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A62277 Concio ad clerum a sermon preach'd to the clergy at the arch-deacon's visitation, held at Huntington, May 19, 1696 ... : to which is added a preface to the clergy / by Sam. Satwell ... Saywell, Samuel, 1651 or 2-1709. 1696 (1696) Wing S799; ESTC R23166 26,607 48

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want of this divine Spirit of Zeal for God's honour and the Salvation of his Peoples Souls in too many of our Profession that hath occasioned our reputation to sink and our calling to be meanly thought of especially by the viler sort of Men. For we should remember that Christ our Elder Brother dyed and is gone to Heaven and that he hath left the care of his Spouse the Church unto us his Ministers and he expects that we should be zealous in raising up Children unto him and to preserve his name and honour in the World Now if we refuse to do this any of us 't will be but just if she whom we should have espoused do spit in our face and our shooe be loosed and we be marked with disgrace as Moses hath mystically taught us in the Law Deut. 25. and you know Christ himself hath told us in the Gospel what that Salt is fit for that hath lost its savour So that our Interest our Honour and I may say all that should be most near and dear unto us and that concerns either this life or another are bound up in the sincere and consciencious discharge of the seral Offices we have taken upon us And I believe our good Examples in all kind of Christian Practice are every whit as much if not more necessary than our good instructions especially in the Age we live in wherein knowledge abounds and good Books are every where to be met with but truly good and pious Examples are very rare We are bound by our places Men think to speak and teach the best things and if we do not put in practice whatsoever we teach and press upon others all are lookt upon but as words of course And indeed if they come but from the tip of our own Tongues we must never expect they should sink deep down into other Mens Hearts and with what face can we press every Christian duty upon other men and endavour to plant in them every spiritual grace if these are not first exemplified in our own lives and deeply rooted in the bottom of our own Hearts And how can we intercede with God for others if we are not well reconciled to him and do not constantly live in some good Friendship with him our selves And in a word we can perform no office with full acceptance to God true comfort to our selves or any great benefit to the Church if we are not heartily Zealous for our Lord's honour and service And now though I owe much Apology for what I have said already yet I can scarce forbear saying many things more on this Subject but I must remember my time who I am and to whom I speak I shall therefore proceed to say but a very few words more touching the Prudence which is likewise highly requisite in Persons of our Profession I shall thankfully release you and perfectly relieve your injured Patience We are all sensible that Zeal without Knowledge is blind and dangerous that 't is like Fire out of its place and we have seen enough of the mischiefs of it of late years and what havock it has made in the World and Zeal even in the best cause if it be not mixed with Prudence and Discretion is of little or no use neither and it may be questioned whether it doth not do more harm than good And because misinformed Zeal hath done so much harm and indiscreet Zeal doth so little good it hath come to pass that all kind of Zeal though never so wise and Christian is counted by too many as a ridiculous thing and is almost every where quite laughed out of Coun tenance and not only a Zealot in any cause but almost any one that is Zealous in Religious matters signifies now a days little better than either a dangerous or a foolish Person But it should be marked that this hath happen'd to the exceeding great dammage of true Religion and to the no less encouragement of all kind of Schism and Profaneness and by this means the Devil hath gotten an incredible advantage over the Souls of Men. But this distemper which endangers the very life of Christianity amongst us can no otherwise be cured than by a more unanimous truly Christian and prudent Zeal of the Clergy For Prudence is that universal and supereminent Virtue that makes all other Virtues and Graces effectual for the obtaining their ends and it gives reputation and honour to whatsoever is truly good and commendable in our whole behaviour 't is this Cardinal Virtue of Prudence that enable us to judge of things according to their own natures and tendences whether they be like to be good or evil hurtful or prositable to the common cause of true Religion and of their several degrees and measures either way it teacheth us to judge of Persons according to their various prejudices tempers distempers inclinations interests and abilities that we may make the best and wisest use of them we can to the profiting themselves and to the doing the Church of God the greatest service For all men have their several gifts and abilities and there are searce any now a-days without their prejudices defects and failings in one kind or other which must be considered and also be allowed for by every prudent person that knows how to treat with and use all men to the best advantage Prudence likewise teacheth us to guess aright at the most likely events and consequences of things whereby we may avoid many evils and inconveniencies which foolish conceited heedless and obstinate Persons commonly fall into Lastly Prudence teacheth us to discern the fittest and properest times and seasons for the doing of the best things For that which may be easily accomplished at one time cannot be brought to pass without the greatest difficulties and hazards imaginable at another However your over-wary and prudential Men too often omit all opportunities of mending any thing under the notion or pretence rather of its being a very improper time to do it now but this is only when their spiritual Zeal is not equally matched with their Worldly wisdom Hence it is very manifest that both these I mean Zeal and Prudence must meet together where any notable and greatly profitable good works can be expected And as Prudence is to direct in all practical matters whatsoever to the making of them successful so more particularly it should teach us to understand the feveral genius's and prejudices of all the Adverfaries of our Church that we may be sure to give them as little offence as possible may be and that we may be better able to stop their mouths abate their Calumnies and wear off their false Notions of us and to win them over by degrees if it may be to the Peace and Unity of the Church and if that cannot be done however our behaviour should be such that whosoever is of the contrary part may have no evil thing to say of us And to this purpose we should remember the blind