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加爾文基督教要義(60)卷三第二十章(1) 論祈禱——信心的主要操練,每日接受神恩的媒介

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追求永生 發表於 2010-1-19 02:01 | 只看該作者 回帖獎勵 |倒序瀏覽 |閱讀模式
第二十章 論祈禱——信心的主要操練,每日接受神恩的媒介
  從我們所已經討論的,我們知道世人是如何的無善可陳,且亦缺乏一切得救的手段。因此,他們倘若要求拯救,就必須離開自己,而從別處去求。繼又論到主如何自願地將自己在基督身上表現出來,在基督里叫我們由患難轉為福樂,由貧窮變為富足;且藉基督把天堂的寶藏啟示給我們,好叫我們的信心完全以他的愛子為念,使我們的一切盼望朝向著他,使我們的一切盼望都在他裡面得滿足。這誠然是一個秘密而深奧的哲理,不能由普通的邏輯推斷;但是那些眼目為上帝所開啟的人卻能完全懂得,因為在神的光明裡,他們才見得到光明。我們因信心的教導知道一切我們所缺乏的都可以從上帝得來,也可以從我們的主耶穌基督那裡得到,因為天父喜歡將他的一切豐富恩典放在基督身上,好使我們從這個最豐富的泉源吸取所需;所以我們只要追求他,用禱告祈求那我們知道是存在於他裡面的。若是只知道上帝為賜予一切美善的主,他要我們祈求他,但我們卻既不接近他,也不求告他,就好比一個人找到了一個埋在地下的寶庫,卻不去開發,仍然是無益的。因之,使徒保羅指示我們,真的信心必常常祈求上帝,所以他指示這一個次序——正如信心是由福音而生,同樣,因著信心,我們就被吸引去求告主名(參羅10:14)。這與他在前面所說的一樣,所受的那「兒子的心」把福音的見證印證在我們的心中,鼓勵我們的靈,在上帝面前傾訴我們的意念,「用說不出來的嘆息」來呼籲「阿爸父」(羅8:26)。這一個題目以前只略略提到,現在應詳加討論。
  二、所以我們是藉著禱告才能到達天父為我們所儲存的豐富寶藏。因為在人與上帝中間有一種使人們能進入至聖所的交通,好在神的面前祈求他所應許的,這樣,主的應許既為我們所信,也可以在我們的經驗中證實。因此我們知道,凡是主叫我們仰望於他的,都應該隨時向他祈求。實在的祈禱可以掘出主的福音向我們的信心所啟示的寶藏。所以關於禱告的必要和它的各種效用,確非言語所能充分說明的。我們的天父宣稱,我們的得保障只有依靠我們對他名的呼求,不是沒有理由的;靠著禱告我們呼求他的祜佑,作為我們的幫助,因為他的眷佑關心我們的一切;當我們軟弱到幾乎暈倒時,我們呼求他的能力來支持我們;雖然我們為罪的重擔所壓,靠著禱告,我們祈求他的聖善接納我們進入他的恩眷中;總之,在禱告中,我們呼求他對我們顯示他的完全性格。因之,我們的良心可得到特別的平安與寧靜;因為當我們把一切壓迫我們的煩惱都交給上帝時,我們心中感覺到無限泰然,因為覺得所有的一切愁苦都不在他面前隱蔽,而他既願意,也能夠,為我們解決一切使我們得到真實利益。
  三、但是有人要說,難道我們不告訴他,他就不知道我們的苦惱與需要;好像他在那裡瞌睡或毫不關心,非等到我們的呼聲把他喚醒不可?但是持此一說的人,並不注意到我們的主關於祈禱目的的教訓:主要人祈禱,並不是為他自己的緣故,乃是為我們的緣故。誠然他喜悅我們把他所應得的歸於他,這也是理當如此;世人應當認他為一切所欲所賞的恩賜的泉源,而以禱告感謝他。然而甚至這種對主敬拜的益處亦復回到了我們的身上。所以古時聖者越是用大信心把神對他們和別人的恩惠宣傳出來,就越被激動而作更懇切的禱告。以利亞的例子即可證明:以利亞雖然確知上帝的計劃,且很有把握地應許亞哈王降雨,然他仍懇切地將臉伏在雙膝之中祈禱,並叫僕人去觀望七次(參王上18:42),這並不是他不相信神所應許的話,而是他知道應該把他所希望的擺在上帝面前,好使他的信心不趨於麻木疲憊。所以,雖然當我們對於自己的苦難境遇愚昧麻木時,主仍然不懈地鑒臨保護我們,有時且不待呼求而救援我們,然而我們的最大益助是在乎殷勤祈求他,第一,好使我們的心中火熱,熱烈認真地追求,敬愛與崇拜他,並且使我們在需要的時候,依靠神作為我們的唯一保障;第二,好使我們心裡不存有任何向主隱瞞的念頭,如此,我們才會學到全心全意在主面前陳訴;最後好使我們準備用誠實感謝的心,去接受並承認主所賜的福,因為我們的祈禱提醒我們,一切恩賜是從神而來的。而且我們既然得到我們所求的,深信主應許了我們的祈求,就更加熱切地默念神恩,更愉快地接受從祈禱所得到的。末了,祈禱的效用與經驗本身在我們心中證實了,主按照我們的軟弱,賜給我們他的眷佑;我們感覺到主不但應許不丟棄我們,不但在我們最需要他的時候給我們開路,使我們接近他,而且時常伸出他的手臂來援助我們;不但用言語安慰我們,而且親自扶持,幫助我們。因為這些緣故,我們的仁慈天父雖然並不疲乏或瞌睡,然而為要訓練我們這些萎靡懈惰的人,為我們自己的益處親近他,懇切祈求他,所以他有時好像是疲乏瞌睡,不理我們。因之,那些藉口神常看顧萬物,因此認為祈禱是一件多餘的事,是煩擾神的舉動的人,是非常矛盾的;主明明宣布說:「凡誠心求告他的,他必與他們相近」(詩145:18)。同樣荒謬的是另外有些人以為主所自願賜給我們的東西,我們用不著再去祈求;其實這些東西,雖然由於寬大恩典,像水一樣流給我們,然而他願意把它們當作是由於我們的禱告而賜予的。這由詩篇以及其它許多同樣的經文可以證明:「耶和華的眼目看顧義人,他的耳朵聽他們的呼求」(詩34:15);這句話是稱讚主自願完成那信他的人的拯救,可是並沒有說要免除我們在信心上的操練,好把懈怠排除於人心之外。因之,神的眼睛常眷顧著瞎眼人的需要而援救他們;可是他仍願意聽到我們的呻吟,好使他更能對我們顯示他的愛。因此,「那保護以色列的,也不打盹,也不睡覺」;然而當他看到我們懈怠並啞口不言的時候,他就像是暫時把我們遺忘了。
  四、論到祈禱的最適切的方法:第一原則就是我們的心意必須合乎與神交往的虔誠態度。倘若我們能擺脫一切叫我們離開了上帝的屬肉體的私慾雜念,我們即可達到這種境界;而且,我們的心非但可以專一於禱告,而且可以超越於本身之上。這裡並不是指要有一種擺脫一切,以至於對一切都不動心的態度;相反的,在我們內心正需有熱切的祈求,正如主的聖潔僕人,他們不但懇切祈求,而且是從苦痛的深淵中,及死亡的爪牙下,向主陳訴。我所主張的是我們必須排除一切外在的,使人的思想到處徘徊,把人從天上拉到地下的種種顧慮。當我說必須超越於本身之上,我的意思是說,不要把我們愚昧的妄想帶到神的面前;也不要使思想限於它本身的虛浮範圍之內,卻要提升到值得陳訴於神前的聖潔境地上去。
  五、下述兩件事是很值得注意的:第一,要從事禱告,須全心全意,而不可為胡思妄想所分心;對崇敬上帝的事,沒有比舉止輕浮更悖謬矛盾的了,這種輕浮行為,表示一種淫褻和毫無敬畏的心。遇著這種情形,困難越大,我們越須努力克服。自然,在禱告時沒有人能夠專註到完全不讓其他不正當的思想闖入,或從中干擾,或用那種間接的側唆旁誘的方法,阻撓他的虔誠祈禱。那麼,我們應該思量,當神許我們到他面前發生親密交往的時候,我們若糟蹋主這種降格來臨的機會,而不將我們的思想固守虔敬,卻使褻俗之事與神聖虔敬的事相混雜,這是何等失於尊敬嚴肅的事;好像我們是在與一個同我們一樣的凡人交談,可以隨時把他放在一旁。所以,我們要知道只有那些因神的感化,擺脫一切凡情俗慮的人,才算是對禱告有良好準備。禱告時的舉手禮是表明,除非人提高自己的思想,不然他們必與上帝相距甚遠,所以詩篇上說:「我的心仰望你」(詩25:1)。經上常用「仰望神祈禱」的話來表達禱告的心情,好使那些希望自己的禱告蒙神俯聽的人,不陷入於糞土中。總之,那如此溫柔地邀請我們將一切重擔脫下交付給他的神,對我們的恩眷愈大,我們可原諒自己的地方就愈少,除非我們認為他的特殊的無可比擬的恩眷是比一切都重要,並認真懇切地集中我們的心思與注意力,盡我們的祈禱的本分;而這個境界,除非我們努力制服我們的思想,超脫一切障礙,我們是無法達到的。
  我們要說的第二點就是:我們所乞求的,不能出乎神所許可的。因為神雖然命令我們向他傾心禱告(參詩:62:8),然而他並沒有任從我們隨便把邪惡與愚昧的情慾都排列出來。當他應許成就信徒的心愿時,他並非如此放任,以至於順從了我們的放肆的情慾。可是人們祈禱時,往往嚴重地冒犯了上面這兩條規律。大多數人非但是不恭不敬,僭妄地來到神前陳說他們的妄想,而且靦顏無禮地在神的台前陳訴他們在夢寐當中所懷想的一切,而且由於他們的愚妄,他們竟把他們不敢在人面前宣露的邪污念頭,胡亂地向神祈求。好些教外的人已在輕鄙譏笑這種僭妄,而這種邪惡卻仍盛行;因之,古時那些野心的人敬拜猶皮得(Jupiter);貪財的拜麥丘立(Mercury);文人學士拜亞波羅(Apollo)與米內瓦(Minerva);好戰的拜馬爾司(Mars);好色的拜維諾司(Venus);而現在的人(正如我剛才所提起的)祈禱時放縱地使用一切不適當的言詞,等於和同輩的人談話開玩笑一樣。上帝不許人如此戲弄他的宏恩,他伸張他的權力,叫我們虔誠禱告,聽他的命令。所以我們應當記得約翰的話:「我們若照他的旨意求什麼,他就聽我們,這是我們向他所存坦然無懼的心」(約壹5:14)。
  但是我們能力既然趕不上這種完全的信心,我們就必須追求補救的方法。正如我們的意念的注意力應該集中於上帝,同樣我們的心思的熱忱也應該都歸向他。但是我們的心思與意念常常不能達到這種高尚的境地;說得更貼切一點,它們常常感到軟弱失敗,以致背道而馳。為補救我們的軟弱無能,所以神賜給我們聖靈,作為我們祈禱的導師,指點我們何者為義,並糾正我們的心思。因為「我們的軟弱,有聖靈幫助,我們本不曉得當怎樣禱告,只是聖靈親自用說不出來的嘆息,替我們禱告」 (羅8:26)。這並非是說聖靈真的祈禱,嘆息,但是他在我們的心內激發坦然無懼的心,和種種思念與嘆息,遠非我們原有能力所能達到的。所以保羅說信徒受聖靈感動所發出的 「嘆息」,是「說不出來的」,並非沒有道理;因為那真正從事禱告的人,都懂得人在禱告的時候是惶恐焦急,不知當說什麼;甚至正要發出語聲時,只是口中吃吃,心內躊躇;所以能夠禱告得恰當乃是一種特別恩賜。這並不是說我們可以怠慢,把祈禱的責任卸給聖靈,因而更加深了我們那懈怠的傾向。有些人有一種不虔敬的錯誤看法,以為我們可以在冷淡,懈怠中等候,直到神來呼召我們脫離別的糾纏,歸向於他;殊不知當我們在萎靡懈怠中感覺睏倦時,就應當呼求聖靈的援助。使徒保羅鼓勵我們「在聖靈里禱告」(林前14:15),也不是要我們蠲棄我們的警醒,卻是指示聖靈的感力在我們的禱告中運行,並不是要阻涉我們自己的努力;因為上帝要在這一椿事上證明我們的信心有多少效力。
  六、禱告的第二原則是:當我們祈求的時候,須承認自己的貧乏,認真地思想我們一切所求都是何等嚴重緊要,必須熱烈誠懇地祈求。許多人毫不在意地背誦禱文,好像那是上帝加在他們頭上的一項任務;他們雖然承認禱告乃是對於臨到他們身上的災難的一種必要的解救,因為若沒有神的援助,滅亡必然臨到他們,然而他們禱告只不過沿著習俗,這從他們毫不留意他們所祈求的,並從他們心中的冷淡,可以看出。他們對於自己的需要只有一種泛泛的混沌之感,不足激動他們把所需要當作一種迫切的現實,來祈求拯救。若有人祈求罪得赦免,而卻認為他自己不是罪人,或至少不想到他是罪人,我們還能想像比這虛偽更可憎惡,和在神面前更可咒詛的事嗎?這是公然戲弄上帝。這種邪惡敗壞,正如我們曾說過,是浸入整個人類,許多人只不過在形式上祈求某些事情,其實他們以為這些事情並不是從主的善良,乃是從別的來源獲得的,要不然,就認為自己已經有了。另有一些人的罪行,似乎是要少些,但仍然是不能寬容的;他們心中只有一個原則,以為必須以禱告來解除上帝的忿怒,可是禱告時心力渙散,吃吃亂語。信徒應當特別小心,若心中沒有火熱的赤忱,同時也不懇切地盼望得著所祈求的,就不要進到神的面前祈求。在對那些似乎不是為著自己的需要,而是為著榮耀神的事,我們的禱告仍須同樣的熱忱懇切,當我們禱告願人尊他的名為聖時,我們應當如飢如渴,懇切地期望人尊他的名為聖。
  七、若是有人以為人並不常常為著同樣的需要禱告,這一點我也同意,雅各書上對這一分別有很好的說明:「你們中間有受苦的呢,他就該禱告,有喜樂的呢,他就該歌頌」(雅5:13)。因之,常識本身可以指明,因為我們的極端懈怠,所以上帝是照著我們所處的境況,激發我們懇切祈禱。這就是大衛所說的「當趁可尋找的時候」了(詩32:6)。正如他在別的地方所說的,我們越被煩惱,苦難,恐懼,以及其它種種試探所困擾,我們就越有接近上帝的自由,好像他特別邀請我們親近他。同時,正如保羅所說的,我們要「常常禱告」(弗6:18),因為,無論我們自以為是如何的興旺,我們的周圍都充滿著喜樂,然而我們仍然要感到有某些缺乏,而這種感覺無時無刻不激勵我們禱告。即使是一個酒肉盈門的富人,若不是由於神的不斷恩眷,他也不能進一口飲食;所以他的豐實的倉庫,並不阻礙他祈求每日所需用的飲食。倘若我們想到每時每刻有許多危險在威脅我們,我們心中的恐懼必將告訴我們,我們沒有一個時候不需要禱告,而這事在靈性方面更易明了。難道我們所感覺到的這許多罪過能容許我們安心而不謙卑地求神救我們脫離這一切罪和懲罰嗎?何時誘惑能向我們休戰,使我們無須急切地盼望援助呢?此外,對於神國光榮的渴慕,更能不斷地吸引我們,叫我們不住地禱告。所以,每一個時節都同樣地適合於禱告。主時常吩咐我們殷勤禱告,並不是沒有原因的。我這裡尚未討論到恆切禱告,這題目以後即將提出。但是經上所有勸我們「不住地禱告,」的許多地方,都是指責我們的懈怠,因為我們常常不感到這種需要。這一原則把一切假冒,取巧和虛妄都從禱告擯除出去。神應許一切真實求告他的人,他要親近他們;他宣布凡一心一意尋求主的人,他必為他們所尋見。但這是那些以自己的不潔不義為可喜的人所不希望達到的。
  所以,合理的禱告需要悔改。因之經上常說,上帝不聽從惡人,他們的禱告,正如他們的祭物,是可憎惡的;凡不肯敞開心門的,上帝也掩耳不聽他們的禱告,凡硬心無情,冒犯他的尊嚴的,他必不放鬆,這是合理的。以賽亞書警誡我們說:「你們多多的祈禱,我也不聽,你們的手都滿了殺人的血」(賽1:15)。耶利米書也說:「我切切告誡,他們卻不側耳而聽;所以,他們雖向我哀求,我卻不聽」(耶11:7,8,11)。因為惡者誇耀他們與神所立的約,卻不斷地羞辱他的聖名,這使他覺得他自己受了很大的侮辱。所以在以賽亞書上他說:「這百姓用嘴唇親近我,心裡卻遠離我」(賽29:13)。主不僅對禱告上的,連對一切崇拜上的假冒為善,都表示憎厭。雅各書有一節表明這個意思:「你們求也得不著,是因為你們妄求,要浪費在你們的宴樂中」(雅4:3)。雖然信徒的禱告不靠他們自己的德行(這一點我們將再討論),然而約翰所勸告的仍然不算多餘:「我們一切所求的,就從他得著,因為我們遵守他的命令」(約壹3:22);因為邪惡的心把神恩的門關閉了,因此,只有那些誠懇敬拜上帝的人的禱告是對的,且蒙垂聽。所以那準備禱告的人須因自己的罪而憎惡自己,常存著一種求乞的心情,但人若無悔罪之心就不可能如此。
  八、第三原則是:凡來到上帝面前祈禱的,必須拋棄一切誇耀自己和自以為義的念頭;總之,不存依靠自己的心,只謙卑地把一切榮耀完全歸給上帝;不然,即或在最小的事上自誇,上帝必因他的虛妄的驕傲而向他掩面。關於在上帝面前順服,壓抑一切自高思想的事,我們從上帝僕人當中可得到許多榜樣,愈是聖潔的人,在上帝面前愈是謙卑惶恐。主所最稱讚的但以理說:「我們在你面前懇求,原不是因自己的義,乃因你的大憐憫。求主垂聽,求主赦免,求主應允而行,為你自己不要遲延,我的上帝啊,因這城和這民,都是稱為你名下的」(但9:18,19)。但以理並不如一般人將自己的罪和大眾的混在一起談,卻分別承認自己的罪,走到赦罪的避難所,祈求赦免;他呼求說:「我認我的罪,和本國之民以色列的罪」(但9:20)。大衛的榜樣也同樣教導我們謙卑:「求你不要審問僕人,因為在你面前,凡活著的人,沒有一個是義」(詩143:2)。以賽亞如此禱告說:「你曾發怒,因為我們犯罪;我們若走在你的路上就能得救;我們都像不潔凈的人,所有的義,都像污穢的衣服;我們都像葉子漸漸枯乾;我們的罪孽好像風把我們吹去。並且無人求告你的名,無人奮力抓住你,原來你掩面不顧我們,使我們因罪孽消化。耶和華啊,現在你仍是我們的父,我們是泥,你是窯匠,我們都是你手的工作。耶和華啊,求你不要大發烈怒,也不要永遠記念罪孽;求你垂顧我們,我們都是你的百姓」(賽64:5-9)。請注意,他們沒有別的依靠,只有靠著自己為上帝的兒女,才不至於失掉將來神對他們眷顧的希望。因此耶利米說:「我們的罪雖然作見證告我們,還求你為你名的緣故行事」(耶14:7)。有一個不知名的作者(通常認為是先知巴錄)說過一段很真實與聖潔的話:「但是大有憂傷,曲背,懦弱,雙目失明,腸中飢餓的人,卻還能歸榮耀和公義給主,所以我們在主前懇求,不是因著列祖列王的公義」,又說「求主垂聽,發慈悲,因為你是大慈悲的上帝,求你憐恤我們,因為我們在你面前誠然犯了罪」(次經巴錄書2:18,19;3:2)。
  九、最後,要得到一個恰當的禱告的開端,仍須依靠謙卑、坦白的認罪,以求獲得寬赦。即使是一個最聖潔的人,除非他與主歸於和好,也不能從上帝得到恩眷;除非他蒙主饒恕,就不能夠逃避主的忿怒。那麼,難怪信徒須用這樣的一個鑰匙,打開祈禱的門;正如我們從詩篇中許多地方所領略的。例如大衛在祈求一件別的事情時說:「求你不要記念我幼年時的罪愆,和我的過犯。耶和華啊,求你因你的恩惠,按你的慈愛,記念我」(詩25:7)。又說:「求你看顧我的困苦我的艱難,赦免我一切的罪」(詩25:18)。所以我們也知道,我們每天在神面前陳述新犯的罪過是不夠的,我們也須時常記起那些已經遺忘了的罪行。所以這位先知既在另一地方承認他所犯的一個嚴重的罪,又同時提起他在母腹中就有了罪;他這樣說,並不是要以天性的墮落來減輕自己的罪過,而是把自己畢生的罪一一提起來,希望神因他的勇於自責,而更加憐恤他。雖然那些聖者不常明顯地為赦罪祈求,然而,倘若我們勸勉查考他們在聖經中的禱詞,就可曉得,他們之能勇敢地禱告,正是由於記念神的慈悲,所以每當開始禱告的時候,他們總要求與神和好;因為凡檢討自己良心的,必不敢將自己的顧慮貿然直陳;每逢臨近主前,除非完全依靠神的慈悲與饒恕,總是戰戰兢兢。另外還有一種特別認罪方法,當信徒祈求免去刑罰時,必同時祈求赦免他們的罪過;因為當刑罰的原因仍舊存在時,祈求免去它的結果是很矛盾的。我們必須小心,不要效法愚蠢的病人,他們只求去掉病症,而卻忽視病原。因之,我們必須先求與神和好,然後他才能表示他的恩眷,一面因為神自己要依照這個次序,一面因為除非我們的良心發覺神對我們已不再有忿怒,完全與我們和好,他對我們的任何恩惠就沒有多大益處。關於這一點,基督有一句提醒我們的話;當他決定要醫好一個癱子時,他說:「你的罪赦了」(太9:2)。這裡他叫我們注意到我們的主要目標——蒙神悅納,進入他的恩眷——,然後幫助我們,使我們享受與神和好的果效。但在特別承認現在所犯的罪,求主饒恕一切的罪,和免去一切的刑罰以外,還有一個在禱告時用以邀神垂憐的引語是不當忘卻的。因為一切的禱告,除非是根據神的白白恩慈,均無功效。關於這個意見,我們可引約翰一書的話:「我們若認自己的罪,上帝是信實的,是公義的,必要赦免我們的罪,洗凈我們一切的不義」(約壹1:9)。因之,在律法之下,一切禱告均須靠贖罪祭,使之歸於聖潔,一面使之蒙悅納,一面叫人們知道他們本不配有禱告的光榮和權利,除非他們的罪污先蒙潔凈;他們得以坦然無懼地禱告,完全是在乎上帝的恩慈。
  十、但是,有時聖徒似乎是仗著自己的義,來到神前祈求,如大衛所說:「求你保存我的性命,因我是虔誠人」(詩86:2);希西家所說:「耶和華啊,求你記念我在你面前怎樣存完全的心,按誠實行事,又作你眼中所看為善的」(賽38:3)。其實他們這樣說不過是要以他們的再生來證明他們是上帝的僕人和兒女,也就是上帝所申明要向他們解除忿怒的人。他在詩篇中告訴我們(正如我們所已經提起過的):「耶和華的眼目看顧義人,他的耳朵聽他們的呼求」(詩34:15);使徒約翰也說:「我們一切所求的,就從他得著,因為我們遵守他的命令」(約壹3:22);根據這些經文,他並不按照我們行為的功德去決定我們禱告的價值,只不過藉以使那些自己感覺到正直,無罪的人(其實,一切信徒都應當有此感覺),能夠建立他們的坦白無懼的心。約翰福音上所載那個瞎子蒙恩恢復光明后的話,「上帝不聽罪人」(約9:31),是和神真理的原則相符合的。但這「罪人」一語,是就經上常有的說法,指那酣睡罪中,以罪為滿足,而毫無求義意向的人論;因為一個不熱烈追求虔誠的人就不能敞開心胸,向上帝誠懇呼籲。這樣的應許是與聖徒所宣稱的相符;在這些宣言中,他們提起自己的清潔與無辜,好使他們體會到一種主的僕人所應該表現的德行。並且他們這樣祈禱,常是當他們在主面前把自己和敵人比較,希望主能拯救他們脫離敵人的不公不義時。在這種比較上,難怪他們陳訴心中的公義和誠實,想藉著自己的正直來邀神的迅速援助。所以,我們不反對義人在神面前,以自己誠心所感到的潔白,來證實神那為安慰和支持崇拜他的人所賜的應許;但是,我們仍希望這種善人能夠撇開他自己行為的義,不加思索,專心依靠神的寬大仁慈。
  十一、禱告的第四原則是:雖然我們是這樣的卑微,然而我們在禱告時須確實相信要獲得所祈求的。把信賴神的恩眷的心與神的公義的報復性這二者相提並論,似乎有些矛盾;可是這兩件事是相符的,倘若一個因自己的罪過而被壓倒的人,能為神的良善所舉起。正如我們以前所說,悔改與信心是相輔的,一個叫人恐懼,一個叫人喜樂,二者不可分離,所以在禱告中這二者必須同被提出。對這一點大衛說得好:「我必憑你豐盛的慈愛進入你的居所,我必存敬畏你的心,向你下拜」(詩5:7)。神的良善不只使人有信心,也使人有敬畏他的心;因為不但主的威嚴叫我們崇敬,我們的不義也使我們忘記了一切的驕傲與自信,並叫我們充滿畏懼的心。這裡我所說的自信並不是那叫人脫離一切焦急,而歸於完全寧靜的信賴心,因為那是屬於不為俗慮所染,不為妄念所壓,不為恐懼所驚,而一切賞賜與意願相稱的人。然而聖徒卻有一種至高無上的刺激,知道呼籲上帝,當需要與困惑纏繞他們,使他們感到不安時,當他們對自己完全失望時,他們就期待信心的及時幫助。因為在那種苦惱中,神的良善在他們眼中是如此的光榮,雖然在現在的苦難中呻吟,對將來也有更大的恐懼,然而一想到神的良善之可靠,即可減輕苦痛,而生得救的希望。所以虔誠人的祈禱必兼有兩方面,不但是包括,而且是表現兩方面;就是說,他雖然呻吟於目前的惡勢力之下,且惶慮焦急於新的邪惡之發生,然而他同時必依靠上帝的保障,相信他願意伸出他的救援的手。倘若我們祈求神的恩賜,但沒有指望得著的心,神必因我們的缺乏信心而震怒。因之,就禱告性質來說,再沒有比遵守這一原則更為相宜的,就是不要輕率向前,卻須循著信心的步驟。關於這一原則,基督在下面一段話中指示我們:「所以我告訴你們,凡你們禱告祈求的,無論是什麼,只要信是得著的,就必得著」(可11:24)。在另一個地方他又說:「你們禱告,無論求什麼,只要信,就必得著」(太21:22)。雅各也有與此相同的話:「你們中間有缺乏智慧的,應當求那厚賜與眾人,也不斥責人的上帝,主就必賜給他。只要憑著信心求,一點也不疑惑」(雅1:5)。這裡「信心」與「疑惑」對照,就正把信心的性質表現出來了。同樣值得注意的是他接著又說,這種疑惑的人,不能從主那裡得著什麼,這種人在疑慮中呼求主,心中毫無把握,不知所祈求的是否能蒙俯允;雅各把這種人比之海中的波浪,被風吹著翻騰。因之,他在該書另一地方稱合理的禱告為 「出於信心的祈禱」(雅5:15)。此外,上帝時常申明他要照著各人的信心施賜,這話的意思是說,我們若沒有信心就不能得著什麼。最後,凡祈禱應驗的,都是由於信心。保羅的那一段最著名的話也是這種意思,可惜那些不肯細心思想的人很少注意到:「人未曾信他,怎能求他呢?未曾聽他,怎能信他呢?可見通道是從聽道來的,聽道是從神的話來的」(羅10:14,17)。這裡,很顯然在爭持說,禱告既然本原於信心,所以只有那些因福音的宣傳而認識了神的恩慈和良善的人,才能作誠懇的禱告。
  十二、我們的反對者從未想到這種需要。所以,當我們訓誨信徒須有依靠之心,相信上帝對他們是寬恩仁厚的,這些反對者就認為我們所說的是最大的荒謬。其實倘若他們慣於作真實的祈禱,他們就必知道,若沒有這種堅強信賴神恩的心,就不能夠合宜地向上帝呼籲。但是,心中沒有這種經驗的人既然不能完全發現信心的能力,他們除了虛浮的想像外,顯然沒有別的經驗,所以與他們爭論是沒有益處的。我們所求的那種保證的價值與必須,主要是從祈禱中學習得來的;凡不懂得這一層道理的,就暴露出他們的愚昧。那麼,把這一類盲目的人拋開罷,讓我們遵行保羅的話,就是人若不從福音中認識神的慈悲,並深信這是神為他所預備的,就不能呼求神。像下面這種話,算是一種什麼禱詞呢?「主啊,我心中誠然疑惑,不知你是否願意俯聽;但是我既為焦慮所迫,我投奔你,倘若我配蒙救援,求你救援我。」這種祈求不像我們在經上所讀到的眾聖者的禱告,也與聖靈藉著使徒的話所教訓的不同:「我們只管坦然無懼的來到施恩的寶座前,就可蒙恩典」(來4:16)。另外又說:「我們因信耶穌,就在他裡面放膽無懼,篤信不疑的來到上帝面前」(弗3;12)。這種有求必應的信仰既是為主所親自吩咐的,又是眾聖者的榜樣所指示的,所以,我們若要有效地禱告,就當以全力來堅持它。因為只有那種出自這樣肯定的信心,和這樣不可撓折的盼望的禱告,才能蒙悅納。使徒若只提到「信心」,也許就夠了;然而他不但加上了「篤信不疑」,而且再以「放膽無懼」來補充,以此把我們與那些雖與我們同樣作禱告,卻只是模模糊糊不知所云的非信徒分別出來。所以整個教會常常照著詩篇上的話禱告:「主阿,求你照我們所仰望的,向我們施行慈愛」 (詩33:22)。詩篇的另一地方也有同樣的意思:「我呼求的日子,上帝幫助我,這是我所知道的」(詩56:9),又說:「早晨我必向你陳明我的心意,並要儆醒」(詩5:3)。從這些話里我們知道,禱告若沒有盼望相隨,就好像空的聲音一般。盼望有如戍樓,在那裡我們守候上帝。這和保羅所勸導的次序是相符的;他在鼓勵信徒「靠著聖靈隨時多方禱告」之前,指示他們「拿著信德當作藤牌;並戴上救恩的頭盔,拿著聖靈的寶劍,就是上帝的道」(弗6:16-18)。
  讓讀者回想我前面所說的:我們承認自己的苦難,貧窮和罪孽,信心必不因此而減少。因為,雖然信徒感到自己為罪惡的重擔所壓迫,非但空無所有,不足以邀神的恩眷,而且因為自己罪過深重,心中畏懼上帝,可是他們仍然不停息地在神面前陳訴,這種經驗亦不能叫他們因恐怖而不依賴上帝,因為除此之外沒有別的方法可以親近上帝。禱告的設立,其目的並非要我們在上帝面前妄自高大,或誇張自己的作為;而是叫我們得以承認自己的過犯,陳述自己的苦難,如同兒女在父母面前陳訴一樣。我們的苦難堆積如山,應該激發我們迫切禱告,正如詩篇所指示的:「求你醫治我,因為我得罪了你」(詩41:4)。我承認,這種良心的打擊原是致命的,除非有神的援助;我們最仁慈的天父,以他無比的慈悲,隨時醫治我們,平息我們的煩惱,使我們憂慮蠲除,恐懼消散;他慈和地引我們到他面前,替我們排除一切阻礙和疑惑,好使我們接近他。
  十三、第一,當他命令我們祈禱的時候,那命令的本身對違抗命令者含著一種指責。主的命令,沒有比詩篇上所記的更貼切的:「要在你患難中的日子求告我」(詩50:15)。在聖經中,關於我們虔敬的本分,沒有比禱告一事更常提到的,所以這裡不必多事討論。主說:「你們祈求,就給你們;叩門,就給你們開門」(太7:7)。這個教訓附帶著一個應許,而那是必要的;因為雖然一切人都承認應當順從主的教訓,然而倘若他不曾應許俯聽他們的祈求,或甚至答應他們的祈求,許多人必將疏忽上帝的呼喚。這兩層既經說明,很顯然的,凡不肯直接來到神前的,他們不只是犯了背叛或反抗的罪,而且也證明了他們的不信,因為他們不相信主的應許;這是更值得注意的,因為假冒為善的人藉口謙卑與節制,而傲慢地蔑視了上帝的命令,不相信主這一個仁慈的呼召,以致多少奪取了神所應得的崇拜。因為神既然拒絕當日被視為聖潔的祭禮,就宣布了那最蒙悅納,最主要的敬拜,乃是「在患難的日子求告他。」因此,他既然指定了那必需獻給他的,又鼓勵我們樂於遵從,我們就沒有什麼好藉口的可躊躇的理由,來原諒自己。所以,聖經上許多吩咐我們禱告的話,不啻是擺在我們眼前,用以激發我們信心的許多旗幟。若沒有從神那裡來的召喚,闖到神的面前就是僭越。所以他用他自己的言語,為我們開一條道路:「我要說,這是我的子民,他們也要說,耶和華是我們的上帝」(亞13:9)。我們於此知道他如何領導崇拜他的人,願意他們跟從他;所以,我們沒有理由恐懼他所吩咐的話是他所不高興的。讓我們特別記著主的一個顯明的性格,信靠這一個性格,我們既可勝過一切的阻礙:「聽禱告的主阿,凡有血氣的,都要來就你」(詩65:2)。知道了上帝有這樣的一個稱呼,向你們保證,沒有比垂聽禱告更符合於他的性格的,那麼有什麼事比這更可叫我們喜慰的呢?因此,詩人結論說,祈禱的路,不只為少數人,而是為一切人敞開的;因為他向一切人說:「要在患難之日,求告我,我必搭救你,你也要榮耀我。」(詩50:15)根據這個原則,大衛為要得到他所求的,就根據神所給他的應許祈求說:「耶和華以色列的上帝啊,因你啟示你的僕人……所以僕人大膽向你如此祈禱」(撒下7:27。)因此,我們可以推論,大衛若沒有主的應許的鼓勵,必定是心裡懼怕的。所以在另一地方,他為自己立了一個普遍原則,即「敬畏他的,他必成就他們的心愿」(詩145:19)。在詩篇里,我們可看出禱告的連貫性有時好像是被間斷了,禱告有時集中於神的能力,忽而轉到神的良善,又轉到神的應許的真實。或有人以為大衛引用這種言詞來損害到自己的禱告是不合時宜的;但是信徒由於經驗,知道除非得到新的力量的支持,他們禱告的熱誠是會逐漸消失的;所以,禱告中,我們想念神的本性與話語,並非無益。因之,我們須不猶豫地追隨大衛的榜樣,常於禱告中加上那凡能鼓勵萎靡心靈,使之獲得新的勇氣的詞語。
  十四、我們對於這種甜蜜的應許竟未深受感動,這是很希奇的事;許多人寧願在錯誤的魔障中徘徊,拋棄活水的泉源,他們不承受神所應許白白賜予的恩典,卻替自己製造一個破水槽。所羅門說:「耶和華的名,是堅固台,義人奔入,便得安穩」(箴18:10)。先知約珥於預言可怕毀滅將要迅速臨到后,又補充底下這一句可記憶的話:「到那時候,凡求告耶和華名的,就必得救」(珥2:32),這話我們知道是指福音之道而言的。百人中難得有一人因受感動而來到主的面前,雖然主藉著以賽亞宣布說,「他們尚未求告,我就應允,正說話的時候,我就垂聽」(賽65:24),在另一地方,他以同樣的尊榮賜給整個教會,正如給予基督的各肢體,說:「他若求告我,我就應允他,他在急難中,我要與他同在,我要搭救他,使他尊貴」(詩91:15)。我在前面已經說過,我的本意並不在列舉一切經文,不過選擇那最重要的,好叫我們知道神的仁慈,他如何屈尊俯就我們,召喚我們到他面前,並叫我們知道,在這種強有力的激勵中,我們若仍懈怠萎靡,是何等的忘恩。所以我們應當常常記住:「凡求告耶和華的,就是誠心求告他的,耶和華便與他們相近」(詩145:18);這話正與我們所引以賽亞與約珥的話一樣,神保證他喜歡垂聽我們的禱告,若我們把一切意念向他傾吐,他的喜悅將如同聞到馨香的祭物一般。若我們的禱告不懷疑慮恐懼,我們即能得著神所應許的這種特殊恩惠。神的威嚴使我們畏懼,但我們信靠他的話,大膽地稱他為父,因為他親自吩咐我們以這最可親的稱呼稱他。既然有此召喚,我們就該知道,我們確有充足的禱告的材料;我們的禱告不依靠我 們自己的功德,反倒說,成就禱告的希望都是根據且依靠神的應許,所以我們的禱告不需要有別的支援,也無需心中焦慮。我們應當記住,雖然我們不及古時列祖,先知和使徒的聖潔,然而神對於禱告的事的命令既然是他們與我們所同有的,關於信,彼此亦皆同,所以我們若信賴神的話,我們也就與他們一樣,有著同樣的權利。正如前此所說過的,神宣稱他要以仁慈垂聽一切人的禱告;鼓勵那最可憐的人,叫他們盼望獲得他們所祈求的,因此我們應當依照一般的祈禱方式表達;依此方式禱告的,決不至於被擯棄於應許之外,不問他是最偉大或最卑微的人,所以只要心中虔誠,謙卑,信實,不自高傲;更不可作偽善的欺騙禱告來褻瀆主名,這樣,我們慈悲的天父必不拒絕他所鼓勵來親近他,甚至以各種可能的方法來召喚的人。所以我前此所徵引大衛的話是值得注意的:「耶和華以色列的上帝阿,因你啟示僕人……所以僕人大膽向你祈禱。主耶和華啊,唯有你是上帝,你的話是真實的,你也應許將這福氣賜給僕人」(撒下7:27,28)。在另一處又說:「求你照著應許僕人的話,以慈愛安慰我」(詩119:76)。所有以色列人,無論何時,當他們以回憶神所立的約來堅定自己信心的時候,他們必說,上帝既有命令,我們決不可以畏怯之心禱告。在這方面,他們是效法他們的列祖,尤其是雅各。雅各在承認他自己「一點也不配從神接受一切慈愛」后,仍然宣布他自己將祈求更大的福氣,因為上帝曾應許要施賜給他。所以,不信的人在需要緊迫的時候不向主祈求,不懇求他的援助,不問他們有什麼藉口,這都是虧負了所應當歸給神的榮耀,恰如為自己捏造了新的假神與偶像;因為他們這樣行是否認上帝為一切福澤的本源。反過來說,信徒相信,無論什麼障礙,總必遵照神的命令行事,沒有比此更能有效地使他們擺脫疑慮的,神明明宣布,他所喜悅的無過於順從。這些話足以證明我前面所提出的,就是禱告中的坦然無懼的心和敬畏及懇切之心是完全相符的;而神抬高了自卑的人,也不算矛盾。這樣,聖經上那些似乎矛盾的說法都成為十分調和的了。耶利米與但以理都用過這樣一句話:「在神前呈獻禱告」。耶利米書上也說:「求你准我們在你面前祈求」(耶42:2)。經上又常常提到信徒「揚聲禱告」。希西家王求先知代禱,就是如此說的。而大衛則希望他的禱告如「馨香」上騰(參詩141:2)。雖然他們深信父神的慈愛,欣然把自己託付於神的信實,對神所白白應許的救援毫不躊躇地懇求,然而他們並不曾疏忽苟安,傲然自得,卻是謙抑自己,靠著應許,步步攀登,不斷懇求。
  十五、這裡有幾個問題發生了。經上提到主曾許諾某些並非從一個寧靜有規律的心情中發出的禱告。例如約坦,雖然為著一個正義目標,卻以忿怒,及報復之心求將示劍地方的人民盡行消滅,而這事後來果然臨到(參士9:20)。主既使這類禱告應驗,似乎是贊同人的忿激的情緒了。又如參孫,當他祈求說:「求你賜我這一次的力量,使我在非利士人身上報那剜我雙眼的仇」(士16:28)時,亦為同樣情緒所激動。雖然這裡混雜著一些高尚的熱忱,可是那最主要的情緒卻是有罪的,暴烈的,報復性的。然而上帝卻應許了這種請求。似乎由此可以推論,沒有遵照神所規定之方法的禱告,仍然有效。我的答覆是:第一,一條永久性的規則必不因特殊的例外而失效;第二,特殊的例外有時施用於小數個別份子身上,而這類情形總是與一般有別的。所以我們應注意基督對那些想貿然效法以利亞的門徒所說的話:」你們的心如何,你們並不知道」(路9:55),但是,我們必須說明的就是神並非對他所許可的禱告全都喜悅;但是,就聖經中的例證說,有許多不可否認的證據,證明他搭救那些可憐無告的人,垂聽那些在不公義的壓迫下求告他的人所發出的痛苦呻吟;所以,當可憐的人的陳訴達到他面前的時候,雖然這些人不值得他的微末的恩眷,但他卻要施行判斷。因之,主顯然地往往藉懲罰那些殘酷,劫掠,暴烈,淫邪以及不虔不義者的其他各種罪行,制裁他們的狂妄和暴虐的權力,來救助那些在不義壓迫下的受難者,雖然這些人往往像擊打空氣一般,向他們所不認識的神呼求。所以詩篇上有一個詩人教訓人說:雖然有些禱告並非無效,然而卻不是因著信而上達於天的(參詩107篇)。因為他所採集的禱告並不只是信徒的,也是非信徒因需要所迫而發出的,而且事實證明神對他們一律表示慈愛。神這樣屈尊俯就人,是證明人們的禱告足以使他喜悅嗎?不是的;然而他即對不信的人的祈求也不拒絕,以此表彰他的慈悲也激勵信徒更勸勉於禱告,因為看見連不信的人的哀求也未蒙拒絕。然而信徒不可以此為理由,乖離神所定的規則,也不可以因那些不信的人得到了他們所祈求的而妒忌他們,好像他們得到了所祈求的是一件大事一般。正如我們所說過,主為亞哈的虛偽悔改所動,是為要表明,他的選民以誠實悔改的心尋求他時,他是如何隨時準備應允他們的禱告。因此在詩篇上,主曾譴責以色列人,因為他們從祈禱中蒙主饒恕恩眷后,又回到他們原來的悖逆(參詩106:39)。士師記的史實也證明每當他們哀哭時,雖然他們的眼淚是假的,然而主仍把他們從敵人手中拯救出來。所以,正如主「叫太陽照好人,也照壞人」(太5:45),同樣,凡理由正當,其苦難值得救助的人,他亦不蔑視他們的哀求。可是他雖然俯聽這些人的禱告,但卻與救恩之事無關,正如他供給糧食給那些輕視他的聖善的人之與救恩無關一樣。
  至於亞伯拉罕和撒母耳有關的問題似乎較難解答。亞伯拉罕之替所多瑪人祈求,並沒有得著神的指示,而撒母替掃羅所求的,明明違反了神的禁令(參創18:23;撒上15:11)。耶利米也是一樣的,他禱告求勿 消滅耶路撒冷(耶32:16等)。雖然他們所求的遭受拒絕,然而我們不能說他們不是以信祈求。我希望謙遜的讀者們將以下面的解答為滿意:那些人既明白了上帝的旨意要他們即使對不義的人也當存慈悲之心,他們雖在某種特別事例上沒有得到所求的,但不能說是因為他們沒有信心。奧古斯丁對此有很好的說明:「倘若聖者們所求告的使反乎神的命令,他們怎能說是憑信心禱告呢?這是因為他們真是照著神的旨意,不過不是那隱微而不變的旨意,而是他所激勵他們的特殊旨意,為的是要用不同的方法來應驗他們所祈求的。」這是一個最確切的說明;因為上帝按照他的不可測度的計劃調度萬事,好叫眾聖者那夾雜著信心與錯誤的禱告不至於落空。然而這並不可作為效法的榜樣,正如它之不可作為那些逾越本分的聖者們的遁辭一樣。所以,倘若沒有確實的應許,我們只能把我們的求告以一種附有條件的方式表達出來,有如大衛在下面的求告: 「求你為我興起你已經命令的審判」(詩7:6)。他提示我們他之祈求現世恩賜,是因他得著神的特別啟示。
  十六、這裡應當說明的,就是神對我所論到的關於合理禱告的四原則,並沒有絕對嚴格的要求,以至於拒絕了一切他認為沒有把完全的信心或悔改,和熱烈的忠忱及良好的意念打成一片的祈禱。我們已經說過(見本章第四節),祈禱雖然是信徒與上帝中間的親密交往,然而必須存著敬虔與謙卑之心。所以我們不能放縱意念,我們的願望也不能越過了神所應許的範圍;為避免使神的威儀在我們的眼中降低,我們對於神必須提高思想,純潔地敬畏他。沒有一個人曾經完全達到這樣的境地;且不談一般人,既就大衛的許多埋怨的話看,他還是十分放肆!並非是他故意要同神抗辯,或不服從神的判斷;卻是他自己的軟弱使他跌倒,他除了在神的懷中傾吐他的愁苦外,就得不著更好的安慰。況且,神忍受我們的胡言妄語,隨時原諒我們的愚昧無知和不智的言語。誠然,若不是神這樣寬宥我們,我們就沒有禱告的自由了。因之大衛的意向雖是要完全順服神的意旨,而他的忍耐也和他的懇切之心相稱,然而有時候他的情緒激勵,與我們前此所提到的禱告的第一原則大相違背。我們從詩篇第三十九篇的末段,可以發現這一個敬虔的人是如何地為他的暴烈的憂戚所捲走,以致逾越規範。他禱告說:「求你寬容我,使我在去而不返之先,可以力量復原」(詩39:13)。這裡似乎是表示他除了求神離開他,讓他在自己的罪惡痛苦中消滅外,沒有別的願望。他並非故意說這种放肆的話,好像一般無賴惡徒一樣,願意上帝離開了他,他只陳訴他受不起神的忿怒。在這樣的試煉之下,許多聖者所吐露的話往往不合神的規則,亦未曾想到他們的禱告是否相宜。這一類錯誤的祈禱原是應遭拒絕的,然而諸聖者若能懺悔,改正了自己,再回複本來的面目,神必赦免他們。
  他們也冒犯禱告的第二原則(見本章第六節),因為他們常須與自己的冷淡態度相抗爭,他們雖有貧乏與苦難,這還不足以激發他們作懇切認真的禱告。他們常常心思游移,陷於虛幻中,所以在這一方面亦需要饒恕,否則他們那萎靡,殘缺,間斷,雜亂的祈禱,必遭拒絕。上帝以一種感覺印入人們心中,使人知道禱告必出自虔敬崇高之心。因之,我們前面所提過的舉手禮流行於各時代,各地方,至今仍為人所遵行;但是有誰當舉手的時候,不感覺到自己的遲鈍麻木,一心傾向於俗世的事呢?至於所求赦罪的事(見本章第八節),雖然聖徒不曾遺忘,可是凡曾真實從事禱告的人,都知道他們很少有把大衛所說的祭獻上十分之一的:「上帝所要的祭,就是憂傷的靈,上帝阿,憂傷痛悔的心,你必不輕看」(詩51:17)。所以他們需常祈求兩種赦免;因為第一他們雖感覺到自己有許多過犯,而他們卻未曾深自懊悔,到了自己恨惡自己的那種必要地步;第二神既然使人從悔改及敬畏主獲得益助,他們的憂傷悔罪所生的謙卑之心,可以祈求審判的主減少對他們的懲罰。但是,最重要的是,軟弱或殘缺的信心,若非神的寬恕,必使信徒的禱告歸於無效,但是我們不必懷疑這一缺憾之必蒙神的饒恕;神對他的兒女常施訓誡,好像要完全毀掉他們的信心似的。這種嚴厲的試探有時迫使信徒呼叫:「你向你百姓的禱告發怒,要到幾時呢?」(詩80:4)。好像是連他們的禱告,也成為激發神怒之因。耶利米說:「我哀號求救,他使我的禱告,不得上達」(哀3:8),無可懷疑地,他心中是非常紛擾。聖經上有無數的這種例子,很顯然聖徒們的信心常常為疑慮所摻雜,所以在信望中仍然流露缺乏信心的遺痕;但是,因為他們不能達到一切所願望的,他們就不斷地勸勉改過,希望能逐漸接近禱告的完全規律,同時思想自己是如何地陷於罪的深淵中,即使在蒙拯救的時候,仍冒犯新的過失;若非神寬宥人們禱告的一切缺陷,那就找不到有什麼禱告是神所不當加以輕蔑的。我提到這些事情,並不是要叫信徒安心饒恕自己的罪行,只是要他們嚴格地改正本身,奮力勝過這些障礙;不論撒但如何努力在一切事上攔阻他們的禱告,然而,他們當衝破一切障礙,且信神必喜悅他們的努力,嘉納他們的祈禱,只要他們向著他們那尚未達到的目的努力。
  十七、既然沒有一個人,憑著自己的身分,配到上帝面前,親自向上帝陳訴,天父為救人脫離那使人心消沉的羞辱和恐懼,乃差遣他的兒子,我們的主耶穌基督,來作為我們的中保,(參提前2:5;約壹2:1)。有了基督的引導,我們可以坦然無懼地接近上帝,相信既有了這樣的一位中保,我們因他名所求的,必不被拒絕,因為無論何事,父親必不拒絕他的兒子。在這裡我們必須再提起從前所討論過關於信心的事;因為我們既得以基督為中保的應許,所以,除非我們是藉著他而希望獲得所求的,我們的禱告就無效了。因為當我們想到神的威儀,沒有不極端恐懼的,而且我們的不配的感覺驅使我們離開上帝,直到我們接受基督作為我們的中保,他才使那威儀可畏的寶座變成為恩典的寶座;正如使徒在希伯來書所說:「坦然無懼來到施恩的寶座前,為要得憐恤,蒙恩惠作隨時的幫助」(來4:16)。關於禱告既有規則,對於禱告的人,也有必蒙垂聽的應許,所以我們受命應靠著基督的名祈求。有一個顯明的應許,凡我們奉他名所求的,就必得著。主說:「你們奉我的名,無論求什麼,我必成就,叫父因兒子得榮耀」,又說「向來你們沒有奉我的名求什麼,如今你們求就必得著」(約14:13;16:24)。因此,無可爭論的,凡在基督以外,依靠任何別的名呼求上帝的,都是故意違抗命令,完全不顧主的旨意;必不能得著什麼應許。正如保羅所說的:「上帝的應許,在基督都是是的,」這就是說,一切都在他身上成全和應驗了(參林后1:20)。
  十八、我們現在要詳細說明當日基督在何種情勢下,命令門徒在他升天以後請求他的代禱。他說:「到那日你們要奉我的名祈求」(約16:26)。從起初,任何禱告,若不是因為中保的緣故,絕對不蒙垂聽。因為這個原因,主在律法上規定,只有祭司可以進入聖所,在他們的肩上背著以色列十二支派的名號,並在胸前掛著同樣數目的寶石;而眾百姓卻只能遠遠地站在外殿,和著祭司們一同祈禱(參出28章)。獻祭的供用是要使禱告生效。所以,律法上的禮儀第一是影射我們已被從神面前逐出,因此需要一位中保,替我們說話,把我們負在他的肩上,束在他的胸前,使我們可以因他的名而蒙垂聽。第二,他的流血潔凈了我們的禱告,不然,我們的禱告是污穢的。所以我們見到古時的聖徒,當他們希望得著什麼的時候,他們的希望都是基於祭物上面,因為他們知道獻祭可以堅定禱告。大衛說:「願耶和華記念你的一切供獻,悅納你的燔祭」(詩20:3)。因此,我們可以說,神從起初就悅納基督的代禱,以此接納信徒的崇敬。那麼,基督為什麼要指定一個新的時期,叫他的門徒奉他名禱告呢?豈不是因為這恩典如今特別顯明,所以值得加倍地推薦給我們?在同一意義下,他前面提到,說:「向來你們沒有奉我的名求什麼,如今你們求就必得著」,這並非因為他們完全不知道中保的職分(所有猶太人對這些首要的道理都頗熟悉),只是他們尚未明白知道,基督升天以後將更加顯然地作為教會的中保。因此,為安慰他們和他分離后的憂愁,使他們得著明顯的幫助,他稱自己為中保,而指示他們一向所曾得到的幫助,現在即將賜予他們,叫他們藉著基督的居中代求,有著親近上帝的更大自由。所以使徒說,「我們因耶穌的血,得以坦然進入至聖所,是藉著他給我們開了一條又新又活的路!(來10:19,20)。所以如果我們不踴躍地以雙手來承受這個特別為我們安排的,不可測度的恩典,我們就更加不可饒恕了。
  十九、在進一步說,基督既然是叫我們接近上帝的唯一道路,那些偏離這條道路,拋棄這個入門的人,就在沒有接近上帝的門路了,而在神的寶座前所留下給他們的,無非是忿怒,審判和恐怖。再者天父既然指派基督作我們的元首與領袖,所以凡在任何方面拒絕或背棄他的,即是盡量塗抹神所印鑄的記號。因此,基督是神所派的惟一中保,藉著他的代求,天父就樂意恩待我們。雖然聖徒們仍然為著彼此的得救在上帝面前代求,好像使徒保羅所提到的(參弗6:18,19;提前2:1);但是,這種代求亦完全依賴於基督的代求,對它的價值,絕對不能減損。因為我們的代求是由於同作肢體,互相關切的,彼此都結連於同一元首。既然都是藉著基督的名代求,那麼他們的代禱除了宣稱,若離開基督的代求,即不可能從禱告得到絲毫利益,還能有什麼別的呢?基督的代求既不阻礙教會中各肢體的彼此代禱,所以我們當遵守這一確定的原則,即教會中的一切代禱均須以基督的代求為指歸。我們需特別謹慎,不要對元首忘卻感恩,因為神既然饒恕我們的不義,不但准許我們各人為自己禱告,而且准許我們彼此代禱。倘若那些在他們私下禱告中理當被神拒絕的人,竟蒙神指派,作為教會的代求者;而倘若他們竟把基督的光榮掩蔽了,他們是何等濫用神的寬大恩典呀?
  二十、再者,那些詭辯者的議論是非常無稽的,他們說基督乃是救贖的中保,而信徒卻是代求的中保;好像是說,基督只能夠一度履行中保的任務,而那永恆的代禱的事,卻交與他的僕人們。他們以為他們從基督身上只取去了這一點點光榮,對基督已經很客氣的了。但是聖經所說的卻與此不同,它的簡明的話是每一虔誠信徒都能滿足的,不管騙子們有什麼不同的意見。當約翰說:「若有人犯罪,在父那裡,我們有一位中保,就是耶穌基督」(約壹2:1),他的意思是指耶穌基督曾經作過我們的中保,還是指他將要永遠為我們代求呢?當保羅說他「在上帝的右邊,也替我們祈求」這話,(羅8:24),又是什麼意思呢?他在另一地方所說,「在上帝和人中間,只有一位中保」(提前2:5),難道所指不是他在前面所提到的祈禱?因為他在前面既然提到要為一切的人代禱,立刻又補充說,只有一位上帝,而人與上帝之間,也只有一位中保。與這意見相符的是奧古斯丁的解釋,他說:「基督徒在祈禱彼此在神前代求。可是那沒有一人為他代求,而他卻為一切人代求的,乃是真正唯一的中保。」使徒保羅雖然是元首之下的一個主要肢體,然而因為他是基督身上一個肢體,又知道這教會的真實偉大的祭司之進入了幔子後面的至聖所,並不是象徵的,而真真實實地進入了天堂的深處,不是那象徵性的至聖所,而是永恆的至聖之所,所以他亦請信徒們為他禱告。保羅並未叫自己成為上帝與人中間的中保,他只勸諭所有基督身上肢體都彼此代求;各肢體既然彼此同情,若有一肢體遭難,其餘的亦同受苦。所以一切還在世上勞動的肢體彼此間的代禱,都達於那在他們以前到了天國,並且為他們贖罪的元首基督。假若保羅是中保,其餘的使徒也同樣可作中保,那麼,中保就很多了;保羅的話也就無效,因為他說:「只有一位上帝,在上帝和人間,只有一位中保,乃是降世為人的基督耶穌」;在他裡面,我們都屬一體,若是我們能在和平的團結中,保守信心的一體。在另一處奧古斯丁說:「你若尋求一個祭司,他是在諸天之上,就是那曾在地上為你們死,如今在天上為你們代求的。」然而我們不要幻想他是俯伏在父的腳前為我們代求;我們所了解的是和使徒一樣:就是他出現於上帝面前,他的死的權力永遠作了我們的代求;他既進入了至聖所,就繼續不斷地替那些站立在外殿的子民將禱告陳述於上帝面前,直到萬事都成全了。
  二十一、關於那些肉身已死而活在基督裡面的聖徒,倘若我們亦希望他們代求,我們切勿幻想他們向上帝祈求時,除靠著基督外,還會有別的途徑,若藉著其他名義的禱告可蒙上帝悅納,因為基督乃是祈禱的唯一途徑。因此,聖經既吩咐我們離棄一切別的方法,惟靠基督,而天父的旨意既要把一切的事成就在他身上,那麼,若我們圖依靠聖徒而不依靠基督去獲得神的垂聽,要不是瘋狂,至少是愚笨,因為沒有基督,即聖徒也無由接近上帝。可是這種習俗流行已久,至今羅馬教所在的地方,仍然盛行,誰能否認這事實呢?這些人常以聖徒的功績作為與神修好,邀神恩眷的憑藉,卻把基督忽略了,依靠諸聖者的名來祈求上帝。試問這豈不是把我們前面所申明專屬於基督的代求職分轉移給聖者了嗎?其實有那一個天使或魔鬼,曾經有片言隻字向世人道及那種代求的事呢?聖經對此亦完全沒有提到。那麼,他們捏造此一說的根據在哪裡呢?當然的,當人慾在上帝所准許的方法以外尋找自助之道時,他就暴露了他的不信。倘若我們搜索那些樂意請求聖者代禱者的內心,我們就會發現他們心中惶恐焦慮,似乎是以為基督的代求是不夠的,或以為他過於嚴格。他們這種惶恐焦慮先就侮辱了基督,且掠奪了他作惟一中保的名號,而這是天父所賜給他的特別權柄,不得轉移給別人的。他們這樣作,是遮掩基督降世的光榮,並否認他十架的救恩;總而言之,他們是剝奪了基督因受一切苦難所應得的頌讚,而他所受的一切苦難和他的作為,正是要使他成為真正惟一的中保。同時,他們也拒絕了上帝的善意,因為他在基督里表明他自己是他們的父;除非他們承認基督為兄弟,上帝就不是他們的父親了。除非他們相信自己是基督親愛的對象,而世間沒有比基督的愛更溫柔,和善的,他們便是不以基督為兄弟。聖經只賜給我們基督,又把我們奉獻給基督,並把我們安排在他裡面。安波羅修說「他是我們的口,藉著他我們向上帝陳訴;他是我們的眼,藉著他,我們才看見天父;他是我們的右手,藉著他,我們才能把自己奉獻給天父。若沒有基督的中保,我們和一切聖徒都不能與上帝有些微交通。」倘若他們辯駁說:我們教會中的一切公禱豈不都結語於:「奉我主基督的名」;我以為這亦是一個無聊的託詞;因為若把基督的代求和已死的諸聖者的代求或功勞混在一起,其對基督的污辱,較比把他的代求完全刪去,只提到已死聖者的名,並未稍減。更有甚者,他們在一切禮拜的禱詞上,詩歌,及短文等方面,總是把榮耀歸給已死的聖者,並不提到基督。
  二十二、他們的愚昧程度達到如此的一個高峰,使我們看見到迷信的一個驚人的特質,就是它一旦擺脫了羈索,就一發而不可收拾。他們既重視聖者的代禱,就漸次把特殊任務指派給每一個聖者,常按照不同的事件,隨時向他們的所謂代求者呼求;甚且每人選擇自己的聖者,在他們的庇護下,把他們當作自己的護佑神一般。這樣,他們不僅是正如古時先知譴責以色列人的話,按照城市的數目設立神祗,且亦按照人數設立。既然眾聖者都把自己的願望歸於神的旨意,並謹守遵行他的旨意,所以若派定他們去作別的禱告,不照著他們的榜樣祈求神的國度的降臨,那就不但是對他們的一種愚昧和情慾的念頭,而且是污辱了他們。他們關於諸聖者所揣想的 ——即以為每一聖者都會偏愛那些特別敬拜他的人——其實是背離了對神國降臨的希望很遠。許多人甚至於把聖者當作拯救的經紀人,而不以他們為代求的襄助者,因此陷於褻瀆神的罪中。看哪,這些可憐的人,一旦離開正軌,即上帝的道,是如何地墮落下去了。我對那些更加不虔的怪事暫且不提,因為這些事雖然叫他們在上帝,天使與人的面前被厭憎,可是他們並不感覺羞愧或憂傷。他們俯伏於巴卜拉(Barbara),迦他林(Catharine),以及別的聖者的像前,口中喃喃念「主禱文」,對這種狂妄,天主教的神甫們非但不加禁阻糾正,反因財利之惑加以讚許。他們雖然希望逃脫這種腐臭罪行的咎責,然而他們求告艾里九(Eligius)與彌達爾度(Medardus)看顧他們,援助他們,或如求告聖母瑪利亞命令她的兒子耶穌俯允他們的祈求,又將以何詞為自己辯護呢?迦太基大會禁止在聖壇前直接奉諸聖者的名禱告,也許是因為當時虔敬的人無法掃除腐敗風俗的勢力,所以加上這一個限制,好使公共禱告不因「聖彼得啊,為我們代求」這一句話而受污損。但如今他們的邪惡悖逆已達到了可怕的程度,竟然毫不躊躇地把那完全屬於上帝與基督的,轉移到死人的名份上!
  二十三、可是他們想從聖經找尋根據,來支持這種代禱,確實徒勞。他們說,經上提到天使的禱告;非但如此,信徒的禱告都由天使的手帶到神的面前。但是,倘若他們要把已死的聖者比擬天使,他們須得證明眾聖者是蒙指派來監督我們得救的事之靈,須證明他們的責任是在一切事上保守我們,常在我們的左右勸導安慰我們。但是,這一切的職務都是屬於天使,而不是屬於已死的聖者的(參來1:14;詩91:11;34:7)。他們把已死的聖者列入於天使之群,這是何等的荒謬背理,因為兩者的職務在聖經上是明顯地加以分別的。在世上的法官面前,若未獲准許,無人敢出來擔任辯護職務。那麼,我們渺小如蟲的人,竟敢在神面前冒充為代禱者,而經上分明未曾對他們指派這種職務。神喜遣派天使來幫助我們有關拯救的事,因此,天使常臨到我們的崇拜聚會,而教會不啻是天使的園地,藉著教會,眾天使得以讚頌「上帝百般的智慧」(參弗3:10)。那些把特別屬於天使的職務移給別人的人,不免是把神所建立而不可侵犯的秩序顛倒敗壞了。但他們卻以同樣巧妙的方法再援引聖經上的話語,如神對耶利米所說的:「雖有摩西和撒母耳在我面前代求,我的心也不顧惜這百姓」(耶15:1),因此質問,他若非知道已死的聖者在代人祈求,怎能有這話呢?但是,我卻從相反的方面推出一個結論,那就是,既然摩西與撒母耳都不能為以色列人代求,那麼,就從來沒有死人代求的事了。因為摩西在世時對有關百姓得救的事比誰都更努力,若他死後不替他們代禱,別的聖者還能代禱嗎?倘若他們再要作細微未節的詭辯,堅持死人可替活人祈求,因為主曾說過:「雖然他們代求過」的話,這樣一來,我更將有反駁的理由了。經上提到的「雖有摩西代求……」亦可證明當百姓極端需要時,摩西並沒有代求(作者認為『雖有』二字與『縱使』同)。因之,可能更沒有其他聖者能夠代求,因為別的聖者的溫良,仁愛以及父母般的懇切之心都遠不如摩西。所以,他們從自己的謬論所得到的,滿以為可以作為護衛自己的武器,恰是使他們受傷的武器。可是,對這樣簡明的一句許發生爭執是非常可笑的,其實主只宣布說他將不顧惜這百姓的罪行,雖有摩西和撒母耳這兩人(他們的禱告原是主所喜悅的)的代求,也必無效。這一意思很可以從以西結書的一段同性質的話上看出: 「其中雖有挪亞,但以理,約伯的人,他們只能因他們的義救自己的性命,這是主耶和華說的」(結14:14)。這裡我們所了解的意思無疑的是指,若挪亞,約伯兩個已經死去的人復生;因為其中的第三人——但以理,仍然活著——雖然尚在青年時期,但他的不可比擬的虔誠已為眾所周知。所以讓我們撇開這些人罷,經上清楚指示,他們已經完成了他們的路程了。保羅說到大衛時,並不說他的禱告可以幫助後代的人,只說他「服事了他那一世的人」(徒13:36)。
  二十四、他們仍反對說,這樣我們豈不把諸聖者的一切仁惠的願望都剝奪了嗎?他們的一生豈不是生活在慈悲及仁惠的空氣中?誠然,我不願太過好奇地去深究諸聖現在的行為或思想,然而他們大抵不是為某種特殊願望的衝動所激動,他們的固定不變的願望乃是熱烈追求神的國度,而這個國度不只在於信徒的得救,也在於不信者的滅亡。果然如此,他們的愛心只以教會的團契為限。從這一觀點說,我同意他們是在為我們禱告的,然而他們必不因此而放棄他們的寧靜,而為我們的俗慮所擾;也更不會成為我們呼籲的對象。他們也不必仿效世人,互相代禱。當世人彼此分擔他們的重負時他們的愛心就得到培養。這樣行誠然是遵照上帝的命令,且含有神的應許;而這兩件事乃是禱告的要點。然而已死的聖者並不如此,主既使他們離開了我們的社會,我們對他們再也沒有什麼往來的方法,同樣,就我們所能揣測的,他們也再沒有和我們往來的方法(參傳9:5,6)。或者有人認為那些已死的聖者必對我們保持原來的愛心,因為他們與我們聯繫在同一的信仰上。可是誰曾啟示我們,他們具有這樣聰敏的耳朵,能聽到我們的聲音,有敏銳的目力,能洞察我們的需要呢?我們的對方,在他們的學院中傳授一種莫明其妙的學說,以為有某種光輝照射在那些已死的聖者身上,在這種光輝中,如同在鏡子裡面一樣,他們可以從天上俯視人間,洞察世事。但是像我們的對方所大膽假想的這一說法,豈不是在頭腦中運用一種虛無的幻想,企圖參透神的奧秘么?他們並沒有神的話語作為根據,卻妄把聖經踐踏於腳下。而聖經常常指出我們屬肉體的智慧是與神的智慧敵對;且指責我們心中的虛榮,要我們放棄自己的一切理論,完全以神的旨意為依歸。
  二十五、至於他們從聖經其他地方所援引作為掩護他們的虛妄主張的句段,更加是牽強附會。他們說雅各在禱告中求,使他的後裔歸在他自己和他的祖及父亞伯拉罕與以撒的名下(參創48:16)。讓我們先來檢討以色列人的命名的方式,和他們稱呼祖名的習慣;他們並不呼籲他們的祖宗援助他們;他們只是求神記念他僕人亞伯拉罕,以撒,雅各的名字。他們的這種例子,實不足以作為那些在禱告中向聖者本身陳訴的人的辯護。但因為那些愚笨的人,既不知道稱雅各的名是什麼意思,也不知道為什麼要稱雅各的名,所以我們不必希奇他們那樣幼稚地連稱名的方式都弄錯了。這一類的詞語在聖經上是常常見到的。以塞亞論及受丈夫保護的妻子,常常以丈夫的名字為名,亦同一意義。所以稱呼亞伯拉罕之名,乃是以色列人在追溯他們的譜系時,因懷念祖宗而致的欽崇和祝頌。雅各之這樣做並不要叫自己的名永受頌祝,而因為他知道他的後裔的一切幸福,是從上帝和他所訂立的約繼承過來的,既然這是他後裔的最大之福,所以他祈求將他的名連在他的後裔的名中,好把和上帝所立的約傳給他們。在他的後裔方面,當他們在禱告中提起他們祖宗的名字時,他們並不是求已死的人的代求,而是要主記念他所立的約,在那個約中,他們最仁慈的天父,曾因為亞伯拉罕、以撒、雅各的緣故,應許要對他們施行仁慈,而且要寬赦他們的過失。其實古時聖者不依賴祖宗的功勞,可以從先知以賽亞書所載會眾的話表明出來:「亞伯拉罕雖然不認識我們,以色列也不承認我們,你卻是我們的父,耶和華啊,你是我們的父,你名稱為我們的救贖主」(賽63:16)。他們既然表達了這種意思,同時又補充說,「耶和華啊,求你為你僕人們的緣故轉回來。」然而這仍然不是代求,不過提到主在約中的應許。現在我們既有了主耶穌,那永恆仁慈的約,不但是訂立而已,而且已經證實,那麼我們在我們的禱告中,還有什麼更好的名好憑藉呢?既然那些博士們爭持說,以色列人的列祖們在上面所引經文中都是代求者,那麼,我願意知道,為什麼在他們所設立的許多代求人中,沒有這位教會之父伯拉罕的地位呢?連最低的地位也不給他呢?那麼,究竟從那種邪惡的來源中他們找出了他們的中保代求者呢?讓他們告訴我吧,憑什麼他們把上帝所最喜悅,且抬舉於最高尊榮地位的亞伯拉罕貶抑下去?這事的真相乃是,他們現在所行的在古時教會中既然沒有前例,所以為要遮掩這種離奇的舉動,他們以為最好是不提起古時列祖的名字。好像是只要所提到的人名不同,即可以作為這種新的腐敗風氣的託詞。有的時候他們以上帝因大衛的緣故對眾百姓施憐憫為理由,來支持他們主張,其實這非但不足以支持,而是斷然否定了他們的錯誤。當知大衛是具有特殊品格的人,他是上帝從聖者群中所揀選出來的,要在他身上應驗他與他所立的約,所以,這裡所指的是約,而不是人,而且是那作為惟一中保的基督的預表。因之大衛因作基督的預表所具有的特質,是不能適用於別人的。
  二十六、但是有些人,似乎因為在經上常讀到古時聖者的祈禱都蒙垂聽的故事而深受影響。何以呢?原因是他們曾這樣的禱告過。詩篇上說:「他們哀求,便蒙解救,他們依靠你,就不羞愧」(詩22:5)。所以,讓我們也學他們的榜樣禱告,我們就必蒙同樣的垂聽。可是這些人卻荒謬可笑地辯稱,除了昔時曾經蒙上帝垂聽的禱告,再也沒有什麼禱告是曾蒙垂聽的。雅各對這一點的說法是最妥當的,他說,「以利亞與我們是一樣性情的人,他懇切禱告,求不要下雨,雨就三年零六個月不下在地上。他又禱告,天就降下雨來,地也生出土產」(雅5:17,18)。怎麼說呢!這豈是說以利亞有什麼特權,要我們去借重嗎?完全不是;可是他表明了聖潔,虔誠的禱告是永遠有效的,要鼓勵我們照樣地祈禱。因為我們對上帝垂聽禱告的迅捷與寬大是存著一種卑下的見解,除非我們用這種例子來鼓勵和加強對神應許的信賴。其實神所應許的,不只是一二人或少數人的祈禱將蒙垂聽,凡一切求告他名的,都必蒙垂聽。對這事的愚昧無知是不可饒恕的,因為他們幾乎公然否認聖經上的許多證據。大衛因神的能力而常蒙救援;難道他妄自居功,要作為解救我們的中保嗎?他自己所宣稱的卻完全不同:「義人必環繞我,因為你是用厚恩待我」(詩142:7)。又說:「凡仰望他的,便有光榮,他們的臉,必不蒙羞。我這困苦人呼求,耶和華便垂聽,救我脫離一切患難」(詩34:5,6)。詩篇中有許多這類禱告,大衛懇求上帝應許他的祈求,好使義人不至蒙羞,且因著他的前列,心中存看嘉美的盼望。讓我們再引一個例子來證明:「為此,凡虔誠的人,都當趁你可尋找的時候禱告你」(詩32:6)。這一節經文我更樂意徵引,因為羅馬教的那些雇傭的和無聊的辯護者常不知羞愧地以此證明死人可以代人祈求。大衛的意義無非是,他的禱告一蒙垂聽,上帝的仁慈就大受稱頌。一般說來,我們必須堅持,凡是神恩的經驗——不管是對我們自己的或別人的——都在對神應許的信心上大有助益。我不想援引更多關於大衛向自己提示,以過去所受的神恩作為眼前及將來的信賴根據的經文,因為凡留心讀詩篇的人,都自然會發現。可是雅各在好久以前即以身作則,給我們同樣的教訓:「你向僕人所施的一切慈愛和誠實,我一點也不配得;我先前只拿著我的杖過這約但河,如今我卻成了兩隊了」(創32:10)。他誠然提到應許,但並不只提應許,他同樣加上這應許的效果,好在將來更能信賴神的恩慈。原來神與世人不同,世人對自己的氣量漸次厭倦,他們的財富可能耗盡;我們對神當依照他的本性去認識,正如大衛所說的;「耶和華誠實的上帝阿,你救贖了我」(詩31:5)。他既把得救的讚頌歸給了神,他補充說他是「誠實的」;因為,倘若神本身不是始終一致的,則他以往所施賜的恩惠並不能作為我們依賴他及向他禱告的根據。但是,當我們知道,他所給予的每一個援助都足以證明祂的良善和信實,我們就再沒有理由恐懼我們所希求或指望的會歸於失敗了。
  二十七、現在讓我們對這一爭辨作如下的結論:既然經上指明崇拜的主要部分為對神的呼籲,既然神看這虔誠的任務比一切祭祀更好,所以凡指奉別的名禱告的,沒有不顯然犯了褻瀆神的罪。因此,詩篇上說:「倘若我們忘了上帝的名,或向別的神舉手,上帝豈不鑒察這事么?」(詩44:20,21)。此外,既然神的旨意要我們只憑信心呼求,而且明明白白命令一切禱告須照著他的話所定下的規律,還有,以他的話為根據的信既然是正確禱告的源泉,我們若稍微乖離神的話,禱告就必然是腐敗的。但是,正如前此所說明的,倘若我們考查全部聖經,我們就知道作為祈禱對象的光榮是完全屬於上帝的。關於代求的職分,我們也已知道,是特別屬於基督的,任何禱告都不能蒙神悅納,除非是蒙中保基督的認可。雖然信徒可以為弟兄在上帝前彼此代禱,我們也已證明這種代禱並不貶損基督作為惟一中保的地位;因為一切禱告的人都是依賴基督中保的地位,才能將本身和他人薦於上帝。我們更辯明,這代求的職務不能轉移給已死的聖者,因為聖經從沒有提起已死聖者曾被指派為我們代求的事。聖經常鼓勵我們盡彼此代禱的本分,關於已死的人的代禱,卻未有隻字提及。雅各書上把兩件事連在一起說:「你們要彼此認罪,互相代求」(雅5:16),這顯然是把死了的人排除在外。所以,要指責這一個錯誤,有了這理由就夠了:合理的禱告是由信心來的,信心是由聽從上帝的話語生的,卻沒有提到死人代求這虛構的事;極端的迷信乃是大膽地為自己選擇神所未指派的中保。聖經中充滿著各樣的祈禱,卻找不到如羅馬教徒所信的這種代求,而他們竟相信若沒有這種代求,即無所謂禱告。很顯然的,這種迷信是由於缺乏信心而生的,因為他們若不是不以基督的代求為滿足,就是完全否認了他這任務的光榮。后一點更容易從他們的鹵莽證明出來;因為他們並沒有提出可靠的論據來說明我們需要聖者的代求,卻只說我們自己不配親近上帝。我們之不配親近上帝,誠然是一件十分確實的事;可是,我們亦因此可以斷定他們是以為基督的代求若沒有聖喬治(St.George)或希坡律陀(Hippolytus)以及其他幽靈的協助,即歸無效。這是把基督的一切尊榮都掠奪了。
  二十八、祈禱,雖然只嚴格限於願望的表達與祈求,然而在祈求與感恩兩者中,卻有很密切的聯繫,所以二者可置於同一名目下討論。就保羅所例舉的來說,都可歸於這一組的第一項目下。當禱告與懇求時,我們在神面前傾吐我們的願望,祈求那可以加增神的榮耀和表彰神名的事件,同時也祈求那些於我們有益的恩賜。當感恩的時候,我們用讚美祝頌對我們的恩惠,承認我們所領受的一切福澤,都是出於神的廣大恩典。所以大衛把這兩件事連在一起說:「並要在患難之日求告我,我必搭救你,你也要榮耀我」(詩50:15)。聖經吩咐我們不斷地把這二者用在一起,不是沒有理由的;原來我們在別的地方曾說過,我們的缺乏是如此之大,而經驗本身告訴我們從四面襲來的惶恐憂慮是極其眾多,我們一切人都有充分理由不住地呻吟嘆息,迫切地求告上帝。雖然聖者們或能夠超脫一切困擾,然而即使是最聖潔的人,他們所受罪的刺激,和試誘的種種攻擊,都足以使他們呼求神的救援。我們的讚美和感恩的祭,必須繼續不斷地獻上,否則就是犯罪;因為上帝總是按照我們的情形不止息地增加恩惠,藉以鍛煉我們那萎靡的感恩之心。總之,神賜給我們的各種恩慈是如此寬廣,隨時隨地,我們目光所到之處,都充滿著神手所施行的奇妙作為,以致我們決不至於缺少可資讚美和感謝的事物。
  關於這一點,可再稍加申論:既然我們一切的盼望和援助都在乎上帝(這一層已充分地證明了),既然我們的身家事業若非蒙神賜福,即不能興盛,因此我們須殷勤不懈地將我們自己和我們的一切擺在上帝面前。更要將我們所想,所言和所行的都置於神的旨意之下,盼望得到他的幫助。凡想依賴自己,或依賴別人以圖謀事業,而不遵行神的旨意,不求神的援助的人,必受神的咒詛。我們既經屢次提起,若我們承認神為一切福澤的賜予者,就是將神所應得的榮耀歸給神,因此,我們從神的手中領受福澤時,須不住地以感恩之心領受;我們對這些由主恩所賜予的福澤,其最適切的享受方法乃不斷地歸榮耀於他,和不住地表示我們的感謝。當保羅說一切被造之物「都因上帝的道和人的祈求,成為聖潔了」(提前4:5)的時候,他的意思是指:這一切若沒有道和我們的禱告,就不是聖潔的;這裡所說的道就是信心。因之大衛在領受神的恩典后,很優美地說:「他使我口唱新歌!」(詩40:3)。這話的含意是,倘若我們不頌讚所得的恩典,我們就是犯了緘默的罪,因為他所賜給我們的每一個恩典,都是我們頌揚感謝他的一個新機會。因此以塞亞在宣場神的無比恩慈時,鼓勵信徒「都當向耶和華唱新歌」(賽42:10)。本著這個意思,大衛在另一地方說:「主啊,求你使我嘴唇張開,我的口便傳揚讚美你的話」(詩51:15)。希西家和約拿也同樣宣稱,他們蒙拯救的結果是要在聖殿中頌讚神恩(參賽38:20;拿2:10)。大衛為一切信徒頒布一條普通的規律說:」我拿什麼報答耶和華所賜給我的一切厚恩?我要舉起救恩的杯,稱揚耶和華的名」(詩116:12,13)。以色列的會眾在詩篇的另一處說:「耶和華我們的上帝阿,求你拯救我們,我們好稱讚你的聖名,以讚美你為誇勝」(詩106:47),又說:「他垂聽窮人的禱告,並不藐視他們的祈求。這必為後代的人記下,將來受造的民,要讚美耶和華。……使人在錫安傳揚耶和華的名,在耶路撒冷傳揚讚美他的話」(詩102:17,18,21)。況且,當信徒「為他的名的緣故」在任何事上求告主時,他們既然承認在自己份上不配蒙福,就有了必須感恩的義務,同時他們應許將來必頌讚神的恩惠。因此,何西阿在討論教會將來的拯救時說:「求你除凈罪孽,悅納善行,這樣,我們就把嘴唇的祭,代替牛犢獻上」(何14:2)。神的恩賜不只值得我們口舌的頌讚,也敦促我們愛他。大衛說:「我愛耶和華,因為他垂聽我的聲音,和我的求告」(詩116:1),在另一地方大衛列舉他從主所經歷到的援助,他說:「耶和華我的力量阿,我愛你」(詩18:1)。任何讚美都不能夠蒙神悅納,除非是從熱烈的愛中涌流出來的。我們也必須記得保羅的主張,就是一切求告,若沒有和感恩的心連在一起,就都不合理而且有罪的。因此他說:「凡事藉著禱告,祈求,和感謝,將你們所要的告訴上帝」(腓4:6)。因為忿怒,厭倦,煩躁,和憂傷恐懼等雖能驅迫人喃喃禱告,但保羅所要求的是一種有規律的熱忱,信徒應當欣然頌讚上帝,即使是禱告還沒有得到應驗,也當如此。倘若在顯然的逆景之下,仍須有這種關係,那麼,在上帝垂聽我們的禱告時,我們就應當更讚美他。正如我們所指出的,我們的禱告(原都是污穢的)乃因基督中保的代求,而歸於聖潔,所以使徒敦促我們「靠著基督,常以頌讚為祭,獻給上帝的」(來13:15)。這是告訴我們,若沒有基督擔任祭司職分,居中代求,我們的嘴唇是不配頌讚神名的。因此,我們可知,在教皇黨羽中流行著何等荒謬的見解,他們大多數都懷疑基督是否應當被稱為中保。保羅之所以指點我們要「不住的祈禱」,要「凡事謝恩」(帖前5:17,18),就是因為他願意一切的人都專心致志,隨時隨地在一切事上,直接向上帝禱告,指望從他那裡得著一切,並將一切的頌讚都歸給他,因為他不斷地供給我們讚美感恩的機會。
  二十九、這種殷勤禱告主要雖是關涉到個人的私禱,卻仍然與教會的公禱有關。可是,公禱不可能不住的舉行,也必須依照公眾所同意的方法舉行。這是我所同意的,因此,教會規定和宣布一定的時間;這雖不是神所關心的,但對人卻是必要的,好顧全眾人的利益,並使一切教會的事務都按照保羅所指導的施行,即「規規矩矩的按著次序行」(林前14:40)。但是,這並不是說各教會不當盡職鼓勵會友增多他們的禱告次數,並在非常的迫切需要之下,更加熱烈虔誠地禱告。至於恆切禱告,那是與不住地殷勤禱告有關,我們將在本章的終了時加以討論。然而所謂恆切殷勤的祈禱並不是要鼓勵我們作那虛浮、重複的禱告,那是會為基督所禁止的(參太6:7);原來基督並非阻止我們作熱忱真摯的,長時間的或經常的禱告;他是禁止我們絮絮不休地向神干求,以為拿許多廢話充塞神的耳朵,即可以向神勒索什麼,也好像神能為人的話語所說服似的。假冒為善的人不知道他們是面對著上帝,在禱靠時炫耀自己,好像是在勝利進軍似的。例如那個法利塞人,他感謝上帝時自認為和別人不同(參路18:11);無疑地,他是要在人前誇耀自己,好像要藉著禱告的一席話得著了虔誠的美名。那種「虛浮重複」的禱詞,目前也因著同樣的原因,在羅馬教徒中盛行;有些人以重複的話語白白地糟蹋時間,另一些人故意加多那叫人厭倦的言詞,來附會凡俗。既然這種幼稚的喋喋不休的禱告是戲弄上帝,所以,基督禁止人在教會中這樣作,是不足為奇的,因為在教會中只應該有發自內心的嚴肅禱告,與此類似的一種腐敗習慣,同樣為基督所指責的,就是假冒為善的人,為著炫耀自己,常到街頭上禱告,希望有許多人可以看到他們的虔誠,好蒙世人稱讚。但是,我們已經說過,禱告的目的乃在提高我們的心意,朝向上帝,無論是在頌讚他或是在祈求他的援助,我們必須知道禱告的主要地方乃在我們的心意中;或說禱告不外是把內心深處的意念,在那洞察人心的主面前傾吐。因此,我們天上的師傅,正如我所說過的,當他提起關於禱告的規則時,吩咐說:「你禱告的時候,要進入你的內室,關上門,禱告你在暗中的父,你父在暗中察看,必然報答你」(太6:6)。當他勸我們不要效法假冒為善的人,喜歡在表面誇炫自己的禱告,以討人喜悅后;他立刻又加上「進入內室,關上門祈禱」的話,就我所知,他這樣說是教我們尋找一個退修的地方,好使我們把思想轉向於我們的心靈深處,我們的身體既當作為上帝的殿,主應許我們,上帝必照我們心中的願望成全我們。主並不反對在別的地方禱告,只不過表明禱告是一件秘密的事,而它的主要地方乃是心中,且必須心意寧靜,不為俗慮所擾。所以主自己每當要從事熱烈懇切的祈禱時,常退到安靜的地方,遠離人間的浮囂,他這樣做是有意以自己的榜樣教導我們,使我們那飄浮無恆的心不至於忽略了這種幫助,能在禱告的時候聚精會神。雖然如此,主並不反對必要時在大眾面前祈禱,所以我們若有需要,無論在任何地方,都可以「舉起聖潔的手禱告」(提前2:8)。所以,我們可作結論說,無論是誰,若拒絕在莊嚴的公眾聚會中禱告,他就是絲毫不知道私禱的意義,不問是個人的或是家裡的。從另一方面說,凡忽略私禱的,不問他如何孜孜不懈地參加公眾的聚會,他的禱告也不過是捕風捉影,因為他所注重的是人的意見,而不是上帝的隱密判斷。同時,為使教會中的公禱不致於為人輕蔑,上帝在古時就以光榮的名號稱呼它,好比稱聖殿為「祈禱的殿」(賽56:7),藉著這一稱呼,他教訓人禱告乃是崇拜的主要部分;而聖殿的設立,乃作為信眾的標準,叫他們可以同心合意地在聖殿中禱告。另外還有一個特別的應許;「上帝阿,錫安的人,都等候讚美你,所許的願,也要向你償還」(詩65:1)。在這些話中,詩人告訴我們,在教會中的禱告並非徒然,因為主永遠以讚美喜樂的機會賜給他的子民。雖然屬於律法的影子已經停止,然而神的旨意要以這一儀禮在我們當中維持信心的統一,所以這應許,無疑的也屬於我們,因為這是基督親口所證實的,保羅也承認它為是永久有效的。
  三十、上帝在他的話語中既命令信徒遵行公禱,所以指定公共聖所作為舉行公禱的地方;因此凡拒絕加入在上帝民中崇拜的人,不得藉口他們是聽從神的命令,進入內室禱告。因為主既然應許凡有二三人奉他名聚會祈禱,他們所求的,必蒙允許,這就證明他並不輕視在公眾面前的祈禱,只要不是為要在人前炫耀以求人的讚許,卻是從心底里發出的真誠懇切的禱告。倘若這就是聖殿的合理用途(當然是如此的),那麼,我們就得非常小心,避免把聖殿當作神的固定居處,以為在聖殿中,神更接近我們,更能垂聽我們的禱告,像數世紀以來所流行的觀念一樣;或把聖殿當作什麼神秘境地,以為在那裡禱告,必更聖潔。其實我們本身乃是上帝真實的殿,倘若我們要在神的聖殿中呼求神,我們就得在自己的心中祈求。所以,我們既受命令「以心靈和誠實祈求」(約4:23),就當摒除猶太人或異教徒拘守地點的見解,不論在什麼地方都可禱告。誠然,由於上帝的命令,古時聖殿是獻作禱告和祭祀的地方,可是當時神的真理尚在借喻式的陰影中,現在既已完全顯明,就再也不容許他們把神限制在一個有形的殿中。其實上帝命令古時猶太人建造聖殿,也不是為要把神的臨在限制於聖殿四壁之中,殿的意義不過是用來象徵天上的真聖殿而已。因之,以塞亞和司提反對那些以為神是住在那「人手所造的殿中」的人,深加斥責(賽61:1;徒7:48)。
  三十一、所以,凡祈禱所發出的聲音,或吟唱的詩歌,除非是由心的深處發出的,都不會有什麼效果,亦不會蒙神悅納。相反的,這些聲音和詩歌倘若只是從嘴唇與喉腔中吐出來的,其結果只是招惹神對我們的忿怒而已;因為那只是侮辱他的聖名和戲弄他的尊嚴;正如我們可以從以賽亞的話語中找出,雖然他所含的意義較為寬廣,然而對這種過犯是同樣申斥的,他說:「主說,因為這百姓親近我,用嘴唇尊敬我,心卻遠離我,他們敬畏我,不過是領受人的吩咐,所以我在這百姓中要行奇妙的事,就是奇妙又奇妙的事,他們智慧人的智慧,必然消滅,聰明人的聰明,必然隱藏」(賽29:13,14)。我們並非反對聲樂或歌唱,而是鄭重推薦,倘若那是出於至情的。因為在祈禱與崇拜時,聲樂與歌唱可以幫助崇拜者聚精會神,因為人心反覆不定,輾轉善變,容易為種種事務所紛擾,必須藉助於種種有效方法。此外,神的榮耀既然應當由我們身體的各部分彰顯出來,所以我們須貢獻我們的舌頭作為歌唱讚頌之用,因為它們被造的一個特殊目的乃為頌揚神的光榮。雖然如此,舌頭的主要用處乃是在於信眾聚會時公禱,其目的的是要聲樂如出一口,頌讚神的光榮,他是我們同一的精神和同一的信心所敬拜的,並且我們公開地一同頌揚,為的是要使信徒能夠彼此交流信仰,彼此以榜樣來互相激勵。
  三十二、教會中歌唱的風俗是相沿甚古,甚至使徒們也這樣行過,這是我們從保羅的話可以推斷來的:「我要用靈歌唱,也要用悟性歌唱」(林前14:15)。又在歌羅西人書上說:「用詩章,頌詞,靈歌,彼此教導,互相勸戒,心存感恩,歌頌上帝」(西3:16)。在前一節中,他吩咐我們用聲音和心意歌唱讚美,在後一節中,他主張以靈歌唱,藉此眾信徒互相幫助,建立德行。然而這並非普遍奉行的,奧古斯丁曾指出在安波羅修的時代,米蘭教會首先採用唱詩的習慣,當時瓦倫提尼安(Valentinian)之母游斯丁娜(Justina)正在逼迫正派信仰,會眾特別儆醒,往往澈夜禱告歌唱;以後西方的其他教會相繼效法。在這一段話的前面,他提起這種歌唱的風俗是從東方的教會採取來的。在他的翻改錄(Retractions)第二卷中他也說過在他的時代,這種風俗也在非洲流行。他說,「有一個護民官,名叫希拉流(Hilary),對當時新介紹到加大果(Carthage)的風俗習慣,常常找機會盡量加以惡意的指摘,他反對從詩篇摘取句段作為讚美詩,在奉獻之前,或在奉獻之後,在壇上歌唱。為順應眾弟兄的要求,我駁斥了他的指摘。」自然,倘若歌唱能夠調整到合乎神與天使的莊嚴,則不但能增加崇拜時的尊嚴與神聖的情緒,同時也可以在誠懇禱告和熱心敬拜方面作有效的激發。然而,我們必須十分小心,否則我們所注意的必集中於詩歌的節調,而不注意詞句的靈性意義。奧古斯丁承認他自己有陷入於那種危險的傾向,因此有時他寧願遵照亞他那修所指示的辦法,就是唱詩的人對每一個字的呤唱儘可能減少抑揚頓挫的音符,使得比較接近於朗誦,而非歌唱。但當奧氏一想到他自己從歌唱所領受益助時,他就傾向於與亞氏所主張的相反的一面。所以若能遵守以上所說的範圍,毫無疑問的,歌唱乃是一種極莊嚴而有益的崇拜方法。相反的,凡詩歌音之編譜,只求使人悅耳,那非但與教會的莊嚴不合,且必為神所不悅。   

[本話題由 追求永生 於 2010-01-19 02:02:11 編輯]

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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-1-20 13:36 | 只看該作者
CHAPTER 20.
OF PRAYER--A PERPETUAL EXERCISE OF FAITH. THE DAILY BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IT.
The principal divisions of this chapter are,--I. Connection of the subject of prayer with the previous chapters. The nature of prayer, and its necessity as a Christian exercise, sec. 1, 2. II. To whom prayer is to be offered. Refutation of an objection which is too apt to present itself to the mind, sec. 3. III. Rules to be observed in prayer, sec. 4ñ16. IV. Through whom prayer is to be made, sec. 17ñ19. V. Refutation of an error as to the doctrine of our Mediator and Intercessor, with answers to the leading arguments urged in support of the intercession of saints, sec. 20ñ27. VI. The nature of prayer, and some of its accidents, sec. 28ñ33. VII. A perfect form of invocation, or an exposition of the Lord's Prayer, sec. 34ñ50. VIII. Some rules to be observed with regard to prayer, as time, perseverance, the feeling of the mind, and the assurance of faith, sec. 50ñ52.

Sections.

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 realized 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 no where 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 every thing 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 every thing 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. 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. 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. 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?46[5] 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. 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 fervor 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 groveling 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. 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 prayer, 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. 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, 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 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 any thing 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 sloth, 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. 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 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 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 fervor and vehemence 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. 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. 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 note 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, 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. 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 any thing, 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 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. 9:18ñ20). 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. 64:5ñ9). You see how they put no confidence in any thing 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,46[6] "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. 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 any thing 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;46[7] 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.46[8] 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 Savior'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 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. Sometimes, however, the saints in supplicating God, seem to appeal to their own righteousness, as when David says, &quotreserve 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. 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. 3, 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," (Mt. 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 any thing without faith. In short, it is faith which obtains every thing 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 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. 6:16ñ18). 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 every thing 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 any thing 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; but our heavenly Father has, in ineffable kindness, added a remedy, by which, calming all perturbation, 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. And first, indeed in enjoining us to pray, he by the very injunction convicts us of impious contumacy 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," (Mt. 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 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 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 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 fulfill 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 ardor 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 vigor.

14. 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. "The name of the Lord," says Solomon, "is a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it, and is safe." 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." 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." 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."46[9] 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 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 harmonize. Jeremiah and David speak of humbly laying their supplications47[0] before God. 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." 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. And David says, "Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense; and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice."47[1] 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 or presumptuous security; but climbing up by the ladder of the promises, still remain humble and abased suppliants.[本話題由 追求永生 於 2010-01-20 13:38:51 編輯]
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15. 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 fervor 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. 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, 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. 3, 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. 32:16). 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. 22 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.47[2]

16. 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 any thing 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 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 any thing 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 fervor, 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,47[3] 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 with 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 hindrances, 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. 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,47[4] 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. 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 any thing, 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. 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 others 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 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. 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, 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, he also commends himself to the prayers of the faithful. 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. And thus the mutual prayers of all the members still laboring 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, ëThere is one God, and one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;' in whom we also are one if we keep the unity of the faith in the bond of peace,"47[5] (August. Contra Parmenian, Lib. 2 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) 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. 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 obtruded, 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. 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;47[6] and so far are their pastors47[7] 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?47[8] 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. 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 caviling 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. 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 immovable 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. 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 dullness 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 any thing 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,47[9] no place whatever is given to Abraham, the father of the Church? We know well from what a crew they select their intercessors.48[0] 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. 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 any thing 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 l 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. 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 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. 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 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. 51:15). 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 vigor 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, &quotray without ceasing; in every thing 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. 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 battologivan, vain speaking, which our Saviour has prohibited (Mt. 6:7). For he does not there forbid us to pray long or frequently, or with great fervor, but warns us against supposing that we can extort anything from God by importuning him with garrulous loquacity, 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.48[1] 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 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," (Mt. 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, &quotraise waiteth for thee, O God, in Sion: and unto thee shall the vow be performed,"48[2] (Ps. 65:1). 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. 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 (Mt. 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.48[3] 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 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. 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. 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. 9 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;48[4] 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.48[5] He also intimates (Retract. Lib. 2) 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."48[6] 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 ardor 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. 10 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.48[7] 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.
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 03:53 | 只看該作者
使徒保羅指示我們,真的信心必常常祈求上帝,所以他指示這一個次序——正如信心是由福音而生,同樣,因著信心,我們就被吸引去求告主名(參羅10:14)。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 03:54 | 只看該作者
二、所以我們是藉著禱告才能到達天父為我們所儲存的豐富寶藏。因為在人與上帝中間有一種使人們能進入至聖所的交通,好在神的面前祈求他所應許的,這樣,主的應許既為我們所信,也可以在我們的經驗中證實。因此我們知道,凡是主叫我們仰望於他的,都應該隨時向他祈求。實在的祈禱可以掘出主的福音向我們的信心所啟示的寶藏。所以關於禱告的必要和它的各種效用,確非言語所能充分說明的。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 03:58 | 只看該作者
我們的天父宣稱,我們的得保障只有依靠我們對他名的呼求,不是沒有理由的;靠著禱告我們呼求他的祜佑,作為我們的幫助,因為他的眷佑關心我們的一切;當我們軟弱到幾乎暈倒時,我們呼求他的能力來支持我們;雖然我們為罪的重擔所壓,靠著禱告,我們祈求他的聖善接納我們進入他的恩眷中;總之,在禱告中,我們呼求他對我們顯示他的完全性格。[本話題由 追求永生 於 2010-02-02 03:59:56 編輯]
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 03:59 | 只看該作者
因之,我們的良心可得到特別的平安與寧靜;因為當我們把一切壓迫我們的煩惱都交給上帝時,我們心中感覺到無限泰然,因為覺得所有的一切愁苦都不在他面前隱蔽,而他既願意,也能夠,為我們解決一切使我們得到真實利益。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:01 | 只看該作者
主要人祈禱,並不是為他自己的緣故,乃是為我們的緣故。誠然他喜悅我們把他所應得的歸於他,這也是理當如此;世人應當認他為一切所欲所賞的恩賜的泉源,而以禱告感謝他。然而甚至這種對主敬拜的益處亦復回到了我們的身上。所以古時聖者越是用大信心把神對他們和別人的恩惠宣傳出來,就越被激動而作更懇切的禱告。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:03 | 只看該作者
所以,雖然當我們對於自己的苦難境遇愚昧麻木時,主仍然不懈地鑒臨保護我們,有時且不待呼求而救援我們,然而我們的最大益助是在乎殷勤祈求他,第一,好使我們的心中火熱,熱烈認真地追求,敬愛與崇拜他,並且使我們在需要的時候,依靠神作為我們的唯一保障;第二,好使我們心裡不存有任何向主隱瞞的念頭,如此,我們才會學到全心全意在主面前陳訴;最後好使我們準備用誠實感謝的心,去接受並承認主所賜的福,因為我們的祈禱提醒我們,一切恩賜是從神而來的。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:05 | 只看該作者
所以,雖然當我們對於自己的苦難境遇愚昧麻木時,主仍然不懈地鑒臨保護我們,有時且不待呼求而救援我們,然而我們的最大益助是在乎殷勤祈求他,第一,好使我們的心中火熱,熱烈認真地追求,敬愛與崇拜他,並且使我們在需要的時候,依靠神作為我們的那些藉口神常看顧萬物,因此認為祈禱是一件多餘的事,是煩擾神的舉動的人,是非常矛盾的;主明明宣布說:「凡誠心求告他的,他必與他們相近」(詩145:18)。同樣荒謬的是另外有些人以為主所自願賜給我們的東西,我們用不著再去祈求;其實這些東西,雖然由於寬大恩典,像水一樣流給我們,然而他願意把它們當作是由於我們的禱告而賜予的。這由詩篇以及其它許多同樣的經文可以證明:「耶和華的眼目看顧義人,他的耳朵聽他們的呼求」(詩34:15);這句話是稱讚主自願完成那信他的人的拯救,可是並沒有說要免除我們在信心上的操練,好把懈怠排除於人心之外。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:07 | 只看該作者
論到祈禱的最適切的方法:第一原則就是我們的心意必須合乎與神交往的虔誠態度。倘若我們能擺脫一切叫我們離開了上帝的屬肉體的私慾雜念,我們即可達到這種境界;而且,我們的心非但可以專一於禱告,而且可以超越於本身之上。這裡並不是指要有一種擺脫一切,以至於對一切都不動心的態度;相反的,在我們內心正需有熱切的祈求,正如主的聖潔僕人,他們不但懇切祈求,而且是從苦痛的深淵中,及死亡的爪牙下,向主陳訴。我所主張的是我們必須排除一切外在的,使人的思想到處徘徊,把人從天上拉到地下的種種顧慮。當我說必須超越於本身之上,我的意思是說,不要把我們愚昧的妄想帶到神的面前;也不要使思想限於它本身的虛浮範圍之內,卻要提升到值得陳訴於神前的聖潔境地上去。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:09 | 只看該作者
下述兩件事是很值得注意的:第一,要從事禱告,須全心全意,而不可為胡思妄想所分心;對崇敬上帝的事,沒有比舉止輕浮更悖謬矛盾的了,這種輕浮行為,表示一種淫褻和毫無敬畏的心。遇著這種情形,困難越大,我們越須努力克服。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:10 | 只看該作者
第二點就是:我們所乞求的,不能出乎神所許可的。因為神雖然命令我們向他傾心禱告(參詩:62:8),然而他並沒有任從我們隨便把邪惡與愚昧的情慾都排列出來。當他應許成就信徒的心愿時,他並非如此放任,以至於順從了我們的放肆的情慾。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:11 | 只看該作者
人們祈禱時,往往嚴重地冒犯了上面這兩條規律。大多數人非但是不恭不敬,僭妄地來到神前陳說他們的妄想,而且靦顏無禮地在神的台前陳訴他們在夢寐當中所懷想的一切,而且由於他們的愚妄,他們竟把他們不敢在人面前宣露的邪污念頭,胡亂地向神祈求。好些教外的人已在輕鄙譏笑這種僭妄,而這種邪惡卻仍盛行;因之,古時那些野心的人敬拜猶皮得(Jupiter);貪財的拜麥丘立(Mercury);文人學士拜亞波羅(Apollo)與米內瓦(Minerva);好戰的拜馬爾司(Mars);好色的拜維諾司(Venus);而現在的人(正如我剛才所提起的)祈禱時放縱地使用一切不適當的言詞,等於和同輩的人談話開玩笑一樣。上帝不許人如此戲弄他的宏恩,他伸張他的權力,叫我們虔誠禱告,聽他的命令。所以我們應當記得約翰的話:「我們若照他的旨意求什麼,他就聽我們,這是我們向他所存坦然無懼的心」(約壹5:14)。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:13 | 只看該作者
但是我們能力既然趕不上這種完全的信心,我們就必須追求補救的方法。正如我們的意念的注意力應該集中於上帝,同樣我們的心思的熱忱也應該都歸向他。但是我們的心思與意念常常不能達到這種高尚的境地;說得更貼切一點,它們常常感到軟弱失敗,以致背道而馳。為補救我們的軟弱無能,所以神賜給我們聖靈,作為我們祈禱的導師,指點我們何者為義,並糾正我們的心思。因為「我們的軟弱,有聖靈幫助,我們本不曉得當怎樣禱告,只是聖靈親自用說不出來的嘆息,替我們禱告」 (羅8:26)。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-2 04:16 | 只看該作者
禱告的第二原則是:當我們祈求的時候,須承認自己的貧乏,認真地思想我們一切所求都是何等嚴重緊要,必須熱烈誠懇地祈求。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-3 12:16 | 只看該作者
許多人毫不在意地背誦禱文,好像那是上帝加在他們頭上的一項任務;他們雖然承認禱告乃是對於臨到他們身上的災難的一種必要的解救,因為若沒有神的援助,滅亡必然臨到他們,然而他們禱告只不過沿著習俗,這從他們毫不留意他們所祈求的,並從他們心中的冷淡,可以看出。他們對於自己的需要只有一種泛泛的混沌之感,不足激動他們把所需要當作一種迫切的現實,來祈求拯救。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-3 12:17 | 只看該作者
若有人祈求罪得赦免,而卻認為他自己不是罪人,或至少不想到他是罪人,我們還能想像比這虛偽更可憎惡,和在神面前更可咒詛的事嗎?這是公然戲弄上帝。這種邪惡敗壞,正如我們曾說過,是浸入整個人類,許多人只不過在形式上祈求某些事情,其實他們以為這些事情並不是從主的善良,乃是從別的來源獲得的,要不然,就認為自己已經有了。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-3 12:18 | 只看該作者
另有一些人的罪行,似乎是要少些,但仍然是不能寬容的;他們心中只有一個原則,以為必須以禱告來解除上帝的忿怒,可是禱告時心力渙散,吃吃亂語。
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 樓主| 追求永生 發表於 2010-2-3 12:19 | 只看該作者
信徒應當特別小心,若心中沒有火熱的赤忱,同時也不懇切地盼望得著所祈求的,就不要進到神的面前祈求。
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