Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n body_n holy_a soul_n 16,669 5 5.2335 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A42092 The compleat conformist, or, Seasonable advice concerning strict conformity, and frequent celebration of the holy Communion in a sermon preached (on the seventh of January, being the first Sunday after the Epiphany, in the year 1682) at the Cathedral, and in a letter written to the clergy of the archdeaconry of Durham / by Denis Grenville. Grenville, Denis, 1637-1703. 1684 (1684) Wing G1938; ESTC R8783 37,668 65

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE Compleat Conformist OR SEASONABLE ADVICE CONCERNING STRICT CONFORMITY AND Frequent Celebration OF THE Holy Communion IN A SERMON Preached on the seventh of January being the first Sunday after the Epiphany in the Year 1682. at the Cathedral And in a Letter written to the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Durham By Denis Grenville D.D. Archdeacon and Prebendary of Durham LONDON Printed for Robert Clavell at the Peacock in St. Pauls Church-Yard 1684. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE AND Right Reverend Father in God NATHANIEL Lord Bishop of DURHAM AND Clerk of the Closet to His Majesty My Lord AS it hath been matter of great Joy to all Devout Christians that God hath put it into the Heart of our most Reverend Primate of All England to attempt the Revival of Primitive Piety and the long Eclipsed Honour of our Saviour by restoring a weekly Celebration of the Holy Sacrament in his Metropolitical Church so I am confident it must needs be an extraordinary satisfaction to the Regular Clergy of your own Diocess where Conformity hath fluorished in a high measure blessed be God ever since the Restauration As I acknowledge it my Duty my Lord to render my self by all means whether in season or out of season serviceable to God's Church especially to the Jurisdiction under you wherein his Providence hath placed me so the due Obedience and Reverence I justly bear you oblige me to dedicate to your Lordship the pains I have taken to promote a frequent Parochial Celebration of the Holy Communion humbly beseeching your Lordship to Countenance this seasonable performance of my Duty and honest Design to quicken my Brethren in the faithful discharge of their Office And I do assure your Lordship that I shall never Endeavour to promote my own private Phantasies either by adding to or diminishing from the Established Laws of our Church but as firmly as my weakness will permit shall strive to maintain that excellent Order and Discipline which the Publick Authority of the Church hath obliged us all unto and as both your Self and Predecessor have enjoyned me I shall as strenuously and prudently as I am capable administer the same for the promotion of the true end thereof the Glory of God and Salvation of those committed to my Care Since I know I can neither do God nor your Lordship more real and I hope more acceptable service than in so doing That my Sermon which was preached in my ordinary Course at the Cathedral was never intended for the Press will easily appear from the Examination of the Discourse it self and that it was not Vanity nor an Itch to be in Print which was the motive to this Publication will I am persuaded be readily granted by all those who consider that it carries with it no Temptation to expose it to publick View but some well meant Zeal which in a Censorious Age is more apt to procure Contempt than Commendation Had I not in the Applicatory part for the sake whereof I now set it forth pressed with some earnestness the Topick of Conformity and the chief part thereof frequent Communion which to promote is the main design of this Application to my Brethren it had never seen the Light at present But having in the Conclusion of the Sermon set a Scheme of Conformity before the eyes of the Laity as I have in my Letter to the Clergy presented them with another belonging to Ecclesiasticks I judged the Discourses not unfit to accompany since they may strengthen one the other As an honest desire to contribute to the Publick Good was my chief reason for publishing my Sentiments in these matters so is it a considerable motive for my presuming in this manner to present them to your Lordship that I may discharge my own Conscience and demonstrate how much I am My Lord Your Lordships most obedient and most humble Servant D. G. Newly Published SHort Discourses upon the whole Common-Prayer designed to inform the Judgment and excite the Devotion of such as daily use the same by Tho. Comber D. D. The Laver of Regeneration and the Cup of Salvation two plain and profitable Discourses upon the two Sacraments The one laying open the Nature of Baptism and earnestly pressing the serious consideration and religious observation of the Sacred Vow made by all Christians in their Baptism The other pressing as earnestly the frequent Renewing of our Baptismal Vow at the Lords holy Table Demonstrating the indispensible necessity of Receiving and the great sin and danger of Neglecting the Lords Supper with Answers to the chief Pretences whereby the Absenters would excuse themselves The General Catalogue of Books Printed in England since the Dreadful Fire 1666 to the end of Trinity Term 1684. To which are added a Catalogue of Latine Books Printed in Foreign parts and in England since the year 1670. Printed for Robert Clavell at the Peacock in S. Pauls Church Yard A SERMON JOHN I. 29. Behold the Lamb of God THE very first word of my Text doth powerfully command your attention and require you to behold him to day whom the Church presented as manifested yesterday which will be no unseasonable Meditation you will find if you examine the Services of the respective Sundays after the Epiphany till the Purification It is no small matter in Scripture that hath an Ecce prefixed thereunto and nothing can better deserve it than those passages that relate to our Lord 's wonderful Incarnation namely God manifested in the Flesh to be true and very man Born of a Virgin the chief subject of Devotion on the Feast of our Lord's Nativity or the man Christ Jesus manifested to be God the subject of the Devotions on the Feast of the Epiphany three several ways First By the Wise mens coming to worship him twelve days after his Birth Secondly By a Voice from Heaven at his Baptism thirty years after And thirdly By his first Miracle in Cana of Galilee where he turned Water into Wine Which way soever we turn our Eyes to behold either God manifested to be Man or Man manifested to be God the Spectacle will be glorious and wonderful and every way deserving of our highest Admiration and Praise which is in a particular manner proper for our consideration at this Instant when we are approaching to the Table of our Lord to feed on his blessed Body and Bloud And that that holy Duty of the Altar as well as the other of the Pulpit may succeed to the honour of God and comfort of our Souls let us beg the assistance of God's most holy Spirit c. Ye shall pray for the holy Catholick Church of Christ the Congregation of Christian People c. Behold the Lamb of God Never any Spectacle in the world so well deserved a Crier to call the People to behold it as this in the Text Nor was there any man in the world so fit to call Spectators to this Spectacle as the Baptist God is come down into the World in the Form of a
suffer for Trespasses and so Dear to God that he alone could prevail with him to turn his Wrath from us And therefore leaving all other Sacrifices we cleave only to him All other Sacrifices had all their Virtue from him the most sufficient Sacrifice in himself being The Lamb of God III. The Lamb of God Are not all Lambs you 'll say His The Lambs of God All the Beasts of the Forest are his and so are the Cattel upon a Thousand Hills Yes But this by an Excellency is God's Lamb God's Lamb in a most peculiar and especial manner The others are God's Lambs for the Priest to sacrifice this for God himself to sacrifice Therefore saith Ferus is Christ called Agnus Dei because God gave him So God loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son John 3. 16. Sacrifice and Offerings in Scripture are called theirs that presented them The Firstlings of the Flock which Abel offered are called his Offering Gen. 4. 9. And the Bullock which the People were to offer for their Sins is by Moses called the Peoples Sin-Offering and in this Sense Christ is called the Lamb of God because God gave him God offered him Christ being thus God's Sacrifice Offered by himself he is therefore called God's Lamb. See Hear and Admire then the wonderful Love of God Was there no Ransom for the Sin of Lost Man but only the offering the Son of God Was not a Lamb sufficient but it must be the Lamb of God And was there no other to offer him but God the Father to sacrifice his only Son Oh how great was God's Love to do so much for us How great our Sin to require so much to be done The Sacrifices of Beasts were but for a time neither were they sufficient of themselves at any time to make the Comers thereunto perfect as pertaining to the Conscience Heb. 9. 9. All their Virtue and Worth was from this Sacrifice of God's Lamb which was Typified in theirs the Substance of these shadows When their Time was fulfilled God put a Period to those kinds of Burnt-Offerings and Sacrifices for Sin Then his own Lamb comes to the Altar His own Son hath a Body fitted and comes to do his Father's Will by which Will we are sanctified through the Offering of the Body of Jesus Christ once for all as the Apostle speaks And thus having dispatched all the Particulars I proposed to discourse of give me leave to spend the remaining time in some useful Improvement of and Reflections on the Text the Time and the Sacrament to which we are approaching and whereto both Preacher and People ought chiefly to draw their Meditations And therefore I hope for pardon if I imploy a considerable part of the time allotted to this purpose Application We have lately Celebrated three great and solemn Festivals relating to our blessed Lord and Saviour his Nativity his Circumcision and his Epiphany In the first we remember his taking upon himself Humane Nature In the second his becoming obedient to the Law for Man In the third the manifestation of himself to be God The business of the Text then can be no unseasonable nor unprofitable Imployment the beholding him who has been so lately exposed to view especially on a Day when the very Sacrament of his Body and Bloud those Sacred Pledges of his Love are exposed on his Altar and to what end this Son of God was manifested we learn from St. John namely to destroy the Works of the Devil He was born that we might be New-born He was Circumcised in the Flesh that we might be Circumcised in Heart and Spirit And he was manifested to the Gentiles that their Posterity of whom we are part like the Wise men might throughout all Ages Worship and Adore him with all due respect and humility both of Body and Soul nay I might add likewise with their Estates too for otherwise we shall be very deficient in imitating their pious Example for they did during his low estate of Humiliation even to a Stable and Manger pay him Tribute not only from their Souls but from their Bodies also for they fell down and worshipped him a Respect which many of us too often grutch him now he is in his highest Exaltation and not only thus paying him Tribute from their Bodies but from their Estates Worshipping him with Gifts and Oblations offering him Gold Frankincense and Myrrh Which may serve as a sufficient Justification of our Churches Practice in requiring the Offertory to be a constant Companion of the Holy Communion yea and that too a very significant part of the Office and also a sufficient ground of Reproof to all those that shall presume to neglect so Laudable and Edifying a Practice an Imposition unexceptionable and reasonable to be performed by the Poor as well as the Rich since the poor Widows Mite is Recorded in Scripture to be as acceptable to God as the rich man's Abundance cast into the Treasury But to return to our glorious Spectacle whether we view him in the Inn in the Arms of his Mother or in the Temple bleeding under the Hand and Knife of the Priest or lastly receiving Divine Worship from Kings who came to Adore him we have before our eyes a Pattern of the greatest Love Purity and Condescension indeed the Grand Exemplar of all Vertue more especially of those Vertues which have been the subject of the Discourse Innocency and Meekness Certain it is that if we could but take a full and perfect view of this Prospect of all the most lovely it would have some blessed Effects on us in Transforming us into his Likeness in making of us at least in some small measure and degree Pure as he is Pure Innocent as he is Innocent Meek as he is Meek Were we but Obedient and Faithful to our God to our Church to our own Souls in frequenting the House of God on these solemn Occasions but with honest Hearts and good Meaning viewing him in his service viewing him in his Sacraments by Faith we should never want some comfortable Issue of our Indeavours we should not be so unsuccessful as we are in the Reformation of our Lives and the Conforming of them to the Life of Christ the Innocent Meek and blessed Jesus To do this and we can do nothing of greater importance should be the subject of all our Resolutions it hath been no holy nor happy Christmass if it hath not prevailed with us to resolve to be better men But such a Resolution doth most particularly concern us who are now approaching to God's Altar Brethren we can put no tricks upon the Almighty who searcheth and seeth the Heart as we see Faces It is not our demure Looks nor our outward humble Postures or most solemn Prostrations that can render us acceptable Guests and unite us to our Saviour but a lively Faith firm Hope a fervent Charity and sincere Resolutions of new Obedience especially in reference to those matters wherein we have