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A95721 Church reformation, a discourse pointing at some vanities in divine service. Delivered in two sermons at Bridgnorth: Sept. 30. 1660. Being the Lords Day; and the time of the assizes held there for the county of Salop. By Mich: Thomas, rector of Stockton in the same county. Thomas, Michael, rector of Stockton. 1661 (1661) Wing T968; Thomason E1055_17; ESTC R203930 25,323 52

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Paul before-mentioned we may make our selves lyable to the wrath of the King which as Solomon says is as the roaring of a Lion yea we may make our selves lyable to that which St. Paul terms Damnation an heavy word and the Lord incline all our hearts to such a prudent and conscionable obedience both to his own Commands and the Kings that we may never feel the weight of it The second general Part. The Caution For they consider not that they do evil Have ye yet one minutes patience more I hope ye have and indeed there needs not much more for the discussion of this part Solomon here points at a palpable and very dangerous piece of Folly As indeed what can be more foolish then for a man when he doth evil to think he doth well And what can be more dangerous then to dishonour God while we think we serve him It is an heavy word that of Solomon Who so turneth away his ear from hearing the Law even his Prayer shall be an abomination Prov. 28. 9. and that is a fea●ful state Let but a sinner against Gods and the Kings Commandments retire into some private place and there sit down and bethink himself and say What shall I do to be saved Righteousness I have none my whole life hath been as it were one continued transgression I have in an Hypocritical way come often to the House of God and heard many Sermons and observed many Fasts but my heart was not right towards God it went after covetousness my pretended zeal was cruel and bloody and I served my self while I bore the world in hand that I was a servant of Christs All my Religion lay in hearing but I had no obedience My practice was not conformable to my pretences and now what will become of me Should I betake my self to prayer and pour out my guilty soul in supplications Solomon tells me That they would be but the Sacrifice of Fools that my prayer would be an abomination that the Lord would cast it out as a filthy thing So that I am in great danger to lye under the guilt of sin and the wrath of God for ever Let I say a sinner I mean one that hath been more ready to hear then to obey but argue his own case with his own soul and he will quickly see his folly and with tears acknowledge that he hath done evil that there hath been iniquity even in his holy things and there remaineth nothing for him but a fearful expectation of vengeance to come But I would not close my discourse with such a sad note as this neither dare I tell you that the yoak of the Christian Religion is easier then it is You have had the Nature of Divine Worship represented to you both for the Form and the Matter of it The Form I place in those Reverential postures and gestures of the outward Man The Matter in an obedience to divine Commands and to the Kings so far forth as they are not repugnant to the Laws of God nor injoin any thing which is unlawful for or unworthy of a Christian And I beseech you to think of it by a speedy resolution for new and better obedience secure and lay in a stock of comfort for your poor souls against the coming of the great Day of the Lord. If hereafter ye shall come rightly disposed and prepared to this House of Prayer the Lord according to his promise will meet you and bless you and make you joyful in it He will give you the comforts and the graces of his blessed Spirit to strengthen and guide you in the way wherein you should go and at your end receive you into that other House of his not made with hands which is eternal in the Heavens For which the Lord of his Mercy prepare us Amen Amen FINIS To the Honou●able Sir Christopher Turner Knight One of the BARONS OF HIS Majesties Exchequer My Lord AMong those many mercies which our good God in the happy Restoration of his sacred Majesty hath poured upon this unworthy Nation it is look'd upon by some pious and judicious persons as none of the least yea rather as one of the greatest that his Majesty hath placed such Iudges over us who understand both Law and Gospel and are able not only to administer Iustice and Iudgement to the people in their Civil Causes but to be guides and examples to them in their devotions and addresses to God It was no small comfort to me being by the Providence of God called to this service and directed to this argument that I found your Lordship such a practical Auditor recommending my mean discourse to the better consideration of the people by your exemplar reverence in the House of God And I have the sooner digested the Obloquy which was cast upon these weak pieces when I saw the duty which they pointed at Reverence in Divine Worship was so well known and so evidently performed beside your self by so many learned and pious and honourable persons Many and sore were the evils which lay upon this Church of England in our late troubles and although our chief cordolium arose that we see some of the fundamentals of our Religion undermin'd and shaken it could not but beget some sighs and sad thoughts in us to hear the circumstantials so decryed and despised as if Divine Worship consisted only in our hearts and spirits and it had been superstition in any respect to have glorified God with our bodies It was an ingenuous concession of Mr Calvin in the case of Ceremonies that if they were few in number easie to be observed and clear in their signification they might juvare rudiorum imperitiam assist the weakness of the ruder sort of people and that they would conduce Christum illustrare to make Christ better known to them And certainly the devout and reverend servants of God in the various and humble postures and gestures of their bodies in Divine Worship have no other design but to testifie that awful sence which they have of an extraordinary presence of God in Holy Assemblies by them to instruct and edifie the ignorant and to prepare them for their more solemn approaches to the Throne of grace It was judiciously said by a late learned man that reverence was the pale of Religion if that pale be broken down the Roes and the Hinds of the field as Solomon calls them weak and unstable souls will break out and wander into profaneness and Atheism and in a short time forget that God whom they see worship'd in such a sleight and homely manner Wherefore we have cause to bless the Lord that notwithstanding the Sectaries like wild Boars were so long foraging in his Vineyard which he had planted here amongst us and had well neer laid it waste by destroying the Dressers and rooting out those goodly plants of Order and Decency and Vniformity he hath yet preserved an holy seed who know him and fear him and come with hearts and bodies to sanctifie him at what time or in what places soever they draw neer to him It is the joy of our hearts notwithstanding we live so far remote from the Imperial City to hear of the signal reverence of his Sacred Majesty in holy Worship and it is our wish that his pious example may have such an influence upon the Nation that this Church of England which was so lately blackned by her own intestine troubles may recover her former comeliness and become once more a praise on the Earth Our expectations of this happiness are somewhat raised since we see the Episcopal Chairs and the Seats of Iudicature fill'd with such eminent persons who have given so ample testimony of their Loyalty to their King and their constancy to their Religion My Lord I am a poor stranger to you I had not the happiness to my best remembrance ever to see your face till I met you in the House of God and afterward received from your Lordship that more then sufficient reward a very candid signification of your acceptance of my well-meant labours And I humbly and heartily congratulate to you your Honour that by the favour of your Prince you shine in the Orb of Iustice and are such an illustrious and yet benevolent star in that Now glittering Constellation Good luck have you with your Honor and may you ride on prosperously as you have begun judging the Tribes of England in Truth and Meekness and Righteousness and may he whose name is The Councellour be continually assistant to you may you grow old honourable in the service of your Country and your King and your God and then when your Change shall come your comfort and assurance will be so much the greater that you shall be translated and adscited into the number of those who shall sit upon Thrones judging the Tribes of Israel These hopes and wishes shall be constantly and fervently seconded by the prayers of My Lord your most humbly devoted servant Mich. Thomas