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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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all that we are or have is due to thee from whom all is received and therefore we do not impute any thing to our selves or our own acquisition In this Faith we pray and confide that what we pray for shall be granted RUBRICK Then likewise he shall say O Lord open thou our lips Answ And our mouth shall shew forth thy praise Psal 51.15 O God make speed to save us Psal 70.1 Answ O Lord make hast to help us Psal 40.13 RUBRICK Here all standing up the Priest shall say Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost Isa 42.8 1 Cor. 10.31 Rom. 11.36 Answ As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen Priest Praise ye the Lord Psal 146.1 Answ The Lords name be praised EXPLANATION The forementioned Versicles with the Responses are Canonical Scripture and taken most-what out of the Book of Psalms by which we acknowledge our dependance upon God and that we are unable of our selves to perform any Religious duty well unless God enable us They are used interchangably by Minister and People to testifie mutual Love to strengthen affection to stir up devotion to kindle and enflame it one in another to oblige us to greater attention and this praying by way of Response is grounded upon the Scripture and conformable to the practice of the earliest and purest times of Christianity And for the form of giving glory to God Father Son and Holy Ghost it is very ancient by which we avouch our Doctrine and Faith of the Trinity against all opposers as we have received from Christ and his Apostles so we baptize believe and give glory to God Father Son and Holy Ghost and this we do not without Scripture-warrant Mat. 28.19 Rom. 11.36 It is the Christians Hymn and shorter Creed some who professed Christianity had corrupted this form of giving glory to God and had framed up another form in favour of their own new opinions and perswasions in Religion differing from that of the Ancient Christians both in words and sense but the ancient form which was before and is still used was again restored upon the restauration of which those words were added As it was in the beginning c. that is in the first beginning of the true Religion professed and solemnly owned by the name of Christian Now certainly very meet it is that we should give glory to God because it is appropriate to God alone Psal 115.1 It is his peculiar right which he lays claim to Isa 42.8 for he is the King of Glory The Heavens declare it Psal 19.1 the Angels chant it Luk. 2.14 Seraphims resound it Isa 6.3 and man is no less obliged to it then those coelestial Spirits are No place on earth is more proper for it then God's house where every man should speak of his honour and there is no better posture to do it in then standing for by it we shew our chearful readiness to give glory to God and our pious resolution to stand fast in the Faith of the Holy Trinity And for those words Praise ye the Lord they are the same with Hallelujah set at the end of the five last Psalms in the Psalter and used in this place to be as an impression invitatory to the following Psalms and the following Response The Lords name be praised is according to what we find written Psal 106.48 RUBRICK Then shall be said or sung this Psalm following except on Easter-day upon which another Anthem is appointed and on the nineteenth day of every month it is not to be read here but in the ordinary course of the Psalms PSAL. 95. Ver. 1. O Come let us sing unto the Lord let us heartily rejoyce in the strength of our salvation 2. Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and shew our selves glad in him with psalms 3. For the Lord is a great God and a great King above all gods 4. In his hand are all the corners of the earth and the strength of the hills is his also 5. The sea is his and he made it and his hands prepared the dry land 6. O come let us worship and fall down and kneel before the Lord our Maker 7. For he is the Lord our God and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand 8. To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wilderness 9. When your fathers tempted me proved me and saw my works 10. Fourty years long was I grieved with this generation and said It is a people that do err in their hearts for they have not known my ways 11. Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen EXPLANATION With this Psalm the ancient Church used to begin her Service it was the invitatory Psalm with which they usually began before the Congregation was well met together at the hearing of which all hastned to Church and it is very well appointed to be used in this place before all other Psalms because it is the fittest to conform us to the right use of all the rest and to furnish out Gods Service with all due reverence Glory be to the Father c. is added at the end of this and of every Psalm that we may reduce that to practice which is the scope of every Psalm that is Give Glory to God RUBRICK Then shall follow the Psalms in order as they are appointed And at the end of every Psalm throughout the year and likewise at the end of Benedicite Benedictus Magnificat and Nunc dimittis shall be repeated Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost Answ As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen EXPLANATION The Psalter was anciently divided into several portions called Nocturns by which division the Psalms were read every week and this was a custom peculiar only to the Latine Church for in the Syrian and Greek Churches the Psalter was read over every twenty days Our Church allows a months space for the reading over the Book of Psalms and her meaning is that they should be read in publick according to ancient practice by way of Response Now the reasons why the Psalms are so frequently read over and why in this manner I conceive to be these Because the Psalms do contain in them the choice and flower of all things profitable which may be met withall in the Holy Scriptures and do more movingly express them by reason of the Poetical form wherein they are written No part of Scripture doth more admirably set forth all the considerations and operations which belong to God nor so magnifie the Holy meditations and actions of Divine
let thy mercy lighten upon us as our trust is in thee Psal 33.22 O Lord in thee have I trusted let me never be confounded Psal 71.1 EXPLANATION The Church in appointing Hymns observes punctually the rule of the Apostle Colos 3.16 and from the practice of Christ and his Apostles who sung Hymns together Mat. 26.30 probably to teach and instruct us to do the like may the Antiquity of them in the Christian Church be derived We have not only Christ's example for it and the Apostles command for it but we read of it practised in the Church of Alexandria which was founded by St. Mark St. Ambrose brought Hymns into the Church of Millain God saith Jerom is delighted with Morning and Evening Hymns St. Augustine as we read in the Life of him was very much afflicted a little before his death as for the decay of other things in Religion and in the publick worship of God so that the Hymns and Lauds used to be sung to God were lost out of the Church Those Hymns were either said or sung but more properly sung because Hymns are Songs of Praise and it was the practice to sing them both in the Jewish Psal 47.6 and Christian Church Mat. 26.30 for singing enflames and enlivens the minds and affections of the hearers and such musick by pleasing the affections and delighting the minds of men makes the Service of God more delectable and less tedious And for this reason is Church-Service so intermixed with Lessons Psalms and Prayers and like the garment of the Spouse Psal 45. made up of such variety that by this variety our devotions may be carried on with the more chearfulness and the greater appetite and without any fastidiousness Standing was the usual posture for the saying or singing of Hymns for it is indeed the most proper posture for thanksgiving or laud Psal 134.1 2. 2 Chron. 7.6 and this erection of our bodies doth most properly express the elevation of our hearts in joy praises and Eucharist unto God The forementioned Hymn called Te Deum laudamus was composed as it is said by St. Ambrose and St. Augustine which they used to sing Anthem-wise and the occasion of its composition was St. Augustine's Conversion and Baptism in both which St. Ambrose was most happily instrumental But be the Author who it will the Structure though Humane is complete and the materials of it are Divine and it is worthily enough vouchsafed a place in our constant Service for its Antiquity for its consonancy with Scripture for having the Churches both warrant and approbation for the contents of it which are most Christian hugely advantageous for the heightning of Devotion and promoting of Religion wherein is acknowledged the Power and Majesty of God the Father the Divinity and Humanity of God the Son his Incarnation Passion Resurrection Ascension Exaltation to Glory and Power committed to him for to guide rule preserve and govern his Church and wherein also is asserted the Divinity of God the Holy Ghost and there is nothing in the whole Hymn but what is very agreeable to Scripture Some exception may be made against this expression in it When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death thou didst open the kingdom of Heaven to all believers But what can justly be found fault with in this expression by it we do not express this to be our meaning as if we thought that the departed Saints were not in a state of bliss and happiness before Christ's Ascension but our meaning is rather that Christ by his Ascension prepared a greater and more complete state of bliss for those that are his meriting their going to it by his Death and making the way passable by his Resurrection and Ascension John 3.13 John 14.2 3. Heb. 9.8 12. Heb. 10.19 20. Heb. 11.40 for by this means he procured greater Grace for them here greater Glory for them hereafter Whatever he did or suffer'd the end was to open the kingdom which our sins had shut up which he opened most liberally at his Ascension and after he had overcome the sharpness of death for then he took a local possession of Glory for the use of all that are his Be the state of the Saints departed before what it will yet what God bestowed upon their Souls was procured by Christ's Death Resurrection and Ascension which followed after as also the Glorification of their bodies is most certainly to follow the Exaltation of his whither the glory of the Head is gone before the hope of the Body is to follow after and when our bodies and souls come to be glorified together then shall we be in our complete and perfect bliss Glory be to the Father is not enjoyned to be used at the end of this Hymn because it is it self almost nothing else but that Doxology enlarged RUBRICK Or this Canticle Benedicite omnia opera Domini O All ye works of the Lord bless ye the Lord praise him and magnifie him for ever Psal 145.10 O ye Angels of the Lord bless ye the lord praise him c. Psal 148.2 O ye Heavens bless ye the Lord praise him c. Psal 148.4 O ye waters that be above the Firmament bless ye the Lord praise him c. Psal 148.4 O all ye powers of the Lord bless ye the Lord c. Psal 150.1 O ye Sun and Moon bless ye the Lord c. Psal 148.3 O ye Stars of Heaven bless ye the Lord c. Psal 148.3 O ye showres and dwe bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.8 Psal 148.4 O ye winds of God bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.18 Psal 148.8 O ye fire and heat bless ye the Lord c. O ye Winter and Summer bless ye the Lord c. Psal 74.17 O ye dews and frosts bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.16 O ye frost and cold bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.16 17. O ye ice and snow bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.16 17. O ye nights and days bless ye the Lord praise him c. Psal 74.16 O ye light and darkness bless ye the Lord praise him c. Psal 104.19 20. O ye lightnings and clouds bless ye the Lord c. Job 38.25 34 35. O let the earth bless the Lord yea let it praise him c. Psal 67.6 O ye mountains and hills bless ye the Lord praise him c. Psal 148.9 O all ye green things upon the earth bless ye the Lord c. Psal 147.8 Psal 148.9 O ye wells bless ye the Lord c. Psal 104.10 O ye seas and flouds bless ye the Lord Job 38.8 9 10 11. O ye Whales and all that move in the waters bless ye the Lord Gen. 1.21 O all ye fowls of the air bless ye the Lord Psal 148.10 O all ye beasts and cattel bless ye the Lord Psal 148.10 O ye children of men bless ye the Lord Psal 107.8 O let Israel bless the Lord praise him c. Psal 135.19 O ye
worship one God in Trinity and Trinity in Vnity 1 John 5.7 Revel 4.8 Mat. 28.19 Rom. 11.36 Neither confounding the persons nor dividing the substance The Jews and Turks have a Faith such as it is for they worship one God and many of them keep that Faith whole and in a sense undefiled for as they believe one God so they live according to what they believe The meer Pagans and Heathens have a Faith too for they worship more Gods then one they will rather admit of too many then none at all few Atheists are to be met with amongst any of these as Atheism stands in direct opposition to a Deity Yet all Jews Turks and Pagans may be termed Atheists and Infidels in opposition to the Christian Religion in regard they all deny the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead which all sound Christians do believe worship and adore For there is one person of the Father another of the Son and another of the Holy Ghost But the Godhead of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost is all one the Glory equal the Majesty co-eternal Such as the Father is such is the Son and such is the Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 1 John 5.7 Heb. 1.3 John 10.30 Philip. 2.6 The doctrine of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of Godhead and Divine Essence is the peculiar doctrine of Christians and that which remarkably distinguishes the Christian Religion from all other Religions in the world Though all the world besides opposed it yet Christians have ever believed and embraced it and as they have believed so they have been baptized and have always given glory to God one in Essence Father Son and Holy Ghost three in Person always acknowledging in the blessed Trinity and unspeakable Deity one substance in work not divided in will agreeing in omnipotence and glory equal The Heathens especially the Platonists had some broken notions of this admirable Mystery which ought to be the subject of our adoration and devotion rather then of our curiosity and search The Jews had many dark adumbrations of it but it was only cleared and revealed to Christians God the Father in the Creation of the world God the Son in the Redemption of mankind God the Holy Ghost in the Sanctification of the Church To search too far into this Mystery is rashness to dispute it is folly to deny it madness to believe it is true piety and to know it is life The Father uncreate the Son uncreate and the Holy Ghost uncreate Gen. 1.2 3. The Father incomprehensible the Son incomprehensible and the Holy Ghost incomprehensible 1 Tim. 6.16 The Father eternal the Son eternal and the Holy Ghost eternal Deut. 33.27 Psal 90.2 God a self-being gave being to the Creatures he was himself without beginning gave a beginning to time and to the world in time he made something of nothing and of that something he made all things God who created the world was himself uncreated and as uncreated so incomprehensible for if he could be comprehended he should not be God and as incomprehensible so eternal that is God from everlasting before all time and to everlasting when time shall be no more And yet they are not three eternals but one eternal As also there are not three incomprehensibles nor three uncreated but one uncreated and one incomprehensible So likewise the Father is Almighty the Son Almighty and the Holy Ghost Almighty And yet they are not three Almighties but one Alighty So the Father is God the Son is God and the Holy Ghost is God And yet they are not three Gods but one God So likewise the Father is Lord the Son Lord and the Holy Ghost Lord And yet not three Lords but one Lord 1 John 5.7 Revel 1.8 Revel 4.8 1 Cor. 8.5 6. God is potentially one personally three one in Essence three in Subsistence in the diversification of Names as the Scripture hath made the distinction three but in Nature Substance and Essence one so the holy Fathers of the Church have forced themselves to speak because they knew not how to speak better nor more clearly in so deep a Mystery neither had they spoken so much I suppose had not the enemies to Christianity extorted it from them and forced them to speak out where they had a mind to be silent When the great doctrine of the Trinity which is the peculiar doctrine of Christians was opposed they thought themselves obliged to defend it and in such terms too as to declare their own meaning though perhaps not to all capacities very intelligible For as it follows in this Creed the meaning of the Church so far as she can express her meaning is this For like as we are compelled by the Christian verity to acknowledge every person by himself to be God and Lord So are we forbidden by the Catholick Religion to say there be three Gods or three Lords Revel 4.8 Heb. 1.3 Rom. 11.36 1 John 5.7 Christians only defended that form of Baptism instituted by our Saviour and that Faith into which they were baptized viz. into the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Mat. 28.19 and if in their own defence they have used expressions not so candidly received and embraced by all that read them they are not to be blamed for it but their opposers who forced them to make use of what expressions they could in their own defence They chose rather to be accounted fools for Christ then to betray and yield up that form of Christ's Institution by which they were initiated in Baptism to be his Disciples The Father is made of none neither created nor begotten His name is I am which shews him to be a self-being Exod. 3.14 and the Heathen Aristotle dyed with an expression in his mouth not much differing when he called upon the Being of Beings to have mercy on him And other Heathens both Poets and Philosophers taking their Light perhaps from the Sacred Scriptures have used terms equivalent to shew God the Father who is the original principle of the Deity to be a self-being by whose bounty and benefit all things are as he himself is by and from himself and by the benefit of none The Son is of the Father alone not made nor created but begotten John 1.14 18. The Son of God who is also very God in respect of his Divine Nature not a Son by way of Eminence but by Essence not by Priviledge or Prerogative but by Nature and Substance was of the Father alone not differing from him in respect of Deity but in respect of Personality He was not made for he was in the beginning before any thing was made and all things were made by him John 1.1 2 3. neither was he created for he was before all creatures his goings forth have been from everlasting Mic. 5.2 He was before the world was In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God John 1.1 We
sedition privy conspiracy and rebellion from all false doctrine heresie and schism from hardness of heart and contempt of thy Word and Commandment Good Lord deliver us We are caution'd and advised by the holy Scriptures to fear the Lord and the King and not to have any thing to do with those who are seditious and given to change Prov. 24.21 for such persons are of very unhappy tempers and plot mischiefs secretly Psal 17.12 are unquiet in themselves and will not suffer others to live quietly by them their hearts are not stablished with grace but are of unstable minds carried about with divers and strange doctrines Heb. 13.9 sound doctrine they regard not but after their own lusts heap to themselves Teachers having itching ears which ears they turn from the truth that they may be turned unto fables 2 Tim. 4.3 4. they have in them evil hearts of unbelief hardned through the deceitfulness of sin so that they depart from the living God Heb. 3.12 13. contemn his Word and slight his Commandment Now from these persons and from the evil of their doings that we may neither act evil with them nor suffer evil from them do we pray to be delivered By the mystery of thy holy Incarnation by thy holy Nativity and Circumcision by thy Baptism Fasting and Temptation Good Lord deliver us Christ's Incarnation Nativity Circumcision Baptism Fasting and Temptation we meet with 1 Tim. 3.16 Mat. 1.25 Luk. 1.35 Luk. 2.21 Mat. 3.16 Luk. 3.21 Mat. 4.1 2 3 4 5 6. By thine Agony and bloudy sweat by thy Cross and Passion by thy precious death and burial by thy glorious Resurrection and Ascension and by the coming of the Holy Ghost Good Lord deliver us These we also find expresly mentioned in the holy Scriptures Christ's Agony and bloudy sweat Mat. 26.37 38. Luk. 22.44 his Cross and Passion Philip. 2.8 Heb. 12.2 his precious death and burial Mat. 27.58 59 60. his glorious Resurrection Mat. 28.6 his Ascension Luk. 24.51 and the coming down of the Holy Ghost Act. 2. and By all these or Through all these we pray for deliverance The meanest Grammarian would tell us that here is no swearing or conjuration in the case their eyes must look through very strange Spectacles who can spie out an oath here By is no more then Through and in these prayers we do no other then desire God to aid us by applying to us the fifteen benefits here rehearsed These passionate strains are no forms of Oaths they are only a compendious recapitulation of the History of the Gospel and an acknowledgment of the chief means of our Salvation We read the like expressions 1 Pet. 2.24 Isa 53.5 By in these places is no sign of an oath only it notes the instrumental cause of a thing Zanchy confessed that in the Liturgick Offices of the Roman Church these two things pleased him very much First that they did conclude their Pravers Through Jesus Christ our Lord Secondly that they did enumerate in their Prayers all the acts and offices of the Mediator adding By thy Cross and Passion c. And it was undoubtedly to very good purpose that the 〈◊〉 Fathers of the Greek 〈◊〉 after they had recounted in their Liturgies all the particular pains as they are set down in the story of Christ's Passion and by all and every one of 〈◊〉 petition for mercy did after all 〈◊〉 up with this expression By the unknow● 〈…〉 thy Body and agonies of thy Soul ●ave mercy upon us save us and deliver us In all time of our tribulation in all time of our wealth in the hour of death and in the day of judgment Good Lord deliver us In regard we are liable to many sorts of temptations which may befall us either in a prosperous or adverse estate we pray unto God that he would deliver us from every evil work and preserve us unto his Heavenly Kingdom 2 Tim. 4.18 that he would be assistant to us in the hour of death and destroy the dread and fear of it in us by vertue of the death of him who died that he might destroy death and him who had the power of it Heb. 2.14 15. We pray also that a gracious sentence may be passed upon us at the last Judgment implying withall that we may so lead our lives as not to fall under the other more dreadful one The summe of what is here prayed for is contained in the petitions of our Saviour's Prayer mentioned Mat. 6.13 We sinners do beseech thee to hear us O Lord God and that it may please thee to rule and govern thy holy Church universal in the right way 1 John 1.8 9 10. Mat. 28.20 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. Thut it may please thee to keep and strengthen in the true worshipping of thee in righteousness and holiness of life thy servant Charles our most gracious King and Governour 1 Tim. 2.1 2 3. Psal 72.1 2. Psal 80.17 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to rule his heart in thy faith fear and love and that he may evermore have affiance in thee and ever seek thy honour and glory Psal 21. We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to be his defender and keeper giving him the victory over all his enemies Psal 21. Psal 132. We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to bless and preserve our gracious Queen Catherine James Duke of York and all the Royal Family Psal 89.29 Psal 45. Gen. 49.10 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to illuminate all Bishops Priests and Deacons with true knowledge and understanding of thy Word and that both by their preaching and living they may set it forth and shew it accordingly Deut. 33.8 9 10 11. Psal 132.9 Act. 20.28 1 Cor. 9.27 1 Tim. 4.16 1 Pet. 5.2 3 4. We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to endue the Lords of the Council and all the Nobility with grace wisdom and understanding Exod. 18.21 Prov. 11.14 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to bless and keep the Magistrates giving them grace to execute justice and to maintain truth 2 Chron. 19.6 Rom. 13. We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. That it may please thee to bless and keep all thy people Psal 28.9 We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. We may read in Tertullian Clement Bishop of Rome Eusebius Ambrose Cyril and others many early presidents of praying for the Church Emperours Kings the Royal Seed Bishops together with the inferiour order of Priests and Deacons and for all things indeed and persons which we pray for in this Litany and Litanies were undoubtedly of very ancient use being at first composed to be solemnly used for the appeasing of Gods wrath in time of publick evils and for the procuring of his mercy in common benefits this may be easily
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
men They are an universal declaration of things Heavenly working in those whose hearts God inspireth with a due consideration and disposition of mind whereby they are made fit vessels both for receipt and delivery of whatsoever Spiritual perfection There is nothing necessary for man to know which the Psalms are not able to teach They are to beginners a familiar introduction to those who are entred into the way of Religion a mighty augmentation of vertue and knowledge and to the most perfect a strong confirmation Heroical magnanimity exquisite Justice grave moderation exact wisdom Repentance unfeigned unwearied Patience the mysteries of God the sufferings of Christ the terrours of Wrath the comforts of Grace the works of Providence over the world present and the promised Joys of the next all good necessary to be known done or had are laid up in this Store-house no grief incident to man's soul or sickness to the body but a remedy may be found for it in the Book of Psalms As the Holy Scripture exceeds other writings in verity so the Book of Psalms exceeds other Sacred Scriptures in variety The Psalter is the common treasury of all good arguments and instructions the summary pith and breviary of the whole Bible therefore as the Church esteemed nothing more generally necessary for the Worship of God then the Word of God so she judged no parcel of the Word more full and fit then the Psalms But it is to be wished that we could all endeavour to make our lives conformable to those Holy patterns who were the Pen-men of these Psalms and that the Psalmists infusions and effusions may find in us the Psalmists spiritual affections to go along with them that when we say or sing over these Psalms we may not speak against our sense knowledge or conscience nor blame the Psalm or Church for enjoyning it to be used when we our selves perhaps are in fault He who would make a right and good use of the Psalms read over in private or publick must endeavour to form his Spirit to the affection of the Psalm if it be the affection of love which runs through the Psalm it is to be read with the same affection if of fear the same Spirit of fear should be imprinted upon the Soul if of desire it should be carried on with the like transportation if of gratitude to God the Soul should be lifted up with praises and come with affections that way enflamed If the Psalm carries in it the Spirit of Prayer and Supplication of Praise or Eucharist he who dares to read it must still conform and bring down his Spirit to the Psalm and whatever affection is in any Psalm the heart is to comply with that affection that by this means the often repeating of the Psalms may not prove a ridiculous piece of Pageantry we should strive to say the Psalms with the same Spirit with which they were inspired who composed them and accommodate our selves to them in the same manner as if we our selves had been the composers or as if they had been purposely composed for our use by exciting up in our selves the same affections which we may discern to have been in David or others at the same time when they composed them We are to love when they love fear when they fear hope when they hope praise God when they praise him weep for our own sins and others when they weep beg what we want with the like Spirit wherewith their petitions are framed love our enemies when they love theirs pray for ours when they pray for theirs have zeal for Gods glory when they profess it humble our selves when they are humbled and lift up our Spirits to Heaven when they lift up theirs give thanks for Gods mercies when they do delight and rejoyce in the benefits of the Messias and beauties of the Church when they do relate the wonderful works of God in the creation of the World and deliverance of his people with the like admiration and praise as they do and where-ever there is mention of punishments inflicted on rebellious sinners and rewards and favours bestowed upon the obedient we are to tremble where they tremble and to rejoyce where they rejoyce we are to walk in Gods Sanctuary as they walked and to wish to dwell in it as they wished And wherever the Psalmist as a Master teacheth exhorteth reprehendeth and directeth we are to suppose him speaking to every one of us and we should answer him in such due manner as he requires And at the beginning of every Psalm we should beg of God that affection which the Psalmist had when he composed it and desire to attain the same guift and spiritual savour which he felt Was this course as constantly used as the reading over the Book of Psalms we should in time be of the Psalmists temper and devotion and the usage of the Psalms would not seem so strange as perhaps they may to some for want of observing this good rule prescribed by the Ancients It is a course which the devouter Christians ever observed and they found it hugely advantageous for the heightning and enflaming of their devotions Some scruples may be made by some persons against the reading of Scripture in general and against the Psalms in particular the most devotional part of Scripture for they were most of them composed by David the Type of Christ and the best fitted and qualified of any man to set down a formulary of Devotions in which are contained the most remarkable things which concern Christ or Christianity and which may well enough be used by all who are sincerely Christian either as forms of Prayers or Praises of which they consist for the most part Indeed some Psalms seem to have no propriety of the Spirit of Christianity being spent in calling down vengeance upon Gods and the Psalmists enemies which is contrary to the Gospel-temper Luk. 9.54 55. but herein lies our great mistake for David the Psalmist of Israel by whom the Spirit of the Lord spake 2 Sam. 23.2 could not have in him the least malignity or revenge in the penning of his Psalms not of those of the severest character for in those Psalms he did not so properly pray as a petitioner that God would bring such and such Judgments upon obstinate sinners as he did predict and denounce as a Prophet the just Judgments of God which would inevitably fall upon such sinners Such Psalms are Prophesies and Predictions not properly Prayers and they may easily be accommodated to the Christian affection Spirit and temper All Texts of Scripture in either Testament of this seemingly-severe temper and nature may be safely admitted into the very bowels of our Souls if they could be permitted also to perform the work which they are designed for that is to melt us into contrition to mortifie us to reform us to bruise our Souls to purge all dross out of them to refine and prepare them for holy duties Besides the Jews