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A26350 The duty of daily frequenting the publick service of the church recommended in a sermon preached in a chapel at Wragby in Lincoln-shire erected to that purpose by Sir Edmound Turnor, Kt., and consecrated by the Lord Bishop of Lincoln the 18th day of July, 1697 / by John Adamson. Adamson, John. 1698 (1698) Wing A500; ESTC R27093 17,308 34

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of their Guilt or Danger Further by daily Reading or hearing read at the Publick Service of our Church a Portion of the I salms of David so full of Piety and Devotion and some Chapters in the Bible too generally I fear neglected by Christians in private where we have excellent Rules and Examples of Holy Living and powerful Motives to it This must needs be granted to conduce very much to the directing and reforming our Lives If this blessed Effect be not wrought upon all who come daily to the Publick Prayers of our Church more is the Pity But the Fault is in themselves and not in our Prayers If some frequent them only in Formality and Hypocrisie 't is no wonder they are never the better for them Do thou frequent them with Sincerity Devotion and Attention and be assured thou shalt receive great spiritual Improvement by them as I doubt not but thousands of the sincere Members of our Church to their inexpressible Comfort do find 2. This advantage of a good Life by Frequency in Publick Prayer is also and that chiefly to be ascribed to the Blessing of God and the powerful working of his Grace upon us which Blessing is promised to us and to be obtain'd by us only in the serious Use of the Duty of Prayer so qualified as I before hinted Thus our Blessed Saviour instructs us Ask and it shall be given you seek and ye shall find Knock and it shall opened unto you where that he refers particularly to this Blessing of his Grace and Holy Spirit appears from these following words If ye being evil know how to give good gifts unto your Children how much more shall your Father which is in Heaven give the Holy Spirit to them that ask him This I acknowledge is spoken of Prayer in in general but it holds true of Publick Prayer with a great advantage as you have already heard If then Frequency in Publick Prayer does thus promote the Honour of God and our Religion if it procures those Blessings we want either for our selves or others and greatly tends to promote a good Life if we have any regard to the Honour of God and our Religion if any real desire to be Happy here or hereafter we shall rejoyce in all Opportunities of Publick Prayer and heartily endeavour so to Order our Affairs that nothing may hinder our constant Attendance at them And if Frequency in Publick Prayer be so needfull a Duty as you have seen the like Frequency and that with the greatest Seriousness in receiving the Holy Sacrament of the Lord's Supper which is the highest Solemnity of Prayer is upon the Account of the same and greater Reasons as needful a Duty where there are the happy Opportunities of it And in this also the worthy Founder of your Chapel hath very piously provided for you And as I understand many of you purpose very commendably to Communicate on this day so I hope and earnestly exhort you will do it with that Sincerity in a hearty Repentance for your Sins and serious Resolutions of a Holy Life that you may receive much spiritual Comfort and Improvement by it and then you will even rejoyce in the frequent Opportunities of this Holy Sacrament in this place and make it your constant Care as it is your certain Duty to dispose your selves for a worthy partaking of them Consider well and always bear it in mind how great your Guilt will be how heavy your Condemnation if ye shall slight and neglect or any ways abuse such powerful means of Salvation But I must not insist upon this copious Subject I only crave your Patience whilst I observe unto you three or four practical Inferences from what has been discoursed INFERENCES 1. If these Places be Houses of Prayer and by our Saviour's own direction not to be employ'd in common Uses then let us always treat them with Respect and Reverence considering they are God's Houses Consecrated to his more immediate Service and in which he is pleased to vouchsafe his more peculiar Presence In respect of this his Presence God declares that the Place where he appear'd to Moses was Consecrated and therefore required him to shew Reverence to it Put off thy shoes from off thy feet for the place whereon thou standest is Holy Ground The like was commanded to Ioshua upon the same account and this as a Token of Respect Obedience and Humility The Custom being taken as some Conjecture from Captives or Bond-Slaves who used to go barefoot in token of their Subjection Hence arose that Custom amongst the Jews for the Priests to enter into the Temple barefoot The like was observed amongst the very Heathen who had their Nudipedalia Sacra and put off their Shoes when they enter'd the Temple of Apollo So some have observ'd That even amongst the Turks and Aethiopick Christians they go not into their Sacred Assemblies but with their Feet naked That was the ancient way amongst them of expressing their Reverence as uncovering the Head is now amongst us And will not all these rise up in Judgment against us and condemn us if we permit them to shew more Respect and Honour to the Places of their false Worship than we to those of the True Thus we find St. Paul requiring Decency in the Church particularly that Men be uncovered and Women covered there Because of the Angels they being supposed both under the Old and New Testament to be present in the places of God's Publick Service observing the Behaviour of all there present and accusing every Indeceney and Disrespect to God And from this their presence it is that God is said to be peculiarly present in Churches whose presence in one place more than in another in respect of himself is not easily conceivable and so to fit them to be the Houses of God according to the Explication of Iacob who upon the Vision of Angels at Luz awakes and says How venerable is this Place the Lord is in it this is none other but the House of God Upon this Account we read that the Primitive Christians were wont to shew very great Respect and Reverence in the Church as being the solemn Place of Worship and where God did more peculiarly manifest his Presence and are told by a learned Author That they came into the Church as into the Palace of the Great King with Fear and Trembling and that the Emperors themselves who otherwise never went without their Guard about them yet when they came to go into the Church used to lay down their Arms to leave their Guard behind them and to put off their Crowns all as Tokens of that high Respect they bare to those Religious Places Let them always then be esteemed Holy by us as being set a part for holy Uses and in relation to God and to their End I mean not otherwise and let them accordingly be always treated by us 2. If they be Houses of Prayer
good earnest as sometime he certainly will to execute Vengeance upon them None of them durst oppose one word when our Blessed Lord with an Authority becoming his Station and his Zeal for his Father's Honour urg'd upon them the words of the Text My House shall be called or shall be the House of Prayer Having as briefly as I well could shewn you the Occasion and Design of these words every one will easily discern that they instruct us in this great Truth that Places dedicated to God and his Worship are to be treated with Reverence and not to be employ'd in any prophane or common Uses but only in Religious Duties particularly that of Prayer which is the principal of them So has God declared by his Prophet Isaiah c. 56. v. 7. and so our Blessed Saviour from him in the Text My House shall be called the House of Prayer Prayer is the Duty which God in the Old Testament and our Blessed Saviour in the New were pleased to make Choice of to represent the others by which are to be performed in Places set apart for Religious Worship And Prayer is the especial Duty for the performance of which the Place this day Consecrated was Erected by your pious Benefactor and therefore of this Duty only I shall Discourse unto you at this time And here I might usefully enlarge on the more general parts of Prayer as 1. Supplication When we ask of God any Blessing we want either for our Souls or Bodies 2. Intercession When we Pray for others even all Mankind but more especially for our Governours and the Houshold of Faith 3. Thanksgiving When we recount with grateful Hearts the many Blessings both Spiritual and Temporal which we enjoy give God the Glory of them and our selves to him in gratitude for them All these general Parts of Prayer we are directed to by the Apostle and are all of them sufficiently provided for in our excellent Liturgy which highly recommends it to our great Esteem and constant Use. I might also seasonably enlarge on the most needful and yet too commonly neglected Qualifications of Prayer as 1. Purity and Holiness Since we know that God heareth not Sinners i. e. wilful and impenitent Ones that the Apostle requires that when we Pray we lift up Holy Hands and that the Sacrifice of the wicked is an Abomination to the Lord but the Prayer of the Upright is his delight 2. Serious Attention to our Prayers for then only we can be said to Pray and then only expect to be heard Inasmuch as our Blessed Saviour has set the Mark of Hypocrisie upon such Prayers as are not accompanied with the Heart and plainly tells us they are all in vain Matth. 15. 7 8 9. Ye Hypocrites ye draw nigh unto me with your mouth and honour me with your lips but your heart is far from me but in vain do you worship me 3. Fervour and Earnestness with all the Affection and Devotion of our Souls such as may testifie we really desire the things we Pray for This is required of us by the Apostle that we be fervent in Spirit serving the Lord This is that which makes our Prayers very prevalent with God Iames 5. 16. The fervent Prayer of a righteous man availeth much Even amongst the Jews the Talmudists taxing the Peoples negligence in Prayer one of the three faulty sorts of their Amen recounted by them is a faint Amen when they pray'd without Fervency 4. Humility both in our Souls and Bodies In our Souls acknowledging our unworthiness to appear before so great a Majesty to receive from him any of those Blessings we ask but only upon the account of his Bounty and Mercy and the Merits of his Son And Humility in our Bodies expressing this Humility of our Souls putting up our Petitions to the Majesty of Heaven for the greatest Blessings we can receive upon our Knees according to the Example of Holy Men in Scripture of the blessed Apostles and even of Christ himself who kneeled down when he pray'd to his heavenly Father St. Luke 22. 41. Accordingly we read of the Primitive Christians That to Sit at Prayers was ever held by them a posture of great Rudeness and Irreverence And Tertullian falls heavy upon some that used it in his time about two hundred years after Christ telling them They acted contrary to Scripture and were Irreligious in so doing and represents them as if they had a mind to reproach God to his face and tell him that they are weary of the Duty of Praying to him If it be an irrevent thing as he goes on in arguing with them to sit down before one for whom thou hast a great Reverence and Veneration how much more does it savour of Irreligion to do so in the Presence of the Living God even while the Angel is yet standing by thee to carry up the Prayer to Heaven These together with a true Faith and a Dependance upon the alone Merits of Christ which I presume I need not mention in this place are the chief of those Qualifications and yet too commonly neglected with which we must take care we put up our Prayers to God if we hope to have them accepted by him and these I might usefully have enlarg'd upon But it must suffice thus briefly to have hinted them that I may the more largely recommend unto you 5. In the Fifth place Frequency in this Duty of Prayer and that in Publick as often as you have Opportunities as you of this place will now daily have This I would earnestly recommend to your serious Practice upon these three Accounts In that I. It is much for the Honour of God and our Religion II. Very Advantageous to our selves in reference to this World III. It greatly promotes a good Life in reference to the Happiness of the next in all those that sincerely make use of it 1. We ought to be frequent in this Duty of Publick Prayer because it is much for the Honour of God and our Religion As often as we Pray unto him with Seriousness we acknowledge and adore the Soveraignty Wisdom Justice and Power and Mercy of God and in doing all this we must needs be granted to Honour him and perform a Service highly acceptable to him When we Pray unto him we evidently declare that we own his Dominion over us and that he has a Right to govern us and that all our Services are his due tho' we too often unworthily alienate them to prophane and wicked Purposes We also acknowledge his Wisdom to be infinite that as he throughly understands all the Actions of our Lives and secrets of our Hearts all our Wants and Necessities so he best knows how to make the most suitable Provision for them We likewise hereby magnifie the Justice of God particularly in our Confessions and Deprecations knowing him ready to pass an impartial Sentence upon us for our Sins Again in all our Prayers to God