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I WILL PRAY WITH THE SPIRITA N DWith the Understanding Also-O R,A Discourse Touching Prayer;Wherein is discovered,I. What Prayer Is. A N DWith the U N D E R S T A N D I N G also...spiritually enlightened to see the promises and to be encouraged.
By J O H N.B U N Y A N.
WRITTEN IN PRISON, 1662. |
There is no subject of more solemn importance to human happiness than
prayer. It is the only medium of intercourse with heaven. "It is that language
wherein a creature holds correspondence with his Creator; and wherein the soul
of a saint gets near to God, is entertained with great delight, and, as it
were, dwells with his heavenly Father."[1] God, when manifest in the flesh,
hath given us a solemn, sweeping declaration, embracing all prayer–private,
social, and public–at all times and seasons, from the creation to the final
consummation of all things–"God is a Spirit, and they that worship him MUST
WORSHIP HIM IN SPIRIT AND IN TRUTH" (John 4:24).
The great enemy of souls, aided by the perverse state of the human mind, has
exhausted his ingenuity and malice to prevent the exercise of this holy and
delightful duty. His most successful effort has been to keep the soul in that
fatal lethargy, or death unto holiness, and consequently unto prayer, into
which it is plunged by Adam's transgression. Bunyan has some striking
illustrations of Satan's devices to stifle prayer, in his history of the Holy
War. When the troops of Emmanuel besiege Mansoul, their great effort was to
gain "eargate" as a chief entrance to Mansoul, and at that important gate
there were placed, by order of Diabolous, "the Lord Will-be-will, who made one
old Mr. Prejudice, an angry and ill-conditioned fellow, captain of that ward,
and put under his power sixty men called Deafmen to keep it," and these were
arrayed in the most excellent armour of Diabolous, "A DUMB AND PRAYERLESS
SPIRIT."
Nothing but the irresistible power of Emmanuel could have overcome these
obstacles. He conquers and reigns supreme, and Mansoul becomes happy; prayer
without ceasing enables the new-born man to breathe the celestial atmosphere.
At length Carnal Security interrupts and mars this happiness. The Redeemer
gradually withdraws. Satan assaults the soul with armies of doubts, and, to
prevent prayer, Diabolous "lands up Mouthgate with dirt."[2] Various efforts
are made to send petitions, but the messengers make no impression, until, in
the extremity of the soul's distress, two acceptable messengers are found, not
dwelling in palaces, but in "a very mean cottage,"[3] their names were
"Desires Awake and Wet Eyes," illustrating the inspired words, "Thus saith the
High and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is holy: I dwell–with
him–that is of a contrite and humble spirit" (Isa 57:15). By this we are
taught the utter worthlessness of depending upon the prayers of saints on
earth, or the glorified spirits of heaven. Our own prayers alone are availing.
Our own "Desires-awake" and "Wet-eyes," our own aspirations after God, our own
deep repentance and sense of utter helplessness drives us to the Saviour,
through whom ALONE we can find access and adoption into the family of our
Father who is in heaven.
The soul that communes with God attains an aptitude in prayer which no human
learning can give; devotional expressions become familiar; the Spirit of
adoption leads them with deep solemnity to approach the Infinite Eternal as a
father. Private prayer is so essentially spiritual that it cannot be reduced
to writing. "A man that truly prays one prayer, shall after that never be able
to express with his mouth, or pen the unutterable desires, sense, affection,
and longing that went to God in that prayer". Prayer leads to "pure religion
and undefiled," "to visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction," and
to preserve us "unspotted from the world" (James 1:27). Blessed indeed are
those who enjoy an abiding sense of the Divine presence; the Christian's
divine life may be measured by his being able to "pray without ceasing," to
"seek God's face continually." Men ought always to pray," and to "continue in
prayer." This does not consist in perpetually repeating any form of prayer,
but in that devotional frame of mind which enables the soul to say, "For me to
live is Christ." When David was compassed about with the sorrows of hell, he
at once ejaculates, "O Lord, I beseech thee deliver my soul." When the
disciples were in danger they did not recite the Lord's Prayer, or any other
form, but at once cried, "Lord, save us, we perish." Bunyan, speaking of
private prayer, keenly inquires, will God not hear thee "except thou comest
before him with some eloquent oration?" "It is not, as many take it to be,
even a few babbling, prating, complimentary expressions, but a sensible
feeling in the heart." Sincerity and a dependence upon the mediatorial office
of Christ is all that God requires. "The Lord is nigh unto all them that call
upon him–IN TRUTH" (Psa 145:18). In all that related to the individual
approach of the spirit to its heavenly Father, our pious author offended not;
but having enjoyed communion with God, he was, as all Christians are, desirous
of communion with the saints on earth, and in choosing the forms of public
worship, he gave great offence to many by rejecting the Book of Common Prayer.
To compel or to bribe persons to attend religious services is unjustifiable,
and naturally produces hypocrisy and persecution. So it was with the decree of
King Darius, (Dan 6); and so it has ever been with any royal or parliamentary
interference with Christian liberty. "Who art thou that judgest another man's
servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth" (Rom 14:4). "EVERY ONE of
us shall give account of himself to God" (Rom 14:12). All the solemnities of
the day of judgment point not merely to the right, but to the necessity of
private decision on all questions of faith, worship, and conduct, guided
solely by the volume of inspiration. Mansoul, in its regenerate state, is the
temple which the Creator has chosen for his worship; and it is infinitely more
glorious than earthly edifices, which crumble into dust, while God's temples
will be ever glorious as eternity rolls on.
Bunyan, to the sixteenth year of his age, had, when he attended public
worship, listened to the Book of Common Prayer. At that time an Act of
Parliament prohibited its use under severe and unjust penalties, and ordered
the services to be conducted by the rules of a directory. In this an outline
is given of public thanksgivings, confessions, and petitions; but no form of
prayer. In the preface the Puritans record their opinion, that the Liturgy of
the Church of England, notwithstanding all the pains and religious intentions
of its compilers, hath proved an offence; unprofitable ceremonies hath
occasioned much mischief; its estimation hath been raised by prelates, as if
there were no other way of worship; making it an idol to the ignorant and
superstitious, a matter of endless strife, and of increasing an idle ministry.
Bunyan had weighed these observations, and recollected his former ignorance
and superstition, when he counted all things holy connected with the outward
forms, and did "very devoutly say and sing as others did."
But when he arose from the long and dread conflict with sin, and entered upon
his Christian life, he decidedly preferred emancipation from forms of prayer,
and treated them with great severity. He considered that the most essential
qualification for the Christian ministry is the gift of prayer. Upon this
subject learned and pious men have differed; but the opinions of one so
eminently pious, and so well-taught in the Scriptures, are worthy of our
careful investigation. Great allowances must be made for all that appears
harsh in language, because urbanity was not the fashion of that day in
religious controversy. He had been most cruelly imprisoned, with threats of
transportation, and even an ignominious death, for refusing conformity to the
Book of Common Prayer. Being conscientiously and prayerfully decided in his
judgment, he set all these threats at defiance, and boldly, at the risk of his
life, published this treatise, while yet a prisoner in Bedford jail; and it is
a clear, concise, and scriptural discourse, setting forth his views upon this
most important subject.
Any preconceived form would have fettered Bunyan's free spirit; he was a giant
in prayer, and commanded the deepest reverence while leading the public
devotions of the largest congregations. The great question as to public prayer
is whether the minister should, relying upon Divine assistance, offer up
prayer to God in the Saviour's name, immediately conceived under a sense of
His presence; or whether it is better, as it is certainly easier, to read a
form of prayer, from time to time, skillfully arranged, and with every regard
to beauty of language? Which of these modes is most in accordance with the
directions of the Sacred Scriptures, and most likely to be attended with
spiritual benefit to the assembled church? Surely this inquiry does not
involve the charge of schism or heresy upon either party.
"Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind." Nor should such
differences lead us to despise each other. Let our first inquiry be, whether
the Saviour intended a fixed form of prayer? And if so, did he give His church
any other than that most beautiful and comprehensive form called the Lord's
Prayer? And did he license any one, and if so, who, to alter, add to, or
diminish from it? On the other hand, should we conclude that "We know not what
we should pray for as we ought, only as the Spirit helpeth our infirmities,"
then must we rely, as Bunyan did, upon the promised aid of that gracious
Spirit. Blessed, indeed, are those whose intercourse with heaven sheds an
influence on their whole conduct, gives them abundance of well-arranged words
in praying with their families and with the sick or dejected, and–whose lives
prove that they have been with Jesus, and are taught by him, or who, in
Scripture language, "pray with the spirit and with the understanding also."
"I WILL PRAY WITH THE SPIRIT, AND I WILL PRAY WITH THE UNDERSTANDING ALSO"–(I Cor 14:15).
PRAYER is an ORDINANCE of God, and that to be used both in public and
private; yea, such an ordinance as brings those that have the spirit of
supplication into great familiarity with God; and is also so prevalent in
action, that it getteth of God, both for the person that prayeth, and for them
that are prayed for, great things.[5] It is the opener of the heart of God,
and a means by which the soul, though empty, is filled. By prayer the
Christian can open his heart to God, as to a friend, and obtain fresh
testimony of God's friendship to him. I might spend many words in
distinguishing between public and private prayer; as also between that in the
heart, and that with the vocal voice. Something also might be spoken to
distinguish between the gifts and graces of prayer; but eschewing this method,
my business shall be at this time only to show you the very heart of prayer,
without which, all your lifting up, both of hands, and eyes, and voices, will
be to no purpose at all. "I will pray with the Spirit."
The method that I shall go on in at this time shall be, FIRST. To show you
what true prayer is. SECOND. To show you what it is to pray with the Spirit.
THIRD. What it is to pray with the Spirit and understanding also. And so,
FOURTHLY. To make some short use and application of what shall be spoken.
FIRST, What [true] prayer is. Prayer is a sincere, sensible, affectionate
pouring out of the heart or soul to God, through Christ, in the strength and
assistance of the Holy Spirit, for such things as God hath promised, or
according to the Word, for the good of the church, with submission, in faith,
to the will of God.
In this description are these seven things. First, It is a sincere; Second, A
sensible; Third, An affectionate, pouring out of the soul to God, through
Christ; Fourth, By the strength or assistance of the Spirit; Fifth, For such
things as God hath promised, or, according to his word; Sixth, For the good of
the church; Seventh, With submission in faith to the will of God.
First. For the first of these, it is a SINCERE pouring out of the soul to God.
Sincerity is such a grace as runs through all the graces of God in us, and
through all the actings of a Christian, and hath the sway in them too, or else
their actings are not any thing regarded of God, and so of and in prayer, of
which particularly David speaks, when he mentions prayer. "I cried unto him,"
the Lord "with my mouth, and he was extolled with my tongue. If I regard
iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear" my prayer (Psa 66:17,18). Part
of the exercise of prayer is sincerity, without which God looks not upon it as
prayer in a good sense (Psa 16:1-4). Then "ye shall seek me and find me, when
ye shall search for me with all your heart" (Jer 29:12-13). The want of this
made the Lord reject their prayers in Hosea 7:14, where he saith, "They have
not cried unto me with their heart," that is, in sincerity, "when they howled
upon their beds." But for a pretence, for a show in hypocrisy, to be seen of
men, and applauded for the same, they prayed. Sincerity was that which Christ
commended in Nathaniel, when he was under the fig tree. "Behold, an Israelite
indeed, in whom is no guile." Probably this good man was pouring out of his
soul to God in prayer under the fig tree, and that in a sincere and unfeigned
spirit before the Lord. The prayer that hath this in it as one of the
principal ingredients, is the prayer that God looks at. Thus, "The prayer of
the upright is his delight" (Prov 15:8).
And why must sincerity be one of the essentials of prayer which is accepted of
God, but because sincerity carries the soul in all simplicity to open its
heart to God, and to tell him the case plainly, without equivocation; to
condemn itself plainly, without dissembling; to cry to God heartily, without
complimenting. "I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus; Thou has
chastised me, and I was chastised, as a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke" (Jer
31:18). Sincerity is the same in a corner alone, as it is before the face of
the world. It knows not how to wear two vizards, one for an appearance before
men, and another for a short snatch in a corner; but it must have God, and be
with him in the duty of prayer. It is not lip-labour that it doth regard, for
it is the heart that God looks at, and that which sincerity looks at, and that
which prayer comes from, if it be that prayer which is accompanied with
sincerity.
Second. It is a sincere and SENSIBLE pouring out of the heart or soul. It is
not, as many take it to be, even a few babbling, prating, complimentary
expressions, but a sensible feeling there is in the heart. Prayer hath in it a
sensibleness of diverse things; sometimes sense of sin, sometimes of mercy
received, sometimes of the readiness of God to give mercy, &c.
1. A sense of the want of mercy, by reason of the danger of sin. The soul, I
say, feels, and from feeling sighs, groans, and breaks at the heart. For right
prayer bubbleth out of the heart when it is overpressed with grief and
bitterness, as blood is forced out of the flesh by reason of some heavy burden
that lieth upon it (I Sam 1:10; Psa 69:3). David roars, cries, weeps, faints
at heart, fails at the eyes, loseth his moisture, &c., (Psa 38:8-10). Hezekiah
mourns like a dove (Isa 38:14). Ephraim bemoans himself (Jer 31:18). Peter
weeps bitterly (Matt 26:75). Christ hath strong cryings and tears (Heb 5:7).
And all this from a sense of the justice of God, the guilt of sin, the pains
of hell and destruction. "The sorrows of death compassed me, and the pains of
hell gat hold upon me: I found trouble and sorrow." Then cried I unto the Lord
(Psa 116:3,4). And in another place, "My sore ran in the night" (Psa 77:2).
Again, "I am bowed down greatly; I go mourning all the day long" (Psa 38:6).
In all these instances, and in hundreds more that might be named, you may see
that prayer carrieth in it a sensible feeling disposition, and that first from
a sense of sin.
2. Sometimes there is a sweet sense of mercy received; encouraging,
comforting, strengthening, enlivening, enlightening mercy, &c. Thus David
pours out his soul, to bless, and praise, and admire the great God for his
loving- kindness to such poor vile wretches. "Bless the Lord, O my soul; and
all that is within me bless his holy name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and
forget not all his benefits.[6] Who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who
healeth all thy diseases; who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who
crowneth thee with loving- kindness and tender mercies; who satisfieth thy
mouth with good things, so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's" (Psa
103:1-5). And thus is the prayer of saints sometimes turned into praise and
thanksgiving, and yet are prayers still. This is a mystery; God's people pray
with their praises, as it is written, "Be careful for nothing, but in every
thing by prayer, and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your request be made
known unto God" (Phil 4:6). A sensible thanksgiving, for mercies received, is
a mighty prayer in the sight of God; it prevails with him unspeakably.
3. In prayer there is sometimes in the soul a sense of mercy to be received.
This again sets the soul all on a flame. "Thou, O lord of hosts," saith David,
"hast revealed to thy servant, saying I will build thee an house; therefore
hath thy servant found in his heart to pray - unto thee" (II Sam 7:27). This
provoked Jacob, David, Daniel, with others–even a sense of mercies to be
received–which caused them, not by fits and starts, nor yet in a foolish
frothy way, to babble over a few words written in a paper; but mightily,
fervently, and continually, to groan out their conditions before the Lord, as
being sensible, sensible, I say, of their wants, their misery, and the
willingness of God to show mercy (Gen 32:10,11; Dan 9:3,4).
A good sense of sin, and the wrath of God, with some encouragement from God to
come unto him, is a better Common-prayer-book than that which is taken out of
the Papistical mass-book,[7] being the scraps and fragments of the devices of
some popes, some friars, and I wot not what.
Third. Prayer is a sincere, sensible, and an AFFECTIONATE pouring out of the
soul to God. O! the heat, strength, life, vigour, and affection, that is in
right prayer! "As the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so panteth my soul
after thee, O God" (Psa 42:1). "I have longed after thy precepts" (Psa
119:40). "I have longed for thy salvation" (ver 174). "My soul longeth, yea,
even fainteth, for the courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh crieth out
for the living God" (Psa 84:2). "My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath
unto thy judgments at all times" (Psa 119:20). Mark ye here, "My soul
longeth," it longeth, it longeth, &c. O what affection is here discovered in
prayer! The like you have in Daniel. "O Lord, hear; O Lord, forgive; O Lord,
hearken and do; defer not, for thine own sake, O my God" (Dan 9:19). Every
syllable carrieth a mighty vehemency in it. This is called the fervent, or the
working prayer, by James. And so again, "And being in an agony, he prayed more
earnestly" (Luke 22:44). Or had his affections more and more drawn out after
God for his helping hand. O! How wide are the most of men with their prayers
from this prayer, that is, PRAYER in God's account! Alas! The greatest part of
men make no conscience at all of the duty; and as for them that do, it is to
be feared that many of them are very great strangers to a sincere, sensible,
and affectionate pouring out their hearts or souls to God; but even content
themselves with a little lip-labour and bodily exercise, mumbling over a few
imaginary prayers. When the affections are indeed engaged in prayer, then,
then the whole man is engaged, and that in such sort, that the soul will spend
itself to nothing, as it were, rather than it will go without that good
desired, even communion and solace with Christ. And hence it is that the
saints have spent their strengths, and lost their lives, rather than go
without the blessing (Psa 69:3; 38:9,10; Gen 32:24,26).
All this is too, too evident by the ignorance, profaneness, and spirit of
envy, that reign in the hearts of those men that are so hot for the forms, and
not the power of praying. Scarce one of forty among them know what it is to be
born again, to have communion with the Father through the Son; to feel the
power of grace sanctifying their hearts: but for all their prayers, they still
live cursed, drunken, whorish, and abominable lives, full of malice, envy,
deceit, persecuting of the dear children of God. O what a dreadful after-clap
is coming upon them! which all their hypocritical assembling themselves
together, with all their prayers, shall never be able to help them against, or
shelter them from.
Again, It is a pouring out of the heart or soul. There is in prayer an
unbosoming of a man's self, an opening of the heart to God, an affectionate
pouring out of the soul in requests, sighs, and groans. "All my desire is
before thee," saith David, "and my groaning is not hid from thee" (Psa 38:9).
And again, "My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God. When shall I come
and appear before God? When I remember these things, I pour out my soul in me"
(Psa 42:2,4). Mark, "I pour out my soul." It is an expression signifying, that
in prayer there goeth the very life and whole strength to God. As in another
place, "Trust in him at all times; ye people, - pour out your heart before
him" (Psa 62:8). This is the prayer to which the promise is made, for the
delivering of a poor creature out of captivity and thralldom. "If from thence
thou shalt seek the Lord thy God, thou shalt find him, if thou seek him with
all thy heart and with all thy soul" (Deut 4:29).
Again, It is a pouring out of the heart or soul TO GOD. This showeth also the
excellency of the spirit of prayer. It is the great God to which it retires.
"When shall I come and appear before God?" And it argueth, that the soul that
thus prayeth indeed, sees an emptiness in all things under heaven; that in God
alone there is rest and satisfaction for the soul. "Now she that is a widow
indeed, and desolate, trusteth in God" (I Tim 5:5). So saith David, "In thee,
O Lord, do I put my trust; let me never be put to confusion. Deliver me in thy
righteousness, and cause me to escape; incline thine ear to me, and save me.
Be thou my strong habitation, whereunto I may continually resort: - for thou
art my rock and my fortress; deliver me, O my God, - out of the hand of the
unrighteous and cruel man. For thou art my hope, O Lord God, thou art my trust
from my youth" (Psa 71:1-5). Many in a wording way speak of God; but right
prayer makes God his hope, stay, and all. Right prayer sees nothing
substantial, and worth the looking after, but God. And that, as I said before,
it doth in a sincere, sensible, and affectionate way.
Again, It is a sincere, sensible, affectionate pouring out of the heart or
soul to God, THROUGH CHRIST. This through Christ must needs be added, or else
it is to be questioned, whether it be prayer, though in appearance it be never
so eminent or eloquent.
Christ is the way through whom the soul hath admittance to God, and without
whom it is impossible that so much as one desire should come into the ears of
the Lord of Sabaoth (John 14:6). "If ye shall ask anything in my name";
"whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, I will do it" (John 14:13,14).
This was Daniel's way in praying for the people of God; he did it in the name
of Christ. "Now therefore, O our God, hear the prayer of thy servant, and his
supplications, and cause thy face to shine upon thy sanctuary that is
desolate, for the Lord's sake" (Dan 9:17). And so David, "For thy name's
sake," that is, for thy Christ's sake, "pardon mine iniquity, for it is great"
(Psa 25:11). But now, it is not every one that maketh mention of Christ's name
in prayer, that doth indeed, and in truth, effectually pray to God in the name
of Christ, or through him. This coming to God through Christ is the hardest
part that is found in prayer. A man may more easily be sensible of his works,
ay, and sincerely too desire mercy, and yet not be able to come to God by
Christ. That man that comes to God by Christ, he must first have the knowledge
of him; "for he that cometh to God, must believe that he is" (Heb 11:6). And
so he that comes to God through Christ, must be enabled to know Christ. Lord,
saith Moses, "show me now thy way, that I may know thee" (Exo 33:13).
This Christ, none but the Father can reveal (Matt 11:27). And to come through
Christ, is for the soul to be enabled of God to shroud itself under the shadow
of the Lord Jesus, as a man shroudeth himself under a thing for safeguard
(Matt 16:16).[8] Hence it is that David so often terms Christ his shield,
buckler, tower, fortress, rock of defence, &c., (Psa 18:2; 27:1; 28:1). Not
only because by him he overcame his enemies, but because through him he found
favour with God the Father. And so he saith to Abraham, "Fear not, I am thy
shield," &c., (Gen 15:1). The man then that comes to God through Christ, must
have faith, by which he puts on Christ, and in him appears before God. Now he
that hath faith is born of God, born again, and so becomes one of the sons of
God; by virtue of which he is joined to Christ, and made a member of him (John
3:5,7; 1:12). And therefore, secondly he, as a member of Christ, comes to God;
I say, as a member of him, so that God looks on that man as a part of Christ,
part of his body, flesh, and bones, united to him by election, conversion,
illumination, the Spirit being conveyed into the heart of that poor man by God
(Eph 5:30). So that now he comes to God in Christ's merits, in his blood,
righteousness, victory, intercession, and so stands before him, being
"accepted in his Beloved" (Eph 1:6). And because this poor creature is thus a
member of the Lord Jesus, and under this consideration hath admittance to come
to God; therefore, by virtue of this union also, is the Holy Spirit conveyed
into him, whereby he is able to pour out himself, to wit, his soul, before
God, with his audience. And this leads me to the next, or fourth particular.
Fourth. Prayer is a sincere, sensible, affectionate, pouring out of the heart
or soul to God through Christ, by the strength or ASSISTANCE OF THE SPIRIT.
For these things do so depend one upon another, that it is impossible that it
should be prayer, without there be a joint concurrence of them; for though it
be never so famous, yet without these things, it is only such prayer as is
rejected of God. For without a sincere, sensible, affectionate pouring out of
the heart to God, it is but lip-labour; and if it be not through Christ, it
falleth far short of ever sounding well in the ears of God. So also, if it be
not in the strength and assistance of the Spirit, it is but like the sons of
Aaron, offering with strange fire (Lev 10:1,2). But I shall speak more to this
under the second head; and therefore in the meantime, that which is not
petitioned through the teaching and assistance of the Spirit, it is not
possible that it should be "according to the will of God (Rom 8:26,27).
Fifth. Prayer is a sincere, sensible, affectionate pouring out of the heart,
or soul, to God, through Christ, in the strength and assistance of the Spirit,
FOR SUCH THINGS AS GOD HATH PROMISED, &c., (Matt 6:6-8). Prayer it is, when it
is within the compass of God's Word; and it is blasphemy, or at best vain
babbling, when the petition is beside the book. David therefore still in his
prayer kept his eye on the Word of God. "My soul," saith he, "cleaveth to the
dust; quicken me according to thy word." And again, "My soul melteth for
heaviness, strengthen thou me according unto thy word" (Psa 119:25-28; see
also 41, 42, 58, 65, 74, 81, 82, 107, 147, 154, 169, 170). And, "remember thy
word unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope" (ver 49). And
indeed the Holy Ghost doth not immediately quicken and stir up the heart of
the Christian without, but by, with, and through the Word, by bringing that to
the heart, and by opening of that, whereby the man is provoked to go to the
Lord, and to tell him how it is with him, and also to argue, and supplicate,
according to the Word; thus it was with Daniel, that mighty prophet of the
Lord. He understanding by books that the captivity of the children of Israel
was hard at an end; then, according unto that word, he maketh his prayer to
God. "I Daniel," saith he, "understood by books," viz., the writings of
Jeremiah, "the number of the years whereof the word of the Lord came to
Jeremiah, - that he would accomplish seventy years in the desolations of
Jerusalem. And I set my face to the Lord God, to seek by prayer and
supplications, with fasting, and sackcloth, and ashes" (Dan 9:2,3). So that I
say, as the Spirit is the helper and the governor of the soul, when it prayeth
according to the will of God; so it guideth by and according to, the Word of
God and his promise. Hence it is that our Lord Jesus Christ himself did make a
stop, although his life lay at stake for it. I could now pray to my Father,
and he should give me more than twelve legions of angels; but how then must
the scripture be fulfilled that thus it must be? (Matt 26:53,54). As who
should say, Were there but a word for it in the scripture, I should soon be
out of the hands of mine enemies, I should be helped by angels; but the
scripture will not warrant this kind of praying, for that saith otherwise. It
is a praying then according to the Word and promise. The Spirit by the Word
must direct, as well in the manner, as in the matter of prayer. "I will pray
with the Spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also" (I Cor 14:15).
But there is no understanding without the Word. For if they reject the word of
the Lord, "what wisdom is in them?" (Jer 8:9).
Sixth. FOR THE GOOD OF THE CHURCH. This clause reacheth in whatsoever tendeth
either to the honour of God, Christ's advancement, or his people's benefit.
For God, and Christ, and his people are so linked together that if the good of
the one be prayed for, to wit, the church, the glory of God, and advancement
of Christ, must needs be included. For as Christ is in the Father, so the
saints are in Christ; and he that toucheth the saints, toucheth the apple of
God's eye; and therefore pray for the peace of Jerusalem, and you pray for all
that is required of you. For Jerusalem will never be in perfect peace until
she be in heaven; and there is nothing that Christ doth more desire than to
have her there. That also is the place that God through Christ hath given to
her. He then that prayeth for the peace and good of Zion, or the church, doth
ask that in prayer which Christ hath purchased with his blood; and also that
which the Father hath given to him as the price thereof. Now he that prayeth
for this, must pray for abundance of grace for the church, for help against
all its temptations; that God would let nothing be too hard for it; and that
all things might work together for its good, that God would keep them
blameless and harmless, the sons of God, to his glory, in the midst of a
crooked and perverse nation. And this is the substance of Christ's own prayer
in John 17. And all Paul's prayers did run that way, as one of his prayers
doth eminently show. "And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and
more in knowledge, and in all judgment; that ye may approve things that are
excellent; that ye may be sincere, and without offence, till the day of
Christ. Being filled with the fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus
Christ unto the glory and praise of God" (Phil 1:9-11). But a short prayer,
you see, and yet full of good desires for the church, from the beginning to
the end; that it may stand and go on, and that in the most excellent frame of
spirit, even without blame, sincere, and without offence, until the day of
Christ, let its temptations or persecutions be what they will (Eph 1:16-21;
3:14-19; Col 1:9- 13).
Seventh. And because, as I said, prayer doth SUBMIT TO THE WILL OF GOD, and
say, Thy will be done, as Christ hath taught us (Matt 6:10); therefore the
people of the Lord in humility are to lay themselves and their prayers, and
all that they have, at the foot of their God, to be disposed of by him as he
in his heavenly wisdom seeth best. Yet not doubting but God will answer the
desire of his people that way that shall be most for their advantage and his
glory. When the saints therefore do pray with submission to the will of God,
it doth not argue that they are to doubt or question God's love and kindness
to them. But because they at all times are not so wise, but that sometimes
Satan may get that advantage of them, as to tempt them to pray for that which,
if they had it, would neither prove to God's glory nor his people's good. "Yet
this is the confidence that we have in him, that if we ask anything according
to his will, he heareth us; and if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask,
we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him," that is, we asking
in the Spirit of grace and supplication (I John 5:14,15). For, as I said
before, that petition that is not put up in and through the Spirit, it is not
to be answered, because it is beside the will of God. For the Spirit only
knoweth that, and so consequently knoweth how to pray according to that will
of God. "For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man
which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of
God" (I Cor 2:11). But more of this hereafter. Thus you see, first, what
prayer is. Now to proceed.
SECOND. I will pray with the Spirit. Now to pray with the Spirit–for that
is the praying man, and none else, so as to be accepted of God–it is for a
man, as aforesaid, sincerely and sensibly, with affection, to come to God
through Christ, &c.; which sincere, sensible, and affectionate coming must be
by the working of God's Spirit.
There is no man nor church in the world that can come to God in prayer, but by
the assistance of the Holy Spirit. "For through Christ we all have access by
one Spirit unto the Father" (Eph 2:18). Wherefore Paul saith, "For we know not
what we should pray for as we ought; but the Spirit itself maketh intercession
for us with groanings which cannot be uttered. And he that searcheth the
hearts, knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession
for the saints according to the will of God" (Rom 8:26,27). And because there
is in this scripture so full a discovery of the spirit of prayer, and of man's
inability to pray without it; therefore I shall in a few words comment upon
it.
"For we." Consider first the person speaking, even Paul, and, in his person,
all the apostles. We apostles, we extraordinary officers, the wise
master-builders, that have some of us been caught up into paradise (Rom 15:16;
I Cor 3:10; II Cor 12:4). "We know not what we should pray for." Surely there
is no man but will confess, that Paul and his companions were as able to have
done any work for God, as any pope or proud prelate in the church of Rome, and
could as well have made a Common Prayer Book as those who at first composed
this; as being not a whit behind them either in grace or gifts.[9]
"For we know not what we should pray for." We know not the matter of the
things for which we should pray, neither the object to whom we pray, nor the
medium by or through whom we pray; none of these things know we, but by the
help and assistance of the Spirit. Should we pray for communion with God
through Christ? should we pray for faith, for justification by grace, and a
truly sanctified heart? none of these things know we. "For what man knoweth
the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so the
things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God" (I Cor 2:11). But here,
alas! the apostles speak of inward and spiritual things, which the world knows
not (Isa 29:11).
Again, as they know not the matter, &c., of prayer, without the help of the
Spirit; so neither know they the manner thereof without the same; and
therefore he adds, "We know not what we should pray for as we ought"; but the
Spirit helpeth our infirmities, with sighs and groans which cannot be uttered.
Mark here, they could not so well and so fully come off in the manner of
performing this duty, as these in our days think they can.
The apostles, when they were at the best, yea, when the Holy Ghost assisted
them, yet then they were fain to come off with sighs and groans, falling short
of expressing their mind, but with sighs and groans which cannot be uttered.
But here now, the wise men of our days are so well skilled as that they have
both the manner and matter of their prayers at their finger-ends; setting such
a prayer for such a day, and that twenty years before it comes. One for
Christmas, another for Easter, and six days after that. They have also bounded
how many syllables must be said in every one of them at their public
exercises. For each saint's day, also, they have them ready for the
generations yet unborn to say. They can tell you, also, when you shall kneel,
when you shall stand, when you should abide in your seats, when you should go
up into the chancel, and what you should do when you come there. All which the
apostles came short of, as not being able to compose so profound a manner; and
that for this reason included in this scripture, because the fear of God tied
them to pray as they ought.
"For we know not what we should pray for as we ought." Mark this, "as we
ought." For the not thinking of this word, or at least the not understanding
it in the spirit and truth of it, hath occasioned these men to devise, as
Jeroboam did, another way of worship, both for matter and manner, than is
revealed in the Word of God (I Kings 12:26-33). But, saith Paul, we must pray
as we ought; and this WE cannot do by all the art, skill, and cunning device
of men or angels. " For we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but
the Spirit"; nay, further, it must be "the Spirit ITSELF" that helpeth our
infirmities; not the Spirit and man's lusts; what man of his own brain may
imagine and devise, is one thing, and what they are commanded, and ought to
do, is another. Many ask and have not, because they ask amiss; and so are
never the nearer the enjoying of those things they petition for (James 4:3).
It is not to pray at random that will put off God, or cause him to answer.
While prayer is making, God is searching the heart, to see from what root and
spirit it doth arise (I John 5:14). "And he that searcheth the heart knoweth,"
that is, approveth only, the meaning "of the Spirit, because he maketh
intercession for the saints according to the will of God." For in that which
is according to his will only, he heareth us, and in nothing else. And it is
the Spirit only that can teach us so to ask; it only being able to search out
all things, even the deep things of God. Without which Spirit, though we had a
thousand Common Prayer Books, yet we know not what we should pray for as we
ought, being accompanied with those infirmities that make us absolutely
incapable of such a work. Which infirmities, although it is a hard thing to
name them all, yet some of them are these that follow.
First. Without the Spirit man is so infirm that he cannot, with all other
means whatsoever, be enabled to think one right saving thought of God, of
Christ, or of his blessed things; and therefore he saith of the wicked, "God
is not in all his thoughts," (Psa 10:4); unless it be that they imagine him
altogether such a one as themselves (Psa 50:21). For "every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil," and that "continually" (Gen 6:5; 8:21).
They then not being able to conceive aright of God to whom they pray, of
Christ through whom they pray, nor of the things for which they pray, as is
before showed, how shall they be able to address themselves to God, without
the Spirit help this infirmity? Peradventure you will say, By the help of the
Common Prayer Book; but that cannot do it, unless it can open the eyes, and
reveal to the soul all these things before touched. Which that it cannot, it
is evident; because that is the work of the Spirit only. The Spirit itself is
the revealer of these things to poor souls, and that which doth give us to
understand them; wherefore Christ tells his disciples, when he promised to
send the Spirit, the Comforter, "He shall take of mine and show unto you"; as
if he had said, I know you are naturally dark and ignorant as to the
understanding any of my things; though ye try this course and the other, yet
your ignorance will still remain, the veil is spread over your heart, and
there is none can take away the same, nor give you spiritual understanding but
the Spirit. The Common Prayer Book will not do it, neither can any man expect
that it should be instrumental that way, it being none of God's ordinances;
but a thing since the Scriptures were written, patched together one piece at
one time, and another at another; a mere human invention and institution,
which God is so far from owning of, that he expressly forbids it, with any
other such like, and that by manifold sayings in his most holy and blessed
Word. (See Mark 7:7,8, and Col 2:16-23; Deut 12:30- 32; Prov 30:6; Deut 4:2;
Rev 22:18). For right prayer must, as well in the outward part of it, in the
outward expression, as in the inward intention, come from what the soul doth
apprehend in the light of the Spirit; otherwise it is condemned as vain and an
abomination, because the heart and tongue do not go along jointly in the same,
neither indeed can they, unless the Spirit help our infirmities (Mark 7; Prov
28:9; Isa 29:13). And this David knew full well, which did make him cry,
"Lord, open thou my lips, and my mouth shall show forth thy praise" (Psa
51:15). I suppose there is none can imagine but that David could speak and
express himself as well as others, nay, as any in our generation, as is
clearly manifested by his word and his works. Nevertheless when this good man,
this prophet, comes into God's worship, then the Lord must help, or he can do
nothing. "Lord, open thou my lips, and" then "my mouth shall show forth thy
praise." He could not speak one right word, except the Spirit itself gave
utterance. "For we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but the
Spirit itself helpeth our infirmities." But,
Second. It must be a praying with the Spirit, that is, the effectual praying;
because without that, as men are senseless, so hypocritical, cold, and
unseemly in their prayers; and so they, with their prayers, are both rendered
abominable to God (Matt 23:14; Mark 12:40; Luke 18:11, 12; Isa 58:2, 3). It is
not the excellency of the voice, nor the seeming affection, and earnestness of
him that prayeth, that is anything regarded of God without it. For man, as
man, is so full of all manner of wickedness, that as he cannot keep a word, or
thought, so much less a piece of prayer clean, and acceptable to God through
Christ; and for this cause the Pharisees, with their prayers, were rejected.
No question but they were excellently able to express themselves in words, and
also for length of time, too, they were very notable; but they had not the
Spirit of Jesus Christ to help them, and therefore they did what they did with
their infirmities or weaknesses only, and so fell short of a sincere,
sensible, affectionate pouring out of their souls to God, through the strength
of the Spirit. That is the prayer that goeth to heaven, that is sent thither
in the strength of the Spirit. For,
Third. Nothing but the Spirit can show a man clearly his misery by nature, and
so put a man into a posture of prayer. Talk is but talk, as we use to say, and
so it is but mouth- worship, if there be not a sense of misery, and that
effectually too. O the cursed hypocrisy that is in most hearts, and that
accompanieth many thousands of praying men that would be so looked upon in
this day, and all for want of a sense of their misery! But now the Spirit,
that will sweetly show the soul its misery, where it is, and what is like to
become of it, also the intolerableness of that condition. For it is the Spirit
that doth effectually convince of sin and misery, without the Lord Jesus, and
so puts the soul into a sweet, sensible, affectionate way of praying to God
according to his word (John 16:7-9).
Fourth. If men did see their sins, yet without the help of the Spirit they
would not pray. For they would run away from God, with Cain and Judas, and
utterly despair of mercy, were it not for the Spirit. When a man is indeed
sensible of his sin, and God's curse, then it is a hard thing to persuade him
to pray; for, saith his heart, "There is no hope," it is in vain to seek God
(Jer 2:25; 18:12). I am so vile, so wretched, and so cursed a creature, that I
shall never be regarded! Now here comes the Spirit, and stayeth the soul,
helpeth it to hold up its face to God, by letting into the heart some small
sense of mercy to encourage it to go to God, and hence it is called "the
Comforter" (John 14:26).
Fifth. It must be in or with the Spirit; for without that no man can know how
he should come to God the right way. Men may easily say they come to God in
his Son: but it is the hardest thing of a thousand to come to God aright and
in his own way, without the Spirit. It is "the Spirit" that "searcheth all
things, yea, the deep things of God" (I Cor 2:10). It is the Spirit that must
show us the way of coming to God, and also what there is in God that makes him
desirable: "I pray thee," saith Moses, "show me now thy way, that I may know
thee" (Exo 33:13). And, He shall take of mine, and "show it unto you" (John
16:14).
Sixth. Because without the Spirit, though a man did see his misery, and also
the way to come to God; yet he would never be able to claim a share in either
God, Christ, or mercy, with God's approbation. O how great a task is it, for a
poor soul that becomes sensible of sin and the wrath of God, to say in faith,
but this one word, "Father!" I tell you, however hypocrites think, yet the
Christian that is so indeed finds all the difficulty in this very thing, it
cannot say God is its Father. O! saith he, I dare not call him Father; and
hence it is that the Spirit must be sent into the hearts of God's people for
this very thing, to cry Father: it being too great a work for any man to do
knowingly and believingly without it (Gal 4:6). When I say knowingly, I mean,
knowing what it is to be a child of God, and to be born again. And when I say
believingly, I mean, for the soul to believe, and that from good experience,
that the work of grace is wrought in him. This is the right calling of God
Father; and not as many do, to say in a babbling way, the Lord's prayer (so
called) by heart, as it lieth in the words of the book. No, here is the life
of prayer, when in or with the Spirit, a man being made sensible of sin, and
how to come to the Lord for mercy; he comes, I say, in the strength of the
Spirit, and crieth Father. That one word spoken in faith, is better than a
thousand prayers, as men call them, written and read, in a formal, cold,
lukewarm way. O how far short are those people of being sensible of this, who
count it enough to teach themselves and children to say the Lord's prayer, the
creed, with other sayings; when, as God knows, they are senseless of
themselves, their misery, or what it is to be brought to God through Christ!
Ah, poor soul! Study your misery, and cry to God to show you your confused
blindness and ignorance, before you be so rife in calling God your Father, or
teaching your children either so to say. And know, that to say God is your
Father, in a way of prayer or conference, without any experiment of the work
of grace on your souls, it is to say you are Jews and are not, and so to lie.
You say, Our Father; God saith, You blaspheme! You say you are Jew, that is,
true Christians; God saith, You lie!
"Behold I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say they are Jews,
and are not, but do lie" (Rev 3:9). "And I know the blasphemy of them that say
they are Jews, and are not, but are the synagogue of Satan" (Rev 2:9). And so
much the greater the sin is, by how much the more the sinner boasts it with a
pretended sanctity, as the Jews did to Christ, in the 8th of John, which made
Christ, even in plain terms, to tell them their doom, for all their
hypocritical pretences (John 8:41-45). And yet forsooth every cursed
whoremaster, thief, and drunkard, swearer, and perjured person; they that have
not only been such in times past, but are even so still: these I say, by some
must be counted the only honest men, and all because with their blasphemous
throats, and hypocritical hearts, they will come to church, and say, "Our
Father!" Nay further, these men, though every time they say to God, Our
Father, do most abominably blaspheme, yet they must be compelled thus to do.
And because others that are of more sober principles, scruple the truth of
such vain traditions; therefore they must be looked upon to be the only
enemies of God and the nation: when as it is their own cursed superstition
that doth set the great God against them, and cause him to count them for his
enemies (Isa 53:10). And yet just like to Bonner, that blood-red persecutor,
they commend, I say, these wretches, although never so vile, if they close in
with their traditions, to be good churchmen, the honest subjects; while God's
people are, as it hath always been, looked upon to be a turbulent, seditious,
and factious people (Ezra 4:12-16).
Therefore give me leave a little to reason with thee, thou poor, blind,
ignorant sot.
(1.) It may be thy great prayer is to say, "Our Father which art in heaven,"
&c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words of this prayer? Canst
thou indeed, with the rest of the saints, cry, Our Father? Art thou truly born
again? Hast thou received the spirit of adoption? Dost thou see thyself in
Christ, and canst thou come to God as a member of him? Or art thou ignorant of
these things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? Is not the devil thy
father? (John 8:44). And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh? And yet
darest thou say to God, Our Father? Nay, art thou not a desperate persecutor
of the children of God? Hast thou not cursed them in thine heart many a time?
And yet dost thou out of thy blasphemous throat suffer these words to come,
even our Father? He is their Father whom thou hatest and persecutest. But as
the devil presented himself amongst the sons of God, (Job 1), when they were
to present themselves before the Father, even our Father, so is it now;
because the saints were commanded to say, Our Father, therefore all the blind
ignorant rabble in the world, they must also use the same words, Our Father.
(2.) And dost thou indeed say, "Hallowed be thy name" with thy heart? Dost
thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the name, holiness, and
majesty of God? Doth thy heart and conversation agree with this passage? Dost
thou strive to imitate Christ in all the works of righteousness, which God
doth command of thee, and prompt thee forward to? It is so, if thou be one
that can truly with God's allowance cry, "Our Father." Or is it not the least
of thy thoughts all the day? And dost thou not clearly make it appear, that
thou art a cursed hypocrite, by condemning that with thy daily practice, which
thou pretendest in thy praying with thy dissembling tongue?
(3.) Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his will to be
done in earth as it is in heaven? Nay, notwithstanding, thou according to the
form, sayest, Thy kingdom come, yet would it not make thee ready to run mad,
to hear the trumpet sound, to see the dead arise, and thyself just now to go
and appear before God, to reckon for all the deeds thou hast done in the body?
Nay, are not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? And if
God's will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not be thy
ruin? There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if he should so deal
on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell? And so of the rest of the
petitions. Ah! How sadly would even those men look, and with what terror would
they walk up and down the world, if they did but know the lying and
blaspheming that proceedeth out of their mouth, even in their most pretended
sanctity? The Lord awaken you, and teach you, poor souls, in all humility, to
take heed that you be not rash and unadvised with your heart, and much more
with your mouth! When you appear before God, as the wise man saith, "Be not
rash with thy mouth, and let not thine heart be hasty to utter any thing,
(Eccl 5:2); especially to call God Father, without some blessed experience
when thou comest before God. But I pass this.
Seventh. It must be a praying with the Spirit if it be accepted, because there
is nothing but the Spirit that can lift up the soul or heart to God in prayer:
"The preparations of the heart in man, and the answer of the tongue, is from
the Lord" (Prov 16:1). That is, in every work for God, and especially in
prayer, if the heart run with the tongue, it must be prepared by the Spirit of
God. Indeed the tongue is very apt, of itself, to run without either fear or
wisdom: but when it is the answer of the heart, and that such a heart as is
prepared by the Spirit of God, then it speaks so as God commands and doth
desire.
They are mighty words of David, where he saith, that he lifteth his heart and
his soul to God (Psa 25:1). It is a great work for any man without the
strength of the Spirit, and therefore I conceive that this is one of the great
reasons why the Spirit of God is called a Spirit of supplications, (Zech
12:10), because it is that which helpeth the heart when it supplicates indeed
to do it; and therefore saith Paul, "Praying with all prayer and supplication
in the Spirit" (Eph 6:18). And so in my text, "I will pray with the Spirit."
Prayer, without the heart be in it, is like a sound without life; and a heart,
without it be lifted up of the Spirit, will never pray to God.
Eighth. As the heart must be lifted up by the Spirit, if it pray aright, so
also it must be held up by the Spirit when it is up, if it continue to pray
aright. I do not know what, or how it is with others' hearts, whether they be
lifted up by the Spirit of God, and so continued, or no: but this I am sure
of, First, That it is impossible that all the prayer-books that men have made
in the world, should lift up, or prepare the heart; that is the work of the
great God himself. And, in the second place, I am sure that they are as far
from keeping it up, when it is up. And indeed here is the life of prayer, to
have the heart kept with God in the duty. It was a great matter for Moses to
keep his hands lifted up to God in prayer; but how much more then to keep the
heart in it! (Exo 17:12).
The want of this is that which God complains of; that they draw nigh to him
with their mouth, and honour him with their lips, but their hearts were far
from him (Isa 29:13; Eze 33), but chiefly that they walk after the
commandments and traditions of men, as the scope of Matthew 15:8, 9 doth
testify. And verily, may I but speak my own experience, and from that tell you
the difficulty of praying to God as I ought, it is enough to make your poor,
blind, carnal men to entertain strange thoughts of me. For, as for my heart,
when I go to pray, I find it so loth to go to God, and when it is with him, so
loth to stay with him, that many times I am forced in my prayers, first to beg
of God that he would take mine heart, and set it on himself in Christ, and
when it is there, that he would keep it there. Nay, many times I know not what
to pray for, I am so blind, nor how to pray, I am so ignorant; only, blessed
be grace, the Spirit helps our infirmities (Psa 86:11).
O! the starting-holes that the heart hath in the time of prayer; none knows
how many bye-ways the heart hath, and back- lanes, to slip away from the
presence of God. How much pride also, if enabled with expressions. How much
hypocrisy, if before others. And how little conscience is there made of prayer
between God and the soul in secret, unless the Spirit of supplication be there
to help? When the Spirit gets into the heart, then there is prayer indeed, and
not till then.
Ninth. The soul that doth rightly pray, it must be in and with the help and
strength of the Spirit; because it is impossible that a man should express
himself in prayer without it. When I say, it is impossible for a man to
express himself in prayer without it, I mean, that it is impossible that the
heart, in a sincere and sensible affectionate way, should pour out itself
before God, with those groans and sighs that come from a truly praying heart,
without the assistance of the Spirit. It is not the mouth that is the main
thing to be looked at in prayer, but whether the heart is so full of affection
and earnestness in prayer with God, that it is impossible to express their
sense and desire; for then a man desires indeed, when his desires are so
strong, many, and mighty, that all the words, tears, and groans that can come
from the heart, cannot utter them: "The Spirit — helpeth our infirmities, -
and maketh intercession for us with [sighs and] groanings which cannot be
uttered" (Rom 8:26).
That is but poor prayer which is only discovered in so many words. A man that
truly prays one prayer, shall after that never be able to express with his
mouth or pen the unutterable desires, sense, affection, and longing that went
to God in that prayer.
The best prayers have often more groans than words: and those words that it
hath are but a lean and shallow representation of the heart, life, and spirit
of that prayer. You do not find any words of prayer, that we read of, come out
of the mouth of Moses, when he was going out of Egypt, and was followed by
Pharaoh, and yet he made heaven ring again with his cry (Exo 14:15). But it
was inexpressible and unsearchable groans and cryings of his soul in and with
the Spirit. God is the God of spirits, and his eyes look further than at the
outside of any duty whatsoever (Num 16:22). I doubt this is but little thought
on by the most of them that would be looked upon as a praying people (I Sam
16:7).
The nearer a man comes in any work that God commands him to the doing of it
according to his will, so much the more hard and difficult it is; and the
reason is, because man, as man, is not able to do it. But prayer, as
aforesaid, is not only a duty, but one of the most eminent duties, and
therefore so much the more difficult: therefore Paul knew what he said, when
he said, "I will pray with the Spirit." He knew well it was not what others
writ or said that could make him a praying person; nothing less than the
Spirit could do it.
Tenth. It must be with the Spirit, or else as there will be a failing in the
act itself, so there will be a failing, yea, a fainting, in the prosecution of
the work. Prayer is an ordinance of God, that must continue with a soul so
long as it is on this side glory. But, as I said before, it is not possible
for a man to get up his heart to God in prayer; so it is as difficult to keep
it there, without the assistance of the Spirit. And if so, then for a man to
continue from time to time in prayer with God, it must of necessity be with
the Spirit.
Christ tells us, that men ought always to pray, and not to faint (Luke 18:1).
And again tells us, that this is one definition of a hypocrite, that either he
will not continue in prayer, or else if he do it, it will not be in the power,
that is, in the spirit of prayer, but in the form, for a pretence only (Job
27:10; Matt 23:14). It is the easiest thing of a hundred to fall from the
power to the form, but it is the hardest thing of many to keep in the life,
spirit, and power of any one duty, especially prayer; that is such a work,
that a man without the help of the Spirit cannot so much as pray once, much
less continue, without it, in a sweet praying frame, and in praying, so to
pray as to have his prayers ascend into the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth.
Jacob did not only begin, but held it: "I will not let thee go, unless thou
bless me" (Gen 32). So did the rest of the godly (Hosea 12:4). But this could
not be without the spirit of prayer. It is through the Spirit that we have
access to the Father (Eph 2:18).
The same is a remarkable place in Jude, when he stirreth up the saints by the
judgment of God upon the wicked to stand fast, and continue to hold out in the
faith of the gospel, as one excellent means thereto, without which he knew
they would never be able to do it. Saith he, "Building up yourselves on your
most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost" (Jude 20). As if he had said,
Brethren, as eternal life is laid up for the persons that hold out only, so
you cannot hold out unless you continue praying in the Spirit. The great cheat
that the devil and antichrist delude the world withal, it is to make them
continue in the form of any duty, the form of preaching, of hearing, or
praying, &c. These are they that have "a form of godliness, but denying the
power thereof; from such turn away" (II Tim 3:5).
Here followeth the third thing; to wit,
THIRD. And now to the next thing, what it is to pray with the Spirit, and
to pray with the understanding also. For the apostle puts a clear distinction
between praying with the Spirit, and praying with the Spirit and
understanding: therefore when he saith, "he will pray with the Spirit," he
adds, "and I will pray with the understanding ALSO." This distinction was
occasioned through the Corinthians not observing that it was their duty to do
what they did to the edification of themselves and others too: whereas they
did it for their own commendations. So I judge: for many of them having
extraordinary gifts, as to speak with divers tongues, &c., therefore they were
more for those mighty gifts than they were for the edifying of their brethren;
which was the cause that Paul wrote this chapter to them, to let them
understand, that though extraordinary gifts were excellent, yet to do what
they did to the edification of the church was more excellent. For, saith the
apostle, "if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my
understanding," and also the understanding of others, "is unfruitful" (I Cor
14:3, 4, 12, 19, 24, 25. Read the scope of the whole chapter). Therefore, "I
will pray with the Spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also."
It is expedient then that the understanding should be occupied in prayer, as
well as the heart and mouth: "I will pray with the Spirit, and I will pray
with the understanding also." That which is done with understanding, is done
more effectually, sensibly, and heartily, as I shall show farther anon, than
that which is done without it; which made the apostle pray for the Colossians,
that God would fill them "with the knowledge of his will, in all wisdom and
spiritual understanding" (Col 1:9). And for the Ephesians, that God would give
unto them "the spirit of wisdom and revelation, in the knowledge of him" (Eph
1:17). And so for the Philippians, that God would make them abound "in
knowledge, and in all judgment" (Phil 1:9). A suitable understanding is good
in everything a man undertakes, either civil or spiritual; and therefore it
must be desired by all them that would be a praying people. In my speaking to
this, I shall show you what it is to pray with understanding.
Understanding is to be taken both for speaking in our mother- tongue, and also
experimentally. I pass the first, and treat only on the second.
For the making of right prayers, it is to be required that there should be a
good or spiritual understanding in all them who pray to God.
First. To pray with understanding, is to pray as being instructed by the
Spirit in the understanding of the want of those things which the soul is to
pray for. Though a man be in never so much need of pardon of sin, and
deliverance from wrath to come, yet if he understand not this, he will either
not desire them at all, or else be so cold and lukewarm in his desires after
them, that God will even loathe his frame of spirit in asking for them. Thus
it was with the church of the Laodiceans, they wanted knowledge or spiritual
understanding; they knew not that they were poor, wretched, blind, and naked.
The cause whereof made them, and all their services, so loathsome to Christ,
that he threatens to spew them out of his mouth (Rev 3:16, 17). Men without
understanding may say the same words in prayer as others do; but if there be
an understanding in the one, and none in the other, there is, O there is a
mighty difference in speaking the very same words! The one speaking from a
spiritual understanding of those things that he in words desires, and the
other words it only, and there is all.
Second. Spiritual understanding espieth in the heart of God a readiness and
willingness to give those things to the soul that it stands in need of. David
by this could guess at the very thoughts of God towards him (Psa 40:5). And
thus it was with the woman of Canaan; she did by faith and a right
understanding discern, beyond all the rough carriage of Christ, tenderness and
willingness in his heart to save, which caused her to be vehement and earnest,
yea, restless, until she did enjoy the mercy she stood in need of (Matt
15:22-28).
And understanding of the willingness that is in the heart of God to save
sinners, there is nothing will press the soul more to seek after God, and to
cry for pardon, than it. If a man should see a pearl worth an hundred pounds
lie in a ditch, yet if he understood not the value of it, he would lightly
pass it by: but if he once get the knowledge of it, he would venture up to the
neck for it. So it is with souls concerning the things of God: if a man once
get an understanding of the worth of them, then his heart, nay, the very
strength of his soul, runs after them, and he will never leave crying till he
have them. The two blind men in the gospel, because they did certainly know
that Jesus, who was going by them, was both able and willing to heal such
infirmities as they were afflicted with: therefore they cried, and the more
they were rebuked, the more they cried (Matt 20:29- 31).
Third. The understanding being spiritually enlightened, hereby there is the
way, as aforesaid, discovered, through which the soul should come unto God;
which gives great encouragement unto it. It is else with a poor soul, as with
one who hath a work to do, and if it be not done, the danger is great; if it
be done, so is the advantage. But he knows not how to begin, nor how to
proceed; and so, through discouragement, lets all alone, and runs the hazard.
Fourth. The enlightened understanding sees largeness enough in the promises to
encourage it to pray; which still adds to it strength to strength. As when men
promise such and such things to all that will come for them, it is great
encouragement to those that know what promises are made, to come and ask for
them.
Fifth. The understanding being enlightened, way is made for the soul to come
to God with suitable arguments, sometimes in a way of expostulation, as Jacob
(Gen 32:9). Sometimes in way of supplication, yet not in a verbal way only,
but even from the heart there is forced by the Spirit, through the
understanding, such effectual arguments as moveth the heart of God. When
Ephraim gets a right understanding of his own unseemly carriages towards the
Lord, then he begins to bemoan himself (Jer 31:18-20). And in bemoaning of
himself, he used such arguments with the Lord, that it affects his heart,
draws out forgiveness, and makes Ephraim pleasant in his eyes through Jesus
Christ our Lord: "I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus," saith
God, "Thou hast chastised me, and I was chastised; as a bullock unaccustomed
to the yoke; turn thou me, and I shall be turned; for thou art the Lord my
God. Surely after that I was turned, I repented, and after that I was
instructed," or had a right understanding of myself, "I smote upon my thigh, I
was ashamed; yea, even confounded; because I did bear the reproach of my
youth." These be Ephraim's complaints and bemoanings of himself; at which the
Lord breaks forth into these heart-melting expressions, saying, "Is Ephraim my
dear son? Is he a pleasant child? For since I spake against him, I do
earnestly remember him still; therefore my bowels are troubled for him; I will
surely have mercy upon him, saith the Lord." Thus, you see, that as it is
required to pray with the Spirit, so it is to pray with the understanding
also. And to illustrate what hath been spoken by a similitude:–set the case,
there should come two a-begging to your door; the one is a poor, lame,
wounded, and almost starved creature, the other is a healthful lusty person;
these two use the same words in their begging; the one saith he is almost
starved, so doth the other: but yet the man that is indeed the poor, lame, or
maimed person, he speaks with more sense, feeling, and understanding of the
misery that is mentioned in their begging, than the other can do; and it is
discovered more by his affectionate speaking, his bemoaning himself. His pain
and poverty make him speak more in a spirit of lamentation than the other, and
he shall be pitied sooner than the other, by all those that have the least
dram of natural affection or pity. Just thus it is with God: there are some
who out of custom and formality go and pray; there are others who go in the
bitterness of their spirits: the one he prays out of bare notion and naked
knowledge; the other hath his words forced from him by the anguish of his
soul. Surely that is the man that God will look at, "even to him that is
poor," of an humble "and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word" (Isa
66:2).
Sixth. An understanding well enlightened is of admirable use also, both as to
the matter and manner of prayer. He that hath his understanding well
exercised, to discern between good and evil, and in it placed a sense either
of the misery of man, or the mercy of God; that soul hath no need of the
writings of other men to teach him by forms of prayer. For as he that feels
the pain needs not to be taught to cry O! even so he that hath his
understanding opened by the Spirit needs not so to be taught of other men's
prayers, as that he cannot pray without them. The present sense, feeling, and
pressure that lieth upon his spirit, provokes him to groan out his request
unto the Lord. When David had the pains of hell catching hold on him, and the
sorrows of hell compassing him about, he needs not a bishop in a surplice to
teach him to say, "O Lord, I beseech thee, deliver my soul" (Psa 116:3, 4). Or
to look into a book, to teach him in a form to pour out his heart before God.
It is the nature of the heart of sick men, in their pain and sickness, to vent
itself for ease, by dolorous groans and complainings to them that stand by.
Thus it was with David, in Psalm 38:1-12. And thus, blessed be the Lord, it is
with them that are endued with the grace of God.
Seventh. It is necessary that there be an enlightened understanding, to the
end that the soul be kept in a continuation of the duty of prayer.
The people of God are not ignorant how many wiles, tricks, and temptations the
devil hath to make a poor soul, who is truly willing to have the Lord Jesus
Christ, and that upon Christ's terms too; I say, to tempt that soul to be
weary of seeking the face of God, and to think that God is not willing to have
mercy on such a one as him. Ay, saith Satan, thou mayest pray indeed, but thou
shalt not prevail. Thou seest thine heart is hard, cold, dull, and dread; thou
dost not pray with the Spirit, thou dost not pray in good earnest, thy
thoughts are running after other things, when thou pretendest to pray to God.
Away hypocrite, go no further, it is but in vain to strive any longer! Here
now, if the soul be not well informed in its understanding, it will presently
cry out, "the Lord hath forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me" (Isa
49:14). Whereas the soul rightly informed and enlightened saith, Well, I will
seek the Lord, and wait; I will not leave off, though the Lord keep silence,
and speak not one word of comfort (Isa 40:27). He loved Jacob dearly, and yet
he made him wrestle before he had the blessing (Gen 32:25-27). Seeming delays
in God are no tokens of his displeasure; he may hide his face from his dearest
saints (Isa 8:17). He loves to keep his people praying, and to find them ever
knocking at the gate of heaven; it may be, says the soul, the Lord tries me,
or he loves to hear me groan out my condition before him.
The woman of Canaan would not take seeming denials for real ones; she knew the
Lord was gracious, and the Lord will avenge his people, though he bear long
with them (Luke 18:1- 6). The Lord hath waited longer upon me than I have
waited upon him; and thus it was with David, "I waited patiently," saith he;
that is, it was long before the Lord answered me, though at the last "he
inclined" his ear "unto me, and heard my cry" (Psa 40:1). And the most
excellent remedy for this is, an understanding well informed and enlightened.
Alas, how many poor souls are there in the world, that truly fear the Lord,
who, because they are not well informed in their understanding, are oft ready
to give up all for lost, upon almost every trick and temptation of Satan! The
Lord pity them, and help them to "pray with the Spirit, and with the
understanding also." Much of mine own experience could I here discover; when I
have been in my fits of agony of spirit, I have been strongly persuaded to
leave off, and to seek the Lord no longer;[10] but being made to understand
what great sinners the Lord hath had mercy upon, and how large his promises
were still to sinners; and that it was not the whole, but the sick, not the
righteous, but the sinner, not the full, but the empty, that he extended his
grace and mercy unto. This made me, through the assistance of his Holy Spirit,
to cleave to him, to hang upon him, and yet to cry, though for the present he
made no answer; and the Lord help all his poor, tempted, and afflicted people
to do the like, and to continue, though it be long, according to the saying of
the prophet (Hab 2:3). And to help them (to that end) to pray, not by the
inventions of men, and their stinted forms, but "with the Spirit, and with the
understanding also."
And now to answer a query or two, and so to pass on to the next thing.
Query First. But what would you have us poor creatures to do that cannot tell
how to pray? The Lord knows I know not either how to pray, or what to pray
for.
Answ. Poor heart! thou canst not, thou complainest, pray. Canst thou see thy
misery? Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature under the curse of his
law? If so, do not mistake, I know thou dost groan and that most bitterly. I
am persuaded thou canst scarcely be found doing any thing in thy calling, but
prayer breaketh from thy heart. Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from
every corner of thy house? (Rom 8:26). I know it is thus; and so also doth
thine own sorrowful heart witness thy tears, thy forgetfulness of thy calling,
&c. Is not thy heart so full of desires after the things of another world,
that many times thou dost even forget the things of this world? Prithee read
this scripture, Job 23:12.
Query Second. Yea, but when I go into secret, and intend to pour out my soul
before God, I can scarce say anything at all.
Answ. 1. Ah! Sweet soul! It is not thy words that God so much regards, as that
he will not mind thee, except thou comest before him with some eloquent
oration. His eye is on the brokenness of thine heart; and that it is that
makes the very bowels of the Lord to run over. "A broken and a contrite heart,
O God, thou wilt not despise" (Psa 51:17).
2. The stopping of thy words may arise from overmuch trouble in thy heart.
David was so troubled sometimes, that he could not speak (Psa 77:3, 4). But
this may comfort all such sorrowful hearts as thou art, that though thou canst
not through the anguish of thy spirit speak much, yet the Holy Spirit stirs up
in thine heart groans and sighs, so much the more vehement: when the mouth is
hindered, yet the spirit is not. Moses, as aforesaid, made heaven ring again
with his prayers, when (that we read of) not one word came out of his mouth
(Exo 14:15). But,
3. If thou wouldst more fully express thyself before the Lord, study, first,
Thy filthy estate; secondly, God's promises; thirdly, The heart of Christ.
Which thou mayest know or discern, (1.) By his condescension and bloodshed.
(2.) By the mercy he hath extended to great sinners formerly, and plead thine
own vileness, by way of bemoaning; Christ's blood by way of expostulation; and
in thy prayers, let the mercy that he hath extended to other great sinners,
together with his rich promises of grace, be much upon thy heart. Yet let me
counsel thee, (a.) Take heed that thou content not thyself with words. (b.)
That thou do not think that God looks only at them neither. But, (c.) However,
whether thy words be few or many, let thine heart go with them; and then shalt
thou seek him, and find him, when thou shalt seek him with thy whole heart
(Jer 29:13).
Objection. But though you have seemed to speak against any other way of
praying but by the Spirit, yet here you yourself can give direction how to
pray.
Answ. We ought to prompt one another forward to prayer, though we ought not to
make for each other forms of prayer. To exhort to pray with Christian
direction is one thing, and to make stinted forms for the tying up the Spirit
of God to them is another thing. The apostle gives them no form to pray
withal, yet directs to prayer (Eph 6:18; Rom 15:30-32). Let no man therefore
conclude, that because we may with allowance give instructions and directions
to pray, that therefore it is lawful to make for each other forms of prayer.
Object. But if we do not use forms of prayer, how shall we teach our children
to pray?
Answ. My judgment is, that men go the wrong way to teach their children to
pray, in going about so soon to teach them any set company of words, as is the
common use of poor creatures to do.
For to me it seems to be a better way for people betimes to tell their
children what cursed creatures they are, and how they are under the wrath of
God by reason of original and actual sin; also to tell them the nature of
God's wrath, and the duration of the misery; which if they conscientiously do,
they would sooner teach their children to pray than they do. The way that men
learn to pray, it is by conviction for sin; and this is the way to make our
sweet babes do so too. But the other way, namely, to be busy in teaching
children forms of prayer, before they know any thing else, it is the next way
to make them cursed hypocrites, and to puff them up with pride. Teach
therefore your children to know their wretched state and condition; tell them
of hell-fire and their sins, of damnation, and salvation; the way to escape
the one, and to enjoy the other, if you know it yourselves, and this will make
tears run down your sweet babes' eyes, and hearty groans flow from their
hearts; and then also you may tell them to whom they should pray, and through
whom they should pray: you may tell them also of God's promises, and his
former grace extended to sinners, according to the word.
Ah! Poor sweet babes, the Lord open their eyes, and make them holy Christians.
Saith David, "Come ye children, hearken unto me; I will teach you the fear of
the Lord" (Psa 34:11). He doth not say, I will muzzle you up in a form of
prayer; but "I will teach you the fear of the Lord"; which is, to see their
sad states by nature, and to be instructed in the truth of the gospel, which
doth through the Spirit beget prayer in every one that in truth learns it. And
the more you teach them this, the more will their hearts run out to God in
prayer. God never did account Paul a praying man, until he was a convinced and
converted man; no more will it be with any else (Acts 9:11).
Object. But we find that the disciples desired that Christ would teach them to
pray, as John also taught his disciples; and that thereupon he taught them
that form called the LORD'S PRAYER.
Answ. 1. To be taught by Christ, is that which not only they, but we desire;
and seeing he is not here in his person to teach us, the Lord teach us by his
Word and Spirit; for the Spirit it is which he hath said he would send to
supply in his room when he went away, as it is (John 14:16; 16:7).
2. As to that called a form, I cannot think that Christ intended it as a
stinted form of prayer. (1.) Because he himself layeth it down diversely, as
is to be seen, if you compare Matthew 6 and Luke 11. Whereas if he intended it
as a set form, it must not have been so laid down, for a set form is so many
words and no more. (2.) We do not find that the apostles did ever observe it
as such; neither did they admonish others so to do. Search all their epistles,
yet surely they, both for knowledge to discern and faithfulness to practice,
were as eminent as any HE ever since in the world which would impose it.
[3.] But, in a word, Christ by those words, "Our Father," &c., doth instruct
his people what rules they should observe in their prayers to God. (1.) That
they should pray in faith. (2.) To God in the heavens. (3.) For such things as
are according to his will, &c. Pray thus, or after this manner.
Object. But Christ bids pray for the Spirit; this implieth that men without
the Spirit may notwithstanding pray and be heard. (See Luke 11:9-13).
Answ. The speech of Christ there is directed to his own (verse 1). Christ's
telling of them that God would give his Holy Spirit to them that ask him, is
to be understood of giving more of the Holy Spirit; for still they are the
disciples spoken to, which had a measure of the Spirit already; for he saith,
"when ye pray, say, Our Father," (verse 2) I say unto you (verse 8). And I say
unto you, (verse 9) "If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto
your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit
to them that ask him," (verse 13). Christians ought to pray for the Spirit,
that is, for more of it, though God hath endued them with it already.
Quest. Then would you have none pray but those that know they are the
disciples of Christ?
Answ. Yes.
1. Let every soul that would be saved pour out itself to God, though it cannot
through temptation conclude itself a child of God. And,
2. I know if the grace of God be in thee, it will be as natural to thee to
groan out thy condition, as it is for a sucking child to cry for the breast.
Prayer is one of the first things that discovers a man to be a Christian (Acts
9:12). But yet if it be right, it is such prayer as followeth. (1.) To desire
God in Christ, for himself, for his holiness, love, wisdom, and glory. For
right prayer, as it runs only to God through Christ, so it centers in him, and
in him alone. "Whom have I in heaven but thee? And there is none upon earth
that I desire," long for, or seek after, "beside thee" (Psa 73:25). (2.) That
the soul might enjoy continually communion with him, both here and hereafter.
"I shall be satisfied, when I awake with" thine image, or in "thy likeness,"
(Psa 17:15). "For in this we groan earnestly," &c., (II Cor 5:2). (3.) Right
prayer is accompanied with a continual labour after that which is prayed for.
"My soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch for the morning" (Psa
130:6). "I will rise now, I will seek him whom my soul loveth" (Song 3:2). For
mark, I beseech you, there are two things that provoke to prayer. The one is a
detestation to sin, and the things of this life; the other is a longing desire
after communion with God, in a holy and undefiled state and inheritance.
Compare but this one thing with most of the prayers that are made by men, and
you shall find them but mock prayers, and the breathings of an abominable
spirit; for even the most of men either do pray at all, or else only endeavour
to mock God and the world by so doing; for do but compare their prayer and the
course of their lives together, and you may easily see that the thing included
in their prayer is the least looked after by their lives. O sad hypocrites!
Thus have I briefly showed you, FIRST, What prayer is; SECOND, What it is to
pray with the Spirit; THIRD, What it is to pray with the Spirit, and with the
understanding also.
I shall now speak a word or two of application, and so conclude with, First, A word of information; Second, A word of encouragement; Third, A word of rebuke.
For the first to inform you; as prayer is the duty of every one of the
children of God, and carried on by the Spirit of Christ in the soul; so every
one that doth but offer to take upon him to pray to the Lord, had need be very
wary, and go about that work especially with the dread of God, as well as with
hopes of the mercy of God through Jesus Christ.
Prayer is an ordinance of God, in which a man draws very near to God; and
therefore it calleth for so much the more of the assistance of the grace of
God to help a soul to pray as becomes one that is in the presence of him. It
is a shame for a man to behave himself irreverently before a king, but a sin
to do so before God. And as a king, if wise, is not pleased with an oration
made up with unseemly words and gestures, so God takes no pleasure in the
sacrifice of fools (Eccl 5:1, 4). It is not long discourses, nor eloquent
tongues, that are the things which are pleasing in the ears of the Lord; but a
humble, broken, and contrite heart, that is sweet in the nostrils of the
heavenly Majesty (Psa 51:17; Isa 57:15). Therefore for information, know that
there are these five things that are obstructions to prayer, and even make
void the requests of the creature.
1. When men regard iniquity in their hearts, at the time of their prayers
before God. "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear" my
prayer (Psa 66:18). For the preventing of temptation, that by the
misunderstanding of this may seize thy heart, when there is a secret love to
that very thing which thou with thy dissembling lips dost ask for strength
against. For this is the wickedness of man's heart, that it will even love,
and hold fast, that which with the mouth it prays against: and of this sort
are they that honour God with their mouth, but their heart is far from him
(Isa 29:13; Eze 33:31). O! how ugly would it be in our eyes, if we should see
a beggar ask an alms, with an intention to throw it to the dogs! Or that
should say with one breath, Pray, you bestow this upon me; and with the next,
I beseech you, give it me not! And yet thus it is with these kind of persons;
with their mouth they say, "Thy will be done"; and with their hearts nothing
less. With their mouth say, "Hallowed be thy name"; and with their hearts and
lives thy delight to dishonour him all the day long. These be the prayers that
become sin (Psa 109:7), and though they put them up often, yet the Lord will
never answer them (II Sam 22:42).
2. When men pray for a show to be heard, and thought somebody in religion, and
the like; these prayers also fall far short of God's approbation, and are
never like to be answered, in reference to eternal life. There are two sorts
of men that pray to this end.
(1.) Your trencher chaplains, that thrust themselves into great men's
families, pretending the worship of God, when in truth the great business is
their own bellies; and were notably painted out by Ahab's prophets, and also
Nebuchadnezzar's wise men, who, though they pretended great devotion, yet
their lusts and their bellies were the great things aimed at by them in all
their pieces of devotion.
(2.) Them also that seek repute and applause for their eloquent terms, and
seek more to tickle the ears and heads of their hearers than anything else.
These be they that pray to be heard of men, and have all their reward already
(Matt 6:5). These persons are discovered thus, (a.) They eye only their
auditory in their expressions. (b.) They look for commendation when they have
done. (c.) Their hearts either rise or fall according to their praise or
enlargement. (d.) The length of their prayer pleaseth them; and that it might
be long, they will vainly repeat things over and over (Matt 6:7). They study
for enlargements, but look not from what heart they come; they look for
returns, but it is the windy applause of men. And therefore they love not to
be in their chamber, but among company: and if at any time conscience thrusts
them into their closet, yet hypocrisy will cause them to be heard in the
streets; and when their mouths have done going their prayers are ended; for
they wait not to hearken what the Lord will say (Psa 85:8).
3. A third sort of prayer that will not be accepted of God, it is, when either
they pray for wrong things, or if for right things, yet that the thing prayed
for might be spent upon their lusts, and laid out to wrong ends. Some have
not, because they ask not, saith James, and others ask and have not, because
they ask amiss, that they may consume it on their lusts (James 4: 2-4). Ends
contrary to God's will is a great argument with God to frustrate the petitions
presented before him. Hence it is that so many pray for this and that, and yet
receive it not. God answers them only with silence; they have their words for
their labour; and that is all. Object. But God hears some persons, though
their hearts be not right with him, as he did Israel, in giving quails, though
they spent them upon their lusts (Psa 106:14). Answ. If he doth, it is in
judgment, not in mercy. He gave them their desire indeed, but they had better
have been without it, for he "sent leanness into their soul" (Psa 106:15). Woe
be to that man that God answereth thus.
4. Another sort of prayers there are that are not answered; and those are such
as are made by men, and presented to God in their own persons only, without
their appearing in the Lord Jesus. For though God hath appointed prayer, and
promised to hear the prayer of the creature, yet not the prayer of any
creature that comes not in Christ. "If ye shall ask anything in my name." And
whether ye eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all in the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ (Col 3:17). "If ye shall ask anything in my name," &c., (John
14:13, 14), though you be never so devout, zealous, earnest and constant in
prayer, yet it is in Christ only that you must be heard and accepted. But,
alas! the most of men know not what it is to come to him in the name of the
Lord Jesus, which is the reason they either live wicked, pray wicked, and also
die wicked. Or else, that they attain to nothing else but what a mere natural
man may attain unto, as to be exact in word and deed betwixt man and man, and
only with the righteousness of the law to appear before God.
5. The last thing that hindereth prayer is, the form of it without the power.
It is an easy thing for men to be very hot for such things as forms of prayer,
as they are written in a book; but yet they are altogether forgetful to
inquire with themselves, whether they have the spirit and power of prayer.
These men are like a painted man, and their prayers like a false voice. They
in person appear as hypocrites, and their prayers are an abomination (Prov
28:9). When they say they have been pouring out their souls to God he saith
they have been howling like dogs (Hosea 7:14).
When therefore thou intendest, or art minded to pray to the Lord of heaven and
earth, consider these following particulars. 1. Consider seriously what thou
wantest. Do not, as many who in their words only beat the air, and ask for
such things as indeed they do not desire, nor see that they stand in need
thereof. 2. When thou seest what thou wantest, keep to that, and take heed
thou pray sensibly.
Object. But I have a sense of nothing; then, by your argument, I must not pray
at all.
Answ. 1. If thou findest thyself senseless in some sad measure, yet thou canst
not complain of that senselessness, but by being sensible there is a sense of
senselessness. According to thy sense, then, that thou hast of the need of
anything, so pray; (Luke 8:9), and if thou art sensible of thy senselessness,
pray the Lord to make thee sensible of whatever thou findest thine heart
senseless of. This was the usual practice of the holy men of God. "Lord, make
me to know mine end," saith David (Psa 39:4). "Lord, open to us this parable,"
said the disciples (Luke 8:9). And to this is annexed the promise, "Call unto
me and I will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things which thou
knowest not," that thou art not sensible of (Jer 33:3). But,
Answ. 2. Take heed that thy heart go to God as well as thy mouth. Let not thy
mouth go any further than thou strivest to draw thine heart along with it.
David would lift his heart and soul to the Lord; and good reason; for so far
as a man's mouth goeth along without his heart, so far it is but lip-labour
only; and though God calls for, and accepteth the calves of the lips, yet the
lips without the heart argueth, not only senselessness, but our being without
sense of our senselessness; and therefore if thou hast a mind to enlarge in
prayer before God, see that it be with thy heart.
Answ. 3. Take heed of affecting expressions, and so to please thyself with the
use of them, that thou forget not the life of prayer.
I shall conclude this use with a caution or two.
Caution 1. And the first is, take heed thou do not throw off prayer, through
sudden persuasions that thou hast not the Spirit, neither prayest thereby. It
is the great work of the devil to do his best, or rather worst, against the
best prayers. He will flatter your false dissembling hypocrites, and feed them
with a thousand fancies of well-doing, when their very duties of prayer, and
all other, stink in the nostrils of God, when he stands at a poor Joshua's
hand to resist him, that is, to persuade him, that neither his person nor
performances are accepted of God (Isa 65:5; Zech 3:1). Take heed, therefore,
of such false conclusions and groundless discouragements; and though such
persuasions do come in upon thy spirit, be so far from being discouraged by
them, that thou use them to put thee upon further sincerity and restlessness
of spirit, in thy approaching to God.
Caution 2. As such sudden temptations should not stop thee from prayer, and
pouring out thy soul to God; so neither should thine own heart's corruptions
hinder thee. (Let not thy corruptions stop thy prayers). It may be thou mayest
find in thee all those things before mentioned, and that they will be
endeavouring to put forth themselves in thy praying to him. Thy business then
is to judge them, to pray against them, and to lay thyself so much the more at
the foot of God, in a sense of thy own vileness, and rather make an argument
from thy vileness and corruption of heart, to plead with God for justifying
and sanctifying grace, than an argument of discouragement and despair. David
went this way. "O Lord," saith he, "pardon mine iniquity, for it is great"
(Psa 25:11).
And therefore, secondly, to speak a word by way of encouragement, to the
poor, tempted, and cast down soul, to pray to God through Christ. Though all
prayer that is accepted of God in reference to eternal life must be in the
Spirit–for that only maketh intercession for us according to the will of God,
(Rom 8:27)–yet because many poor souls may have the Holy Spirit working on
them, and stirring of them to groan unto the Lord for mercy, though through
unbelief they do not, nor, for the present, cannot believe that they are the
people of God, such as he delights in; yet forasmuch as the truth of grace may
be in them, therefore I shall, to encourage them, lay down further these few
particulars.
1. That scripture in Luke 11:8 is very encouraging to any poor soul that doth
hunger after Christ Jesus. In verses 5-7, he speaketh a parable of a man that
went to his friend to borrow three loaves, who, because he was in bed, denied
him; yet for his importunity-sake, he did arise and give him, clearly
signifying that though poor souls, through the weakness of their faith, cannot
see that they are the friends of God, yet they should never leave asking,
seeking, and knocking at God's door for mercy. Mark, saith Christ, "I say unto
you, though he will not rise and give him, because he is his friend; yet
because of his importunity," or restless desires, "he will rise and give him
as many as he needeth." Poor heart! thou criest out that God will not regard
thee, thou dost not find that thou art a friend to him, but rather an enemy in
thine heart by wicked works (Col 1:21). And thou art as though thou didst hear
the Lord saying to thee, Trouble me not, I cannot give unto thee, as he in the
parable; yet I say, continue knocking, crying, moaning, and bewailing thyself.
I tell thee, "though he will not rise and give thee, because thou art his
friend; yet, because of thy importunity, he will arise and give thee as many
as thou needest." The same in effect you have discovered, Luke 18, in the
parable of the unjust judge and the poor widow; her importunity prevailed with
him. And verily, mine own experience tells me, that there is nothing that doth
more prevail with God than importunity. Is it not so with you in respect of
your beggars that come to your door? Though you have no heart to give them
anything at their first asking, yet if they follow you, bemoaning themselves,
and will take no nay without an alms, you will give them; for their continual
begging overcometh you. Are there bowels in you that are wicked, and will they
be wrought upon by an importuning beggar? Go thou and do the like. It is a
prevailing motive, and that by good experience, he will arise and give thee as
many as thou needest (Luke 11:8).
2. Another encouragement for a poor trembling convinced soul is to consider
the place, throne, or seat, on which the great God hath placed himself to hear
the petitions and prayers of poor creatures; and that is a "throne of grace"
(Heb 4:16). "The mercy-seat" (Exo 25:22). Which signifieth that in the days of
the gospel God hath taken up his seat, his abiding-place, in mercy and
forgiveness; and from thence he doth intend to hear the sinner, and to commune
with him, as he saith (Exo 25:22),–speaking before of the mercy-seat–"And
there I will meet with thee," mark, it is upon the mercy-seat: "There I will
meet with thee, and" there "I will commune with thee, from above the
mercy-seat." Poor souls! They are very apt to entertain strange thoughts of
God, and his carriage towards them: and suddenly to conclude that God will
have no regard unto them, when yet he is upon the mercy-seat, and hath taken
up his place on purpose there, to the end he may hear and regard the prayers
of poor creatures. If he had said, I will commune with thee from my throne of
judgment, then indeed you might have trembled and fled from the face of the
great and glorious Majesty. But when he saith he will hear and commune with
souls upon the throne of grace, or from the mercy-seat, this should encourage
thee, and cause thee to hope, nay, to "come boldly unto the throne of grace,
that thou mayest obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need" (Heb
4:16).
3. There is yet another encouragement to continue in prayer with God: and that
is this:
As there is a mercy-seat, from whence God is willing to commune with poor
sinners; so there is also by his mercy-seat, Jesus Christ, who continually
besprinkleth it with his blood. Hence it is called "the blood of sprinkling"
(Heb 12:24). When the high-priest under the law was to go into the holiest,
where the mercy-seat was, he might not go in "without blood" (Heb 9:7).
Why so? Because, though God was upon the mercy-seat, yet he was perfectly just
as well as merciful. Now the blood was to stop justice from running out upon
the persons concerned in the intercession of the high-priest, as in Leviticus
16:13-17, to signify that all thine unworthiness that thou fearest should not
hinder thee from coming to God in Christ for mercy. Thou criest out that thou
art vile, and therefore God will not regard thy prayers; it is true, if thou
delight in thy vileness, and come to God out of a mere pretence. But if from a
sense of thy vileness thou do pour out thy heart to God, desiring to be saved
from the guilt, and cleansed from the filth, with all thy heart; fear not, thy
vileness will not cause the Lord to stop his ear from hearing of thee. The
value of the blood of Christ which is sprinkled upon the mercy-seat stops the
course of justice, and opens a floodgate for the mercy of the Lord to be
extended unto thee. Thou hast therefore, as aforesaid, "boldness to enter into
the holiest by the blood of Jesus," that hath made "a new and living way" for
thee, thou shalt not die (Heb 10:19, 20).
Besides, Jesus is there, not only to sprinkle the mercy-seat with his blood,
but he speaks, and his blood speaks; he hath audience, and his blood hath
audience; insomuch that God saith, when he doth but see the blood, he "will
pass over you, and the plague shall not be upon you," &c., (Exo 12:13).
I shall not detain you any longer. Be sober and humble; go to the Father in
the name of the Son, and tell him your case, in the assistance of the Spirit,
and you will then feel the benefit of praying with the Spirit and with the
understanding also.
1. This speaks sadly to you who never pray at all. "I will pray," saith the
apostle, and so saith the heart of them that are Christians. Thou then art not
a Christian that art not a praying person. The promise is that every one that
is righteous shall pray (Psa 32:6). Thou then art a wicked wretch that prayest
not. Jacob got the name of Israel by wrestling with God (Gen 32). And all his
children bare that name with him (Gal 6:16). But the people that forget
prayer, that call not on the name of the Lord, they have prayer made for them,
but it is such as this, "Pour out thy fury upon the heathen," O Lord, "and
upon the families that call not on thy name" (Jer 10:25). How likest thou
this, O thou that art so far off from pouring out thine heart before God, that
thou goest to bed like a dog, and risest like a hog, or a sot, and forgettest
to call upon God? What wilt thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because
thou couldst not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? Who will grieve for
thy sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? I tell thee, the
ravens, the dogs, &c., shall rise up in judgment against thee, for they will,
according to their kind, make signs, and a noise for something to refresh them
when they want it; but thou hast not the heart to ask for heaven, though thou
must eternally perish in hell, if thou hast it not.
2. This rebukes you that make it your business to slight, mock at, and
undervalue the Spirit, and praying by that. What will you do, when God shall
come to reckon for these things? You count it high treason to speak but a word
against the king, nay, you tremble at the thought of it; and yet in the
meantime you will blaspheme the Spirit of the Lord. Is God indeed to be
dallied with, and will the end be pleasant unto you? Did God send his Holy
Spirit into the hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it?
Is this to serve God? And doth this demonstrate the reformation of your
church? Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? O fearful! Can you
not be content to be damned for your sins against the law, but you must sin
against the Holy Ghost?
Must the holy, harmless, and undefiled Spirit of grace, the nature of God, the
promise of Christ, the Comforter of his children, that without which no man
can do any service acceptable to the Father–must this, I say, be the burthen
of your song, to taunt, deride, and mock at? If God sent Korah and his company
headlong to hell for speaking against Moses and Aaron, do you that mock at the
Spirit of Christ think to escape unpunished? (Num 16; Heb 10:29). Did you
never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling but one lie
against it? (Acts 5:1-8). Also to Simon Magus for but undervaluing of it?
(Acts 8:18-22). And will thy sin be a virtue, or go unrewarded with vengeance,
that makest it thy business to rage against, and oppose its office, service,
and help, that it giveth unto the children of God? It is a fearful thing to do
despite unto the Spirit of grace (Compare Matt 12:31, with Mark 3:28-30).
3. As this is the doom of those who do openly blaspheme the Holy Ghost, in a
way of disdain and reproach to its office and service: so also it is sad for
you, who resist the Spirit of prayer, by a form of man's inventing. A very
juggle of the devil, that the traditions of men should be of better esteem,
and more to be owned than the Spirit of prayer. What is this less than that
accursed abomination of Jeroboam, which kept many from going to Jerusalem, the
place and way of God's appointment to worship; and by that means brought such
displeasure from God upon them, as to this day is not appeased? (I Kings
12:26-33). One would think that God's judgments of old upon the hypocrites of
that day should make them that have heard of such things take heed and fear to
do so. Yet the doctors of our day are so far from taking of warning by the
punishment of others, that they do most desperately rush into the same
transgression, viz., to set up an institution of man, neither commanded nor
commended of God; and whosoever will not obey herein, they must be driven
either out of the land or the world.
Hath God required these things at your hands? If he hath, show us where? If
not, as I am sure he hath not, then what cursed presumption is it in any pope,
bishop, or other, to command that in the worship of God which he hath not
required? Nay further, it is not that part only of the form, which is several
texts of Scripture that we are commanded to say, but even all must be
confessed as the divine worship of God, notwithstanding those absurdities
contained therein, which because they are at large discovered by others, I
omit the rehearsal of them. Again, though a man be willing to live never so
peaceably, yet because he cannot, for conscience sake, own that for one of the
most eminent parts of God's worship, which he never commanded, therefore must
that man be looked upon as factious, seditious, erroneous, heretical–a
disparagement to the church, a seducer of the people, and what not? Lord, what
will be the fruit of these things, when for the doctrine of God there is
imposed, that is, more than taught, the traditions of men? Thus is the Spirit
of prayer disowned, and the form imposed; the Spirit debased, and the form
extolled; they that pray with the Spirit, though never so humble and holy,
counted fanatics; and they that pray with the form, though with that only,
counted the virtuous! And how will the favorers of such a practice answer that
Scripture, which commandeth that the church should turn away from such as have
"a form of godliness, and deny the power thereof"? (II Tim 3:5). And if I
should say that men that do these things aforesaid, do advance a form of
prayer of other men's making, above the spirit of prayer, it would not take
long time to prove it. For he that advanceth the book of Common Prayer above
the Spirit of prayer, he doth advance a form of men's making above it. But
this do all those who banish, or desire to banish, them that pray with the
Spirit of prayer; while they hug and embrace them that pray by that form only,
and that because they do it. Therefore they love and advance the form of their
own or others' inventing, before the Spirit of prayer, which is God's special
and gracious appointment.
If you desire the clearing of the minor, look into the jails in England, and
into the alehouses of the same; and I trow you will find those that plead for
the Spirit of prayer in the jail, and them that look after the form of men's
inventions only in the alehouse. It is evident also by the silencing of God's
dear ministers, though never so powerfully enabled by the Spirit of prayer, if
they in conscience cannot admit of that form of Common Prayer. If this be not
an exalting the Common Prayer Book above either praying by the Spirit, or
preaching the Word, I have taken my mark amiss. It is not pleasant for me to
dwell on this. The Lord in mercy turn the hearts of the people to seek more
after the Spirit of prayer; and in the strength of that, to pour out their
souls before the Lord. Only let me say it is a sad sign, that that which is
one of the most eminent parts of the pretended worship of God is
Antichristian, when it hath nothing but the tradition of men, and the strength
of persecution, to uphold or plead for it.
I shall conclude this discourse with this word of advice to all God's
people. 1. Believe that as sure as you are in the way of God you must meet
with temptations. 2. The first day therefore that thou dost enter into
Christ's congregation, look for them. 3. When they do come, beg of God to
carry thee through them. 4. Be jealous of thine own heart, that it deceive
thee not in thy evidences for heaven, nor in thy walking with God in this
world. 5. Take heed of the flatteries of false brethren. 6. Keep in the life
and power of truth. 7. Look most at the things which are not seen. 8. Take
heed of little sins. 9. Keep the promise warm upon thy heart. 10. Renew thy
acts of faith in the blood of Christ. 11. Consider the work of thy generation.
12. Count to run with the foremost therein.
Grace be with thee.
[1] Dr. Watt's Guide to Prayer.
[2] Vol iii., p. 346.
[3] Vol iii., p. 298.
???[4] Pilgrimage of Perfection, 4to, 1526, vol. iii., p. 9.
[5] Effectual fervent prayer is wrought in the heart by the Holy Ghost, and
those objects for which HE inclines the soul to pray are bestowed by God. Thus
great things were obtained by Jacob, (Gen 32:24-28); by Moses, (Exo 30:11-14;
Num 14:13- 21); by Joshua, (10:12-14); by Hezekiah, (II Kings 19:14-37); by
the woman of Canaan, (Matt 15:21-28). The effectual fervent prayer of a
righteous man availeth much, (James 5:16).–ED.
[6] How easy to forget all God's benefits, and how impossible it is to
remember them all!–ED.
[7] See Mr. Fox's citation of the mass, in the last volume of the Book of
Martyrs.
[8] Jesus Christ has opened the way to God the Father, by the sacrifice He
made for us upon the cross. The holiness and justice of God need not frighten
sinners and keep them back. Only let them cry to God in the name of Jesus,
only let them plead the atoning blood of Jesus, and they shall find God upon a
throne of grace, willing and ready to hear. The name of Jesus is a
never-failing passport to our prayers. In that name a man may draw near to God
with boldness, and ask with confidence. God has engaged to hear him. Reader,
think of this; is not this encouragement?–J. C. Ryle–ED.
[9] See Mr. Fox's Acts and Monuments, v.2.
[10] "In these days, I should find my heart to shut itself up against the
Lord, and against his holy Word: I have found my unbelief to set, as it were,
the shoulder to the door to keep him out."– Grace Abounding, No. 81.–ED.
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