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prayer_n forgive_v lord_n trespass_n 3,485 5 11.3824 5 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A40668 Good thoughts in worse times consisting of personall meditations, Scripture observations, meditations on the times, meditations on all kind of prayers, occasionall meditations / by Tho. Fuller ... Fuller, Thomas, 1608-1661. 1647 (1647) Wing F2436; ESTC R7345 37,840 250

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Needfull for some Namely for such who as yet have not attained what all should endeavour to pray extempore by the Spirit But as little children to whom the plainest and evenest Roome at first is a Labarinth are so ambitious of going an-hye-lone that they scorne to take the guidance of a Forme or Bench to direct them but will adventure by themselves though often to the cost of a knock and a fall So many confesse their weaknes in denying to confesse it who refuseing to be beholden to a set-forme of Prayer preferre to fay non-sence rather then nothing in their extempore Expressions More modesty and no le●e Piety it had been for such men to have prayed longer with Set-formes that they might pray better without them XII The same againe IT is no base and beggerly shift arguing a narrow and necessitous heart but a peice of holy and heavenly Thrist often to use the same Prayer againe Christs Practice is my Directory herein who the third time said the same * words A good Prayer is not like a Stratagem in Warre to be used but once No the oftener the better The cloathes of the Israelites whilst they wandered fortie yeares in the Wildernesse never waxed old as if made of Perpetuano indeed So a good Prayer though often used is still fresh and faire in the Eares and Eyes of Heaven Despaire not then thou simple Soule who hast no exchange of Raiment whose Prayers cannot appeare every day at heavens Court in new cloaths Thou maist be as good a Subject though not so great a Gallant coming alwayes in the same sute Yea perchance the very same which was thy Fathers and Grand-Fathers before thee a well composed Prayer is a good Heire-toome in a family may hereditarily bedescended to many Generations But know thy comfort thy Prayer is well know to he●ven to it which it is a co●stant customer Onely adde new or new degrees of old affections thereunto and it will be acceptable to God thus repaired as if new erected XIII Mixt-Prayers MIxt-Prayers are a methodicall composition no casuall confusion of extempore and Premeditate Prayers put together Wherein the Standers still are the same and the essentiall Parts confession of sin begging of Pardon craving grace for the future thanking God for former Favours c. like the Bones of the Prayer remaine alwayes unaltered Whilst the moveable petitions like the flesh Colour of thy Prayers are added abridged or altered as Gods Spirit adviseth and enableth us according to the emergencies of present occasions In the Mid-land-Sea Galleys are found to be most usefull which partly runne on the Legges of Oares and partly flye with the Wings of Sailes whereby they become serviceable both in a wind and in a calme Such the conveniency of mixtprayer wherein infused and acquired graces meet together and men partly move with the brea the of the holy Spirit partly row on by their owne Industry Such medley prayers are most usefull as having the stedinesse of premeditate and the activity of extemporary prayer joyned together XIIII Take your company along IT is no disgrace for such who have the guift and grace of Extemporary prayer sometimes to use a set-forme for the benefit and behoof of others Iaacob though he could have marched on a man's pace yet was carefull not to over-drive the children and Eewes * big with young Let Ministers remember to bring up the R●re in their Congregations that the meanest may goe along with them in their Devotions God could have created the World ex tempore in a moment but was pleased as I may say ' to make it premediatly in a set-method of six dayes Not for his own Ease but our Instruction that our Heads and Hearts might the better keep pace with his Hands to behold and consider his Workmanship Let no man disdaine to set his owne nimblenesse backward that others may goe along with him Such degrading ones-selfe is the quickest proceeding in Piety when men preferre the edification of others before their owne credit and esteeme XV Prayer must be Quotidian AMongst other Arguments inforceing the necessity of Daily-Prayer this not the least that Christ injoynes us to petition for dayly Bread New-Bread we know is best and in a spirituall sense our Bread though in it selfe as stale and moldie as that of the Gibeonites is every day new because a new and hot blessing as I might say is dayly beg'd and bestowed of God upon it Manna must dayly be gathered not provisionally be hoorded up God expects that men every day addresse themselves unto him by petitioning him for sustenance How contrary is this to the Common-practice of many As Camells in Sandy-Countries are said to drink but once in seven dayes and then in praesens praeteritum futurum for time past present and to come so many fumble this last 〈◊〉 next Weekes devotion all in a prayer Yea some deferre all their praying till the last day Constantine had a conceite that because Baptisme wash't away all sinns he would not be baptized till his Death-bed that so his soule might never loose the purity thereof but immediately mount to Heaven But sudden Death preventing him he was not baptized at all as some say or onely by an Arrian Bishop as others a●irme If any erroniously on the same supposition put off their Prayers to the last let them take heed least long delayed at last they prove either none at all or none in effect XVI The Lords Prayer IN this age wee begin to think meanely of the Lords Prayer Oh how basely may the Lord think of our Prayers Some will not forgive the Lords prayer for that passage therein as we forgive them that trespasse against us Others play the witches on this prayer Witches are reported amongst many other hellish Observations whereby they oblige themselves to Satan to say the Lords prayer backwards Are there not many who though they doe not pronounce the syllables of the Lords prayer retrograde their discretion will not suffer them to be betraied to such a non-sence sin yet they transpose it in effect desiring their Dayly-Bread before Gods Kingdom come preferring temporall benefits before heavenly blessings Oh if every one by this marke should be tryed for a Witch how hard would it goe with all of us Lamiarum plena sunt omnia XVII All Best AT the siedge and takeing of New-Carthage in Spaine there was dis●ention betwixt the Souldiers about the Crown Murall due to him who first footed the Walles of the City Two pretended to the Crown Parts were taken and the Roman Army siding in factions was likely to fall foule and mutually fight against it selfe Scipio the Generall prevented the danger by providing two Murall * Crownes giving one to each who claimed it affirming that on the examination of the prooffes both did appeare to him at the same instant to climb the wall O let us not set severall kinds of Prayers at varience betwixt themselves