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A61574 Occasional sermons preached by the Most Reverend Father in God, William Sancroft ... ; with some remarks of his life and conversation, in a letter to a friend. Sancroft, William, 1617-1693. 1694 (1694) Wing S561; ESTC R35157 79,808 212

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thy Hand be upon the Man of thy right Hand whom thou hast made so strong for thy self Keep him as the Apple of thine Eye Hide him under the shadow of thy Wings Let his Days be many and his Reign prosperous and under his shadow let both Church and State long flourish And let them be confounded and driven backward as many as have Evil Will at Sion To furnish out an Office for such daily Devotions 't is but to take your Psalter along with you in your Hand which is full of them But especially let me commend to you that Decad of Psalms which begins with the 54 th and so on which may seem to have been put together on purpose for such an Occasion This would be indeed effectually to transcribe holy David's Copy in this his Exemplary and ardent Devotion which is the second Duty requir'd in the Text to prepare us for the protection of God's Wing There is but one more behind and that is 3. Constant Perseverance in both the former In the two former you have seen Holy David putting himself under the shadow of God's Wings and making good his Refuge there by Acts of Faith and Devotion And being once there no Storm shall beat him off no Discouragement shall drive him away no Delay shall weary him out If God kills him 't is all one hee 'l trust in him still and die in his Arms For here he hath set up his Rest and Donec transierin●t he is steddily resolv'd his Refuge is and shall be here till these Calamities are over-past But here we must take heed of a great Mistake There are that hold the Donec in the Text too hard and stiff are too punctual and precise with God in it who will trust in him it may be and ply their Devotions just so long as till the Calamity be past But then on the sudden their Trust grows feeble and their Devotion cold and heartless No sooner deliver'd but like old Israel they forget God at the Sea even at the Red-Sea Use him like Themistocle's Planetrees under which Men run for shelter in Storm but the Shower once over they pluck off the Branches turn their Backs and away Nay but there is in Scripture Language an infinite and an interminable Donec which never expires He knew 〈◊〉 not till she brought forth Nay he never knew her In spight of Helvidius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Greek Church stile her A Virgin before and in and after the Birth of our Lord and for ever Ay that 's the Virgin 's Soul indeed that keeps ever close to her heavenly Spouse Not only runs under his Wings for Shelter when Calamities affright her saying Spread thy Skirt over me and then strays away again as soon as ever the flattering Calm and Sun-shine of Prosperity tempts her abroad As our Lord hath given us an everlasting Donec Lo I am with you saith he till the end of the World Not that he will leave us then but take us yet nigher unto himself and so we shall ever be with the Lord as the Apostle speaks So must we also have One for him of the same Latitude and Extension For ever under the Shadow of his Wings till this single Tyranny as in the old Translation till these Calamities as in the New or as the Hebrew implies till all and every of our Calamities be overpast Both before and in and after Calamities still under the Shadow of God's Wings While they last 't is In the Shadow of thy Wings will I trust and when they are past 't is In the Shadow of thy Wings will I rejoyce that 's all the Difference As the Scenes shift our Devotion must improve and Advance too till our Prayer be heighten'd into Praise as I trust e're long it will be our Hope swallowed in Enjoyment and our Trust sublimated and made to flowre up into Joy and Triumph When the same God that rais'd David from the Cave to the Throne shall translate us also from the Shadow of his Wings into the Light of his Countenance To the Beatifical Vision whereof he of his Mercy bring us who hath so dearly bought it for us Jesus Christ the Righteous To whom with thee O Father and God the Holy Ghost be ascribed of us and all the Creatures in Heaven and Earth Blessing Honour Glory and Power both now and for evermore Amen FINIS A CATALOGUE OF SOME BOOKS Printed for and are to be Sold by Thomas Bassett at the George near St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet-street A Practical Discourse concerning Christian Conversation purposely Written to Vindicate and Improve the Religious Societies of late Years erected in the Cities of London Glocester c. By Philopatris and Philadelphus Members of the Church of England Now in the Press An Essay concerning Human Understanding with large Additions By Mr. Iohn Lock Newly Reprinted in Folio A Collection of Cases and other Discourses lately Written to the Communion of the Church of England by some Divines of the City of London to which is prefixed a Catalogue of all the Cases and Discourses with the Authors Names together with three Tables containing 1. The Contents of each Discourse 2. The Scriptures Illustrated and Occasionally explained 3. The several Authors cited and examined The English Examiner Or A Spelling Book Containing 1. Rules for Spelling Reading and Pronouncing of our English Tongue by way of Question and Answer 2. Words from One to Six or Seven Syllables both common Names and also proper divided according to the Rules 3. Words alike in Sound but of different Sense and Signification 4. Numeral Letters and Figures the Names of the Books in Scripture the Months and Quarters in the Year English words contracted and the Use of great Letters Lastly is added the Practice of Reading or the way of Teaching to Read by Verses that have Words therein only of one Syllable By Richard Brown late English Writing-Master of Rugby in the County of Warwick but now of the City of Coventry An Enquiry into the Causes of Diseases in general and the Disturbances of the Humours in Man's Body wherein the Nature of the Blood of the Air and of a Pestilential Constitution are briefly considered together with some Observations shewing wherein the Venom of Vipers particularly that of the English Adder doth consist By Sanford Walferstan M. A. Remarks made in Travels through France and Italy with many Public Inscriptions Lately taken by a Person of Quality An Essay of Transmigration in Defence of Pythagorus Or a Discourse of Natural Philosophy By Mr. Bulstrode The Young Clerks Tutor Enlarged Being a most useful Collection of the best Presidents of Recognizances Obligations Conditions Acquittances Bills of Sale Warrants of Attorneys c. As also all the Names of Men and Women in Latin with the day of the Date the several Sums of Money and the addition of several Trades and Employments in their proper Cases as they stand in the Obligations together