
INSTITUTES OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
John Calvin
OF PRAYER

Translated by Henry Beveridge
1845
BOOK III.
CHAPTER XX.
OF PRAYER -- A PERPETUAL EXERCISE OF FAITH.
THE DAILY BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IT.
Outline
1. A general summary of what is contained in the
previous part of the work. A transition to the doctrine of prayer. Its
connection with the subject of faith.
2. Prayer defined. Its necessity and use.
3. Objection, that prayer seems useless, because
God already knows our wants. Answer, from the institution and end of
prayer. Confirmation by example. Its necessity and propriety.
Perpetually reminds us of our duty, and leads to meditation on divine
providence. Conclusion. Prayer a most useful exercise. This proved by
three passages of Scripture.
4. Rules to be observed in prayer. First,
reverence to God. How the mind ought to be composed.
5. All giddiness of mind must be excluded, and
all our feelings seriously engaged. This confirmed by the form of
lifting the hand in prayer. We must ask only in so far as God permits.
To help our weakness, God gives the Spirit to be our guide in prayer.
What the office of the Spirit in this respect. We must still pray both
with the heart and the lips.
6. Second rule of prayer, a sense of our want.
This rule violated, 1. By perfunctory and formal prayer 2. By hypocrites
who have no sense of their sins. 3. By giddiness in prayer. Remedies.
7. Objection, that we are not always under the
same necessity of praying. Answer, we must pray always. This answer
confirmed by an examination of the dangers by which both our life and
our salvation are every moment threatened. Confirmed farther by the
command and permission of God, by the nature of true repentance, and a
consideration of impenitence. Conclusion.
8. Third rule, the suppression of all pride.
Examples. Daniel, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Baruch.
9. Advantage of thus suppressing pride. It leads
to earnest entreaty for pardon, accompanied with humble confession and
sure confidence in the Divine mercy. This may not always be expressed in
words. It is peculiar to pious penitents. A general introduction to
procure favour to our prayers never to be omitted.
10. Objection to the third rule of prayer. Of the
glorying of the saints. Answer. Confirmation of the answer.
11. Fourth rule of prayer, -- a sure confidence
of being heard animating us to prayer. The kind of confidence required,
viz., a serious conviction of our misery, joined with sure hope. From
these true prayer springs. How diffidence impairs prayer. In general,
faith is required.
12. This faith and sure hope regarded by our
opponents as most absurd. Their error described and refuted by various
passages of Scripture, which show that acceptable prayer is accompanied
with these qualities. No repugnance between this certainty and an
acknowledgment of our destitution.
13. To our unworthiness we oppose, 1. The
command of God. 2. The promise. Rebels and hypocrites completely
condemned. Passages of Scripture confirming the command to pray.
14. Other passages respecting the promises
which belong to the pious when they invoke God. These realised though we
are not possessed of the same holiness as other distinguished servants
of God, provided we indulge no vain confidence, and sincerely betake
ourselves to the mercy of God. Those who do not invoke God under urgent
necessity are no better than idolaters. This concurrence of fear and
confidence reconciles the different passages of Scripture, as to
humbling ourselves in prayer, and causing our prayers to ascend.
15. Objection founded on some examples, viz.,
that prayers have proved effectual, though not according to the form
prescribed. Answer. Such examples, though not given for our imitation,
are of the greatest use. Objection, the prayers of the faithful
sometimes not effectual. Answer confirmed by a noble passage of
Augustine. Rule for right prayer.
16. The above four rules of prayer not so
rigidly exacted, as that every prayer deficient in them in any respect
is rejected by God. This shown by examples. Conclusion, or summary of
this section.
17. Through whom God is to be invoked, viz.,
Jesus Christ. This founded on a consideration of the divine majesty, and
the precept and promise of God himself. God therefore to be invoked only
in the name of Christ.
18. From the first all believers were heard
through him only: yet this specially restricted to the period subsequent
to his ascension. The ground of this restriction.
19. The wrath of God lies on those who reject
Christ as a Mediator. This excludes not the mutual intercession of
saints on the earth.
20. Refutation of errors interfering with the
intercession of Christ. 1. Christ the Mediator of redemption; the saints
mediators of intercession. Answer confirmed by the clear testimony of
Scripture, and by a passage from Augustine. The nature of Christ's
intercession.
21. Of the intercession of saints living
with Christ in heaven. Fiction of the Papists in regard to it. Refuted.
1. Its absurdity. 2. It is nowhere mentioned by Scripture. 3. Appeal to
the conscience of the superstitious. 4. Its blasphemy. Exception.
Answers.
22. Monstrous errors resulting from this
fiction. Refutation. Exception by the advocates of this fiction. Answer.
23. Arguments of the Papists for the
intercession of saints. 1. From the duty and office of angels. Answer.
2. From an expression of Jeremiah respecting Moses and Samuel. Answer,
retorting the argument. 3. The meaning of the prophet confirmed by a
similar passage in Ezekiel, and the testimony of an apostle.
24. 4. Fourth papistical argument from the
nature of charity, which is more perfect in the saints in glory. Answer.
25. Argument founded on a passage in Moses.
Answer.
26. Argument from its being said that the
prayers of saints are heard. Answer, confirmed by Scripture, and
illustrated by examples.
27. Conclusion, that the saints cannot be
invoked without impiety. 1. It robs God of his glory. 2. Destroys the
intercession of Christ. 3. Is repugnant to the word of God. 4. Is
opposed to the due method of prayer. 5. Is without approved example. 6.
Springs from distrust. Last objection. Answer.
28. Kinds of prayer. Vows. Supplications.
Petitions. Thanksgiving. Connection of these, their constant use and
necessity. Particular explanation confirmed by reason, Scripture, and
example. Rule as to supplication and thanksgiving.
29. The accidents of prayer, viz., private
and public, constant, at stated seasons, &c. Exception in time of
necessity. Prayer without ceasing. Its nature. Garrulity of Papists and
hypocrites refuted. The scope and parts of prayer. Secret prayer. Prayer
at all places. Private and public prayer.
30. Of public places or churches in which
common prayers are offered up. Right use of churches. Abuse.
31. Of utterance and singing. These of no
avail if not from the heart. The use of the voice refers more to public
than private prayer.
32. Singing of the greatest antiquity, but
not universal. How to be performed.
33. Public prayers should be in the
vulgar, not in a foreign tongue. Reason, 1. The nature of the Church. 2.
Authority of an apostle. Sincere affection always necessary. The tongue
not always necessary. Bending of the knee, and uncovering of the head.
34. The form of prayer delivered by Christ
displays the boundless goodness of our heavenly Father. The great
comfort thereby afforded.
35. Lord's Prayer divided into six
petitions. Subdivision into two principal parts, the former referring to
the glory of God, the latter to our salvation.
36. The use of the term Father implies, 1.
That we pray to God in the name of Christ alone. 2. That we lay aside
all distrust. 3. That we expect everything that is for our good.
37. Objection, that our sins exclude us
from the presence of him whom we have made a Judge, not a Father.
Answer, from the nature of God, as described by an apostle, the parable
of the prodigal son, and from the expression, Our Father. Christ
the earnest, the Holy Spirit the witness, of our adoption.
38. Why God is called generally, Our
Father.
39. We may pray specially for ourselves and
certain others, provided we have in our mind a general reference to all.
40. In what sense God is said to be in heaven.
A threefold use of this doctrine for our consolation. Three cautions.
Summary of the preface to the Lord's Prayer.
41. The necessity of the first petition a
proof of our unrighteousness. What meant by the name of God. How it is
hallowed. Parts of this hallowing. A deprecation of the sins by which
the name of God is profaned.
42. Distinction between the first and second
petitions. The kingdom of God, what. How said to come. Special
exposition of this petition. It reminds us of three things. Advent of
the kingdom of God in the world.
43. Distinction between the second and
third petitions. The will here meant not the secret will or good
pleasure of God, but that manifested in the word. Conclusion of the
three first petitions.
44. A summary of the second part of the
Lord's Prayer. Three petitions. What contained in the first. Declares
the exceeding kindness of God, and our distrust. What meant by bread.
Why the petition for bread precedes that for the forgiveness of sins.
Why it is called ours. Why to be sought this day, or daily.
The doctrine resulting from this petition, illustrated by an example.
Two classes of men sin in regard to this petition. In what sense it is
called, our bread. Why we ask God to give it to us.
45. Close connection between this and the
subsequent petition. Why our sins are called debts. This petition
violated, 1. By those who think they can satisfy God by their own
merits, or those of others. 2. By those who dream of a perfection which
makes pardon unnecessary. Why the elect cannot attain perfection in this
life. Refutation of the libertine dreamers of perfection. Objection
refuted. In what sense we are said to forgive those who have sinned
against us. How the condition is to be understood.
46. The sixth petition reduced to three
heads. 1. The various forms of temptation. The depraved conceptions of
our minds. The wiles of Satan, on the right hand and on the left. 2.
What it is to be led into temptation. We do not ask not to be tempted of
God. What meant by evil, or the evil one. Summary of this petition. How
necessary it is. Condemns the pride of the superstitious. Includes many
excellent properties. In what sense God may be said to lead us into
temptation.
47. The three last petitions show that the
prayers of Christians ought to be public. The conclusion of the Lord's
Prayer. Why the word Amen is added.
48. The Lord's Prayer contains everything
that we can or ought to ask of God. Those who go beyond it sin in three
ways.
49. We may, after the example of the saints,
frame our prayers in different words, provided there is no difference in
meaning.
50. Some circumstances to be observed. Of
appointing special hours of prayer. What to be aimed at, what avoided.
The will of God, the rule of our prayers.
51. Perseverance in prayer especially
recommended, both by precept and example. Condemnatory of those who
assign to God a time and mode of hearing.
52. Of the dignity of faith, through which we
always obtain, in answer to prayer, whatever is most expedient for us.
The knowledge of this most necessary.
1. A general summary of what is contained in the
previous part of the work. A transition to the doctrine of prayer. Its
connection with the subject of faith.
FROM the previous part of the work we clearly see how completely
destitute man is of all good, how devoid of every means of procuring his
own salvation. Hence, if he would obtain succour in his necessity, he
must go beyond himself, and procure it in some other quarter. It has
farther been shown that the Lord kindly and spontaneously manifests
himself in Christ, in whom he offers all happiness for our misery, all
abundance for our want, opening up the treasures of heaven to us, so
that we may turn with full faith to his beloved Son, depend upon him
with full expectation, rest in him, and cleave to him with full hope.
This, indeed, is that secret and hidden philosophy which cannot be
learned by syllogisms: a philosophy thoroughly understood by those whose
eyes God has so opened as to see light in his light (Ps. 36:9). But
after we have learned by faith to know that whatever is necessary for us
or defective in us is supplied in God and in our Lord Jesus Christ, in
whom it hath pleased the Father that all fulness should dwell, that we
may thence draw as from an inexhaustible fountain, it remains for us to
seek and in prayer implore of him what we have learned to be in him. To
know God as the sovereign disposer of all good, inviting us to present
our requests, and yet not to approach or ask of him, were so far from
availing us, that it were just as if one told of a treasure were to
allow it to remain buried in the ground. Hence the
Apostle, to show that a faith unaccompanied with prayer to God cannot be
genuine, states this to be the order: As faith springs from the Gospel,
so by faith our hearts are framed to call upon the name of God (Rom.
10:14). And this is the very thing which he had expressed some
time before, viz., that the Spirit of adoption, which seals the
testimony of the Gospel on our hearts, gives us courage to make our
requests known unto God, calls forth groanings which cannot be uttered,
and enables us to cry, Abba, Father (Rom. 8:26). This last point, as we
have hitherto only touched upon it slightly in passing, must now be
treated more fully.
2. Prayer defined. Its necessity and use.
To prayer, then, are we indebted for penetrating to those
riches which are treasured up for us with our heavenly Father. For there
is a kind of intercourse between God and men, by which, having entered
the upper sanctuary, they appear before Him and appeal to his promises,
that when necessity requires they may learn by experiences that what
they believed merely on the authority of his word was not in vain.
Accordingly, we see that nothing is set before us as an object of
expectation from the Lord which we are not enjoined to ask of Him in
prayer, so true it is that prayer digs up those treasures which the
Gospel of our Lord discovers to the eye of faith. The necessity and
utility of this exercise of prayer no words can sufficiently express. Assuredly
it is not without cause our heavenly Father declares that our only
safety is in calling upon his name, since by it we invoke the presence
of his providence to watch over our interests, of his power to sustain
us when weak and almost fainting, of his goodness to receive us into
favour, though miserably loaded with sin; in fine, call upon him to
manifest himself to us in all his perfections. Hence, admirable
peace and tranquillity are given to our consciences; for the straits by
which we were pressed being laid before the Lord, we rest fully
satisfied with the assurance that none of our evils are unknown to him,
and that he is both able and willing to make the best provision for us.
3. Objection, that prayer seems useless, because
God already knows our wants. Answer, from the institution and end of
prayer. Confirmation by example. Its necessity and propriety.
Perpetually reminds us of our duty, and leads to meditation on divine
providence. Conclusion. Prayer a most useful exercise. This proved by
three passages of Scripture.
But some one will say, Does he not know without a monitor both what
our difficulties are, and what is meet for our interest, so that it
seems in some measure superfluous to solicit him by our prayers, as if
he were winking, or even sleeping, until aroused by the sound of our
voice?[1] Those who argue
thus attend not to the end for which the Lord taught us to pray. It was
not so much for his sake as for ours. He wills indeed, as is just, that
due honour be paid him by acknowledging that all which men desire or
feel to be useful, and pray to obtain, is derived from him. But even the
benefit of the homage which we thus pay him redounds to ourselves.
Hence the holy patriarchs, the more confidently they proclaimed the
mercies of God to themselves and others felt the stronger incitement to
prayer. It will be sufficient to refer to the example of Elijah, who
being assured of the purpose of God had good ground for the promise of
rain which he gives to Ahab, and yet prays anxiously upon his knees, and
sends his servant seven times to inquire (1 Kings 18:42); not that he
discredits the oracle, but because he knows it to be his duty to lay his
desires before God, lest his faith should become
drowsy or torpid. Wherefore, although it is true that while we
are listless or insensible to our wretchedness, he wakes and watches for
use and sometimes even assists us unasked; it is
very much for our interest to be constantly supplicating him; first,
that our heart may always be inflamed with a serious and ardent desire
of seeking, loving and serving him, while we accustom ourselves to have
recourse to him as a sacred anchor in every necessity; secondly,
that no desires, no longing whatever, of which we are ashamed to make
him the witness, may enter our minds, while we learn to place all our
wishes in his sight, and thus pour out our heart before him; and, lastly,
that we may be prepared to receive all his benefits with true gratitude
and thanksgiving, while our prayers remind us that they proceed from his
hand. Moreover, having obtained what we asked, being persuaded
that he has answered our prayers, we are led to long more earnestly for
his favour, and at the same time have greater pleasure in welcoming the
blessings which we perceive to have been obtained by our prayers.
Lastly, use and experience confirm the thought of his providence in our
minds in a manner adapted to our weakness, when we understand that he
not only promises that he will never fail us, and spontaneously gives us
access to approach him in every time of need, but has his hand always
stretched out to assist his people, not amusing them with words, but
proving himself to be a present aid. For these reasons, though our most
merciful Father never slumbers nor sleeps, he very often seems to do so,
that thus he may exercise us, when we might otherwise be listless and
slothful, in asking, entreating, and earnestly beseeching him to our
great good. It is very absurd, therefore, to
dissuade men from prayer, by pretending that Divine Providence, which is
always watching over the government of the universes is in vain
importuned by our supplications, when, on the contrary, the Lord himself
declares, that he is "nigh unto all that call upon him, to all that
call upon him in truth (Ps. 145:18). No better is the frivolous
allegation of others, that it is superfluous to pray for things which
the Lord is ready of his own accord to bestow; since it is his pleasure
that those very things which flow from his spontaneous liberality should
be acknowledged as conceded to our prayers. This is testified by that
memorable sentence in the psalms to which many others corresponds:
"The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and his ears are open
unto their cry" (Ps. 34:15). This passage, while extolling the care
which Divine Providence spontaneously exercises over the safety of
believers, omits not the exercise of faith by which the mind is aroused
from sloth. The eyes of God are awake to assist the blind in their
necessity, but he is likewise pleased to listen to our groans, that he
may give us the better proof of his love. And thus both things are true,
"He that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep" (Ps.
121:4); and yet whenever he sees us dumb and torpid, he withdraws as if
he had forgotten us.
4. Rules to be observed in prayer. First,
reverence to God. How the mind ought to be composed.
Let the first rule of right prayer then be, to have our heart
and mind framed as becomes those who are entering into converse with
God. This we shall accomplish in regard to the mind, if, laying
aside carnal thoughts and cares which might interfere with the direct
and pure contemplation of God, it not only be wholly intent on prayer,
but also, as far as possible, be borne and raised above itself. I do not
here insist on a mind so disengaged as to feel none of the gnawings of
anxiety; on the contrary, it is by much anxiety that the fervour of
prayer is inflamed. Thus we see that the holy servants of God betray
great anguish, not to say solicitude, when they cause the voice of
complaint to ascend to the Lord from the deep abyss and the jaws of
death. What I say is, that all foreign and
extraneous cares must be dispelled by which the mind might be driven to
and fro in vague suspense, be drawn down from heaven, and kept
grovelling on the earth. When I say it must be raised above
itself, I mean that it must not bring into the presence of God any of
those things which our blind and stupid reason is wont to devise, nor
keep itself confined within the little measure of its own vanity, but
rise to a purity worthy of God.
5. All giddiness of mind must be excluded, and
all our feelings seriously engaged. This confirmed by the form of
lifting the hand in prayer. We must ask only in so far as God permits.
To help our weakness, God gives the Spirit to be our guide in prayer.
What the office of the Spirit in this respect. We must still pray both
with the heart and the lips.
Both things are specially worthy of notice. First,
let every one in professing to pray turn thither all his thoughts and
feelings, and be not (as is usual) distracted by wandering thoughts;
because nothing is more contrary to the reverence due to God than that
levity which bespeaks a mind too much given to license and devoid of
fear. In this matter we ought to labour the more earnestly the more
difficult we experience it to be; for no man is so intent on prayer as
not to feel many thoughts creeping in, and either breaking off the tenor
of his prayer, or retarding it by some turning or digression. Here let
us consider how unbecoming it is when God admits us to familiar
intercourse to abuse his great condescension by mingling things sacred
and profane, reverence for him not keeping our minds under restraint;
but just as if in prayer we were conversing with one like ourselves
forgetting him, and allowing our thoughts to run to and fro. Let us
know, then, that none duly prepare themselves for prayer but those who
are so impressed with the majesty of God that they engage in it free
from all earthly cares and affections. The ceremony of lifting up our
hands in prayer is designed to remind us that we are far removed from
God, unless our thoughts rise upward: as it is said in the psalm,
"Unto thee, O Lord, do I lift up my soul" (Psalm 25:1).
And Scripture repeatedly uses the expression to raise our prayers
meaning that those who would be heard by God must not grovel in the
mire. The sum is, that the more liberally God
deals with us, condescendingly inviting us to disburden our cares into
his bosom, the less excusable we are if this admirable and incomparable
blessing does not in our estimation outweigh all other things, and win
our affection, that prayer may seriously engage our every thought and
feeling. This cannot be unless our mind, strenuously exerting
itself against all impediments, rise upward.
Our second proposition was, that we are to ask only in so far
as God permits. For though he bids us pour out our hearts (Ps. 62:8), he
does not indiscriminately give loose reins to foolish and depraved
affections; and when he promises that he will grant believers their
wish, his indulgence does not proceed so far as to submit to their
caprice [unacceptable change of mind,
whim]. In both matters grievous delinquencies are everywhere
committed. For not only do many without modesty, without reverence,
presume to invoke God concerning their frivolities, but impudently bring
forward their dreams, whatever they may be, before the tribunal of God.
Such is the folly or stupidity under which they labour, that they have
the hardihood to obtrude upon God desires so vile, that they would blush
exceedingly to impart them to their fellow men. Profane writers have
derided and even expressed their detestation of this presumption, and
yet the vice has always prevailed. Hence, as the ambitious adopted
Jupiter as their patron; the avaricious [greed],
Mercury; the literary aspirants, Apollo and Minerva; the warlike, Mars;
the licentious, Venus: so in the present day, as I lately observed, men
in prayer give greater license to their unlawful desires than if they
were telling jocular [humorous] tales among
their equals. God does not suffer his condescension to be thus mocked,
but vindicating his own light, places our wishes under the restraint of
his authority. We must, therefore, attend to the observation of John:
"This is the confidence that we have in him, that if we ask
anything according to his will, he heareth us" (1 John 5:14).
But as our faculties are far from being able to attain to such high
perfection, we must seek for some means to assist them. As the eye of
our mind should be intent upon God, so the affection of our heart ought
to follow in the same course. But both fall far beneath this, or rather,
they faint and fail, and are carried in a contrary direction. To assist
this weakness, God gives us the guidance of the Spirit in our prayers to
dictate what is right, and regulate our affections. For seeing "we
know not what we should pray for as we ought," "the Spirit
itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be
uttered" (Rom. 8:26) not that he actually prays or groans, but he
excites in us sighs, and wishes, and confidence, which our natural
powers are not at all able to conceive. Nor is it
without cause Paul gives the name of groanings which cannot be
uttered to the prayers which believers send forth under the guidance
of the Spirit. For those who are truly exercised in prayer are not
unaware that blind anxieties so restrain and perplex them, that they can
scarcely find what it becomes them to utter; nay, in attempting to lisp
they halt and hesitate. Hence it appears that to pray aright is a
special gift. We do not speak thus in indulgence to our sloths as if we
were to leave the office of prayer to the Holy Spirit, and give way to
that carelessness to which we are too prone. Thus
we sometimes hear the impious expression, that we are to wait in
suspense until he take possession of our minds while otherwise occupied.
Our meaning is, that, weary of our own heartlessness and sloth, we are
to long for the aid of the Spirit. Nor, indeed, does Paul, when he
enjoins us to pray in the Spirit (1 Cor. 14:15), cease to exhort us to
vigilance, intimating, that while the inspiration of the Spirit is
effectual to the formation of prayer, it by no means impedes or retards
our own endeavours; since in this matter God is pleased to try how
efficiently faith influences our hearts.
6. Second rule of prayer, a sense of our want.
This rule violated, 1. By perfunctory and formal prayer 2. By hypocrites
who have no sense of their sins. 3. By giddiness in prayer. Remedies.
Another rule of prayer is, that in
asking we must always truly feel our wants, and seriously considering
that we need all the things which we ask, accompany the prayer with a
sincere, nay, ardent desire of obtaining them. Many repeat
prayers in a perfunctory manner from a set form, as if they were
performing a task to God, and though they confess that this is a
necessary remedy for the evils of their condition, because it were fatal
to be left without the divine aid which they implore, it still appears
that they perform the duty from custom, because their minds are
meanwhile cold, and they ponder not what they ask. A general and
confused feeling of their necessity leads them to pray, but it does not
make them solicitous as in a matter of present consequence, that they
may obtain the supply of their need. Moreover, can we suppose anything
more hateful or even more execrable [abominable]
to God than this fiction of asking the pardon of sins, while he who asks
at the very time either thinks that he is not a sinner, or, at least, is
not thinking that he is a sinner; in other words, a fiction by which God
is plainly held in derision? But mankind, as I
have lately said, are full of depravity, so that in the way of
perfunctory service they often ask many things of God which they think
come to them without his beneficence, or from some other quarter, or are
already certainly in their possession. There is another fault which
seems less heinous, but is not to be tolerated. Some murmur out prayers
without meditation, their only principle being that God is to be
propitiated [appeased]
by prayer. Believers ought to be specially on their guard never
to appear in the presence of God with the intention of presenting a
request unless they are under some serious impression, and are, at the
same time, desirous to obtain it. Nay, although in these things which we
ask only for the glory of God, we seem not at first sight to consult for
our necessity, yet we ought not to ask with less fervour and vehemency
of desire. For instance, when we pray that his name be hallowed -- that
hallowing must, so to speak, be earnestly hungered and thirsted after.
7. Objection, that we are not always under the
same necessity of praying. Answer, we must pray always. This answer
confirmed by an examination of the dangers by which both our life and
our salvation are every moment threatened. Confirmed farther by the
command and permission of God, by the nature of true repentance, and a
consideration of impenitence. Conclusion.
If it is objected, that the necessity which urges us to pray is not
always equal, I admit it, and this distinction is profitably taught us
by James: "Is any among you afflicted? let him pray. Is any merry?
let him sing psalms" (James 5:13). Therefore, common sense itself
dictates, that as we are too sluggish, we must be stimulated by God to
pray earnestly whenever the occasion requires. This David calls a time
when God "may be found" (a seasonable time); because, as he
declares in several other passages, that the more hardly grievances,
annoyances, fears, and other kinds of trial press us, the freer is our
access to God, as if he were inviting us to himself. Still not less true
is the injunction of Paul to pray "always" (Eph. 6:18);
because, however prosperously according to our view, things proceed, and
however we may be surrounded on all sides with grounds of joy, there is
not an instant of time during which our want does not exhort us to
prayer. A man abounds in wheat and wine; but as he
cannot enjoy a morsel of bread, unless by the continual bounty of God,
his granaries or cellars will not prevent him from asking for daily
bread. Then, if we consider how many dangers impend every moment,
fear itself will teach us that no time ought to be without prayer. This,
however, may be better known in spiritual matters. For
when will the many sins of which we are conscious allow us to sit secure
without suppliantly entreating freedom from guilt and punishment? When
will temptation give us a truce, making it unnecessary to hasten for
help? Moreover, zeal for the kingdom and glory of God ought not to seize
us by starts, but urge us without intermission, so that every time
should appear seasonable. It is not without cause, therefore,
that assiduity in prayer is so often enjoined. I am not now speaking of
perseverance, which shall afterwards be considered; but Scripture, by
reminding us of the necessity of constant prayer, charges us with sloth,
because we feel not how much we stand in need of this care and assiduity
[close, constant attention]. By this rule
hypocrisy and the device of lying to God are restrained, nay, altogether
banished from prayer. God promises that he will be near to those who
call upon him in truth, and declares that those who seek him with their
whole heart will find him: those, therefore, who delight in their own
pollution cannot surely aspire to him.
One of the requisites of legitimate prayer is repentance. Hence the
common declaration of Scripture, that God does not listen to the wicked;
that their prayers, as well as their sacrifices, are an abomination to
him. For it is right that those who seal up their hearts should find the
ears of God closed against them, that those who, by their
hardheartedness, provoke his severity should find him inflexible.
In Isaiah he thus threatens: "When ye make many prayers, I will not
hear: your hands are full of blood" (Isaiah 1:15). In like manner,
in Jeremiah, "Though they shall cry unto me, I will not hearken
unto them" (Jer. 11:7, 8, 11); because he
regards it as the highest insult for the wicked to boast of his covenant
while profaning his sacred name by their whole lives. Hence he
complains in Isaiah: "This people draw near to me with their mouth,
and with their lips do honour me; but have removed their heart far from
men" (Isaiah 29:13). Indeed, he does not confine this to prayers
alone, but declares that he abominates pretense in every part of his
service. Hence the words of James, "Ye ask and receive not, because
ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts" (James 4:3).
It is true, indeed (as we shall again see in a little), that the pious [devout,
religious, earnest], in the prayers which they utter, trust not
to their own worth; still the admonition of John is not superfluous:
"Whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his
commandments" (1 John 3:22); an evil conscience shuts the door
against us. Hence it follows, that none but the
sincere worshippers of God pray aright, or are listened to. Let
every one, therefore, who prepares to pray feel dissatisfied with what
is wrong in his condition, and assume, which he cannot do without
repentance, the character and feelings of a poor suppliant.
8. Third rule, the suppression of all pride.
Examples. Daniel, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Baruch.
The third rule to be added is: that he who comes into the
presence of God to pray must divest himself of all vainglorious
thoughts, lay aside all idea of worth; in short, discard all
self-confidence, humbly giving God the whole glory, lest by arrogating
anything, however little, to himself, vain pride cause him to turn away
his face. Of this submission, which casts down all haughtiness,
we have numerous examples in the servants of God. The holier they are,
the more humbly they prostrate themselves when they come into the
presence of the Lord. Thus Daniel, on whom the Lord himself bestowed
such high commendation, says, "We do not present our supplications
before thee for our righteousness but for thy great mercies. O Lord,
hear; O Lord, forgive; O Lord, hearken and do; defer not, for thine own
sake, O my God: for thy city and thy people are called by thy
name." This he does not indirectly in the usual manner, as if he
were one of the individuals in a crowd: he rather confesses his guilt
apart, and as a suppliant [humble petitioner]
betaking himself to the asylum of pardon, he distinctly declares that he
was confessing his own sin, and the sin of his people Israel (Dan.
9:18-20). David also sets us an example of this humility: "Enter
not into judgment with thy servant: for in thy sight shall no man living
be justified" (Psalm 143:2). In like manner, Isaiah prays,
"Behold, thou art wroth; for we have sinned: in those is
continuance, and we shall be saved. But we are all as an unclean thing,
and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a
leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away. And there
is none that calleth upon thy name, that stirreth up himself to take
hold of thee: for thou hast hid thy face from us, and hast consumed us,
because of our iniquities. But now, O Lord, thou art our Father; we are
the clay, and thou our potter; and we all are the work of thy hand. Be
not wroth very sore, O Lord, neither remember iniquity for ever: Behold,
see, we beseech thee, we are all thy people." (Isa. 64:5-9). You
see how they put no confidence in anything but this: considering that
they are the Lord's, they despair not of being the objects of his care.
In the same way, Jeremiah says, "O Lord, though our iniquities
testify against us, do thou it for thy name's sake" (Jer. 14:7).
For it was most truly and piously written by the uncertain author
(whoever he may have been) that wrote the book which is attributed to
the prophet Baruch,[2] "But the soul that is
greatly vexed, which goeth stooping and feeble, and the eyes that fail,
and the hungry soul, will give thee praise and righteousness, O Lord.
Therefore, we do not make our humble supplication before thee, O Lord
our God, for the righteousness of our fathers, and of our kings."
"Hear, O Lord, and have mercy; for thou art merciful: and have pity
upon us, because we have sinned before thee" (Baruch 2:18, 19;
3:2).
9. Advantage of thus suppressing pride. It leads
to earnest entreaty for pardon, accompanied with humble confession and
sure confidence in the Divine mercy. This may not always be expressed in
words. It is peculiar to pious penitents. A general introduction to
procure favour to our prayers never to be omitted.
In fine, supplication for pardon, with humble and ingenuous
confession of guilt, forms both the preparation and commencement of
right prayer. For the holiest of men cannot hope to obtain anything from
God until he has been freely reconciled to him. God cannot be propitious
to any but those whom he pardons. Hence it is not strange that
this is the key by which believers open the door of prayer, as we learn
from several passages in The Psalms. David, when presenting a request on
a different subject, says, "Remember not the sins of my youth, nor
my transgressions; according to thy mercy remember me, for thy goodness
sake, O Lord" (Psalm 25:7). Again, "Look upon my affliction
and my pain, and forgive my sins" (Psalm 25:18). Here also we see
that it is not sufficient to call ourselves to account for the sins of
each passing day; we must also call to mind those which might seem to
have been long before buried in oblivion. For in
another passage the same prophet, confessing one grievous crime, takes
occasion to go back to his very birth, "I was shapen in iniquity,
and in sin did my mother conceive me" (Psalm 51:5); not to
extenuate the fault by the corruption of his nature, but as it were to
accumulate the sins of his whole life, that the stricter he was in
condemning himself, the more placable God might be. But although
the saints do not always in express terms ask forgiveness of sins, yet
if we carefully ponder those prayers as given in Scripture, the truth of
what I say will readily appear; namely, that their courage to pray was
derived solely from the mercy of God, and that they always began with
appeasing him. For when a man interrogates his conscience, so far is he
from presuming to lay his cares familiarly before God, that if he did
not trust to mercy and pardon, he would tremble at the very thought of
approaching him. There is, indeed, another special
confession. When believers long for deliverance from punishment, they at
the same time pray that their sins may be pardoned;[3]
for it were absurd to wish that the effect should
be taken away while the cause remains. For we must beware of imitating
foolish patients who, anxious only about curing accidental symptoms,
neglect the root of the disease.[4] Nay,
our endeavour must be to have God propitious even before he attests his
favour by external signs, both because this is the order which he
himself chooses, and it were of little avail to experience his kindness,
did not conscience feel that he is appeased, and thus enable us to
regard him as altogether lovely. Of this we are even reminded by our
Saviour's reply. Having determined to cure the paralytic, he says,
"Thy sins are forgiven thee;" in other words, he raises our
thoughts to the object which is especially to be desired, viz. admission
into the favour of God, and then gives the fruit of reconciliation by
bringing assistance to us. But besides that special confession of
present guilt which believers employ, in supplicating for pardon of
every fault and punishment, that general introduction which procures
favour for our prayers must never be omitted, because prayers will never
reach God unless they are founded on free mercy. To this we may
refer the words of John, "If we confess our sins, he is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). Hence, under the law it was
necessary to consecrate prayers by the expiation [pay
the penalty of; make amends] of blood, both that they might be
accepted, and that the people might be warned that they were unworthy of
the high privilege until, being purged from their defilements, they
founded their confidence in prayer entirely on the mercy of God.
10. Objection to the third rule of prayer. Of the
glorying of the saints. Answer. Confirmation of the answer.
Sometimes, however, the saints in supplicating God, seem to appeal to
their own righteousness, as when David says, "Preserve my soul; for
I am holy" (Ps. 86:2). Also Hezekiah, "Remember now, O Lord, I
beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth, and with a perfect
heart, and have done that which is good in thy sight" (Is. 38:2). All
they mean by such expressions is, that regeneration declares them to be
among the servants and children to whom God engages that he will show
favour. We have already seen how he declares by the Psalmist that
his eyes "are upon the righteous, and his ears are open unto their
cry" (Ps. 34:16:) and again by the apostle, that "whatsoever
we ask of him we obtain, because we keep his commandments" (John
3:22). In these passages he does not fix a value
on prayer as a meritorious work, but designs to establish the confidence
of those who are conscious of an unfeigned integrity and innocence, such
as all believers should possess. For the saying of the blind man
who had received his sight is in perfect accordance with divine truth,
And God heareth not sinners (John 9:31); provided
we take the term sinners in the sense commonly used by Scripture to mean
those who, without any desire for righteousness, are sleeping secure in
their sins; since no heart will ever rise to genuine prayer that does
not at the same time long for holiness. Those supplications in which the
saints allude to their purity and integrity correspond to such promises,
that they may thus have, in their own experience, a manifestation of
that which all the servants of God are made to expect. Thus they almost
always use this mode of prayer when before God they compare themselves
with their enemies, from whose injustice they long to be delivered by
his hand. When making such comparisons, there is no wonder that they
bring forward their integrity and simplicity of heart, that thus, by the
justice of their cause, the Lord may be the more disposed to give them
succour. We rob not the pious breast of the privilege of enjoying a
consciousness of purity before the Lord, and thus feeling assured of the
promises with which he comforts and supports his true worshippers, but
we would have them to lay aside all thought of their own merits and
found their confidence of success in prayer solely on the divine mercy.
11. Fourth rule of prayer, -- a sure confidence
of being heard animating us to prayer. The kind of confidence required,
viz., a serious conviction of our misery, joined with sure hope. From
these true prayer springs. How diffidence impairs prayer. In general,
faith is required.
The fourth rule of prayer is, that notwithstanding of our
being thus abased and truly humbled, we should be animated to pray with
the sure hope of succeeding. There is, indeed, an appearance of
contradiction between the two things, between a sense of the just
vengeance of God and firm confidence in his favour, and yet they are
perfectly accordant, if it is the mere goodness of God that raises up
those who are overwhelmed by their own sins. For, as we have formerly
shown (chap. iii. sec. 1, 2) that repentance and faith go hand in hand,
being united by an indissoluble tie, the one causing terror, the other
joy, so in prayer they must both be present. This concurrence
David expresses in a few words: "But as for me, I will come into
thy house in the multitude of thy mercy, and in thy fear will I worship
toward thy holy temple" (Ps. 5:7). Under the goodness of God he
comprehends faith, at the same time not excluding fear; for not only
does his majesty compel our reverence, but our own unworthiness also
divests us of all pride and confidence, and keeps us in fear. The
confidence of which I speak is not one which frees the mind from all
anxiety, and soothes it with sweet and perfect rest; such rest is
peculiar to those who, while all their affairs are flowing to a wish are
annoyed by no care, stung with no regret, agitated by no fear. But the
best stimulus which the saints have to prayer is when, in consequence of
their own necessities, they feel the greatest disquietude, and are all
but driven to despair, until faith seasonably comes to their aid;
because in such straits the goodness of God so shines upon them, that
while they groan, burdened by the weight of present calamities, and
tormented with the fear of greater, they yet trust to this goodness, and
in this way both lighten the difficulty of endurance, and take comfort
in the hope of final deliverance. It is necessary
therefore, that the prayer of the believer should be the result of both
feelings, and exhibit the influence of both; namely, that while he
groans under present and anxiously dreads new evils, he should, at the
same times have recourse to God, not at all doubting that God is ready
to stretch out a helping hand to him. For it is not easy to say
how much God is irritated by our distrust, when we ask what we expect
not of his goodness. Hence, nothing is more accordant to the nature of
prayer than to lay it down as a fixed rule, that it is not to come forth
at random, but is to follow in the footsteps of faith. To this principle
Christ directs all of us in these words, "Therefore, I say unto
you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive
them, and ye shall have them" (Mark 11:24). The same thing he
declares in another passage, "All things, whatsoever ye shall ask
in prayer, believing, ye shall receive" (Matth. 21:22). In
accordance with this are the words of James, "If any of you lack
wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and
upbraideth not, and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith,
nothing wavering" (James 1:5). He most aptly
expresses the power of faith by opposing it to wavering. No less worthy
of notice is his additional statement, that those who approach God with
a doubting, hesitating mind, without feeling assured whether they are to
be heard or not, gain nothing by their prayers. Such persons he
compares to a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed. Hence,
in another passage he terms genuine prayer "the prayer of
faith" (James 5:15). Again, since God so
often declares that he will give to every man according to his faith he
intimates that we cannot obtain anything without faith. In short, it is
faith which obtains everything that is granted to prayer. This is
the meaning of Paul in the well known passage to which dull men give too
little heed, "How then shall they call upon him in whom they have
not believed? and how shall they believe in him of whom they have not
heard?" "So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
word of God" (Rom. 10:14,17). Gradually
deducing the origin of prayer from faith, he distinctly maintains that
God cannot be invoked sincerely except by those to whom, by the
preaching of the Gospel, his mercy and willingness have been made known,
nay, familiarly explained.
12. This faith and sure hope regarded by our
opponents as most absurd. Their error described and refuted by various
passages of Scripture, which show that acceptable prayer is accompanied
with these qualities. No repugnance between this certainty and an
acknowledgement of our destitution.
This necessity our opponents do not at all consider. Therefore, when
we say that believers ought to feel firmly assured, they think we are
saying the absurdest thing in the world. But if they had any experience
in true prayer, they would assuredly understand that God cannot be duly
invoked without this firm sense of the Divine benevolence. But
as no man can well perceive the power of faith, without at the same time
feeling it in his heart, what profit is there in disputing with men of
this character, who plainly show that they have never had more than a
vain imagination? The value and necessity of that assurance for which we
contend is learned chiefly from prayer. Every one who does not see this
gives proof of a very stupid conscience. Therefore, leaving those
who are thus blinded, let us fix our thoughts on the words of Paul, that
God can only be invoked by such as have obtained a knowledge of his
mercy from the Gospel, and feel firmly assured that that mercy is ready
to be bestowed upon them. What kind of prayer
would this be? "O Lord, I am indeed doubtful whether or not thou
art inclined to hear me; but being oppressed with anxiety I fly to thee
that if I am worthy, thou mayest assist me." None of the saints
whose prayers are given in Scripture thus supplicated. Nor are we thus
taught by the Holy Spirit, who tells us to "come boldly unto the
throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in
time of need" (Heb. 4:16); and elsewhere teaches us to "have
boldness and access with confidence by the faith of Christ" (Eph.
3:12). This confidence of obtaining what we ask, a confidence which the
Lord commands, and all the saints teach by their example, we must
therefore hold fast with both hands, if we would pray to any advantage.
The only prayer acceptable to God is that which springs (if I may so
express it) from this presumption of faith, and is founded on the full
assurance of hope. He might have been contented to use the simple
name of faith, but he adds not only confidence, but liberty or boldness,
that by this mark he might distinguish us from unbelievers, who indeed
like us pray to God, but pray at random. Hence, the whole Church thus
prays "Let thy mercy O Lord, be upon us, according as we hope in
thee" (Ps. 33:22). The same condition
is set down by the Psalmist in another passage, "When I cry unto
thee, then shall mine enemies turn back: this I know, for God is for
me" (Ps. 56:9). Again, "In the
morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up" (Ps.
5:3). From these words we gather, that
prayers are vainly poured out into the air unless accompanied with
faith, in which, as from a watchtower, we may quietly wait for God.
With this agrees the order of Paul's exhortation. For before urging
believers to pray in the Spirit always, with vigilance and assiduity, he
enjoins them to take "the shield of faith," "the helmet
of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of
God" (Eph. 6:16-18).
Let the reader here call to mind what I formerly observed, that faith
by no means fails though accompanied with a recognition of our
wretchedness, poverty, and pollution. How much
soever believers may feel that they are oppressed by a heavy load of
iniquity, and are not only devoid of everything which can procure the
favour of God for them, but justly burdened with many sins which make
him an object of dread, yet they cease not to present themselves, this
feeling not deterring them from appearing in his presence, because there
is no other access to him. Genuine prayer is not that by which we
arrogantly extol ourselves before God, or set a great value on anything
of our own, but that by which, while confessing our guilt, we utter our
sorrows before God, just as children familiarly lay their complaints
before their parents. Nay, the immense accumulation of our sins should
rather spur us on and incite us to prayer. Of this the Psalmist
gives us an example, "Heal my soul: for I have sinned against
thee" (Ps. 41:4). I confess, indeed, that these stings would prove
mortal darts, did not God give succour [assistance;
aid]; but our heavenly Father has, in ineffable kindness, added a
remedy, by which, calming all perturbation [mental
disturbance, agitation], soothing our cares, and dispelling our
fears he condescendingly allures us to himself; nay, removing all
doubts, not to say obstacles, makes the way smooth before us.
13. To our unworthiness we oppose, 1. The
command of God. 2. The promise. Rebels and hypocrites completely
condemned. Passages of Scripture confirming the command to pray.
And first, indeed in enjoining us to pray, he by the very injunction
convicts us of impious contumacy [disobedience]
if we obey not. He could not give a more precise command than that which
is contained in the psalms: "Call upon me in the day of
trouble" (Ps. 50:15). But as there is no office of piety more
frequently enjoined by Scripture, there is no occasion for here dwelling
longer upon it. "Ask," says our Divine Master, "and it
shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be
opened unto you" (Matth. 7:7). Here, indeed, a promise is added to
the precept, and this is necessary. For though all confess that we must
obey the precept, yet the greater part would shun the invitation of God,
did he not promise that he would listen and be ready to answer. These
two positions being laid down, it is certain that all who cavillingly [from
'cavil:' objection] allege that they
are not to come to God directly, are not only rebellious and disobedient
but are also convicted of unbelief, inasmuch as they distrust the
promises. There is the more occasion to attend to this, because
hypocrites, under a pretense of humility and modesty, proudly contemn [despise,
treat with disregard] the precept, as well
as deny all credit to the gracious invitation of God; nay, rob him of a
principal part of his worship. For when he rejected sacrifices,
in which all holiness seemed then to consist, he declared that the chief
thing, that which above all others is precious in his sight, is to be
invoked in the day of necessity. Therefore, when he demands that which
is his own, and urges us to alacrity [cheerful
readiness] in obeying, no pretexts for doubt, how specious soever
they may be, can excuse us. Hence, all the passages throughout Scripture
in which we are commanded to pray, are set up before our eyes as so many
banners, to inspire us with confidence. It were presumption to go
forward into the presence of God, did he not anticipate us by his
invitation. Accordingly, he opens up the way for us by his own voice,
"I will say, It is my people: and they shall say, The Lord is my
God" (Zech. 13:9). We see how he anticipates his worshippers, and
desires them to follow, and therefore we cannot fear that the melody
which he himself dictates will prove unpleasing. Especially let us call
to mind that noble description of the divine character, by trusting to
which we shall easily overcome every obstacle: O thou that hearest
prayer, unto thee shall all flesh come" (Ps. 65:2). What
can be more lovely or soothing than to see God invested with a title
which assures us that nothing is more proper to his nature than to
listen to the prayers of suppliants? Hence the Psalmist infers,
that free access is given not to a few individuals, but to all men,
since God addresses all in these terms, "Call upon me in the day of
trouble: I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me" (Ps.
50:15). David, accordingly, appeals to the promise thus given in order
to obtain what he asks: "Thou, O Lord of hosts, God of Israel, hast
revealed to thy servant, saying, I will build thee an house: therefore
hath thy servant found in his heart to pray this prayer unto thee"
(2 Sam. 7:27). Here we infer, that he would have been afraid but for the
promise which emboldened him. So in another passage he fortifies himself
with the general doctrine, "He will fulfil the desire of them that
fear him" (Ps. 145:19). Nay, we may observe in The Psalms how the
continuity of prayer is broken, and a transition is made at one time to
the power of God, at another to his goodness, at another to the
faithfulness of his promises. It might seem that
David, by introducing these sentiments, unseasonably mutilates his
prayers; but believers well know by experience, that their ardour grows
languid unless new fuel be added, and, therefore, that meditation as
well on the nature as on the word of God during prayer, is by no means
superfluous. Let us not decline to imitate the example of David,
and introduce thoughts which may reanimate our languid minds with new
vigour.
14. Other passages respecting the promises
which belong to the pious when they invoke God. These realised though we
are not possessed of the same holiness as other distinguished servants
of God, provided we indulge no vain confidence, and sincerely betake
ourselves to the mercy of God. Those who do not invoke God under urgent
necessity are no better than idolaters. This concurrence of fear and
confidence reconciles the different passages of Scripture, as to
humbling ourselves in prayer, and causing our prayers to ascend.
It is strange that these delightful promises affect us coldly, or
scarcely at all, so that the generality of men prefer to wander up and
down, forsaking the fountain of living waters, and hewing out to
themselves broken cisterns, rather than embrace the divine liberality
voluntarily offered to them (Jer. 2:13). "The name of the
Lord," says Solomon, "is a strong tower; the righteous runneth
into it, and is safe." (Pr. 18:10) Joel, after predicting the
fearful disaster which was at hand, subjoins the following memorable
sentence: "And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on
the name of the Lord shall be delivered." (Joel 2:32) This we know
properly refers to the course of the Gospel. Scarcely one in a hundred
is moved to come into the presence of God, though he himself exclaims by
Isaiah, "And it shall come to pass, that before they call, I will
answer; and while they are yet speaking, I will hear." (Is. 65:24)
This honour he elsewhere bestows upon the whole Church in general, as
belonging to all the members of Christ: "He shall call upon me, and
I will answer him: I will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him,
and honour him." (Ps. 91:15) My intention, however, as I already
observed, is not to enumerate all, but only select some admirable
passages as a specimen how kindly God allures us to himself, and how
extreme our ingratitude must be when with such powerful motives our
sluggishness still retards us. Wherefore, let these words always resound
in our ears: "The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him, to
all that call upon him in truth" (Ps. 145:18).
Likewise those passages which we have quoted from Isaiah and Joel, in
which God declares that his ear is open to our prayers, and that he is
delighted as with a sacrifice of sweet savour when we cast our cares
upon him. The special benefit of these promises we receive when we frame
our prayer, not timorously [timidly] or
doubtingly, but when trusting to his word whose majesty might otherwise
deter us, we are bold to call him Father, he himself deigning to suggest
this most delightful name. Fortified by such
invitations it remains for us to know that we have therein sufficient
materials for prayer, since our prayers depend on no merit of our own,
but all their worth and hope of success are founded and depend on the
promises of God, so that they need no other support, and require not to
look up and down on this hand and on that. It must therefore be
fixed in our minds, that though we equal not the lauded sanctity of
patriarchs, prophets, and apostles, yet as the command to pray is common
to us as well as them, and faith is common, so if we lean on the word of
God, we are in respect of this privilege their associates. For
God declaring, as has already been seen, that he will listen and be
favourable to all, encourages the most wretched to hope that they shall
obtain what they ask; and, accordingly, we should attend to the general
forms of expression, which, as it is commonly expressed, exclude none
from first to last; only let there be sincerity of heart,
self-dissatisfaction, humility, and faith, that we may not, by the
hypocrisy of a deceitful prayer, profane the name of God. Our
most merciful Father will not reject those whom he not only encourages
to come, but urges in every possible way. Hence David's method of prayer
to which I lately referred: "And now, O Lord God, thou art that
God, and thy words be true, and thou hast promised this goodness unto
thy servant, that it may continue for ever before thee" (2 Sam.
7:28). So also, in another passage, "Let, I pray thee, thy merciful
kindness be for my comfort, according to thy word unto thy servant"
(Psalm 119:76). And the whole body of the Israelites, whenever they
fortify themselves with the remembrance of the covenant, plainly
declare, that since God thus prescribes they are not to pray timorously
(Gen. 32:13). In this they imitated the example of the patriarchs,
particularly Jacob, who, after confessing that he was unworthy of the
many mercies which he had received of the Lord's hand, says, that he is
encouraged to make still larger requests, because God had promised that
he would grant them. But whatever be the pretexts
which unbelievers employ, when they do not flee to God as often as
necessity urges, nor seek after him, nor implore his aid, they defraud
him of his due honour just as much as if they were fabricating to
themselves new gods and idols, since in this way they deny that God is
the author of all their blessings. On the contrary, nothing more
effectually frees pious minds from every doubt, than to be armed with
the thought that no obstacle should impede them while they are obeying
the command of God, who declares that nothing is more grateful to him
than obedience. Hence, again, what I have
previously said becomes still more clear, namely, that a bold spirit in
prayer well accords with fear, reverence, and anxiety, and that there is
no inconsistency when God raises up those who had fallen prostrate.
In this way forms of expression apparently inconsistent admirably
haronize. Jeremiah and David speak of humbly laying their supplications[5]
before God (Jer. 42:9; Dan. 9:18). In another passage Jeremiah says
"Let, we beseech thee, our supplication be accepted before thee,
and pray for us unto the Lord thy God, even for all this remnant" (Jer.
42:2). On the other hand, believers are often said to lift up prayer.
Thus Hezekiah speaks, when asking the prophet to undertake the office of
interceding (2 Kings 19:4). And David says, "Let my prayer be set
forth before thee as incense; and the lifting up of my hands as the
evening sacrifice" (Ps. 141:2). The
explanation is, that though believers, persuaded of the paternal love of
God, cheerfully rely on his faithfulness, and have no hesitation in
imploring the aid which he voluntarily offers, they are not elated with
supine [lethargic; disinclined for
exertion] or presumptuous security; but
climbing up by the ladder of the promises, still remain humble and
abased suppliants.
15. Objection founded on some examples, viz.,
that prayers have proved effectual, though not according to the form
prescribed. Answer. Such examples, though not given for our imitation,
are of the greatest use. Objection, the prayers of the faithful
sometimes not effectual. Answer confirmed by a noble passage of
Augustine. Rule for right prayer.
Here, by way of objection, several questions are raised. Scripture
relates that God sometimes complied with certain prayers which had been
dictated by minds not duly calmed or regulated. It is true, that the
cause for which Jotham imprecated on the inhabitants of Shechem the
disaster which afterwards befell them was well founded; but still he was
inflamed with anger and revenge (Judges 9:20); and hence God, by
complying with the execration, seems to approve of passionate impulses.
Similar fervour also seized Samson, when he prayed, "Strengthen me,
I pray thee, only this once, O God, that I may be at once avenged of the
Philistines for my two eyes" (Judges 16:28). For although there was
some mixture of good zeal, yet his ruling feeling was a fervid, and
therefore vicious longing for vengeance. God
assents, and hence apparently it might be inferred that prayers are
effectual, though not framed in conformity to the rule of the word. But
I answer, first, that a perpetual law is not abrogated by
singular examples; and, secondly, that special suggestions
have sometimes been made to a few individuals, whose case thus becomes
different from that of the generality of men. For we should
attend to the answer which our Saviour gave to his disciples when they
inconsiderately wished to imitate the example of Elias, "Ye know
not what manner of spirit ye are of" (Luke 9:55). We
must, however, go farther and say, that the wishes to which God assents
are not always pleasing to him; but he assents, because it is necessary,
by way of example, to give clear evidence of the doctrine of Scripture,
viz. [namely; that is to say],
that he assists the miserable, and hears the groans of those who
unjustly afflicted implore his aid: and, accordingly, he executes his
judgments when the complaints of the needy, though in themselves
unworthy of attention, ascend to him. For how often, in
inflicting punishment on the ungodly for cruelty, rapine [plundering;
robbery], violence, lust, and other crimes, in curbing audacity
and fury, and also in overthrowing tyrannical power, has he declared
that he gives assistance to those who are unworthily oppressed though
they by addressing an unknown deity only beat the air? There is one
psalm which clearly teaches that prayers are not without effect, though
they do not penetrate to heaven by faith (Ps. 107:6,13,19). For
it enumerates the prayers which, by natural instinct, necessity extorts
from unbelievers not less than from believers, and to which it shows by
the event, that God is, notwithstanding, propitious. Is it to testify by
such readiness to hear that their prayers are agreeable to him? Nay; it
is, first, to magnify or display his mercy by the circumstance,
that even the wishes of unbelievers are not denied; and, secondly,
to stimulate his true worshippers to more urgent prayer, when they see
that sometimes even the wailings of the ungodly are not without avail.
This, however, is no reason why believers should deviate from the law
divinely imposed upon them, or envy unbelievers, as if they gained much
in obtaining what they wished. We have observed (chap. iii. sec. 25),
that in this way God yielded to the feigned repentance of Ahab, that he
might show how ready he is to listen to his elect when, with true
contrition, they seek his favour. Accordingly, he upbraids the Jews,
that shortly after experiencing his readiness to listen to their
prayers, they returned to their own perverse inclinations. It is also
plain from the Book of Judges that, whenever they wept, though their
tears were deceitful, they were delivered from the hands of their
enemies. Therefore, as God sends his sun
indiscriminately on the evil and on the good, so he despises not the
tears of those who have a good cause, and whose sorrows are deserving of
relief. Meanwhile, though he hears them, it has no more to do with
salvation than the supply of food which he gives to other despisers of
his goodness.
There seems to be a more difficult question concerning Abraham and
Samuel, the one of whom, without any instruction from the word of God,
prayed in behalf of the people of Sodom, and the other, contrary to an
express prohibition, prayed in behalf of Saul (Gen. 18:23; 1 Sam.
15:11). Similar is the case of Jeremiah, who prayed that the city might
not be destroyed (Jer. 32:16ff). It is true their prayers were refused,
but it seems harsh to affirm that they prayed without faith. Modest
readers will, I hope, be satisfied with this solution, viz., that
leaning to the general principle on which God enjoins us to be merciful
even to the unworthy, they were not altogether devoid of faith, though
in this particular instance their wish was disappointed. Augustine
shrewdly remarks, "How do the saints pray in faith when they ask
from God contrary to what he has decreed? Namely, because they pray
according to his will, not his hidden and immutable will, but that which
he suggests to them, that he may hear them in another manner; as he
wisely distinguishes" (August. de Civit. Dei, Lib. xxii. c. 2). This
is truly said: for, in his incomprehensible counsel, he so regulates
events, that the prayers of the saints, though involving a mixture of
faith and error, are not in vain. And yet this no more sanctions
imitation than it excuses the saints themselves, who I deny not exceeded
due bounds. Wherefore, whenever no certain promise exists, our
request to God must have a condition annexed to it. Here we may refer to
the prayer of David, "Awake for me to the judgment that thou hast
commanded" (Ps. 7:6); for he reminds us that he had received
special instruction to pray for a temporal blessing.[6]
16. The above four rules of prayer not so
rigidly exacted, as that every prayer deficient in them in any respect
is rejected by God. This shown by examples. Conclusion, or summary of
this section.
It is also of importance to observe, that the four laws of prayer of
which I have treated are not so rigorously enforced, as that God rejects
the prayers in which he does not find perfect faith or repentance,
accompanied with fervent zeal and wishes duly framed. We
have said (sec. 4), that though prayer is the familiar intercourse of
believers with God, yet reverence and modesty must be observed: we must
not give loose reins to our wishes, nor long for anything farther than
God permits; and, moreover, lest the majesty of God should be despised,
our minds must be elevated to pure and chaste veneration. This no
man ever performed with due perfection. For, not to speak of the
generality of men, how often do David's complaints savour of
intemperance? Not that he actually means to expostulate [make
friendly but formal protest] with God, or murmur at his
judgments, but failing, through infirmity, he finds no better solace
than to pour his griefs into the bosom of his heavenly Father. Nay,
even our stammering is tolerated by God, and pardon is granted to our
ignorance as often as anything rashly escapes us: indeed, without this
indulgence, we should have no freedom to pray. But although it
was David's intention to submit himself entirely to the will of God, and
he prayed with no less patience than fervour, yet irregular emotions
appear, nay, sometimes burst forth, -- emotions not a little at variance
with the first law which we laid down. In particular, we may see in a
clause of the thirty-ninth Psalm, how this saint was carried away by the
vehemence of his grief, and unable to keep within bounds. "O spare
me,{[7]} that I may recover strength, before I go
hence, and be no more" (Ps. 39:13). You would call this the
language of a desperate man, who had no other desire than that God
should withdraw and leave him to relish in his distresses. Not that his
devout mind rushes into such intemperance, or that, as the reprobate are
wont, he wishes to have done with God; he only complains that the divine
anger is more than he can bear. During those trials, wishes often escape
which are not in accordance with the rule of the word, and in which the
saints do not duly consider what is lawful and expedient. Prayers
contaminated by such faults, indeed, deserve to be rejected; yet
provided the saints lament, administer self-correction and return to
themselves, God pardons.
Similar faults are committed in regard to the second law (as to
which, see sec. 6), for the saints have often to struggle with their own
coldness, their want and misery not urging them sufficiently to serious
prayer. It often happens, also, that their minds wander, and are almost
lost; hence in this matter also there is need of pardon, lest their
prayers, from being languid or mutilated, or interrupted and wandering,
should meet with a refusal. One of the natural feelings which God has
imprinted on our mind is, that prayer is not genuine unless the thoughts
are turned upward. Hence the ceremony of raising the hands, to which we
have adverted, a ceremony known to all ages and nations, and still in
common use. But who, in lifting up his hands, is not conscious of
sluggishness, the heart cleaving to the earth? In regard to the petition
for remission of sins (sec. 8), though no believer omits it, yet all who
are truly exercised in prayer feel that they bring scarcely a tenth of
the sacrifice of which David speaks, "The sacrifices of God are a
broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise" (Ps. 51:17). Thus a twofold pardon is always to be asked; first,
because they are conscious of many faults the sense of which, however,
does not touch them so as to make them feel dissatisfied with themselves
as they ought; and, secondly, in so far as they have been enabled
to profit in repentance and the fear of God, they are humbled with just
sorrow for their offenses, and pray for the remission of punishment by
the judge. The thing which most of all vitiates prayer, did not God
indulgently interpose, is weakness or imperfection of faith; but it is
not wonderful that this defect is pardoned by God, who often exercises
his people with severe trials, as if he actually wished to extinguish
their faith. The hardest of such trials is when believers are
forced to exclaim, "O Lord God of hosts, how long wilt thou be
angry against the prayer of thy people?" (Ps. 80:4), as if their
very prayers offended him. In like manner, when Jeremiah says "Also
when I cry and shout, he shutteth out my prayers (Lam. 3:8), there
cannot be a doubt that he was in the greatest perturbation. Innumerable
examples of the same kind occur in the Scriptures, from which it is
manifest that the faith of the saints was often mingled wth doubts and
fears, so that while believing and hoping, they, however, betrayed some
degree of unbelief. But because they do not come so far as were to be
wished, that is only an additional reason for their exerting themselves
to correct their faults, that they may daily approach nearer to the
perfect law of prayer, and at the same time feel into what an abyss of
evils those are plunged, who, in the very cures they use, bring new
diseases upon themselves: since there is no prayer which God would not
deservedly disdain, did he not overlook the blemishes with which all of
them are polluted. I do not mention these things
that believers may securely pardon themselves in any faults which they
commit, but that they may call themselves to strict account, and thereby
endeavour to surmount these obstacles; and though Satan endeavours to
block up all the paths in order to prevent them from praying, they may,
nevertheless, break through, being firmly persuaded that though not
disencumbered of all hinderances, their attempts are pleasing to God,
and their wishes are approved, provided they hasten on and keep their
aim, though without immediately reaching it.
17. Through whom God is to be invoked, viz.,
Jesus Christ. This founded on a consideration of the divine majesty, and
the precept and promise of God himself. God therefore to be invoked only
in the name of Christ.
But since no man is worthy to come forward in his own name, and
appear in the presence of God, our heavenly Father, to relieve us at
once from fear and shame, with which all must feel oppressed,{ [8]}
has given us his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, to be our Advocate and
Mediator, that under his guidance we may approach securely, confiding
that with him for our Intercessor nothing which we ask in his name will
be denied to us, as there is nothing which the Father can deny to him (1
Tim. 2:5; 1 John 2:1; see sec. 36, 37). To this it is necessary to refer
all that we have previously taught concerning faith; because, as the
promise gives us Christ as our Mediator, so, unless our hope of
obtaining what we ask is founded on him, it deprives us of the privilege
of prayer. For it is impossible to think of the dread majesty of God
without being filled with alarm; and hence the sense of our own
unworthiness must keep us far away, until Christ interpose, and convert
a throne of dreadful glory into a throne of grace, as the Apostle
teaches that thus we can "come boldly unto the throne of grace,
that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need"
(Heb. 4:16). And as a rule has been laid down as to prayer, as a promise
has been given that those who pray will be heard, so we are specially
enjoined to pray in the name of Christ, the promise being that we shall
obtain what we ask in his name. "Whatsoever ye shall ask in
my name," says our Saviour, "that will I do; that the Father
may be glorified in the Son;" "Hitherto ye have asked nothing
in my name; ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full"
(John 14:13; 16:24). Hence it is incontrovertibly clear that those who
pray to God in any other name than that of Christ contumaciously falsify
his orders, and regard his will as nothing, while they have no promise
that they shall obtain. For, as Paul says "All the promises of God
in him are yea, and in him amen;" (2 Cor. 1:20), that is, are
confirmed and fulfilled in him.
18. From the first all believers were heard
through him only: yet this specially restricted to the period subsequent
to his ascension. The ground of this restriction.
And we must carefully attend to the circumstance of time. Christ
enjoins his disciples to have recourse to his intercession after he
shall have ascended to heaven: "At that day ye shall ask in my
name" (John 16:26). It is certain, indeed, that from the very first
all who ever prayed were heard only for the sake of the Mediator. For
this reason God had commanded in the Law, that the priest alone should
enter the sanctuary, bearing the names of the twelve tribes of Israel on
his shoulders, and as many precious stones on his breast, while the
people were to stand at a distance in the outer court, and thereafter
unite their prayers with the priest. Nay, the sacrifice had even the
effect of ratifying and confirming their prayers. That
shadowy ceremony of the Law therefore taught, first, that we are
all excluded from the face of God, and, therefore, that there is need of
a Mediator to appear in our name, and carry us on his shoulders and keep
us bound upon his breast, that we may be heard in his person; And secondly,
that our prayers, which, as has been said, would otherwise never be free
from impurity, are cleansed by the sprinkling of his blood. And
we see that the saints, when they desired to obtain anything, founded
their hopes on sacrifices, because they knew that by sacrifice all
prayers were ratified: "Remember all thy offerings," says
David, "and accept thy burnt sacrifice" (Ps. 20:3). Hence we
infer, that in receiving the prayers of his people, God was from the
very first appeased by the intercession of Christ. Why then does Christ
speak of a new period ("at that day") when the disciples were
to begin to pray in his name, unless it be that this grace, being now
more brightly displayed, ought also to be in higher estimation with us?
In this sense he had said a little before, "Hitherto ye have asked
nothing in my name; ask." Not that they were altogether ignorant of
the office of Mediator (all the Jews were instructed in these first
rudiments), but they did not clearly understand that Christ by his
ascent to heaven would be more the advocate of the Church than before.
Therefore, to solace their grief for his absence by some more than
ordinary result, he asserts his office of advocate, and says, that
hitherto they had been without the special benefit which it would be
their privilege to enjoy, when aided by his intercession they should
invoke God with greater freedom. In this sense the Apostle says that we
have "boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by
a new and living way, which he hath consecrated for us" (Heb.
10:19, 20). Therefore, the more inexcusable we are, if we do not with
both hands (as it is said) embrace the inestimable gift which is
properly destined for us.
19. The wrath of God lies on those who reject
Christ as a Mediator. This excludes not the mutual intercession of
saints on the earth.
Moreover since he himself is the only way and the only access by
which we can draw near to God, those who deviate from this way, and
decline this access, have no other remaining; his throne presents
nothing but wrath, judgment, and terror. In short, as the Father has
consecrated him our guide and head, those who abandon or turn aside from
him in any way endeavour, as much as in them lies, to sully and efface
the stamp which God has impressed. Christ,
therefore, is the only Mediator by whose intercession the Father is
rendered propitious and exorable (1 Tim. 2:5). For though the saints are
still permitted to use intercessions, by which they mutually beseech God
in behalf of each other's salvation, and of which the Apostle makes
mention (Eph. 6:18, 19; 1 Tim. 2:1); yet these depend on that one
intercession, so far are they from derogating [detract;
take away part] from it. For as the
intercessions which, as members of one body we offer up for each other,
spring from the feeling of love, so they have reference to this one
head. Being thus also made in the name of Christ,
what more do they than declare that no man can derive the least benefit
from any prayers without the intercession of Christ? As there is nothing
in the intercession of Christ to prevent the different members of the
Church from offering up prayers for each other, so let it be held as a
fixed principle, that all the intercessions thus used in the Church must
have reference to that one intercession. Nay, we must be
specially careful to show our gratitude on this very account, that God
pardoning our unworthiness, not only allows each individual to pray for
himself, but allows all to intercede mutually for each other. God having
given a place in his Church to intercessors who would deserve to be
rejected when praying privately on their own account, how presumptuous
were it to abuse this kindness by employing it to obscure the honour of
Christ?
20. Refutation of errors interfering with the
intercession of Christ. 1. Christ the Mediator of redemption; the saints
mediators of intercession. Answer confirmed by the clear testimony of
Scripture, and by a passage from Augustine. The nature of Christ's
intercession.
Moreover, the Sophists are guilty of the merest trifling when they
allege that Christ is the Mediator of redemption, but that believers are
mediators of intercession; as if Christ had only performed a temporary
mediation, and left an eternal and imperishable mediation to his
servants. Such, forsooth [truly; no doubt],
is the treatment which he receives from those who pretend only to take
from him a minute portion of honour. Very different is the language of
Scripture, with whose simplicity every pious man will be satisfied,
without paying any regard to those importers. For when John says,
"If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ
the righteous" (1 John 2:1), does he mean merely that we once had
an advocate; does he not rather ascribe to him a perpetual intercession?
What does Paul mean when he declares that he "is even at the right
hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us"? (Rom. 8:32). But
when in another passage he declares that he is the only Mediator between
God and man (1 Tim. 2:5), is he not referring to the supplications which
he had mentioned a little before? Having previously said that prayers
were to be offered up for all men, he immediately adds, in confirmation
of that statement, that there is one God, and one Mediator between God
and man. Nor does Augustine give a different interpretation when he
says, "Christian men mutually recommend each other in their
prayers. But he for whom none intercedes, while he himself intercedes
for all, is the only true Mediator. Though the Apostle Paul was under
the head a principal member, yet because he was a member of the body of
Christ, and knew that the most true and High Priest of the Church had
entered not by figure into the inner veil to the holy of holies, but by
firm and express truth into the inner sanctuary of heaven to holiness,
holiness not imaginary, but eternal (Heb 9:11, 24), he also commends
himself to the prayers of the faithful (Rom. 15:30; Eph. 6:19; Col.
4:3). He does not make himself a mediator between God and the people,
but asks that all the members of the body of Christ should pray mutually
for each other, since the members are mutually sympathetic: if one
member suffers, the others suffer with it (1 Cor. 12:26). And thus the
mutual prayers of all the members still labouring on the earth ascend to
the Head, who has gone before into heaven, and in whom there is
propitiation for our sins. For if Paul were a
mediator, so would also the other apostles, and thus there would be many
mediators, and Paul's statement could not stand, 'There is one God, and
one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;' (1 Tim. 2:5) in
whom we also are one (Rom. 12:5) if we keep the unity of the faith in
the bond of peace (Eph. 4:3)," (August. Contra Parmenian, Lib. ii.
cap. 8). Likewise in another passage Augustine says, "If
thou requirest a priest, he is above the heavens, where he intercedes
for those who on earth died for thee" (August. in Ps. 94). We
imagine not that he throws himself before his Father's knees, and
suppliantly intercedes for us; but we understand with the Apostle, that
he appears in the presence of God, and that the power of his death has
the effect of a perpetual intercession for us; that having entered into
the upper sanctuary, he alone continues to the end of the world to
present the prayers of his people, who are standing far off in the outer
court.
21. Of the intercession of saints living
with Christ in heaven. Fiction of the Papists in regard to it. Refuted.
1. Its absurdity. 2. It is nowhere mentioned by Scripture. 3. Appeal to
the conscience of the superstitious. 4. Its blasphemy. Exception.
Answers.
In regard to the saints who having died in the body live in Christ,
if we attribute prayer to them, let us not imagine that they have any
other way of supplicating God than through Christ who alone is the way,
or that their prayers are accepted by God in any other name. Wherefore,
since the Scripture calls us away from all others to Christ alone, since
our heavenly Father is pleased to gather together all things in him, it
were the extreme of stupidity, not to say madness, to attempt to obtain
access by means of others, so as to be drawn away from him without whom
access cannot be obtained. But who can deny that this was the practice
for several ages, and is still the practice, wherever Popery prevails?
To procure the favour of God, human merits are ever and anon [every
now and then] obtruded [thrust
forward persistently], and very frequently
while Christ is passed by, God is supplicated in their name. I ask if
this is not to transfer to them that office of sole intercession which
we have above claimed for Christ? Then what angel or devil ever
announced one syllable to any human being concerning that fancied
intercession of theirs? There is not a word on the subject in Scripture.
What ground then was there for the fiction? Certainly, while the human
mind thus seeks help for itself in which it is not sanctioned by the
word of God, it plainly manifests its distrust (see s. 27). But
if we appeal to the consciences of all who take pleasure in the
intercession of saints, we shall find that their only reason for it is,
that they are filled with anxiety, as if they supposed that Christ were
insufficient or too rigorous. By this anxiety they dishonour Christ, and
rob him of his title of sole Mediator, a title which being given him by
the Father as his special privilege, ought not to be transferred to any
other. By so doing they obscure the glory of his nativity and make void
his cross; in short, divest and defraud of due praise everything which
he did or suffered, since all which he did and suffered goes to show
that he is and ought to be deemed sole Mediator. At the same time, they
reject the kindness of God in manifesting himself to them as a Father,
for he is not their Father if they do not recognize Christ as their
brother. This they plainly refuse to do if they think not that he feels
for them a brother's affection; affection than which none can be more
gentle or tender. Wherefore Scripture offers him alone, sends us to him,
and establishes us in him. "He," says Ambrose, "is our
mouth by which we speak to the Father; our eye by which we see the
Father; our right hand by which we offer ourselves to the Father. Save
by his intercession neither we nor any saints have any intercourse with
God" (Ambros. Lib. de Isaac et Anima). If they object that the
public prayers which are offered up in churches conclude with the words,
through Jesus Christ our Lord, it is a frivolous evasion; because no
less insult is offered to the intercession of Christ by confounding it
with the prayers and merits of the dead, than by omitting it altogether,
and making mention only of the dead. Then, in all their litanies, hymns,
and proses where every kind of honour is paid to dead saints, there is
no mention of Christ.
22. Monstrous errors resulting from this
fiction. Refutation. Exception by the advocates of this fiction. Answer.
But here stupidity has proceeded to such a length as to give a
manifestation of the genius of superstition, which, when once it has
shaken off the rein, is wont to wanton without limit. After men began to
look to the intercession of saints, a peculiar administration was
gradually assigned to each, so that, according to diversity of business,
now one, now another, intercessor was invoked. Then individuals adopted
particular saints, and put their faith in them, just as if they had been
tutelar deities. And thus not only were gods set up according to the
number of the cities (the charge which the prophet brought against
Israel of old, Jer. 2:28; 11:13), but according to the number of
individuals. But while the saints in all their desires refer to the will
of God alone, look to it, and acquiesce in it, yet to assign to them any
other prayer than that of longing for the arrival of the kingdom of God,
is to think of them stupidly, carnally, and even insultingly. Nothing
can be farther from such a view than to imagine that each, under the
influence of private feeling, is disposed to be most favourable to his
own worshippers. At length vast numbers have fallen into the horrid
blasphemy of invoking them not merely as helping but presiding over
their salvation. See the depth to which miserable men fall when they
forsake their proper station, that is, the word of God. I say nothing of
the more monstrous specimens of impiety in which, though detestable to
God, angels, and men, they themselves feel no pain or shame. Prostrated
at a statue or picture of Barbara or Catherine, and the like, they
mutter a Pater Noster;{[9]} and so far are their
pastors{[10]} from curing or curbing this frantic
course, that, allured by the scent of gain, they approve and applaud it.
But while seeking to relieve themselves of the odium of this vile and
criminal procedure, with what pretext can they defend the practice of
calling upon Eloy (Eligius) or Medard to look upon their servants, and
send them help from heaven, or the Holy Virgin to order her Son to do
what they ask?{[11]} The
Council of Carthage forbade direct prayer to be made at the altar to
saints. It is probable that these holy men, unable entirely to suppress
the force of depraved custom, had recourse to this check, that public
prayers might not be vitiated with such forms of expression as Sancte
Petre, ora pro nobis -- St Peter, pray for us. But how much farther has
this devilish extravagance proceeded when men hesitate not to transfer
to the dead the peculiar attributes of Christ and God?
23. Arguments of the Papists for the
intercession of saints. 1. From the duty and office of angels. Answer.
2. From an expression of Jeremiah respecting Moses and Samuel. Answer,
retorting the argument. 3. The meaning of the prophet confirmed by a
similar passage in Ezekiel, and the testimony of an apostle.
In endeavouring to prove that such intercession derives some support
from Scripture they labour in vain. We frequently read (they say) of the
prayers of angels, and not only so, but the prayers of believers are
said to be carried into the presence of God by their hands. But if they
would compare saints who have departed this life with angels, it will be
necessary to prove that saints are ministering spirits, to whom has been
delegated the office of superintending our salvation, to whom has been
assigned the province of guiding us in all our ways, of encompassing,
admonishing, and comforting us, of keeping watch over us. All these are
assigned to angels, but none of them to saints. How preposterously they
confound departed saints with angels is sufficiently apparent from the
many different offices by which Scripture distinguishes the one from the
other. No one unless admitted will presume to perform the office of
pleader before an earthly judge; whence then have worms such license as
to obtrude themselves on God as intercessors, while no such office has
been assigned them? God has been pleased to give angels the charge of
our safety. Hence they attend our sacred meetings, and the Church is to
them a theatre in which they behold the manifold wisdom of God (Eph.
3:10). Those who transfer to others this office which is peculiar to
them, certainly pervert and confound the order which has been
established by God and ought to be inviolable. With similar dexterity
they proceed to quote other passages. God said to Jeremiah, "Though
Moses and Samuel stood before me, yet my mind could not be toward this
people" (Jer. 15:1). How (they ask) could he have spoken thus of
the dead but because he knew that they interceded for the living? My
inference, on the contrary, is this: since it thus appears that neither
Moses nor Samuel interceded for the people of Israel, there was then no
intercession for the dead. For who of the saints
can be supposed to labour for the salvation of the peoples while Moses
who, when in life, far surpassed all others in this matter, does
nothing? Therefore, if they persist in the paltry quibble, that
the dead intercede for the living, because the Lord said, "If they
stood before me," (intercesserint), I will argue far more
speciously in this way: Moses, of whom it is said, "if he
interceded," did not intercede for the people in their extreme
necessity: it is probable, therefore, that no other saint intercedes,
all being far behind Moses in humanity, goodness, and paternal
solicitude. Thus all they gain by their cavilling is to be wounded by
the very arms with which they deem themselves admirably protected. But
it is very ridiculous to wrest this simple sentence in this manner; for
the Lord only declares that he would not spare the iniquities of the
people, though some Moses or Samuel, to whose prayers he had shown
himself so indulgent, should intercede for them. This meaning is most
clearly elicited from a similar passage in Ezekiel: "Though these
three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver but
their own souls by their righteousness, saith the Lord God" (Ezek.
14:14). Here there can be no doubt that we are to understand the words
as if it had been said, If two of the persons named were again to come
alive; for the third was still living, namely, Daniel, who it is well
known had then in the bloom of youth given an incomparable display of
piety. Let us therefore leave out those whom Scripture declares to have
completed their course. Accordingly, when Paul speaks of David, he says
not that by his prayers he assisted posterity, but only that he
"served his own generation" (Acts 13:36).
24. 4. Fourth papistical argument from the
nature of charity, which is more perfect in the saints in glory. Answer.
They again object, Are those, then, to be deprived of every pious
wish, who, during the whole course of their lives, breathed nothing but
piety and mercy? I have no wish curiously to pry into what they do or
meditate; but the probability is, that instead of being subject to the
impulse of various and particular desires, they, with one fixed and
immoveable will, long for the kingdom of God, which consists not less in
the destruction of the ungodly than in the salvation of believers. If
this be so, there cannot be a doubt that their charity is confined to
the communion of Christ's body, and extends no farther than is
compatible with the nature of that communion. But though I grant that in
this way they pray for us, they do not, however, lose their quiescence
so as to be distracted with earthly cares: far less are they, therefore,
to be invoked by us. Nor does it follow that such invocation is to be
used because, while men are alive upon the earth, they can mutually
commend themselves to each other's prayers. It serves to keep alive a
feeling of charity when they, as it were, share each other's wants, and
bear each other's burdens. This they do by the command of the Lord, and
not without a promise, the two things of primary importance in prayer.
But all such reasons are inapplicable to the dead, with whom the Lord,
in withdrawing them from our society, has left us no means of
intercourse (Eccles. 9:5, 6), and to whom, so far as we can conjecture,
he has left no means of intercourse with us. But if any one allege that
they certainly must retain the same charity for us, as they are united
with us in one faith, who has revealed to us that they have ears capable
of listening to the sounds of our voice, or eyes clear enough to discern
our necessities? Our opponents, indeed, talk in the shade of their
schools of some kind of light which beams upon departed saints from the
divine countenance, and in which, as in a mirror, they, from their lofty
abode, behold the affairs of men; but to affirm this with the confidence
which these men presume to use, is just to desire, by means of the
extravagant dreams of our own brain, and without any authority, to pry
and penetrate into the hidden judgments of God, and trample upon
Scripture, which so often declares that the wisdom of our flesh is at
enmity with the wisdom of God, utterly condemns the vanity of our mind,
and humbling our reason, bids us look only to the will of God.
25. Argument founded on a passage in Moses.
Answer.
The other passages of Scripture which they employ to defend their
error are miserably wrested. Jacob (they say) asks for the sons of
Joseph, "Let my name be named on them, and the name of my fathers,
Abraham and Isaac" (Gen. 48:16). First, let us see what the nature
of this invocation was among the Israelites. They do not implore their
fathers to bring succour to them, but they beseech God to remember his
servants, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Their example, therefore, gives no
countenance to those who use addresses to the saints themselves. But
such being the dulness of these blocks, that they comprehend not what it
is to invoke the name of Jacob, nor why it is to be invoked, it is not
strange that they blunder thus childishly as to the mode of doing it.
The expression repeatedly occurs in Scripture. Isaiah speaks of women
being called by the name of men, when they have them for husbands and
live under their protection (Isa. 4:1). The calling of the name of
Abraham over the Israelites consists in referring the origin of their
race to him, and holding him in distinguished remembrance as their
author and parent. Jacob does not do so from any anxiety to extend the
celebrity of his name, but because he knows that all the happiness of
his posterity consisted in the inheritance of the covenant which God had
made with them. Seeing that this would give them the sum of all
blessings, he prays that they may be regarded as of his race, this being
nothing else than to transmit the succession of the covenant to them.
They again, when they make mention of this subject in their prayers, do
not betake themselves to the intercession of the dead, but call to
remembrance that covenant in which their most merciful Father undertakes
to be kind and propitious to them for the sake of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. How little, in other respects, the saints trusted to the merits
of their fathers, the public voice of the Church declares in the
prophets "Doubtless thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant
of us, and Israel acknowledge us not; thou, O Lord, art our Father, our
Redeemer" (Isa. 63:16). And while the Church thus speaks, she at
the same time adds, "Return for thy servants' sake," not
thinking of anything like intercession, but adverting only to the
benefit of the covenant. Now, indeed, when we have the Lord Jesus, in
whose hand the eternal covenant of mercy was not only made but
confirmed, what better name can we bear before us in our prayers? And
since those good Doctors would make out by these words that the
Patriarchs are intercessors, I should like them to tell me why, in so
great a multitude,{[12]} no place whatever is
given to Abraham, the father of the Church? We know well from what a
crew they select their intercessors.{[13]} Let
them then tell me what consistency there is in neglecting and rejecting
Abraham, whom God preferred to all others, and raised to the highest
degree of honour. The only reason is, that as it was plain there was no
such practice in the ancient Church, they thought proper to conceal the
novelty of the practice by saying nothing of the Patriarchs: as if by a
mere diversity of names they could excuse a practice at once novel and
impure. They sometimes, also, object that God is entreated to have mercy
on his people "for David's sake" (Ps. 132:10; see Calv. Com.).
This is so far from supporting their error, that it is the strongest
refutation of it. We must consider the character which David bore. He is
set apart from the whole body of the faithful to establish the covenant
which God made in his hand. Thus regard is had to the covenant rather
than to the individual. Under him as a type the sole intercession of
Christ is asserted. But what was peculiar to David as a type of Christ
is certainly inapplicable to others.
26. Argument from its being said that the
prayers of saints are heard. Answer, confirmed by Scripture, and
illustrated by examples.
But some seem to be moved by the fact, that the prayers of saints are
often said to have been heard. Why? Because they prayed. "They
cried unto thee" (says the Psalmist), "and were delivered:
they trusted in thee, and were not confounded" (Ps. 22:5). Let us
also pray after their example, that like them we too may be heard. Those
men, on the contrary, absurdly argue that none will be heard but those
who have been heard already. How much better does James argue,
"Elias was a man subject to like passions as we are, and he prayed
earnestly that it might not rain: and it rained not on the earth by the
space of three years and six months. And he prayed again and the heaven
gave rain, and the earth brought forth her fruit" (James 5:17, 18).
What? Does he infer that Elias possessed some peculiar privilege, and
that we must have recourse to him for the use of it? By no means. He
shows the perpetual efficacy of a pure and pious prayer, that we may be
induced in like manner to pray. For the kindness
and readiness of God to hear others is malignantly interpreted, if their
example does not inspire us with stronger confidence in his promise,
since his declaration is not that he will incline his ear to one or two,
or a few individuals, but to all who call upon his name. In this
ignorance they are the less excusable, because they seem as it were
avowedly to contemn the many admonitions of Scripture. David was
repeatedly delivered by the power of God. Was this to give that power to
him that we might be delivered on his application? Very different is his
affirmation: "The righteous shall compass me about; for thou shalt
deal bountifully with me" (Ps. 142:7). Again, "The righteous
also shall see, and fear, and shall laugh at him" (Ps. 52:6).
"This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him, and saved him out of
all his troubles" (Ps. 34:6). In The Psalms are many similar
prayers, in which David calls upon God to give him what he asks, for
this reason, viz., that the righteous may not be put to shame, but by
his example encouraged to hope. Here let one passage suffice, "For
this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee in a time when thou
mayest be found" (Ps. 32:6, Calv. Com.). This passage I have quoted
the more readily, because those ravers who employ their hireling tongues
in defense of the Papacy, are not ashamed to adduce it in proof of the
intercession of the dead. As if David intended anything more than to
show the benefit which he shall obtain from the divine clemency and
condescension when he shall have been heard. In general, we must hold
that the experience of the grace of God, as well towards ourselves as
towards others, tends in no slight degree to confirm our faith in his
promises. I do not quote the many passages in which David sets forth the
loving-kindness of God to him as a ground of confidence, as they will
readily occur to every reader of The Psalms. Jacob had previously taught
the same thing by his own example, "I am not worthy of the least of
all thy mercies, and of all the truth which thou hast showed unto thy
servant: for with my staff I passed over this Jordan; and now I am
become two bands" (Gen. 32:10). He indeed alleges the promise, but
not the promise only; for he at the same time adds the effect, to
animate him with greater confidence in the future kindness of God. God
is not like men who grow weary of their liberality, or whose means of
exercising it become exhausted; but he is to be estimated by his own
nature, as David properly does when he says, "Thou hast redeemed
me, O Lord God of truth" (Ps. 31:5). After ascribing the praise of
his salvation to God, he adds that he is true: for were he not ever like
himself, his past favour would not be an infallible ground for
confidence and prayer. But when we know that as often as he assists us,
he gives us a specimen and proof of his goodness and faithfulness, there
is no reason to fear that our hope will be ashamed or frustrated.
27. Conclusion, that the saints cannot be
invoked without impiety. 1. It robs God of his glory. 2. Destroys the
intercession of Christ. 3. Is repugnant to the word of God. 4. Is
opposed to the due method of prayer. 5. Is without approved example. 6.
Springs from distrust. Last objection. Answer.
On the whole, since Scripture places the principal part of worship in
the invocation of God (this being the office of piety which he requires
of us in preference to all sacrifices), it is manifest sacrilege to
offer prayer to others. Hence it is said in the psalm: "If we have
forgotten the name of our God, or stretched out our hands to a strange
god, shall not God search this out?" (Ps. 44:20, 21). Again,
since it is only in faith that God desires to be invoked, and he
distinctly enjoins us to frame our prayers according to the rule of his
word: in fine, since faith is founded on the word, and is the parent of
right prayer, the moment we decline from the word, our prayers are
impure. But we have already shown, that if we consult the whole
volume of Scripture, we shall find that God claims this honour to
himself alone. In regard to the office of
intercession, we have also seen that it is peculiar to Christ, and that
no prayer is agreeable to God which he as Mediator does not sanctify.
And though believers mutually offer up prayers to God in behalf of their
brethren, we have shown that this derogates in no respect from the sole
intercession of Christ, because all trust to that intercession in
commending themselves as well as others to God. Moreover, we have shown
that this is ignorantly transferred to the dead, of whom we nowhere read
that they were commanded to pray for us. The Scripture often exhorts us
to offer up mutual prayers; but says not one syllable concerning the
dead; nay, James tacitly excludes the dead when he combines the two
things, to "confess our sins one to another, and to pray one for
another" (James 5:16). Hence it is sufficient
to condemn this error, that the beginning of right prayer springs from
faith, and that faith comes by the hearing of the word of God, in which
there is no mention of fictitious intercession, superstition having
rashly adopted intercessors who have not been divinely appointed.
While the Scripture abounds in various forms of prayer, we find no
example of this intercession, without which Papists think there is no
prayer. Moreover, it is evident that this superstition is the result of
distrust, because they are either not contented with Christ as an
intercessor, or have altogether robbed him of this honour. This last is
easily proved by their effrontery [shameless
audacity] in maintaining, as the strongest of all their arguments
for the intercession of the saints, that we are unworthy of familiar
access to God. This, indeed, we acknowledge to be most true, but we
thence infer that they leave nothing to Christ, because they consider
his intercession as nothing, unless it is supplemented by that of George
and Hypolyte, and similar phantoms.
28. Kinds of prayer. Vows. Supplications.
Petitions. Thanksgiving. Connection of these, their constant use and
necessity. Particular explanation confirmed by reason, Scripture, and
example. Rule as to supplication and thanksgiving.
But though prayer is properly confined to vows and supplications, yet
so strong is the affinity between petition and thanksgiving, that both
may be conveniently comprehended under one name. For the forms which
Paul enumerates (1 Tim. 2:1) fall under the first member of this
division. By prayer and supplication we pour out our desires before God,
asking as well those things which tend to promote his glory and display
his name, as the benefits which contribute to our advantage. By
thanksgiving we duly celebrate his kindnesses toward us, ascribing to
his liberality every blessing which enters into our lot. David
accordingly includes both in one sentence, "Call upon me in the day
of trouble: I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me" (Ps.
50:15). Scripture, not without reason, commands us to use both
continually. We have already described the greatness of our want, while
experience itself proclaims the straits which press us on every side to
be so numerous and so great, that all have sufficient ground to send
forth sighs and groans to God without intermission, and suppliantly
implore him. For even should they be exempt from
adversity, still the holiest ought to be stimulated first by their sins,
and, secondly, by the innumerable assaults of temptation, to long for a
remedy. The sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving can never be
interrupted without guilt, since God never ceases to load us with favour
upon favour, so as to force us to gratitude, however slow and sluggish
we may be. In short, so great and widely diffused are the riches
of his liberality towards us, so marvellous and wondrous the miracles
which we behold on every side, that we never can want a subject and
materials for praise and thanksgiving.
To make this somewhat clearer: since all our hopes and resources are
placed in God (this has already been fully proved), so that neither our
persons nor our interests can prosper without his blessing, we must
constantly submit ourselves and our all to him. Then whatever we
deliberate, speak, or do, should be deliberated, spoken, and done under
his hand and will; in fine, under the hope of his assistance. God
has pronounced a curse upon all who, confiding in themselves or others,
form plans and resolutions, who, without regarding his will, or invoking
his aid, either plan or attempt to execute (James 4:14; Isaiah 30:1;
31:1). And since, as has already been observed, he
receives the honour which is due when he is acknowledged to be the
author of all good, it follows that, in deriving all good from his hand,
we ought continually to express our thankfulness, and that we have no
right to use the benefits which proceed from his liberality, if we do
not assiduously proclaim his praise, and give him thanks, these being
the ends for which they are given. When Paul declares that every
creature of God "is sanctified by the word of God and prayers"
(1 Tim. 4:5), he intimates that without the word and prayers none of
them are holy and pure, word being used metonymically [substitution
of the name of an attribute for that of the thing meant] for
faith. Hence David, on experiencing the loving-kindness of the Lord,
elegantly declares, "He hath put a new song in my mouth" (Ps.
40:3); intimating, that our silence is malignant when we leave his
blessings unpraised, seeing every blessing he bestows is a new ground of
thanksgiving. Thus Isaiah, proclaiming the singular mercies of God,
says, "Sing unto the Lord a new song" (Is. 42:10). In the same
sense David says in another passage, "O Lord, open thou my lips;
and my mouth shall show forth thy praise" (Ps. 41:15). In like
manner, Hezekiah and Jonah declare that they will regard it as the end
of their deliverance "to celebrate the goodness of God with songs
in his temple" (Is. 38:20; Jonah 2:10). David lays down a general
rule for all believers in these words, "What shall I render unto
the Lord for all his benefits toward me? I will take the cup of
salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord" (Ps. 116:12, 13).
This rule the Church follows in another psalm, "Save us, O Lord our
God, and gather us from among the heathen, to give thanks unto thy holy
name, and to triumph in thy praise" (Ps. 106:47). Again, "He
will regard the prayer of the destitute, and not despise their prayer.
This shall be written for the generation to come: and the people which
shall be created shall praise the Lord." "To declare the name
of the Lord in Zion, and his praise in Jerusalem" (Ps. 102:18, 21).
Nay, whenever believers beseech the Lord to do
anything for his own name's sake, as they declare themselves unworthy of
obtaining it in their own name, so they oblige themselves to give
thanks, and promise to make the right use of his lovingkindness by being
the heralds of it. Thus Hosea, speaking of the future redemption
of the Church, says, "Take away all iniquity, and receive us
graciously; so will we render the calves of our lips" (Hos. 14:2).
Not only do our tongues proclaim the kindness of God, but they naturally
inspire us with love to him. "I love the Lord, because he hath
heard my voice and my supplications" (Ps. 116:1). In another
passage, speaking of the help which he had experienced, he says, "I
will love thee, O Lord, my strength" (Ps. 18:1). No praise will
ever please God that does not flow from this feeling of love. Nay,
we must attend to the declaration of Paul, that all wishes are vicious
and perverse which are not accompanied with thanksgiving. His words are,
"In everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let
your requests be made known unto God" (Phil. 4:6). Because many,
under the influence of moroseness, weariness, impatience, bitter grief
and fear, use murmuring in their prayers, he enjoins us so to regulate
our feelings as cheerfully to bless God even before obtaining what we
ask. But if this connection ought always to subsist in full
vigour between things that are almost contrary, the more sacred is the
tie which binds us to celebrate the praises of God whenever he grants
our requests. And as we have already shown that our prayers, which
otherwise would be polluted, are sanctified by the intercession of
Christ, so the Apostle, by enjoining us "to offer the sacrifice of
praise to God continually" by Christ (Heb. 13:15), reminds us, that
without the intervention of his priesthood our
lips are not pure enough to celebrate the name of God. Hence we
infer that a monstrous delusion prevails among Papists, the great
majority of whom wonder when Christ is called an intercessor. The reason
why Paul enjoins, "Pray without ceasing; in everything give
thanks" (1 Thess. 5:17, 18), is, because he would have us with the
utmost assiduity, at all times, in every place, in all things, and under
all circumstances, direct our prayers to God, to expect all the things
which we desire from him, and when obtained ascribe them to him; thus
furnishing perpetual grounds for prayer and praise.
29. The accidents of prayer, viz., private
and public, constant, at stated seasons, &c. Exception in time of
necessity. Prayer without ceasing. Its nature. Garrulity of Papists and
hypocrites refuted. The scope and parts of prayer. Secret prayer. Prayer
at all places. Private and public prayer.
This assiduity in prayer, though it specially refers to the peculiar
private prayers of individuals, extends also in some measure to the
public prayers of the Church. These, it may be said, cannot be
continual, and ought not to be made, except in the manner which, for the
sake of order, has been established by public consent. This I admit, and
hence certain hours are fixed beforehand, hours which, though
indifferent in regard to God, are necessary for the use of man, that the
general convenience may be consulted, and all things be done in the
Church, as Paul enjoins, "decently and in order" (1 Cor.
14:40). But there is nothing in this to prevent each church from being
now and then stirred up to a more frequent use of prayer and being more
zealously affected under the impulse of some greater necessity. Of
perseverance in prayer, which is much akin to assiduity, we shall speak
towards the close of the chapter (sec. 51, 52). This assiduity,
moreover, is very different from the battologia,
vain speaking, which our Saviour has prohibited (Matth. 6:7). For
he does not there forbid us to pray long or frequently, or with great
fervour, but warns us against supposing that we can extort anything from
God by importuning him with garrulous [given to
talk, wordy, babbling] loquacity [talkative],
as if he were to be persuaded after the manner of men. We know that
hypocrites, because they consider not that they have to do with God,
offer up their prayers as pompously as if it were part of a triumphal
show. The Pharisee, who thanked God that he was not as other men, no
doubt proclaimed his praises before men, as if he had wished to gain a
reputation for sanctity by his prayers. Hence that vain speaking,
which for a similar reason prevails so much in the Papacy in the present
day, some vainly spinning out the time by a reiteration of the same
frivolous prayers, and others employing a long series of verbiage for
vulgar display.{[14]} This childish garrulity
being a mockery of God, it is not strange that it is prohibited in the
Church, in order that every feeling there expressed may be sincere,
proceeding from the inmost heart. Akin to this abuse is another which
our Saviour also condemns, namely, when hypocrites for the sake of
ostentation [pretentious display, showing off to
attract notice] court the presence of many witnesses, and would
sooner pray in the market-place than pray without applause. The
true object of prayer being, as we have already said (sec. 4, 5), to
carry our thoughts directly to God, whether to celebrate his praise or
implore his aid, we can easily see that its primary seat is in the mind
and heart, or rather that prayer itself is properly an effusion and
manifestation of internal feeling before Him who is the searcher of
hearts. Hence (as has been said), when our divine Master was
pleased to lay down the best rule for prayer, his injunction was,
"Enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to
thy Father which is in secret, and thy Father which seeth in secret
shall reward thee openly" (Matth. 6:6). Dissuading us from the
example of hypocrites, who sought the applause of men by an ambitious
ostentation in prayer, he adds the better course -- enter thy chamber,
shut thy door, and there pray. By these words (as
I understand them) he taught us to seek a place of retirement which
might enable us to turn all our thoughts inwards and enter deeply into
our hearts, promising that God would hold converse with the feelings of
our mind, of which the body ought to be the temple. He meant not to deny
that it may be expedient to pray in other places also, but he shows that
prayer is somewhat of a secret nature, having its chief seat in the
mind, and requiring a tranquillity far removed from the turmoil of
ordinary cares. And hence it was not without cause that our Lord
himself, when he would engage more earnestly in prayer, withdrew into a
retired spot beyond the bustle of the world, thus reminding us by his
example that we are not to neglect those helps which enable the mind, in
itself too much disposed to wander, to become sincerely intent on
prayer. Meanwhile, as he abstained not from prayer when the occasion
required it, though he were in the midst of a crowd, so must we,
whenever there is need, lift up "pure hands" (1 Tim. 2:8) at
all places. And hence we must hold that he who declines to pray in the
public meeting of the saints, knows not what it is to pray apart, in
retirement, or at home. On the other hand, he who neglects to pray alone
and in private, however sedulously he frequents public meetings, there
gives his prayers to the wind, because he defers more to the opinion of
man than to the secret judgment of God. Still, lest the public
prayers of the Church should be held in contempt, the Lord anciently
bestowed upon them the most honourable appellation, especially when he
called the temple the "house of prayer" (Isa. 56:7). For
by this expression he both showed that the duty of prayer is a principal
part of his worship, and that to enable believers to engage in it with
one consent his temple is set up before them as a kind of banner.
A noble promise was also added, "Praise waiteth for thee, O God, in
Sion: and unto thee shall the vow be performed" (Ps. 65:1).{[15]}
By these words the Psalmist reminds us that the prayers of the Church
are never in vain; because God always furnishes his people with
materials for a song of joy. But although the shadows of the law have
ceased, yet because God was pleased by this ordinance to foster the
unity of the faith among us also, there can be no doubt that the same
promise belongs to us -- a promise which Christ sanctioned with his own
lips, and which Paul declares to be perpetually in force.
30. Of public places or churches in which
common prayers are offered up. Right use of churches. Abuse.
As God in his word enjoins common prayer, so public temples are the
places destined for the performance of them, and hence those who refuse
to join with the people of God in this observance have no ground for the
pretext, that they enter their chamber in order that they may obey the
command of the Lord. For he who promises to grant
whatsoever two or three assembled in his name shall ask (Matth. 18:20),
declares, that he by no means despises the prayers which are publicly
offered up, provided there be no ostentation, or catching at human
applause, and provided there be a true and sincere affection in the
secret recesses of the heart.{[16]}
If this is the legitimate use of churches (and it certainly is), we
must, on the other hand, beware of imitating the practice which
commenced some centuries ago, of imagining that churches are the proper
dwellings of God, where he is more ready to listen to us, or of
attaching to them some kind of secret sanctity, which makes prayer there
more holy. For seeing we are the true temples of God, we must pray in
ourselves if we would invoke God in his holy temple. Let us leave
such gross [luxuriant, bloated, glaring, total,
dense, transparent, repulsive] ideas to the Jews or the heathen,
knowing that we have a command to pray without distinction of place,
"in spirit and in truth" (John 4:23). It is true that by the
order of God the temple was anciently dedicated for the offering of
prayers and sacrifices, but this was at a time when the truth (which
being now fully manifested, we are not permitted to confine to any
material temple) lay hid under the figure of shadows. Even the temple
was not represented to the Jews as confining the presence of God within
its walls, but was meant to train them to contemplate the image of the
true temple. Accordingly, a severe rebuke is administered both by Isaiah
and Stephen, to those who thought that God could in any way dwell in
temples made with hands (Isa. 66:2; Acts 7:48).
31. Of utterance and singing. These of no
avail if not from the heart. The use of the voice refers more to public
than private prayer.
Hence it is perfectly clear that neither words nor singing (if used
in prayer) are of the least consequence, or avail one iota with God,
unless they proceed from deep feeling in the heart. Nay, rather they
provoke his anger against us, if they come from the lips and throat
only, since this is to abuse his sacred name, and hold his majesty in
derision. This we infer from the words of Isaiah, which, though
their meaning is of wider extent, go to rebuke this vice also:
"Forasmuch as this people draw near me with their mouth, and with
their lips do honour me, but have removed their heart far from me, and
their fear toward me is taught by the precept of men: therefore, behold,
I will proceed to do a marvellous work among this people, even a
marvellous work and a wonder: for the wisdom of their wise men shall
perish, and the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid" (Isa.
29:13). Still we do not condemn words or singing,
but rather greatly commend them, provided the feeling of the mind goes
along with them. For in this way the thought of God is kept alive on our
minds, which, from their fickle and versatile nature, soon relax, and
are distracted by various objects, unless various means are used to
support them. Besides, since the glory of God ought in a manner to be
displayed in each part of our body, the special service to which the
tongue should be devoted is that of singing and speaking, inasmuch as it
has been expressly created to declare and proclaim the praise of God. This
employment of the tongue is chiefly in the public services which are
performed in the meeting of the saints. In this way the God whom we
serve in one spirit and one faith, we glorify together as it were with
one voice and one mouth; and that openly, so that each may in turn
receive the confession of his brother's faith, and be invited and
incited to imitate it.
32. Singing of the greatest antiquity, but
not universal. How to be performed.
It is certain that the use of singing in churches (which I may
mention in passing) is not only very ancient, but was also used by the
Apostles, as we may gather from the words of Paul, "I will sing
with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also" (1
Cor. 14:15). In like manner he says to the Colossians,
"Teaching and admonishing one another in psalms, and hymns, and
spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord"
(Col. 3:16). In the former passage, he enjoins us
to sing with the voice and the heart; in the latter, he commends
spiritual Songs, by which the pious mutually edify each other.
That it was not an universal practice, however, is attested by Augustine
(Confess. Lib. ix. cap. 7), who states that the church of Milan first
began to use singing in the time of Ambrose, when the orthodox faith
being persecuted by Justina, the mother of Valentinian, the vigils of
the people were more frequent than usual;{[17]}
and that the practice was afterwards followed by the other Western
churches. He had said a little before that the custom came from the
East.{[18]} He also intimates (Retract. Lib.
ii). that it was received in Africa in his own time. His words are,
"Hilarius, a man of tribunitial rank, assailed with the bitterest
invectives he could use the custom which then began to exist at
Carthage, of singing hymns from the book of Psalms at the altar, either
before the oblation, or when it was distributed to the people; I
answered him, at the request of my brethren."{[19]}
And certainly if singing is tempered to a gravity
befitting the presence of God and angels, it both gives dignity and
grace to sacred actions, and has a very powerful tendency to stir up the
mind to true zeal and ardour in prayer. We must, however, carefully
beware, lest our ears be more intent on the music than our minds on the
spiritual meaning of the words. Augustine confesses (Confess. Lib. x.
cap. 33) that the fear of this danger sometimes made him wish for the
introduction of a practice observed by Athanasius, who ordered the
reader to use only a gentle inflection of the voice, more akin to
recitation than singing. But on again considering how many advantages
were derived from singing, he inclined to the other side.{[20]}
If this moderation is used, there cannot be a doubt that the practice is
most sacred and salutary. On the other hand, songs composed merely to
tickle and delight the ear are unbecoming the majesty of the Church, and
cannot but be most displeasing to God.
33. Public prayers should be in the
vulgar, not in a foreign tongue. Reason, 1. The nature of the Church. 2.
Authority of an apostle. Sincere affection always necessary. The tongue
not always necessary. Bending of the knee, and uncovering of the head.
It is also plain that the public prayers are not to be couched in
Greek among the Latins, nor in Latin among the French or English (as
hitherto has been every where practised), but in the vulgar tongue, so
that all present may understand them, since they ought to be used for
the edification of the whole Church, which cannot be in the least degree
benefited by a sound not understood. Those who are not moved by
any reason of humanity or charity, ought at least to be somewhat moved
by the authority of Paul, whose words are by no means ambiguous:
"When thou shalt bless with the spirit, how shall he that occupieth
the room of the unlearned say, Amen, at thy giving of thanks, seeing he
understandeth not what thou sayest? For thou verily givest thanks, but
the other is not edified" (1 Cor. 14:16, 17). How then can one
sufficiently admire the unbridled license of the Papists, who, while the
Apostle publicly protests against it, hesitate not to bawl out the most
verbose prayers in a foreign tongue, prayers of which they themselves
sometimes do not understand one syllable, and which they have no wish
that others should understand?{[21]}
Different is the course which Paul prescribes, "What is it then? I
will pray with the spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also;
I will sing with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding
also:" meaning by the spirit the special gift of tongues, which
some who had received it abused when they dissevered it from the mind,
that is, the understanding. The principle we must
always hold is, that in all prayer, public and private, the tongue
without the mind must be displeasing to God. Moreover, the mind must be
so incited, as in ardour of thought far to surpass what the tongue is
able to express. Lastly, the tongue is not even necessary to private
prayer, unless in so far as the internal feeling is insufficient for
incitement, or the vehemence of the incitement carries the utterance of
the tongue along with it. For although the best prayers are sometimes
without utterance, yet when the feeling of the mind is overpowering, the
tongue spontaneously breaks forth into utterance, and our other members
into gesture. Hence that dubious muttering of Hannah (1 Sam.
1:13), something similar to which is experienced by all the saints when
concise and abrupt expressions escape from them. The bodily gestures
usually observed in prayer, such as kneeling and uncovering of the head
(Calv. in Acts 20:36), are exercises by which we attempt to rise to
higher veneration of God.
34. The form of prayer delivered by Christ
displays the boundless goodness of our heavenly Father. The great
comfort thereby afforded.
We must now attend not only to a surer method, but also form of
prayer, that, namely, which our heavenly Father has delivered to us by
his beloved Son, and in which we may recognize his boundless goodness
and condescension (Matth. 6:9; Luke 11:2). Besides
admonishing and exhorting us to seek him in our every necessity (as
children are wont to betake themselves to the protection of their
parents when oppressed with any anxiety), seeing that we were not fully
aware how great our poverty was, or what was right or for our interest
to ask, he has provided for this ignorance; that wherein our capacity
failed he has sufficiently supplied. For he has given us a form in which
is set before us as in a picture everything which it is lawful to wish,
everything which is conducive to our interest, everything which it is
necessary to demand. From his goodness in this respect we derive the
great comfort of knowing, that as we ask almost in his words, we ask
nothing that is absurd, or foreign, or unseasonable; nothing, in short,
that is not agreeable to him. Plato, seeing the ignorance of men
in presenting their desires to God, desires which if granted would often
be most injurious to them, declares the best form of prayer to be that
which an ancient poet has furnished: "O king Jupiter, give what is
best, whether we wish it or wish it not; but avert from us what is evil
even though we ask it" (Plato, Alcibiad. ii). This
heathen shows his wisdom in discerning how dangerous it is to ask of God
what our own passion dictates; while, at the same time, he reminds us of
our unhappy condition in not being able to open our lips before God
without dangers unless his Spirit instruct us how to pray aright (Rom.
8:26). The higher value, therefore, ought we to set on the privilege,
when the only begotten Son of God puts words into our lips, and thus
relieves our minds of all hesitation.
35. Lord's Prayer divided into six
petitions. Subdivision into two principal parts, the former referring to
the glory of God, the latter to our salvation.
This form or rule of prayer is composed of six petitions .
For I am prevented from agreeing with those who divide it into seven
by the adversative mode of diction used by the Evangelist, who appears
to have intended to unite the two members together; as if he had said,
Do not allow us to be overcome by temptation, but rather bring
assistance to our frailty, and deliver us that we may not fall. Ancient
writers{[22]} also agree with us, that what
is added by Matthew as a seventh head is to be considered as explanatory
of the sixth petition.{[23]}
But though in every part of the prayer the first place is assigned to
the glory of God, still this is more especially the object of the three
first petitions, in which we are to look to the glory of God alone,
without any reference to what is called our own advantage. The
three remaining petitions are devoted to our interest, and properly
relate to things which it is useful for us to ask. When we ask that the
name of God may be hallowed, as God wishes to prove whether we love and
serve him freely, or from the hope of reward, we are not to think at all
of our own interest; we must set his glory before our eyes, and keep
them intent upon it alone. In the other similar petitions, this is the
only manner in which we ought to be affected. It
is true, that in this way our own interest is greatly promoted, because,
when the name of God is hallowed in the way we ask, our own
sanctification also is thereby promoted. But in regard to this
advantage, we must, as I have said, shut our eyes, and be in a manner
blind, so as not even to see it; and hence were all hope of our private
advantage cut off, we still should never cease to wish and pray for this
hallowing, and everything else which pertains to the glory of God. We
have examples in Moses and Paul, who did not count it grievous to turn
away their eyes and minds from themselves, and with intense and fervent
zeal long for death, if by their loss the kingdom and glory of God might
be promoted (Exod. 32:32; Rom. 9:3). On the other
hand, when we ask for daily bread, although we desire what is
advantageous for ourselves, we ought also especially to seek the glory
of God, so much so that we would not ask at all unless it were to turn
to his glory. Let us now proceed to an exposition of the Prayer.
OUR FATHER WHICH ART IN HEAVEN.
36. The use of the term Father implies, 1.
That we pray to God in the name of Christ alone. 2. That we lay aside
all distrust. 3. That we expect everything that is for our good.
The first thing suggested at the very outset is, as we have already
said (sec. 17-19), that all our prayers to God ought only to be
presented in the name of Christ, as there is no other name which can
recommend them. In calling God our Father, we
certainly plead the name of Christ. For with what confidence could any
man call God his Father? Who would have the presumption to arrogate to
himself the honour of a son of God were we not gratuitously adopted as
his sons in Christ? He being the true Son, has been given to us
as a brother, so that that which he possesses as his own by nature
becomes ours by adoption, if we embrace this great mercy with firm
faith. As John says, "As many as received him, to them gave he
power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe in his
name" (John 1:12). Hence he both calls
himself our Father, and is pleased to be so called by us, by this
delightful name relieving us of all distrust, since nowhere can a
stronger affection be found than in a father. Hence, too, he could not
have given us a stronger testimony of his boundless love than in calling
us his sons. But his love towards us is so much the greater and
more excellent than that of earthly parents, the farther he surpasses
all men in goodness and mercy (Isaiah 63:16). Earthly
parents, laying aside all paternal affection, might abandon their
offspring; he will never abandon us (Ps. 27:10), seeing he cannot deny
himself. For we have his promise, "If ye then, being evil,
know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more shall your
Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask him?" (Matth.
7:11). In like manner in the prophet, "Can a woman forget her
sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her
womb? Yea, they may forget, yet will not I forget thee" (Isaiah
49:15). But if we are his sons, then as a son cannot betake himself to
the protection of a stranger and a foreigner without at the same time
complaining of his father's cruelty or poverty, so we cannot ask
assistance from any other quarter than from him, unless we would upbraid
him with poverty, or want of means, or cruelty and excessive austerity.
37. Objection, that our sins exclude us
from the presence of him whom we have made a Judge, not a Father.
Answer, from the nature of God, as described by an apostle, the parable
of the prodigal son, and from the expression, Our Father. Christ
the earnest, the Holy Spirit the witness, of our adoption.
Nor let us allege that we are justly rendered timid by a
consciousness of sin, by which our Father, though mild and merciful, is
daily offended. For if among men a son cannot have a better advocate to
plead his cause with his father, and cannot employ a better intercessor
to regain his lost favour, than if he come himself suppliant and
downcast, acknowledging his fault, to implore the mercy of his father,
whose paternal feelings cannot but be moved by such entreaties, what
will that "Father of all mercies, and God of all comfort," do?
(2 Cor. 1:3). Will he not rather listen to the tears and groans of his
children, when supplicating for themselves (especially seeing he invites
and exhorts us to do so), than to any advocacy of others to whom the
timid have recourse, not without some semblance of despair, because they
are distrustful of their father's mildness and clemency? The
exuberance of his paternal kindness he sets before us in the parable
(Luke 15:20; see Calv. Comm). when the father with open arms receives
the son who had gone away from him, wasted his substance in riotous
living, and in all ways grievously sinned against him. He waits not till
pardon is asked in words, but, anticipating the request, recognizes him
afar off, runs to meet him, consoles him, and restores him to favour. By
setting before us this admirable example of mildness in a man, he
designed to show in how much greater abundance we may expect it from him
who is not only a Father, but the best and most merciful of all fathers,
however ungrateful, rebellious, and wicked sons we may be, provided only
we throw ourselves upon his mercy. And the better to assure us that he
is such a Father if we are Christians, he has been pleased to be called
not only a Father, but our Father, as if we were pleading with him after
this manner, O Father, who art possessed of so much affection for thy
children, and art so ready to forgive, we thy children approach thee and
present our requests, fully persuaded that thou hast no other feelings
towards us than those of a father, though we are unworthy of such a
parent.{[24]} But as our narrow hearts are
incapable of comprehending such boundless favour, Christ is not only the
earnest and pledge of our adoption, but also gives us the Spirit as a
witness of this adoption, that through him we may freely cry aloud,
Abba, Father. Whenever, therefore, we are restrained by any feeling of
hesitation, let us remember to ask of him that he may correct our
timidity, and placing us under the magnanimous guidance of the Spirit,
enable us to pray boldly.
38. Why God is called generally, Our
Father.
The instruction given us, however, is not that every individual in
particular is to call him Father, but rather that we are all in common
to call him Our Father. By this we are reminded how strong the feeling
of brotherly love between us ought to be, since we are all alike, by the
same mercy and free kindness, the children of such a Father. For if He
from whom we all obtain whatever is good is our common Father (Matth.
23:9), everything which has been distributed to us we should be prepared
to communicate to each other, as far as occasion demands. But if we are
thus desirous as we ought, to stretch out our hands and give assistance
to each other, there is nothing by which we can more benefit our
brethren than by committing them to the care and protection of the best
of parents, since if He is propitious and favourable nothing more can be
desired. And, indeed, we owe this also to our Father. For as he
who truly and from the heart loves the father of a family, extends the
same love and good-will to all his household, so the zeal and affection
which we feel for our heavenly Parent it becomes us to extend towards
his people, his family, and, in fine, his heritage, which he has
honoured so highly as to give them the appellation of the "fulness"
of his only begotten Son (Eph. 1:23). Let the
Christian, then, so regulate his prayers as to make them common, and
embrace all who are his brethren in Christ; not only those whom at
present he sees and knows to be such, but all men who are alive upon the
earth. What God has determined with regard to them is beyond our
knowledge, but to wish and hope the best concerning them is both pious
and humane. Still it becomes us to regard with special affection those
who are of the household of faith, and whom the Apostle has in express
terms recommended to our care in everything (Gal. 6:10). In short, all
our prayers ought to bear reference to that community which our Lord has
established in his kingdom and family.
39. We may pray specially for ourselves and
certain others, provided we have in our mind a general reference to all.
This, however, does not prevent us from praying specially for
ourselves, and certain others, provided our mind is not withdrawn from
the view of this community, does not deviate from it, but constantly
refers to it. For prayers, though couched in special terms, keeping that
object still in view, cease not to be common. All this may easily be
understood by analogy. There is a general command from God to relieve
the necessities of all the poor, and yet this command is obeyed by those
who with that view give succour to all whom they see or know to be in
distress, although they pass by many whose wants are not less urgent,
either because they cannot know or are unable to give supply to all. In
this way there is nothing repugnant to the will of God in those who,
giving heed to this common society of the Church, yet offer up
particular prayers, in which, with a public mind, though in special
terms, they commend to God themselves or others, with whose necessity he
has been pleased to make them more familiarly acquainted.
It is true that prayer and the giving of our substance are not in all
respects alike. We can only bestow the kindness of our liberality on
those of whose wants we are aware, whereas in prayer we can assist the
greatest strangers, how wide soever the space which may separate them
from us. This is done by that general form of prayer which, including
all the sons of God, includes them also. To this we may refer the
exhortation which Paul gave to the believers of his age, to lift up
"holy hands without wrath and doubting" (1 Tim. 2:8). By
reminding them that dissension is a bar to prayer, he shows it to be his
wish that they should with one accord present their prayers in common.
40. In what sense God is said to be in heaven.
A threefold use of this doctrine for our consolation. Three cautions.
Summary of the preface to the Lord's Prayer.
The next words are, WHICH ART IN HEAVEN . From this we
are not to infer that he is enclosed and confined within the
circumference of heaven, as by a kind of boundaries. Hence Solomon
confesses, "The heaven of heavens cannot contain thee" (1
Kings 8:27); and he himself says by the Prophet, "The heaven is my
throne, and the earth is my footstool" (Isa. 56:1); thereby
intimating, that his presence, not confined to any region, is diffused
over all space. But as our gross minds are unable to conceive of his
ineffable glory, it is designated to us by heaven, nothing which
our eyes can behold being so full of splendour and majesty. While, then,
we are accustomed to regard every object as confined to the place where
our senses discern it, no place can be assigned to God; and hence, if we
would seek him, we must rise higher than all corporeal or mental
discernment. Again, this form of expression
reminds us that he is far beyond the reach of change or corruption, that
he holds the whole universe in his grasp, and rules it by his power. The
effect of the expressions therefore, is the same as if it had been said,
that he is of infinite majesty, incomprehensible essence, boundless
power, and eternal duration. When we thus speak of God, our
thoughts must be raised to their highest pitch; we must not ascribe to
him anything of a terrestrial or carnal nature, must not measure him by
our little standards, or suppose his will to be like ours. At
the same time, we must put our confidence in him, understanding that
heaven and earth are governed by his providence and power. In short,
under the name of Father is set before us that God, who hath appeared to
us in his own image, that we may invoke him with sure faith; the
familiar name of Father being given not only to inspire confidence, but
also to curb our minds, and prevent them from going astray after
doubtful or fictitious gods. We thus ascend from the only
begotten Son to the supreme Father of angels and of the Church. Then
when his throne is fixed in heaven, we are reminded that he governs the
world, and, therefore, that it is not in vain to approach him whose
present care we actually experience. "He that cometh to God,"
says the Apostle, "must believe that he is, and that he is a
rewarder of them that diligently seek him" (Heb. 11:6). Here
Christ makes both claims for his Father, first, that we
place our faith in him; and, secondly, that we feel
assured that our salvation is not neglected by him, inasmuch as he
condescends to extend his providence to us. By these elementary
principles Paul prepares us to pray aright; for before enjoining us to
make our requests known unto God, he premises in this way, "The
Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing" (Phil. 4:5, 6). Whence it
appears that doubt and perplexity hang over the prayers of those in
whose minds the belief is not firmly seated, that "the eyes of the
Lord are upon the righteous" (Ps. 34:15).
41. The necessity of the first petition a
proof of our unrighteousness. What meant by the name of God. How it is
hallowed. Parts of this hallowing. A deprecation of the sins by which
the name of God is profaned.
The first petition is, HALLOWED BE THY NAME. The
necessity of presenting it bespeaks our great disgrace. For what can be
more unbecoming than that our ingratitude and malice should impair, our
audacity and petulance should as much as in them lies destroy, the glory
of God? But though all the ungodly should burst with sacrilegious rage,
the holiness of God's name still shines forth. Justly does the Psalmist
exclaim, "According to thy name, O God, so is thy praise unto the
ends of the earth" (Ps. 48:10). For wherever
God hath made himself known, his perfections must be displayed, his
power, goodness, wisdom, justice, mercy, and truth, which fill us with
admiration, and incite us to show forth his praise. Therefore, as the
name of God is not duly hallowed on the earth, and we are otherwise
unable to assert it, it is at least our duty to make it the subject of
our prayers. The sum of the whole is, It must be our desire that God may
receive the honour which is his due: that men may never think or speak
of him without the greatest reverence. The opposite of this
reverence is profanity, which has always been too common in the world,
and is very prevalent in the present day. Hence the necessity of the
petition, which, if piety had any proper existence among us, would be
superfluous. But if the name of God is duly hallowed only when separated
from all other names it alone is glorified, we are in the petition
enjoined to ask not only that God would vindicate his sacred name from
all contempt and insult, but also that he would compel the whole human
race to reverence it. Then since God manifests himself to us partly by
his word, and partly by his works, he is not sanctified unless in regard
to both of these we ascribe to him what is due, and thus embrace
whatever has proceeded from him, giving no less praise to his justice
than to his mercy. On the manifold diversity of his works he has
inscribed the marks of his glory, and these ought to call forth from
every tongue an ascription of praise. Thus Scripture will obtain its due
authority with us, and no event will hinder us from celebrating the
praises of God, in regard to every part of his government. On the other
hand, the petition implies a wish that all impiety which pollutes this
sacred name may perish and be extinguished, that everything which
obscures or impairs his glory, all detraction and insult, may cease;
that all blasphemy being suppressed, the divine majesty may be more and
more signally displayed.
42. Distinction between the first and second
petitions. The kingdom of God, what. How said to come. Special
exposition of this petition. It reminds us of three things. Advent of
the kingdom of God in the world.
The second petition is, THY KINGDOM COME. This contains
nothing new, and yet there is good reason for distinguishing it from the
first. For if we consider our lethargy in the greatest of all matters,
we shall see how necessary it is that what ought to be in itself
perfectly known should be inculcated [urge,
impress upon] at greater length. Therefore, after the injunction
to pray that God would reduce to order, and at length completely efface
every stain which is thrown on his sacred name, another petition,
containing almost the same wish, is added, viz., Thy kingdom come. Although
a definition of this kingdom has already been given, I now briefly
repeat that God reigns when men, in denial of themselves and contempt of
the world and this earthly life, devote themselves to righteousness and
aspire to heaven (see Calvin, Harm. Matth. 6). Thus this kingdom
consists of two parts; the first is, when God by the agency of
his Spirit corrects all the depraved lusts of the flesh, which in bands
war against Him; and the second, when he brings all our thoughts
into obedience to his authority. This petition, therefore, is
duly presented only by those who begin with themselves; in other words,
who pray that they may be purified from all the corruptions which
disturb the tranquillity and impair the purity of God's kingdom. Then as
the word of God is like his royal sceptre, we are here enjoined to pray
that he would subdue all minds and hearts to voluntary obedience. This
is done when by the secret inspiration of his Spirit he displays the
efficacy of his word, and raises it to the place of honour which it
deserves. We must next descend to the wicked, who perversely and with
desperate madness resist his authority. God, therefore, sets up his
kingdom, by humbling the whole world, though in different ways, taming
the wantonness of some, and breaking the ungovernable pride of others.
We should desire this to be done every day, in order that God may gather
churches to himself from all quarters of the world, may extend and
increase their numbers, enrich them with his gifts, establish due order
among them; on the other hand, beat down all the enemies of pure
doctrine and religion, dissipate their counsels, defeat their attempts. Hence
it appears that there is good ground for the precept which enjoins daily
progress, for human affairs are never so prosperous as when the
impurities of vice are purged away, and integrity flourishes in full
vigour. The completion, however, is deferred to the final advent
of Christ, when, as Paul declares, "God will be all in all" (1
Cor. 15:28). This prayer, therefore, ought to withdraw
us from the corruptions of the world which separate us from God, and
prevent his kingdom from flourishing within us; secondly, it
ought to inflame us with an ardent desire for the mortification of the
flesh; and, lastly, it ought to train us to the endurance of the
cross; since this is the way in which God would have his kingdom to be
advanced. It ought not to grieve us that the outward man decays
provided the inner man is renewed. For such is the nature of the kingdom
of God, that while we submit to his righteousness he makes us partakers
of his glory. This is the case when continually adding to his light and
truth, by which the lies and the darkness of Satan and his kingdom are
dissipated, extinguished, and destroyed, he protects his people, guides
them aright by the agency of his Spirit, and confirms them in
perseverance; while, on the other hand, he frustrates the impious
conspiracies of his enemies, dissipates their wiles and frauds, prevents
their malice and curbs their petulance, until at length he consume
Antichrist "with the spirit of his mouth," and destroy all
impiety "with the brightness of his coming" (2 Thess. 2:8,
Calv. Comm.).
43. Distinction between the second and
third petitions. The will here meant not the secret will or good
pleasure of God, but that manifested in the word. Conclusion of the
three first petitions.
The third petition is, THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH AS IT IS IN
HEAVEN. Though this depends on his kingdom, and cannot be
disjoined from it, yet a separate place is not improperly given to it on
account of our ignorance, which does not at once or easily apprehend
what is meant by God reigning in the world. This, therefore, may not
improperly be taken as the explanation, that God will be King in the
world when all shall subject themselves to his will. We
are not here treating of that secret will by which he governs all
things, and destines them to their end (see chap. xxiv. s. 17). For
although devils and men rise in tumult against him, he is able by his
incomprehensible counsel not only to turn aside their violence, but make
it subservient to the execution of his decrees. What we here
speak of is another will of God, namely, that of which voluntary
obedience is the counterpart; and, therefore, heaven is expressly
contrasted with earth, because, as is said in The Psalms, the angels
"do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of his word"
(Ps. 103:20). We are, therefore, enjoined to pray that as everything
done in heaven is at the command of God, and the angels are calmly
disposed to do all that is right, so the earth may be brought under his
authority, all rebellion and depravity having been extinguished. In
presenting this request we renounce the desires of the flesh, because he
who does not entirely resign his affections to God, does as much as in
him lies to oppose the divine will, since everything which proceeds from
us is vicious. Again, by this prayer we are taught
to deny ourselves, that God may rule us according to his pleasure; and
not only so, but also having annihilated our own may create new thoughts
and new minds so that we shall have no desire save that of entire
agreement with his will; in short, wish nothing of ourselves, but have
our hearts governed by his Spirit, under whose inward teaching we may
learn to love those things which please and hate those things which
displease him. Hence also we must desire that he would nullify and
suppress all affections which are repugnant to his will.
Such are the three first heads of the prayer, in presenting which we
should have the glory of God only in view, taking no account of
ourselves, and paying no respect to our own advantage, which, though it
is thereby greatly promoted, is not here to be the subject of request. And
though all the events prayed for must happen in their own time, without
being either thought of, wished, or asked by us, it is still our duty to
wish and ask for them. And it is of no slight importance to do so, that
we may testify and profess that we are the servants and children of God,
desirous by every means in our power to promote the honour due to him as
our Lord and Father, and truly and thoroughly devoted to his service.
Hence if men, in praying that the name of God may be hallowed, that his
kingdom may come, and his will be done, are not influenced by this zeal
for the promotion of his glory, they are not to be accounted among the
servants and children of God; and as all these things will take place
against their will, so they will turn out to their confusion and
destruction.
44. A summary of the second part of the
Lord's Prayer. Three petitions. What contained in the first. Declares
the exceeding kindness of God, and our distrust. What meant by bread.
Why the petition for bread precedes that for the forgiveness of sins.
Why it is called ours. Why to be sought this day, or daily.
The doctrine resulting from this petition, illustrated by an example.
Two classes of men sin in regard to this petition. In what sense it is
called, our bread. Why we ask God to give it to us.
Now comes the second part of the prayer, in which we descend to our
own interests, not, indeed, that we are to lose sight of the glory of
God (to which, as Paul declares, we must have respect even in meat and
drink, 1 Cor. 10:31), and ask only what is expedient for ourselves; but
the distinction, as we have already observed, is this: God claiming the
three first petitions as specially his own, carries us entirely to
himself, that in this way he may prove our piety. Next he permits
us to look to our own advantage, but still on the condition, that when
we ask anything for ourselves it must be in order that all the benefits
which he confers may show forth his glory, there being nothing more
incumbent on us than to live and die to him.
By the first petition of the second part, GIVE US THIS DAY OUR
DAILY BREAD, we pray in general that God would give us all things
which the body requires in this sublunary [of
this world, earthly] state, not only food
and clothing, but everything which he knows will assist us to eat our
bread in peace. In this way we briefly cast our care upon him,
and commit ourselves to his providence, that he may feed, foster, and
preserve us. For our heavenly Father disdains not to take our body under
his charge and protection, that he may exercise our faith in those
minute matters, while we look to him for everything, even to a morsel of
bread and a drop of water. For since, owing to some strange inequality,
we feel more concern for the body than for the soul, many who can trust
the latter to God still continue anxious about the former, still
hesitate as to what they are to eat, as to how they are to be clothed,
and are in trepidation whenever their hands are not filled with corn,
and wine, and oil (Ps. 4:8): so much more value do we set on this
shadowy, fleeting life, than on a blessed immortality. But
those who, trusting to God, have once cast away that anxiety about the
flesh, immediately look to him for greater gifts, even salvation and
eternal life. It is no slight exercise of faith, therefore, to
hope in God for things which would otherwise give us so much concern;
nor have we made little progress when we get quit of this unbelief,
which cleaves, as it were, to our very bones.
The speculations of some concerning supersubstantial bread seem to be
very little accordant with our Saviour's meaning; for our prayer would
be defective were we not to ascribe to God the nourishment even of this
fading life. The reason which they give is heathenish, viz., that it is
inconsistent with the character of sons of God, who ought to be
spiritual, not only to occupy their mind with earthly cares, but to
suppose God also occupied with them. As if his blessing and paternal
favour were not eminently displayed in giving us food, or as if there
were nothing in the declaration that godliness hath "the promise of
the life that now is, and of that which is to come" (1 Tim. 4:8). But
although the forgiveness of sins is of far more importance than the
nourishment of the body, yet Christ has set down the inferior in the
prior place, in order that he might gradually raise us to the other two
petitions, which properly belong to the heavenly life, -- in this
providing for our sluggishness. We are enjoined to ask our bread,
that we may be contented with the measure which our heavenly Father is
pleased to dispense, and not strive to make gain by illicit arts.
Meanwhile, we must hold that the title by which it is ours is donation,
because, as Moses says (Levit. 26:20, Deut. 8:17), neither our industry,
nor labour, nor hands, acquire anything for us, unless the blessing of
God be present; nay, not even would abundance of bread be of the least
avail were it not divinely converted into nourishment. And hence this
liberality of God is not less necessary to the rich than the poor,
because, though their cellars and barns were full, they would be parched
and pine with want did they not enjoy his favour along with their bread.
The terms this day, or, as it is in another Evangelist, daily, and also
the epithet daily, lay a restraint on our immoderate desire of fleeting
good -- a desire which we are extremely apt to indulge to excess, and
from which other evils ensue: for when our supply is in richer abundance
we ambitiously squander it in pleasure, luxury, ostentation, or other
kinds of extravagance. Wherefore, we are only enjoined to ask as much as
our necessity requires, and as it were for each day, confiding that our
heavenly Father, who gives us the supply of to-day, will not fail us on
the morrow. How great soever our abundance may be,
however well filled our cellars and granaries, we must still always ask
for daily bread, for we must feel assured that all substance is nothing,
unless in so far as the Lord, by pouring out his blessing, make it
fruitful during its whole progress; for even that which is in our hand
is not ours except in so far as he every hour portions it out, and
permits us to use it. As nothing is more difficult to human pride
than the admission of this truth, the Lord declares that he gave a
special proof for all ages, when he fed his people with manna in the
desert (Deut. 8:3), that he might remind us that "man shall not
live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth
of God" (Matth. 4:4). It is thus intimated, that by his power alone
our life and strength are sustained, though he ministers supply to us by
bodily instruments. In like manner, whenever it so pleases, he gives us
a proof of an opposite description, by breaking the strength, or, as he
himself calls it, the staff of bread (Levit. 26:26), and leaving us even
while eating to pine with hunger, and while drinking to be parched with
thirst. Those who, not contented with daily bread, indulge an
unrestrained insatiable cupidity [greed of gain],
or those who are full of their own abundance, and trust in their own
riches, only mock God by offering up this prayer. For the former ask
what they would be unwilling to obtain, nay, what they most of all
abominate, namely, daily bread only, and as much as in them lies
disguise their avarice [greed of gain] from
God, whereas true prayer should pour out the whole soul and every inward
feeling before him. The latter, again, ask what they do not at all
expect to obtain, namely, what they imagine that they in themselves
already possess. In its being called ours, God, as we have already said,
gives a striking display of his kindness, making that to be ours to
which we have no just claim. Nor must we reject the view to which I have
already adverted, viz., that this name is given to what is obtained by
just and honest labour, as contrasted with what is obtained by fraud and
rapine, nothing being our own which we obtain with injury to others. When
we ask God to give us, the meaning is, that the thing asked is simply
and freely the gift of God, whatever be the quarter from which it comes
to us, even when it seems to have been specially prepared by our own art
and industry, and procured by our hands, since it is to his blessing
alone that all our labours owe their success.
45. A summary of the second part of the
Lord's Prayer. Three petitions. What contained in the first. Declares
the exceeding kindness of God, and our distrust. What meant by bread.
Why the petition for bread precedes that for the forgiveness of sins.
Why it is called ours. Why to be sought this day, or daily.
The doctrine resulting from this petition, illustrated by an example.
Two classes of men sin in regard to this petition. In what sense it is
called, our bread. Why we ask God to give it to us.
The next petition is, FORGIVE US OUR DEBTS. In this and
the following petition our Saviour has briefly comprehended whatever is
conducive to the heavenly life, as these two members contain the
spiritual covenant which God made for the salvation of his Church,
"I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it on their
hearts." "I will pardon all their iniquities" (Jer.
31:33; 33:8). Here our Saviour begins with the forgiveness of sins, and
then adds the subsequent blessing, viz., that God would protect us by
the power, and support us by the aid of his Spirit, so that we may stand
invincible against all temptations. To sins he
gives the name of debts, because we owe the punishment due to them, a
debt which we could not possibly pay were we not discharged by this
remission, the result of his free mercy, when he freely expunges the
debt, accepting nothing in return; but of his own mercy receiving
satisfaction in Christ, who gave himself a ransom for us (Rom. 3:24).
Hence, those who expect to satisfy God by merits of their own or of
others, or to compensate and purchase forgiveness by means of
satisfactions, have no share in this free pardon, and while they address
God in this petition, do nothing more than subscribe their own
accusation, and seal their condemnation by their own testimony. For
they confess that they are debtors, unless they are discharged by means
of forgiveness. This forgiveness, however, they do not receive, but
rather reject, when they obtrude their merits and satisfactions upon
God, since by so doing they do not implore his mercy, but appeal to his
justice. Let those, again, who dream of a perfection which makes it
unnecessary to seek pardon, find their disciples among those whose
itching ears incline them to imposture,{[25]}
(see Calv. on Dan. 9:20); only let them understand that those whom they
thus acquire have been carried away from Christ, since he, by
instructing all to confess their guilt, receives none but sinners, not
that he may soothe, and so encourage them in their sins, but because he
knows that believers are never so divested of the sins of the flesh as
not to remain subject to the justice of God. It is, indeed, to be
wished, it ought even to be our strenuous endeavour, to perform all the
parts of our duty, so as truly to congratulate ourselves before God as
being pure from every stain; but as God is pleased to renew his image in
us by degrees, so that to some extent there is always a residue of
corruption in our flesh, we ought by no means to neglect the remedy. But
if Christ, according to the authority given him by his Father, enjoins
us, during the whole course of our lives, to implore pardon, who can
tolerate those new teachers who, by the phantom of perfect innocence,
endeavour to dazzle the simple, and make them believe that they can
render themselves completely free from guilt? This, as John declares, is
nothing else than to make God a liar (1 John 1:10). In like manner,
those foolish men mutilate the covenant in which we have seen that our
salvation is contained by concealing one head of it, and so destroying
it entirely; being guilty not only of profanity in that they separate
things which ought to be indissolubly connected; but also of wickedness
and cruelty in overwhelming wretched souls with despair -- of treachery
also to themselves and their followers, in that they encourage
themselves in a carelessness diametrically opposed to the mercy of God.
It is excessively childish to object, that when they long for the advent
of the kingdom of God, they at the same time pray for the abolition of
sin. In the former division of the prayer absolute
perfection is set before us; but in the latter our own weakness. Thus
the two fitly correspond to each other -- we strive for the goal, and at
the same time neglect not the remedies which our necessities require.
In the next part of the petition we pray to be forgiven, "as
we forgive our debtors;" that is, as we spare and pardon
all by whom we are in any way offended, either in deed by unjust, or in
word by contumelious treatment. Not that we can forgive the guilt of a
fault or offence; this belongs to God only; but we can forgive to this
extent: we can voluntarily divest our minds of wrath, hatred, and
revenge, and efface the remembrance of injuries by a voluntary oblivion.
Wherefore, we are not to ask the forgiveness of our sins from God,
unless we forgive the offenses of all who are or have been injurious to
us. If we retain any hatred in our minds, if we meditate revenge, and
devise the means of hurting; nay, if we do not return to a good
understanding with our enemies, perform every kind of friendly office,
and endeavour to effect a reconciliation with them, we by this petition
beseech God not to grant us forgiveness. For we ask him to do to us as
we do to others. This is the same as asking him not to do unless we do
also. What, then, do such persons obtain by this petition but a
heavier judgment? Lastly, it is to be observed that the condition of
being forgiven as we forgive our debtors, is not added because by
forgiving others we deserve forgiveness, as if the cause of forgiveness
were expressed; but by the use of this expression the Lord has been
pleased partly to solace the weakness of our faith, using it as a sign
to assure us that our sins are as certainly forgiven as we are certainly
conscious of having forgiven others, when our mind is completely purged
from all envy, hatred, and malice; and partly using as a badge by which
he excludes from the number of his children all who, prone to revenge
and reluctant to forgive, obstinately keep up their enmity, cherishing
against others that indignation which they deprecate from themselves; so
that they should not venture to invoke him as a Father. In the Gospel of
Luke, we have this distinctly stated in the words of Christ.
46. The sixth petition reduced to three
heads. 1. The various forms of temptation. The depraved conceptions of
our minds. The wiles of Satan, on the right hand and on the left. 2.
What it is to be led into temptation. We do not ask not to be tempted of
God. What meant by evil, or the evil one. Summary of this petition. How
necessary it is. Condemns the pride of the superstitious. Includes many
excellent properties. In what sense God may be said to lead us into
temptation.
The sixth petition corresponds (as we have observed) to the promise{ [26]}
of writing the law upon our hearts; but because we do not obey
God without a continual warfare, without sharp and arduous contests, we
here pray that he would furnish us with armour, and defend us by his
protection, that we may be able to obtain the victory. By this we are
reminded that we not only have need of the gift of the Spirit inwardly
to soften our hearts, and turn and direct them to the obedience of God,
but also of his assistance, to render us invincible by all the wiles and
violent assaults of Satan. The forms of temptation are many and
various. The depraved conceptions of our minds provoking us to
transgress the law -- conceptions which our concupiscence suggests or
the devil excites, are temptations; and things which in their own nature
are not evil, become temptations by the wiles of the devil, when they
are presented to our eyes in such a way that the view of them makes us
withdraw or decline from God.{[27]} These
temptations are both on the right hand and on the left.{[28]}
On the right, when riches, power, and honours, which by their glare, and
the semblance of good which they present, generally dazzle the eyes of
men, and so entice by their blandishments, that, caught by their snares,
and intoxicated by their sweetness, they forget their God: on the left,
when offended by the hardship and bitterness of poverty, disgrace,
contempt, afflictions, and other things of that description, they
despond, cast away their confidence and hope, and are at length totally
estranged from God. In regard to both kinds of
temptation, which either enkindled in us by concupiscence, or presented
by the craft of Satan's war against us, we pray God the Father not to
allow us to be overcome, but rather to raise and support us by his hand,
that strengthened by his mighty power we may stand firm against all the
assaults of our malignant enemy, whatever be the thoughts which he sends
into our minds; next we pray that whatever of either description is
allotted us, we may turn to good, that is, may neither be inflated with
prosperity, nor cast down by adversity. Here, however, we do not ask to
be altogether exempted from temptation, which is very necessary to
excite, stimulate, and urge us on, that we may not become too lethargic.
It was not without reason that David wished to be tried,{[29]}
nor is it without cause that the Lord daily tries his elect, chastising
them by disgrace, poverty, tribulation, and other kinds of cross.{[30]}
But the temptations of God and Satan are very different: Satan tempts,
that he may destroy, condemn, confound, throw headlong; God, that by
proving his people he may make trial of their sincerity, and by
exercising their strength confirm it; may mortify, tame, and cauterize
their flesh, which, if not curbed in this manner, would wanton and exult
above measure. Besides, Satan attacks those who are unarmed and
unprepared, that he may destroy them unawares; whereas whatever God
sends, he "will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that
ye may be able to bear it."{[31]}
Whether by the term evil we understand the devil or sin, is not of the
least consequence. Satan is indeed the very enemy who lays snares for
our life,{[32]} but it is by sin that he is
armed for our destruction.
Our petition, therefore, is, that we may not be overcome or
overwhelmed with temptation, but in the strength of the Lord may stand
firm against all the powers by which we are assailed; in other words,
may not fall under temptation: that being thus taken under his charge
and protection, we may remain invincible by sin, death, the gates of
hell, and the whole power of the devil; in other words, be delivered
from evil. Here it is carefully to be observed, that we have no
strength to contend with such a combatant as the devil, or to sustain
the violence of his assault. Were it otherwise, it would be mockery of
God to ask of him what we already possess in ourselves. Assuredly
those who in self-confidence prepare for such a fight, do not understand
how bold and well-equipped the enemy is with whom they have to do. Now
we ask to be delivered from his power, as from the mouth of some furious
raging lion, who would instantly tear us with his teeth and claws, and
swallow us up, did not the Lord rescue us from the midst of death; at
the same time knowing that if the Lord is present and will fight for us
while we stand by, through him "we shall do valiantly" (Ps.
60:12). Let others if they will confide in the
powers and resources of their free will which they think they possess;
enough for us that we stand and are strong in the power of God alone.
But the prayer comprehends more than at first sight it seems to do. For
if the Spirit of God is our strength in waging the contest with Satan,
we cannot gain the victory unless we are filled with him, and thereby
freed from all infirmity of the flesh. Therefore, when we pray to be
delivered from sin and Satan, we at the same time desire to be enriched
with new supplies of divine grace, until completely replenished with
them, we triumph over every evil. To some it seems rude and harsh to ask
God not to lead us into temptation, since, as James declares (James
1:13), it is contrary to his nature to do so. This difficulty has
already been partly solved by the fact that our concupiscence is the
cause, and therefore properly bears the blame of all the temptations by
which we are overcome. All that James means is, that it is vain and
unjust to ascribe to God vices which our own consciousness compels us to
impute to ourselves. But this is no reason why God may not when he sees
it meet bring us into bondage to Satan, give us up to a reprobate mind
and shameful lusts, and so by a just, indeed, but often hidden judgment,
lead us into temptation. Though the cause is often concealed from men,
it is well known to him. Hence we may see that the expression is not
improper, if we are persuaded that it is not without cause he so often
threatens to give sure signs of his vengeance, by blinding the
reprobate, and hardening their hearts.
47. The three last petitions show that the
prayers of Christians ought to be public. The conclusion of the Lord's
Prayer. Why the word Amen is added.
These three petitions, in which we specially commend ourselves and
all that we have to God, clearly show what we formerly observed (sec.
38, 39), that the prayers of Christians should be public, and have
respect to the public edification of the Church and the advancement of
believers in spiritual communion. For no one requests that anything
should be given to him as an individual, but we all ask in common for
daily bread and the forgiveness of sins, not to be led into temptation,
but delivered from evil. Moreover, there is subjoined the reason for our
great boldness in asking and confidence of obtaining (sec. 11, 36).
Although this does not exist in the Latin copies, yet as it accords so
well with the whole, we cannot think of omitting it.
The words are, THINE IS THE KINGDOM, AND THE POWER, AND THE GLORY,
FOR EVER. Here is the calm and firm assurance of our faith.
For were our prayers to be commended to God by our own worth, who would
venture even to whisper before him? Now, however
wretched we may be, however unworthy, however devoid of commendation, we
shall never want a reason for prayer, nor a ground of confidence, since
the kingdom, power, and glory, can never be wrested from our Father. The
last word is AMEN, by which is expressed the eagerness of our desire to
obtain the things which we ask, while our hope is confirmed, that all
things have already been obtained and will assuredly be granted to us,
seeing they have been promised by God, who cannot deceive. This
accords with the form of expression to which we have already adverted:
"Grant, O Lord, for thy name's sake, not on account of us or of our
righteousness." By this the saints not only express the end of
their prayers, but confess that they are unworthy of obtaining did not
God find the cause in himself and were not their confidence founded
entirely on his nature.
48. The Lord's Prayer contains everything
that we can or ought to ask of God. Those who go beyond it sin in three
ways.
All things that we ought, indeed all that we are able, to ask of God,
are contained in this formula, and as it were rule, of prayer delivered
by Christ, our divine Master, whom the Father has appointed to be our
teacher, and to whom alone he would have us to listen (Matth. 17:5). For
he ever was the eternal wisdom of the Father, and being made man, was
manifested as the Wonderful, the Counsellor (Isa. 11:2; 9:6). Accordingly,
this prayer is complete in all its parts, so complete, that whatever is
extraneous and foreign to it, whatever cannot be referred to it, is
impious and unworthy of the approbation of God. For he has here
summarily prescribed what is worthy of him, what is acceptable to him,
and what is necessary for us; in short, whatever he is pleased to grant.
Those, therefore, who presume to go further and ask something more from
God, first seek to add of their own to the wisdom of God (this it
is insane blasphemy to do); secondly, refusing to confine
themselves within the will of God, and despising it, they wander as
their cupidity directs; lastly, they will never obtain anything,
seeing they pray without faith. For there cannot be a doubt that
all such prayers are made without faith, because at variance with the
word of God, on which if faith do not always lean it cannot possibly
stand. Those who, disregarding the Master's rule,
indulge their own wishes, not only have not the word of God, but as much
as in them lies oppose it. Hence Tertullian (De Fuga in
Persequutione) has not less truly than elegantly termed it Lawful
Prayer, tacitly intimating that all other prayers are lawless and
illicit.
49. We may, after the example of the saints,
frame our prayers in different words, provided there is no difference in
meaning.
By this, however, we would not have it understood that we are so
restricted to this form of prayer as to make it unlawful to change a
word or syllable of it. For in Scripture we meet with many prayers
differing greatly from it in word, yet written by the same Spirit, and
capable of being used by us with the greatest advantage. Many prayers
also are continually suggested to believers by the same Spirit, though
in expression they bear no great resemblance to it. All we mean to say
is, that no man should wish, expect, or ask anything which is not
summarily comprehended in this prayer. Though the words may be very
different, there must be no difference in the sense. In this way, all
prayers, both those which are contained in the Scripture, and those
which come forth from pious breasts, must be referred to it, certainly
none can ever equal it, far less surpass it in perfection. It omits
nothing which we can conceive in praise of God, nothing which we can
imagine advantageous to man, and the whole is so exact that all hope of
improving it may well be renounced. In short, let us remember that we
have here the doctrine of heavenly wisdom. God has taught what he
willed; he willed what was necessary.
50. Some circumstances to be observed. Of
appointing special hours of prayer. What to be aimed at, what avoided.
The will of God, the rule of our prayers.
But although it has been said above (sec. 7, 27, &c.), that we
ought always to raise our minds upwards towards God, and pray without
ceasing, yet such is our weakness, which requires to be supported, such
our torpor [state of reduced activity],
which requires to be stimulated, that it is requisite for us to appoint
special hours for this exercise, hours which are not to pass away
without prayer, and during which the whole affections of our minds are
to be completely occupied; namely, when we rise in the morning, before
we commence our daily work, when we sit down to food, when by the
blessing of God we have taken it, and when we retire to rest. This,
however, must not be a superstitious observance of hours, by which, as
it were, performing a task to God, we think we are discharged as to
other hours; it should rather be considered as a discipline by which our
weakness is exercised, and ever and anon stimulated. In particular,
it must be our anxious care, whenever we are ourselves pressed, or see
others pressed by any strait, instantly to have recourse to him not only
with quickened pace, but with quickened minds; and again, we must
not in any prosperity of ourselves or others omit to testify our
recognition of his hand by praise and thanksgiving. Lastly, we
must in all our prayers carefully avoid wishing to confine God to
certain circumstances, or prescribe to him the time, place, or mode of
action. In like manner, we are taught by this prayer not to fix
any law or impose any condition upon him, but leave it entirely to him
to adopt whatever course of procedure seems to him best, in respect of
method, time, and place. For before we offer up any petition for
ourselves, we ask that his will may be done, and by so doing place our
will in subordination to his, just as if we had laid a curb upon it,
that, instead of presuming to give law to God, it may regard him as the
ruler and disposer of all its wishes.
51. Perseverance in prayer especially
recommended, both by precept and example. Condemnatory of those who
assign to God a time and mode of hearing.
If, with minds thus framed to obedience, we allow ourselves to be
governed by the laws of Divine Providence, we shall easily learn to
persevere in prayer, and suspending our own desires wait patiently for
the Lord, certain, however little the appearance of it may be, that he
is always present with us, and will in his own time show how very far he
was from turning a deaf ear to prayers, though to the eyes of men they
may seem to be disregarded. This will be a very present consolation, if
at any time God does not grant an immediate answer to our prayers,
preventing us from fainting or giving way to despondency, as those are
wont to do who, in invoking God, are so borne away by their own fervour,
that unless he yield on their first importunity and give present help,
they immediately imagine that he is angry and offended with them and
abandoning all hope of success cease from prayer. On the contrary,
deferring our hope with well tempered equanimity [evenness
of mind or temper], let us insist with that
perseverance which is so strongly recommended to us in Scripture.
We may often see in The Psalms how David and other believers, after they
are almost weary of praying, and seem to have been beating the air by
addressing a God who would not hear, yet cease not to pray because due
authority is not given to the word of God, unless the faith placed in it
is superior to all events. Again, let us not tempt
God, and by wearying him with our importunity provoke his anger against
us. Many have a practice of formally bargaining with God on certain
conditions, and, as if he were the servant of their lust, binding him to
certain stipulations; with which if he do not immediately comply, they
are indignant and fretful, murmur, complain, and make a noise. Thus
offended, he often in his anger grants to such persons what in mercy he
kindly denies to others. Of this we have a proof in the children of
Israel, for whom it had been better not to have been heard by the Lord,
than to swallow his indignation with their flesh (Num. 11:18, 33).
52. Of the dignity of faith, through which we
always obtain, in answer to prayer, whatever is most expedient for us.
The knowledge of this most necessary.
But if our sense is not able till after long expectation to perceive
what the result of prayer is, or experience any benefit from it, still
our faith will assure us of that which cannot be perceived by sense,
viz., that we have obtained what was fit for us, the Lord having so
often and so surely engaged to take an interest in all our troubles from
the moment they have been deposited in his bosom. In this way we
shall possess abundance in poverty, and comfort in affliction. For
though all things fail, God will never abandon us, and he cannot
frustrate the expectation and patience of his people. He alone will
suffice for all, since in himself he comprehends all good, and will at
last reveal it to us on the day of judgment, when his kingdom shall be
plainly manifested. We may add, that although God
complies with our request, he does not always give an answer in the very
terms of our prayers but while apparently holding us in suspense, yet in
an unknown way, shows that our prayers have not been in vain.
This is the meaning of the words of John, "If we know that he hear
us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we
desired of him" (1 John 5:15). It might seem that there is here a
great superfluity of words, but the declaration is most useful, namely,
that God, even when he does not comply with our requests, yet listens
and is favourable to our prayers, so that our hope founded on his word
is never disappointed. But believers have always need of being supported
by this patience, as they could not stand long if they did not lean upon
it. For the trials by which the Lord proves and exercises us are severe,
nay, he often drives us to extremes, and when driven allows us long to
stick fast in the mire before he gives us any taste of his sweetness. As
Hannah says, "The Lord killeth, and maketh alive; he bringeth down
to the grave, and bringeth up" (1 Sam. 2:6). What could they here
do but become dispirited and rush on despair, were they not, when
afflicted, desolate, and half dead, comforted with the thought that they
are regarded by God, and that there will be an end to their present
evils. But however secure their hopes may stand,
they in the meantime cease not to pray, since prayer unaccompanied by
perseverance leads to no result.
End Notes
[1]French, "Dont
il sembleroit que ce fust chose supeflue de le soliciter par prieres;
veu que nous avons accoustumé de soliciter ceux qui ne pensent à
nostre affaire, et qui sont endormis."--Whence it would seem that
it was a superfluous matter to solicit him by prayer; seeing we are
accustomed to solicit those who think not of our business and who are
slumbering.
[2]French, "Pourtant
ce qui est escrit en la prophetie qu'on attribue à Baruch, combien que
l'autheur soit incertain, est tres sainctement dit;"--However, what
is written in the prophecy which is attributed to Baruch, though the
author is uncertain, is very holily said.
[3]French,
"il reconoissent le chastisement qu'ils ont merité;"--they
acknowledge the punishment which they have deserved.
[4]The French
adds, "Ils voudront qu'on leur oste le mal de tests et des reins,
et seront contens qu'on ne touche point a la fievre;"--They would
wish to get quit of the pain in the head and the loins, and would be
contented to leave the fever untouched.
[5]Latin, "prosternere
preces." French, "mettent bas leurs prieres;" -- lay low
their prayers.
[6]The French
adds, "duquel id n'eust pas autrement esté asseuré;"--of
which he would not otherwise have felt assured.
[7]Latin, "Desine
a me." French, "Retire-toy;"--Withdraw from me.
[8]French,
"Confusion que nous avons, ou devons avoir en nousmesmes;"--confusion
which we have, or ought to have, in ourselves.
[9]Erasmus,
though stumbling and walking blindfold in clear light, ventures to write
thus in a letter to Sadolet, 1530: "Primum, constat nullum esse
locum in divinis voluminibus, qui permittat invocare divos nisi fortasse
detorquere huc placet, quod dives in Evangelica parabola implorat opem
Abrahae. Quanquam autem in re tanta novare quicquam praeter auctoritatem
Scripturae, merito periculosum videri possit, tamen invocationem divorum
nusquam improbo," &c.--First, it is clear that there is no
passage in the Sacred Volume which permits the invocation of saints,
unless we are pleased to wrest to this purpose what is said in the
parable as to the rich man imploring the help of Abraham. But though in
so weighty a matter it may justly seem dangerous to introduce anything
without the authority of Scripture, I by no means condemn the invocation
of saints, &c.
[10]Latin, "Pastores;"--French,
"ceux qui se disent prelats, curés, ou precheurs;"--those who
call themselves prelates, curates, or preachers.
[11]French,
"Mais encore qu'ils taschent de laver leur mains d'un si vilain
sacrilege, d'autant qu'il ne se commet point en leurs messes ni en leurs
vespres; sous quelle couleur defendront ils ces blasphemes qu'il lisent
a pleine gorge, où ils prient St Eloy ou St Medard, de regarder du ciel
leurs serviteurs pour les aider? mesmes ou ils supplient la vierge Marie
de commander a son fils qu'il leur ottroye leur requestes?"--But
although they endeavour to wash their hands of the vile sacrilege,
inasmuch as it is not committed in their masses or vespers, under what
pretext will they defend those blasphemies which they repeat with full
throat, in which they pray St Eloy or St Medard to look from heaven upon
their servants and assist them; even supplicate the Virgin Mary to
command her Son to grant their requests?
[12]The French
adds, "et quasi en une fourmiliere de saincts;"--and as it
were a swarm of saints.
[13]French,
"C'est chose trop notoire de quel bourbieu ou de quelle racaille
ils tirent leur saincts." -- It is too notorious out of what mire
or rubbish they draw their saints.
[14]French,
"Cette longueur de priere a aujourd'hui sa vogue en la Papauté, et
procede de cette mesme source; c'est que les uns barbotant force Ave
Maria, et reiterant cent fois un chapelet, perdent une partie du temps;
les autres, comme les chanoines et caphars, en abayant le parchemin jour
et nuict, et barbotant leur breviaire vendent leur coquilles au peuple."--This
long prayer is at present in vogue among the Papists, and proceeds from
the same cause: some muttering a host of Ave Marias, and going over
their beads a hundred times, lose part of their time; others, as the
canons and monks grumbling over their parchment night and day, and
muttering their breviary, sell their cockleshells to the people.
[15]Calvin
translates, "Te expectat Deus, laus in Sion,"--God, the praise
in Sion waiteth for thee.
[16]See Book
I. chap. xi. sec. 7,13, on the subject of images in churches. Also Book
IV. chap. iv. sec. 8, and chap. v. sec. 18, as to the ornaments of
churches.
[17]This
clause of the sentence is omitted in the French.
[18]The
French adds, "où on en avoit tousjours usé;"--where it had
always been used.
[19]The whole
of this quotation is omitted in the French.
[20]French,
"Mais il adjouste d'autre part, que quand il se souvenoit du fruict
et de l'edification qu'il avoit recue en oyant chanter à l'Eglise il
enclinoit plus à l'autre partie, c'est, approuver le chant;"--but
he adds on the other hand that when he called to mind the fruit and
edification which he had received from hearing singing in the church, he
inclined more to the other side; that is, to approve singing.
[21]French,
"Qui est-ce donc qui se pourra assez esmerveiller d'une audace tant
effrenee qu'ont eu les Papistes et ont encore, qui contre la defense de
l'Apostre, chantent et brayent de langue estrange et inconnue, en
laquelle le plus souvent ils n'entendent pas eux mesmes une syllabe, et
ne veulent que les autres y entendent?"--Who then can sufficiently
admire the unbridled audacity which the Papists have had, and still
have, who, contrary to the prohibition of the Apostle, chant and bray in
a foreign and unknown tongue, in which, for the most part, they do not
understand one syllable, and which they have no wish that others
understand?
[22]Augustine
in Enchiridion ad Laurent. xxx. 116. Pseudo-Chrysost. in Homilies on
Matthew, hom. xiv. See end of sec. 53.
[23]"Dont
il est facile de juger que ce qui est adjousté en S. Matthieu, et
qu'aucuns ont pris pour une septieme requeste, n'est qu'un explication
de la sixieme, et se doit a icelle rapporter;" -- Whence it is easy
to perceive that what is added in St Matthew, and which some have taken
for a seventh petition, is only an explanation of the sixth, and ought
to be referred to it.
[24]French,
"Quelque mauvaistié qu'ayons euë, ou quelque imperfection ou
poureté qui soit en nous;" -- whatever wickedness we may have
done, or whatever imperfection or poverty there may be in us.
[25]French,
"Telles disciples qu'ils voudront;"--such disciples as they
will.
[26]The
French adds, "que Dieu nous a donnee et faite;"-which God has
given and performed to us.
[27]James
1:2, 14; Matth. 4:1, 3; 1 Thess. 3:5.
[28]2 Cor.
6:7, 8.
[29]Ps.
26:2.
[30]Gen. 22:1;
Deut. 8:2; 13:3. For the sense in which God is said to lead us into
temptation, see the end of this section.
[31]1 Cor.
10:13; 2 Pet. 2:9.
[32]1 Pet.
5:8.
This work of John Calvin
is
in the public domain.
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