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A34051 A companion to the temple and closet, or, A help to publick and private devotion in an essay upon the daily offices of the church. Comber, Thomas, 1645-1699.; Church of England. Book of common prayer. 1672 (1672) Wing C5452; ESTC R29309 296,203 435

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That would make the Porch larger then the house and may better be seen in the following discourse only at present we may say this of it in general That though all Churches in the World have and ever had forms of prayer yet none was ever blessed with so comprehensive so exact and so inoffensive a Composure Which is so judiciously contrived that the wisest may exercise at once their Knowledg and Devotion and yet so plain that the most ignorant may pray with Understanding so full that nothing is omitted that is fit to be asked in publique and so particular that it comprises most things which we would pray for in private and yet so short as not to tire any that have true Devotion It s Doctrine is pure and Primitive its Ceremonies so few and Innocent that most of the Christian World agree in them its Method is exact and Natural its language is significant and perspicuous most of the words and Phrases being taken out of holy Scripture and the rest the Expressions of the first and best Ages so that whoever takes exceptions at these must quarrel with the language of the Holy-Ghost or fall out with the Church in her greatest Innocence Indeed the greatest part of these Prayers are primitive or a second Edition of the most ancient Liturgies of the Eastern and Western Churches corrected and amended And in the opinion of the most impartial and excellent Grotius (a) Certum mihi est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anglicanam item morem imponendi manus adolescentibus in memoriam baptismi Autoritatem Episcoporum Presbyteria ex solis pastoribus composita multaque alia ejusmodi satis congruere institutis vetustioris Ecclesiae a quibus in Galliâ Belgio recessum negare non possumus Grotius Epist ad Boet. who was no member of nor had any Obligation to this Church The English Liturgie comes so near that Pattern that none of the Reformed Churches can compare with it And if any thing External be needful to recommend that which is so glorious within We may add That the Composers were all Men of great Piety and Learning for they were all either Martyrs or Confessors upon the Restitution of Popery which as it declares their Piety so the Judicious Digesting of these prayers doth evidence their Learning for therein a Scholar can discern close Logick pleasing Rhetorick pure Divinity and the very Marrow of all the Ancient Doctrine and Discipline and yet all made so familiar that the unlearned may safely say Amen (b) 1 Cor. 14.16 Lastly all these excellencies have obtained that universal Reputation which these prayers enjoy in all the World so that they are deservedly admired by the Eastern Churches and had in great esteem by the most eminent Protestants (c) See D. Durel his defence of the Liturgy beyond the Seas the most impartial Judges In fine this Liturgie is honoured by all but the Romanist whose interest it opposeth and some Dissenters whose prejudices will not let them see its lustre whence it is they call that which Papists hate because 't is Protestant Superstitious and Popish and though they count it Roman condemn it without a hearing But when we remember the best things in a bad world have most Enemies as it doth not lessen its worth so it must not abate our esteem that it hath malicious or misguided Adversaries Who for all this hold the Conclusion and obstinately resolve they will not come How endless and unprofitable it is to dispute with these the little success of the best arguments managed by the wisest Men do too sadly testify Wherefore I shall decline that and attempt to convince the Enemies by assisting the Friends of our Church Devotions And by drawing that vaile which the ignorance and indevotion of some and the passion and prejudice of others have cast over them represent the Liturgie in its true and native lustre which is so lovely and ravishing that like the purest beauties it needs no supplement of Art and Dressing but conquers by its own attractives and wins the affections of all but those that do not see it clearly (d) Ignorant qui non amant This will be sufficient I am sure to shew that whoever desires no more then to worship God with zeal and knowledg spirit and truth purity and sincerity may do it by these devout Formes so that I should have concluded here my Preface when I had given a more particular account of this Undertaking but that I must first examine an Objection or two which are like a skin over the eyes of some and be the Picture never so full of graces will spoile the Prospect if they be not removed Object 1. It is said to be a Form and therefore a hindrance to zealous praying by the spirit Answ Whoever makes this Objection and affirmes we cannot pray by the Spirit in the words of a Form must beware his ignorance betray him not into a dangerous uncharitableness and perhaps blasphemy For the Saints of the Old Testament (e) Numb 6.23 Deut. 26.3 Ezra 9.5 Daniel 9.1 prayed by Formes and so did Christ himself in the New (f) Math. 26.44 and he taught his Apostles a Form to pray by and dare any say they prayed not by the Spirit Have not all Churches since the Apostles times to our daies had their Forms of Prayer and did not the devoutest men of all ages Compose and use such Was ever Extemporè Prayer heard of in Publique till of late unless on special occasions And do we think No Church nor no Persons prayed by the Spirit till now To come nearer still Have not France and Geneva their Forms And did not learned Calvin and the best reformed Divines use a Form before their Sermons And is not an unstudied Prayer a Form to the People who are confined to pray in those words And will you say these all pray without the Spirit of God But sure we hugge the Phrase of praying by the Spirit not attending the Sense For the meaning doubtless is to be so assisted by the Holy-Ghost that our thoughts being composed and our Souls calmed and our Hearts deeply affected with our Wants and the Divine all-sufficiency we can pray with a strong Faith and a fervent Love When we are so intent upon our Requests that we duly weigh them and pursue every petition with pressing importunity ardent desires and Vigorous affections this is the Spirit of prayer And thus we may better pray by the Spirit in the words of a Form than we can do when our Mind is imployed in inventing new expressions For having a Form which custome hath made familiar we have all things set down to our Hands which we or others want and we are at leasure to improve the good Motions of the Spirit having no more to do but to joyn our Souls and Affections to every Petition and follow them up to Heaven in most passionate and zealous wishes that God would grant them
will Absolve none without true Repentance wherefore let us beg of him who requires this Condition to give what he requires (g) Domine da quod jubes jube quod vis D. Augustin upon all these considerations let us beseech c. if we now make not our applications it will be a despising his love slighting his Message and sending back his servants empty oh let us earnestly pray for true Penitence we are encouraged by his gracious nature engaged by his courteous offer of a treaty urged by necessity as being not like to be forgiven without it further we must ask these favours of him from whom comes every good and perfect gift (h) James 1.17 for if we consider what we ask we shall easily discern they must not be sought any where else Repentance is a change of the notions of the mind the choices of the will the actings of the affections and passions induring new joys and sorrows hopes and fears desires and aversations so that it is a kind of new Creation (i) Ephes 4.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he alone that brought life out of death and light out of darkness can bring us from the death of sin and darkness of iniquity to the life and light of holiness and Piety * Nulla sine Deo meus bona Seneca we can fall down by our own weight but we cannot rise out of this narrow Pit without help nay we sink lower for our hearts are as backward to repent as forward to sin and by frequent commissions we love sin more and are more loth to part with it yesterday we mistook by accident to day we desire to be again in such circumstances to morrow we shall run into them (k) viresque acquirit eundo so that we must not trust in our own hearts (l) Prov. 28.1 but seek repentance from God and his holy Spirit which being both so necessary for us and of so incomparable advantage to us let us humbly beg this on our knees beseeching God to grant them to us which word grant (m) Acts 11.18 denotes a free act of grace from a Prince to his Subject though few offending Subjects can have a Pardon granted out upon their Repentance yet God deals so with us and hath not only promised to forgive us when we do repent (n) John 6.37 but to give us grace that we may repent (o) Acts 5.31 and if we have his gracious assistance no doubt we shall repent truly and not fall into Ahabs hypocrisie Israels treachery (p) Psal 78.34 nor Judas his despair Oh let us pray for his holy spirit of grace which will open our eyes to see our sirs and soften our hearts to mourn for them and strengthen our purposes to amend them and this will be a true Repentance which contains in it an unfeigned Faith which is here understood though not expressed for Faith and true Repentance are so inseparably joyned that in Scripture Repentance is put for them both in many places (q) Matth. 4.17 compared with Mark 1.15 because he that is truly humbled and really purposed to amend doth ever trust in Gods mercy or else it may be understood when we pray for his holy Spirit we mean to produce in us all graces especially Faith which is that gracious fruit of the Spirit of Adoption (r) Gal. 4.16 for by it we call God Father and as such rely on him 'T is certain if we can prevail with God for his holy Spirit it will bring both Faith and all Graces with it and will assist us to do good when Repentance hath taken us off from our evil courses this will keep out those lusts which Repentance began to exclude but observe Repentance goes first for you must not expect this holy Dove will abide in impure places (s) Pietas inducit Spiritum Sanctum R. R. ad Candida tecta columbae when the unclean Spirit expects his house to be swept and garnished (t) Matth. 12.44 we may then hope to have our Prayers for Gods holy Spirit heard when Repentance hath prepared his lodgings in our hearts § 11. That those things may please him which we do at this present Having thus taught you who to pray to and what to pray for it remains that we shew the great advantages of having your Prayers heard that so you may not put up so weighty a request without such hearty desires and zealous affections as are suitable to it for this one Petition granted will procure you 1. Present acceptance 2. Future assistance 3. Endless happiness true Repentance and Gods holy Spirit will assure all this to you but if you pray not so devoutly and earnestly as to obtain them your Absolution must be cancelled your services rejected your souls continue polluted here and be condemned to endless misery hereafter so that we hope your own Interest will quicken you most passionately to beg for these to which purpose consider them severally 1. If your Confession Prayers and Endeavours be such as can prevail with God to give you a true Repentance and his holy Spirit then all the duties now performed shall be acceptable particularly and in the first place that which we Ministers are doing viz. pronouncing the Absolution this shall be confirmed by God and he will assent to it so that your Pardon shall be inrolled in Heaven and then all other duties that we and you do shall be pleasing to God and beneficial to you our mutual and common Prayers shall be answered our praises accepted our hearing shall be converting and salutiferous our Communicating an infallible conveyance and irrevocable seal of Grace and peace But without Repentance all our prayers and praises and all we do (u) See of this at large before in Sect. 2. shall be rejected as a mocking of God without his holy spirit also all our observances are harsh and unpleasing flat and dull in Gods account it is this good Spirit that makes our hearts and tongues agree this inlightens our minds to see our wants quickens our memory to remember them toucheth our hearts with a sense of them confirms our Faith that God can supply us and enlarges our affections to beg the relief of them In a word this Spirit of God helps us to ask inclines him to give and fits us to receive all we pray for so that God is not pleased when we worship him without it (x) Gal. 4.6 John 4.24 Rom. 8.26 and denies nothing when we have it so that our Saviour accounts (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 11.13 Is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 7.11 it the same to pray for the holy spirit and all good things which spring from it And now who would not earnestly beseech for such a true Repentance as might invite this Holy Spirit into their hearts which will be the seal of their Pardon and make all they do well-pleasing to God to please him
have their inward man endued and adorned with the purity signified thereby And this Petition we make to him who hath promised to deck his Priests with health (l) Psal 132.16 Isai 61.10 and to cloath them with the garment of salvation and the robe of righteousness that his Saints may re-rejoyce and sing For the holy lives and good success of pious and painful Ministers is an extraordinary and a huge delight to Gods people who therefore do here use it as an argument to enforce their request for the Ministers For we say they are not of the number of those who glory in the crimes of the Ministers of God or rejoyce in their calamities because O Lord we love thee and them wherefore if thou wilt please to give them health and safety righteousness and peace we shall thrive under their care and joyfully follow their good examples the benefit and the pleasure will be ours and the glory shall be thine for this and all thy mercies § 7. Psal 28.9 O Lord save thy people Answ And bless thine inheritance The kindness of the Congregation to the Minister expressed in the last Responsal is here most lovingly and thankfully returned and required by him who now prays for them as heartily as they for him before which cannot but endeer the Priest and people one to another since they daily do thus mutually interchange offices of love Wherefore let both joyn in this comprehensive request that God would save and deliver his people from all evil and bless and furnish them with all good things since they are his peculiar inheritance and so may expect a special defence and relief from their own God But of this before in the TE DEVM § 8. 1 Chron. 22.9 Give peace in our time O Lord Answ Because there is none other that fighteth for us but only thou O God It pleased God to make particular Promises to Solomon Hezekiah and Josiah (m) 1 Chron. 22.9 Isai 39.8 2 Kings 22.20 that he would give peace in their days Wherefore we make bold to ask it for our times from the God of peace our only defence (n) Exod. 14.14 Deut. 1.30 against our enemies They who trust in their bow and rely on their sword care not to ask for Peace because they hope either to awe their foes into quietness or to make advantage by War as being sufficiently guarded and prepared But we even the Church of God know Armies and Navies are useless not only against God but without him and only successful by his blessing So that though we have both yet we account the Divine Providence our greatest security How well this Petition suited the Primitive Christians every one may discern who considers they judged it unlawful while the Emperors were Heathen to fight in their own defence (o) Luke 22.38 ita Explic. ab Origen in Cels l. 5. Ambros de Off. Basil August vid. Arnobius l. 1. p 6. And when Prayers and tears were their only weapons they might most justly (p) Ezra 8.22 be earnest with God for their defence who did so wholly depend on his Protection that his glory seemed concerned in their safety Yet it is not improper for us now though blessed be God we have Christian Princes and their forces to defend us for we wish there may be no occasion to use arms or if there be (q) Bellum gerere malis videtur foelicitas bonis necessitas Augustin we declare we rely not alone on these Preparations unless he please to bless them we know they are unserviceable Wherefore if it please him we desire peace and that he will keep off invasions and Rebellions for our time and so will the following generations for their daies that it may appear we wish to live in peace and do trust alone in the Lord of hosts § 9. Psal 51.10 11. O God make clean our hearts within us Answ And take not thy holy spirit from us Though Peace be accounted the chief of all blessings yet without grace it may do us more harm then good Wherefore we conclude with an carnest supplication for Grace to fit us for and help us in the following devotions We are now to offer up our incense and therefore do beseech the Author and lover of purity in holy Davids words to cleanse the Altars of our hearts that neither the guilt of former offences may unhallow or defile them nor any remaining evil thoughts may disturb the holy cloud but that it may ascend and he a sweet savour before the Throne of God And because it is the Holy Spirit alone which can effect this we pray that our hearts may be so pure as to invite this holy Dove to come unto us and remain with us that it may both make and keep us undefiled both in the remaining part of our Prayers and of our lives If we look back on those portions of the Office which we have performed I hope we shall have cause thankfully to acknowledge that the Divine Spirit hath been with us and excited the flames of our devotion the comfort of which aid makes us earnest for its continuance And certainly we could never have sent up these very sacred ejaculations with such fervent spirits united hearts and harmonious voices if the same spirit of zeal and love had not inspired us Therefore let the sweetness of this experience encourage us to beg that the Holy Ghost may stay among us so that we may as affectionately joyn in those Prayers where the Minister is the only speaker as we have done in these wherein we have had the honour and advantage of bearing our Parts and making our Responsals The Paraphrase of the Versicles and Responsals before and after the Lords Prayer Minister MY dear bretheren in the right Faith I do most affectionately salute you desiring The Lord and his grace may be with you to prosper you in that you now are doing Answer And we thankfully return the kindness desiring likewise the Lord may be with thy spirit to compose and excite it while thou speakest to God for us Minister Let not your thoughts wander but now Let us pray to God with fervency and devotion O Lord God the Father pitty pardon and have mercy upon us who are unworthy to call upon thee O Christ the son of God pitty pardon and have mercy upon us whose only hope is in thy Mediation and Redemption O Lord God the Holy Ghost pitty pardon and have mercy upon us and assist us in these our supplications Our Father which art c. Priest Consider our sin and misery with compassion O Lord and now shew some token of thy mercy upon us to our comfort Answ And grant us now and ever such wonderful deliverances from all evil that we may surely obtain thy salvation Priest O Lord thou Governor of all the world be pleased to bless preserve and save the King thine own Anointed Answ And mercifully hear us whose peace is linked
is the Christians highest aim it was Davids prayer (z) Psal 19.14 and the greatest blessing the Priest could wish (a) Numb 6.24 25 26. Psal 20.3 4. that Almighty God might accept them Poor Socrates after many a tedious step in a virtuous but afflicted state (b) An diis placent quae feci nescio hoc autem solum scio me sedulò haec egisse ut placerent could not tell whether he had given content to his Deities or no but whoever of you have the grace of Repentance and the holy spirit are not in those uncertainties but have Enochs Testimony Heb. 11.5 that you do please God § 12. And that the rest of our lives hereafter may be pure and holy this is the second benefit and motive earnestly to pray for these things for so you shall not only be welcomed at present with a gracious smile but all your lives long be reputed as the friends of God and by his help shall be preserved as pure as a true Repentance hath made you and as holy as those are who are under the Guard of the Spirit of holiness Pray therefore with all your soul for a true Repentance or else as soon as your soul is washed it will return to its impure wallowings and all your labour is in vain hitherto (c) 2 Pet. 2.22 laterem lavare for a feigned repentance will send Absolom away for a while but upon the next Enterview will hurry us with more passion into his embraces whereas the deep wounds of the true penitent make sin hateful to him while he lives and he that gets on a white garment with so much difficulty will not easily sully it but carefully preserve it pure as his tears have made it And upon the same ground be very pressing for the holy spirit Which if you can obtain you shall not only be preserved from the spots of sin but shall shine with the lustre of a holy life for our goodness is apt to vanish (d) Hos 6.4 we are wavering and soon weary unless we have that establishing spirit (e) Psal 51.14 David prays for and then all duties will be easie and we shall be strong for love and the sense of his assistance will carry us cheerfully through them all so as to be our pleasure not burden and when we are arrived to this nothing can bribe us to forsake them Oh happy soul that is thus begun to be restored to that purity and holiness which are part of Gods Image (f) Ephes 4.24 and parcels of the Divine Perfections blessed is he that is so far advanced that God is not like to forsake him because he hath made him holy pure and a fit temple for the inhabitation of his spirit nor is he likely ever to forsake that God whose mercy hath saved him whose grace doth refresh him whose waies please him and his glorious bounty which faith discovers doth still allure him to press forward to neerer unions and unseparable connexions no state under the Sun is to be longed and wished for like this which a true Repentance and Gods holy Spirit brings us to § 13. So that at the last we may come to his eternal joy through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen There is nothing more desirable then the sweet peace of a good Conscience but only that which is the end and perfection thereof and that is that happiness which is infinite and endless which the Scripture calls an eternal and everlasting joy (g) Isai 35.10 Chap. 61.7 51.11 which neither men nor devils can lessen or interrupt much less put a period to it And if God give us true Repentance it will preserve us from the sins which forfeit this and if he add his holy spirit it will safely lead us into those paths of righteousness which lead thither where we can desire no more because we have all that is desirable There are no cares to disturb no fears to allay nor sorrows to abate those ravishments of delight for ever there is joy which far surpasseth the half-sad and mixed pleasures which this world hath being nothing else but pure joy which pleaseth by its own excellence and by having no fears nor possibility of defailance in degree or continuance we tast something of it in the charming calm of a strong faith and a quiet conscience with undeceived expectations of Gods love but this is but the land-skip of our heavenly Canaan which Jesus hath purchased for us and God the Father will grant unto us and the most holy Spirit will be our guide thither (h) Psal 51.14 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole glorious Trinity is concerned for us and will cooperate with us to put us into possession of them and then rejoyce over us to all eternity The Father who forgave us the Son who dyed for us and the Blessed Spirit who wrought effectually in us will Communicate this their joy with us and to us for ever And lastly to shew that you thankfully follow these Directions of the Ministers and have in your own heart and thoughts most devoutly petitioned God for a true Repentance and his holy Spirit by means whereof all these incomparable benefits may redound to you in testimony I say hereof you sum up all in a Petitionary Amen desiring it may be so and assenting also to the truth of all this It is most true and therefore oh so be it unto you Amen The Paraphrase of the Absolution BE it known to every one of you that hath confessed his sins with an humble lowly Penitent and obedient heart that Almighty God Supreme King of Heaven and Earth whose Royal Prerogative it is fully to acquit or finally to condemn being the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who assumed our nature and suffered for our sins this great God by his Merits is of an angry Judge become a tender Father and hath solemnly sworn he is one who desireth not neither taketh pleasure in the death or damnation of a sinner though never so justly deserving it but rather chuseth to have opportunity to shew mercy and therefore he useth all possible means that he may turn from his wickedness which will bring the sinner into condemnation that by leaving these paths of death he might be forgiven and live in holiness and comfort here and in everlasting glory hereafter And to confirm this his good will and keep penitent sinners from despair he hath given and in holy Scripture communicated Power by vertue of his Supreme Authority and Commandment for the exercise of this power for when poor sinners need comfort he hath given special charge to his Ministers lawfully chosen by himself and those he appoints to be his Ambassadors to declare at all times his willingness to pardon all and pronounce Absolution more particularly and plainly to those that by returning and obedience do own him even to his People being Penitent for all their offences as you now from your
Whereas in Extempore Prayer the Petitions expire into Air in a moment for neither Minister nor People knew them before nor can remember them afterwards the one being busy in inventing the others in expecting a pleasing novelty And methinks it argues more of the Spirit of God when we can attend the old Prayers with zeal and love then when we need Variety and Novel Expressions to skrew us up into a Devotion too much like Artifice and seeming rather to be moved by the pleasure of the Fancy then the Actings of desire However we judge of the Effects of Gods Spirit rather by disposing our hearts to joyn in a well-composed Form then by filling our heads with new Prayers or opening our Mouths in fluent expressions both which we may do without the help of the Spirit but to be devout without it is most impossible To which we shall only add that many Sons of God and sound Members of our Church do daily use these prayers with as much Spirit and Life serious and sincere Devotion as any in the World can do And this they account a demonstration that the Spirit doth assist them in this Form And so it may assist these mistaken Christians if they will lay down their groundless prejudice and try to serve God thus as well as they can So would the good Spirit assist their prayers and make up our differences (h) Quis enim inimicum adhuc ducere potest eum cum quo unam ad Deum vocem emisit D. Basil giving us one mind and one Spirit that with one Heart and one Mouth we might glorify one God Object 2. But it is further urged that these Prayers though good in themselves will grow flat and nauseous by daily use (i) Vilia sunt nobis quaecunque prioribus annis Vidimus sor● det quicquid spectavimus olim Calphurn Eccl. 7. and consequently become an impediment to Devotion Answ We come not to the house of God for Recreation but for a supply of our Wants and therefore this might be a better reason of an empty Theatre than a thin Congregation We come to God in Publique to petition for the releif of our own general Necessities and those of the whole Church viz. for Pardon of sin Peace of Conscience the succours of Divine Grace and a Deliverance from sin and Sathan Death and Hell as also for food and raiment health and strength protection and success in all our Concerns and more generally for the Peace of the Kingdom the prosperity of the Church the propagation of the Gospel and the success of its Ministers Now these things are alwaies needful and alwaies the same to be prayed for every day alike Wherefore unless we be so Vain as to fancy God is delighted with Variety and Change as well as we what need is there to alter the Phrase every day or what efficacy can a new Model give to our old requests Particular wants and single Cases must be supplyed by the Closet-Devotions for the Pub●ique whether by Form or Extempore can never reach all those which are so numerous and variable Wherefore one Form may fit all that ought to be asked in the Church and why then should we desire a needless and infinite Variety and Alteration If we do it is out of Curiosity not Necessity The poor Man is most healthful whose Labour procures him both Appetite and Digestion who seldome changeth his Dish yet finds a Relish in it and a new strength from it every day And so it is with the sober and industrious Christian who busying himself in serving God gets daily a new sense of his Wants and consequently a fresh Stomack to these Holy Forms which are never flat or dull to him that brings new affections to them every day It is the Epicure and luxurious the crammed lazy Wanton or the diseased man that need quelques choses or Sauces to make his daily bread desirable And if this be our Temper it is a sign of a diseased Soul and an effect of our surfeiting on holy things In this we resemble those Murmurers Numb 11.6 who despised the bread of Heaven because they had it daily and loathed Manna it self calling it in scorn Dry Meat This was sufficient to sustain their bodies and satisfy their hunger but they required Meat for their Soul (k) Psal 78.18 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to feed their Fancies and their lusts even as we do for whom the Church hath provided Prayers sufficient to express our needs but not to satiate our wanton Fancies nor gratify the Lust of our Curiosity and we complain they are insipid so perhaps they are to such for the Manna had no Tast to the wicked but it suited it self to the Appetite and Tast of every good Man as the Jews tell us in their Traditions (l) Wisd 16.21 Fagius on Numb 11. Sure I am it is true here for if we be curious and proud or Carnal and Profane there is no gust in the Common-prayers but a truly pious Man can every day here exercise Repentance and Faith Love and Desire and so use them as to obtain fresh hopes of Mercy Peace of Conscience increase of Grace and expectations of Glory and whoever finds not this the fault is not in the Prayers but in the indisposition of his own heart If all this will undeceive any and take away their prejudice so that they may see clearly what they cannot but love if they did behold I shall think my pains well bestowed if not it appears they are resolved to believe as they do and I am resolved also not to imitate them so far as to cover my Arguments with strenuous revilings (m) Non incessimus adversarios convitiis contumeliis sicut plerique faciunt rationum argumentorum infirmitatem maledictis obtegentes Greg. Naz. because it is more pleasant to me to give a true and lovely Character of my own Devotions then an odious though deserved one of Others Only let those that delight in making objections against Forms know that we can easily recriminate and Charge extempore Prayers with Novelty Confusion Irreverence Vain-glory which can scarce be denyed and many other inconveniences that will hardly be excused But this were to perpetuate a Quarrel and had not been mentioned here but to teach those to be modest in their Censures (n) Cum tua praevideas oculis mala lippus inunctis Cur in amicorum Vitiis tam cernis Acutum who are not free from all Exceptions nay liable to infinitely more then can be justly Charged upon us But having thus cleared the way to all indifferent and disinterested Persons it is time to speak briefly of the Design of the following Discourse which is to make it evident that our Excellent Prayers do deserve all possible love and esteem and contain in them a rich Treasurie of all that can make our Devotion live●y and useful And if we be assisted by Gods spirit and
come with Desire to pray with zeal and sincerity here is without calling in any aids but that of Heaven Matter enough in the curious Order clear Method significant Phrases and strong Arguments to quicken our affections and enlarge our Souls in holy and fervent wishes desires and meditations which is the Prayer of the Inward Man the Life and Soul of this Duty All which is done by giving a Natural and facile Analysis of the Method and by making plain and practical Observations on the parts together with a literal Paraphrase of the whole By which none can imagine I should give a borrowed lustre to the Prayers which they had not of their own for I only prove they had it before and I find all in them that I observe from them which I hope will be so plain that all Men will see the inference and be able in their own Devotions to find out much more Now in this Essay I shall hope to serve three sorts of Persons 1. The Ignorant who may be instructed hereby to pray with understanding Not that we suppose these Offices so obscure as to need a Comment for nothing can be more plainly expressed nor is it possible to invent words more universally understood but many that understand the sense of the words have not Art enough to discern the Order Method and Connexion of the Prayers nor skil to find out the Arguments that press every request or the places of Scripture which furnish these Devotions with significant Phrases nor judgment to Describe what disposition of Soul doth suit the several parts of them And they that consider that the greatest number are such will think it seasonable to help such with a plain and easy Explication But to pass these there are many in other things knowing Persons who rather for want of Consideration then judgment never took notice of the natural dependences of these prayers nor the true and full import of the expressions nor of the Graces to be exercised in the several Parts because they only attended the words but took no care to expatiate into holy meditations And if the former need a Master these want a Monitor lest they offend in a worse kind (o) Non tibi deputatur ad culpam quod invitus ignoras sed quod negligis quaerere quod ignoras Aug. de lib. arbitr lib. 3. c. 19. For Negligence is worse then simple Ignorance But I hope though all that is here be obvious yet something will be found which either was not known or not observed before and those things also such as may elevate the affections and make the Prayers more pleasing and more profitable 2. The devout servants of God and obedient Sons of the Church whose Care it is to pray daily in Publique and whose desire and endeavour is to do it well Might I be a Nethinim to hew wood and prepare fuel for the altars of their Hearts I should rejoice and it hath been my Care to suggest not alwaies the most Critical but the most practical sense which most directly tended to help Devotion for these Mens sake who no doubt have in their own hearts made many of these Observations before and I hope they will like them no worse for I shall like them better in hopes the same Spirit directed me and them But I hope that what I have done will besides its present assistance suggest a way to all devout Souls for making Pathetical and pious inlargements more and better then are to be found here that so our daily Offices may be full of life and pleasure and every day court us with new delights And I must affirm I have rather opened the top then searched the bottome of this rich Mine But su●e I am we had need to quicken our Devotion all we can not only for our own good but that our flames might thaw the hearts and lighten the eyes of the rest of the Congregation which scarce ever mind either Words or ●ense but are either sleepy or tired to the dishonour of God the discomfort of the Minister (p) Pauci mecum sunt in oratione hi ipsi vertiginosi hiantes assiduè se convertentes observantes quando Psalmorum cantor versus finiet quando ab Ecclesiâ velut à carcere ab orationis necessitate liberabuntur Basil conc 11. de servit and the ruine of their own Souls How happy should we be if by my endeavours and your Examples we might awaken such into a Sense of their Duty that these excellent Prayers might every where be said with an excellent spirit for the benefit of particulars and the good of the whole Church 3. The mistaken dissenters who hereby may be convinced and perhaps persuaded (q) Facilius vinci possunt quam persuaderi Hyeron that we can pray by this Form with as much zeal and more knowledg with as much Spirit and more Truth then by any other kind of Prayer And then it must appear that this Venerable Liturgie hath been falsly represented by such who would not have it seen truly lest it should be loved really (r) Credunt de nobis quae non probantur nolunt inquiri ne probentur non esse Tert. Ante nos incipiunt homines odisse quam nosse ne cognitos aut imitari possint aut damnare non possint Cyp. de idol Van. But if they are so much their own Masters as to read the Prayers seriously and view this little book with as much Charity as it was written with I shall hope either for their company at Prayers or at least to escape their censures for going thither For unless they be foolishly obstinate they either must love them or cannot hate them If they would love them and pray with us we shall be friends and if only the second be obtained we shall be quiet and even that is desirable These are the designes which began and incouraged this undertaking and that they are the sincere purposes of the Author his own Conscience doth testify and he hopes even those who approve not the Meanes must confess the end is good But that he should be so happy to obtain it in all is rather to be desired then expected and if it be succesful in any of these kinds he will not repent his pains If in none he is not the first that hath failed in accomplishing good Intentions And however he will have satisfaction in the Peace of a good Conscience (s) 2 Cor. 1.12 and may say with that noble Roman (t) si sequuta fuerit quae debuit fortuna nos omnes gaudebimus sin minùs ego tamen gaudebo Brutus ap Ciceronem If the success answer his sincerity it will be a cause of universal Joy if not he can rejoyce in his cordial intentions to do good For the Censures of furious zealots or the scoffings of profane Ishmaels he doth not value them being only unwilling to offend authority or true Piety Wherefore he doth
humbly submit these Prayers to the Judicious Correction of the Reverend Fathers of the Church desiring nothing may be said which dissents from the Doctrine and Discipline now established for if it do it is without the Authors knowledge and against his Judgment And finally as to all sober and devout Christians he wisheth the same Charity may guide their eyes and fill their hearts in their perusal which guided his hand in the Composal of these lines and then he hopes for a fair interpretation which these following Sections may need since they are drawn up not for the Study but the Temple not for Criticks but Asceticks (u) Malo ut me reprehendant Grammatici quam ut non intelligant populi D. August nor to make men more learned but more devout They are intended to wait upon you to the house of God and entertain you there till Prayers begin that you may by perusing some parts hereof be fitly disposed for them which is almost one half of the Duty (x) Dimidium facti qui bene coepit habet But the Preface is grown too long and must not be enlarged by Apologies but concluded with this hearty wish May the God of Peace give us all meek Hearts quiet Spirits and devout Affections and free us from sloth and prejudice that we may have full Churches frequent prayers and fervent Charity and that uniting in our Prayers here we may all joyn in his Praises hereafter for Jesus sake Amen SECTION I. OF THE PREPARATION TO Publick PRAYER § 1. PRAYER is an Elevation of the Soul to contemplate the beauties of the Divi●e Nature that by beholding such transcendent perfections it may learn to love desire to please and delight to imitate so great and exact a pattern and consequently is a duty of the highest concernment for it is an Honour and a Benefit to us and yet it is accepted by God as our homage and the testimony of our observance It is a high favour to be admitted to have familiar converse * Job 15.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vulg. Ang preces pr●p sign Colloquium familiare Drusius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Strom. 7. with the King of Kings and a huge advantage to have so frequent admission to the Fountain of all goodness But then it is difficult as well as fair and requires so much attention and serenity zeal and vigour humility and faith love and admiration that it cannot either be well done or kindly accepted without some preceding Preparation for these Souls of ours are so drenched in Matter and so generally taken up with the consideration of outward things partly by the condition of our Nature but principally by the frequency of our conversing with the Cares and Pleasures of the lower World that we find our Minds exceedingly pressed down with the weight of them when we would lift them up to God but as those Fowls whose wings are not proportionable to the weight of their bodies do usually run some paces before they can rise from the earth to begin their flight so the Church teacheth us first to prepare our hearts before we begin to pray The Jews are taught when they enter their Synagogues to stand silently a while in the posture of Prayer before their Devotion is begun (a) Buxtorf Synag Judaic c. 5. and one of their Masters told his Schollars this was the Way to obtain Eternal life (b) Quum vultis orare cogitate prius coram quo stetis Dict. R. Eleaz. Talmud tract Mosi Beruch And the Primitive Christians had a preparatory preface (c) Sacerdos ante Orationem Praefatione praemissâ parat fratrum mentes Cyprian de Orat. dominic to their Publick Prayers as long ago as the time of the famous Cyprian In imitation whereof we are appointed to exercise our Souls in the meditation of these Sentences of Scripture with the Exhortation subjoyned that we may thereby become more fit to pray The Israelites in the oblation of their First-fruits had a form of Gods own appointment Deut. 26.5 wherein they were minded of their former Poverty and that Illustrious Heathen Temple had this Inscription in letters of gold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the Worshippers by a true consideration of themselves might approach with all humility to their supposed Deities And surely it is more requisite for us who worship the True God to reflect upon the vast Disproportion between our selves and him which is as great as between finite and infinite mortal and immortal holy and impure and so we may be convinced of the necessity of being most lowly and reverent before him The frailties of our bodies and the infirmities of our Nature the defects of our Faculties and the misery that cleaves both to Soul and Body doth command us to be humble in the presence of God But that which will lay us lowest of all in o●r own thoughts is the remembrance of our Sins which do principally if not alone alienate us from God for he that pityeth our Miseries doth hate our Sins and he that caused the Leper to be banished out of the City admitted the Lame Man to the beautiful gate of the Temple Wherefore our Spiritual Guides present us with these in the first place both to allay our Pride and to engage our Care to remove them by Repentance before we begin to pray because else we know our prayers cannot be heard (d) Psalm 66.18 Joh. 9.31 Is 59.16 for Joshua himself cannot be heard while the Sin of Israel was not taken away (e) Joshua 7.10 and he meets with a check in his Devotion because he presumed to pray before he had removed the Accursed thing Now since none of us are innocent it follows that none must come to petition God till they have prepared themselves by Repentance and he that doth not this continues in sin still and if so there is a Moral impossibility such a mans prayers should prevail for they are either a heap of contradictions or a contexture of indignities against the God of heaven for such men bewail that in words which they love in their heart and ask forgiveness where they are neither sensible of an offence nor will own the pardon as a favour they accuse themselves for what they did willingly and never condemned themselves for it but will reiterate upon the first opportunity they petition their enemy and ask for what they hate and flatter him whom they fear perhaps but do not love and require thing● that they hope he will not give and if they ask any thing seriously it is either inconsiderable or with evil designs and so becomes a provocation (f) Quas nisi seductis nequeas committere divis Now can an All-seeing eye discern this without indignation will not an Almighty hand be lifted up to destroy them who both delude themselves and mock the King of Glory let us beware least we experience the truth of this in our eternal ruine We
a Passover The true penitent esteems his life a favour and all on this side Hell Mercy and the condemned Malefactor will be as thankful for a Reprieve as another for a great Pension and high Preferment The poor sinners request is no greater then to be spared and his Argument is not because he is not guilty or deserves no stripes that would accelerate the stroke to abate such daring confidence and convince such horrible falshood He knows nothing is to begotten from God by standing on his Innocence but the way is to acknowledge our Guilt for one great end of Gods temporal judgments on sinners is to force them to do him justice by racks and tortures to extort a Confession from them that have the cunning to conceal or the impudence to deny their wickedness Thus God opened the mouths of Josephs brethren (b) Genes 42.21 44.16 of Adonibezek (c) Judg. 1.6 and Manasseth (d) 2 Chron. 32.12 to display their former and almost forgotten cruelties and made Phaaroh himself cry Peccavi (e) Exod. 9.27 Satis est h. e. satis jam lucratus est Deus poenis suis cum jam culpam nostram agnoscimus Fagius in loc and then he hoped God would cease to Punish when he had obtained his end and brought him to Confession But the wi●est way is not to stay till some judgment summon us but of our own accord ingenuously to confess our sins Racks and Strapadoes are for obstinate Rogues and no merciful humane Prince would use them to one that with tears pleaded guilty and begged a Pardon Matth 26.65 Habes confitentem reum much less will the Father of Mercies What need is there of any f●rther witness the humble sinner accuseth himself cleers Gods justice and casts himself wholly on his mercy and doubtless he shall be spared especially because it is to be hoped that he that hath seen his danger and so spedily and fully confessed his fault designs never more to prove disobedient if he may now be spared and since the chief end of punishment is to prevent the sin (f) Nemo prudens punit quia peccatur sed ne peccatur Senec. doubtless God will not be hard to be entreated to spare him that is in the way to amendment and whose own prudent fears have done that which otherwise a sharp judgment must have wrought Let us be so wise as to go in upon the first apprehensions of Gods displeasures and take sanctuary in his pity and we shall not be punished temporally unless with designs of mercy however not eternally § 10. Restore thou them that are penitent Though we are apt to account those beggars saucy and troublesome who from one request granted are encouraged to make a second and more considerable Yet God whose rule is Habenti dabitur to him that hath shall be given is well pleased with it nor will he interpret it impudence if after we have prayed for a removal of the guilt and a deliverance from the punishment of our sin we put up a further and greater request even to be restored For it is not a single mischief which sin doth us besides the stain and the wrath it doth alienate the mind of God from us and therefore after David had prayed against the fore-mentioned evils he also desires to be restored (g) Psalm 51.12 2 Sam. 14. It will not suffice Absolom to be called home from banishment unless he may see his Fathers face So if a truly pious man were sure never to smart for sin by any positive evil the bare privation of the Divine love would be intollerable and its suspension a grievous burden and he that truly calls God Father will not be satisfied without a restoring to his favour which sin had deprived him of The word is also used for the rebuilding a ruined and depopulated City (h) Dan. 9.25 c. which is the sad embleme of a soul laid wast by sin which defaceth its beauty dismantles its strengths and brings down its highest and noblest faculties evenning them with the ground fitting them for converse with low and base things making of a defenced City a heap Which when we consider how can we but weep over our own souls as Nehemiah over the ruines of Jerusalem never ceasing to pray that by the Holy Spirit it may be restored and re-edifyed and retrieved into its former beauty and strength either of these Metaphors afford useful Meditations but 't is most probable this Petition refers to that clause of the Confession there is no health in us and signifies our desires to be restored to health according to Gods promise (i) Jerem. 30.17 It is not enough that we dye not by sin but we desire we may not lye languishing under the remains of so sad a disease but may have a perfect cure Some distempers do so universally corrupt the humours that the abatement is no recovery for they make way for a worse unless the body be well cleansed after them (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. in animâ post peccatum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arrian in Epic. lib. 2. c. 18. So do most sins blind the mind harden the heart Heb. 3.13 weaken the faith undermine the hope embase the affections quench the actings of Gods Spirit and give the tempter advantage against us so that a bare Pardon will not fit us either to serve or enjoy God till the remaining ignorance security distrust worldly mindedness and deadness be purged out and we be fully restored But nothing will move God to do this unless you be sincerely penitent that is add to your sorrow and confession real purposes of amendment he may pity the miserable and may spare him that acknowledgeth his offence but he will restore none but him that reforms for he that sees the heart knows that to seek only pity or deliverance proceeds only from self-love at best and sometimes from love to sin as the crazy Epicure desires health that he may renew the prosecutions of his Lust But he that seriously desires to be restored hates sin for it self and not for its evil company and he that doth so is truly penitent but they that only desire a freedome from misery and punishment and are not grieved for these remains will soon fall again into sin and God who knows that may justly deny them that peace which they will use so ill By this also it appears that those men do in vain complain of those dregs of their old corruptions which have not truly repented for God leaves these Canaanites on purpose to vex these half repenters to hinder them in religious duties (l) Numb 33.35 Saepe includent vos introitum exitum negabunt vobis Jos 23.13 Cautè tectè primò vos irretire conentur deinde palam urgebunt vos donec occaecuti estis Masius and when they grow weary of resisting them then they become snares in their way secretly to intrap
of the Christian Church prove Christ to be God (u) Ergo qui remittit Deus est quia nemo remittit nisi Deus Hilar. in Math. Can. 8. because he forgave sin which none but God can do (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in 1 Cor. 15. and his son Jesus who is also very God and purchased this Mercy of Absolution with his own blood (y) Ille solus peccata dimittit qui pro peccatis mortuus est Ambr. Veniam peccatis quae in ipsum commissa sunt solus potest ille largiri qui peccata nostra portavit Cypr. wherefore we give to God the things which are Gods and plainly declare he is the Author we the dispensers only of this favour and the Witnesses and Messengers to bring certain news thereof (z) En fili certificate remissa tibi esse peccata hujus me testem habebis Vade in Pace Fer. in Matth. 9. And this is more comfort to the Penitent the Supreme Judge he from whose Sentence is no Appeal Pardoneth thee fear not the state of Agag whom Saul had pardoned but God had not wherefore Samuel hewed him to pieces in the midst of his vain hopes that the bitterness of death was past He Pardoneth that hath no equal to examine or approve much less superiour to disanul his actings Our absolution is profitable when the Persons are meet to receive it (a) Tunc enim vera est absolutio Praesidentis cum aeterni arbitrium sequitur judicis Greg. hom 26. but the stamp of God will make it currant in Heaven it self The Priests Pardon is not compleat at present till it be ratified at the last day But he Pardoneth at this present while we are holding out this Absolution he that knows who among you are true believers and really Penitent is at this instant sealing your Pardon in Heaven which makes ours to be valid we then are but the Messengers and interpreters but it is our great Master that Absolveth because what we do is Pronounced in his name dispensed by his Authority offered on his Condition and confirmed by his Approbation § 9. All them that truly repent and unfeignedly believe his holy Gospel These two acts Repentance and Faith are by Christ (b) Mark 1.15 and his Apostles (c) Act. 20.21 made the Conditions of all the Gospel promises and without them no Absolution can be had those that have these no man can condemn but without these no man can acquit it was therefore a great arrogance in those Ecclesiasticks in St. Hieroms time who imagined they could save or destroy at pleasure (d) ut vel damnent innocentes vel solvere se noxios arbitrantur Hierom. Com in Matth. l. 3. Nec Angelus nec Archangelus potest nec Dominus ipse si peccaverimus in poenitentiam deferentibus non relaxat Ambros Epist 28. ad Theodos and it is as great a vanity in any to believe a Servant acting contrary to his Masters known Will because it will be insignificant wherefore if any by hypocrisie shall think to surprize an Absolution Or if he that dispenseth an act by prejudice or corruption you must know it is he must ratifie the Pardon who can see whether these qualifications are in him that receives it or no and though we hold out this Act of a Grace to all yet our Master pardons none but such as do repent truly and believe unfeignedly and how many soever do so if they have been the worst of sinners they shall every one be forgiven Let us then take care to come 1. With an h●mble lowly penitent and obedient heart sorrowing and being ashamed fearing exceedingly confessing humbly and resolving heartily against all sin let us beware that a hard heart and a customary confession and hypocritical pretences do not ruine our hopes and blast our desires for he only Pardoneth the real Penitent 2. Let us bring with us an unfeigned Faith in his Gospel trusting in the assurances of his Promises and persuading our selves of the necessity and excellence of his laws and confirming our souls in the expectations of his rewards and this Faith unfeigned (e) 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Tim. 1 5. will open the door of Mercy but for that bold challenge which some make to the promises and the benefits of the Gospel while they are void of hatred to sin or love to God it is only feigned to stifle the accusations of Conscience and ward off the threats of the Law and to give the man liberty to sin and God will never accept such to remission but discover these men had no other ground for their confidence but only because they had persuaded themselves of a falshood Remember you come to him that searcheth the heart for a Pardon and strive that your Repentance may be true and Faith cordial and sound as you hope for mercy from him and learn by this order first to repent of your former evil ways before you entertain too particular confidences of Gods love and your interest in Jesus but if you have truly repented the more firmly you believe the greater will be Gods glory and the sweeter your comfort and the speedier will your Absolution be confirmed Though your iniquities are heinous and innumerable if upon the sight you have had of them you do condemn your self with real purposes of amendment and notwithstanding your unworthiness if you can trust to the Merits of Jesus and believe all the gracious Promises of the Gospel shall be fulfilled to you I doubt not to assure this your Repentance and Faith shall pass the test of God himself and your desires shall be satisfied in his mercy § 10. Wherefore let us beseech him to grant us true Repentance and his holy Spirit The whole duty of a Minister consists in instruction and exhortation (f) Acts 2.40 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first to convince the understanding the second to engage the affections both which parts of his Office the Priest doth here exercise for hitherto he hath testified there is Remission to be obtained and now he exhorts to seek for it for in this Section we are directed how to obtain in the following we are encouraged by the Benefits to be had thereby now this present exhortation is a conclusion inferred from all the former parts of this Absolution which are in this word wherefore urged as so many motives to quicken our addresses viz. 1. Since God who is full of power and mercy would not the death of us sinners but desires we may live therefore we may cheerfully come to him for help who will be as well pleased with the opportunity of giving as we with the mercy of receiving 2. He hath Commissionated Ministers to be the Heralds of his willingness to forgive wherefore let us in answer to this gracious Proclamation go in and submit to him who though he be the offended Party first sent to us to be reconciled 3. He hath assured us he
officia Dei honor in patre fidei testimonium in nomine oblatio obsequii in voluntate commemoratio spei in regno petitio vitae in pane exomologesis debito●um in deprecatione sollicitudo tentationum in postulatiene tutelae Tertul de Orat. here is our belief of his goodness our persuasion of his love our desire after his holiness our subjection to his Authority and hope of his Kingdome our willingness to suffer and readiness to do his will here we declare our dependance on his Providence and contentedness with his dispensations our Penitence for former sins and resolutions of amendment our sense of our own frailty and our trust in his mercy and grace and all this ending with acts of Faith and Love joy and praise Devotion and Adoration So that this Divine Form is fitted for all times and all places and all persons The ignorant must use it because he may understand it the knowi●g that they may understand it better the sinner that he may be holy the holy man least he become a sinner the rich prays thus for the sanctification of his gifts the poor for the supply of his wants in private it extends to particular needs in publique it unites us all into one soul and makes us equally desire (r) Non singulis privatam precem mandavit sed Oratione communi concordi prece pro omnibus jussit orare Cypr. Epist 8. others good with our own being indited in a publique stile so that though it be useful every where yet it is especially fitted for the Assemblies of the Church where all Antiquity used it as the Salt of all other offices (s) Sat omnium divinorum o●●ctorum● and we in Imitation of them for our Church prescribes it after the Absolution for acceptance after the word of God read and the recital of the Creed for assistance in holiness and confirmation in Faith in the Letany for deliverance from evil in the Communion Service to dispose us for a penitent hearing of the Laws of God never too often nor never superfluously as you may observe afterwards for how can we too often joyn his most perfect Prayer to ours that are so imperfect since by him both we and our prayers are alone made acceptable Those that presented Petitions to the Roman Emperors drew them up by the direction of some judicious Lawer but we have this Sacred Form from the wonderful Counsellor who came out of the Bosom of God and knew his treasures as well as our wants he best could inform us what was fit for us to ask and what most likely for him to grant he was to go to Heaven to be our Advocate there and he hath taught us this that there may be a Harmony between our requests and his What zeal and height of devout affections are sufficient to offer up this Prayer with drawn up by the great Master of Requests and orderer of all entercourse between God and Man how sure is this of acceptance (t) Animata suo privilegio ascendit coelum commendans patri quae filius docuit Tertull. which is stamped with his Image signed with his hand and sent in his name his Power will make it prevalent and Gods love to his dear Son most acceptable (u) Dum prece Oratione quam filius docuit ad patrem loquitur faciliùs audiamur Cypr. for what can pierce the ears sooner or melt the heart of a tender Father more readily then the voice of his only and Beloved Son use it therefore Reverently and heartily and doubt not to be heard The Division of the Lords Prayer The Lords Prayer hath three Parts 1. The Preface or Compellation 2. The six Petitions which concern Expressing 1. Charity to Men Our 2. Faith in God Father 3. Fear of God which art in Heaven Either Gods Glory by 1. The Reverence of his Attributes hallowed be thy Name 2. The Exercise of his Authority thy Kingdome come 3. The fulfilling of his Will thy Will be done in earth as it is in Heaven Or our own good in 1. Temporal supplies give us this day our daily bread 2. Remission of sins past and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us 3. Deliverance for the future from Sin and lead us not into temptation Punishment but deliver us from evil Being an acknowledgement of God 1. As Supreme for thine is the Kingdome 2. As Omnipotent the Power 3. As Gracious and the Glory 4. As Eternal for ever and ever Amen 3. The Conclusion or Doxology A Practical Discourse on the Lords Prayer § 2. OUr Father which art in Heaven This was the usual Preface to the Jewish Forms of Prayer who stiled God their Father which was in heaven (x) Pater noster qui es in coelis fac nobis gra iam Sed. Tephil Lusitan Deus noster qui in coelo unicus es in lib. Musar But since they owned not God the Son they could not justly call God Father and being in bondage to the Law (y) Galat. 4.6 Servis ●ancillis non permissum Abba vel Imma● Dominis suis dicere in Gem. they were Servants rather then Sons and such by their own rule might not call their Masters by the name of Father This Appellation suiteth us better who are by Jesus adopted to be the Sons of God and by his Spirit who obtained that priviledge we are taught to cry Abba Father (z) Gal. 4.6 he that is the eternal Son of God himself who hath alone right to this Name hath put the words in our mouths and what fitter words to begin our Prayers then these two which include the principal requisites of Prayer Faith and Charity no man can call God his Father but by Faith and he must be in Charity that can add Our Father which cannot be said devoutly but by him that is free from wrath to man or doubting (a) 2 Tim. 2.8 'T is certain God is our Father for he hath created us after his own Image and begotten us again by the washing of Regeneration he feeds and cloths us preserves and provides for us he teacheth us what is right and correcteth us when we do amiss and Finally he hath done like a Father in providing an eternal inheritance for us (b) 2 Cor. 12.14 even such as men make for their Children (c) 2 Sam. 7.19 G. P. Talis enim est provisio humana He hath ever expressed a Fatherly love to us and care of us and tenderness toward us and this Jesus obligeth us to acknowledge (d) Isai 63.16 that while we call him Father we may be gratefull to him and have the affections of Children upon us when we come to him in our needs trusting in his mercy persuaded of his All-sufficiency rejoycing in hope and filled with love and joy and comfortable expectations because we are going to our Father and least if we were uncharitable to our Bretheren that unlikeness to
that we may seldome fall into temptation and never fall by it least Sathan who desires our eternal ruine again get power over us and advantage against us let us not be a prey to his malice but deliver us from evil which he inticeth us to as a Tempter and will punish us for as a Tormentor that we may not deliver our selves over to him by sin nor thou give us up to his wrath to execute thy sentence upon us for it These mercies we need and though we are unworthy yet we Petition thee for them thou mayest help us for thine is the Kingdome thou canst do it for thine is the Power thou wilt do it for us as thou hast freely and frequently relieved poor penitent sinners for which Men and Angels do acknowledge thine is the Praise and the Glory and we shall by thy mercy to us be obliged to joyn in this just acknowledgment which shall be made to thee in Heaven and Earth for ever and ever world without end Amen be it so SECTION VI. Of the Responses First of them in General § 1. AFter this devout address to God in that incomparable Prayer which Jesus taught are added some short and pithy Sentences in which the People are to bear a part according to the manner of the Primitive Christians (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Constit Ap. l. 2. c. 5. who used this so constantly that Eusebius (x) Euseb Hist Eccl l. 2. c. 17. brings it as an Argument to prove the Essenes were Christians because they sung by turns answering one another They did so indeed among the Jews but those duties were performed by the Priests and Levites only But Christians have a greater Priviledge and every man is so far a Priest (y) 1 Pet. 2.9 Revel 1.6 as to have leave to joyn in this spiritual sacrifice and it is for the benefit as well as honour of the people For First This shews their full Consent and Unity in all that is Prayed for which Christ teacheth us to be necessary that our Prayers may be heard (z) Matth. 18.19 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nor is their silence sufficient to express such a consent as is here required for they must not only be willing these things may be prayed for but they must desire God should look on it as every ones particular request and accordingly Minister and people must with one mouth as well as one mind (a) Rom. 15.6 praise God Secondly This quickens their Devotion by a grateful variety making those holy offices pleasant which our corrupt nature is so apt to think tedious and by a different manner of address making the time seem short (b) Breve videbitur tempus quod tantis operûm varietatibus occupatur Hieron Epist ad Laet. and the Devotions new so that we may be as fresh as in the beginning of our Prayers Thirdly This engageth their Attention which is apt to stray especially in Sacred things and most of all if the people bear no part But when they have also their share of Duty they must expect before it comes that they may be ready when it is come that they may be right they must observe and after take heed to prepare against the next Answer they are to give How Pious therefore and Prudent is this O●der of the Church thus to intermix the Peoples duty that they may be alwaies exercised in it or preparing for it and never have leisure to entertain those vain thoughts which will set upon us especially in the house of God (c) Nihil agendo malè agere d●scimus Senec. if we have nothing to do And assuredly the general neglect of this Duty of answering in their course hath introduced so much laziness sleeping irreverence inadvertency and weariness into the house of God Our Pious Ancestors may make our Devotion blush when we see them all the time of Prayer in procinctu with their knees bended their hands lifted up their eyes fixed on the Minister and their hearts and mouths ready to say Amen and answer where ever it was required And if ever this Devotion be restored in the Church which all good men passionately with it must be by learning the people zealously and conscientiously to joyn in these pious Ejaculations allotted to them which that they may do I shall now explain them to every ones capacity § 2. O Lord open thou our lips And our mouth shall shew forth thy praise This sentence with many of those that follow are Endited by the Spirit of God taken out of that excellent repository of Devotion the Psalms of David from whence the Jews took the greatest part of their Liturgy and the Primitive Christians collected their Prayers (d) See Dr. Hammonds Preface to his Annotat. and composed their Hymns out of it because it contains variety of prayers and praises exactly fitted for all persons in all circumstances as pertinent as if they had been made for the present occasion and so we shall find this to be which we now consider The words are to be found in Psal LI. ver 15. and were antiently transcribed into the Christian Liturgies for they are ordered to be three times repeated in that antient one attributed to St. James not to mention them of later date And nothing can be more pertinent when Minister and people apply themselves to praise God for speech is the gift of God (e) Prov. 16.1 Exod. 4.11 and that in which man excells all other Creatures and was given us to this end that we might glorifie him whence the tongue is called our glory (f) Psal 16.9 gloria mea LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vid. Psal 36.12 108.1 because it is the instrument of his praise But we here do not only acknowledge our speech was given us to this end but desiring now to make a right use of it we beg his help and confess from him we have the faculty and the exercise of that faculty in every Act especially in holy things wherein unless he open our lips we cannot set forth his praise This is the sense of the words considered absolutely and alone But the Observation whence they are taken o●t of the most famous Penitential Psalm and where they are set soon after the Confession will afford us another profitable exposition David useth them after the Confession of his grievous sin and earnest supplication for Pardon and we use them in the Close of the Penitential part before we begin our solemn praises and petitions intimating that till we have some hopes of our Pardon we cannot proceed any further and so we briefly but zealously press that great sute for mercy because sin and the guilt of it doth stop our mouths and shut our lips that we become tongue-tyed (g) Matth. 22.11 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speechless and mute as Judah the most eloquent of all his brethren (h) Gen. 44.16 Quid scribam vobis a t quomodo
and be careful to express those practical inferences that are all along drawn from them in our lives and conversations heartily desiring we may live by these holy principles of truth and in these we must exercise especially Faith and Love concluding them with giving Glory to the Father who hath made us partakers of a right Faith in his Son by his Spirit and remembring that every Person of this Glorious Trinity joyns in these eminent works of Creation Providence Redemption and Sanctification let us heartily praise God the Father Son and Holy Ghost for all that is done or designed for the sons of men Let thy soul say Oh Lord I confess the truth of these things I believe them fully and I admire them highly and will ever love thee for declaring them I acknowledge thy Power in Creating thy Bounty in sustaining thy Wisdome in ordering and thy Mercy in relieving and preserving all the World I discern thy love in our Redemption I hope in thy might for a resurrection to life and I trust in thy Mercy for a share in thy glory Glory be to the Father c. for all this 2. The Psalms of Exhortation which are serious admonitions backed with powerful motives and convincing arguments and cleer examples by which we are stirred either to some Acts of moral Virtue (b) Psal 15. and 101. or to some Duties of positive Religion to fear God or study his Law or observe his Will (c) Psal 1. and 34. and 119. or else we are warned against sin by threatnings and examples (d) Psal 7. and 58. and 64. particularly against distrust in God by the History (e) Psal 78.105 106. of his Providence over his own people That we may profit by these it is requisite that we do weigh the promises and motives to holiness so seriously that we be convinced of our folly in neglecting these duties and resolved to set upon the sincere performance of them and it is necessary that we consider the evils that are appointed for and threatned to all sorts of sins and the sad instances and examples of sinners that have been made miserable thereby till we find our hearts moved with fear and penitence and till we have taken up purposes of speedy forsaking those dangerous courses so that here we are to exercise humility and Repentance fear of God and pious resolutions which being finished in the Doxology is a superadded act of Praise to the Father for sparing us to the Son for interceding for us and to the Holy Ghost for warning and convincing us and this Glory be to the Father c. doth declare you are thankful for the admonition and resolved to take warning and full of hopes of the Divine assistance to help you to forsake the evil and follow the good In these Psalms take the same resolutions which holy David did and encourage your selves with the same hopes love what he loves desire what he longed for believe and expect what he promiseth to himself hate what he hated take warning by what he observed and fear the same sad event if you go on in the same way with those sinners that are made examples to you evermore praising God for these gracious discoveries and saying Glory be c. 3. The Psalms of Supplication which are most ardent Petitions for all good things for your selves your Bretheren and the whole Church in all circumstances and upon all occasions These are private Prayers for Pardon of sin (f) Psal 25. and 51. and 143. for Restauration to Gods favour (g) Psal 4. and 42. and 63. for Patience in trouble (h) Psal 39. and 88. for deliverance from Spiritual or Temporal enemies (i) Psal 55. and 59 and 71. and 74. and also publique Prayers for the King (k) Psal 21. and 72. and for the Church and people of God (l) Psal 68. and 79. and 80. and such like Which that we may be fitly disposed for we must have a quick and feeling sense of our own and our bretherens wants a firm belief of Gods all-sufficiency a strong confidence in the intercession of Jesus Christ and a full persuasion of the acceptableness of these requests which are drawn up by the Holy Ghost And these devout prayers will give us occasion to shew our care of our own souls and our universal charity to all the world our love to Gods Church and our intire dependance on his Power and Mercy and may fitly be closed with a giving Glory to the Father who heareth us to the Son who pleads for us in Heaven and to the Holy Ghost who directs and assists us on Earth and we have cause to bless him who hath heard both our and others Prayers and will do so to the end of the world giving all persons in all ages past present and to come great-cause of Eucharist and thanksgiving for by this Gloria Patri added to our Prayers we declare our confidence and hope that he will grant us our desires who is and was and ever shall be the helper of all that flee to him for succour and we call to mind that many are now praising him in heaven for hearing these very Petitions we now put up Art thou poor or miserable sick or weak despised or slandered persecuted or oppressed here thou mayest breath out thy complaints to him that can help thee or those that are so Art thou under trouble of conscience or fear of Gods anger worsted by temptation or sluggish in holy duties or any waies spiritually indisposed here are most proper and pertinent forms for thy comfort and redress Art thou a well-wisher to all the world a lover of Gods people a friend to the Peace of Kingdoms and a faithful Subject to thy own Prince hast thou any detestation for sinners or desire of their Conversion any pitty for the calamitous and wishes for their deliverance if thou bring a charitable heart thou mayest pray for all or any of these in such prevailing words that ere thou hast done speaking thou mayest have such assurances of a gracious return as to sing Glory be to the Father c. 4. The Psalms of thanksgiving are those joyful songs of Praise and Eucharist and lovely descriptions of the Divine goodness to the World but especially to us and all his own people Such are those wherein God is praised for all his mercies (m) Psal 103. and 136. and 145. for those bestowed on our bodies (n) Psal 116. and 130. health plenty (o) Psal 65. and 104. victories over our enemies (p) Psal 18. and 144. and 149. as also for what he hath done for our souls (q) Psal 66. and 111. and 118. and in these Psalms are most earnest exhortations to joyn in praising his holy Name and most exact Characters of all Gods gracious dealings with us and all mankind wherefore that we may joyn in heart and voice let us bring with us hearts fully sensible of our
which shined on so many millions of wretched Heathens benighted in the darkness of Idolatry and made them Christian I will bless thee for honouring thy antient but despised people who were more enabled by the birth of Jesus then by all their former Royalties and victorious Trophies and instead of the bright Cloud the glory of the Tabernacle thou hast sent him to pitch his tent among them who was the brightness of thy own glory I am ravished to behold so many joyful souls blessing thee for this light which shined on them in their sins and the confines of eternal darkness and converted and translated them into thy marvelous light And all thy holy Saints in all ages have given thee the glory for all those illustrious beams of Love and Charity Piety Justice and Devotion which shine from their lives and are but the reflexion of the rayes of the grace of Jesus This excellent person rejoyced not only in his own felicity but to behold by the Spirit of Prophecy what joy Jesus was like to bring to me and many thousands of Converts and holy Men to the end of the World Wherefore let us be glad and rejoyce with him for our selves and all people for the light that shines upon us and the glory that is round about us and with all our Souls sing Glory be to the Father c. The Paraphrase of the Nunc Dimittis I Desire not to live in this world any longer then I have laid hold of thy Salvation which since thy Word and Spirit hath now discovered to me I have all I can wish for here therefore Lord now lettest thou thy command go forth that thy servant who hath longed hitherto to injoy thee may depart quietly out of this miserable world and be dismissed from the prison of the flesh I can now leave it in peace being assured thou wilt make good all other Promises since in giving thy dear Son thou hast done so exactly according to thy word My desires are satisfied and my faith confirmed as much as is possible in this world For mine eyes inlightened by thy holy Spirit have seen by Faith in thy blessed word him that is my Redeemer and brings thy salvation to me and all the world I cannot contain nor yet express my joy to behold this lovely Peace-maker w ich thou hast not only manifested in the flesh to the infinite delight of thy servants then but prepared by the discovery of thy holy Gospel to appear most gloriously before the face of all people that ever were or shall be This glorious Sun of Righteousness hath shined on all the Earth his word is a light to lighten the dismal regions of the unconverted heathens and the Gentiles that knew not God His doctrine instructed them and hath converted many and his presence and his grace is the honour and the glory of all true believers the joy and comfort of thy people Israel so that we and all the world are bound to praise thee for thy Gospel and thy son here on Earth and to continue our song to all Eternity when thou lettest us depart from hence Amen The last Hymn after the second Lesson viz. the LXVII Psalm § 6. AFter those parts of the Epistles which are more Doctrinal as containing the excellent principles and precepts of the Christian Religion we may seasonably use this rare piece of Davids devotion which contains most passionate wishes for the propagation of the knowledge of these incomparable truths throughout all the world and zealous desires that they may be known to all as they are to us whereby we declare our high esteem of them our hearty thankfulness for them and our sincere desires that all men might have the benefit and God the glory by them which is a seasonable return for those instructions we have now received out of Gods holy word and these very Petitions are an act of Eucharist and Praise The first Verse is the first Request even that God would be gracious to us in forgiving our sins giving us his grace to profit and outwardly expressing the kindness of his heart by the smiles of his countenance The second Verse is the end why we desire this felicity to his Church that the divine goodness to us may invite many Converts in and the encrease of the Church will be our happiness as it is our desire The third Verse is the second Petition that we and all may so discern the excellency of his Laws that he may be universally praised by Jews and Gentiles Verse fourth both for the holiness of his Commands and the righteous administrations of his Providence And to shew how earnestly we desire Gods glory and how constantly it ought to be paid the same Petition is repeated ver 5. And to encourage all to it the blessed effects of this universal praise are added ver 6. and 7. For when we are thankful God will multiply his blessings the Church shall be replenished with grace and fruitful in good works and more will so be drawn to embrace this Sacred Religion Did we thus earnestly beg his grace to prosper his Word to us and heartily Praise him for it our selves and fervently wish the enlargement of Christs Kingdom God the Father and Jesus Christ even our own God and God the Holy Ghost would assuredly bless us To which holy and undivided Trinity be ascribed all Honour Glory and Praise by us and all the World now and for ever Amen SECTION XI The Analysis of the Apostles Creed In this Creed are two parts shewing what we believe 1 Concerning God 1. In general that there is A God One God I believe in God 2. In special as to the Persons of the Trinity 1. Person the Father His Nature the Father Almighty Works Creation Providence maker of Heaven and Earth 2. Person the Son 1. His Name and Offices Prophet Priest and King and in Iesus Christ 2. His Natures both the Divine and his only Son our Lord Humane in his Conception and Birth who was conceived by the holy ghost born of the Virgin Mary 3. His works 1. Redemption by 1. His Passion suffered under Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buryed he descended into hell 2. Resurrection the third day he rose again from the dead 3. Ascension and Interces● he ascended into heaven and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty 2. Final Judgement from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead 3. Person whose Name expresseth His Nature a Holy Spirit His Office to sanctifie us I believe in the Holy Ghost 2. Concerning our selves 1. Our Condition as to 1. Union the holy Catholique Church 2. Communion the communion of Saints 2. Our Priviledges 1. As to the Soul the forgiveness of sins 2. As to the Body the resurrection of the body and 3. As to both the life everlasting Amen A Discourse of the Creed § 1. THE Holy Scriptures being a perfect Revelation of all Divine Truth ought to
be undoubtedly received by every Christian And no man is necessarily obliged to believe any thing in order to his salvation that is not contained therein (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc de Orthod Fid. l. 1. c. 1. or necessarily deduced thence So that the whole Word of God may be called our Creed because it is the rule of our Faith And yet because the truths therein revealed are dispersed and variously presented according to the several occasions of their manifestation and since they are liable to be misunderstood by ignorance and carelesness or misrepresented to us by malice and interest it seems almost necessary that the fundamental Articles of our Faith should be collected thence and reduced to one comprehensive sum which may be learned early remembred easily and retained unanimously and constantly by all Christians On which grounds there was in the Apostles times a form of sound words (p) 2 Tim. 1.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epist. Jud. ver 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philip. 3.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that Faith which was delivered to the Saints and which they are charged to keep with all fidelity that they might all be of the same mind and walk by the same rule And if the consent of Antiquity be of any Authority this form of the Apostles Creed was that which they all agreed upon (q) Discessuri ab invicem norman prius futurae praedicationis in commune constituunt Ruffinus in Symbol Omnes Orthodoxi Patres affirmant Symbolum ab ipsis Apostolis conditum Sixt. Senens Bib. before their parting to be a standing rule and measure for the Christian faith So that it hath ever since been of great authority in the Church and though the cavils of some hereticks made it fit to explain some Articles more largely and gave occasion to the composing of new Creeds at Nice and Constantinople c. yet these were never intended to abate the Authority of this which of all others hath been received most generally And those were accounted Orthodox and Catholique (r) Hanc legem sequentes Christianorum Catholicorum nomen jubemus amplecti reliquos vero dementes haeretici dogmatis infamiam sustinent Theodos Grat. Imp. who did embrace it and all others branded with the infamous names of Hereticks and Deceivers But whoever desires a fuller account hereof or a large explication of all the Doctrines herein contained must be referred to those Excellent Persons who have so well performed that task it being our design now only to consider it as it is here made use of in our daily Devotions and so what is to be said will come under some of these heads 1. The place it obtains in our Liturgy 2. The time when 3. The reasons why and 4. The manner how it is to be repeated § 2. This antient Confession of our Faith is most judicially set by the Church after the ending of the Lessons out of holy Scripture For the Creed receives both its Being and Authority from thence since it is collected from the Word of God and proved by it and what can be more seasonable then for us after the reading of Holy Writ to declare our persuasion of all that is contained therein especially of the Articles treated of in the now read Portion By repeating our Creed here we do set to our seals (s) John 3.33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to confirm the Truth of God and all revealed by him and do gratefully acknowledge and declare those salutary mysteries we have learned from these Divine Oracles And we may further consider that as the Creed follows the Lessons out of which it sprang so it precedes the Prayers which are grounded on it And the publique profession of our Faith before we pray is the vindication and the foundation of the Petitions we make for therefore we ask these things and in this manner because we believe in an Invisible God who is an Omnipotent Creator a most merciful Redeemer and a most gracious Comforter Hence we pray to the Father in the Name of the Son by the assistance of the holy Spirit in fellowship with the Saints for the forgiveness of sins and a joyful resurrection And all this we are directed and encouraged unto by the belief of this Creed which by exercising that most necessary companion of our Prayers viz. Faith is an excellent preparative to our addresses Which secondly may partly account for the time and frequency of its repetition which ought to be as often as we solemniy read or pray and so not to be omitted at any time in publique Assemblies where the Antients observed the use of it and we may receive great benefit by a devout imitation of them in arming our souls hereby against all doubting or evil thoughts which disturbe us most in our attendance upon the service of our heavenly Master (t) Cum horremus aliquid animo recurrendum est ad Symbolum Quando enim sine militiae sacramento miles in tentorio bellator in praelio Ambr. So that as the Germans excluded him from their sacrifices that came without his shield so should he be from our Church-devotions that holds not up this shield of Faith by which he may overcome all the fiery darts of the Devil And as if it could never be repeated too often we find holy Ambrose (u) Symbolum quoque specialiter debemus tanquam nostri cordis signaculum antelucanis horis quotidie recensere ad Virg. l. 3. commending it to his Virgins as the first exercise of their morning piety and St. Augustine prescribing it to his Catechumens to be used both Night and Morning not as a Prayer as some ignorant Persons mistake it but as a foundation to build their Prayers on (x) Accipite filii regulam fidei quod Symbolum dicitur in corde scribite quotidie dicite apud vos antequam dormiatis anteq●am precedatis symbolo vestro vos munite de Symb. ad Catech. l. 1. a Memento to whom they were made and a ground of their hope that they should be accepted and for the same reasons we now place it in our Morning and Evening Prayer § 3. But the fitness and necessity of its daily repetition will more fully appear and we shall be better instructed in our duty therein by a more particular account of the reasons thereof the principal of which are 1. To fix it in our memories and record it there that it may never go out of our minds being daily revived by a fresh recital for this being the sum of those principles which we are to square our lives by the Test to discern the temptations of Sathan and the false doctrines of hereticks by (y) Nulla enim unquam extitit haeresis quae non hoc Symbolo potuit damnari Coelestin ad Nest we can no more be without it then the Architect without his Rule and the Goldsmith without his touchstone And
along with every sentence and seal it with a most hearty assent There are many truths which do not concern us whether they be true or false and in such cases a general persuasion that they may be true will suffice But these principles of our Faith are the ground of our Prayers the rule of our lives and must be received with the same evidence that the Mathematicians postulata are on which his following demonstrations depend so that without the admission of these he can do nothing Remember you must conduct the affairs of your life by this profession you must venture your souls at your death on these principles nay if need be you must seal these Truths with your blood therefore do not slightly repeat them but let them sink into your heart and be so assured of them that no pleasure or profit may intice you to walk contrary to it or deny it nor no threats or pains affright you from confessing it and rejoyce in this daily opportunity to express the constancy of your faith and every day protest your belief as solemnly as if you were to dye for it 3. Our mind can never want imployment for all the faculties and powers thereof because in the repetition we are to make a particular application of every Article that it may produce those effects and serve those ends for which it was revealed And it is absurd if not impious to think that God did discover these sacred truths only to enlarge our speculations or experience our credulity All that is true is equally so and the reason why these truths are more necessary to be believed then others is not because they are more certain but more u●eful to assist our devotions and direct our conversation then any other propositions that Gods word doth contain where they are not barely taught but ever applied either as incouragements to the worship of God or arguments to a holy life Nor are they intended so much to make us wiser as to perswade us to become better (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Paedag. And if they have not this effect upon us our Faith excels not the Confession of the Devils (i) Matth. 8.29 James 2.19 who did acknowledge Jesus the Son of God and yet opposed the purposes of that mistery and so had no benefit by their acknowledgment This light is set up to direct us and it is expected that we should work and walk by it And that will appear when our Devotions suit these principles and our practices are the genuine products of our profession For therefore Heaven did reveal this Creed and therefore the Church inserts it here And that we may learn to use it to these purposes let us more particularly consider 1. How we may apply it to assist our Prayers In order whereunto we must observe that our Faith is the basis on which our Petitions are built the sole engagement to us to make them and the principal motive to God to hear them who hath so often required that we should pray with Faith and without the least wavering or distrust (k) Matth. 21.22 1 Tim. 2.8 Heb. 11.6 James 1.6 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agitatur scil dubitans at non progreditur vide item Jac. 5.15 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. If we come to God we must believe that he is and that he will reward those that wait upon him without which persuasion the Gentiles themselves did never (l) Veneramini Dees colitis non credentes illos esse propitias aures vestris supplicationibus accommodare Arnob adv gentes lib. 2. worship their false Gods nor can we pray to the true with either courage zeal or comfort till we have possessed our souls with right opinions of him And this we may do by a reciting our Creed before our Prayers which is an impenetrable armor against all those discouragements and fears which Sathan is apt to assail us with Let us not pray like those that know not God but imitate the holy servants of God in Scripture who alwaies begin their supplications with a brief Confession of their Faith in Gods Power (m) 1 Kings 8.23 Nehem. 9.6 1 Chron. 29.11.12 Daniel 9.4 and Providence his Mercy and his Covenant as we do ours with the declaration of our Faith Oh what holy fervours doth it put our souls into to contemplate the Power of an Almighty Father the love of a most merciful Redeemer and the grace of the holy Spirit our sanctifier Doth it not teach us reverence and fear sincerity and longing desires hope and chearful expectations thus to set God before us in our Creed in the beauty of his Attributes and the glory of his works When we have professed our belief in the Father Almighty that made Heaven and Earth how readily shall we run to him for the supply of our temporal necessities When we have protested our assurance that the eternal Son of God was made man born among us lived with us and dyed for us and arose again and returned to his glory to prepare a place for us and plead our cause can we then forbear to cry for pardon and peace for conversion and salvation or shall we doubt to be accepted Again have we owned our belief of that holy Spirit which is the Author and finisher of all grace and are we not then fitly disposed and strongly moved to petition for his aid that we may continue true members of Christs body and enjoy a Communion with the Saints remission of our sins restauration of our body and an eternal life of glory If we did not premise our Faith to our Prayers it might be suspected we spoke to him we knew not and asked what was unfit to be desired or impossible to be obtained But now all these stumbling blocks are removed and our Creed is made an excellent preparatory to the following Collects every Petition of which are directed by grounded on and enforced from some of these Articles which if we thus apply them will shew us how fitly we may desire these things and what reason we have to hope they shall be granted And secondly we must learn to apply these Articles of our Faith to the right ordering of our lives not repeating them as empty notions and airy speculations but as the principles and rules of practice For why should the Christians belief alone be supposed sufficient without some Acts deduced from it The Merchant believes there are Jewels and rarities in other lands (n) Estne operis in vitâ negotiosum aliquod quod non fide praecunte suscipiunt actores Arnob. l. 2. Nihil est quod in vitâ geri possit si non credulitas praecesserit Ruffin in Symbol and he puts to Sea and attempts the purchase The Countryman sows the Scholar studies and the Souldier fights according to the principles of advantage they believe will come upon those endeavours And doth the Religious man only believe and sit
still Are not our principles surer our hopes clearer and our probabilities fairer and our gains like to be infinitely more Why then do we say these principles over as it were some Lesson that was never to be put in practice Let us turn our Creed into Syllogisms and we shall see what consequences necessarily flow from it And let us so firmly believe it that our Conversation may be the natural conclusion from those premises for there is no man whose natural Logick will not enable him to argue thus He that believes God to be Almighty and that he made him and all the world must love and fear this God and trust in him in all his needs But I believe in God the Father Almighty c. Therefore I must love and fear and trust in him at all times Or thus Whoever deserves and fears Gods wrath cannot truly believe Jesus came to save him from it but he must speedily apply himself to him and thankfully embrace this salvation But I who deserve and fear Gods wrath do believe this c. Therefore I must speedily apply my self to him and thankfully embrace this salvation from him And thus without strictly confining our selves to the rules of Art the most ignorant may with a little consideration find the natural result of every Article and what effect it will produce in any man that heartily doth embrace it And oh that all the world were as willing to live according to their professions as they are able to apprehend the force of these arguings We should not see our practises so frequently opposite to nay destructive of those principles we pretend to believe Let us ask our selves what manner of persons we ought to be who do so solemnly protest our belief that all these things are true In temporal things what we believe dangerous and unprofitable we avoid what we are persuaded is pleasant and advantageous we pursue and if our assent be as firm why should we not do so in spirituals Where the grounds are surer the inferences clearer and the gain and reward infinitely greater 't is too much to be feared we follow not our Creed far enough nor consider what the belief of those Articles would produce in us if cordially embraced Wherefore for the sake of such as could not or would not thus use the Articles of their Faith we have added to the Paraphrase the following Application The Paraphrase and Application of the Creed Art 1. I Believe most firmly in one infinite and eternal God who is a most powerful wise gracious and pure spirit Distinguished into three Persons the first of which is the Father Almighty who is the maker of me and all the Creatures of heaven and earth the preserver and Governor of all the world Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to own him for my God and Almighty Father by loving fearing serving and obeying him and to acknowledge him the Creator of all by admiring his works rightly using his Creatures and relying on his Providence for whatever I want in this world which is at his disposal And I am encouraged to call upon this my mighty God and merciful Father for my self and all the world for a competent measure of food and raiment health and wealth peace and plenty and not to doubt but that he who can do what he please will take care of the work of his own hands Art 2. And I do most firmly believe in the second Person of the glorious Trinity even in Iesus Christ our anointed Saviour who is very God equal to the Father being his only Son by eternal generation and is now become our Lord by the merciful redemption of our souls from death and hell Wherefore I am obliged and resolved most thankfully to commit my salvation to the management of my glorious and gracious Redeemer and as anointed by God to be a Prophet Priest and King to observe his teaching rely on his attonement and submit to his Authority and to walk answerable to the price that is payed for me And I am encouraged to pray in his name with faith and comfort for deliverance from my spiritual enemies and the salvation of my soul for a safe Pasport to Gods Heavenly Kingdome since his only Son is my Redeemer Art 3. I do also most firmly believe it was this very son of God who became man and yet was conceived free from sin by the overshadowing power of the Holy Ghost and that assuming our Nature and uniting it to his own Divine Nature was born of the blessed Virgin Mary so that he was both God and Man two Natures in one Person Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to be most thankful for that miraculous condescension and to learn to submit to the meanest condition to do good and to be careful not to defile my Nature which Jesus hath united to the Divinity And I am encouraged to pray that I may be sustained under the necessities of my frail estate which Jesus was acquainted with and purged from the corruptions which he was freed from and that being regenerate like him by the power of the Holy Ghost I may be partaker of his Nature as he was of mine Art 4. I do also most firmly believe that the holy Jesus being to satisfie the Divine Justice for our offences suffered the wrath which we had deserved and under Pontius Pilate the Romane Governor though most innocent in himself he was crucified till with cruel torments both of body and soul he had offered up his life a sacrifice for sin He was really dead and buried and took possession of the regions of darkness for he descended into hell and remained under the power of death for a time Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to lament for and crucifie my sins the cause of his bitter Passion to beware least by continuing in them I bring my self under the same curse and loose the benefits of this all-saving death and also to learn from him to suffer patiently and dye chearfully when God pleaseth And I am hereby encouraged to pray that I may not suffer what Christ hath endured for me that this sacrifice may be accepted as a satisfaction for all my transgressions and that the remembrance of it and the grace obtained by it may mortifie and kill in me that which hath crucified him Art 5. I do also most firmly believe that when he had paid the full price for the sins of the world death could no longer hold him so that the third day after his suffering by an infinite power he arose again assuring us that justice was satisfied and our enemies conquered since he was delivered from the dead among whom our iniquities and Gods anger had laid him Wherefore I am obliged and resolved in my lowest estate to trust in his power for my safety to rely on his All-sufficient merits for my Pardon and to endeavour to rise from the death of sin to walk in newness of life And I am encouraged
to pray to my Victorious Redeemer to rescue me from the snares of Sathan whom he hath conquered to obtain my justification in Heaven and to compleat my sanctification on Earth that I may serve him in new obedience and never lye as dead in sin more Art 6. I do also most firmly believe that the work of our Redemption being finished on Earth he ascended as a glorious Conquerour with great triumph into Heaven from whence he came and sitteth there in great glory now interceding for us and pleading his merits on the right hand of God the Father Almighty that we may be admitted thither for his sake Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to lift up my heart to him and trust in him in all my troubles to hope for the acceptance of my services to ascend thither now in my thoughts affections and desires that I may hereafter ascend in Person and have the full prospect and fruition of his glory And I am encouraged to call upon my glorified Mediator that he will preserve me in peace on Earth fill my soul with longings after Heaven and procure my acceptance there And that his power over Men and all Angels and his interest at the Throne of God may be imployed to bring me to himself Art 7. I do also most firmly believe that though Jesus be now in heaven yet at the end of the world from thence he shall come again most gloriously attended with millions of Angels to try and to judge all the world according to their deeds both the quick which shall then be found alive and the dead though departed never so long before Wherefore I am obliged and resolved daily to expect and diligently to prepare for his coming to Judgment by frequently examining and severely judging my self before by careful avoiding that which would then condemn me and by leaving all evil actions of others to receive their sentence at his Tribunal And I am encouraged to make my supplication to my Judge who also is my Saviour that he will forgive me and all my enemies and to beseech him to prepare us for this day by his Grace and to acquit us in it by his infinite merits and then none can condemn us for ever Art 8. Furthermore I believe most firmly in the third Person of the glorious Trinity the Holy Ghost the sanctifying spirit who is very God and by his assistance and blessing on the means of grace doth instruct convert strengthen and comfort all pious and pure souls Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to honour the holy Word of God to attend on all his Ordinances to follow the good motions of this blessed Spirit and in a lively hope and expectation of the assistance thereof to resist all evil and apply my self to all that is good And I am encouraged to pray by the help of this good Spirit for a blessing on the Word and Sacraments and all Religious duties that I may by them become still more wise and holy till I am sanctified throughout in Spirit and Soul and Body Art 9. I do also most firmly believe that God is and ever was acknowledged by and hath and ever will defend the Universal society of Believers in all ages and places called the holy Catholique Church who are all united unto Christ their head by grace and to one another by love as appears by the Communion of Saints in all offices of Piety and Charity among themselves Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to live in unity peace and charity as a useful member of this Church to adhere to the Faith professed by it to joyn in the Ordinances Administred in it and to do good to all that belong unto it And I am encouraged to pray with my bretheren for the encrease safety and peace of this Church for the flourishing of Religion the prosperity of the Princes s●ccess of the Ministers and unity of the members thereof that by our Concord and good works we may all appear living members of Christ Art 10. I do also most firmly believe that I and all true Christians upon our unfeigned Faith and hearty Repentance shall obtain the forgiveness of and a Pardon for all our sins through the merits and intercession of Christ Jesus Wherefore I am obliged and resolved never to forsake Christs Church to which this priviledge doth belong diligently to repent of all my Transgressions and chearfully to serve my God without fear neither doubting the truth of his Promise nor the sufficiency of my Redeemers merits And I am encouraged daily to make an humble Confession of my si●s with earnest supplications for Absolution and hearty Petitions that I may repent so truly that I may abhor and forsake all iniquity here and be fully acquitted from it at the last and great day Art 11. I do also most firmly believe that not only our souls remain after death but our whole man shall be restored to life again by the resurrection of the body howsoever corrupted or dispersed and its reuniting to the soul at the voice and by the power of the Son of God Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to keep this body in temperance soberness and chastity while I live to resign it chearfully when I dye to be steadfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord since I know my labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. And I am encouraged to pray through the first begotten from the dead for the sanctification of my vile body and a part in the first Resurrection that over me the second death may have no power and that I may be delivered in the greatest miseries of this life and supported under the very Agonies of Death Art 12. And finally I do most firmly believe that the wicked shall remain in endless torments while Gods faithful servants shall enjoy his presence and the society of Saints and Angels in the life whose joys are unspeakable and its glories everlasting which Faith I seal with a most hearty Amen Wherefore I am obliged and resolved to suffer patiently whatever happens in this transitory life to spend the moments thereof well to despise the short and empty pleasures of sin and to esteem nothing too good to loose too difficult to resist or too tedious to perform for the obtaining this happiness And lastly I am encouraged to pray to the purchaser of this Glory to comfort me in all the troubles of this life with the hopes and to carry me through all my duties here by the desires thereof and finally to bring me to the fruition of this bliss the fulfilling of all these hopes and desires hereafter Amen SECTION XII Of the Versicles and their Responsals before and after the Lords Prayer § 1. THe Lord be with you Answ And with thy Spirit If we have sincerely repeated our Creed together we have professed our Faith in God and declared our unity and agreement with one another and then we have cause to hope our Prayers will prevail
since they were ushered in by Faith and Charity the best preparatives to that duty We have all owned that we have one Lord and one Faith and now we are preparing as bretheren and fellow-souldiers to unite our requests and to send them to the throne of God But first in token of our mutual Charity the Church appoints instead of the antients kiss of peace a hearty salutation to pass between the Minister and People he beginning in the phrase of B●az to his Reapers The Lord be with you (o) Ruth 2.4 Psal 129.8 which was after drawn into common use as a form of salutation to all and used by St. Paul in his Epistles (p) 2 Thess 3.16 to which the people are to return a good wish for their Minister in a form taken from the same Apostle (q) 2 Tim. 4.22 Galat. 6.18 desiring the Lord may be with his spirit Which is no invention of our own but mentioned in an Antient Counsel (r) Placuit ut Episcopi ●resbyteri uno modo salutent populum dicentes Dominus vobiscum ut respondeatur à populo Et cum Spiritu tuo s●cut ab ipsis Apostolis traditum omnis retinet Oriens Concil Brace primum Can. 21. and there affirmed to have been instituted by the Apostles and as it there appears retained in the Liturgies especially of the Greek Church but sure it never had a fitter place then in our excellent service where it succeeds the Creed as the Symbol and bond of peace St. John forbids us to salute or to desire God to be with any that cleave not to this right Faith (s) 2 Ep. 5. J●hn ver 10.11 But when the Minister hath heard every one profess his Faith in the same words with himself how chearfully and without scruple may he salute them as bretheren and they requite his affection with a like return 'T is too sadly true that little differences in Religion make wide separations and the most incurable animosities Why then should not our exact agreement be as forcible an uniter of all our hearts since the profession of the same Faith hath ever been reputed the firmest bond of Charity (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo. Wherefore when these endeering offices have warmed our hearts with mutual love these expressions will not barely signifie the affections between the Minister and his people but may be used as the exercise of their Charity by way of P●ayer for one another Let the spirit●al man meditate how often Sathan is among the sons of God how m●ny of his flock which now are preparing to joyn with him are oppressed with hard hearts or disturbed with vain thoughts and then let him earnestly pray the Lord may be with them that his Prayers be not in v●in for them Let the people also remember how comfortable and advantagious it will be to them that he who is their mouth to God may have a pure heart and a fervent spirit and with these thoughts let them most hear ily require their Pastors prayer by desiring the Lord to be with his spirit that both may by acknowledging t●eir insufficiency and declaring their Charity obtain a blessing of God for each other and find the benefit of these short Petitions in every part of the suceeding Off●ces § 2. Let us pray We can do nothing in Religion without the Divine presence and Assistance and therefore the Minister and People must mutually beg that for each other and then they must joyn in their Petitions In the beginning of which is placed this short and antient Exhortation So often repeated in all the old Liturgies (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alibi Dominum oremus postulemu● vid. Liturg S. Jacobi S. Basilii c. whereby the Priest gives the signal of battel or the watch word to all the assembly that they may set on their enemies with courage and besiege even Heaven it self with a holy importunity And as the Cryer of old in the Heathen Sacrifices proclaimed his HOC AGITE and warned all to attend what they were about so doth the Minister charge you against all wandring thoughts which are never more frequent nor pernicious then in holy duties desiring you not to rest sati●fied in his Petitions for you but to let your heart go along with him that they may be accepted as your Prayers though pronounced with his lips He injoyns all to pray and that with him and for one another for it is a great work we have to do and we must now take off our thoughts from all other things and wholly mind this § 3. Lord have mercy upon us Christ have c. Lord have c. The best beginning for our requests is a Petition for Mercy whereby we acknowledge our unworthiness declare our misery and confess we cannot expect our Prayers should be heard unless it may please God first to have mercy upon us Like those poor Lepers (x) Luke 17.11 12. eminus tanquam immundi Levit. 13.45 clamant Jesu Domine miserere nostri we discerning Jesus afar off cry out unclean and beseech him to have mercy on us for we are defiled dust and ashes and how shall we dare to draw near to him or open our mouths before him till he be pleased to pitty and cleanse us As to this particular Form it is originally taken out of Davids Psalms (y) Psal 6.2 Psal 51.1 Psal 123.3 where it is sometimes repeated twice together to which t●e Church hath added Christ have mercy upon us that it might be a short Litany and a supplication for mercy to every Person in the Trinity (z) Imploramus misericordiam Domini per Kyrie eleeson Chri●e c. Kyrie c. ita ut tres articulos aliquo modo divinae majestatis trinitatis in Ecclesiâ celebre●us Amalar Fort. de Eccl. off because we have offended every Person and are to pray to every Person and need the help of every Person calling both the Father and Holy Ghost by the same title of Lord as being partakers of only one and the same Divine Nature and the Son by another title who also did partake of our humane Nature as Durand Rational l. 4. c. 12. doth observe And as Tho. Aquinas adds being under a three sold misery of ignorance guilt and punishment we thrice implo●e mercy And because we need that when ever we pray (a) Quia ante omnem Orationem sacerdotùm necesse est misericordiam Domini implorare Durand Rat. ut supr it was used both in the Eastern and Western Churches and become customary in the time of Theodosius the younger so that it was decreed by a Councel (b) Et quia dulcis nimis salubris consuetudo int●omissa est ut Kyrie eleeson frequentiùs cum grandi compunctione dicatur Placuit etiam nobis ut in omnibus Eccles●is nostris ista consu●tudo Sancta ad Matutinum ad Missas ad Vesperam
and thy gracious Providence we being defended from the Power and malice and preserved in safety from the fear of our enemies may never be hurt terrified or disturbed but may pass our time which thou shalt afford us on this earth in rest from our foes and quietness in our own minds Grant us O Lord therefore this Peace for the sake as it was obtained through the merits of thy Son Iesus Christ our Saviour Amen The Analysis of the third Collect for Aid against all Perils This Collect hath only two Parts 1. The Petitions for 1. Mystically Knowledge Lighten our darkness we beseech thee O Lord Literally Comfort 2. Safety intimating 1. The means by which we must be delivered and by thy great mercy defend us 2. The evils from which from all perils and dangers 3. The time in which of this night 2. The motive urged to obtain them for the love of thy only Son our Saviour Iesus Christ Amen A Practical Discourse on the third Collect at Evening Prayer § 5. LIghten our darkness we beseech thee O Lord The declining of the day doth now mind us of the approaching darkness which will shortly wrap us in the shadows of the night And what Petition more seasonable then with holy David to beseech God to enlighten our darkness (o) Psal 18.28 Vul. Deus meus illumina tenebras meas For the night is sad and terrible in it we can see nothing with our bodily eys to entertain or to cheer us and we seem exposed to all the mischie●s (p) Versuta frans callida amat tenebris obtegi Prud. Ovid. Metam 2. Conscia culpae Conspectum lucemque fugit tenebrisque pudorem Celat John 3.20 Job 24.17 of Sathan and those instruments of his who fly the light and hope to cover their sin with this sable Mantle our dangers are many and our fears are sometimes more especially if our eyes be closed by unbelief as well as darkness If we behold not the Divine Providence watching over us and the Angels encamping round about us the very apprehension of the perils of a dismal night may damp our joy and startle our courage and makes us cry out with the Prophets servant (q) 2 Kings 6.15 16 17. What shall we do But let us intreat the Lord to fulfil his promise (r) Psal 112.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccl. 5.17 Psal 97.11 c. Adrian Isagoge that light may arise in our darkness that is in Scripture phrase comfort in our sadness That our hearts may by faith and cheerful thoughts by the assurance of his providence and the operations of his Grace be joyful and pleasant and that the shine of his countenance may make our nights bright as the day illuminated by the Meridian Sun For the inward comforts of Gods Spirit and a sense of his care and favour when the Soul is in fear or sadness do cheer and refresh more then a suddain light doth the wandring Travellour who is misled in a gloomy night These make our dwellings a Goshen while the wicked have thoughts black and dismal and Aegypt is veiled in a horrid shade and terrified with the dark side of the Cloud while the people of God are led all the night thorough with a light of fire so that the darkness and light to them are equally safe and comfortable Or if we desire to spiritualize the Petition more we may take occasion from the approaching night to enlarg our meditations upon our spiritual ignorance and blindness by nature by which our Souls are veiled and in the dark so that we often wander out of the way We stumble in the day and are in danger to run into the shadow of death till the day spring from on high visit us and give us that true knowledg which is usually set out under the name of light (s) Luke 2.32 Hebr. 6.4 illuminati i. e. edocti Wherefore let us humbly beseech our gracious Lord to let the Sun of righteousness arise upon us for whoever follows him doth not wander nor walk in darkness (t) John 8.12 and that we may take heed to Gods holy word as to a light shining in a dark place (u) 2 Pet. 1.19 and a sure guide to true blessedness And then our knowledg shall increase and we shall keep the right path till we arrive to that eternal light which shall never be extinguished When our hearts are clouded with greif shadowed with ignorance and benummed with dreadful ●p●rehensions we are taught to lift up our thoughts to the Father of lights and the God of all comfort who dwells in that light to which no mortal eye can approach whose Countenance is cleer as the sun and bright as lightning And if we can by our beseechings obtain his favour to shine upon us no doubt it will turn our night into day our sorrows into the joyes of the Morning While we are in the darksome cell of this lower world we think of our glorified brethren who dwell in a perpetual brightness and everlasting light and we long to be with them when it may please God But in the mean time we hope he will support and recreate us with some glimpses of those beams which they have the constant and full fruition of § 6. And by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night Comfort and safety are those two things which make a happy night And of whom should we ask these but of God the Lord who is a light and defence (x) Psal 84.11 The hopes of his love makes it comfortable But least we should be deceived in that comfort his mercy and power must keep us safe which here we earnestly desire We may easily perceive we are most miserable without his Providence especially in the night season for then Sathan prepares most violently to assault us supposing it is his hour and the power of darkness And alas how easily may we then be enticed with pleasure transported with malice and revenge or disturbed with evil fancies and imaginations When the Soul is heavy the Senses dull the stomack loaden the flesh strong and the reason weak (y) Stomachus aeger mens somnolenta animus occupatus tunc omne nefas suadere contendunt quando nullus arbiter culpae nullus criminis conscius nullus potest esse erro is testis Ambros in 8. par 119. Psal when the Curtain is drawn and we think no eyes see us neither judg witness nor accuser can espy us how open are our Souls then to all Dangerous temptations And yet our temporal concerns are not more safe for how soon may we be seized by diseases or suddain death or made miserable by theives and Robbers burnings or inundations Are not our lives and limbs estate and friends liable to loss and mischief both suddenly and unavoidably Go we then with all speed to our merciful Father and let us represent our condition to him the consideration whereof
not to pray that he who rules us may be governed by the will and walk in the waies of God and then judgment shall be executed religion maintained the Nation shall remain in peace and the Church in prosperity the Kingdom established the King and people exceeding happy in each other Evil men for their own designs may advise their Prince to attend nothing but the pursuing his own inclinations and to walk in the ways of his own heart but the Church knows it is his happiness honour and interest to will according to the will of God and act according to his law and therefore orders us to pray for such abundant measures of Grace as may incline his heart and guide his life into all the Paths of true holiness that his eminent dignity may make his virtue exemplary and conspicuo●s and th●t may refle●t again a lustre upon his honour to make him still more glorious And to encourage this Petition we may remember it is desired in heaven as well as on earth by him that can give as well as by us that ask for God himself enjoyns the Prince to have alwaies beside him a Coppy of his law (c) Deut. 17.18 Josh 1.8 to read on it meditate in it ask councel of it (d) Psal 119.124 Heb. viri consilii mei sunt and walk according to it that he might prosper all his daies And from thence came that ceremony still in use of delivering the word of God to the King (e) 2 Kings 11.12 at his Coronation the substance whereof is fully expressed in this excellent sentence which will most heartily be put up by all that desire the glory of God the benefit of the Prince and the welfare of this Nation § 6. Endue him plenteously with heavenly gifts In the first ages of the world there were usually many visible effects of the descent of the holy spirit (g) Numb 11.17 Judges 13.25 1 Sam. 10.10 and Chap. 16.13 upon such as were chosen to govern the people of God to beget in those under them a reverent opinion of these Persons whom all the world hath ever accounted sacred And there are still some footsteps of these miraculous gifts in the power of healing which God hath bestowed upon the lawful heir of this Crown as a testimony that our King is the Lords anointed To which we beseech our heavenly father to add the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might which are so necessary that in our prayers as well as Solomon's choice (g) 1 Kings 3.9 10 11. ubi Grotius ex Men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have the precedence of all outward blessings For these gifts will enable him to determine intricate cases to mannage weighty affaires to countermine subtle devices to disentangle cunningly proposed counsels in which general usefulness and the advisers self-interest are commonly closely twisted Wherefore we pray that he may have so quick an apprehension so sound a judgment and so couragious a mind that like many of his Royal progenitors he may with a spirit almost prophetical unriddle the dark Intrigues of Policy and with an Heroick resolution break through the most rugged difficulties that he may neither fear his Enemies nor too much incourage any of his seeming friends that he may neither be lifted up in prosperity nor dejected by adversity and may tread the narrow path between justice and clemency severity and indulgence and we are to hope that he who hath advanced our Soveraign to this dignity will be mindful of the necessities of his own anointed and fit him for the place he hath called him to so that all his people may reverence and love him and be happy under the Government of so wise and religious a Prince § 7. Grant him in health and wealth long to live Though Solomon chose wisdome and grace yet God added beyond his promise riches and honour long life and health as an accessary to the former (h) 1 Kings 3.11 Mathew 6.33 Wherefore according to our Saviours rule we pray for those in the first place and now we hope our all sufficient Lord who hath endless treasures of all sorts will not deny us these temporal blessings which are requisite to his external felicity And we have the primitive Christians (i) Nos enim pro salute Imperatoris Deum invocamus aeternum paulo post Oramus pro omnibus Imperatoribus vitam illis prolixam imperium securum c. quaecunque hominis Caesaris vota sunt Tert. Apol. cap. 30. Sacrificamus pro salute Imperatoris sed Deo nostro ipsius sed quomodo praecepit Deus purâ prece Idem ad Scapuli cap. 2. for our example in this as well as in other things who though they did offer no incense to fase Gods for the health and safety of the Emperour as the Gentiles did yet did daily and earnestly sacrifice to the true God with fervent prayers beseeching him to give their Princes health and wealth long life and peace and whatsoever Caesar or any man could wish for or desire as we learn out of Tertullian and all the ancient Liturgies But we must take these words in their full latitude and so they will comprehend all outward blessings so health signifies not only the good temperament of the body but as the Latin salus safety from all dangers (k) Isaiah 58.8 And wealth intimates not only riches but all manner of plenty and prosperity (l) Job 21.13 1 Corinth 10.24 And a long life is to be interpreted of a life of comfort and happiness (m) Non vivere sed valere est vita Prov. Rab. ita 1 Kings 1.31 Dan. 2.4 for the life of the miserable is almost a continual dying And now let us put all these together and the sum will be that we earnestly pray that his Majesties life may be long and his years many and prosperous that he may be freed from sickness and want that so his Reign may abound with all blessings Which we ought earnestly to desire for our own sakes because it is our concern the Supream power should be alwaies vigorous and safe prosperous and abounding in all plenty that he may be a terrour to his enemies and a defence to his loving and loyal subjects In his safety we are safe his health and wealth enables him to secure us in that which is ours since his strength and his time his treasures and his power are imployed and expended for the common good And because changes are alwayes dangerous sometimes destructive to a Nation we pray that our King may be long preserved in his gracious Reign over us And no doubt his majesty shall fare the better for the fervent prayers of the Church which he hath so well deserved by being the Restorer and Defender of its ancient doctrine and discipline § 8. Strengthen him that he may vanquish and overcome all his enemies Guiccardine the famous historian tells
all-seeing eye behold all the dwellers upon earth especially thine anointed ones on whose safety the welfare of the rest depends In all loyal affection to our King we most heartily intreat thee and in all lowly regard to thy glorious Majesty we beseech thee by thy particular providence to defend and with thy especial love and favour to behold thy servant and our most gracious Soveraign Lord King Charles that in his safety and happiness we may have peace and comfort and so replenish him with all holy and virtuous qualities by filling his heart with the grace of thy holy Spirit to make him a most religious Prince that he may in his counsels and intentions alwaies incline to choose that which is agreeable to thy will and in his actions and undertakings ever follow the rule of thy word and walk in thy way And that he may be fitted for the due Administration of so great a charg endue him plenteously with the spirit of wisdom and courage and such an extraordinary measure of all heavenly Gifts as may declare him thy anointed And that he may be every way blessed grant him in health and safety plenty and wealth long to live and prosperously to reign over us direct prosper and strengthen him and his armies that he may vanquish and overcome the policies and forces of all his and our enemies who attempt to disturb our peace And finally since the greatest of men the best of Kings and the longest of worldly joys are finite grant to our dear Soveraign that after this life finished in virtue and honour he may attain a Crown of glory in the Kingdome of everlasting joy and felicity which was purchased by the merits and must be obtained through the mediation of Iesus Christ our Lord to all which we most heartily say Amen be it so The Analysis of the Prayer for the Royal Family This Prayer hath three Parts 1. The Person to whom we Pray described by His Power Almighty God His Goodness the fountain of all goodness 2. The Persons for whom we Pray we humbly beseech thee to bless our gracious Queen Catherine Iames Duke of York and all the Royal Family 3. The blessings desired for them 1. Spiritual gifts and grace Endue them with thy holy Spirit enrich them with thy heavenly grace 2. Temporal prosperity prosper them with all happiness 3. Eternal glory and bring them to thine everlasting Kingdom through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen A Practical Discourse on the Prayer for the Royal Family § 10. ALmighty God the fountain of all goodness we humbly beseech thee to bless our gracious Queen Catherine Iames Duke of York and all the Royal Family There is as near an alliance between this and the former Prayer as between the persons for whom they are made so that there will be little to be added except where this hath something peculiar And first it deserves our notice that God is called here the fountain of all goodness which is the explication of those Scripture Phrases the well-spring of life and living waters (s) Psal 36.9 Jer. 2.13 and is an acknowledgment that the God we pray unto is absolute and independent having all goodness in and from himself and also inexhaustible for though he bestows his blessings liberally and constantly upon all creatures yet he suffers no diminution nor decay Wherefore though we have now been petitioning for a King who needs extraordinary assistances and large measures of all kinds of blessings yet we know this Ocean cannot be drawn dry but can supply the Branches as well as the root and make all that stock grow and flourish together The Queen and heir to the Crown are the fountains from which we hope blessings shall be derived upon after Generations But here we behold there is a higher fountain which must first replenish them with all that goodness which they convey to us The ancient Church in their prayers did desire the welfare of the Palace and the imperial family (t) Domum tutam Pertul Pro omni palatio Liturg. S. Basil Pontifices eorumque exemplo caeteri sacerdotes cum pro incolumitate principis vota sus●iperent Neronem quoque Drusum iisdem diis commendavere Tacit Annal. l. 4. Vt pro Domino Imperatore cum suâ prole orationes oblationes augeantur Concil Rhemense can 40. Ezra 6.10 as well as the safety of the Emperour And the practice of the heathens as well as the Canons of the Christians do make it appear fit and rational But if reasons do outweigh examples we may add that we are many waies obliged to pray for the Queen and the Royal family 1. In regard to the glory of God whose honour is advanced by holy example of persons so illustrious whose dignity when it is adorned with piety and goodness may bring virtue into repute and engage many to imitate them 2. In duty to the Kings majesty whose comfort will be encreased both in the holiness and prosperity of persons so neerly related to him and so dearly beloved by him 3. Thirdly in affection to our Country who in this and future generations will have cause to bless God for these prayers if they become prevalent because these are the hopes of succeeding times and our children may be happy in the religious education of such as are to be the pillars of Justice and Patrons of the Church hereafter David had not been so curious in Solomons education but that he knew it was not the Princes personal concern alone but interest of the whole Nation and of all Gods people The Persian Kings desired the Prayers of the Jews for their sons Ezra 6.10 and chose four of their most wise and virtuous Nobility to whom the education of the Prince was committed who as Clem. Alexandrinus tells us were called the Royal tutors and we hope the care of those concerned shall be joi●ed to the Churches prayers and then this Petition shall be prevalent § 11. Endue them with thy holy Spirit enrich them with thy heavenly grace Prosper them with all happiness and bring them to thine everlasting Kingdom through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen These particulars are a comprehension of the same blessings in other words which before we desired for the King even spiritual temporal and eternal felicity The persons we pray for are Royally descended nobly educated replenished with all honourable endowments with great riches and vast possessions yet although they need none of the wealth or honours of this world we may wish them greater and better things viz. that their virtue may be parallel to their descent and their graces equal (u) Nemo in nostrûm gloriam vixit nec quod ante nos fuit nostrum est animus facit nobilem Sen. Ep. 44. nay excel all other endowments that they may be rich in good works so as to gain the love of God and of all good men these in the first place to which we desire it may please God to superadd
assistance is as sure for that is as requisite now as ever and the effect of these mediate gifts and the blessing upon our endeavours is as advantageous and more suitable to the present condition of the Church For the greatest of all wonders which some prefer to the Creation of Light out of the Darkness is not yet ceased viz. the conversion of sinners by that which the profane world account the foolishness of Preaching and then who dares deny but God works great marvels still though not in so magnificent a way Oh therefore let us call upon this Almighty and everlasting God that he will marvellously assist his Ministers and wonderfully bless his People under them that it may appear that he who of old was visibly present with his Church by Miracles may be now perceived to be still among us by extraordinary assistances and admirable success bestowed on his servants § 2. Send down upon our Bishops and Curates and all Congregations committed to their charge the healthful spirit of thy grace This Prayer being made for the whole Church doth here exactly enumerate the several parts of which it doth consist Bishops Ministers and Saints (d) Philip. 1.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illi sunt Ecclesia plebs Sacerdoti adunata pastori suo grex adhaerens S. Cypr. Epist 69. In St. Pauls phrase all which do make a Church And in the antient Liturgies all these degrees are particularly mentioned (e) Pro Archiepiscopo nostro N. honorifico sacerdotio in Christi Ministerio omni Clero populo Dominum postulemus Liturg. S. Basil and prayed for though the same thing be asked for them all the salutary spirit of the divine grace of which every one of them stands in need and the consideration of their several places and offices will be the best guide and help to our affectionate putting up this Petition First the Bishops who as they have the highest dignity in the Church so they have the greatest Charge being to oversee both the People and the Ministers So that by being advanced above all they become servants unto all (f) Ne te efferas officium tibi non potestas injungitur bodiè incipiendum tibi servire omnibus Grotius in Matth. 20. Asserit Judaeos Captivos ita loqui ad Ethnarcam suum vid. Matth. 20.27 1 Cor. 9.19 Apud nos qui in perant serviunt iis quibus videntur imperare Aug. Civ De. l. 19. c. 14. and on them as on the Apostles (g) 1 Cor. 11.28 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lyes the care of all the Churches They are to endeavour to preserve the Church in peace and prosperity by electing fit persons into the Ministry and ordering the externals of divine worship with decency and to edification by preventing haeresies and Schisms among the Clergy and by enquiring into and censuring all publique crimes both in Clergy and People and by consulting upon occasion about the most important affairs of Church and State which is a burden for the shoulders of an Angel And if we consider how necessary and beneficial this office is to us (h) Ecclesiae salus in summi sacerdo●i● i. e. Episcopi dig●itate consistit cui si non exors quaedam ab omnibus detur potestas tot e●●●i●●tur schismata q●ot sacerd●tes Hier. advers Lucifer and how impossible to be duly performed without extraordinary measures of the Spirit of Grace we shall no doubt earnestly beg it for all of this Sacred order especially for him whom we live under whom though we do not here as the antients did mention by name yet we daily remember with a particular affection Secondly Curates by which we are not to understand stipendiary persons but all the inferior Clergy to whom the Bishops do commit the curam animarum cure or charge of Souls which name however abused by vulgar acceptation mindes us of the original of those we now call Ministers For at first the sole charge of every City and the adjacent parts lay upon the Bishop till by the encrease of the faithful it became necessary for him to take unto himself certain Curatores Deputies to whom he committed the office of instructing reserving to himself the rights of Government and Superiority as is excellently proved by some of our own Authors and these acting as the seventy with and under Moses and taking part of the Burden on them are therefore properly called here by the name of Curates And let all that have undertaken this weighty charge most devoutly pray for themselves and all their Brethren and all the faithful people of God joyn with us in so doing For our office is to chatechise and instruct the ignorant to exhort and incourage the good to rebuke and convince sinners to confirm the doubting to win the gain-saying to comfort the sad visit the sick to preach to our congregations to pray with and for them to administer the holy Sacraments and in a word to take care of the Souls of the living and bury the bodies of the dead Wherefore the Prayers of Christs flock had need be fervent for them since this cannot be done without the aid of the Spirit of grace especially because Ministers must be able to teach their Auditors by the innocence of their lives (i) Non statim boni sacerdotis est aut tantummodo innocentèr agere aut tantummodo scientèr praedicare cum innocens tantum sibi proficit nisi d●ctus sit doctus sine doctrinae sit Authoritate nisi innocens sit Hilar. Pict de Trin. l. 8. as well as by the vastness of their learning and had need be free of the crimes with which they charge others least their reproofs become their own reproach rather then their neighbours amendment Lastly the people who are to hear and learn from these spiritual guides must be prayed for that they may be open to instruction easy to advice gentle upon reproofs willing to learn and receive Gods word diligent to practise it and full of all benign dispositions and replenished with Justice Charity and Devotion Remember holy brethren how seriously God and his Spirit hath charged you with his people and how strictly he will require them from you so that if through your default any perish (k) 1 Kings 20.39 Ezek. 33.9 you are accountable to God for them Consider how ineffectual both your prayers and instructions (l) Magisteria fornisecus adjutoria quaedam sunt Cathedram in coelo habet qui eorda docet Aug. in Epist Johan Tract 4. will be unless the Spirit of grace bless them and then pray heartily for your Congregation and let them who are to suck these breasts pray for a healthful nurse a pious painful zealous and knowing Pastor nay let us all Ministers and People desire with and for one another that spirit of saving grace that may make the whole body of the Church healthful and every member strong active and useful in its
1. The ground of our asking considering 1. The Experience of his Grace Almighty God who hast given us grace at this time with one accord to make our common supplications unto thee 2. The Truth of his Promise and dost promise that when two or three are gathered together in thy Name thou wilt grant their requests 2. The Petition or thing asked Hearing our Prayers as to 1. The Matter fulfil now O Lord the desires and petitions of thy servants 2. The Manner as may be most expedient for them 3. The principal Requests 1. To know God granting us in this world knowledge of thy truth 2. To enjoy him and in the world to come life everlasting Amen A Practical Discourse on the Prayer of St. Chrysostome § 5. ALmighty God who hast given us grace at this time with one accord to make our common supplications unto thee This excellent conclusion of our prayers that bears the name of its renowned Author was well known to the Greek Church for it is still found extant in the Lyturgies both of St. Chrysostom and St. Basil And yet it s own worth might sufficiently recommend it if it wanted the reputation of those honourable Names For it is founded on our own experience and the certainty of his Promise who is infallible carried on with such submission to the Divine Will and designed so to our chiefest advantages that nothing can be more judiciously contrived or more pertinently applied to this close of our Devotion Where it seems to review and re-enforce all our former Petitions to revive our hopes of acceptance and encourage our zeal in them yet so as to represent our necessities in the most humble and lowly manner with submission to his Wisdome who best knows what is most expedient for us We may now reflect on those many necessary and useful Prayers which we have offered up to God with an unanimous consent and a hearty Devotion and it is fit we should pay our grateful acknowledgments for that Grace which hath assisted us therein For there are no clearer evidences of the presence of the Divine Spirit in our Prayers then the sincere agreement and harmonious accord of our souls in the joynt oblation of them (u) Acts 1.14 Chap. 4.24 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the fervent affections that every one in particular hath added to them It is his Grace that hath bound our arrows together by the bonds of love and hath directed them to pierce the Clouds by a vigorous and steddy zeal And we have the surer ground to believe he hath assisted us and the greater cause to praise him for it in regard these are no other then our Common Prayers and ordinary Supplications which have no novelties or varieties to court our Fancies but yet have been made new to us by a fresh supply of his heavenly grace which hath kindled our accustomed sacrifice with new flames And if we well consider the effects of Gods grace are rather to be judged by the heart then the tongue by renewed affections rather then change of expressions And to be sure nothing but a new sense of our old wants can give life to these Petitions Wherefore as we daily receive new succours let us daily make new acknowledgments that as we have the comfort of our union and zeal so he who bestows them may have the glory And yet this is not all the use we must make of the experience which we have had of his enabling us to pray for it must strengthen our faith and quicken our hope that we shall be heard For he that helps us to ask thereby assures us he intends to give (x) Matth. 25.25 Psal 10.17 He prepares the heart and then his ear attends thereunto The first step towards the obtaining of a blessing is the giving us a heart devoutly to ask for it (y) Signum futurae impetrationis est quando Spiritus S. movet ad petendam cum fiduciâ quasi securitate impetrandi Cassian coll 9. Which desire he would not create if he did not intend to fulfil it Therefore we may lay this as a foundation on which we may chearfully request his gracious acceptance of those Prayers which he hath quickned us to by a new Devotion § 6. And dost promise that when two or three are gathered together in thy name thou wilt grant their requests But that we may not doubt of the prevalency of our Petitions nor go away from the Throne of Grace with a sad heart we have not only our ground of hope from the operations of the Spirit which are secret and not alwaies so discernable but from an infallible promise made by him who is Truth it self and in whom all the Promises of God are Yea and Amen Which assureth us that the united requests of his People who meet and pray in his name can never miscarry For Jesus is so highly delighted in the unions and unanimous societies of the faithful that if but two of them (z) Math. 18.19 20. Vbi duo consident sermonem habentes ●e lege Schechinah est inter ipsos R.R. ap Drus Non multi●udini sed unitati plurimum tribuendum Cypr. de unit Eccles agree on earth to ask any thing it shall be given them and wheresoever two or three are gathered together in his Name he is (a) Non dicit ero non enim tardat cui Cunctatur sed jam sum i. e. illic inveniar praesens gratià favore singulari Luc. Brugens in the midst of them Nay he is there before they come ready to receive their supplications and whoever meet in his house of Prayer shall find he is present amongst them (b) Psal 46.6 Deus in medio illorum esse dicitur quibus exhibet gratiosae suae praesentiae testimonia Ravan Thes Bib. vid. Deut. 7.21 Josh 3.10 by the communications of his grace and his answering their Prayers For the granting our requests as you may here observe is the Paraphrase of Jesus his being with us and the best testimony of his being among us is the granting our desires And this way we wish our blessed Lord may manifest himself to us who are gathered together in his name (c) Acts 4.7 compared with Matth. 21.23 1 Sam. 17.45 Psal 20.8 that is in obedience to his Command and Authority in hope and trust in his power and Aid to pay our homage to him to declare our Faith in him and to own our dependance upon him Wherefore his own Promise doth oblige him to hear us Sometimes the Congregation is very numerous and he that will hear so few will as an Ancient notes much rather receive those requests to which so many have unanimously and devoutly said AMEN But if there be but few as to the shame of this Nation is too often seen the wickedness of the neglecters ought not to reproach the Pi●ty of those that are present nor is it safe for men to despise them for their parcity
since Jesus disdains not the smallest Number The Jewish Masters indeed teach that ten is the least number (d) Quando decem homines intrant domum Synogogae Divinitas est cum illis Dicunt enim in Talm. Decem faciunt coetum Ita Rab. Salom. in Numb 14.27 to make an Assembly fit for the Divine Presence But our gracious Lord descends lower even unto two or three that none might be discouraged by the negligence of their Bretheren And now be we never so few if we be unanimous and devout what comfort will this promise leave upon our spirits in the close of our Prayers which ascend to Heaven with priviledge and authority When they are backed with his promise they cannot fail Who would not lay aside all occasions and run every day to meet with Jesus who is sure to be found in the Temple And who would not love these Devotions in which so many thousands do agree And who that believes the truth of Jesus can doubt of a gracious return to them If you find but few of your bretheren at Church you shall find him whom your soul seeks there and by his grace and his answers you shall find he hath been with you and left a blessing behind him § 7. Fulfil now O Lord the desires and petitions of thy servants as may be most expedient for them Having so good grounds to believe he hath been present with us both from the experience of his assistance and the certainty of his promise we are taught now to speak to the holy Jesus as it were face to face to apply our selves to him as if he stood before us beseeching him who enabled us to put up these requests and hath been among us and heard them all along to make good his promise and as he was nigh unto us when we called on him that he will fulfil the desires of us that fear him (e) Psal 145.18.19 Desires and Petitions are empty things the hunger and thirst of the soul and when the Divine bounty satisfies these desires he is said to fill us for food is not more pleasing to a hungry body then the desire accomplished (f) Prov. 13.19 is to a longing soul Therefore we beseech him who hears the Petitions of our mouths and also discerns the meditations of our hearts that he will fulfil all our wishes as holy David prayes Psal 19.14 And as he often in that Book (g) Psal 20. ver 4 5. Psal 21. ver 2. makes desires and Petitions the two parts of his Prayers so do we taking the Petitions for the words of these holy Forms even that which we have asked with our lips in express terms and by the desires we mean those inlargements of our souls into secret thoughts and affectionate wishes which were too big to be delivered at our mouths but were begotten in our hearts by the spirit of God and perhaps by occasion of some meditations suggested in these Pages Which desires are the wings to our Petitions the life of our sacrifice and the particular application of these general requests to the state of our own souls which he that kneels next to us cannot discern but our Lord Jesus both sees and will fulfil these as well as those Petitions which were the ground of such devout inlargements He will grant both if it be expedient for us but because we are so unable to judge what is for our real advantage we must not too peremptorily require that he should give us all we wish or pray for We may ask for evil things or for good things which may be evil for us (h) Nam pro jucundis aptissima quaeque dabunt Dij caecâ magnaque cupidine ducti Conjugium petimus partumque uxoris at illis Notum qui pueri qualisque futura sit uxor Juven Exorari in perniciem rogantium saeva benignitas or we may desire them unseasonably immoderately or to evil purposes and then it were cruelty to hear us and it is the greatest kindness to deny us Let us therefore learn from the example of Christ himself to submit our will to the will of God (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and learn from a Heathen to give God leave to choose for us who being infinite in wisdome and goodness knows what is fittest for us and when and where in what manner and what measures to bestow it So that if we leave it to him we shall have all mercies with infinite advantages when we are fittest for them and they will do us most good Whereupon we must resolve though our petitions and desires be earnest yet they shall not be arrogant nor presumptuous but shall learn humbly to submit unto and patiently to wait upon our Heavenly Fathers order and appointment § 8. Granting us in this world knowledge of thy truth and in the world to come life everlasting Amen To know God here by Faith and to behold him hereafter and enjoy him is the sum of our true happiness And therefore we need not positively pray for any thing else but may be so far indifferent as to all other things to leave it to our gracious Master to give or deny us those things according as he sees most expedient provided these two be secured to know God here and to enjoy him hereafter These we must crave however and desire all other blessings may be subordinate to these and so given to us that neither of these be hindred or impaired Or we may consider that since Jesus hath promised to hear all these our prayers we beseech him to confirm his word in granting them that we may have a further experimental knowledge of the truth of his promises In this world me need his daily help and do every day most humbly desire it and if he please to answer us according to his promise it will give us such constant and fresh testimonies of his being our true and never failing friend that we shall still trust more strongly in him and come more cheerfully to him till at last nothing can separate us from his love And thus we being daily bound by new experiences of his favour shall become faithful to the death and then we cannot fail of the Crown of life And we may enforce all our foregoing Petitions by representing to the holy Jesus the great advantages we shall have by his daily fulfilling our desires and Petitions for besides the things we ask for hereby we shall acquire such confirmation to our Faith and such evidences of his truth as will secure us in his love while we live in this world and bring us to fulness of glory and felicity in the world to come therefore dear Jesus hear us and answer us to our endless comfort Amen Be it so The Paraphrase of the Prayer of St. Chrysostome WE acknowledge thy goodness O Almighty God who remembring our inability to serve thee hast given us that sweet and efficacious assistance of thy grace at this time