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B04947 A discourse concerning prayer especially of frequenting the dayly publick prayers. In two parts. / By Symon Patrick, D.D. now Lord Bishop of Ely. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1693 (1693) Wing P789A; ESTC R181547 106,863 299

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which the Kingdom is laid and it can neither be erected or being erected cannot stand when this is gone Now as Religion is necessary to uphold States and Kingdoms so the Publick exercise of it is as necessary to uphold Religion Let the Publick Assemblies cease and Religion will not long stand But we shall soon lose it if we do not meet together to joyn in the common Offices of it and we shall soon be tempted to have the less concern for one anothers safety and happiness when we are not tied together by the bond of one and the same Religion In which when we heartily joyn to serve God it makes us look upon one another as Brethren dear to the same God and Father of us all and therefore dear to one another This the Psalmist represents when he cryes out in the beginning of cxxxiii Psal Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity He would have all the Israelites to look upon themselves as Brethren being all descended from one and the same stock and having also the same God for their Father And then they dwelt together in unity not merely when they lived lovingly and unanimously pursued the same common Interest for the common good but then especially when they all met in one and the same place to Worship God together with one heart and with one Soul which linkt them closer than any other bond could do and provided best for their common security For it appears by what follows he chiefly aims at this assembling themselves unanimously together as the words are in the Hebrew O how good and pleasant is it for Brethren to dwell even together i. e. to meet all at God's house as common to them all Nothing more delightful than to behold such a general Assembly which he illustrates by two similitudes First Of the pretious Oyntment which ran down from the Head of the High Priest to the very skirt of his Garment And then by the Dew of Heaven which made the Hill of Hermon and the Mountain of Zion nigh to which the Temple stood exceeding fruitful And then in conclusion he adds the reason why this was so joyful a sight and so beneficial for there the Lord commanded the Blessing even Life for ever more He pours down his Blessings of all sorts as the Heavens do the Dew and as the pretious Oyntment ran down from Aaron's head upon a people that are thus unanimously joyned together in the Worship and Service of God who only can make them happy that 's meant by Life and can make them so for evermore In order to which He took care his Divine Service should be perpetually performed in the Temple whither they were to resort to do their Duty to him and to implore his Grace and Favour towards them And I cannot think it fell out by chance that next to the Psalm now mentioned is immediately placed a solemn Exhortation in the cxxxiv. Ps unto the Ministers of God to attend constantly upon their Duty in the Sanctuary there to praise the Lord who made Heaven and Earth and to give a Blessing to his people and pray for their prosperity out of Sion as that Psalm concludes I end this with the observation of a wise man that we being Members of a publick Body ought to serve it the best we can Now all the Service we do as Members of it is publick Service which is far more worthy than what we act for our selves privately and distinctly as much as a whole Society exceeds the worth of any one Man in it And what service is there we can do it like to that of maintaining God's true Religion by serious attendance with due care and frequency upon the publick Offices thereof whereby we shall exceedingly promote the common good of all and maintain Society it self by which we are kept and preserved in safety and prosperity For by doing publick honour to God we shall draw down publick Blessings upon our selves God himself will bless us as the Psalmist speaks He will bless them that fear the Lord both small and great The Lord shall increase you more and more you and your Children Ye are the Blessed of the Lord that made Heaven and Earth CXV Psal 13 14 15. Observe the Title he gives himself The Lord that made Heaven and Earth and you will not think it sutable to his super-excellent and transcendent Majesty to have his Worship confined to your Closets or to your private Houses but make it as publick as the Heaven and the Earth are which are exposed to the view of all In that spatious Temple of his as the Ancients were wont to call the World of which the Temple at Jerusalem was an imitation he is to be magnified and praised as openly and with as great multitudes as can possibly meet together that we may not seem to Worship some little petty Deity but the Universal Lord of all Thus I am faln upon the Argument wherewith I begun which cannot be too often pressed and hath a close connexion with this other which I have now handled For he having formed us to live together in Society and to keep closely United in one Body for our common safety and preservation teaches us thereby to own Him as the common Parent of us all and to contrive the best wayes we can whereby we may acknowledge him so to be And there is no way like this of meeting together in the greatest multitude that can assemble to magnifie and praise Him with one voice for his Goodness and declaring the Wonders he doth for the Children of Men commend our selves and all our concerns unto his most powerful protection By whom Kings Raign and Princes decree Justice and therefore he ought to be sought for their Guidance and Direction Protection and Safety and to be acknowledged as it is in the Collect for our King to be the High and Mighty King of kings Lord of lords the only Ruler of Princes who from his Throne beholds all that dwell on the Earth And they are all as the Prophet most admirably expresses it as Nothing less than Nothing and Vanity in comparison with his incomprehensible Greatness Who as that great King Nebuchadnezzar publickly acknowledged and desired all Nations and Kingdoms should take notice of it is the High God whose Kingdom is an Everlasting Kingdom and his Dominion is from Generation to Generation So he begins the Proclamation he caused to be made of his humble Devotion to the Divine Majesty by whom he had been abased as low as the Beasts of the Earth Dan. iv 2 3. After which he tells all the World I Blessed the Most High and I Praised and Honoured Him that liveth for ever whose Dominion is an Everlasting Dominion and his Kingdom is from Generation to Generation And all the Inhabitants of the Earth are reputed as Nothing and he doth according to his Will in the Army of Heaven and among the Inhabitants
to tell him our thoughts but is acquainted with the very beginning of them before they are formed and therefore hath bestowed upon us the faculty of speaking that we may tell our thoughts unto others and make them understand that we are Religiously affected towards him Who if he had intended Religion should be only a private business might have made us without Tongues because he needs no Language to acquaint him with our desires but hears our very thoughts and perceives the most inward motions of our Souls VVhich we have power to express in words not that he may understand us but for the benefit of others that they may understand our sense and know that we are lovers of God and be stirred up by our Prayers and Praises and Thanksgivings to the same Devotion towards him Whence David calls his Tongue his glory lvii Psal 8. because therewith he glorified God and as it there follows ver 9. Praised God among the people and sung unto him among the Nations This St Paul supposes when he saith Prayers ought not to be made in an unknown Tongue because if they were he that was not learned in that Tongue would not be able to say Amen 1 Corinth xiv 16. which word Amen was then it seems pronounced at the end of every Prayer by the whole company for whom the publick Minister spake to God and was as it were their mouth in what he said But though it was thus ordered to avoid confusion and that it might be distinctly known by every body what was said in the Church which had been impossible if they had all spoken together yet they thought themselves bound to signifie and declare that he spake their sense by saying Amen at the conclusion of the Prayer he made Which was as much in effect as if they had said every word of it themselves for it was as much as to say they approved of and consented to the whole And this every one did so audibly that a great multitude being gathered together in a Church it imitated the voice of Thunder as St. Hierom tells us And verily it is a great fault that we do not all thus joyn in the Publick Prayers at this day not only by our bodily presence but with our tongues which ought to express our consent to those Petitions and Thanksgivings which are offered up to God in the name of us all III. And there is a further reason for common Prayer be●●●● the Blessings we enjoy in common together are far greater than those we enjoy singly and distinct one from another We all breath in one common Air and enjoy the comfort of one common Light The Heavens drop their fatness in common upon every mans Fields and Pastures And which is more than all the rest the great Blessings of order and Government the benefits of which we all enjoy by being knit in the same Society unde● the same Governour make it high● reasonable that we should joyn or selves together as one man to acknowledge these common Blessings which make us all happy For being made for society and enjoying innumerable benefits thereby which this is not a place to mention particularly we have lost all sense of what we are and what we have if we do not thi●● our selves bound to give God than● for them in one Body begging 〈◊〉 pardon for their abuse and beseeching their continuance I name not now the greatest Blesing of all which is the Redemption● mankind by Jesus Christ in whi●● not a few particular persons but a●● in general are concerned it being th● common Salvation as St. Jude calls 〈◊〉 because it belongs to the next head where we shall consider mankind a● Church bound to bless God above a things for his Grace in the Lord Jes● Let us look at present only to the visible Heavens which incircle us a●● and proclaim aloud as the Psal●● speaks the Glory of God throughout the World Behold the Sun that great Minister of God which preaches as I may say every where and publishes not to one place or Country but to the whole Earth the Praises of the Lord. It is not a private Whisper but a publick Cry which the Heavenly Bodies make there is neither Speech nor Language but their voices are heard among them Their sound is gone out into all Lands and their words into the ends of the World which tell us what we should do and call upon us to make the voice of his Praise to be heard as much and as far as we are able who hath appointed such illustrious Creatures to do us perpetual service Which is the meaning of the Holy Pslamist when he calls upon all Creatures in Heaven and in Earth both visible and invisible to praise the Lord. Psal cxlviii That is he excites himself and others to give God Thanks for them and to acknowledge the Praises which they continually give him His most Glorious perfections that is which they declare and set forth in the most publick manner For they speak to all as much as they do to one the most excellent immense greatness and goodness of the Lord who in Wisdom also hath made them all and this we ought as publickly to declare it being all that we can do for the Honour of his Name but only live accordingly which this also teaches us and makes absolutely necessary that we may eternally praise him There is an excellent Discourse 〈◊〉 remember in St. Chrysostome to this purpose in his ix Homily upon Genesis where showing how God hath preferred Mankind above all other Creatures he concludes with this exhortation Let us therefore give him Thanks for all these benefits he hath heaped on us This is no grievous no burdensome thing which he expects from us for what trouble is there in testifying our sense of his loving kindness in confessing out obligations in returning our thankful acknowledgments for them 〈◊〉 Which He who is all-sufficient i● himself stands in no need of but we ought to learn thereby to love the Author of all good and not to be ungrateful but study to live sutable to such a careful Providence over us Let us not I beseech you be negligent in this but think with our selves continually both what the common benefits are we all enjoy and the private ones which he hath conferred upon any of us both those which are manifest and confessed by all and those which are concealed perhaps and proper to our selves alone And by all let us excite our selves to give him Thanks which is the greatest Sacrifice the most perfect Oblation Especially when we all joyn together I may add to confess his Goodness and declare the Wonders he doth for the Children of Men. And whosoever he is that hath these things continually in mind and reflects upon his own meanness as well as the immenseness of the Divine Mercy how he governs us and dispenses his Blessings to us not regarding what our sins deserve but what is becoming his
the Psalmist nay with our Saviour Christ as I have before observed I will declare thy Name unto my Brethren in the midst of the Congregation will I praise thee Ye that fear the Lord praise him all ye Seed of Jacob glorifie him and fear him all ye Seed of Israel My praise shall be of thee in the great Congregation I will pay my Vows before them that fear him Psal xxii 22 23 25. I will praise thee O God among the People I will sing unto thee among the Nations For thy Merey is great unto the Heavens and thy Truth unto the Clouds Psal lvii 9 10. Blessed are they that dwell in thy House they will be still praising thee Psal lxxxiv 4. The Dead praise not the Lord neither any that go down into silence But we will bless the Lord from this time forth and for evermore Praise the Lord. Psal cxv 17 18. Which last words teach us that this is a piece of publick Service we do to God in this World which we are uncapable to perform when we are gone from hence Then the time is past of honouring God among Men by dec●●ring the sense we have of his Greatness and speaking good of his Name Fo● though the dead are not quite silent yet what they say or do signifies nothi●● to us in this World where we mu●● serve God while we live or else no● at all Which is a new consideration to quicken us to this Duty and to silence all those Objections which are apt to rise in our hearts against it Yes may some say We like the thing you press but are against the way of doing it in this Church In which some are distasted at all Forms of Prayer and others at that Form wherein we Worship God and him alone Unto the first of these I have this to say That when there were no Forms of Prayer left in this Church they that destroyed them did not dayly hold publick Assemblies Nor do they now make it their constant practice Which gives us too much cause to think they have not such a sense as is to be wished of their necessity But to let that pass supposing some have and that they only dislike a Form of Prayer it is something strange that the same Arguments which make them think dayly publick Assemblies to be needful should not also reconcile them to a Form of Prayer Which was constantly used by the Ancient Jews in their Assemblies as hath been undeniably proved by many of our Writers and was prescribed by our Blessed Lord and Master who made his Prayer I have shown for the publick Service in which he joyned with the Jews when he was at the Temple in Jerusalem and when he was in the Country went to the Synagogues which the Chaldee Paraphrast calls Houses of Praise in Isa vii 19. And so did his Apostles who themselves used a constant Form of Praise For they rested not Day and Night saying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come Rev. iv 8. This as I showed before was their continual Hymn which they offered to God and it appears by St. Paul's usual way of recommending the Churches to whom he wrote unto the Grace of God that they had their Forms of Prayer also For he himself constantly used these words The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all 2 Thess iii. 17 18. The same Power every Bishop had in his Church to compose Prayers for the necessities of it as we may gather from 1 Tim. ii 1 2. Which Exhortation is directed not to the people but to Timothy who was to take care to have all Men recommended unto God in the publick Offices by Prayers and Supplications with Intercessions and Thanksgivings for Kings especially and for all in Authority c. This could not be done orderly as all things were to be in the Christian Church without a set Form of Words which Timothy we may well think composed For those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Prayers be made signifie as literally the Apostle would have Prayers and Supplications composed as that he would have them put up to God And I doubt not they signifie both First That they should be composed and then put up to God by the Church For you may observe further that the Apostles speak of this as their work Act. vi 4. where having bidden the Church look out some Men to be appointed to attend the business of providing for the poor they add but we will give our selves continually to Prayer and to the Ministry of the Word They made the Prayers where they were present as much as they ministred the Word Which is further manifest from hence that the Prayers of the Church of Jerusalem are called the Apostles Prayers Act. ii 42. And they continued stedfastly in the Apostles Doctrine and Fellowship and in breaking of Bread and in Prayers Observe here how all the faithful stedfastly continued in Prayers as well as hearing the Word And that they are First called Prayers in the Plural number not one but many Prayers and then that they are called the Apostles Prayers Prayers made by them For the word Apostles in the beginning belongs to all the three things that follow as well as to the first To the Apostles Fellowship and their breaking of Bread and their Prayers as well as to their Doctrine To be brief as John Baptist being a publick Minister sent of God taught his Disciples how to pray and our Blessed Lord taught his Apostles So his Apostles in like manner taught those whom they Converted according to the pattern Christ had left them and no question delivered the same power to those that should have the Supreme Guidance Direction and Government of the Church to compose Prayers suteable to Mens necessities in the several Nations where they lived and over whom they presided It may be thought indeed that the Extraordinary Gift they had in those dayes supplyed all But it is manifest both that every one had not that Extraordinary Gift of Prayer and that they also who had were to be so ordered and regulated in the exercise of it by the Governours of the Church that it might serve its Edification And nothing tended more to the Edification of the Church than that it should have a standing known Form of Prayers and Praises without which it could not be known how they Worshipped God and not depend merely upon that extraordinary Gift which was not constant but vouchsafed only on some special occasion according as God pleased to impart it Which is not said arbitrarily by me but it appears by a convincing Argument that this extraordinary Gift was not intended to serve the constant necessities of the Church but only some particular purposes for they who had it could not make others understand it and are therefore directed by the Apostle to pray they might be able to interpret that others might reap some benefit
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Num. 39. and prayed ●ot in vain but obtained what he asked and without prayer ●ould not we may well think obtain ●t which of us can be so negligent as ●ot to pray For to what end can we think was ●ll this done by him but to show us ●he obligations of Humane Nature ●nd to make us sensible of our depen●ance on God and that we can have nothing without his Will and that is absolutely necessary our wills sh●● be wholly regulated by his He 〈◊〉 not all this barely to give us an exaple but to demonstrate and make know that no man though never perfect can live to God with praying to him CHAP. IV. Other Arguments of the great N●●sity of Prayer VI. IT may be useful to us furt● to consider that God hath 〈◊〉 pointed his Holy Spirit to assist us this Duty which is a convincing 〈◊〉 monstration of its great necessity we will judge of things according the account which God makes of the● Who lest this Duty should not be w● done lends us his power to perform acceptably unto Him And shall 〈◊〉 suffer the Holy Spirit to wait upon ●o no purpose Nay shall it follow us ●ontinually and urge us to have re●ourse to God inspiring us with good ●houghts and exciting pious desires ●nd we refuse to be led and conducted ●y its holy motions This is as unna●●ral as for a man to have a Soul and ●ever think to have a Tongue and never speak Eyes and a power to see and never open them VII It is as considerable also that ●e hath appointed his Son to be our Mediator and Intercessor with Him in ●he Heavens Which supposes both that we will do this and that it is most necessary to be done For otherwise we make void this new Office of our Blessed Saviours which God the Father in his infinite Wisdom and ten●erest compassion hath created We make him an Advocate without Clients an Intercessor who hath nothing to do but waits in vain for our Petitions Good Lord That Men should be so ignorant or presumptuous as to account themselves Christians and never or seldom lift up their minds 〈◊〉 hearts unto him in the Heavens 〈◊〉 feel any need of his Patronage 〈◊〉 make use of his most powerful inter● for the obtaining any Blessings 〈◊〉 them which they cannot have un●● they address themselves to God them in his prevailing Name and alone VIII The Necessity also of this 〈◊〉 be understood by the frequent inj●ctions we meet withal in Holy Scritures for praying alwaies praying w●●out ceasing and with all Prayer and S●plication in the Spirit as I have be●●noted Which declare it to be a ●●ness of such importance that we canot subsist without it but must use● as constantly as we do our Meat a● Drink or rather more constantly being of such great concernment th● it is as necessary as our very breath The Incense in the Temple as 〈◊〉 John teaches us viii Revel 3. rep●●sented the Prayers of the Saints No● it may not be unworthy our observa● on to note that whereas the Shew-bre● whereby an acknowledgment w● made as some think that they recei●ed all their food from God was re●ewed and set upon the Holy Table in ●he Sanctuary but once every Week ●nd the Lamp in the Temple which ●●gnified perhaps the Light of God's Word was dressed once every day The Incense which certainly signified their Prayers was renewed by God's order twice every day and offered upon the Altar Morning and Evening Which may suggest unto us that we ●●ght to be more sensible of the need ●e have of the Word of God and ●rayer than of the need of our dayly ●ood but especially of Prayer Though we read often yet we stand in need to ●ray oftner IX For it is our main security our ●reat safe-guard our refuge and place ●f retreat in all the dangers unto which we are exposed in this present World and therefore is not only mentioned by the Apostle as a part of the Christian Armour but set also in the last place as that which compleats all the rest of the whole Armour of God vi Ephes 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as St. Chrysostome o●● speaks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. xxx in Gen. CAP. xi for Prayer 〈◊〉 mighty Weapon a powerful defence w●● out which no man● be able to stand ●maintain his groun● gainst the Assaults temptations nor o● come his spiritual Enemies but which we lay hold upon the Arm of Almighty for our defence and succo● and engage the power of God to with us and assure our selves if rightly manage it of a certain 〈◊〉 ctory For herein we imploy all the oth●● parts of the whole Armour of God wh● the Apostle there requires us to 〈◊〉 unto us and to put on us We our knowledge of the Truth and our Faith our Love and our H● and have recourse to the Word of G●● particularly to his pretious promise and declare our sincere affection to Righteousness and our upright int● tions to persist and continue there● by the help of God which we implo● So that it is the more necessary because by Prayer all the graces of God's Holy Spirit are continually exercised and kept in ure the whole Armour of God is girt closer to us and we are made more expedite and ready on all occasions to encounter with the Enemies of our Salvation X. Whence it was you may observe in the last place that Holy Men who lived the Life of God in this World could never be perswaded to omit it I will give but one instance of this in the Prophet Daniel who when he had received the command of a great King to forbear praying to his God for the space of 30 dayes durst not consent to a complyance with his will and pleasure And yet Daniel was a good Subject as well as a wise Man who was very sensible what ready obedience ought to be paid to Kings and how necessary this Obedience was where a contrary antecedent necessity did not ●e upon him to obey God Especially when the thing was enjoyned under the penalty of Death and when his Soveraign did not require a total forbearance of this Duty but only for a li●●ted time And yet so it was he c●● rather to lose the favour of his Prin●● who had been very kind to him nay● lose his Life as well as his Hono● and more than that to be thrown in the Den of Lyons there to be torn pieces and devoured by those raven● Beasts than to omit his constant ●●votions to the Supreme Lord and ●●veraign of Heaven and Earth 〈◊〉 saith the History of his admirable ●●ty vi Dan. 10. When Daniel knew 〈◊〉 this decree was signed mark that went into his house and his Window 〈◊〉 open toward Jerusalem he kneeled 〈◊〉 his knees three times a day and pray and gave thanks before his God 〈◊〉 did afore time Which shows that in his opini●● it is more necessary
want ●●thing yet the sense we have that we ●old all we call ours by the meer mercy 〈◊〉 God should powerfully move us to acknowledge him and to pay him our ●●mage of Thanks and Praise and ●●ble our selves before his Majesty as ●●●hing without him Yea it is an ●●nour and singular Favour we should ●●●k to be admitted into his Sacred ●●sence as I am sure we should ●eem it did we enjoy the same pri●●●edge with earthly Princes Into ●●ose presence we should not think ●e could come too oft if they would ●●●mit it but we should be ambitious wayes to stand in their sight and ●●●k upon our selves as highly dignified if they would be pleased to ma●● us their familiars Let us not then b● perverse as to live as we thought 〈◊〉 Lord of Heaven and Earth doth us injury or layes an heavy burden o● when he requires us to attend hi● that is when he bids us come to him 〈◊〉 first ask and then receive his Bless●●● Look upon our Blessed Saviour 〈◊〉 observe how constant and unwea● he was in this Holy Duty how ●●●…quently he went alone by himself 〈◊〉 give thanks to God and to imp●●… his continued presence with him 〈◊〉 diligently he went to the Temple 〈◊〉 he was at Jerusalem and to the Sy●●gogues when he was in the Count● how he acknowledged God in the 〈◊〉 common benefits how much tim● spent publickly and privately in● company With what strong crie● called upon him in the dayes o● Flesh with what submission 〈◊〉 what reverence with what repe●●… importunities and then think 〈◊〉 your selves are you in less want o● help of God than our Blessed Sav●●●● was Can you live well enough w●●●out praying to him when his only 〈◊〉 ten Son could not Why do you not 〈◊〉 go to Him with fervent desires ●y do you not imitate the Son of God the frequency of your Addresses To what purpose hath God given 〈◊〉 his Holy Spirit if you will not ●y its motions To what end is the ●●d Jesus appointed to be your Inter●or if you will send up no Prayers ●e presented by him in the Court of ●●ven Why doth he call upon you ●ray alway if you need not pray at 〈◊〉 Consider all these Arguments 〈◊〉 again how naked you are with●● this Divine Armour to defend you 〈◊〉 all Gods Graces languish and dye ●his do not continually maintain 〈◊〉 how good Men have thought it ●●er not to live than not to pray and 〈◊〉 Thanks to the God of their life 〈◊〉 they will prevail with you not to be ●●gers unto this Heavenly imploy●t An imployment wherein you will 〈◊〉 much comfort and no less success ●●u do not negligently discharge it 〈◊〉 God hath a love to souls and great●esires their improvement He would ●e them advance even unto his like●● in Righteousness and Goodness and true Holiness Else he would 〈◊〉 invite them and call upon them 〈◊〉 doth to fix their eyes upon him● would not have given them such● and assistance and discovered s● wonderful love unto them as he 〈◊〉 manifested in the Son of his L● Christ Jesus The Heathen thought it sufficie● desire God to hear them out of love he bears to immortal Spirits 〈◊〉 they cry unto him So I find one 〈◊〉 ing in an Ancient Greek Poet ● words are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hearken unto me O Father thou 〈◊〉 wonder of Mankind who takest a s● care of an ever-living Soul But we have a great deal mo● build our hopes upon and may 〈◊〉 Hear us O Father of our Lord 〈◊〉 Christ who hast astonished us wit● wonders of thy love in him Hear us of the love thou bearest unto the Son 〈◊〉 love Hear us for his sake who● down his life to redeem our im●● Souls who lives for ever to make 〈◊〉 ●ession for us Thou who hast bestowed al●●ady so surprising a gift without our ask●ng hear us and give us what we ask of ●ee when we ask it in his name who gave ●imself for us and hath assured us that ●ith him thou wilt give us all things CHAP. VI. The Honour God doth us in admitting us into his presence AMong other false conceits which men have of this Duty of Pray●●o God these two are very prejudi●al to its performance First They look upon it only as a ●y laid upon them by God's mere ●ill and Pleasure which might be ●●red there being no real need of it it were not for this that God will we it and hath ordained it Secondly They imagine thereupon ●●t he is beholden to them for what ●ey do and that they have perfor●ed such a great piece of service to ●m when they have prayed a while ●●t they thereby obtain a dispensation to do their own Will when 〈◊〉 have satisfied his To rectifie the first of these● stakes I have shown this to be a 〈◊〉 ral Duty and not merely bound 〈◊〉 us by a positive Law A Duty s● sed by our Lord and Saviour 〈◊〉 than commanded for it arises 〈◊〉 our being God's Creatures wh● therefore bound to acknowledge 〈◊〉 and to wait upon him continuall● the supply of our necessities fro● bounty And now I shall proce● correct the second mistake and 〈◊〉 by also further confirm what 〈◊〉 said concerning the necessity o● Duty by showing that this is 〈◊〉 from being a burden laid upon 〈◊〉 his mere will and pleasure or an● service whereby we oblige him o● cure an indulgence or connivan● what we do contrary to his W● other things that in truth the 〈◊〉 is done intirely to our selves 〈◊〉 Righteousness cannot profit Him 〈◊〉 intends hereby to make us really 〈◊〉 nay excellent Creatures whose 〈◊〉 it is to look upon our selves as inf● ly beholden to him that he will 〈◊〉 us to come into his presence upon all occasions and call him Our Father This I shall demonstrate by representing first how honourable and excellent an employment this is Secondly How comfortable and truly delightful when performed as it ought Thirdly How beneficial both to make and preserve us such as we ought to desire above all things to be Of the first of these I shall give a brief account in this Chapter wherein I shall endeavour to make the Reader sensible that this Duty which our own necessities call for and exact of us is in it self a most Noble and Excellent Imployment For it is the Ascent of our mind to God as the Ancient Christians describe it a familiar con●erse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. an holy discourse with the Lord of all the withdrawing of our minds from this World and all things in it above which it raises our thoughts and lifts them up unto the first and chiefest Good into whose company it brings us and sets us in his Blessed presence that he may lift up the light of his countenance upon us For though it be the expressio● our deepest humility yet thereby● are lifted up above the highest top of
is preserved but a sense also of his Greatness and Magnificence as I may call it is also bred and nourished in mens minds Who joyning as one Man in the same service are taught not only that God is but what he is infinite in all perfections For when a multitude of people meet together even as many as a spatious place can contain to Worship the same Being it doth most naturally signifie and declare that He is exceeding great and glorious whom so many own for their Lord upon whom they depend for all they have or can have which is not signified nor represented when only one or two or a few pray to Him Therefore this is a reason both that we should hold publick Assemblies and that they should be as full as is possible and all who belong to them should croud unto them to testifie that they look upon him who is there Worshipped to be the great King over all the Earth as the Psalmist speaks xlvii 2. For great numbers meeting together to do their Homage to him it is the most natural sign that can be contrived which private Worship is not that we take him to be the Soveraign of the World the Lord of all above all good unto all in one word the common Parent of us all to whom we resort for his Blessing This is a demonstration that Publick Worship is to be preferred before all other because most sutable to his most excellent Majesty the best token of the high thoughts we have of him the utmost we are able to do to testifie how great and how good we believe him to be how able and willing to help us all as being equally related unto all And the more meet together for this end the better this is declared that he cannot be honoured and glorified enough but we stand in need of the united thoughts and affections of all Mankind could they be assembled at once to magnifie his incomparable perfections Nay If all Creatures in Heaven and in Earth as a very worthy Person observes could meet together in one Body to Worship Him at the same time and in the same place it would still be much better because more sutable to His Most Excellent Majesty being still a better signification of his Infinite perfections and of his vast Dominions which he governs with inconceiveable Wisdom and takes care of with a most provident goodness And though no one place here on Earth is big enough to contain so much as one Nation or Country or great City yet we meeting in several places of the same kind and set apart for the same purpose to Worship God at one and the same time it approaches something near unto this all the people that are under one and the same Government hereby setting forth God's praise together at the very same moment and in the like though not the very same individual place where they uniformly acknowledge him with joynt consent to be their common Preserver and Benefactor Which is far more agreeable to the perfection of his most excellent Nature than the single or private Applications that are made to him in which there is no sensible Declaration made what he is able to do for all but only what he is able to do for one or for a few For which reason the Universal Church anciently observed certain set hours of Prayers that all Christians throughout the World might at the same time joyn together to glorifie God and some of them * Origen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 N. 33 35. were of opinion that the Angelical Host being acquainted with those hours took that time to joyn their Prayers and Praises with those of the Church For common reason led them to this thought that those noble Creatures are highly concern'd to set forth to the utmost of their Power the glorious Honour of God's Majesty who as he is exalted above all Blessing and Praise so hath the utmost pitch of Praise to which Creatures can reach given unto Him when the whole Family of Heaven and Earth combine together at once to Worship Him Thence it was that the Psalms of David though many of them particularly concerned himself were directed to the Chief Musitian for the Publick Service as the way to make his Praise glorious So the Psalmist speaks in lxvi Psalm which begins with a desire that all Lands would make a joyful noise unto God and sing forth the honour of his Name and make his Praise glorious That is this was the way to do something sutable to the surpassing Glory of his Majesty For great saith he elsewhere is the Lord and therefore greatly to be praised in the City of our God xlviii Psal 1. He was not greatly praised sutably to his greatness unless it were in that place where they all met together to praise him No the very private Blessings bestowed on David he would have publickly celebrated by all the people And therefore doth not only say I will bless the Lord at all times his praise shall be continually in my mouth My Soul shall make her boast of the Lord c. but adds O magnifie the Lord with me and let us exalt his name together xxxiv Psal 1 2 3. And therefore much more were the common Blessings poured on them all to be thus acknowledged and his praise sung in the Congregation of Saints as the words are cxlix Psal 1. that is by all the people of the Jews Nay by all the people on the face of the Earth as he speaks cxvii Psal O praise the Lord all ye Nations praise him all ye people c. Which St. Paul shows in the xv Rom. 11. was accomplished when the Gentiles submitted themselves to Christ and became Members of his Church therein to praise him continually in their publick Assemblies III. In which the sense of God will not only be preserved sutable to his most excellent greatness and goodness but preserved pure and sincere free from those dangerous mixtures which may sooner creep into it to corrupt and embase it if he should be Worshipped only in private Where every man may frame conceits of the Divine Majesty agreeable to his own inclinations and there is no such way to prevent or correct them as by attending upon the publick Offices of Religion Into which Errors are not so easily admitted because men are naturally careful about that which they expose to the publick view not being willing themselves to appear before others with such neglect as they are sometimes found in when they are alone Or if there be any thing dangerous admitted there it will soon be discovered and if not redressed yet opposed by good men as all corruptions have been at their first appearance though in process of time they have prevailed They began in private and from thence by degrees adventurnd to appear in publick where they would have appeared sooner if the common sense of Mankind or of Christian people had not been against them There
praying in the Holy Ghost with fervent that is and inflamed desires such as the Holy Ghost excites when it is pleased to breath upon our souls Now this as I said is even naturally stirred up by the fervour of those Devout Worshippers with whom we joyn our Petitions For who can see a great many good people fall down together and kneel before the Lord their Maker with hands and eyes lifted up to Heaven imploring his Grace and Mercy which are things supposed in Christian Assemblies and not be thereby put in mind that it is a matter of great concernment about which they are so earnest Nay be mightily moved to prostrate himself in like manner to Worship the great Lord of all and to make him the same acknowedgments which are as much due from him as from any body else in the World Were a man never so dull or backward to Religious Worship it is impossible but he should be in some measure affected when he comes among a multitude whose reverend and ferious behaviour in the Divine service testifies the inward respect they have in their minds unto that Almighty Being whom they so devoutly Worship It would certainly not only put him in mind of his Duty but incline him with the like signs of humble and hearty Devotion to cast down himself in his Blessed Presence And the greater signs of ardency of desire and warmth of affection there appears in those with whom we are assembled the more feeling we shall naturally have of it our selves it being impossible to be quite cold by the fire side and to have no touch of Zeal when we are in the company of those who manifest a vigorous flame of Divine Love in their hearts Besides It is a comfortable sight barely to behold a great company gathered together to own one and the same Father who therefore cannot but look upon one another as Brethren This is St. Hierome's observation in iv Galat. Major laetitiaex mutuo conspectu oritur the greater joy arises in every heart by the very mutual sight of each other For so it is when Friends meet together they rejoyce to see the Faces one of another they bless the occasion that brought them into one and the same place and the more there are of them the greater rejoycing is there among them Now joy inlarges the heart and dilates our Spirits it makes them spread so much that sometime we can scarce contain them but are transported beyond our selves As on the contrary sorrow and sadness contracts and shrinks up the Spirits flats and deadens them so much that we have scarce any life left in us Upon which account the Spiritual joy and gladness I spoke of arising from the sight of so many Christian Neighbours and Friends is a very great help to us in our Devotion making us to pour out our Souls as the Psalmist speaks with the more inlarged desire It is but a dull and melancholy thing to be alone in comparison with the chearfulness which a great company of the same mind and Spirit naturally excite in each others Breasts By which we may understand also the advantage of full Assemblies in our Churches which look more lovely and therefore quicken more than a thin scattered Congregation Which is a damp to Christian Spirits because it is a very sad sight to behold the Divine Service neglected as it is where there are but few that come together to do God honour The summ of this Argument is That as no man is so warm alone as in a crowd So our Spiritual fervour is more quickned in an Assembly of pious Worshippers than it is apt to be when we are retired by our selves Where we ought indeed to awaken our Thoughts and stir up our affections but it must be acknowledged that we want then a great help and spurr thereunto which is the Holy Zeal of those who joyn with us in the same Petitions in the Publick Assemblies especially the seriousness the gravity and earnestness of him who ministers the service of God there Which together with the Authority of his Office the Sacredness and Majestickness sometime of the place set apart intirely for such services is apt to raise in us more ardent Devotion than we can easily raise in our selves alone IV. But if we had the same advantages of this kind when we are alone which we have not yet there is one more which wholly arises from our frequenting the Publick Assemblies And that is the good example we give to others who may be hereby moved to become Religious What we do alone no body sees nor is it intended that they should but rather that it should be kept secret And therefore it can be no inducement unto others to do their Duty but is the bare discharge of our own For which cause it is the less valuable because it doth less good for that is the best thing which doth the most universal good By which measure if we judge of Prayer we must prefer the publick whereby others are put in mind of their Duty nay attracted to it by our example whereas we our selves alone are profited by what we do alone It may be said indeed that we do good to others by praying for them But this is a very small good in comparison because it is more than they know and while we neglect the publick service we do them more mischief than we can be supposed to do them good by our private Prayers For we bring Religion into contempt when it hath few or none that attend the publick Offices of it and we let them want as I said the force of Example to awaken them out of that careless neglect of God which is too common in the World This is an Argument that should prevail very much with all good minds both to frequent the Publick Service of God and to behave themselves with an awful reverence therein Which will have some effect upon the looser sort who now are hardned in their impiety by the emptiness of our Churches at the time of solemn Worship or by the negligence of their behaviour who vouchsafe to attend upon it A multitude swayes very much either way to incline men to be good as well as to be bad It is hard to resist numerous examples They are able to bring Devotion as well as other things in fashion But if our example have not this effect on others we have notwithstanding done the best we could to advance the service of God in the World which will be a great comfort to us at present and turn to our good account hereafter We have let our light shine before men we have testified openly to the truth of Religion we have expressed our affection to it and reproved the impiety of those who regard not God Yea we put a stop to the progress of this impiety we hinder its growth and increase by wresting a great Argument out of their hands against Religion which is that there
of the Earth and none can stay his hand or say unto him what dost thou ver 34 35. And then concludes his Declaration in this manner Now I Nebuchadnezzar Praise and Extol and Honour the King of Heaven all whose works are Truth and his wayes Judgment and those that walk in Pride he is able to abase A Voice worthy of a King and worthy to be published throughout all the World and therefore he made the Declaration wherein it was contained to be sent to all People Nations and Languages that dwelt on all the Earth ver 1. that is throughout all his wide Empire to all the parts of the Earth where his Authority reached and his words would be reverenced that they might magnifie this great King of Heaven and Earth together with him That was the end of it and it is one of the most publick pieces of Devotition that we ever read was performed by any man arising out of this sense with which he was possessed in those Ancient times that God is to be Honoured Blessed and Extolled publickly among and by all People to whom he thought himself bound to show the Signs and the Wonders which the most High God had wrought towards him And How great saith he are his Signs and how mighty are his Wonders ver 3. He was not able to tell but made the best and the most ample Declaration of them that he could in this Imperial Decree which he caused to be proclaimed every where By all which we may easily be convinced in what gross Errors two sorts of people live First They who imagine that God may be served as well at home as at the Church Such men neither understand the Nature of God nor the Nature of Religion nor their own Nature which teach them quite otherwise And instruct them also to frequent the Publick Assemblies where they have opportunity so to do Secondly For that is another palpable Error to think that it is sufficient if we come on the Lord's Day to testifie that we do not forget God though all the Week beside we take no notice of him but constantly neglect his Publick Service when we are invited to it and have leisure to attend it We forget the many publick common Blessings we dayly need and dayly receive which ought to be as publickly every day implored and acknowledged in our Common Prayers Let the foregoing considerations be duly pondered and they will perswade you both out of Love to God's Honour and out of love to your own good to joyn as often as you can your Prayers Praises and Thanksgivings with the whole Church of God and to make our Assemblies as full as you can both on the Lord's Day and every Day of the Week Whereby you would declare your constant dependence on God and acknowledge how he dayly 〈◊〉 you with his Benefits and draw 〈◊〉 Publick Blessings in abundance upon the Church and Kingdom where you live and do credit to our Holy Religion which alas now looks in many places as if it were despised and not only do credit to it but both help to support it and also promote and propagate it to the Honour and Praise of the Almighty Lord of Heaven and Earth unto whom be Glory in the Church by Christ Jesus throughout all Ages World without end Amen CHAP. XIV The Nature of a Church requires there should be Publick Prayers I Proceed now to the Third Head of Arguments whereby a Christian should be most of all moved to his Duty and that is to consider the Nature of the Church which both requires Publick Assemblies and makes the Service performed in them far more acceptable than Private Prayers can be And here let it be considered in general that the very word we translate Church in the Holy Scriptures signifies in the Greek Language an Assembly a company of persons met together and that publickly upon the publick business or occasions The first time but one we meet with this Word in the New Testament it is used in opposition to a single person alone by himself or to one or two more beside him Matth. xviii 15 16 17. If thy Brother trespass against thee go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone and if he will not hear thee take one or two more c. and if he neglect to hear them tell it to the Church that is to that solemn Assembly which sat to judge causes and unto which was the last resort so that if he did not hear them he was to be lookt upon as an Heathen Man and a Publican And the truth is it signifies any sort of Assembly or concourse of People which was among the Gentiles as well as the Jews For in the xix of the Acts when all the City of Ephesus was in an uproar and ran together into the Theatre crying up Diana this general concourse is thrice called their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Assembly ver 32. Some cryed one thing some another for the Assembly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was confused c. and ver 39. If you inquire of other matters it shall be determined in a lawful Assembly and ver 41. having thus spoken he dismissed the Assembly Now this being the very Notion of the word Church the Christian Church which Christ hath called is an Assembly of Men and Women met together to Worship God by him to give him Thanks for all his Benefits and to implore his Grace and Mercy to them and to all the World It is an Assembly or Company of Men as much as any other but our Saviour's Kingdom being not of this World the Assembly which he appoints is not to meet for Civil Ends and Purposes but for Religious And the great thing in all Religion is the Devout Worship of God and giving Him the Honour due unto his Name for which the Church i.e. Christian Assemblies being founded it is a clear demonstration that this Worship is not so well performed alone by our selves as in these Assemblies For here we act most like Christians that is like Members of the Body of Christ which is his Church With which whosoever doth not joyn he is no longer a Christian because he is not a Member of the Body of Christ which is a Company joyned together to have Fellowship with God and one with another in all Holy Duties of which Prayer Thanksgiving and Praises are the chief For though there they receive Christian Instruction yet that is not the principal business for which they assemble as appears by St. Paul's words to Timothy before-mentioned 1 Tim. ii 1. If we could make Christian people sensible of this they would immediately yield the Publick Worship of God to be that which of all other he most designs to have continued in the World and consequently be most affected towards it and constantly frequent it And how should they remain insensible of it if they would but consider duely that it is implied in their being
likelihood the place where our Lord eat his last Supper with them before his Passion They did not look for this promise of our Saviour in their Closets but expected he would be in the midst of them by the power of the Holy Ghost when they were met together to wait upon him for the fulfilling of his Word IV. And accordingly you may further note that all they who were converted by them to own Christ Jesus for their Lord and Master immediately joyned themselves to them to Worship God in communion with them Thus you read how upon that very day when they received the Holy Ghost and preached thereupon unto all they could meet withal the Resurrection of Christ in their own Language as many as received the Word that is believed on Christ were Baptized that was the first thing they were admitted into the Church and the effect of it was this They continued stedfastly in the Apostles Doctrine and Fellowship and breaking of Bread and in Prayers ver 41 42. which is repeated again ver 46. they continued daily with one accord in the Temple Worshipping God with the Jews and then received the Eucharist at home which was the proper Christian Worship wherein they joyned together in their own Assemblies And here it is very remarkable that when their numbers were increased from three to five thousand and there was a new descent of the Holy Ghost to inable more besides those on whom it fell at first to preach the Word this descent was at the time of Prayer when they were assembled together for that purpose Read Act. iv where you find that the Apostles being let go from their imprisonment they went unto their own Company ver 23. and reported all that the Chief Priests and Elders had said unto them Which when the Company heard they lift up their voice to God with one accord and said Lord Thou art God which hast made Heaven and Earth and the Sea and all that in them is c. grant unto thy Servants that with all boldness they may speak thy Word c. ver 24 25 c. And when they had prayed ver 31. the place was shaken where they were assembled together for Prayer you plainly see and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost and they spake the Word of God with boldness And as it was at Jerusalem so in all other places where they setled a Church it was for this purpose that they should assemble to Worship God together by Christ Jesus This was the very first or principal thing they ordained in such Churches as those words to Timothy which I have often named sufficiently testifie 1 Tim. ii 1. I will therefore that first of all Supplications Prayers Intercessions and giving of Thanks be made for all Men c. Which Assemblies the Apostles required Christians not to forsake no not in times of danger Heb. x. 25. For that you may note as I pass along was to fall off from Christianity as appears by the following Words ver 26. For as to become a Christian was to joyn themselves to the Christian Society in such actions of Religion according to that you read of St. Paul who being converted assayed to joyn himself to the Brethren that is to the Assemblies of Christians Act. ix 26. So to cease to be thus joyned in Christian Communion was to cease to be a Christian and in effect to deny Jesus Christ to be their Lord and Saviour who hath made all that belong unto him to be a Church that is as I have often said a Company of Men and Women assembling themselves together for Divine Offices V. And that they might so do there was it may further be observed a certain place appointed for their Assemblies because there could be no Assemblies but they must be held somewhere or other and they could not be held with any certainty unless the place were determined and known to be designed for that purpose Of this we read so frequently in the Holy Writings of the New Testament that it is a wonder any should make a question of it I mentioned before the upper room Act. i. 11. where the Apostles assembled immediately after our Saviours Ascension which Mr. Mede * Book ii p. 408 c. hath abundantly proved to be the setled place of their Holy Assemblies Where as I said they were assembled again on the day of Pentecost Act. ii 1. and the next day after iv 31. and was the House where they are said to have continued dayly breaking Bread at home Act. ii 46. Nor was this peculiar to Jerusalem but in other Cities they had the like For at Troas also the Church was gathered together in an upper Chamber Act. xx 8. And at Corinth 1 Cor. xi 18 20. the Apostle speaks of their coming together in the Church and into one place which he distinguishes from their own home ver 34. And again xiv 23. he speaks of the whole Church coming together into one place Which was no other but that place where they commonly assembled for Divine Worship And so those words of St. Paul to Timothy are to be understood 1 Tim. ii 8. I will therefore that Men pray every where c. Which is spoken saith Beza in opposition to assembling only at God's House at Jerusalem unto which men were no longer confined but might assemble in any place where there was a House appointed for that purpose So he expounds those words every where omnem locum sacris coetibus destinatum every place appointed or set apart for Holy Assemblies to meet in for St. Paul saith he speaks of Publick Prayer in the common Meeting Thus St. Basil many Ages before him explained the Apostles words L. 2. de Baptismo Resp ad Q. viii in answer to those who urged them to prove that Prayer was not as well performed any where as the Church No such matter these words in every place do not comprehend such places as are imployed in common uses and in prophane or perhaps filthy affairs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. but inlarges the Service of God beyond the Compass of Jerusalem unto any place in the World which according to the Prophecy about Sacrifice is reverently devoted unto God for the Sacred performance of the Glorious Mystery And that these places thus designed for Holy Assemblies were separated from common use and set apart only for this was never doubted till this last Age of fancy and vain conceit Which hath imagined the separation of places to Divine Service only to be a meer legal Institution that is ordained merely by the Law of Moses which made the Tabernacle and afterward the Temple such an Holy Place Whereas they were so made in conformity to the common Notions of Humane Nature and only made more Holy and Separate than any other place by the residence of a visible Majesty and Glory there Otherwise there were Holy that is separated places before that time though not
particularly by St. James Unto which though some Additions perhaps had been then made as there have been more since yet it is hard to think that a great number of Bishops would have owned a Liturgy as composed by St. James if there had not been a constant tradition among them that the Apostles left some stated Form of Prayer and Praise in the Churches which they governed But what need I trouble my self with a long proof of this matter when we have the Confession of the most Learned and Best Men among those whom they that dissent from us have been wont to reverence that there hath been no time wherein there was not a prescribed Form of Divine Service Let Dr. Preston speak for all in a Book of his much prized in former times * Saints dayly Exercise p. 80. where after he had owned that Christ prescribed a Form c. he adds And in the Church at all times both in the Primitive times and all along to the beginning of the Reformed times to Luther and Calvin 's time still in all times the Church had set Forms they used and I know no Objection of weight against it And in Answer to that common Objection which he calls the main one that in stinted Prayer the Spirit is straitned and limited c. He answers as we do now That even those Men that use this reason do the same dayly in the Congregation for when another prayes that is a set Form to him that hears it And therefore if that were a sufficient reason that a Man might not use a set Form because the Spirit is straitned he should not hear another pray at all though it be a conceived Prayer because in that case his Spirit is limited to what that Man saith And very judiciously adds That it is not a bond or restraint of the Spirit because there is a tye of Words For the largeness of the heart standeth not so much in the multitude and variety of Expressions as in the extent of Affection And at last concludes That a set Form of Prayer must be used Would to God they that scruple it would weigh such things as these it would not be long then before they liked nay loved that Form of Prayer which is used in this Church For it is so exactly conformable to the Rule of the Holy Apostle which I have often mentioned 1 Tim. ii 1. consisting of unexceptionable Prayers Supplications Intercessions and Thanksgivings that one cannot but think the Composers of it laid that Rule before them when they framed it It would be too long to give an Account of the whole Book which it is easie to show is made up of those four parts of Divine Service Look only into the Letany which is a word signifying properly a Supplication for the turning away of evil things with which it begins and then proceeds to Prayers and to Intercessions having in the end a general Form of Thanksgiving And observe the admirable Method of it It directs our Prayers to the ever Blessed Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost the only Object of Worship and Fountain of Mercy Of whom we first deprecate evil things and that in the right order first desiring to be delivered from the evil of Sin both of the Spirit and of the flesh and then from the evil of punishment whether in outward or in inward judgments All this we pray to be delivered from by what Christ hath done and suffered for us and by that alone which is the most prevalent way of suing for Mercy And by the way observe that what some through misunderstanding I hope have been pleased to make the Subject of their Mirth and Sport is really and ought to be esteemed the most serious and effectual Supplication that can be made to our Lord. By whose Holy Nativity and Circumcision by his Baptism Fasting and Temptation by his Agony and bloody Sweat by his Cross and Passion by his Pretious Death and Burial by his Glorious Resurrection and Ascension and by the Coming of the Holy Ghost we pray to be delivered For thus it is Our Lord having humbled himself to be a Man for our sakes nay to take on him the form of a Servant and after all his other Sufferings at last to dye the Death of the Cross for us is gone with that Blood which was there shed into the Heavens and is exalted at God's Right Hand in the High and Holy Place where he represents all that he did and suffered from his coming into the World till his going out of it before God and in the vertue of his bloody Sacrifice which he made of himself pleads to have every thing from God which he hath promised and cannot be denied Now for us to beseech him that through the force of his Sufferings of all sorts especially of his cruel Death and the Glory that followed we may be delivered and saved from all evil is the most pathetical the most powerful way of intreaty and the most prevailing importunity that can be used It is as if we should say Lord show unto the Father what thou hast indured for us represent unto him thy obedience unto Death which he promised to reward with all power in Heaven and in Earth Exercise thy Royal Power which thou hast obtained by that humble Obedience for our Deliverance and Salvation As thou hast received the Gift of the Holy Ghost and imparted it to thy Apostles so pour it down more and more upon us also who believe the Gospel which they preached and testified to be the truth Then follow Petitions for all good things First For the Universal Church then for our own in particular For the King and Royal Family For all in Authority under him For all sorts of Persons and for all sorts of Blessings both for Soul and Body Be at the pains I beseech you to read and consider it with such Observations as these and it alone will be sufficient to make you in love with the rest of the Book of Common Prayer A Book so fully perfected according to the Rules of our Christian Religion Dr. Taylor Rector of Hadley in every behalf that no Christian Conscience in the opinion of a famous Martyr in Queen Maries Dayes whose words these are could be offended with any thing therein contained And therefore I conclude that as it would have been a great Sin in the Church of Ephesus if they had dislike● and rejected that way of Supplications Prayers Intercessions and Thanksgiving● wherein Timothy led them to serve God so it will be still in us if we refuse those Directions which are given us in the Divine Service by our Spiritual Governours when it is manifest they guide us by the Word of God and the Apostolical practice according to it If they had composed a Divine Service wherein they required us to pr●● to Angels or to Saints departed t●● Life or to supplicate God by the●● Merits and their Intercession we should