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A61499 Several short, but seasonable discourses touching common and private prayer relating to the publick offices of the church / by a divine of the Church of England. Steward, Richard, 1593?-1651. 1684 (1684) Wing S5525; ESTC R7767 35,778 130

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The first part of which charge is 1. Take heed to your selves To you my Brethren of the Clergy is this charge more strictly given then to the Laity For to the people God hath appointed Pastors who are commanded in the text to take heed to the charge committed to them But who shall feed and guide the Shepherds who shall watch over the Watchmen or teach the Teachers Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt have lost his savour wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast out and troden under foot of men Mat. 5. 13. 2. Take heed to your selves is the first part of the charge And secondly to your Flock The order observed in this Double Charge is the next thing observable which is the same observed by our Lord himself in his charge to S. Peter and in him to all Pastors of the Church saying Luc. 22. 32. When thou art converted then afterward strengthen thy Brethren and Iohn 21. 15. Simon son of Ionas lovest thou me and if so it then follows Feed my Sheep Implicitly commanding all Pastors of his Flock First to be themselves truly converted unto God and their souls inflamed with the sacred fire of Divine Love and then they may hope that their pains will be successful for the feeding and strengthening the Sheep of Christ That rule of Righteousness and Charity which is the sum of the second Table of the Law Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self commands this order to be observed To love thy self aright in the first place and then thy Neighbor as thy self St. Bernard thus bespeaks every Shepherd of souls Tu frater cui nondum est firma satis propria salus cui Charitas adhuc nulla est aut adeo tenera arundinea ut omni statuicedat omni credat spiritui omni circumferatur vento doctrine quanam dementia quaeso aliena curare aut ambis aut aquiescis And upon Cant. 1. 6. They have made me the keeper of the Vineyards but mine own Vineyard have I not kept he severely checks and reproves himself that he had taken on him the Cure of of other mens souls having not sufficiently cared for and cured his own Et miror I do much wonder saith he at the Impudence of those persons that thrust themselves to be Labourers in the Lords Vineyard whilst their own Vineyard is overgrown with Bryars and thorns The Leper under the Law was commanded to have a covering upon his upper lip Lev. 13. 43. ut non docere alios praesumat saith Hesychius that no man presume to open his lips in the Congregation for the instruction of others who is himself infected with the Leprosy either of sinsulness or error for non est cadentis alium erigere Plutarch It is not for a man that lies in the dirt to raise up another thence not for a man that is a sleep in his sins to awake others from that spiritual sleep of death That Proverb remembred by our Lord. Physitian heal thy self Luc. 4. 23. 18. chiefly appliable to the Physitian of souls who must begin at home if he will work any cure upon the Souls of others 3. But this is not all for thirdly the Cure of a Pastors soul is a more difficult task as being to be perfected in a higher degree then ordinarily can be expected from any of his Flock For as our office of Priesthood is more high more emment more holy so should our Conversation be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 St. Chsysostom De sacerdotio As Angels above men as Shepherds above their flock as Masters above their Scholars so should a Bishop a Priest a Pastor excel and transcend the people in wholsome doctrine and holiness of life so the great Gregory Tantum debet actionem populi actio transcendere praesulis quantum distare solet a grege vita Pastoris with much more to the same purpose De cura Pastorali A book which was once translated by the wisest and greatest of our Saxon Princes King Alfred and by him commended to the Clergy of this Nation and a happy Clergy should we be an holy Priesthood if the Instructions in that Golden Book were well observed amongst us 4. Take heed to your selves and to all the Flock and both these joyntly and severally To your selves As to the Innocence and Holiness of your lives as becometh good Christians And to your Flock as Shepherds and Guides of souls Under the Law the Priests and Prophets of the Lord are frequently called the Angels of the Lord of hosts Iud. 2. 1. Mal. 27. And under the Gospel the Angels of the Church of Christ 1 Cor. 11. 10. Rev. 2. 1. 8. 12. And as we read of the Angels on Iacobs Ladder ascending and descending from heaven Gen. 28. 12. so the Priests of the Lord should first take heed to themselves by ascending with the Angels into heaven having their hearts and affections their meditation and Conversation in heaven Phil. 3. 20. And withal take heed to the flock by descending with the Angels from heaven enriched with the word of Life breaking unto them that bread which cometh down from heaven and giveth life unto the world John 6. 33. But this joynt charge is sadly disjoyn'd and perverted by such as take heed to themselves indeed but 't is not with the Angels to ascend but descend only groveling in the dust and wallowing in the mire of Luxury Riot and Excess Pride and Coverousness the pomps and vanities of the world and the sinful lusts of the flesh which every one even the meanest of their Flock hath solemnly abjured when by holy Baptism admitted into the Fold of Christ. By such as take heed to themselves but 't is not in a spiritual but carntl sense who will look narrowly to themselves as to their worldly concerns their Revenue and Income but are to careless to the spiritual concerns both of themselves and their Flock Who seek their own not the things which are Iesus Christ Phil. 2. 21. Caring more for their Families at home then for the Family of Christ more for their bodily then for their spiritual relations providing better for their natural heirs then their spiritual successors in their respective places And in a word by all such as mind more the Benefice then the office more the Fleece then the Flock All such do falsly wrest and wickedly pervert this double charge of the great Visitor in the Text Take heed to your selves and to your Flock To your selves by being examples of holiness to your Flock And to your Flock as Shepherds to feed and guide them as Fathers to admonish and reprove them and as Mothers to nourish and cherish them For these are the four Essentials of a faithful Pastor Holiness of life soundness of Doctrine Christian courage Christian Charity 5. To all the Flock not to the flock at random not to this or that particular Sheep that fawns upon the Shepherd nor
affirms the necessity of this Prayer before Sermon saying That Queen Esther prayed for the temporal safety of her Nation before she adventured to speak before the King Ahasuerus that God would be pleased to put into her mouth congruous words How much more ought we to pray for the like gift when we are to speak for the eternal salvation of souls in the Word and Doctrine August de Doct Christiana And again saith he When the hour is come to preach before he opens his mouth let him lift up his thirsting soul unto God Answ. It is undoubtedly a laudable practice for every Preacher to pray for the Divine Assistance in his Sermons to the People And this not only in the publick prayers of the Church but in private also betwixt God and his own soul and this as the Father directs before he opens his mouth in publick And such was Queen Esther's prayer in private before she publickly spake to the King which makes rather against than for the private prayer in publick for and with the whole congregation St. August could not be guilty of any such practice for it was against his judgment being himself one of the Two Hundred Fathers of that Milevitan Councel wherein it was decreed that no prayer should be us'd in publick but such as were approv'd in the Synod Sometimes this Father did conclude his Sermon with an Exhortation conceived in form of a Prayer e g. Conversi Turning unto the Lord God Father Almighty let us render him all possible thanks beseeching him of his great mercy that he would vouchsafe to hear our prayers and expell the Enemy from having any influence upon our thoughts and desires words and actions that he would increase our faith govern our minds fill us with spiritual cogitations and at last bring us to everlasting happiness through Iesus Christ which is not so much a Prayer as an Invitation to Prayer suitable to the Form prescribed in the Canon of our Church Object 11. The liberty or private prayer in publick is the way to make an able Ministry whilst thus they are put on to exercise and improve their Ministerial gifts and graces Answ. T is rather the way to make a Licentious Fanatick Brain-sick Ministry and in process of time no Ministry at all for from this practice it is that so very many unlearned unstable souls have taken up the trade and proved as eminent at least as well approved of by the people for their gift of Prayer as the most learned of their Tutorers therein And whosoever shall impartially weigh and without prejudice consider it he may observe that this private prayer in publick both in Church and at home is the very life and soul of that Schism and Division which is still so perniciously kept up in this Church T is hereby maintained more than by preaching and disputes T is from hence that Parties do call their Leaders Godly Ministers and themselves the godly Brethren the children that cry Abba Father the chosen and familiar friends of God from their over-saucy and familiar converse with God This is that great Idol whom all the world of Non-conformists on this side the pale of the Roman Church adore and worship crying down the goodly frame of Gods worship in his Church under the notion of Idolatry Superstition and Will-worship that every one may set up his Idols in his own heart follow the sway of their own imaginations to be guilty themselves of that Will-worship which they falsly impute to the Church of Christ Upon this Rock many thousands of Souls have suffered shipwrack who have been otherwise piously inclined For being taken with holy language religious tone and sceming zeal of this or the other person in their private and conceived prayers they have in respect thereof slighted and undervalued even the Celestial Prayer of God the Son all the divinely inspired prayers of God the Holy Ghost recorded in Holy Writ with all the devout and excellent Prayers of the Church of Christ which are framed after the pattern prescribed by our Lord commanded by the higher Powers used by the devout people of God in all Ages and whereby many thousand triumphant Saints in Heaven have pray'd themselves into that blissful place of Eternal Glory After all this it would be considered That as every error in Religion is very prolifick in bringing forth many others of the same mishapen stamp and nature so this erroneous way of divine worship the use of a private Prayer in a publick Congregation is also productive of many mistakes and falshoods and deformed ways of worship in the management thereof And 1. Such private Prayers in publick are generally erroneous in the length of them For that Long Prayers are unlawful is apparent First Because they are prohibited by our Lord Mat. 6. 7. When ye pray use not vain repetitions which cannot be understood of the same prayer repeated which is falsly objected against the prayers of the Church for so prayed our Lord himself and his example surely contradicts not his Doctrine whose Prayer when most earnest in his Desires was the same three times repeated and a very short prayer also Mat. 26. 44. By vain repetitions then must be meant the repetitions of the same thing in other words For First to use multitude of words and variety of expressions in prayer is vain i. e superfluous impertinent and to no purpose since our desires may and ought to be expressed in few words and pertinent Secondly such are generally vain i. e. empty and insignificant that have more noise than weight more sound than sense serving only to fill up the time to amuse the minds and tickle the itching ears of the Hearers That such kind of long Prayers are here forbidden by our Lord is manifest Secondly From the parallel Text quoted in the Margin Eccles. 5. 2. Be not rash with thy mouth and let not thy heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in Heaven and thou upon Earth therefore let thy words be few And this Text in the margin quotes another to the same purpose Prov. 10. 19. In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin but he that refraineth his lips is wise Thirdly From the custom of the Heathen as it follows Use not vain repetitions as the Heathen do It was the manner of the Heathen saith the ordinary Gloss out of Cyprian to endeavour rather to be eloquent than devout in their prayers and to be loud and clamorous rather than fervent and zealous And example whereof we have 1 Kings 18. 27. where Elijah mocks the Priests of Baal calling upon their Pagan Deities Cry aloud for he is a God either he is talking or he is pursuing or he is in a journey or peradventure he is asleep and must be awaked And accordingly they cryed aloud thinking as our Saviour here saith that they should be heard for their much speaking And therefore as it follows v. 18. Be not like unto
of Bidding Prayer And when King Iames of blessed memory turn'd those Injunctions into Canons his Law runs Canon 55. That Ministers should move the People to joyn with him in Prayer viz. in this Form of Bidding Prayer Ye shall pray for Christs Catholick Church c. concluding always with the Lords Prayer Now let any indifferent man judge Are Exhortations proper Forms of Prayer Nay let a discerning man consider it well and it will appear that things there prudently spoken by way of Exhortation and Narration would prove very absurd in Prayer How fond would it appear to tell the great GOD of Heaven of the Kings most Excellent Majesty our Sovereign Lord Charles by the Grace of God King of England c. or as some do oft tell GOD of such a Lord Earl of such a Place and Baron of another and of his Majesties Honourable Privy Councel and his very good Lord c. And yet when we do but exhort them to joyn their Prayers such Clauses may not be unfit I can scarce think of any other way to defend them and yet t is true that this Form is there viz. Can. 55. call'd Prayer before Sermon and so it is because we then say together with the Preacher the Lords Prayer to those very purposes he exhorts And they well know who know Divinity that all kinds of Prayer are reducible to that holy Form but it follows not that the Preacher's Exhortation is a Prayer for that he then speaks not at all to God himself but to the People Indeed upon an occasion extraordinary it is a Prayer of no ordinary composition and therefore call'd the Form of Bidding Prayer both by a reform'd King and a very glorious Queen and yet de facto misus'd by an itching Puritanical party at first no doubt by Cunning and Design and afterwards as I verily think for the most part by a mistake of that bad end to which it drove or by inadvertency of the Law But it is most apparent that such forbidden Prayers are an especial means to eat out the whole English Liturgy A DISCOURSE Of the Difference betwixt Long Prayers prohibited and Continuance in Prayers commanded When thou prayest thou shalt not be as the Hypocrites c. Matth. 6. 5. OXFORD Printed by L. Lichfield Printer to the University for Richard Sherlock Bookseller In the Year 1684 A Discourse of the Difference betwixt Long Prayers prohibited and coutinuance in Prayers commanded THey who are true members of Christ's Church below are conform to the glorious Saints in Heaven above they do the will of God on Earth as t is in Heaven and that 's undoubtedly the way to Heaven We cannot possibly lose our way thither whilst we follow their steps who are thither gone before us Those Triumphant Saints in Heaven rest not day nor night saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty Whereunto conforms the man after Gods own heart saying O Lord God of my salvation I have cryed day and night before thee Our Lord commends it as a duty incumbent that men ought always to pray and by his Apostle commands it positively Pray without ceasing Giving thanks always Praying alway with all Prayer and Supplication But these Examples and Commands are not so to be understood as if we should do nothing else but pray which was an old Heresy of the Messalians and Euchites long since condemned by the Church of Christ as being a thing impossible to pray without ceasing in the bare literal sense because this corruptible body presseth down the soul and corporal necessities do call for supply Neither yet that we should make long Prayers which is the new error and great mistake of these times the which though generally the most used and best liked as being set off with the paint of a seeming zele and pretence of the Spirit yet the unlawfulness of such long Prayers will appear if we will without prejudice and partiality consider that 1. They are forbidden by our Lord saying When ye pray use not vain repetitions Matth. 6. 7. in which words our Lord means not the same prayers repeated as is falsly objected against the Prayers of the Church for thus our Lord prayed himself Matth. 26. 39. 44. where his Prayer was short and three times repeated And therefore undoubtedly by vain repetitions in praying is understood multitude of Words and variety of expressions to the same purpose or rather to no purpose since our Desires both may and ought to be expressed in few words and pertinent according to the pattern our Lord hath given us And that t is the meaning of our Lord when he saith After this manner pray ye that our Prayers should be generally formed to the length of his Prayer prescribed will appear 1. From the Context if seriously weighed and rightly understood wherein is manifest that the manner of praying by such a short Form is commanded in opposition to the Heathenish use of much speaking in Prayer 2. From the Parallel-Text in the Margin Eccles. 5. 2 Be not rash with thy Mouth and let not thy Heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in Heaven and thou upon Earth and therefore let thy words be few 3. From the Prayers of Christ's Church which are in all Liturgies of the Christian World for the most part of the same length and surely the general Practice of the Church is the best Interpreter of the Scripture 4. Such are generally also all the Prayers of the Holy Spirit of God which stand upon Record in Holy Writ viz. the Book of Psalms with many more We meet with none that are of such a continued length as are in use amongst us but they are all divided by distinct Verses into so many several shorter Prayers Long Prayers are forbidden by our Lord because such is the custom of the Heathen as the Heathen do Matth. 6. 7. who mind more the Oratory and Language Tone and Pronuntiation than the Humility and Devotion of the Soul in prayer and t is much misbecoming Christians to worship the true God as the Heathen do their false and feigned Deities And Because they imply a false notion of the Majesty of Heaven and a misbelief of his Divine perfections as if he were asleep and must be awakened or did not understand our Wants and Desires or being otherwise imployed he could not attend our Petitions except in multitude of Words exprest and loud bawling for audience So prayed the Priests of Baal 1 Kings 18. 27. and so saith our Lord of all Heathen people that they think they shall be heard for their much speaking which is directly contrary to the true faith of a Christian who believeth and acknowledgeth the Omniscience and Omnipresence of God as it follows in the Eighth verse Your Heavenly Father knoweth what things you stand in need of before you ask which Divine Truth is implicately denied by loud and long Prayers Long prayers are not only
forbidden by our Lord as the custom of the Heathen but also frequently reproved by him as the practice of the Hypocrites who love to stand praying in the Synagogues and in the corners of the Streets that they may be seen af Men that they may be taken notice of for Godly men desiring rather to seem than really to be Religious loving the praise of Men more than the praise of GOD. Matth. 6. 5. c. 23. 14. Mark 12. 40. Luke 20. 47. Ioh. 12. 43. To pray continually then is neither to be understood of doing nothing else but pray nor yet of using long prayers the one being prohibited by our Lord and the other condemned by his Church but in this and the like Expressions is commanded The intense Devotion of the Soul in Prayer So our Lord expounds his own Command that men ought always to pray viz. that they faint not Luke 18. 1. to wit for want of that holy fervour and devout zeal which is the life and soul of an effectual Prayer And this same Celestial fire of holy Zeal in prayer spends not it self in multitude of Words and much babling of the Lips but is expressed in sighs and groans which cannot be uttered Rom. 8. 8. 26. which are truly the Breathings of the holy Spirit of God in prayer who dwels not upon the Tongue but in the Heart To pray continually enjoyns the constant and continued returns of this holy Duty that we lose no time neglect no opportunity either of the Publick prayers of the Church or of private prayer and Closet-Devotions upon the set solemn and accustomed times thereof remembring that the Time only which is imployed in the sacred Acts of Piety towards God and Charity towards Man is redeemed out of the all-devouring jaws of Death and dark Oblivion to be the Seminary of a blessed Eternity when time shall be no more T is to this end our Lord commands us to watch and pray by our constant prayers at Evening at Midnight at the Cock crowing and in the Morning to watch for the coming of our Lord to put an end to Time and to all that is by Time limited and circumscribed That we ought always to pray i. e. say the Fathers upon the Text at those appointed Hours observed by the Church of God both under the Law called therefore the Hours of the Temple and under the Gospel called the Canonical Hours so generally observed formerly of all devout Christians that St. Hierome Epist. ad Eustor with his Quis nescit takes it for granted that no Godly Christian is either ignorant or negligent in the observation of such Hours as being probably observed by holy David or from his example derived saying of his own daily practice Psal. 119. 164. Seven times a day do I praise thee because of thy righteous judgments To continue in prayer is to have our Hearts so inflamed with the love of God as to be in a continual disposition to pray and this not only at all set and accustomed times but at all times and upon all occasions and objects presented to raise up our souls upon the Spiritual wings of holy Meditations celestial Affections devout Colloquies and Ejaculatory converses with Heaven Thus Enoch walked with God and was translated Gen. 5. 24. Heb. 11. 5. Thus King David professeth I have set God always before me I sal 16. 9. And I will give thanks unto the Lord his praise shall ever be in my mouth Ps. 34. 1. No time omitted Evening and Morning and Noon-day Ps. 55. 17 18. Early and late Ps. 63. 1. 7. No place pretermitted in the Wilderness in the land of Iordan and the unbeaten paths of Hermon Ps. 42. 8. T is the great and constant imployment of a true Christian's life to depend upon God to fix all our Hopes all our Joy and Consolation all that we can reasonably desire to enjoy conducing to our happiness both in this and in the other world in God alone who is the Beginning the Mean and the End of our Being In the first and purest times of Christianity while the blood of Christ was yet warm and more inflamed the Souls of true Believers than in these later and colder times then were the hearts of the Religious continually in Heaven by holy and Divine Aspirations even when their hands were imployed in any and every of their works upon earth So the Divine Ephrem Sive opereris sive sedeas sive comedas In all thy works even in Eating and Drinking and Travelling sitting going standing lying Pray without ceasing Take hint from every thing thou seest hearest tastest to lift up thy heart unto God and refer all to his glory T is recorded of St. Bartholomew the Apostle that he prayed an hundred times in a day and an hundred times in the night also Ephrem tom 1. Homil. de Orando Deum So the great St. Basil Hom. in S. Iude. So St. Chrysost. Hom. 23. in Mat. St. Hierom professeth of himself that often on the tops of Mountains and in hollow Valleys and craggy Rocks with eyes lifted up to Heaven and flowing with tears he poured forth his soul in holy prayers and meditations S. Hierom. Ep. ad Eustor So meditates S. Austin also Te Domine mediter per dies sine cessatione Te sentiam per soporem in nocte Te alloquar Aug. Med. O that I could meditate upon Thee O Lord through the whole day and not cease to be affected with thee in the night my spirit speaking unto thee and my mind conversing with thee alway and alone Blessed are they who think of nothing speak of nothing but the Lord who love nothing above thee desire nothing besides thee Blessed are they whose Hope alone is the Lord and all whose Work is Prayer And several of the devout Fathers computed all that time lost wherein God was not in their minds and memories And there is great reason for it as the same St. Austin meditates For as there is no moment of Time wherein we enjoy not the sweet influences of the Divine Goodness and stand in need also of Gods protecting Presence with us so there should be no time wherein we have not God in our thoughts Aug. in Marcum Wait on thy God continually Hos. 12. 16. Seek the Lord and his strength seek his face evermore Ps. 105. 4. Thus St. Paul and truly devout Christians with him have their conversation in heaven Phil. 3.20 whilst they are upon Earth and that 's the way surely to have our consummation in Heaven when we shall be taken from the Earth MEDITATIONS UPON Our going to CHURCH with some short Directions for our Demeanour in the House of GOD touching some too much mistaken and neglected Acts of Divine Worship As for me I will come into thy House in the multitude of thy Mercies and in thy fear will I worship towards thy Holy Temple Ps. 5. 7. OXFORD Printed by L. Lichfield Printer to the University for Richard Sherlock