Luke 11. 8. To this perseverance we are often stirred up both by precept Rom. 12. 12. and practice as of Hannah 1. Sam. 1. 12. of David Psal. 109. 4. who gave himself to prayer of Daniel when he was forbidden under pain of death to call upon God Dan. 6. of Bartimeus the blind man who calling upon Christ and being therefore rebuked of the people did so much the more cry after him Mark 10. 46 48. of the woman of Syrophenicia who having received divers repulses yet by her importunity obteined her desire Matth. 15. 22. of the Primitive Church Acts 2. 42. and 12. 5. of Cornelius Acts 10. of Paul who prayed without ceasing Fifthly as we are to persist with a kind of importunitie in our prayers so are we with patience to expect the Lords leisure Psal. 40. 1. and 130 5 7. and not to be hasty according to that Isai. 28. 16. Qui crediderit nè festinet Let not him that
who are like himself But the faithfull who are at peace with God have also joy in the holy Ghost whereby they do rejoyce in God in all estates not onely in time of peace prosperity but also in time of adversity Rom. 5. 3. Yea the greatest afflictions of this life are to be born of the godly not onely meekly and patiently but also comfortably and thankfuly For 1. as God in all his judgements remembreth mercy so must our faith apprehend his mercy as well as our sense apprehendeth his judgements And therefore we ought to say with Job chap. 13. 15. Though he kill me yet will I trust in him 2. Because the faithfull have this priviledge that as nothing can hurt them Isai. 54. 17. so all things even their afflictions do work together for their good Rom. 8. 28. 3. Because God afflicteth them for their good whether by triall or chastisement 4. Because with the outward affliction he vouchsafeth inward comfort 2. Cor. 1. 5. 1. Sam. 30. 6. Acts 16. 25. Psal. 94. 19. 5. Because the afflictions of the faithfull though for sinne are under their desert and in them the anger of God is carried not against their persons but against their sinne 6. Because of those other favours of God which in their afflictions they do enjoy Desinentes contristari propter ea quae non habemus de rebus praesentibus gratias agere debemus Ceasing to grieve for those things we have not we are to give thanks for things which we presently have 7. Because though positive blessings are wanting yet there are alwayes innumerable privative blessings for which we are to give thanks Consider the evils we have deserved and the dangers whereunto we are exposed Consider that by our sinnes we have deserved all the plagues denounced in the law Deut. 28. 15. not onely in this life but also in the world to come Whilest therefore our condition is better then those in hell we have cause to prayse God who hath not dealt with us after our sin●…es nor rewarded us after our iniquities Psal. 103. 10. Lam. 3. 22. Now if they are bound to prayse God that are not consumed how much more have we cause to prayse God whom he hath not onely not consumed but hath heaped and multiplied his mercies upon us both privative and positive And as at all times we are to prayse God so in solemn festivalls ordained to that end such as was that of Purim Esth. 9. and ours of the Fifth of November for our marvellous deliverance from that horrible conspiracy of the Papists by the gunpouder-treason FINIS A GODLY AND FRUITFULL EXPOSITION OF THE LORDS PRAYER Shewing the meaning of the words and the duties required in the severall Petitions both in respect of prayer it self and also in respect of our lives PHIL. 4. 6. Be carefull for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God ¶ Printed by Roger Daniel Printer to the Universitie of Cambridge Ann. Dom. MDCXL MATTH 6. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LUKE 11. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 TO call upon the name of God by hearty and effectuall prayer is a duty in it self most excellent to God most glorious to our selves most profitable and necessary But such is the blindnesse and ignorance of our minds the dulnesse and hardnesse of our hearts that we know not either how to pray or what to ask Like to Zebedee's children Matth. 22. 20. We ask we know not what and as Paul speaketh Rom. 8. 26. We know not what to pray as we ought Wherefore our Saviour Christ in abundant mercy towards us that he might relieve our wants in this behalf hath set down a prescript form of prayer whereby we are to frame ours commanding us when we do pray to pray thus In which words as he forbiddeth us not to use this prayer so he doth not alwayes bind us to use the same words For here two extremities are to be avoided the first of the Brownists who think it unlawfull to use the prescript form of these words the second of the Papists who superstitiously insist in the very words and syllables themselves As touching the first Our Saviour commandeth us thus to pray and more plainly Luke 11. 2. When ye pray say Our Father c. Therefore unlesse it be unlawfull to obey the expresse commandment of our Saviour Christ it is lawfull to use these words Secondly the book of Psalmes doth prove that we may have set forms of prayers Psal. 86. is a form of prayer to be used in affliction The 92 is Psalmus in diem Sabbati A Psalme for the Sabbath The 102 Oratio pro paupere A Psalme for a poore man The 136 A solemn form of thanksgiving 2. Chron. 7. 6. and 20. 21. For the second when Christ commandeth to pray thus he doth not tie us to the words but to the things We must pray for such things as herein summarily are conteined with such affections as are herein prescribed For we must understand that our Saviour Christ propoundeth this prayer as a brief summe of all those things which we are to ask For as the Creed is summa credendorum the summe of things to be believed the Decalogue summa agendorum the summe of things to be done so the Lords Prayer is summa petendorum the summe of things to be desired But as all things particularly to be believed are not particularly expressed in the Creed nor all things to be done in the Decalog●… so neither are all things particularized in the Lords prayer for which we are to ask And therefore it is lawfull nay expedient and necessary often to descend into the particulars themselves For the proving whereof we have so many arguments as there are prayers of the godly recorded in the word For though all of them may be referred to this prayer or some part thereof yet none of them are conceived in the same words And moreover Matthew and Luke in setting down this prayer are not curious in observing the same words And therefore superstitious is the opinion and practice of the Church of Rome who think that the bare repetition of these words in an unknown tongue without understanding or faith is ex opere operato meritorious as though our Saviour Christ had prescribed these words to be used as a charm c. First whereas our Saviour Christ propoundeth this form we may be assured that it is a perfect pattern of prayer that nothing ought to be asked which is not in it conteined For in him are all the treasures of the wisdome and knowledge of God Col. 2. 3. He knoweth what is acceptable unto God what is needfull for us therefore in this prayer is conteined whatsoever is either fit for God to grant or for us to ask By this then as a pattern we are to form our prayers and as by a rule we are to examine them
May the things which we desire be referred to these petitions then may we boldly ask them Can they not be referred then do we not pray according to Gods will and therefore can have no assurance that we shall be heard Secondly whereas Christ teacheth his disciples to pray herein he giveth an example to be imitated of Ministers sc. that as they teach other things so also to pray John Baptist Luke 11. 1. taught his disciples to pray whereupon Christs disciples desire him in like manner to teach them Wherein also they are to be an example to be imitated of all learners As the Father in the family or the Pastour in the Church ought to teach so the child in the house the hearer in the Church ought to be desirous to learn how to pray Thirdly it sneweth that of our selves we know not how to pray For if we should be left to our own affections and desires we should ask many times those things which would tend to Gods dishonour and our own hurt As appeareth by Socrates who wanting this direction of our Saviour Christ knew not what to ask but groping in darknesse desired in generall terms that those things which are good he would give them whether they asked them or no and would deliver them from evil things although they should ask them Plato in Alcib 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O Jupiter King give unto us good things whether we ask or ask them not but put away from us evil things though we pray for them And therefore our Saviour Christ thought it necessary to teach us how to pray Again hence ariseth great comfort to Gods children For whereas the word of God assureth us whatsoever we shall ask according to his will it shall be given us 1. John 5. 14. we may assure our selves that we so pray when we follow Christs direction Neither need we doubt but the Lord acknowledging the voice of his own Sonne as Cyprian saith our prayers shall be acceptable unto him Lastly seeing our Saviour Christ hath commanded us to pray and taught us how we are unexcusable if we neglect this duty One thing further is to be considered in the words as they are set down by Luke When ye pray say Whether speech in prayer be alwayes necessary There is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either inward or outward speech and prayer is either vocall or mentall And the Lord heareth the cry of the heart and our secret grones are not hid from him Psal. 38. 10. Howbeit the voyce is to be used so oft as it may conveniently both for the attention of the mind and intension of the affections c. NOw let us come to the Lords Prayer it self In which is lively though summarily set down unto us the practice of that doctrine which heretofore we have learned concerning prayer For as we have been taught that Prayer and Thanksgiving are to be joyned together so here with the Petitions is joyned a Thanksgiving wherein we are taught to ascribe unto the Lord eternall kingdome power and glory which words almost David useth in his solemn thanksgiving 1. Chron. 29. 11. Again whereas we have been taught that unto prayer are required duties before we pray and also in prayer it self both here are prescribed Before we are to use preparation wherein we are to meditate of such things as are fit to stirre up those graces in us which in prayer are to be expressed In prayer two things are to be expressed an hungring and thirsting desire of grace and the speciall assent of faith For the stirring up of both which it is fit to meditate upon the fatherly love and almighty power of God which our Saviour hath taught us to prefix before the prayer it self In prayer two things especially are to be expressed 1. An hungring and thirsting desire of the grace and blessing of God 2. A speciall assent of faith that our request shall be granted Therefore the prayer it self is divided into Petitions and Conclusion the desire being especially expressed in the Petitions the Conclusion conteining 1. a confirmation 2. a testification of our faith in the word Amen Of the Lords prayer therefore there be two parts the Preface and the Prayer it self consisting of Petitions and the Conclusion conteining a Confirmation of our faith joyned with the praysing of God and also a Testification both of our faith and the truth of our desire in the word Amen In expounding the Lords Prayer we will observe this order First we will expound the words and shew the true meaning of thē then we will inferre the uses of Doctrine Confutation Instruction in the duties of prayer and of our lives and lastly of Reproof whereby shall be detected the hypocrisie of worldly men who using these words do not pray in truth Whereas our Saviour doth not abruptly propound the Petitions but prefixeth a solemn Preface we are taught before we call upon God to use some preparation The preface conteineth a description of God to whō we pray taken 1. from his relation to us that he is Our Father 2. from the place wherein his majesty doth especially appear that he is in heaven the former signifying especially his love the other his power Of which two if in our preparation we do duly meditate our desire will be kindled and our faith confirmed considering that he to whom we pray is both able and willing to grant our requests Our Father SOme do expound these words as though they were a rhetoricall proeme which we use to win Gods favour But we use words in our prayer not that God but that we may be moved and affected First we call him Father whereof we are first to seek the meaning and then the use By the name of Father God alone is understood For as our Saviour saith Matth. 23. 9. we must call no man father because we have but one Father who is in heaven Joh. 8. 41. We have one Father which is God A good profession if it had bene uttered with a good conscience Now God is said to be a Father two wayes by Creation and Adoption By creation as Isai. 64. 8. So Adam is said to be the sonne of God Luke 3. 38. and the Angels Job 1. By adoption in Christ Fphes 1. 5. So every believer is born of God 1. John 5. 1. For to so many as believe in Christ God hath given this priviledge to be the sonnes of God John 1. 12. And in this sense is every faithfull man to call God Father But here it may be demanded Whether the whole Trinitie is called upon in the name of Father or the first Person alone The word Father is attributed unto God two wayes either essentially or personally Essentially when he is so called in respect of the creatures 1. Cor. 8. 6. Personally when it hath relation to the other Persons the Sonne and the holy Ghost In this place it hath
into all truth c. mortifying sinne and corruption in us and renewing us unto holinesse of life The end of this kingdome is the kingdome of glory And therefore Christ saith to his Church Luke 12. 32. Fear not little flock c. For therefore doth he pull us out of the kingdome of darknesse and bring us into the kingdome of grace that by faith we may have remission of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified Acts 26. 18. By reason of the certainty hereof it is said that those that believe have everlasting life John 5. 24. and are translated from death unto life that those whom God hath justified he hath also glorified Rom. 8. 30. The kingdome of glory in respect of us is the blessed estate of the godly in heaven when as God shall be all in all 1. Cor. 15. 28. where God hath prepared such things for them that love him as neither the eye of man hath seen nor eare heard nor c. 1. Cor. 2. 9. What this word come signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adveniat This word Come is diversly to be expounded according to the divers significations of the kingdome of God The universall kingdome or kingdome of power is said to come when it is manifested and made apparent that all things are guided by the power and providence of God Here therefore we are taught to pray That the Lord would vouchsafe to advance his kingdome bring all things into subjection under his feet and also that all men may acknowledge this universall kingdome of God ruling all things according to the counsel of his will and may willingly submit themselves to the government of this absolute Lord who hath placed his seat in heaven and his kingdome ruleth over all That he would subdue his enemie●… Psal. 110. 2. governing them with an iron rod Revel 12. 5. and 19. 15. and bruising them like a potters vessel Psal. 2. 9. That he would execute his holy and eternall decrees both in the generall government of the world and also in the saving of the elect and destroying the reprobate to his own glory working all things according to the counsel of his will And albeit this kingdome cannot be resisted or hindred maugre all the enemies thereof yet we are to pray that it may come and that he would exalt his kingdome as before glorifie his name not meaning thereby to move God but to shew the concurrence of our will with Gods will and our affection towards the advancement of Gods kingdome and zeal towards his glory Secondly the kingdome of grace is said to come unto us whenas it is either begun erected in us or continued and increased amongst us And in this behalf we are taught to pray not onely for the coming of this kingdome but also for the granting of the means whereby it cometh also removing the impediments of the coming I As touching the coming it self we are to note out of this word That we come not to this kingdome of grace of our selves but this kingdome cometh unto us and in coming preventeth us as our Saviour speaketh Luke 11. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is come upon you for we naturally are the bondslaves of Satan and subjects of the kingdome of darknesse out of which bondage we are not able to come except the Lord do pull us and as our Saviour saith John 6. 44. No man cometh to the Sonne but whom the Father draweth Wherein appeareth the undeserved mercy of God in preventing us in seeking that which was lost in being found of them that sought him not in coming to them that neither could nor would through their own default come unto him And secondly because there must be alwayes a daily progresse in this kingdome and work of grace in this life therefore we are taught to pray daily that this kingdome may come Now let us see how this kingdome cometh and what it is which here we ask Of the coming of this kingdome there be three degrees The first is the pulling and drawing us out of the kingdome of Satan and power of darknesse unto God which is our effectuall calling whereby we are brought from the spirituall bondage of sinne and Satan into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God and are made fellow-citizens of the Saints domestici Dei of the houshold of God Ephes. 2. 19. And this calling is wrought by this means First to us sleeping in our sinnes the word of God is sent to rouse us the law shewing us our sinnes and the punishments due for them the Gospel promising salvation upon the condition of faith and repentance Secondly the spirit of God concurring with the word inlighteneth our minds to understand the word of God inclineth our minds to attend thereunto mollifieth our hard and stony hearts in the sight and sense of sinnes and then travelling under the burden of them with wearinesse he stirreth up in us a hunger and thirst after the righteousnesse of Christ and reconciliation with God and teacheth us to pray with sighs which cannot be expressed Secondly when the Spirit of God applieth the merits and efficacy of Christs death and r●…surrection to the justification of the sinner and by degrees worketh in him faith and assurance of the pa●…don of his sinnes whereupon followeth peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost In which three t●…e Apostle saith that the kingdome of God doth consist Rom. 14. 17. Thirdly when Christ our King ruleth and reigneth in our hearts by his word and Spirit teaching us to deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live soberly justly and holily in this pr●…sent world expecting the happy hope and glorious appearance of the great God our Saviour Jesus Christ Tit. 2. 12 13. that is when by his Spirit he applieth the merits of his death to the mortifying of sinne in us and of his resurrection to raise us up to newnesse of life And this we desire not onely for our selves but also for the whole company of the elect That the Lord would from all sorts gather his Church electing them from the world engraffing them into his Son justifying them by faith and sanctifying them by his Spirit Th●…t he would confirm them by his grace that they may increase more and more and be inriched with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things and finally by the power of God through faith may be preserved unto everlasting life 1. Pet. 1. 5. And because the Church of God is as we have said the kingdome of God we desire not onely that God would gath●…r his Church but also that he would inlarge it more and more by the visible adding unto it those that are to be saved that h●… would prosper and preserve it Psal. 122. 6. protect and defend it from all enemies both corporall and spirituall that he would give all graces needfull and expedient unto them And thus we are to pray that the kingdome of Gods grace may
he became the subject of Satan his mind darkened with ignorance folly in spirituall things his conscience impure his will not onely unjust but also unable to will that which is good his affections inordinate the inferiour faculties rebelling against the superiour the members of the body instruments of sinne unto iniquity We therefore that are bred and born in this state of disobedience have great need to pray that the Lord would rule in us that we may be renewed according to the image of God in holinesse and righteousnesse 2. Our spirituall servitude and bondage under sinne and Satan by reason whereof we are not able to come unto God but must desire that his kingdome may come unto us When we ceased to subject our selves to God we became the subjects of Satan when we left to be the servants of righteousnesse we became the servants of sinne when we left the image of God we got the image of the devil Naturally we are wholly carried away by the devil as captives to the obedience of his will doing nothing but sinne and pleasing our selves therein thinking our selves free as John 8. being most bond and therefore if we did feel the power of sinne and Satan reigning in us we would with great fervency and vehemency of affection desire that the Lord would pull us out of this power of darknesse and translate us into the kingdome of his Sonne 3. Our unthankfulnesse unto God that hath brought us out of this bondage into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God especially considering he gave himself for us to this end Luke 1. 74. Tit. 2. 14. 1. Pet. 2. 24. We had need therefore to pray that he would rule in us by his word and Spirit For professing our selves to be redeemed by Christ we behave our selves many of us as if we still were in the bondage of sinne For whom we obey his servants we are 4. Our neglect and contempt of the word 5. Our resisting the good motions of his Spirit and striving against the same our contristation or making heavy the Spirit of God 6. The remnants of the kingdome of darknesse or rather our heaps of sinnes and corruptions our continuall lusts and concupiscences 7. Our yielding to the temptations of Satan our worldly minds following after pleasure profit or preferment our not crucifying of the flesh but rather walking therein And as we are to ask good things for others so must we also bewail their wants As when we see men plunged in sinne and carried away headlong to their perdition as the swine were into the sea we ought to lament their desperate estate Psal. 119. 136 158. Ezech. 9. 4. We are to bewail all the impediments of the kingdome of Christ disorder in the Church confusion in the Commonweal the want of the word and causes thereof Our hearts ought to yern within us as our Saviours did Matth. 9. 36. when we see a people living in ignorance and sinne without means without God in this world and therefore for the supply of all these wants we are in sense thereof to pray fervently Let thy kingdome come Our duties in our lives 1. In respect of the kingdome of power That we acknowledge the Lord to be our absolute King That we submit our selves to his providence That we rest contented and well pleased with whatsoever he doth towards us who doth all things according to the counsel of his will 2. In respect of the kingdome of grace we ought to have an earnest desire of the advancement of Gods kingdome and zeal of the Churches good and more particularly that the Lord would reigne in us by his word and Spirit And unto this desire must be joyned an holy endeavour first in order and first in degree to seek the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse that is that the Lord would rule in us by his word and Spirit and that we may shew our subjection by bringing forth the fruits of righteousnesse 3. A carefull using of the means which God hath appointed to advance his kingdome to work our salvation to heare the word with submission reverence attention good conscience and desire to practiceit to nourish the good motions of the Spirit yielding our selves to be drawn thereby 4. Thankfulnesse to God that he hath made us subjects of his kingdome Col. 1. 12. Mark 11. 10. and care to behave our selves as subjects of this kingdome 5. Diligent endeavour in our severall places and callings to advance and further the kingdome of Christ. Princes and Magistrates must be nursing-fathers and nursing-mothers of the Church zealous by all good means to advance the kingdome of Christ and to remove the impediments thereof and to set themselves against the kingdome of darknesse of sinne Satan and Antichrist to root out all superstition and idolatry and the relicks thereof to reform religion where it is corrupt to be defenders of the faith to take order that there may be preachers in all places provided for and see them discharge their duties to punish sinners and reward the vertuous If we be Ministers we are by preaching of the word in season and out of season to do our endeavour to win men unto the Lord c. If private men we must live in obedience to superiours in Church and Commonwealth as to the ordinance of the Lord our King ruling us by them Whatsoever we are our dutie is to labour by all means 1. that we our selves may become subjects of the kingdome of grace and 2. that by all good means we may win others unto the Lord. 6. To oppose our selves against the enemies of the Church both spirituall and temporall to resist Satan and his temptations to be wained from the world and to mind heavenly things to walk not after the flesh but after the spirit to come out of Babylon into the Church of God to keep us therein to oppose our selves against Antichrist and his adherents as being enemies of the kingdome of Christ. But here the hypocrisie of very many is detected who ask this petition with their mouthes but desire it not with their hearts As first in respect of the universall kingdome those that will not submit themselves to the providence of God but desire rather that they were freed from all subjection unto God they abuse God in making their prayer and pray against themselves that God would advance his kingdome and make his enemies his footstool or break them with his iron sceptre like a potters vessel Secondly in regard of the kingdome of grace first those that will not have Christ to reigne over them by his word and spirit but cast off his yoke of subjection Luke 19. 14. Psal. 2. 3. sonnes of Belial such mock God when they say this prayer 2. Those who living in ignorance and sinne and consequently in spirituall bondage please themselves as if they were free John 8. 33. and therefore do not truly desire that Gods kingdome may come because they have
newnesse of life In those for whose sinnes he died and rose again for their justification the spirit of Christ is effectuall to apply the merits of his death to the mortifying of their sinnes and the vertue of his resurrection to their vivification which is called the first resurrection And therefore unlesse thou diest to thy sinnes and risest again unto newnesse of life thou canst have no sound assurance that Christ died for thy sinnes and rose again for thy justification And therefore as we desire the pardon of our sinnes so must we labour to renounce them that we may not onely be freed from the guilt but also delivered from the corruptions themselves True repentance as it mourneth for sinnes committed and craveth the pardon of them so is it carefull for the time to come not to commit that which ought to be mourned for Having thus spoken of the order and coherence of this petition we are now to speak of the words themselves In which two things are conteined first a deprecation or request for the pardoning of our sinnes and secondly a reason for the confirmation of our faith in obteining the same In the request it self we are first to speak of the meaning of the words and then to gather from thence such uses as they afford 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debts according to the propertie of the Syrian language in which our Saviour spake signifieth sinnes For the Syrians call him that sinneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is debtour and sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debt as appeareth by the Chaldean paraphrase on Gen 50. 17. Psal. 1. 1. Bezain Matth. 23. 16. But this may be also evidently proved by conference of other places in the new Testament as Matth. 23. 16 18. The Pharisees conceit was that if a man did swear by the temple or the altar that it was nothing but if he did swear by the gold of the temple or the gift upon the altar that then he was a debtour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So in Luke 13. those whom Christ in the second verse calleth sinners 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the fourth verse he calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 debtours So in this chapter our Saviour setting down a proof of the reason of this petition for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 14 15. But most plainly in Luke 11. 4. where the words of this petition are thus set down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And forgive us our sins for we also forgive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one that is in debt to us that is which hath offended us Now the reason why sinnes are called debts is because for our sinnes we ow punishment For as a man having entred into bonds to perform such and such covenants or else to incurre the forfaiture and penalty conteined in the obligation is subject to the forfaiture if he perform not the covenant so we being bound by most strait obligations to perform obedience to all the commandments of God or else to incurre the penalty comprised in the law which is the obligation or handwriting that is against us Col. 2. 14. are subject to the penalty that is the fearfull curse of God both in this life and in the world to come if we perform not the covenants For as in the law there are two things 1. praeceptum commanding or forbidding and 2. sanctio threatning punishment against the ●…nsgression of the precept so in every sinne ther●… are two things answer●…ble 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fault transgressing the law and the reatus binding over the transgressour to the punishment In respect of which punishment every offendour of the law is a debtour untill either the debt be remitted him or else he hath born the punishment which is without end Whereas therefore we pray that the Lord would forgive us our debts we do not onely desire that the Lord would forget the fault but also that he would remit the punishment unto which the guilt of our fault doth bind us over And therefore foolish is the opinion of the Papists who hold that the Lord many times forgiveth the fault and reteineth the punishment For sinne is called a debt in respect of the punishment which we ow for it and therefore this debt is not remitted if the punishment be reteined Again the mercy of the Lord pardoneth no sinne for which his justice is not satisfied Neither must we so desire the Lord to be mercifull as that we would have him forget his justice Every sinne therefore as it deserveth death so is it punished with death or else the justice of God is not satisfied It is punished I say by death either in the party himself to whom it is not forgiven or in Christ in the behalf of the party to whom it is forgiven For every sinne therefore that is forgiven Christ hath satisfied the justice of God in bearing the punishment therefore God doth not punish them whose sinnes he forgiveth in Christ neither can it stand with his justice to punish the same sinne twice on●… in Christ and again in the faithfull for whom C●…rist hath suffered So that we cannot say that the Lord punisheth them whose sinnes he forgiveth except we will affirm either that the Lord is unjust or that the merits of Christ were unsufficient and unperfect both which are blasphemous Therefore as there is no condemnation so there is no punishment to those that are in Christ Jesus Chastised they may be after their sinnes are forgiven for the example of others and their own amendment as David was 2. Sam. 12. but punished they never are The affliction which the children of God do bear is not a punishment to satisfy for their sinne but either a triall or a chastisement either to cure or prevent sinne in them When we are judged we are chastised c. 1. Cor. 11. 32. And as the opinion of the Papists is foolish so the practice of those men is sottish who when they are indebted unto their neighbour or have incurred a forfeiture are never in quiet untill they have got that debt discharged or remitted and yet the same men being in infinite debt to the Lord which although they had the whole world they are not able to discharge notwithstanding take no thought for this debt no●… earnestly sue for pardon but securely go on in their sinnes as though by continuall increasing of their debt they should the more easily discharge it much like to him that having got a burden of wood and finding it too heavie should cut down more to adde unto the weight or as it is in the ridiculous proverb of the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I cannot carry a goat lay upon me an ox Now these debts are of sundry sorts Some are originall sinnes some actuall some inward others outward some of omission others of commission some of ignorance others of knowledge some of infirmity others of presumption some
in our selves then the firebrands of hell and yet withall we must relie upon Christ and his merits being perswaded that notwithstanding our manifold sinnes yet the Lord will receive us into his love and favour imputing unto us the righteousnesse of his Sonne and covering 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 Father for all the sinnes of them 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 endeavour 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 seek in all things to please him For if we please our selves in displeasing 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 testifie 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 diffidence 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 also 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 injuries done against us then no doubt thou wilt 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 are 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 forgive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 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 hurteth 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 offense not when he remitteth the punishment due unto it by the law of God for that is not in his power to do but when he doth abandon all purpose and desire of revenge all hatred and ill will towards his brother in respect of the offense If this be true then belike no man may complain plain to the Magistrate or seek his remedy by law when he hath sustein●…d injury or wrong Although we are to forgive from our heart every one that offendeth us yet we may in some cases complain unto the Magistrate and seek remedy by law if these cautions be observed 1. That it be not done in anger or malice or desire of revenge which commonly are the grounds of mens going to law but that it be done with a
glory 2. Cor. 1. 20. This therefore serveth to confirm our faith For doubtlesse such things as tend to his glory he will grant especially considering it is his glory to heare the prayers of his servants and seeing to him belongeth the glory of giving every good gift but these things which we ask according to our Saviours direction do tend to the glory of God and to that end we ask them therefore we may be assured that he will grant our requests so far forth as they stand with his glory Now whereas our Saviour directed us to make this our first suit That Gods name may be glorified and now teacheth us to make his glory the reason of our prayers this sheweth That the glory of God should be the main end of all our desires for which we should affect them and unto which when we have obteined them we should referre them 1. Chron. 16. 35. Psal. 50. 15. And forasmuch as the glory is the Lords which he will not have communicated to any other Isai. 42. 8. therefore we are to call upon him alone as being the onely fountain of every good gift the onely hearer of our prayers Of which glory we rob the Lord if we direct our prayers to any other And as we are not to give his glory to any other so we are not to take it to our selves For seeing the glory is the Lords therefore vainglorious persons seek to rob God of that glory which is proper to him and to assume it to themselves But we must say with David Psal. 115. 1. Not unto us O Lord c. and with Daniel chap. 9. 7. Righteousnesse O Lord belongeth unto thee and to us shame c. But we ascribe unto the Lord not onely kingdome power and glory but also an everlasting kingdome an eternall power and immortall glory For as Moses saith Psal. 90. 2. He is God from everlasting to everlasting he is King for ever Therefore he hath right not onely in this life to crown us with his blessings but after this life he hath an everlasting kingdome to bestow upon us Luke 12. 32. unto which he is able and willing to bring us by his power everlasting to the immortall glory of his mercy Now these reasons as they must be propounded in faith so also with chearfulnesse as a consequent thereof And when they are chearfully uttered they are not onely reasons of our requests but also a notable form of praysing God which our Saviour hath taught us to joyn with our prayer And so the holy Ghost hath directed us elsewhere as Col. 4. 2. Phil. 4. 6. And that this is a form of prayse and thanksgiving appeareth by other places of Scripture where the men of God setting themselves of purpose to prayse God have used the very like form As David 1. Chron. 29. 10 11 12. and Psal. 145. 10. and 11. 12 13. Revel 7. 12. Jude v. 25. Revel 4. 11. Vses Duties concerning prayer 1. That we pray to God and him alone Whereof a reason is conteined in these words For his is the kingdome c. 2. That we pray in faith seeing our heavenly Father whose is the kingdome power and glory is both able and willing to grant our requests 3. That with our prayer we joyn prayse and thanksgiving which in this short form is not omitted Duties in our lives 1. To arrogate nothing to our selves but to ascribe all kingdome power and glory to the Lord Psal. 29. 1 2. and 115. 1. and of all good things received to ascribe the praise to God 2. If God be our King then must we behave our selves as dutifull and obedient subjects If his be the power then are we both to fear him and to trust in him If his be the glorie then of him must we beg all good things and to his glory must all be referred If his power kingdome and glorie be everlasting then are we taught whom to fear whom to serve whom to trust in namely him that is able not onely in this life to blesse us but also after to crown us with immortall glorie in his eternall kingdome If we serve the flesh the devil the world we shall have the momentanie fruition of sin and after this life is ended eternall torments God liveth for ever as to crown eternally the godly so to punish the wicked eternally He then will exclude them out of his kingdome and will be of power to destroy both body and soul in hell and he will glorifie his justice in their endlesse confusion Hypocrifie discovered But here the hypocrisie of men is to be discovered who ascribe kingdome to God and yet obey him not power and fear him not glory and glorifie him not and they adde all these reasons to their petitions as if they should say Thou Lord wilt grant our requests for thine is the kingdome power and glory for ever and yet do not believe that the Lord will grant their requests Amen And so much of the confirmation of our faith Now followeth the testification both of our faith and of the truth of our defire in the word Amen For it importeth the assent of the heart to the words of our mouth and it signifieth truly or even so or as the Grecians sometimes translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So be it The meaning of it is thus much as if we should say As I have made th●…se requests unto thee O Lord so do I both unfeignedly desire the performance of them Let them O Lord be granted 1. Kings 1. 36. and also truly believe that thou in thy good time wilt grant my desires so farre forth as they stand with thy glory and my good and in this perswasion I rest attending thy good pleasure And as I have ascribed unto thee kingdome power and glorie so I do both unfeignedly acknowlcdge that thine alone is the kingdome c. and also heartily desire that I and all others may truly and effectually ascribe unto thee everlasting kingdome power and glorie For being annexed unto prayer it signifieth both the truth and earnestnesse of our desire and also the assent of faith laying hold on the promises of God made in Christ to our prayers And being added to thanksgiving it signifieth both the truth of our assertion in ascribing praise to God and also a true desire and zeal of Gods glory Hence therefore we may learn again those duties which heretofore have been taught 1. That we call upon the Lord with unfeigned lips and upright hearts truly desiring those things with our hearts which we ask with our mouthes and being truly thankfull for those things for which we give thanks 2. We must strive against our infidelitie and doubting Psal. 42. 12. and must truly believe that the Lord will grant our requests so farre forth as they stand with his glorie and our good otherwise we cannot say Amen 3. We are to rest in the good pleasure of God with assurance expecting his
meant John 6. 4●… Cyprian Gal. 6. 10. We must pray according to Gods ●…ll We must do Gods will as the Angels 1. In knowledge Heb. 11. 6. 2. In sincerity 3. Willingly Rom. 8. 18. 4. Readily and speedily 5. Fully and totally 6. Constantly 7. Faithfully The hypocrisie of many discovered How things apperteining to our own good are to be asked The order Why we ask temporall bl●…ssings before spirituall Vlpian Why all commodities are comprehended under the name of bread Bernard What on●… bread signifieth What is m●…ant by daily bread Piscat The ●…vils that accompany rich●…s The evils that accompany poverty The same measure is not convenient for all men In what respect God is said to give God giveth onelv the use of all God onely blesseth us in the use 1. Cor. 13. Quest. Answ. That it is lawfull to provide for the time to come Cautions Object 1. Answ. Object 2. Answ. We ought to ask temporall blessings of God 2. We mus●… ask them aright 〈◊〉 duti●…s G●…nerall 〈◊〉 Jo●… 1. 21. The s●…cond common duty ●…s Faith 1. ●…enerall 2. speciall Hypocrisie of worldlings discovered Two main benefits required in the two last petitions Justification and Sanctification The order We must be justified before we can be sanctified The connexion with the former petition Psal. 4. 6. The connexion with the latter petition Parts That our sinnes are debts The reason why sinnes are called d●…ts The Papi●…s confuted who hold that God forgiving the fault reteineth the punishment Their pract●…ce foolish who d●…ferre their r●…pentance What is meant by ou●… trespasses What is meant by this word fo●…give By this petition we are put in mind of our misery and God●… mercy No man can sat●…sfie Gods justice for his sinnes proved Reason 1. 2. 3. 4. Object Answ. 1. Duties are 1. more peculiar 2. more common Meditations to increase our sorrow for sinne The graces which we desire The necessity 1. of the remission of ●…ur sinnes 2. of faith 1. We must be ad●…rned with humility 2. We must believe in Christ. 3. We must repent of our sinnes 4. We must fear by sinne to offend God 5. We must use means to increase 〈◊〉 faith 6. We must labour to please God 7. We must forgive our neighbours Hypocrisie discovered The reason con●…rming our faith in the assurance of remission 2. Reason why these words are added Our forgiving no cause of Gods forgiving us What is meant by 〈◊〉 Object Answ. Quest. Answ. Object How we ca●… be said to forgive Answ. 1. Answ. 2. Object 2. Answ. That it is lawfull to to seek help from the Magistrate with these cautions observed 1. 2. 3. What is meant by As we Not equality but likenesse here to be understood That our forgiving should be sincere and not feigned A threefold use of these words Uses for instruction 1. He that hath offended must seek for reconciliation 2. How we are to behave our selves towards those who have offended us Duty 1. Means ●…o moderate our anger Duty 2. Reasons moving us to forgive 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason Pretenses of those who will not forgive taken away 4. Reason Duty 3. 4. We must labour to win him An use of consolation An use of reproof The coherence and order ●…eing freed from sinne we must become the servants of righteousnes Those whom God pardoneth the devil temp●…eth The necessity of this prayer Not to be lead into temptati●…n The latter part of the petition expoundeth the former Of probations and trials Of Gods trialls 1. by prosperity 2. by afflictions Of tentations for and unto evil 1. Of the 〈◊〉 II. of the world 1. By words 2. By example 3. By the desires thereof By evils and crosses III. of the devil 1. Tentations of errours and heresies Of doubti●…g Of presumption Tentations touching obedience 1. in hearing the word 2. in p●…ayer 3. in the sacrament Tentations drawing men unto evil Object Answ. Object Answ. How God may be s●…id to tempt A consolation Satan can neither tempt nor overcome without Gods permission That it is not evil to be tempted but good to God●… children In Psal. 60. What is meant by Deliver us from evil How we are to pray against taentations How we●… must pray against tentations of the flesh How we must pray against the tentations of the world How we must pray against the tentations of the devil That we must pray for these graces in assurance of faith This conclusion authenticall and necessarie Our faith confirmed by this conclusion by three reasons drawn from three of Gods attributes What is meant by ●…hine is the kingdome The kingdome of grace and glory Psal. 24. 1. The 〈◊〉 between the power of God and the creatures Everlasting kingdome power and glory belongeth to God These word●… are a form of praising God What Amen importeth and signifieth Duties to be p●…rformed Hie●…on Hypocrisie discovered