The
necessary duty of the Christian, as clothed in the Whole Armour of God:
or,
how the Spiritual Panoply may alone be kept furbished.
‘Praying always with
all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto
with all perseverance
and supplication for all saints’
(Eph. 6:18).
We
have at last set before you the Christian in his armour; and now he wants
nothing to furnish him for the battle, or enable him for the victory, but the
presence of his general to lead him on, and bring him honourably off again by
the wisdom of his conduct; which, that he may obtain, the apostle sets him to
prayer—‘praying always,’ &c.
As if he had said, ‘You have now, Christian, the armour of God; but take
heed thou forgettest not to engage God of this armour by humble prayer for your
assistance, lest for all this you be worsted in the fight. He that gives you the arms, can only
teach you to use them, and enable you to overcome by their use.’ I am not ignorant that some make this
of ‘prayer,’ a piece of armour, and to be reckoned as a part of the
panoply. The truth is, it matters
not much in what notion we handle it, whether as a distinct piece of armour, or
as a duty and means necessarily required to the use of our armour. The latter I shall follow; partly
because it hath no piece of material armour, as the other all have, allotted to
it for a resemblance; as also, because by the connection it hath, not with the
last preceding words only, but with the whole discourse of the armour, it seems
to be superadded as a general duty influential upon all the pieces forenamed;
and may be read with every piece:—Take the girdle of truth, praying with all
prayer, &c.; having on the breastplate of righteousness, praying with all
prayer, &c., and the same of the rest. The Christian’s armour will rust except it be furbished and
scoured with the oil of prayer.
What the key is to the watch, that [is] prayer to our graces—it winds
them up and sets them agoing. In
the words observe,
FIRST. The duty commanded, ‘prayer;’
with the end for which it is appointed, viz. as a help to all his graces and
means to carry on his war against sin and Satan: BD@F,LP`µ,<@4—‘praying.’
SECOND. A directory for prayer; wherein
we are instructed how to perform this duty in six distinct divisions of the
subject. First. The time for prayer—‘praying always.’ Second.
The kinds and sorts of prayer—‘with all prayer and supplication.’ Third. The inward principle of prayer from
which it must flow—‘in the Spirit.’ Fourth. The
guard to be set about the duty of prayer—‘watching thereunto.’ Fifth. The unwearied constancy to be exercised
in the duty—‘with all perseverance.’ Sixth. The comprehensiveness of the duty, or
persons for whom we are to pray—‘for all saints.’
DIRECTION
XI.—FIRST GENERAL PART.
[The duty commanded, and its connection with the
whole discourse.]
‘Praying’ (Eph. 6:18).
We
begin with the first, the duty in general, together with the connection it hath
with the whole preceding discourse of the armour, implied in the participle BD`F,LP`µ,<@4—‘praying.’ That is, furnish yourselves with the
armour of God, and join prayer to all these graces for you defence against your
spiritual enemies. Let us take the
three following branches of the subject.
First. Prayer as a
necessary duty to the Christian. Second. Why it is so necessary a means,
with our other armour, for our defence.
Third. Satan’s designs
against prayer.
So
that the point deducible from this is—
BRANCH
FIRST.
[Prayer a necessary duty to the Christian
in his
spiritual warfare.]
We
lay down as the point deducible from what we have said the following doctrine.
Doctrine. That prayer is a necessary duty to be performed by the
Christian, and used with all other means in his spiritual warfare. This is the ‘silver trumpet,’ by the sound
of which he is to alarm heaven, and call in God to his succour, Num. 10:9. The
saints’ enemies fall till God riseth; and God stays to be raised by their
prayers. ‘Let God arise, let his
enemies be scattered,’ Ps.
68:1. Prayer, it is a catholic duty, and
means to be made use of in all our affairs and enterprises. What bread and salt
are to our table, that prayer is to the Christian in all his undertakings,
enjoyments, and temptations.
Whatever our meal is, bread and salt are set on the board; and whatever
our condition is, prayer must not be forgot. As we dip all our morsels in salt, and eat them with bread;
so we are to act every grace, season every enjoyment, mingle every duty, and
oppose every temptation, with prayer. It hath been the constant practice
of the saints in all their dangers and straits, whether from enemies within or
without, from sin, devils, or men, to betake themselves tot he throne of grace,
and draw a line of prayer about them; accounting this the only safe posture to
stand in for their defence. When
God called Abraham from Haran into a strange country, where he wandered from
place to place amidst strangers, who could not but have him in some suspicion
—considering the train and retinue he had—and this their suspicion create many
dangers to this holy man from the kings round about, it is observable what
course Abraham takes for his defence.
You shall find in his removes from place to place, the memorable thing
recorded of him is, that ‘he builded an altar unto the Lord, and called upon
the name of the Lord,’ Gen.
12:7, 8; 13:3, 4. This was the breastwork he raised and
entrenched himself in. When he had
once by prayer cast himself into the arms of God for protection, then he made
account that he was in his castle.
But what need Abraham have put himself so often to this trouble? Had he not the security of God’s
promise when he set forth, that God would bless them that blessed him, and
curse them that cursed him? And
had he not faith to believe God would be a God of his word to perform what he
had promised? We confess both. But
neither God’s promise, nor Abraham’s faith thereon, gave any supersedeas[1] to his duty
in prayer. The promise is given as
a ground of faith, and faith as an encouraging help in prayer; but neither
[are] intended to discharge us of our duty, and save us the labour of that
work.
And
what Abraham did, the same have all the saints ever done. The great spoils which they ever got
from their enemies was in the field of prayer. If Moses sent Joshua into the valley against Amalek, himself
will be on the mount to storm heaven by his prayer, while he is engaged
in fight with the enemy below; and the victory it is plain was not got by
Joshua’s sword, so much as Moses’ prayer.
Jehoshaphat, when he had near a million of men mustered for the field,
besides his garrisons that were all well appointed, yet we find him as hard at
prayer as if he had not had a man on his side: ‘We know not what to do, but our
eyes upon thee,’ II
Chr. 20:12. Now if these worthies when they had but
flesh and blood—men like themselves—to contest with, did yet fetch in their
help from heaven, and make such use of prayer’s auxiliary force—and that when
other helps were not wanting—lest they should be found under the neglect of an
indispensable duty and prevalent means in order to their defence, how much more
doth it behove the Christian, both in point of duty and prudence, to take the
same course in his spiritual war against principalities and powers! For the saint’s graces, when best
trained and exercised, are, without prayer, far less able to stand against
Satan than they, with their military preparation, were to repel the force of
men like themselves. ‘Watch and
pray,’ saith our Saviour, ‘that ye enter not into temptation,’ Matt. 26:41. The not keeping this pass gave the
enemy Satan a fair occasion to come in upon them. For we see, not taking Christ's counsel, they were all,
though holy men, shamefully foiled.
Most of them shifted for themselves by a cowardly flight, while they
left their Lord in his enemy's hands.
And he that thought to show more courage than his fellows, at last came
off with deeper guilt and shame than them all, by denying his Master, who was
even then owning him in the face of death, yea his Father’s wrath. And it is observable that, as they were
led into temptation through their own neglect of prayer, so they were rescued and
led out of it again by Christ’s prayer, which he mercifully laid in beforehand
for them. ‘I have prayed...that
thy faith fail not,’ Luke
22:32.
But
that which above all commends this duty to us, is Christ’s own practice; who,
besides his constant exercise in it, did, upon any great undertaking wherein
he was to meet opposition from Satan and his instruments, much more abound in
it. At his baptism, being now to
enter the stage of his public ministry, and to make his way thereunto through
the fierce and furious assaults of Satan—with whom he was to grapple as it were
hand to hand after his forty days’ solitude—we find him at prayer, Luke 3:21. Which prayer had a present answer,
heaven opening, and the Spirit descending on him, with this voice, saying,
‘Thou art my beloved Son; in thee I am well pleased,’ ver. 22. And now Christ marcheth forth
undauntedly to meet his enemy, who waited for him in the wilderness. Again, when he intended to commission
his apostles, and send them forth to preach the gospel —which he knew would
bring the lion fell and mad out of his den, as also derive the world’s wrath
upon those his messengers—he first sets his disciples on praying, Matt. 9:38, and then
spends the whole night himself in the same work before their mission, Luke 6:12. But above all, when he was to fight his
last battle with the prince of this world, and also conflict with the wrath of
his Father, now armed against him, and ready to be poured upon him for man’s
sin—whose cause he had espoused—on the success of which great undertaking
depended the saving or losing his mediatory kingdom, O how then did he bestir
himself in prayer! It is said, ‘He prayed more earnestly.’ As a wrestler that strains every vein
in his body, so he put forth his whole might, ‘with strong crying and tears
unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard,’ Heb. 5:7, so that he
won the field, though himself slain upon the place. The spoils of this glorious victory believers do now
divide, and shall enjoy it to all eternity. And what is the English of all this, but to show us both the
necessity and prevalency of prayer?
Without this, no victory to be had, though we have our armour; but this,
with that, will make us conquerors over all.
BRANCH SECOND.
[Why
prayer is necessary to the Christian
in his
spiritual warfare.]
Now,
to proceed and show why prayer is so necessary a means with our other armour
for our defence, let us set forth these reasons in order. First.
Because of the co‑ordination of this duty with all other means for the
Christian’s defence, and that by divine appointment. Second. Because
of the influence that prayer hath upon all our graces. Third.
Because of the great prevalency prayer hath with God.
[The co‑ordination of prayer with
other means for
the Christian’s
defence makes it necessary.]
Reason First. The first reason is taken from the co-ordination of this
duty of prayer with all other means for the Christian’s defence, and that by
divine appointment. He that
bids us take the girdle of truth, breastplate of righteousness, &c.,
commands also not to neglect this duty.
Now what God joins we must not sever. The efficacy of co‑ordinate means lies in their
conjunction. The force of an army
consists not in this troop, or that one regiment, but in all the parts in a
body. And if any single troop or
company shall presume to fight the enemy alone, what can they expect but to be
routed by the enemy and punished by their general also? Let not any say they use this means and
that. If any one duty be willingly
neglected, the golden chain of obedience is broke. And bonum non nisi ex integris—nothing is really good
that is not so in all its parts.
As to a good action, there is required a concurrence of all the several
ingredients and causes; so to make a good Christian, there is required a
conscientious care to use all appointed means. He must follow the Lord ‘fully;’ not make here a balk
and there a furrow. It is not the
least of Satan's policy to get between one duty and another, that the man may
not unite his forces, and be uniform in his endeavour.
Few
so bad as to use no means; and not many so faithful to God and themselves as
conscientiously to use all. One,
he pretends to sincerity, and dares appeal to God that he means well, and his
heart is good. But, for ‘the
breastplate of righteousness,’ it is too heavy and cumbersome for him to
wear. Another seems very just and
righteous, so that he would not wrong his neighbour, no, not of one penny, to
gain many pounds. But, as for
faith in Christ, this he never looks after. A third boasts of his faith and hope, as if he did not doubt
of his salvation. But, as for the
word of God that should beget and increase it, he cares not how seldom he looks
on it at home,or hears it in the public.
And a fourth, he hath this to say for himself, ‘That he is a constant
hearer, his seat at church is seldom found empty, and at home the Bible often
in his hands.’ But, as for prayer,
his closet, could it speak, would bear witness against him, that he seldom or
never performs it. This half doing
will prove many a soul’s whole undoing.
Samuel asked Jesse, ‘Are here all thy children?’ Though but a stripling wanting, he must
be sent for before he will sit down.
So may I say to many that are very busy and forward in some particular
duties and means, ‘Is here all that God hath given thee in charge?’ If but one be wanting, God's blessing
will be wanting also. And as that son was wanting of Jesse’s which God did
intend to set the crown upon, so that duty and means which is most neglected,
we have cause to think is the means which God would especially crown with his
blessing upon our faithful endeavour.
[The
influence of prayer
upon Christian
graces makes it a
necessary duty.]
Reason Second. The second reason is taken from the influence that prayer
hath upon all our graces. And
that in a double respect. It will
help to evidence the truth of grace, and also advance its growth.
First. The duty of prayer, frequently and
spiritually performed, will be a means to evidence the truth of our graces. And this is of no small importance to
the Christian, when he hath to do with the tempter. For that which he mainly
drives at, is to bring the Christian into a suspicion of himself as to the work
of grace in him, thereby to overturn the very foundation of his hope, and put
him to a stand in his endeavours. He, indeed, will have little list to go on
that fears he is not in his right way.
I have heard that politicians can make use of a state lie—though the
credit of it lasts but a little while—for great advantage to their
designs. And he that learns them
this art makes much more use of it himself to further his designs against the
Christian. Because he could not
keep Christ in the grave, therefore he raiseth a lie, to hinder the belief of his
resurrection in the world. And when he cannot hinder the production of grace,
he misreports the work of the Christian, as if all were but a cheat put upon
him by his own deceitful heart; which the poor creature is prone enough, God
knows, to believe. And so, though
the fear be false and groundless; yet, being believed, [it] produceth as sad a
confusion to his thoughts, and distress to his spirit, as if it were true. Jacob could not have mourned more if
Joseph had indeed been slain, than he did when there was no such matter. Nor could a wicked wretch easily endure
more terror and horror than some precious saints have felt, for the time that
Satan's false report—slandering the truth of their grace—hath found credit with
them. Now, in prayer, the Christian
stands at great advantage to find out the truth of his state, and that upon a
double account.
1.
God doth commonly take this season, when his people are pouring out their souls
to him, to open his heart to them, and to give his testimony both to their
persons and graces. God hath
his sealing hours, in which his Spirit comes and bears witness to his
children's state and grace. And
this of prayer is a principal one.
Where was it that God so marvellously dignified, and if I may so say,
knighted Jacob with that new title of honour, ‘Thou shalt be called Israel,’
but in the field of prayer? What
was the happy hour in which the angel knocked at Daniel’s door to let him know
how God loved him? was it not when he was knocking at heaven door by his
prayer? ‘At the beginning of thy
supplications the commandment came forth, and I am come to shew thee; for thou
art greatly beloved,’ Dan.
9:23. When got the woman of Canaan the sight
of her faith, not only that it was true, but also strong—‘O woman, great is thy
faith!’ but when her heart was carried forth so vehemently in prayer? Yea, Christ himself heard that
miraculous voice from heaven, ‘This is my beloved Son,’ when he was lifting up
his eyes in prayer to heaven, Luke 3:21.
2.
The duty of prayer affords a demonstrative argument for the truth of that
soul’s grace which spiritually performs it. The Spirit of God, when he testifies to the truth of a
saint’s grace, useth to join issue with the saint's own spirit, ‘The Spirit
itself beareth witness with our spirit,’ Rom. 8:16. Now the testimony which the Christian's own spirit gives for
him, is taken from those vital acts of the new creature that operate in
him—such as sincerity, godly sorrow for sin, love of holiness, and other of
this nature are. Now, no way do these and other graces more sensibly discover
themselves to the Christian’s view than in prayer. Here sincerity shows itself in the Christians’ plain‑heartedness
to confess all his sins freely, without extorting, and nakedly,
without extenuation or reservation—when there is no false box in the cabinet of
the soul to lock up a darling sin in.
Holy David, Ps.
32,
having, ver.
1,
pronounced him ‘blessed’ that had no sin imputed to him, and, ‘in whose spirit
there is no guile,’ gives ver.
5,
this instance of his own sincerity, that he ‘acknowledged his sin, and did not
hide his iniquity;’ as also how well he sped thereby, ‘And thou forgavest the
iniquity of my sin.’ Again, here [i.e.
in prayer] doth the Christian give vent to his heart, aching with inward grief
for sin. Prayer is the channel
into which godly sorrow pours forth itself, and runs down in brinish tears,
while the Christian is accusing himself of, and judging himself for, his
abominations, with deep shame and self‑abhorrency. In a word, here the soul’s
love to holiness flames forth in his fervent vehement desires and requests for
grace that can bear no denial, but even breaks for the longing it hath to it.
Thus
we see spirit of prayer is both an argument of true grace, and a means to draw
out that true grace into act, whereby its truth may be the better exposed to
view. A ‘spirit of grace and of
supplications’ are both joined together, Zech. 12:10. The latter doth indicate the former. What is prayer but the breathing forth
of that grace which is breathed into the soul by the Holy Spirit? When God breathed into man the breath
of life, he became a living soul.
So, when God breathes into the creature the breath of spiritual life, it
becomes a praying soul. ‘Behold he
prayeth,’ saith God of Paul to Ananias, Acts 9:11. As if he had said, ‘Be not afraid of him; he is an honest
soul; thou mayest trust him for he prays.’ Praying is the same to the new creature as crying is to the
natural. The child is not learned
by art or example to cry, but instructed by nature; it comes into the world
crying. Praying is not a lesson
got by forms and rules of art, but flowing from principles of new life itself.
Second. The duty of prayer, as it is a means to
evidence, so to increase, grace.
The praying Christian is the thriving Christian; whereas he that is
infrequent or slothful in praying, is a waster. He is like one that lives at great expense, and drives
little or no trade to bring wherewithal to maintain it. Now prayer helps toward the increase
and growth of grace in these two ways:—1. As it draws the habits of grace into
act, and exerciseth them. 2. As it
sets the soul nigh to God.
1. As it draws the habits of grace into
act, and exerciseth them. Now
as exercise brings a double benefit to the body, so this to the soul.
(1.)
Exercise doth help to digest or breathe forth those humours that clog the
spirits. One that stirs
little, we see, grows pursy, and is soon choked up with phlegm, which exercise
clears the body of. Prayer is the
saint’s exercise‑field, where his graces are breathed. It is as the wind to the air to sweep
the soul; as bellows to the fire, which clears the coals of those ashes that
smother them. The Christian, while
in this world, lives but in an unwholesome climate. One while the delights of
it deaden and dull his love to Christ; another while, the troubles he meets in
it damp his faith on the promise.
How now should the poor Christian get out of these his distempers, had
he not a throne of grace to resort to, where, if once his soul be in a melting
frame, he, like one laid in a kingly sweat, soon breathes out the malignity of
his disease, and comes into his right temper again. How oft do we find the holy prophet, when he first kneels
down to pray, full of fears and doubts, who yet before he and the duty part,
grows into a sweet familiarity with God and repose in his own spirit? He begins his prayer, as if it were
come to that pass that he thought that God would never give him a kind look
more: ‘How long wilt thou forget me, O Lord? for ever?’ Ps. 13:1. But by that time he hath exercised
himself a little in duty, his distemper wears off, the mists scatter, and his
faith breaks out as the sun in its strength. ‘I have trusted in thy mercy; my
heart shall rejoice in thy salvation, I will sing unto the Lord,’ ver. 5. Thus his faith lays the cloth,
expecting a feast ere long to be set on.
He that even now questioned whether he should ever hear good news from
heaven, is so strong in faith, as to make himself merry with the hopes of that
mercy which he is assured will come at last. Abraham began with fifty, but his
faith got ground on God every step, till he brought down the price of their
lives to ten.
(2.)
Exercise whets the appetite to that food which must be taken before strength
can be got. And causa causĉ est causa causati—the remoter cause of
an immediate one is, in a certain sense, the cause of that which flows
as an effect from the more immediate.
The hone that sets the edge on the husbandman’s scythe, helps him to
mow the grass. None comes so sharp‑set
to the word—which is the saint’s food to strengthen his grace—as the Christian
that takes prayer in his way to the ordinance. The stronger natural heat is, the better stomach the man
hath to his meat. Love in the soul
is what natural heat is in the body.
The more the soul loves the word, the more craving it has after it. Now, as exercise stirs up the natural
heat of the body, so prayer excites this spiritual heat of love in the saint’s
bosom to the word. Cornelius is an
excellent instance for it. We find him hard at prayer in his house, when behold
a vision that bids him send for Peter, who should preach the gospel to him—a
happy reward for his devotion!
Now, see what a sharp appetite this praying soul hath to the word. He upon this presently posts away
messengers for Peter, and before he comes, gathers an assembly together—no
doubt all of his friends that he could get. There he sits with a longing heart waiting for the
preacher. As soon as ever he sees
his face, he falls down at his feet, receiving him with that reverence and
respect as if he had been an angel dropped out of heaven. Presently he sets Peter to work, though
some may think he passed good manners in putting him to labour after so long a
journey, before he had refreshed him with some collation or other; but the good
man was so hungry to hear the message he brought, that he could not well pacify
his soul to stay any longer, and like a man truly hunger-bit, he is ready to
catch at any truth—though never so bitter—which shall be set before him. ‘Now therefore are we all here present
before God, to hear all things that are commanded thee of God,’ Acts 10:33. And when the sermon is done, so savoury
and sweet was the meal, that he is loath to think of parting with Peter before
he gets more from him; and therefore beseeches him to stay some days with
him. One sermon did but make his
teeth water for another. O how
unlike are they who come reeking out of the world to a sermon, to Cornelius
that riseth from prayer to wait for the preacher?
2. Prayer helps our graces, as it sets
the soul nigh to God. In
prayer we are said to ‘draw nigh to God,’ James 4:8—to ‘come before his presence,’ Ps. 95:2. In it we
have ‘access by one spirit unto the Father,’ Eph. 2:18, as one that brings a petition to a
prince is called into his presence‑chamber—one of the nearest approaches to God
which the creature is capable of on this side heaven, which was signified by
the incense altar, that stood so high even within the vail. Prayer, it is
called, ‘The throne of grace.’ We
come in prayer to the throne of God, and put our petition into the very hand of
God, as he sits on his throne in all his royalty. Now, as prayer is so near an approach to God, it hath a
double influence into the growth of the saint’s grace.
(1.)
By this near access to God, the soul is put the more into a holy awe and
fear of that pure and piercing eye of God which he sees looking on him. It is true, God is ever near us. Pray or not pray, we cannot rid
ourselves of his presence. But
never hath the soul such apprehensions of his presence as when it is set before
God in prayer. Now the soul speaks
to God as it were mouth to mouth; and considering how holy that majesty is with
whom he hath to do in prayer, he must needs reverence and tremble before
him. Now the natural issue of this
holy fear, what can it be but a care to approve itself to God? And this care cherishes every
grace. They are carried in its
arms, as the child in its nurse's.
It keeps the girdle of truth buckled close about his loins. ‘O,’ saith the soul, ‘I must either
leave praying, or leave doubling and juggling with God by hypocrisy!’ It will strengthen the breastplate of
holiness. It is not possible that
a Christian should walk loosely all day, and be free and familiar with God at
night. He that waits on the person
of a prince will be careful to carry nothing about him that should be offensive
to his eye; yea, afraid lest anything should come to his ear, that should bring
him under a cloud in his prince’s thoughts, and remove him from his place about
him. And courtiers have those that will be always undermining then if they
can; and the Christian wants not such an adversary—for Satan is at his right
hand at every miscarriage to accuse him unto God, saying, ‘This is your
favourite. Though he be so devout
in prayer, he can do this or that, when the duty is over.’ And therefore, if
any in the world have a tie upon them more than others to walk exactly, it is
they that minister before the Lord in this duty. Princes are more curious of their attendants than of others
at further distance from them.
When David showed some distraction of mind before king Achish, he bids
away with him. ‘Have I need of
madmen, that ye have brought this fellow to play the madman in my
presence?’ And does a poor mortal
man that sits on a throne of dust, only heaped up and raised a little above his
fellows, take such state on him as not to bear the discomposure of any before
him? How much less will the great
God—though we wink for a time at the foul sins of others—brook any unholy
behaviour in those that wait so nigh upon him! This, no doubt, made Cain run so fast from the presence of
God, because he knew that it was no standing so nigh God with such an unholy
heart as he carried in his bosom.
(2.)
By the soul’s near access to God in prayer, it receives sweet influences of
grace from him. All grace
comes from the God of grace; not only the first seed of grace, but its growth
and increment; and God usually sheds forth his grace in a way of communion with
his people. Now, by prayer the
Christian is led into most intimate communion with God. And from communion follows communication. As the warmth the chicken finds by
sitting under the hen’s wings cherisheth it, so are the saints' graces
enlivened and strengthened by the sweet influences they receive from this close
communion with God. The Christian
is compared to a tree, Ps.
1. And those trees flourish most, and bear
sweetest fruit, which stand most in the sun. The praying Christian is, as they say of the Rhodians, in
sole positus—placed in the sun.
He stands nigh to God, and hath, God nigh to him in all that he calls
upon him for. And therefore you
may expect his fruit to be sweet and ripe, when another stands as it were in
the shade, and at a distance from God (through neglect of, or infrequency in,
this duty), will have little fruit found on his branches, and that but green
and sour. ‘Those that be planted
in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of our God. They shall still bring forth fruit in
old age; they shall be fat and flourishing,’ Ps. 92:13, 14.
[The
prevalency of prayer
with God
makes it a necessary
duty.]
Reason Third. The third reason the Christian should join prayer to all
other means, is taken from the great prevalency prayer hath with God. He will do no great matter for a saint
without prayer, and nothing is too great for him to do at his request. Prayer,
like Jonathan’s bow, when duly qualified as to the person and act, never
returns empty. Never was faithful
prayer lost at sea. No merchant
trades with such certainty as the praying saint. Some prayers indeed have a longer voyage than others; but
then they come with the richer lading at last into the port. In trading, he
gets most by his commodity that can forbear his money longest. So does the Christian that can with
most patience stay for a return of his prayer. Such a soul shall never be
ashamed of his waiting. The promise is an assuring office to secure him his
adventure, I
John 3:22. O who can express the powerful oratory
of a believer's prayer! Vocula
Pater formaliter dicta in corde, est eloquentia, quam Demosthenes, Cicero, et
eloquentissimi in mundo nunquam possunt exprimere (Luther)—this little
word Father, lisped forth in prayer by a child of God, exceeds the eloquence of
Demosthenes, Cicero, and all other so famed orators in the world.
We
read of taking heaven ‘by force,’ Matt. 11:12. If ever this may be said to be done it is in prayer. Cĉlum
tundimus et misericordiam extorquemus, saith Tertullian—we knock at heaven,
and the merciful heart of God flies open, which we bring away with us. And in the same apology he speaks of
Christians, how they went to pray, as an enemy doth to besiege a town, and
take it by storm—coimus in coetum et congregationem, ut ad Deum quasi
manufactuâ prĉcationibus ambiamus orantes. And then he adds, hĉc vis Deo grata est—this holy violence
we offer to God in prayer is very pleasing to him. Surely, if it were not, he would neither help the Christian
so in the work, nor reward him for it when it is done. Whereas he doth both. He helped Jacob to overcome: ‘By his strength
he had power with God,’ Hosea
12:3. That is, not by his own, but by the
strength he had from God. And then
he puts honour upon him for the victory, ‘Thy name shall be called no more
Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and
hast prevailed,’ Gen.
32:28. It were easy here to expatiate into a
large history of the great exploits which prayer is renowned for in holy
writ. James 5:17; Isa. 37;
Dan 2:18; II Sam. 15:31; Est. 4:16; Acts 12:5; John 11:41; Jonah 2:2; Joshua
10:12, 14; II Kings 20:10; Ps. 106:23; Eze. 22:30. This is the key that hath opened and again shut heaven. It hath vanquished mighty armies,
and unlocked such secrets as passed the skill of the very devil himself
to find out. It hath strangled desperate
plots in the very womb wherein they were conceived, and made those engines
of cruelty prepared against the saints recoil upon the inventors of them; so
that they have inherited the gallows which they did set up for others. At the knock of prayer, prison doors
have opened, the grave hath delivered up its dead; and the sea’s
leviathan, not able to digest his prey, hath been made to vomit it up
again. It hath stopped he sun’s
chariot in the heavens, yea made it go back. And that which surpasseth all, it hath taken hold of the
Almighty, when on his full march against persons and people, and hath put
him into a merciful retreat.
Indeed, by the power prayer hath with God, it comes to prevail over all
the rest.
He
that hath a key to God’s heart cannot be shut out, or stopped at the creature’s
door. Now prayer moves God and
overcomes him, not by causing any change in the divine will, and making God to
take up new thoughts of doing that for his people which he did not before
intend. No, God is immutable, and
what good he doth in time for his people he purposed before any time was. But prayer is said to more than
overcome God; because he then gives, what from eternity he purposed to give
upon their praying to him. For when God decreed what he would do for his
saints, he also purposed that they should pray for the same. ‘I will yet for this be enquired of by
the house of Israel, to do it for them,’ Eze. 36:37. Prayer’s midwifery shall be used to deliver the mercies God
purposeth and promiseth. Hezekiah
understood this when he calls the prophet to the church’s labour, and bids
because ‘the children’—that is, deliverance —stuck in her birth, that he should
therefore ‘lift up a prayer,’ Isa. 37:3, 4.
And when Daniel had found the full reckoning of the promise—how long it
had to go with the deliverance promised for their return from captivity—perceiving
it hastened, he therefore falls hard to prayer, knowing God's purpose to give
doth not discharge us from our duty to ‘ask,’ Dan. 9:3.
[Why Christians are
to pray for what God
hath purposed and
promised to give.]
Question. But why doth God impose this upon the
saints, that they should pray for what he hath purposed and promised to
give? First. That they may
be conformable to Christ. Second.
That he may give the good things of the promise with safety to his honour. Third. To show the great delight
he takes in his saints’ prayers.
Answer
First. That they may be
conformable to Christ. The
design of God is to make every saint like Christ. This was resolved from eternity Rom. 8:29. Now, as
the limner looks on the person whose picture he would take, and draws his lines
to answer him with the nearest similitude that may be; so doth God look on
Christ as the archetype to which he will conform the saint, in suffering, in
grace, and in glory: yet so that Christ hath the pre-eminence in all. Every saint must suffer because Christ
suffered: Christ must not have a delicate body under a crucified head. Yet never any suffered, or could, what
he endured. Christ is holy, and
therefore shall every saint be, but in an inferior degree. An image cut in clay cannot be so exact
as that which is engraved on gold.
Now, as in other things, so in this our conformity to Christ
appears—that as the promises made to him were performed on his prayer to his
Father, so promises made to his saints are given to them in the same way of
prayer. ‘Ask of me,’ saith God to
his Son, ‘and I shall give thee,’ Ps. 2:8. And the apostle tells us, ‘Ye have not because ye ask
not.’ God had promised support to
Christ in all his conflicts: ‘Behold my servant, whom I uphold,’ Isa. 42:1. Yet he prays ‘with strong crying and
tears,’ when his feet stood within the shadow of death. A seed is promised to him, and victory
over his enemies; yet, for both these, he is at prayer now in heaven. Christ towards us acts as a king, but
towards his Father as a priest.
All he speaks to God is on his knee by prayer and intercession. In like manner the saints. The promise
makes them kings over their lusts, conquerors over their enemies; but it makes
them priests towards God, by prayer humbly to sue out those great things given
in the promise.
Answer
Second. That God may give
the good things of the promise with safety to his honour. Secure God but
his glory, and the saint may have what he will. The very life of God is bound up in his glory. The creature’s honour is not
intrinsical to his being. A prince
is a man when his crown and kingdom are gone. But God cannot be a God, except he be glorious; neither can
he be glorious, unless he be holy, just, merciful, and faithful, &c. Now, that this his glory may be seen
and displayed, is the great end he propounds both in making and ordering of the
world: ‘The Lord hath made all things for himself,’ Prov. 16:4. If there were any one occurrence in
the world which could no way be reducible to the glory of God, it would make
the being of a deity to be questioned.
But the all‑wise God hath so made, and doth so order, all his creatures
with their actions, that the manifestation of his glory is the result of
all. Indeed, he forceth it from
some, and takes it by distress, as princes do their taxes from disobedient
subjects. Thus the very wrath of his enemies shall praise him, Ps. 76:10. But he expects the saints should be
active instruments to glorify him, and, like loyal loving subjects, pay him the
tribute of his praise freely, with acclamations of joy and gratitude; which,
that they may do, he issueth out his mercies in such a way as may best suit
with this their duty. And that is
to give the good things he hath purposed and promised to them upon their humble
address in prayer to him. Now two ways the glory of God is secured by this
means.
1.
The saint, in the very duty of prayer—when he performs it in a qualified
manner—doth highly glorify God.
Prayer, as it is medium gratiĉ—a channel of grace, for the
conveying and deriving blessings from God, the fountain, into the cistern of
our bosoms; so it is medium cultus—a means of worship, whereby we are to
do homage to God, and give him the glory of his deity. By this we give him ‘the glory of
his power.’ Prayer is a humble
appeal from our impotency to God’s omnipotence. None begs that at another’s door which he can pleasure
himself with at home. And if we
thought not God able, we would go to another, not to him. We give him the glory of his sovereignty
and dominion and acknowledge that he is not only able to procure for us what we
ask, but can give us a right to, and the blessing of, what he gives. Therefore
Christ closeth his prayer with, ‘Thine is the kingdom, the power, and the
glory,’ &c., as a reason why we direct our prayers to God; because he alone
is the sovereign Lord that can invest us in, and give us title to, any
enjoyment. So that it is high
treason against the crown and dignity of God, when we wither attempt to possess
ourselves of any enjoyments without praying to him; or when we pray
religiously to any other besides him.
By the first we usurp his sovereignty ourselves, in their language, ‘We
are lords; we will come no more unto thee,’ Jer. 2:31. And by the second we give away his kingdom and sovereignty
to another. This was the devil’s
drift when he would have had Christ fall down and worship him, that thereby he
might acknowledge him to have the rule of the world. Again, by prayer give him the glory of his free mercy. Men demand a debt, but beg an alms.
When we pray we renounce merit.
See them opposed, ‘Whom, though I were righteous, yet would I not
answer, but I would make supplication to my judge,’ Job 9:15. We might show the same in all the other
attributes. But this taste from a
few may suffice. And as God,
essentially considered, receives by prayer an acknowledgement of his deity; so
every person in the sacred Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, in prayer are
honoured. By directing our prayers
to God the Father, we honour him as the source and fountain of all grace and
mercy. We honour the Son in
presenting our prayers in his name to the Father, thereby acknowledging him the
purchaser of the mercies we beg.
And the Holy Ghost, he receives the honour of that assistance which we
acknowledge to receive from him for the duty of prayer. For as we pray to
the Father through the Son, so by the help of the Spirit.
2.
As God is honoured in the very act and exercise of his duty duly qualified, so by
it the Christian is deeply engaged, and also sweetly disposed, to praise God
for, and glorify him with, the mercies he obtains by prayer.
(1.)
Prayer engageth to praise God because of his mercies. In prayer we do not only beg mercy of
God, but vow praise to God for the mercies we beg. Prayers are called ‘vows,’ ‘Thou, O God, hast heard my
vows;’ Ps.
61:5;
that is, my prayers, in which I solemnly vowed praise for the deliverance I
begged. It is no prayer where no
vow is included. We must not think
to bind God and leave ourselves free.
God ties himself in the promise to help us; but the condition of the obligation
on our part, is, that we will glorify him. And upon no other terms doth God give us leave to ask any
mercy at his hands. ‘Call upon me
in the day of trouble: I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me,’ Ps. 50:15. Now, what a strong tie doth this lay
upon the praying Christian’s heart, to use the mercies he receives holily, and
to wear with thankfulness what he wins by prayer! The Christian who would be loath to be taken in a lie to
man, will much more fear to be found a liar to God. ‘Surely they are my people,’ saith God; ‘children that will
not lie; so he was their Saviour,’ Isa. 63:8.
(2.)
Prayer is a means to dispose the heart to praise. Prayer and praise, like the symbolical
qualities in the elements, are soon resolved each into the other. When David begins a psalm with prayer,
he commonly ends it with praise.
From whence things have their original, thither they return. From the sea the riverwater comes, and
no mountains can hinder, but back again to the sea it will go. That spirit which leads the soul out of
itself to God for supply, will direct it to the same God with his praise. We do not use to borrow money of one
man and pay it to another. If God
hath been thy ‘strength,’ surely thou wilt make him thy ‘song.’ The thief comes not to thank a man for
what he steals out of his yard.
And I as little wonder that they do not glorify God for or with his
mercies, who did not ask his leave by prayer for them. What men do by themselves they ascribe
to themselves. Mercies ill got are
commonly as ill spent: because they are not sanctified to them, and so become
fuel to feed their lusts. Hence it
is, the more enjoyments they have the more proud and unthankful they are. But by prayer the Christian’s
enjoyments are sanctified, and the flatulency of them, which puffs up others
into pride, is corrected; and the same mercies received by prayer, become nourishment
to the saints' graces, that putrefy and turn to noisome lusts in the prayerless
sinner.
Answer
Third. God will have his
people pray for what he hath purposed and promised, to show the great
delight he takes in their prayers.
As a father, though he can send to his son who lives abroad the money he
hath promised for his maintenance, yet let him not have it except he comes over
at set times for it. And why? Not to trouble his son, but delight himself
in his son’s company. God takes
such content in the company of his praying saints, that to prevent all
strangeness on their part, he orders it so that they cannot neglect a duty but
they shall lose something by it.
‘Ye have not, because ye ask not.’
And the more they abound in prayer the more they shall with blessings. The oftener Joash had ‘smote upon the
ground,’ the fuller his victory over Syria had been. As the arrows of prayer are that we shoot to heaven, so
will the returns of mercy from thence be.
Yet must it not be imputed to any loathness in God to give, that he
makes them pray often and long before the mercy comes, but rather to the
content he takes in our prayers.
He doth all this on a design to draw out the graces of his Spirit in his
children, the voice and language of which in prayer makes most sweet melody in
the ear of God. The truth is, we
are in this too like musicians playing under our window; they play while the
money is thrown out to them, and then their pipes are put up. And were our wants so supplied by the
answer of one prayer, that we did not suddenly need a new recruit, we would be
gone, and God should not hear of us in haste.
USE OR
APPLICATION.
[Reproof to
prayerless souls,
with the dismal state
of such.]
Use
First. A word to those who
live in the total neglect of this duty, that are prayerless creatures. Such
ruins of mankind there are to be found, who pass their wretched days like so
many swine; they never look up to heaven till God lays them on their back; nor
are heard to cry in prayer till this knife is at their throat. What shall I say to these giants and
sons of the earth, that have renounced their allegiance to the God of
heaven!—these kine of Bashan, who, like so many metamorphosed Nebuchadnezzars,
have lost the heart of a man, and live like as very brutes, as the beasts
themselves, who, while they feed, take no notice of him that clothes the field
with grass for them! Can I hope
they will hear man who will not acknowledge the God of heaven by praying to
him? Surely your case is deplored.
What! not pray? Can you do
less than by this homage to own God for your Maker? O less for your own souls, than to beg their life of God,
whose hand of justice is lift up against you? Are you resolved thus to throw yourselves into the devil's
mouth, without so much as striking one stroke for your defence? If God had required a greater matter at
your hands than this, the salvation of your souls would have deserved it. And will you stick at this?
God
does not put us to the cost of laying down the price of our ransom; no, not so
much as to pay our prison fees. Only, he bids thee pray, and he will pay: ‘Your
heart shall live that seek God,’ Ps. 69:32. O, what salt and vinegar will this pour into thy wounds,
when in hell thy conscience shall fly in thy face, and tell thee thou hadst not
been there if thou wouldst in time have humbled thy soul before God, and sought
his favour in that way which cost Christ his blood to procure. Either thou must be dispossessed of
this dumb devil, or undoubtedly it will be thy damnation! And who dies with
less pity than that malefactor that stouts it before the judge, and will not so
much as down on his knees, or open his mouth to cry for mercy, though the judge
on purpose stays to pronounce the sentence and break up the court, to see
whether his stomach will fall, and his proud spirit stoop to ask his life at
his hands? You know how angry
Pilate was when Christ was silent: ‘Speakest thou not unto me? knowest thou not
that I have power to crucify thee, and have power to release thee?’ John 19:10, though,
alas! poor creature, as Christ told him, he could do nothing for or against
him; and therefore Christ neither feared him, nor ought him so much service as
to bestow a word upon him. The
warrant for Christ’s death was sealed in heaven, and he, with the rest of
Christ’s enraged enemies, were but God's servants to do the execution according
to the determinate counsel of God.
But how much more reason hath the great God to be provoked by this
irreligion, and say, ‘Wilt thou not speak to me? pray to me? Dost thou not know I have the power to
save or damn? to deliver thee to the tormentor, or keep thee out of his
hands?’ Or, dost thou look that
God is bound to save thee whether pray or not pray? If he doth, I promise you
he shall do more for thee than for others; yea, than for his own Son, who made
strong cries and supplications to be saved by him. God hath laid the method of
salvation and think not that he will alter it, and so make a blot in the
counsel of his will, for thy pleasure.
What he hath written he hath written, and it shall not be reversed. Yea, though others should be so kind as
out of pity to thy soul to pray for thee, yet if thou beest thyself a
prayerless creature, thou shalt die the death. If they were Noah, Samuel, and Daniel, that stood up to beg
thy life they should not be heard for thee. Proxy prayers in this case will not prevail. And therefore, when the Israelites came
a begging to Samuel for his prayers—which, good man, he easily promised; indeed,
durst not have forgot them in that, though they had not remembered him of
it—mark what caveat he annexeth, ‘Only fear the Lord, and serve him in truth
with all your heart,’ I
Sam. 12:24.
As if he had said, ‘Do not set me to do for you {that} which you will not do
for yourselves.’ It is not all the interest my prayers have in heaven {that}
will keep the wrath of God from falling on you, if you be wicked and
atheistical; therefore ‘fear the Lord, and serve him.’ That is, pray and obey
him.
Fear
oft denotes the worship of God, Gen. 31:53. God is called ‘the fear of Isaac;’ i.e.
the God whom he feared and worshipped.
So, ‘Who would not fear thee, O King of nations? Jer. 10:7, that is,
worship thee, rather than the stocks and stones; because the worshipping of God
results from our reverence and fear we have of him. Christ ‘was heard in that he feared him,’ Heb. 5:7—BÎ JH ,Û8"$X4"H; that is,
his religious fear, expressed in those his strong cries which he groaned forth
to God in his agony. And
therefore, so long as you are prayerless, you live without the fear of God. And what will not such a wretch dare to
do? Even anything that Satan shall
command him, though it be to go to a wizard. When Saul had given over inquiring after God, we hear him by
and by knocking at the devil's door, and asking counsel of a witch. Oh! take heed of living so near the
tempter! If Satan might have his
wish, surely it would be this—that the creature might live prayerless; for by
this he should do the greatest spite possible to God; in that he makes the
creature set him at nought in all his attributes, and have the greatest
advantage against the sinner himself.
Now he hath thee as sure as the thief hath the traveller, when he hath
thrown him into a ditch fast bound, and stopped his mouth, that he cannot cry
to others for help. In a word,
thou art free booty for Satan, who may now satisfy his lust upon thee. He that prayeth invites God into his
further acquaintance, and soon shall have it; as we see in Paul, who had
Ananias sent from God to him. But
he that lives in the neglect of this duty, gives the devil fuller possession of
him. Thou art the man of all
others most fit for him to make an atheist of. I should not wonder that the devil persuades thee there is
no God, who already livest in such defiance against him as cannot but make the
belief of a deity dreadful to thy thoughts. Herod was soon persuaded to cut off John's head, because,
when he was alive, he so troubled and nettled his conscience. And it is to be feared thou wilt easily
be drawn to attempt the stifling all thoughts of a deity, from whom thy
criminous conscience expects to hear nothing that can please thee. Yea, it is probable thou hast too much
of the atheist in thee already, or else thou durst not deny God that part of
natural worship which they that know him least give unto him. I am sure the Scripture lays this brat
of irreligion at the door of atheism, Ps. 14:1: ‘The fool’ there would fain persuade
himself ‘there is no God,’ and when he hath got so far the mastery of his
conscience as to blot God out of his creed, he then soon leaves him out of his
paternoster, ver.
2.