Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n church_n prayer_n set_v 2,517 5 5.9211 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A56677 A letter of the Bishop of Chichester to his clergy Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1690 (1690) Wing P820; ESTC R19118 3,933 8

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A LETTER OF THE Bishop of CHICHESTER TO HIS CLERGY LONDON Printed for Ric. Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1690. A LETTER OF THE Bishop of CHICHESTER TO HIS CLERGY My Dear Brethren I Send you this in pursuance of His Majesty's Letter that was sent to me by My Lord Bishop of London which according to my duty I have not long ago transmited to all you the Clergy of my Diocese I do bless God that has put into His Majesty's Heart such a Zeal for this our Church and such a sense of the ways that are most proper for preserving it and which by the Blessing of God will certainly do it For if the Pastors and Guides of the Church of all Ranks do adorn their Profession with a good Conversation and apply themselves seriously and zealously to the Duties of their Function the Church will both shine and prosper in spite of all the opposition that can be made to it from its enemies The least blemish in a Church man's Life as it is searched out and observed by all men so it not only lessens the force of all his other Labours but it weakens very much the credit of the whole Church which is often judged by the Errors and Disorders of every one of its Pastors Yet it is not enough for men in Holy Orders to be free from those crying sins which are odious to all Christians but are to be detested out of measure in Church-men It is a monstrous thing to see one of that Holy Profession give himself to the excesses of Eating and Drinking or other Sensual Appetites to be guilty of Injustice or Lying of ungoverned Passion or Swearing of Malice or filthy Avarice These things ought not to be named but with detestation among us We ought not only to be blameless and harmless but to shine as lights in the World and to shew in our lives that to which we exhort our People in our Sermons being Patterns to the Believers in Word in Conversation in Charity in Faith and Purity and giving attendance to Reading to Exhortation and to Doctrine that in so doing we may both save our selves and also them that hear us Consider often what a great Account you have to make to God for the Souls committed to your charge Remember and read over frequently the Vows that you made to God at your Ordination and the Charge that was then given you and examine your selves frequently whether you do observe these or not Think how Sacred a Trust that of Souls is which the Son of God has purchased with his own Blood and how severely he will reckon with you if through your ill Example bad Doctrine or the other neglects of your duty those Souls perish for which he died Think it not enough barely to read Prayers or perform other Divine Offices among them You must go often among them to instruct exhort admonish or reprove them as there is occasion for it You must instruct the Youth visit the Sick reprove Offenders and reconcile such Differences as happen at any time to create Quarrels among your People and all this you must do with Zeal and Affection And in particular you ought to warn your People of the heavy Judgments of God which the sins of the Land give us just cause to apprehend and that the rather since God has spared us so long whilst he has visited so many Nations round about us in so terrible a manner and has given us so great a measure of the light of his Gospel and so long a course of Temporal as well as Spiritual Blessings And frequently set forth to them the heinousness of such sins as you find do most abound among them whether they be the crying ones related to in the Acts of Parliament lately sent you or others You ought to represent to them the high contempt done to God when Men make their Bodies which ought to be Temples for God to dwell in by his Spirit the members of a Harlot and the Indignity done their own Natures when by the excesses of Drinking a Man has changed himself into a Beast You ought to shew them what a horrible Affront it is to Almighty God to profane his Holy Name by rash and vain Swearing and what a dreadful thing it is to swear falsly even in common Discourse but much more when it is before a Judge You ought to set often before your People the great wickedness of Lying and Slander of Falshood and Injustice and of all Cheating and Oppression and that in all cases of wrong done their Neighbours there is no repentance that is acceptable to God but that which is accompanied with restitution or reparation as far as the Party can possibly make it You are often to represent to your People the indispensable necessity of true holiness without which no Man can see God and without which their believing a true Faith and their being of a true Church cannot serve them in any stead For we are assured from the Word of God that not only Idolaters but Fornicators and Adulterers Thieves Covetous Persons Drunkards Revilers and Extortioners cannot enter into the Kingdom of God Put them often in mind of the importance of the Word Reformed Churches which imports that as our Doctrine and Worship are by the blessing of God Reformed so our Lives ought also to be Reformed otherwise all the advantages that we have of light and truth beyond other Churches will rise up in Judgment against us if we do not live suitably to them But above all things study to possess your people with a deep sense of the duty that they owe to God their Maker and to Jesus Christ their Saviour that so they may apply themselves to the exercises of Devotion in secret to the frequenting the Publick Worship and chiefly to the receiving the Sacrament with that serious disposition of mind which becomes such Holy Performances that so they may delight in going together to the House of God And in order to their doing this aright infuse into them a great reverence for the Lord's Day as a time separated from the common business of life for their attending on the Worship of God and such other Religious Exercises as may both increase their knowledge and their sense of Divine Matters and that therefore they ought not to satisfie themselves with going to Church and assisting publickly in the Service of God but that they set themselves more to Prayer on that day and to the reading of Scriptures or other good Books both apart and together in their Families that so they may grow up in Grace and in the Knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ These things you must open to your People frequently in season and out of season both at Church and from house to house And I charge you by all the Authority that I have over you by the Zeal that you bear to the Church of England and as you desire to have