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A13854 Directions for a godly life especially for communicating at the Lord's table. Intended first for private vse; now publish'd for the good of those who desire the safty [sic] of their owne soules, and shall bee pleased to make vse thereof. By H. Tozer Mr of Arts, and fellow of Exceter Colledge in Oxford. Tozer, Henry, 1602-1650. 1628 (1628) STC 24161; ESTC S122218 43,206 213

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DIRECTIONS FOR A GODLY LIFE Especially for Communicating at the Lord's Table Intended first for private vse now publish'd for the good of those who desire the safty of their owne soules and shall bee pleased to make vse thereof BY H. TOZER Mr of Arts and Fellow of Exceter Colledge in Oxford Psal 69.33 Seke yee after God and your soule 〈◊〉 liue OXFORD Printed by WILLIAM TVRNER Printer to the famous Vniversity 1628. TO THE HONOVRABLE Gentleman Mr LORENZO CARY Sonne to the R. Honourable Vicount Faulkland Lord Deputy of Ireland WORTHY SIR SINCE the time that it first pleased your honourable Father to commend you vnto the religious government of this Colledge wherein you now liue your carriage hath beene so sweete louely that it hath wonne I dare say the heart of each member thereof to a readinesse of respecting this your goodnesse as in word so in deede according to their severall places and dignities Neither could I suffer my selfe standing in a more neare relation than any of the rest vnto you to come short in the performance of this office Wherefore I here offer vnto your religious meditation this ensuing treatise collected and composed first for private vse but now published not to gaine the applause of any from which my owne vnworthinesse sufficiently checkes mee but chiefely for these two respects first to testifie that loue which I both owe vnto you and am ready to make good Secondly and more principally to invite you to a due consideration of those holy duties therein contayned that by a seasonable knowledge of the same your actions may bee the more carefully ordered and God's name in the faithfull practise thereof more fully glorified The subiect is a matter not of humane learning but of God's service and thereof a parte without exception the greatest the due receiving of the holy Communion A duty I confesse better knowne then well considered and more often thought on then sincerely practis'd if it were not so bad actions would not bee so commonly priviledg'd by the greatnesse of the Agents as now they are but they to whom God hath giuen most honour here would ever thinke it their greatest glory to honour him most again by their faithfull service vnto him And good reason why they should if they remember that to whom God hath given most of them hee requireth most againe yea such who haue the precedency of others in place and dignity may do well to consider that in making a conscience of matters of Religion and leading their liues according to the rules thereof they doe not onely provide well for the salvation of their owne soules but giue a good occasion to others also while they happily provoke them to the practise of the same duties by their good examples which are ever held as liuely precepts and serue for a secret reproofe to an ingenuous inferiour when hee shall see himselfe defectiue in that wherein his betters haue gone before him Let the Honourable Mighty thus remember how farre they shall honour God by a religious life and then they cannot but acknowledge that it is their glorious fredome to bee his humble Servants Others if they please may take notice of this perswasion and perhaps they would if I were not vnworthy to advise them but now I speake to you alone whom I well knowe willing as freely to make vse of others helpe so truely to accept of this from mee Your owne happinesse you must confesse with thanks to God that by his providence you liue in that Society whose Religion is as firme as vndefiled where you cannot say you want the rule either of louing precepts or exanple according vnto which you haue already ioyned with the rest in a religious communicating at the Lords Table My desire is to perswade you to a constant perseverance in what you haue so well begunne that so devoting your tender yeares with those which follow vnto the service of th' Almighty you may againe from him receiue and fully enioy his dayly blessing which doth ever attend on those that truely seeke him Some meditations which perhaps may serue for your direction I here present vnto your view in which I freely acknowledge almost nothing mine to prevent the censure of a curious Reader but onely the labour of composing this I now commend to you and you vnto the blessed providence of the most Highest resting ever Yours truely in the Lord HENRY TOZER DIRECTIONS FOR THE DVE RECEIVING OF THE HOly Communion CHAP. I. What a Sacrament is and how many there bee A Sacrament is an outward visible signe of an inward and invisible grace ordayned by God whereby hee doth seale vnto vs his covenant of grace made in the blood of Christ and wee againe testifie our faith and piety towards him so that it is both a signe in respect of the thing signified a seale in respect of the covenant thereby sealed vnto vs. The word sacrament doth properly signifie an oath wherby Souldiers bound themselues vnto their Generall whence it is taken to signifie that obligation whereby wee tye our selues to the blessed and sweete service of Iesus Christ for hereby wee as Christ's Souldiers first binde our selues by promise of obedience to fight vnder the Lords banner against the world the flesh and the divell Secondly we put on the cognisaunce and Armes the Colours and marke of Christ by professing our faith in him that so it may appeare vnto the world to whom wee doe belong Now Sacraments are of two forts First of the Old Testament which were 2. first Circumcision secondly the Passeouer The first was ordained for a signe of entrance into the Covenant the second for an assurance of confirmation of and continuance in the same both which are now abolished and in stead of them wee now haue the Sacraments of the New Testament which are likewise 2. first Baptisme answerable to Circumcision secondly the Lord's Supper to the Passeover both signified by that water blood which issued out of the side of Christ when it was peirced by the souldiers on the Crosse Of these the first is called the Sacrament of our Nativity or entrance because by it wee are assured that wee are receiued into the Covenant of Grace and so are regenerate belong to the flock of Christ the second is called the Sacrament of our growth perseverance whereby wee growe vp in Christ are assured that we shall be still kept in this estate So that both are necessary the one to assure vs of our entrance into the other of our continuance in the estate of Grace for although that Grace once conferr'd cannot bee lost yet our assurance doth often want strengthening by reasō of our manifold tēptations against which we are cōforted by the remembrance of Christ's death and passion which doth also teach vs why the Sacrament of Baptisme is receiued but once the Lord's Supper often because our birth is signified by our Baptisme we can
him it is the counsell of the Apostle 1. Cor. 11. who biddeth vs to examine then eate not goe away first examine then eate of this Bread drinke of this cup If thou say I had rather stay till the next opportunity that I may haue the more time to repēt cōsider that the longer thou stayest the more sinnes thou wilt run into and then it will bee so much the harder to repent as thou oughtest and besides that how do'st thou know whether God will giue thee grace and time to repent then or not hee hath promised indeede to haue mercy vpon a sinner at what time soeuer he shall repent but hee hath not promised to giue him grace to repent when he will Seeke the Lord therefore while hee offereth himselfe vnto thee that thou mayst finde mercy when thou seekest it Lastly some in a proud manner thus excuse or rather justifie their absence I doe already sufficiently beleeue whatsoeuer is proposed in the word of God and therefore what neede haue I to receiue this Sacrament so often as a seale to confirme my faith it doth no way conferre grace vnto mee and my faith is so firme that I perswade my selfe I neede not a seale to strengthen it so much as others doe whose faith is weaker wherefore I thinke that I may sometimes forbeare But knowe ô vaine man which thus disputest with thy God that this is Gods ordinance a principall part of his service which therefore ought diligently to to be performed though it did no way profit vs even because God had commanded it yea when wee haue done all those thinges which are cōmanded vs we must say that we are vnprofitable servants we haue done but that which was our duty to doe Luc. 17.10 Besides is thy faith so strong that it needs no further strengthening do'st thou not daily perceiue in thee a weakenesse of vnderstanding in matters of Piety Religiō a frailty in thy memory and a continuall disorder in thy affections if not know thus much that it is a misery to want but a greater misery not to be sensible of our wants this also knowe for a certaine trueth that when thou findest in thy selfe either none or at leastwise a small desire of hearing Gods word and receiuing the Sacraments know I say that there is surely some sinne or other in thee not well repented of which cloyeth thy soule that it cannot delight in those spirituall exercises Let vs therefore endeavour to come to the Lords Table as often as wee are invited and when wee doe come let vs take heede that wee come not for fashions sake or to please men or in any opinion of our own merit in this action for this is not a celebration but a prophanation of the Lords ordinance because herein wee serue not God but our selues which is a fearefull thing for God is not as man that hee should bee deceiued neither seeth he as man seeth for man judgeth onely according to the outward appearance but God searcheth the very heart reynes and will one day as certainly punish the prophaners of his ordinance as the contemners thereof Wherefore as wee ought in the first place to be fully perswaded of the necessity so should wee in the second by all meanes labour to come to the knowledge of the right manner of receiving which is the next thing to be considered CHAP. IIII. The Necessity of preparation HE which desires to receiue at the Lords Table in a right manner must make conscience of three duties which are necessarily to be performed 1 A diligent Preparation before 2 A seasonable Meditation in the time of receiuing 3 A religious practise after the same in our liues and conversations In the first as before in the matter of receiving we must take notice of a thinges First The Necessity 2. The right manner of Preparation The Necessity will plainely appeare if wee consider these 2. things 1. In whose presence it is that wee are to receiue 2. The danger which we bring on our selues by not being prepared As for the first we are to sit and feede in the presence of the Lord himselfe Now if any even the best of vs should bee invited by a King to his Princely table hee would bee carefull to present himselfe if he reverence his presence in the best manner that hee could putting on then especially if he haue any better than other his best apparell disposing all thinges in the most decent order that so he might be the better accepted if so with what feare and reverence should wee then approach vnto the Table of this King of Kinges when hee inviteth vs who stands there ready attended with his Angels to behold those which present themselues will soone espie out that man who shall dare to approach before him not having on his wedding garment and what can such expect but with the man in the Gospell a casting out into vtter darkenesse Matth. 22.12 Neither must wee thinke to deceiue the Lord with an hypocriticall out-side for hee looketh not to the outward gesture onely but to the invvard parts of the soule it is not so much a cleane hand or curious attire vvhich maketh vs accepted of God as a pure heart and a cleansed soule adorned vvith faith repentance vvee may for a time deceiue mortall men such as our selues but when the secrets of our hearts shall be made manifest then shall our hypocrisie as well as our negligence bee laid open to our destruction Let vs therefore humble our selues before God and prepare our selues aright that we may escape the danger which will otherwise fall vpon vs which is the second thing to bee considered in the Necessity of preparation The danger of not being prepared is particularly set forth vnto vs by considering the offence which wee herein commit and the reward thereof If we come vnprepared and so receiue vnworthily our offence is no lesse than to bee guilty of the Body and Blood of Christ as Saint Paul saith 1. Cor. 11.27 that is wee offer speciall disgrace and indignity vnto Christ in not receiving him with that reverēce which we ought which offence as it is in it selfe very hainous so it drawes on vs a fearefull punishment for the Prophet Ieremiah hath pronounced him accursed which doth the worke of the Lord deceitfully Ierem. 48.10 and if it be so in other things which are of lesse moment what can we expect for the abusing of this so weighty a matter The Apostle setteth downe at full the fearefulnes hereof when he saith 1. Cor. 11.29 that he which eateth and drinketh vnworthily eateth and drinketh his owne damnation than vvhich vvhat can bee more terrible neither is the Scripture silent in shevving vs the judgements of God vpon such offenders as vvee may plainely see both in the Old Testament in the suddaine death of Vzza for rash touching of the Arke and also in the Nevv in the binding hand foote for