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A38583 The reasonableness of our Christian service (as it is contained in the Book of Common-Prayer) evidenced and made clear from the authority of Scriptures and practice of the primitive Christians, or, A short rationale upon our morning and evening service as it is now established in the Church of England wherein every sentence therein contained is manifestly proved out of the Holy Bible, or plainly demonstrated to be consonant thereto / composed and written by Thomas Elborow, vicar of Cheswick ; and since his death made publick by the care and industry of Jo. Francklyn ... Elborow, Thomas. 1678 (1678) Wing E324; ESTC R31410 96,665 240

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owe our being conduct and preservation and to him we are obliged to pay all the obedience and observance which the meekest creatures in nature pay to those who have the care and conduct of them Vers 4. O let us make our solemn addresses to his Sanctuary where his Divine Majesty is signally pleased to exhibit himself and to testifie his peculiar residence and favourable audience to them who assemble there Thither let us come with all the humility and devotion of loyal and thankful hearts and praise and magnifie his Name for all the mercies which we have ever received from him Vers 5. For to do this we have all imaginable obligations not only that of his Soveraign dominion over all to which all the performances of our lives are but a most unproportionable tribute but also his abundant benignity his rich promises of a never-failing mercy and his constant fidelity of performing to every man who is fitly qualified for receiving it the utmost that he ever promised to any 4. A Paraphrase on Magnificat Luke 1. Vers 46 47. MAry the blessed Virgin and mother of the Lord Jesus brake out into this holy Hymn of praise and thanksgiving saying All the faculties of my Soul my affections and understanding have reason to bless and praise the name of God and to return great thanks unto him for I have received great things from him I my self will praise him and will not do it only by another as I have tasted liberally of his bounty so will I in my own person perform this duty His benefits are so great and so good so manifest and so manifold that I cannot utter them with my tongue and therefore must devoutly ponder on them in my heart I will give him my Soul the best thing that I have who hath given to me all that I am or have I will praise him cordially unfeignedly without hypocrisie with all intention in my understanding with all devotion in my affection not with a divided heart but with my whole heart will I praise him I will make him who is great in himself to be reputed so of others I will magnifie him and magnifie my self too in the doing of it He is a Lord able to help and he is a Saviour as willing as he is able I adore his greatness I joy in his goodnes● and whatever I take joy in beside it is only for his sake He is my mighty Saviour and deliverer saving me both from sin and danger Vers 48. He hath done the greatest honour to me the unworthiest of all his Servants that was ever done to any He hath s●ken pity of the wretched condition and state which I the daughter of David's Seed was brought into and hath not disdained my poverty but hath been pleased to make choice of me for a vessel of Grace in a very great work He hath looked upon me in my abased condition with a most gracious eye and hath not only vouchsafed to make me his Child but the Mother of my Maker so that all posterities shall look upon me as a most happy person and most highly dignified by God of any Vers 49. The omnipotent God of Heaven hath done marvellous things in me hath honoured me above imagination hath so blessed me as to make me a Virgin the Mother of the most Blessed in whom all Nations of the Earth are blessed and his Name shall be ever blessed for it Vers 50. For in me he hath accomplished the promised mercy made to Abraham saying I will be thy God and the God of thy seed after thee which abundant kindness is not to me only but ●o all who obey and serve him humbly from time to time to help and comfort them to scatter and confound all their foes and especially to make good his promise to them touching the Messias and Saviour of the world Vers 51. The great and proud designer-of the world are so far from being favoured that they are manifestly opposed and confounded by him and by his only power without any helper hath he now wrought a great and glorious work He hath established the Kingdom of Christ and hath overthrown all the counsels and endeavours of his enemies and hath disappointed all who are proud in the imagination of their own hearts Vers 52. It is ordinary with him to abase the lofty Atheists however high they are raised in might and power and to advance humble persons though they are of never so low degree Vers 53. He takes the poor who depend upon him into his protection and replenisheth them with all necessaries when they call upon him whereas the rich men of the world who trust in their uncertain riches are often brought into want and beggery Vers 54 55. He hath now performed his promise made to Abraham and his Seed hath exhibited to them and to all the believing world the great promised mercy and hath made such a provision for them which shall never fail having sent the Messias the Saviour of the world so long expected which is a mercy that shall never be taken from us Therefore for this unspeakable mercy and for all mercies flowing from this Glory shall be ascribed to God in all the Churches of his Saints and that for ever 5. A Paraphrase upon Psal 98. Vers 1 2. IT is now an opportune season to praise and magnifie the great God of Heaven for all his miraculous deliverances but especially for the glorious conquests of the Messias who by his own power and by vertue of his most perfect righteousness hath obtained for the Humane nature which he assumed and for his whole Church Victory over all his enemies and eternal Glory He hath made a conquest over the Grave by rising triumphantly out of it and thereby hath given us a pawn and pledge of our Resurrection This is a new work indeed and deserves a new Song to be sung in all Ages by all the regenerated part of Mankind who are renewed according to Christ Jesus the most glorious exemplar of all the Regenerate Vers 3. This mighty work of God in raising the Messias from the dead and the completion of his predictions and promises therein his goodness and mercy and Evangelical righteousness by which he is pleased to justifie sinful men through the merits of his Son 's most perfect righteousness embraced by a lively Faith God would have to be published and proclaimed by the preaching of the Gospel to all the men in the world Vers 4. And not published only as a Miracle though of most stupendious nature but as an act of infinite goodness and promised mercy and of great fidelity in performing it too the benefits whereof were first reached forth to his own peculiar people the Jews and afterwards to be published to the utmost Nations of the world who have all their parts in the Redemption from sin and Satan atchieved and wrought by it Vers 5 6 7. This is true matter of the greatest joy and exultation to
THE REASONABLENESS OF OUR Christian Service As it is contained in the Book of COMMON-PRAYER EVIDENCED And made clear from the Authority of Scriptures and Practice of the Primitive Christians Or A short RATIONALE upon our Morning and Evening Service as it is now Established in the Church of ENGLAND Wherein every Sentence therein contained is manifestly proved out of the Holy Bible or plainly demonstrated to be consonant thereto Composed and written by Thomas Elborow Vicar of Cheswick And since his death made publick by the care and industry of Jo. Francklyn A. M. and Minister of Brentford 1 Cor. 1.10 11. Now I beseech you brethren by the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ that ye all speak the same thing and that there be no divisions among you but that ye be perfectly joyned together in the same mind and in the same judgment For it hath been declared unto me of you my brethren by them which are of the house of Cloe that there are contentions among you LONDON Printed for Richard Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1678. Imprimatur July 3. 1674. C. Smith R. P. D. Episc Lond. à Sac. Dom. To the most Virtuous M rs FRANCES ELBOROW Widow of the late deceased Author Madam YOur Husband the Author of this following Treatise a very worthy and in his station eminent Minister of and what of greater note a faithful Advocate for the Church of England besides his continued Exhortations to Piety to all whom his Care did reach or his Interest could prevail with was in the Practises of Publick Duties an eminent Christian Subject continually promoting those Duties fundamental to Government Loyalty and a Communion with the Church by Law Establish'd Of the former and his endeavours for it he gave a good Testimony in the beginning of our late Troubles by his diligent Perswasion of others to it and what is truer proof his own Sufferings for it The latter became 〈◊〉 Care in its season too When our Soveraign was restored to his Right the Church to its former Order and He to a Place for the exercise of his Function he endeavoured to undeceive those the foregoing Times had misled and to make them sensible of the true Harmony in the Churches Publick Divine Service And as his Endeavour so was his Prospect great too for seeing the Present Age even spoil'd he did look forward and endeavour to mend the Succeeding To this end he writ the following Annotations with a design as great as good and which I hope will not in a small measure gain upon the World to beget the Worship of God its due reverent performance to gain the Church the Communication of all ●ational English Subjects and all of the Churches Communion a true sense of their Publick Devotions That neither so great a good nor the memory of the worthy Author should dye not only the care and love which my Function presseth me to of actions of this nature but also many singular acts of kindness and friendship which I had receiv'd from the Author made me gratefully concern'd But having added to these of his many and great favours receiv'd from Your virtuous hands and of those most obliging me to perpetuate your Husband's memory to have him known to the World by benefiting it with some Work of his I lay under far greater obligations To satisfie which that among other scatter'd Papers which came to my hands I should choose to publish this Piece was in consideration of his intent thoughts upon the benefits of it and of the concurrence of Your generous temper rather desiring the benefit of most then the satisfaction of the most curious Knowing moreover that any name or thing made publick hath its reception and takes the measure of its estimation from the greatness or the generality of the advantage it brings There had layn indeed a just accusation against me as of dis-ingenuity toward the Publick so of great ingratitude to your Virtues and to the memory of your Husband upon my neglect in this concern However now give me leave of this necessity to make a small piece of virtue and from that little care the publishing this Book requir'd in me take advantage to express my gratefulness to the memory of the worthy Author and to you the surviving part of him my desire to shew my self Madam Your very faithful Friend and Servant J. F. Brentford June 6. 1677. THE PREFACE TO THE READER Courteous Reader I●ind written Eccles 5.1 that some persons who come into the Religious Assemblies to offer up their service and devotions to God and for want of due consideration do absurd things they do evil and consider not that they do it Now if it be demanded who they are that do so the same Scripture tells us They who do not keep their feet when they enter into the house of God do not demean themselves with all the Reverence imaginable when they come into that Holy place where Gods terrible Majesty is represented which is enough one would think to suppress any unworthy and irreligious actions or thoughts They who do not come into Gods house with all holy devotion and prepared resolutions to offer to him an holy Worship and Service such as he will accept of They who are not ready to hear and to receive instruction to salvation by the Word of God which is there publickly taught They who do not readily dispose themsel●es to all voluntary obedience to the same Word in which obedience consists that Service which is more acceptable with God than any Sacrifice outward They who come into Gods house and special presence there to offer him a Sacrifice and perform it in such a gross and rude manner as that God will not indeed cannot accept of it they do as it were affront him in his own house they offer him an abuse before his face they come to express their folly rather then to shew their devotion they give him the Sacrifice of fools and all for want of due consideration For they consider not that they do evil Now to correct all these errours and evils which may be committed in the Service of God for want of due consideration which are great evils however little account we may make of them I shall fix your considerations upon some few things very necessary to be thought upon when ye are either going about or are upon the Service of God 1. When ye are entring consider that ye are entring Gods house and therefore keep your feet when ye enter Eccles 5.1 which words are a caution commanding our care and our consideration that we do not enter rudely that we do not enter rashly and unadvisedly I or we are going into the house of God whither we are to carry nothing along with us which may be displeasing and offensive unto that God into whose house we are going We are to look to our feet that is our passions and affections which are as the feet and lower part
read that he was saith Ambrose but we never read when he was not begotten of his Father before all worlds but the manner of his begetting or his generation who can declare Isa 53.8 The Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son neither made nor created nor begotten but proceeding John 14.26 John 15.26 How the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son we are not able to say need not to search only because revealed we ought to believe it so far as it is revealed The Holy Ghost's procession is as ineffable as the Son's generation I know not how saith St. Augustine to distinguish betwixt that and this for as both are credible so both are ineffable So there is one Father not three Fathers one Son not three Sons one Holy Ghost not three Holy Ghosts Ephes 4.6 John 3.16 Ephes 4.4 And in this Trinity none is afore or after other none is greater or less then another But the whole three Persons are co-eternal together and co-equal John 10.30 Philip. 2.6 1 John 5.7 So that in all things as is aforesaid the Vnity in Trinity and the Trinity in Vnity is to be worshipped Rom. 11.36 1 John 2.22 23. Revel 4.8 Isa 6.3 He therefore that will be saved must thus think of the Trinity That is The Christian Religion which offers Salvation to all who shall embrace it obliges those who will become Proselytes to it to believe God to be as he hath revealed himself to be in his holy Word that is God Father Son and Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 God Father Word and Holy Ghost 1 John 5.7 Three and yet but one three Persons and yet but one God This Mystery of the Trinity saith Bernard is to be embraced by Faith not searched into by Reason I believe saith he the eternal and blessed Trinity though I understand it not and apprehend that by Faith which I cannot comprehend by Reason Many of the Fathers have undertaken to give us some adumbrations of this Mystery which yet cannot be seen clearly and therefore ought not to be examined curiously Tertullian hath shadowed it forth by the same Sun in its body beams and light Lactantius by the same water in its Fountain Spring and River Augustine by the same Soul in its understanding memory and will Basil by the three distinct colours in the Rain-bow Jerome by the same hand arm and fingers Meletius by three fingers And the Hand which appeared to Belshazzar upon the wall Dan. 5.5 was a hand with three fingers say some Expositors upon the place Humane eloquence saith St. Augustine hath laboured much in this Mystery but wanted words to express it Yet however Reason cannot instruct us to know what is hid it should direct us to believe what is revealed in Scripture concerning this Mystery Hereticks have endeavoured to break this mysterious knot which they were not able to untie yet they themselves have been broken and this Mystery is preserved Ignatius Scholar to St. John the Evangelist hath defended it in his Epistles so hath Vincentius Lyrinensis in his Golden Treatise so have Tertullian and St. Augustine in their Books written of it so Athanasius in his most excellent Treatise entituled God the Word incarnate and more eminent writers which I forbear now to mention We read Psal 50. ver 21. some men who were far enough from being good men charged by God himself who did so far mistake God and themselves too that they thought God like themselves when they were not themselves I know that place is properly applicable to men of the most vitious lives and putrified manners to such as deny God at least in their practises yet it may after a sort be applyed to those also who mistake him upon another account and presume to be too familiar with him only because they are not well instructed to know their distance who discourse of God and of Religion as of common things and by so doing draw contempt and irreverence towards both To advance the reputation of Religion and to gain it that respect and reverence which it ought to have we must advance the reputation of God first and shew him to be such a one as is rather to be admired and adored then to be drawn into a low esteem by our over-much familiarity This Creed serves now for such a purpose it being framed up not so much to advance our knowledge as to edifie our reverence that we may have more humble and reverend conceits of God and of Religion too when we shall see how much fools we are though we may take our selves to be very wise men and that all the knowledge we have of God in respect of that which we cannot know is but ignorance This Creed may serve to check that pride which is so radicated in our natures that we presume to be acquainted with all the ways methods and operations of God with all Religion and all that is Religious whereas though revealed to us by the Creatures and the Scriptures we know very little of God himself The greatest part of what we know of him is but the least part of what we know not of him There is nothing in God but what is very mysterious he was not God if he could be comprehended not only the mystery of Godliness which takes up the latter part of this Creed is a great mystery 1 Tim. 3.16 but the mystery of the Godhead which takes up the former part is also a very great mystery Now this should beget in us fear and reverence that we have such a God to do withall upon all good occasions who when he is brought the clearest down to our understanding is yet above it The more he reveals himself to us the more is he hid from us he cloaths himself with light yet we can see nothing but the dark side of him that which reveals other things to us hides him from us He is not far from us Act. 17.27 yet he is out of our reach He makes his approaches to us and yet is unapproachable 1 Tim. 6.16 He is visible in his works Rom. 1.19 20. and yet invisible in himself 1 Tim. 6.16 He gives himself several names and this amongst the rest I am that I am Exod. 3.14 as to shew him a God unchangable so to shew him a God unspeakable The three great works wherein he was most manifest are Creation Redemption and Sanctification wherein we admire three and are to adore but one we may discover three Persons and yet we must pay our Devotions and Adorations but to one God In the Creation we have three Persons creating yet but one Creator The creation of the matter is ascribed to the power of the Father the disposition of the form to the wisdom of the Son the preservation of the whole to the love of the Holy Ghost The Persons are three and yet inseparable acting by a strange order in these three great works yet acting inseparably In the first of Genesis where
sorrow upon the Soul and a Repentance not to be repented of That it may please thee to defend and provide for the fatherless children and widows and all that are desolate and oppressed We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. We pray for those whom God himself hath especially declared in Scripture that he will be careful of and kind to and the intimations of his will and pleasure are the best directions for our Prayers neither can we pray more suitably to the mind of God for his pity and compassion to be extended to any then to those miserable persons whom he hath expresly nominated in his Sacred Scriptures to be the proper and fit objects of his compassion and protection so that he is pleased to stile himself the Father of the fatherless the Husband of the widow the Helper of the helpless and the Friend of the friendless the only succour and sure refuge to all miserable and distressed persons who being destituted of the world six their sole dependance upon him That it may please thee to have mercy upon all men We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. When we pray that God would have mercy upon all men we pray for his general mercy to be extended to all in the same sense as he wills all to be saved 1 Tim. 2.1 2 3 4. and in the same sense as he is pleased to distribute out his mercies to all Mat. 5.45 That it may please thee to forgive our enemies persecutors and slanderers and to turn their hearts We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. In praying for our enemies we observe that special command given by our Saviour the observing of which commandment brings us up to the perfection of our Christianity and makes us most like unto God Mat. 5.44 45. And because there is no inordinate lust in our corrupt nature so hard to be mortified as hatred is therefore did Christ in his Sermon upon the Mount administer something expresly towards the mortifying of this wicked passion wherein he doth not only take off the edge of our Revenge but he turns it quite the contrary way teaching us to love our enemies to bless those who curse us to do good to those who hate us to pray for those who despitefully use us and persecute us to love those for Gods sake whom perhaps for their own sake we cannot love The holy Apostle St. Paul teacheth the same Rom. 12.20 21. as Justin Martyr said to Trypho the Jew Ye persecute us and we pray for you Such like forms of Prayers may be met with in the writings of the Primitive Fathers the Liturgies and Constitutions of the Ancient Church Ignatius in his Epistle to Polycarp and the Church of Smyrna Tertullian and Cyprian in their Treatises of Christian Patience have written very notably upon this argument In all which may be observed the charity of the Church of Christians towards the very enemies of that Religion which she professeth There is not any thing in this Litany but may be met with in ancient Writers and ancient Liturgies ascribed to Chrysostom Basil St. James and in the Catholick Collect mentioned in the Constitutions which are father'd upon Clemens Romanus the places I could cite word for word only in regard I am writing to English People I have made it my design to write all in English such as it is and not so much as to dip into any other Tongue or Language That it may please thee to give and preserve to our use the kindly fruits of the earth so as in due time we may enjoy them Psal 104.27 28. Psal 65.9 10 11 12 13. Mat. 6.11 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. From the Litanies or Rogations then used upon their common Perambulations came the three days before the day Anniversary of our Lords Ascension to be called Rogation-days and the Sunday before Rogation-Sunday wherein the Church prayed especially and most seasonably that it would please God to give and preserve to their use the kindly Fruits of the earth so that in due time they might enjoy them For unless God give them and preserve them when given and preserve them to our use and give us grace to use them as we ought to do we can neither enjoy them him in them nor our selves That it may please thee to give us true repentance to forgive us all our sins negligences and ignorances and to endue us with the grace of thy holy Spirit to amend our lives according to thy holy Word 2 Tim. 2.25 26. Jer. 5.24 25. Mat. 3.8 Mat. 6.33 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. This petition in very good order follows the former for unless that be granted to us which we petition for in this prayer all the earthly blessings before prayed for may never ripen to maturity they may be blasted in the springing of them the Canker Locust Caterpillar or any thing else however contemptible may be sent on Gods errand come armed with his displeasure and ravish these blessings out of our hands before we can come to the reaping of them One sin God he knows we are guilty of many unrepented of may bring a curse upon our blessings like the Frogs and Flies Locusts and Caterpillars into Aegypt or the Worm into Jonah's Gourd and quickly deprive us of all those blessings of increasing Nature which we yet hold by no other tenure then that of a defeasible expectation and if it shall please God to be so mercifull unto us as to give us these good things to enjoy and to forgive us our sins which is a greater mercy then all besides yet that we may not abuse them to luxury and intemperance when we have them but use them soberly that we may reap the good and God the glory we pray for the grace of Gods holy Spirit that all these blessings may be sanctified to us and that they may be as so many new obligations upon us to amend our lives and to live as becometh those who have received from God the great donor such obliging favours Son of God we beseech thee to hear us Mat. 9.27 Luk. 1.35 Son of God c. O Lamb of God that takest away the sins of the world John 1.29 Grant us thy peace John 14.27 John 16.33 Rom. 5.1 O Lamb of God that takest away the sins of the world John 1.36 Have mercy upon us Mark 10.47 48. O Christ hear us O Christ hear us Lord have mercy upon us Lord have mercy c. Christ have mercy upon us Christ have mercy c. Lord have mercy upon us Lord have mercy c. These repetitions are warrantable by Scripture and therefore cannot be by men of Reason and Religion judged vain it is an argument of zeal and devotion and ferventy in prayer when our petitions are doubled by which we express our desires We meet with the like re-duplications frequently used in the Primitive Church David used often repetitions Psal 136. Psal 119. Psal 107.
was betrayed by Judas on a Wednesday was crucified on a Friday and was laid in the Sepulchre on a Saturday And the Church enjoyned these days to be quarterly observed as Fasting-days for these following reasons 1. That Christians might be as devout as the Jews who observed four several and solemn times of Fast in the year Zechar. 8.19 2. Because these are the First-fruits of every Season which we rightly dedicate to the service and honour of God that beginning every Season so devoutly we may learn to spend the whole year accordingly and that by this means we may procure Gods blessing upon the Fruits of the year arising out of the Earth which are at these Seasons either sown sprung up come to ripeness or gathered into Barns 3. That we may call our selves yearly to a strict account for our sins committed every Season and sadly and seriously repent of them 4. That we may implore Gods mercy to our bodies in freeing us from those common distemperatures which usually are predominant at these four Seasons 5. That we may procure the greater blessing upon the Ministers received into Holy Orders at these four Seasons of the year by Prayer Fasting and imposition of hands Now the forementioned weeks are called Ember weeks from an old Saxon word Enthber which denotes Abstinence or say others from the word Ember now commonly in use which signifies Ashes for Ashes were a ceremony frequently made use of in times of Fasting and carried with it significancy sufficient from which ceremony the first day of the Lent-fast was termed Ash-wednesday of which it is probable I may say something more in proper place A Prayer for the High Court of Parliament to be read during their Session MOst gracious God we humbly beseech thee as for this Kingdom in general so especially for the High Court of Parliament under our most religious and gracious King at this time assembled That thou wouldst be pleased to direct and prosper all their consultations to the advancement of thy glory the good of thy Church the safety honour and welfare of our Soveraign and his Kingdoms that all things may be so ordered and settled by their endeavours upon the best and surest foundations that peace and happiness truth and justice religion and piety may be established among us for all generations These and all other necessaries for them for us and thy whole Church we humbly beg in the Name and Mediation of Jesus Christ our most blessed Lord and Saviour Amen Note No persons can be offended at this Prayer who are not enemies to all goodness and rather desire that debauchery and wickedness should overspread a Nation to the shame and dishonour of it than piety and vertue to advance its reputation A Collect or Prayer for all conditions of men to be used at such times when the Litany is not appointed to be said O God the Creator and Preserver of all mankind we humbly beseech thee for all sorts and conditions of men that thou wouldest be pleased to make thy ways known unto them thy saving health unto all nations Psal 67.1 2. 1 Tim. 2.1 2 3 4. More especially we pray for the good estate of the Catholick Church Gal. 6.10 Psal 122.6 that it may be so guided and governed by thy good spirit that all who profess and call themselves Christians may be led into the way of truth and hold the faith in unity of spirit in the bond of peace and in righteousness of life Ephes 4.3 Finally we commend to thy fatherly goodness all those who are any ways afflicted or distressed in mind body or estate Heb. 13.3 * * This to be said when any desire the prayers of the Congregation especially those for whom our prayers are desired that it may please thee to comfort and relieve them according to their several necessities giving them patience under their sufferings and a happy issue out of all their afflictions And this we beg for Jesus Christ his sake Amen A Prayer that may be said after any of the former O God whose nature and property is ever to have mercy and to forgive receive our humble petitions Psal 103.13 and though we be tied and bound with the chain of our sins yet let the pitifulness of thy great mercy loose us for the honour of Jesus Christ our Mediatour and Advocate Amen Note Touching the preceding Prayers and following Thanksgivings may it be observed that extraordinary dangers should of themselves invite us and stir us up to extraordinary Prayers and extraordinary deliverances from those dangers should equally move us to extraordinary thankfulness as we are to pray to God for the blessings we would obtain so we are to praise him when they are obtained when God opens his hand to gratifie us we should open our mouths to glorifie him It is the Apostles prescribed method to begin with Prayer and to end with Thanksgiving 1 Tim. 2.1 indeed where the concernment is National a provision in such cases is usually better made by fixing set days to be solemnly and religiously observed but it many times happens that the calamities inflicted and mercies received are only Provincial or peculiar to some one County Town City or Vicinage so that they may not reach the cognizance of the Supreme Magistrate therefore are these Prayers and Thanksgivings composed that they may be ready upon all occasions for us to have recourse to when there are no set days indicted for such a purpose THANKSGIVINGS A General Thanksgiving ALmighty God Father of all mercies 2 Cor. 1.3 we thine unworthy servants do give thee most humble and hearty thanks Psal 116.12 13. for all thy goodness and loving kindness to us and to all men 1 Tim. 2.1 * * This to be said when any that have been prayed for desire to return praise particularly to those who desire now to offer up their praises and thanksgivings for thy late mercies vouchsafed unto them We bless thee for our creation preservation and all the blessings of this life but above all for thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ for the means of grace and for the hope of glory And we beseech thee give us that due sense of all thy mercies that our hearts may be unfeignedly thankful and that we may shew forth thy praise not only with our lips but in our lives by giving up our selves to thy service and by walking before thee in holiness and righteousness all our days Luk. 1.74 75. Tit. 2.11 12. through Jesus Christ our Lord to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost be all honour and glory world without end Amen Note This Thanksgiving is not only warrantable by more Texts of Scripture then I have cited but it is so excellent both for matter and method that all Churches and Writers can hardly shew a better form so full of matter and that comprized in so few words This needs no vindication because no persons in their