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B04947 A discourse concerning prayer especially of frequenting the dayly publick prayers. In two parts. / By Symon Patrick, D.D. now Lord Bishop of Ely. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1693 (1693) Wing P789A; ESTC R181547 106,863 299

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several pretious Gums made no other perfume than the Spices would have done had they been burnt one by one CHAP. XVII Other Considerations to strengthen this Argument VII GOD hath also appointed a publick order of Men to Direct and Govern Christian Assemblies and to Minister therein both by giving Christian Instruction and by offering up the Common Prayers of the Church to God and Blessing the people in his Name This is another convincing Argument both that Christ designed publick Assemblies because he hath appointed publick Ministers to officiate there and that the Prayers made there are to be preferred before private Devotions because there we partake of the Service of God's Ministers the benefit whereof we lose if we content our selves with what we do at home There is nothing more apparent in the Holy Writings than that our Lord would have such an order of men set apart for his Divine Service in the Church Whose ordination by his special appointment and designation is an assurance that their Ministry therein is acceptable to God as well when they offer the peoples Prayers to him and bless them in his Name as when they deliver his Word to the people and teach them both how to pray and to perform all other Duties of a Christian Life Both of these are necessary and their Office is designed for both But especially for the first to minister the Divine Service of the Church The principal of which is the Eucharist wherein they dispense the most pretious Tokens of Christ's Love to his Body the Church by Prayers and by Thanksgivings to God for the Redemption of the World by that Death of Christ upon the Cross Which ought to be publickly celebrated because it is an Annunciation o● the Lord's Death wherein we publish and show it forth till he come an● never was administred nor can be b● any other persons but those whom o● Lord hath intrusted to be Stewards 〈◊〉 his Mysteries For whose Prayers and Publick Se●vice in the Church if Men have not great esteem it is because they hav● no Religion or no true Knowledg● thereof For if they believed tha● God hath any Ministers as he hath i● there be any such thing as Religion who are peculiarly sanctified that is set apart for his Service they would believe that God conveys some Ble●sings by their Ministry and look upo● their Ordination as a Seal that He wh● hath thereby appointed them to be Instruments of his for the Salvation of Men's Souls will by these Instruments effect the thing whereunto he hath ordained them and particularly give Men his Blessing by their means and accept those Prayers which these Servants of his offer up unto him for them and in their Name For that praying for the People is a special part of their Work we may learn from St. James v. 14. where he directs those to whom he writes when any Man was sick to send for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him Which no less belonged to their Office we may be sure when Men were well than when they were sick being a part of their dayly ministration for the whole Body of the Church Whose weaker Prayers as I noted before out of St. Chrysostome being helped by the stronger Prayers of God's Ministers go up to Heaven together with them All Christians indeed are called A Holy and a Royal Priesthood to offer up Spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God by Christ Jesus 1 Pet. ii 5 9. but it is manifest by these very words that they are not so singly but in a Body when they Pray and give Thanks together with him that Ministers the Divine Service in the Church the Spiritual House of which the Apostle there speaks in which Spiritual Sacrifices were offered up to God And since Sacrifices were offered only in Publick in the place God appointed for them we may thence I think conclude that our Prayers Praises and Thanksgivings are then only Sacrifices when made in our Assemblies and that then we act as Priests unto God and not at other times The principal Sacrifice of Christians I am sure is in its own Nature a Publick Service and is to be so esteemed even when it is administred to the Sick in Private who receive it as part of that Body which is supposed continually to offer this Sacrifice I mean the Holy Communion wherein we offer to God with Prayers Praises and Thanksgivings a commemoration of the Sacrifice of Christ upon the Cross for us For this we ought all to meet as frequently as we can that we may conjunctly and openly acknowledge this benefit because though this be the principal and immediate intention of this action it hath respect also to that communion which we have one with another as mutual Members and with Christ our Head as his Body So the Apostle teaches us when he saith The Cup of Blessing which we bless is it not the Communion of the Blood of Christ The Bread which we break it is not the Communion of the Body of Christ For we being many are one Bread and one Body for we are all partakers of that one Bread 1 Cor. x. 16 17. And therefore since we are not Members of the same Body unless we be knit together in one and we are not knit together in one but by the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ and we cannot have that communion but by Assembling together to eat of one Bread and drink of one Cup it is manifest to all that there is the greatest necessity of Publick Assemblies where this is the chief business for which Christians should meet together in one Body as oft as is possible and at all other times beseech God to accept their Sacrifices for the sake of that perfect Sacrifice Oblation and Satisfaction which Christ hath made and which we commemorate Here also in the Publick Assemblies censures were inflicted upon publick Offenders as we learn from the Apostle 1 Corinth v. 4. as well as from Tertullian in his Apology cap. xxxix and many such like things I might add to the same purpose if I had room for them and had not other material considerations to press which ought not to be omitted VIII Among which this is not inconsiderable that the Publick Service of the Church by them ministred is so acceptable unto God that the Angels God's Heavenly Ministers attend in such Holy Assemblies and make a part of them For this is the Reason St. Paul gives 1 Corinth xi 10. why a Woman should cover her Head in time of Prayer that is be in a humble and reverend posture because of the Angels Whose presence in the Assemblies of Christians is a Token of Christ's Blessed Presence in the midst of them according to his own promise before-mentioned Matth. xviii 20. For where the Angels are said to be there God is present as the Hebrews observe and not without good ground for what they say For when Jacob saw Angels
in a vision ascending and descending upon a Ladder which stood on the Earth and reached unto Heaven he said as soon as he was awake how dreadful is this place that is with what reverence should I behave my self here this is no other but the House of God and this is the Gate of Heaven He concludes God to be present because the Angels were who are his Ministers and Attendants And accordingly we are to understand these words of the Apostle as intended to signifie a Divine presence among us when we are reverently assembled together to Worship God in his Holy places Which the Ancient Christians lookt upon as a singular incouragement to attend upon the Publick Prayers because then a Christian prays with the Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are the words of Clemens Alexandrinus as already L. vii Strom. p. 746. especially at that time equal even to an Angel and will not be out of the precinct of those Holy Guardians when he prayes alone but then also have their Company Of which Origen hath a set Discourse in his Book of Prayer lately published Part. 2da Num. 20. where mentioning the words of the Psalmist among others The Angel of the Lord incampeth round about them that fear him c. He thus proceeds it is probable that when many are assembled together sincerely to the Glory of Christ the Angel of every one of them there pitcheth his Tent together with him that is committed to his Charge and Custody so as to make 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double Church where the Saints are gathered together one Church of Men and another Church of Angels IX But if there were nothing of this in it yet the Communion of Saints here on Earth which is an Article of our Creed should invite us unto the Publick Service For how do we maintain communion with them if we joyn not with those among whom we live in the Assemblies of the Saints That is of Christians who are all a Holy people to the Lord by their solemn dedication to him in their Baptism and by their Holy profession and meeting together continually for Holy Offices Which if any Man forsake he is no longer Holy but Prophane renouncing so far the Christian Faith which teaches him to keep the Communion of Saints by having Fellowship with them in Prayer especially in the Eucharist which is the Communion of Christ's Body and Blood By partaking of which we have the nearest Communion also one with another being made one Body as I have said already by partaking all of that one Bread 1 Cor. x. 17. Communion indeed or Fellowship is in one place made a thing distinct from breaking of Bread and Prayers Act. ii 42. and signifies some think communicating to each others necessities Which Notion of Communion if we understand to be meant in the Creed it makes no less to my purpose than the other For we must consider that this was done in their Publick Assemblies whereby their communicating to the needs of their Brethren became an acceptable Offering unto God together with their Prayers This we learn from the 1 Cor. xvi 1 2. Where St. Paul speaks of the Collections for the Saints as a part of the business of the first day of the Week both there and in the Churches of Galatia When they did not forget this well-pleasing Sacrifice as it is called Heb. xiii 16. but acknowledged God's bounty to themselves by the relief they sent to others and by such a publick contribution maintained also a sense and fellow-feeling of one anothers condition and made a profession that they all belonged to one and the same Body though never so far distant one from another The Sense of which we are apt to lose when we joyn not together in such actions of piety Whereby Brotherly Love and Kindnese is likewise nourished and we are knit together in the tenderest Affection while we look upon one another not only as Children of the same common Father but as Limbs of the same Body Who naturally have the same care one for another and whether one Member suffer all the Members suffer with it or one Member be honoured all the Members rejoyce with it 1 Corinth xii 25 26. In this Brotherly Love and in the same Faith some think the Unity of the Body of Christ intirely consists But they should consider that this Brotherly Love and Care flows from the Unity of Christ's Body which consists therefore in the conjunction of every Member with the rest and keeping communion one with another in all the common Offices of Religion in Christian Assemblies From which whosoever departs or refuses to joyn therein he breaks the Unity of the Body of Christ which is his Church And though he do the same thing alone which is done in those Assemblies yet it is not the same thing in the account of Christ who looks upon such a Man as gone from him by going from his Body the Church X. I will add one thing more which is that the Service of God in the Church triumphant in Heaven is a Publick Service and they do not Worship God separately there but joyn together in his Praises This we are taught by St. John Rev. vii 11. where after a great multitude had been represented to him which no Man could number of all Nations and Kindreds and Tongues who stood before the Throne and before the Lamb crying with a loud voice and saying Salvation to our God which sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lamb whereby no doubt is signified the Service of the Christian Church then it follows that All the Angels also stood round about the Throne and about the Elders and the four Beasts and fell before the Throne on their Faces and Worshipped God saying Amen Blessing and Glory and Wisdom and Thanksgiving and Honour and Power and Might be unto our God for ever and ever They said that is Amen to the Christian Service and also added their own giving Glory to God in one Body for it is the voice of all Angels as the Christian Church did Let this be seriously pondered and we shall indeavour to approach as near unto them as we can by joyning as they do in one Society of the Church to Worship God For so doing we joyn our selves to the Society also of the Holy Angels as the Angels St. John here informs us do to the Society of Christian Worshippers They and we make but one Body in Christ in whom God hath gathered together in one all things both which are in Heaven and which are on Earth And this Unity consists it is manifest by this Vision of St. John in their communion one with another in Holy Offices which the Church in Heaven where it is become most perfectly one doth most sacredly keep and preserve CHAP. XVIII A Recapitulation of the four foregoing Chapters with some Inferences from thence LAY now all these things together that the Church in the very notion
particularly by St. James Unto which though some Additions perhaps had been then made as there have been more since yet it is hard to think that a great number of Bishops would have owned a Liturgy as composed by St. James if there had not been a constant tradition among them that the Apostles left some stated Form of Prayer and Praise in the Churches which they governed But what need I trouble my self with a long proof of this matter when we have the Confession of the most Learned and Best Men among those whom they that dissent from us have been wont to reverence that there hath been no time wherein there was not a prescribed Form of Divine Service Let Dr. Preston speak for all in a Book of his much prized in former times * Saints dayly Exercise p. 80. where after he had owned that Christ prescribed a Form c. he adds And in the Church at all times both in the Primitive times and all along to the beginning of the Reformed times to Luther and Calvin 's time still in all times the Church had set Forms they used and I know no Objection of weight against it And in Answer to that common Objection which he calls the main one that in stinted Prayer the Spirit is straitned and limited c. He answers as we do now That even those Men that use this reason do the same dayly in the Congregation for when another prayes that is a set Form to him that hears it And therefore if that were a sufficient reason that a Man might not use a set Form because the Spirit is straitned he should not hear another pray at all though it be a conceived Prayer because in that case his Spirit is limited to what that Man saith And very judiciously adds That it is not a bond or restraint of the Spirit because there is a tye of Words For the largeness of the heart standeth not so much in the multitude and variety of Expressions as in the extent of Affection And at last concludes That a set Form of Prayer must be used Would to God they that scruple it would weigh such things as these it would not be long then before they liked nay loved that Form of Prayer which is used in this Church For it is so exactly conformable to the Rule of the Holy Apostle which I have often mentioned 1 Tim. ii 1. consisting of unexceptionable Prayers Supplications Intercessions and Thanksgivings that one cannot but think the Composers of it laid that Rule before them when they framed it It would be too long to give an Account of the whole Book which it is easie to show is made up of those four parts of Divine Service Look only into the Letany which is a word signifying properly a Supplication for the turning away of evil things with which it begins and then proceeds to Prayers and to Intercessions having in the end a general Form of Thanksgiving And observe the admirable Method of it It directs our Prayers to the ever Blessed Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost the only Object of Worship and Fountain of Mercy Of whom we first deprecate evil things and that in the right order first desiring to be delivered from the evil of Sin both of the Spirit and of the flesh and then from the evil of punishment whether in outward or in inward judgments All this we pray to be delivered from by what Christ hath done and suffered for us and by that alone which is the most prevalent way of suing for Mercy And by the way observe that what some through misunderstanding I hope have been pleased to make the Subject of their Mirth and Sport is really and ought to be esteemed the most serious and effectual Supplication that can be made to our Lord. By whose Holy Nativity and Circumcision by his Baptism Fasting and Temptation by his Agony and bloody Sweat by his Cross and Passion by his Pretious Death and Burial by his Glorious Resurrection and Ascension and by the Coming of the Holy Ghost we pray to be delivered For thus it is Our Lord having humbled himself to be a Man for our sakes nay to take on him the form of a Servant and after all his other Sufferings at last to dye the Death of the Cross for us is gone with that Blood which was there shed into the Heavens and is exalted at God's Right Hand in the High and Holy Place where he represents all that he did and suffered from his coming into the World till his going out of it before God and in the vertue of his bloody Sacrifice which he made of himself pleads to have every thing from God which he hath promised and cannot be denied Now for us to beseech him that through the force of his Sufferings of all sorts especially of his cruel Death and the Glory that followed we may be delivered and saved from all evil is the most pathetical the most powerful way of intreaty and the most prevailing importunity that can be used It is as if we should say Lord show unto the Father what thou hast indured for us represent unto him thy obedience unto Death which he promised to reward with all power in Heaven and in Earth Exercise thy Royal Power which thou hast obtained by that humble Obedience for our Deliverance and Salvation As thou hast received the Gift of the Holy Ghost and imparted it to thy Apostles so pour it down more and more upon us also who believe the Gospel which they preached and testified to be the truth Then follow Petitions for all good things First For the Universal Church then for our own in particular For the King and Royal Family For all in Authority under him For all sorts of Persons and for all sorts of Blessings both for Soul and Body Be at the pains I beseech you to read and consider it with such Observations as these and it alone will be sufficient to make you in love with the rest of the Book of Common Prayer A Book so fully perfected according to the Rules of our Christian Religion Dr. Taylor Rector of Hadley in every behalf that no Christian Conscience in the opinion of a famous Martyr in Queen Maries Dayes whose words these are could be offended with any thing therein contained And therefore I conclude that as it would have been a great Sin in the Church of Ephesus if they had dislike● and rejected that way of Supplications Prayers Intercessions and Thanksgiving● wherein Timothy led them to serve God so it will be still in us if we refuse those Directions which are given us in the Divine Service by our Spiritual Governours when it is manifest they guide us by the Word of God and the Apostolical practice according to it If they had composed a Divine Service wherein they required us to pr●● to Angels or to Saints departed t●● Life or to supplicate God by the●● Merits and their Intercession we should