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A25463 Panem quotidianum, or, A short discourse tending to prove the legality, decency, and expediency of set forms of prayer in the churches of Christ with a particular defence of the book of common prayer of the Church of England... / by William Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3222; ESTC R38624 47,207 64

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we might say with Solomon that one sinner destroys much good Answ. 2. Reader when thou desirest to be delivered from the power and rage of sin by Christs Passion and to have thy heart cleansed by the coming of the Holy Ghost as St. Paul had his Tit. 3. 5. a Christian hearing thee will charitably suppose that thou art praying however he will never suppose that thou art swearing Answ. 3. It were worth our enquiring to know if these men do desire or pray to be delivered from Christs death since they are angry with us for desiring to be saved by it and if they do so then to know unto whom they make that prayer and I shall beseech God that it may please him to forgive our enimies persecutors and slanderers and to turn their hearts Deal not with them O Lord after their sins neither reward them after their iniquities Obj. 7. Besides your Oaths that are in your Letany there is a Prayer that our hearts cannot say Amen to for it is or seems at least to be very sinful The Prayer is this That it may please thee to preserve all that travel by land or water here we pray for Thieves Robbers and Pirats which ought not to be done All Women labouring of Childe here we pray for all Whores and Strumpets All sick persons and young children and to show thy pity upon all prisoners and captives here we pray for all the damned souls they being in prison and for the devils they being captives Answ. 1. The heart of man is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jerem. 17. 9. T is Domine bonus ego malus tu Pius ego Impius tu sanctus ego miser tu justus ego injustus tu lux ego eoecus tu vita ego mortuus Blessed is the man that watcheth alway From all blindness of heart from pride vain glory and hypocrisie from envy hatred and malice and from all uncharitableness good Lord deliver us Answ. 2. As we are to have no communication nor communion with Devils so neither are we to make supplication for them But we are bound to remember them that are in bonds as in bond with them and them that suffer adversity as if we our selves also were in the body Heb. 13. 3. The Whore her self when she is in labour ought to be prayed for though if you had not more of the Serpent than of the Dove you would not see her at all in this prayer So is a Thief also though he were going to be hanged for stealing or a Murtherer for Murthering and if the Lord will bless all that travel by Land and Water with his grace there will be no Robbers It is the desire of the Church That all Israel both temporally and eternally be saved Why dost thou condemn her for her charity Qualis unusquisque intus est taliter judicat exterius Kemp. True Christian charity thinketh no evil 1 Cor. 13. 5. Object 8. There are according to those directions given you concerning the reading of Lessons several Chapters to be read out of the Apocrypha in the Congregation where nothing should be read but Scripture Answ. 1. Should nothing be read in Churches but Scripture where then should we read Briefs Proclamations and Pattents for Collections which are appointed to be read in publick and upon the Sabbath-day too than which nothing doth more usually occurre and nothing less spoke against And yet if men did not delight in Controversies they might perceive that the Reading of those Chapters is left to the Ministers discretion Answ. 2. S●…int Paul commanding the Colossians Col. 4. 16. to let his Epistle be read to the Church of Laodicea commands them withal that they reade in their Church the Epistle from Laodicea which Epistle not being Canonical yet appointed by that unerring Apostle to be read in the Church proves the weakness of the Objection against Apocrypha for not being Scripture Answ. 3. There is a Calendar prefixed before the Book of Common Prayer and amongst the Lessons appointed for every day of the month there are some 30 Chapters out of the books of Wisdom Tobit Iudith Baruch and Ecclesiasticus to be read In the books of the Apocrypha there are many falsities much non-sence things that agree not with Scripture and many things that agree not with it self Whether the Chapters that are appointed to be read contain in them any of these I have neither purpose nor leasure to search yet since most of them are out of the books of Wisdom and Ecclesiasticus we shall suppose the best but suppose the worst there is none to be read or at least no great fear that their reading will do much hurt except the people will repair whether their Minister will or no twice every day to their Church or Chappel to hear service that which I see no great reason for Ministe●…s to be very much afraid of For if the people do not so come they are not obliged to heed that Calendar Answ. 4. There is a Calendar prefixed before the Book of Common Prayer wherein the Lessons that are appointed to be read every Sabbath-day throughout the year are set down and in that there is only the first Chapter of the Book of Wisdom to be read wherein there is nothing but what favours of good so that according to the Common Prayer throughout the whole year there is but one Sunday that hath Apocrypha ordained for it and that is Whitsunday unless the Sabbath fall upon a Feast and that may bring or make a small alteration Many fear that the reading or hearing of Apocrypha in their Churches may do much hurt The first Chapter of Wisdom which is all cannot do hurt There is about this a great noyse and but small cause Answ. 5. There are two things that usually Ministers do in Churches 1. To observe Doctrines and 2. To exhort to Manners for observing and confirming of Doctrines the Scriptures are only to be used Article 6. of the Church of England For exhorting to manners Poets Heathens Philosophers are frequently cited there being in such Writers excellent documents and examples perswading to goodness and to a good life and for this the Apocrypha is appointed to be read viz. for exhortation to manners not confirmation of Doctrines Art 6. of the Church of England And indeed to me it is equally a sin to cite or speak sentences out of Seneca the Heathen in a Pulpit upon a Lords day or any other moral Author which is frequently done as it is to speak or read sixteen sentences of Philo the Jew or whoever was the Author of that book of Wisdom or Ecclesiasticus albeit it were oftner done Answ. 6. When you say that Apocrypha is not to be read I suppose you mean because it is humane inventions not the Word of God It is to be known that no more are Ministers Sermons there are in Sermons mens wit or invention exercised inframing Arguments in
drawing Corollaries applying those Arguments none of which in a proper sence are Scripture but so farre as they agree with and can be proved to be true by Scripture so farre we embrace them believe them practice them yet still never behold them as the Word of God so every Printed Sermon should be a Bible but as mens Exhortations suiting to the Word Look upon several Exhortations of the Apocrypha as no other particularly the first Chapter of Wisdome the only Chapter appointed to be read and thou mayst be satisfied Object 9. The Common Prayer is but in it self a heap of prayers collected out gathered and translated out of the Mass-Bo●… of the Church of Rome and therefore to be avoided as sinful Answ. 1. Take heed and beware that thou beest none of those bruit beasts Peter speaks of 2 Pet. 2. 12. speaking evil of those things they understand not Answ. 2. There are in thy English Bible several things many things that are in the mass-Mass-book yet keep thy Bible and throw it not away neither tear the leaves out as a Woman once toare a leaf out of her Bible as Popish for having the word Bishop written in it it being never awhit the worse the Sun may shine upon a Dung-hill and yet be clean the whole Bible may be put in ballads and yet the Word of God not the worse Answ. 3. It is not to be denied neither need any be ashamed to confess That there is much in the Common Prayer not to say all to be found in the Mass. The Papists in their Missal having with other Superstitious and often-times blasphemous expressions wound in many holy Hymns and Scriptural Songs as Mahomet did some things that either were in or agreeable to Scripture in his Alchoran which our Pious Composers of this Book the greatest Opposers of and burned for not compliance with Popery like wise Chymicks took away and what was good holy and either agreeable to or literally in the Scripture put together in this Book which by Supream Authority not as from the Mass but as from the infallible Word of God was thought profitable to the edification of the Church established and appointed in our publick Assemblies to be used and read And he that reads the whole Book of the Mass may know that there is as great difference between the Mass as it is used in Rome and the Common Prayer as used in England as there is between Ieroboams two Calves 1 Kings 12. 28. and Solomons twelve Oxen 1 Kings 7. 24. the one being absolutely forbidden as against the Law the other though never commanded in yet never disapproved by the Word of God his presence filling the place wherein they were his judgements falling upon the other where they stood They differ as Nebuchadnezzars musick unto his Idol and as Davids musick in Gods worship the one the three Children would not regard the other no holy Saint did ever oppose the one was to an Idol which was against the Law the other unto God not contrary to the Law ●…t King out of ambition invented the one the other out of De●…on brought in the other The one was Nebuchadnezzars's mind against God the other Davids mind for God the effect shewed that God hated the one and that God was well-pleased with the other For though it was not mentioned in the Law but a pure invention of Davids yet no Prophet before nor after the Captivity before Christ nor Apostle after him did ever in the least give a check to it or blame any Israelite for observing of it In a word there is ●…s great difference between the Mass and the Common Prayer as it is used in our Churches let him that readeth understand as there is between a Papist and a Catholick This being conformable to the Universal practice of the Universal Church in all Ages the other to the late practice of the particular Church of Rome in these last years Wo be to such as call evil good and good evil Isa 5. 20. Obj. 10. The Common-Prayer-book to those that are strong may appear to be lawful but we being weak in the faith and having tender consciences cannot submit to it and it was formerly took away by them whose consciences could not close up with it Ans. 1. What tender consciences some of those men had that took away the Common Prayer and they that lately persecuted the users of it is known to the World that now is and shall be known to all generations that are to come how tender of mens lives of the Christian profession of sinning against God the world is not so dull as not to apprehend Answ. 2. Because there is such discourses about tender consciences let it not trouble the Reader if we enlarge upon that The●…m And let us distinctly handle 1. The nature of conscience in general 2. The nature of this tender conscience in particular 3. The duty of him who hath such a conscience To let pass several distinctions and definitions of Schoolmen which are something obscure dark and intricate 1. The nature of conscience may be known by this description It is a faculty in the soul of man taking knowledge of and noting all his actions whether good or evil and accordingly approving or condemning It 's the souls Register as it remembers things it 's the souls Accuser as it reproves things it 's the souls Judge as it sentences the soul for things It may for a time sleep or be still and so not act as either of these yet at last it will awake and bite like a Serpent and sting like an Adder witness Iudas According to the light that this faculty receives of the nature of things is distinguished into a natural conscience and a suprrnatural the natural is that faculty that is only enlightned by natural reason and from rational principles holds this good and this evil is glad for doing this and sorry for doing that This the pure Heathen hath Rom. 2. 15. The supernatural is when the conscience or souls receives not only light from Reason but from Scripture and by that knows what is good or what is evil those that know not God know not what the Sabbath is they that know the Scripture do and their conscience will judge them if they do not performe what in that particular it requireth so doth not the conscience of the other 2. The nature of a tender conscience it 's a faculty in the faithful and religious soul perswading him to abstain from that the lawfulness of which he doth not fully apprehend upon the account of offending God Because we are speaking to Christians we suppose faith in him that is thus tender and in regard the conscience acts according to the apprehension it hath of things whether by Natural of Scriptural helps we define our conscience as perswading the soul to abstain and hindering the soul not mentioning those things that the conscience binds the soul to that being beside out purpose from acting