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 soul_n whole_a 13,673 5 5.8632 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
B23108 The catechism of the Church of England, poetically paraphrased. By James Fowler Fowler, James, verse-writer.; Church of England. aut 1678 (1678) Wing F1729A 21,745 62

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

contiguous joyn Not only friends or brothers nor alone Those that with me the same Religion own Though chiefly these But generally all Whom by the glorious name of Man we call All whom the great Creator hath endu'd With Souls made in his own Similitude All Jews Turks Hereticks and Infidels And ev'n my Enemy where e're he dwells To these my duty is like love to bear As to my self and hold them equal dear To do to every man as I would be Content and willing he should do to me To both my Parents who my being gave And then from death my Infant-life did save Such honor and such filial love to shew As to the Author 's of my life is due If need require to succour and relieve them In all distresses that in age may grieve them The King and all his Ministers which he Hath vested with a just Authority In all Commands in every thing where they Cross not God's Laws to honor and obey To be submissïve to my spiritual Pastors Governors Teachers and instructing Masters To bear me low and reverend in my deeds To all whose place or fortune mine exceeds They are to God who made them differ debters But I must count them diff'ring thus my betters No bodies injury or hurt to act Either with tongue in word or hand in fact To be as Conscience cries aloud I must To all in all my dealings true and just Not off'ring to deceive with sly evasions Mysterious sence or mental reservations No private grudge malicious wounding dart Nor envious peek to lodge within my heart To kéep my hands from picking and from stealing That when I 've pow'r to falsifie in dealing And none sees what I do but God alone His eye may teach me then to know my own My tongue to bridle that it never may In vain superfluous speaking go astray Always to set a careful watch before My mouth that lying never scape the door My Lips to keep that they may speak no guile Nor with false sland'rous tales my Soul defile To kéep my body fit for the abode Of that great Guest the holy Spirit of God In temp'rate eating which a proof may give That I live not to eat but eat to live In sober drinking not with Swine to swill To drink to quench my thirst but not to fill And chastity Christ's Members not to take And them the Members of an Harlot make Not to desire or cover goods that be Not mine but other men's by property But well to learn and labor hard to get My living truly by my own brow-sweat And in that state of life in which I stand Lawfully call'd thereto by God's Command Whether my place be great mean high or low Whether the Gown the Sword the Pen or Plough Whate're my duty be God calls me to it Something he bids me do and I must do it Of these two parts consists a Christian's duty In these and only these is perfect beauty No wealth or pow'r the world affords that can So much as these adorn the Christian man Question 'T is very true But this my good Child know In nature's Garden no such fruit will grow Unless the Lord the Husbandman prepare The ground with Grace 't will no obedience bear He that hath that walks upright in the ways That God directs but he that wants it strays Nor comes this Grace unsought for no man gains it But he that by true fervent pray'r obtains it The method of supplying what we want Is first for man to ask then God to grant And for this grace to him thou must repair By humble diligent and fervent prayer Let me hear therefore if thou canst repeat That brief but full succinct but most compleat And comprehensive form our Saviour's words Prescrib'd by him and therefore call'd the Lord's Who pitying to see the humane mind In heavenly matters ignorant and blind Directed us when we prepare to pray Those words or such-like words as those to say Answer PREFACE Our common Father now not mine alone But all men's that are born of thee Though no man's faith can save me but my own Yet Prayers may excepted be That I for others make or they for me Which art in Heaven most eminently there As that thy glorious might declares Who yet though they be made on Earth can'st hear With gracious and paternal ears And hearing grant thy needy Almes-mens pray'rs First Petition Hallowed reverenc'd by all that fear thee Magnifi'd honor'd and ador'd And sanctified in us that now draw neer thee Prais'd for the grace thou dost afford And for the mercy's that we want implor'd Thus hallow'd be thy Name that Name Divine Which does indeed deserve it solely Does all the names of Heathen Gods out-shine And when they speak no more than folly Thine is majestick wonderful and holy Second Petition Thy Kingdom that of grace whereby as King Thou in thy Children's hearts dost reign And into such subjection lusts canst bring That they shall but attempt in vain To dispossess their lawful Soveraign And that of glory which shall recompence All present shame and miseries When glorious Angels shall come fetch us hence And mounting us above the Skies Shall wipe away all tears from off our eyes This twofold Kingdom come the one to make Our hearts thy Spirit 's Temple-room The other us from Pilgrimage to take To our Eternal heavenly home So come Lord Jesus quickly let it come Third Petition Thy will which only has power to command At whose bare nod the Creatures run Which whatsoe're it says for Law must stand Curb'd question'd and controul'd by none This sacred godly will on earth be done On us in cheerfully submitting to All methods of thy Providence Who as our Maker what thou wilt mayst do And good or ill to us dispence As seems most fitting in thy own wise sence And by us in a dutiful compliance To thy Commands without demurring For aid so placing on thee our affiance That our endeavours joynt concurring May keep us never from our duty stirring Thus be it done by us on earth as 't is In Heav'n where 't is the Angels choice Their only pleasure glory joy and bliss Who in obeying thee rejoyce To execute the dictates of thy voice Fourth Petition Give us we cannot purchase Boons from Heav'n Nor fee th' Almighty to be kind All favours we receive from thee are given Should we be left our selves to find We soon should starve and perish hunger-pin'd This day we ask not Lord to be secur'd For years to come from being poor We are not of to morrows life assur'd From hand to hand supply our store This Lord we want indeed and ask no more Our daily bread plain wholsom homely food Not Kickshaws and Conserves but bread Not what delights the eye but what is good Not what may please but what may feed Not what we long for Lord but what we need Bread for the body meat and drink and cloathing A good name
liberty health peace And for the Soul or t'other comes to nothing Thy Spirit which our Souls may ease And Faith and Hope and Love in them encrease Fifth Petition Forgive us for we cannot satisfie Neither discharge the whole nor part Dear God forgive us though the score be high An able Creditor thou art We debtors neither can compound nor start Our trespasses for which the least of which Thou might'st Command us down to hell Where Scorpions rods should lay our lustful itch That bottomless Infernal cell Where none but Fiends and flames in darkness dwell This our ten thousand Talents Lord and more Forgive as we the hundred pence To them that ow't us and to clear the score Of our weak Brother's small offence Do thou with Grace our spirits Influence Sixth Petition And lead us not nor let the Tempter lead us So far into temptations field As underfoot to let that Lion tread us And throwing down our sword and shield Like Dastards to th' insulting foe to yield But by thy power deliver us from evil All that leads to or lies in sin From all the wiles and cunnings of the Devil From every snare and secret gin That he hath laid to trap and catch us in And from the ev'l of punishment that 's due To sin thy servants Lord deliver Thou might'st pay torments death and hell 't is true But thou art God blest for ever Of Grace and Pardon art a franker giver Conclusion For thine the Kingdom is thou canst reprieve And dost with acts of Grace abound And if thy power will as 't can forgive That power shall with praise be crown'd And all the glory shall to thee redound To thee be all for ever and for ever By all ascrib'd as 't is most meet Let this our prayer be deny'd us never Granted we wish and hope to see 't And therefore say to it Amen So be it Question Oh heavenly Prayer and such as did befit The blessed lips that first did dictate it But he that would as God's Petitioner His wishes at the Throne of Grace prefer In an acceptable and prospr'ous way Must with the understanding also pray Not he that to an unknown God addresses And rudely in an unknown tongue expresses He knows not what that in a frantick notion Makes ignorance the mother of devotion That thinks the wisdom and the pow'r immense Of Heav'ns great Ruler bound to pick out sence From senceless Pray'rs which they themselves that s●● Are ignorant what they deprecate or pray Not such a man must hope his Sute will thrive Or think he shall prevail with God to give Till he knows what he asks 't is only he That prays with knowledge can accepted be Nor can nor dare I bid you hope to speed Unless you first know rightly what you need Then how to ask Now give me leave t' enquire What do you in this Prayer of God desire Answer I beg of God my Lord and Father who As Lord hath pow'r as Father will to do What I request whose hand with bounty flows And on his Creatures all good things bestows To send to me and all of humane race His sanctifying and preventing Grace That with a hearty Zeal sincere and true That Reverence that to his Name is due That depth of love and thankfulness for all His love which for his answ'ring deep doth call That thus with his coelestial Grace endu'd We may in part express our gratitude In pious worship undefil'd and pure With faith not wavering but stedfast sure In civil service making still the end Of worldly bus'ness to his glory tend And in obedience such as shall submit To his Command ' cause he commanded it And I desire his heav'nly Providence Both to our Souls and Bodies to dispence All things that he sees needful to asswage Our grief and care in this our Pilgrimage And that he will on us his Servants though We merit wrath and vengeance mercy show That he will pardon us for Christ his sake As well the lesser faults and slips we make As our presumptuous those more daring high And impious Darts ' gainst Heav'n it self let fly That he 'l vouchsafe in mercy to defend us From all the num'rous dangers that attend us Ghostly to stifle and extirpate Grace And God's own Image in the Soul efface And send that glorious Heav'n-born Particle To Eternal Lodgings in the shades of Hell And bodily which wait us day by day Upon our lives and dearest joys to prey Diseases dolorous pains distracting cares Oppressing sorrows and dismaying fears Misfortunes pinching poverty and losses Despairing thoughts and over-burd'ning crosses That Israel's Shepherd he whose Eyes no sleep Nor slumber know would always guard and kéep Poor us his easily seduced Sheep From sin and wickedness and from the Foe That seeks to involve us in eternal woe That though with Satans fiery Darts surrounded We be not in eternal Death confounded That dying life that death which never dies Where dismal yellings frightful shriekes and cries Eccho'd with mournful accents of despair With throbs and curses beat the flaming air And this I humbly trust and hope he 'll do By his good mercy prompted thereunto For his dear sake who of his own accord Dy'd to redeem us Iesus Christ our Lord. And this my trust to evidence I say Amen say he Amen to what I pray Question Departing Friends their mem'ry to endear To those they part with make their love appear In absence strong and vigorous and maintain Constant affections till they meet again Some one request or two are wont to leave The doing which their sorrows may relieve And separations tediousness deceive And thus our ever dear but parting Lord Was pleas'd some pledges of his love t' afford Which given to his Spouse the Church in charge From over-pressing sorrows might enlarge Her fainting spirits exercise her graces And move th' affections in their proper places He institutes his blessed Sacraments Whereby each party mutually indents He to his people to remember them They thankfully to love and honor him But now How many hath the Lord 's Anointed For that great end to 's holy Church appointed Answer Two only which we properly so call As they respect the common needs of all And as they 're useful sutable supplies To Christians general necessities That is to say first that which enters them And makes them freemen Christians Baptism And that which feeds them at his holy Board The food of Souls the Supper of the Lord. First he gives milk for Babes in Christ and then Corroborating meat for stronger men Those others which obtruders introduce Are not of gen'ral Sacramental use And either want the parts in Constitution Or good Authority for Institution If holy Orders rightfully they call A Sacrament why not dispenc'd to all Since all are Souldiers why are all not bound By like engagements to maintain their ground This therefore in its proper definition Is but the Leading-Officer's Commission If Marriage were