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A00587 Ancilla pietatis: or, The hand-maid to priuate deuotion presenting a manuell to furnish her with necessary principles of faith. Forcible motiues to a holy life. Vsefull formes of hymnes and prayers. ... By Daniel Featly, D. in Diuinity. Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1626 (1626) STC 10725; ESTC S115083 203,491 770

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admire and aduance Gods super-excellent Maiesty and yéeld him all glory and praise Q. How doth faith beget these vertues A. As it apprehendeth Gods infinite perfections SECT 22. DOMIN 22. Of reuerence obedience and patience and how they are the fruits of faith Q. What is reuerence A. A diuine grace or vertue whereby wee stand continually in awe of the diuine Maiesty and neuer speake or thinke of God without a trembling astonishment Q. What is obedience A. A diuine grace whereby we apply our selues wholly to God and endeauour to fulfill all his Commandements Q. What is patience A. A diuine grace or vertue whereby we submit our selues vnder the mighty hand of God and without grudging or repining endure whatsoeuer he layeth vpon vs. Q. How doth faith beget these vertues A. As it fixeth the eye of the soule vpon the omnipotent power all-séeing wisedome and soueraigne Maiesty of God SECT 23. DOMIN 23. Of loue feare repentance gratitude and zeale and how they are the fruits of faith Q. What is diuine loue A. A spirituall grace whereby we preferre God before all things and set our hearts and whole delights on him Q. What is filiall feare A. A spirituall grace whereby we are carefull to shunne and auoid any thing that may offend our heauenly Father Q. What is repentance A. A spirituall grace whereby we are hartily sorry as oft as wee offend and earnestly desire to amend Q. What is gratitude to God A. A spirituall grace or vertue whereby both in word and déed wee endeuour to expresse our thankfulnesse to God lauding him for his benefits and contributing to the maintenance of his seruice Q. What is Zeale A. A diuine vertue whereby we are continually enflamed with a desire to promote Gods glory Q. How doth faith beget these vertues A. By fixing the eye of the soule and apprehending Gods infinite bounty and goodnesse SECT 24. DOMIN 24. Of hope confidence and magnanimity and how they are the fruits of faith Q. What is hope A. A diuine or theologicall verture whereby wee exspect the performance of all God's promises touching our saluation Q. What is confidence A. A diuine vertue whereby we continually depend vpon God and trust in him in all difficulties and dangers Q. What is magnanimity or spirituall courage A. A diuine vertue or spirituall grace whereby wee valiantly attempt and atchieue matters of greatest difficulty in Gods cause and for the maintenance and aduancing of Religion Q. How doth faith produce these diuine vertues A. As it apprehendeth Gods Truth and faithfulnesse in his promises and applyeth them to vs in particular SECT 25. DOMIN 25. Of the outward worship of God in generall Q. Thus much of the inward worship How ought wee to worship God outwardly A. By hearing the Word receiuing the Sacraments Prayer profession of our faith keeping his Sabboth and the religious vse of oathes and vowes SECT 26. DOMIN 26. Of Keeping the Sabboth Q. How worship we God in keeping the Sabboth A. By sequestring it from our accustomed businesse and dedicating it to the immediate worship of God and his peculiar seruice SECT 27. DOMIN 27. Of hearing the Word Q. How ought wee to worship God by hearing the Word A. By repairing frequently to the Church there reuerently attending to the Word read or preached seriously meditating vpon it and endeauouring to practise it in our liues and conuersations SECT 28. DOMIN 28. Of Prayer and the parts thereof Q. How ought wee to worship God by Prayer A. By calling vpon the Name of God through Christ out of a true sence and féeling of our wants and infirmities and a liuely faith in his promises feruently and constantly both publkely and priuately for such things as are agréeable to his holy will Q. What are the parts of Prayer A. First an humble confession of our sinnes Secondly a hearty thanks-giuing to God for his benefits Thirdly a feruent desire and asking such things as we néede SECT 29. DOMIN 29. Of receiuing the Sacrament and necessary preparation thereunto Q. How are we to worship God by receiuing the Sacraments A. By Preparation before wee receiue Reuerent intention in the receiuing Thanksgiuing after it Q. How ought wee to prepare our selues before wee come to the Communion A. By speciall Prayer Examination Q. What speciall Prayer is requisite A. A Prayer to God to assist vs in this holy exercise and make vs worthy receiuers and to conferre on vs those graces that are promised to all that communicate worthily And lastly to giue vs a sence and féeling of them in our selues Q. Wherein standeth our speciall examination A. In foure points principally First whether wée haue a true sence and remorse of conscience for our sinnes past and a vehement desire and constant purpose of amendment whence ariseth a hungring and thirsting for grace Secondly whether wée haue a competent measure of knowledge in the grounds of Christian religion in generall and in particular of the Sacraments Thirdly whether wee haue a particular affiance in Christ and grounded perswasion of our saluation by his death and passion Fourthly whether our hearts are frée from malice and hatred and whether wee beare true and sincere affection to all Christ's members SECT 30. DOMIN 30. Of Oathes Vowes and profession of our faith Q. How ought wee to worship God by Oathes Vowes and profession of our faith A. 1. By swearing by God In truth not falsly In Iudgement not rashly nor vpon any slight occasiō In iustice not maliciously to a wicked end 2. By making holy vowes vnto God and religiously performing them 3. By publikely testifying the truth of the holy Gospell and sealing it with our blood if it be required of vs. PARS IIII. SECT 31. DOMIN 31. Of the Christian duties we owe to our selues Q. BBy your answers I vnderstand what you meane by the immediate worship of God both inward and outward Now tell me wherein consisteth the mediate worship of God or rather seruice or obedience to him A. In such duties as by Gods command wee owe to our selues and our brethren Q. VVhat duties owe we to our selues A. 1. To prouide for the good of our Soules improuing our naturall faculties by Art and Industrie but especially by séeking after the gifts of God's Spirit and vsing all meanes to encrease them in vs. 2. To prouide for the good of our bodies by sobriety wholsome dyet comely rayment moderate exercise and physicke 3. To prouide for our good name by taking vertuous and honest courses and following after such things as are prayse-worthy and eschewing the contrary 4. To prouide for our estate by first Carefull getting secondly Frugall sauing thirdly wisely vsing the goods of this life and discréetly managing our priuate affaires SECT 32. DOMIN 32. Of the common duties wee owe to our Neighbours Q. VVhat duties by Gods commandement are wee to performe to others A. They are either General and common duties of al christians one toward another Or Speciall dueties proper
Ancilla Pietatis OR THE HAND-MAID to Priuate DEVOTION Presenting a Manuell to furnish her with Necessary Principles of Faith Forcible Motiues to a holy life Vsefull Formes of Hymnes and Prayers fitted to The Christian Feasts and Fasts The Weeks of the yeere The daies of the Weeke Christus fide concipitur confessione nascitur deuotione tenetur S. Leo. By Daniel Featly D. Diuinity At London printed for Nicholas Bourne Anno Domini 1626 Then another Angel Re Watch yee in Faith and Hope and A the serpent was lif Io 3.14 Loo y 3 starre Matt 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luk 2.11 There apeared 〈…〉 Why stand ye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts ●●●… 〈…〉 Mat 28. ●… Deuotion Handmaid 〈…〉 in Christo Patris 〈…〉 Coll. Emman Cantab. TO THE RIGHT Noble and Religious Lady the Dutchesse of Buckingam her GRACE May it please your Grace SAint Ierome in a Funerall Oration strewing flowers vppon the hearst of Fabiola said cōcerning her VVee haue lost a most pretious iewell out of the Church But since your happy departure from the Romish Synagogue and repairing to our true reformed Church wee may say on the contrary in regard of you We haue gained a most pretious Iewell to the Church Such lowlinesse of minde in such height of fortunes such Deuotion in such distractions such constancy in such temptations wee blesse God for in you wee pray God for in others of your Sexe and ranke If to touch vpon your modesty were not to wound it and to relate your continuall practise of Deuotion were not to interrupt it I should speake much of it yet no more then they know to bee most true who are neerest to you when you draw neere to your Father in secret But because it is not the least of your praises that you cannot endure praise and there are many in England not onely in Africa who are bewitched by flattery I will drawe a veile before those eminent parts which my pensill cannot expresse And therfore ceasing farther to blazon your vertues I humblie craue leaue of you to preferre vnto you a seruant to attend you in your closet I meane THE HAND-MAID TO PRIVATE DEVOTION who vpon her knee tenders to your Grace some helpes to your Deuotion together with the Deuotion and prayers of the Author to God for you to crowne you with the blessings of this life and the blessednesse of the life to come Your Graces humbly deuoted DANIEL FEATLY THE PREFACE to the Reader CHRISTIAN READER IN the late dreadfull Visitation when the waies of Sion mourned because none passed by them and the gates of the Sanctuary lamented because almost none entred at them Religion her selfe for the most forbearing the Church and keeping her closet and there finding sufficient employment to complaine of bewaile the danger and desolation of her solemnest assemblies I fell into a serious consideration of the vse and most vrgent necessity of PRIVATE DEVOTION And to the end I might accord with my brethren in their groanes and cries being smitten my selfe with a dangerous though not infectious disease I gaue ouer those waters of strife wherein I had met with the Romish Fisher intangled in his owne Net and sought after the waters of Shiloah that runne softly which at that season farre better relished with me then the other Not that I altered my iudgement touching the studie of controuersies which without all controuersie is not onely most needefull but delightfull also to them that are therein exercised It is an easie taske and almost euery ones labour now a dayes to gather flowers of Paradice and make Posies or Garlands of them for Christ's Spouse But it is not for euery hand to meddle with those thornie difficulties which yet must be carefully handled by them who will make a strong hedge or sure fence for the Lord's Vineyard The more perplexed and intricate the difficulty is the greater is the contentment in beating out the truth in points of no lesse consequence then difference Children are not so much delighted with smiting flints one against the other to see the sparcles as mē of rational vnderstāding discourse by collision of contrary arguments to strike out the fire of diuine Truth And this fire as well as that other which the naturall heate of Deuotion kindleth yeeldeth much warmth to the conscience euen of a dying man Witnesse Oecolampadius whose last words were these Now I goe cheerefully to the tribunall of Christ where it shall appeare that I haue not seduced God's people but haue sincerely taught the truth of God I might instance likewise in Doctor Whitaker's Cygnea Cantio his swanlike song before his death wherein hee warble●h sweetely vpon those at this day most Vexed questions of vniuersall grace and freewill And his contemporary the eye of the other Vniuersity Doctor Reynolds when hee lay on his death bed called for Doctor Abbots after the Lord Bishop of Salisbury Reply to W. Bishop then newly come forth and heard much of it read vnto him with great contentment But being as I said euen now out of tune in my body I listed not nor in that shaking weakenes could hold fast the peggs to streine and tune the iarring strings of c●ntrouersed opinions in point of Religion That which I then most desired was to settle my thoughts and affections and compose my soule to rest by listening to the sweete songs of Sion set to Dauids well-tuned harpe and runs vpon in exquisite diuision by some of our excellent Asaphs in their pious Treatises Soliloquies Prayers Meditations and Contemplations This heauenly musick so ranished my senses that I found by experience in the twylight betwixt the day of life and night of death that inlightened thoughts affoord nothing like comfort to en flamed affections Now the oyle which feedeth this sacred flame next to the inspired holy Scriptures floweth most abundantly in Treatises of Deuotion In which kinde of writings the Romanists for the most part exceede in bulke but our Diuines in weight The Church of Rome like Leah is more fruitfull but her Deuotions like Leah in this also are blea●e-eyed with superstitiō But the mother of our faith like Rachel is not altogether so fruitful yet she is more comely and beautiful and I hope wil be also here after as fruitful Verily if euer Priuate Deuotions powring thēselus forth in brinish teares were in season now they are Neuer losses so great to be bewailed neuer iudgements so fearefull to bee auerted neuer hearts so hard to be mollified neuer consciences so fowle to be rinsed by teares as now Nature hath prouided a soueraigne remedy against the sting of the Scorpion in the oyle of the Scorpion When thou feelest the sting it is but bruising the Serpent and rubbing it on the place and the moisture presently of the Serpent killed destroyeth the venome of that Serpent I would to God our soules were as deare to vs as our bodies and that we tooke as much care for remedies against sinne as salues
to God with confidence 7 The guidance of the spirit 8 An incorruptible inheritance THE TEXTS EXcept a man bee borne againe hee cannot enter into the Kingdome of God Ioh. 3. 3. Except a man be borne of water and the spirit c. verse 5. Ye were darknesse but now yee are light in the Lord. Ephes. 5. 9. The creature shall bee deliuered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God Rom. 5. 21. Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not for his seede remaineth in him neither can hee sinne because he is borne of God 1 Ioh. 3. 9. Sinne shall not haue dominion ouer you for yee are not vnd●● the Law but vnder grace 〈…〉 6. 14. As many as receiued 〈…〉 them he gaue power to 〈…〉 Sonnes of God euen to them that belieue on his name Ioh. 1. 12. Which are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God verse 13. That he might redeeme them that are vnder the Law and that we might receiue the adoption of sonnes Gal. 4. 5. And to the congregation of the first-borne Heb. 12. 23. Of his owne will begat hee vs with the Word of truth that we should bee the first fruits of his creatures Iam. 1. 18. Wee haue receiued the spirit of Adoption whereby wee cry Abba Father Rom 8. 11. As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. 14. Blessed bee God the Father of 〈◊〉 Lord Iesus Christ which 〈◊〉 to his abundant mercy 〈◊〉 vs againe vnto a 〈◊〉 ●pe 1 Pet. 1. 3. To an inheritance incorruptible and vndefiled and that fadeth not away reserued in heauen for you verse 4. The same spirit testifieth to our spirits that we are the children of God Rom 8. 6. If we be children then heires euen the heires of God and coheirs annexed with Christs verse 17. A Hymne for the Natiuity of our Lord consisting of fowre parts 1. God the Fathers 2. Christs 3. The Prophets 4. The Churches Glory be to God on High in earth peace good will to men THe Lord euen the most mighty God hath spoken and called the world from the rising vp of the Sunne to the going downe thereof Ps. 50. 1. Out of Sion hath God appeared in perfect beauty verse 2. Saluation is nigh them that feare him that glory may dwell on the earth Psal. 85. 9. Mercy and truth are met together righteousnesse and peace haue kissed each other verse 10. Truth shall flourish on the earth and righteousnesse hath looked downe from heauen ver 11. Thou art fairer then the children of men full of grace are thy lipps because God hath blessed thee for euer Psal. 45. 3. Thou hast loued righteousnesse and hated iniquity wherfore God euen thy God hath annointed thee with the oyle of gladnesse aboue thy fellowes verse 8. O Lord my God great are thy wonderous workes which thou hast done like as be also thy thoughts which are to vs ward yet there is no man that ordereth them vnto thee Psal. 40. 6. If I would declare or speake of them they should be more in number then I am able to expresse verse 7. Sacrifice and meate offerings thou wouldest not haue but mine eares hast thou opened verse 8. Burnt offerings and sacrifice for sin hast thou not required then said I Loe I come verse 9. In the volume of thy booke it is written of me that I should fulfill thy will O my God I am content to doe it yea thy law is in my heart verse 10. I haue declared thy righteousnesse in the great congregation Loe I will not refraine my lipps ô Lord and that thou knowest verse 11. I haue not hid thy righteousnesse within my heart my talking hath beene of thy truth and of thy saluation verse 12. I wil preach the lawe whereof the Lord hath said vnto me Thou art my Sonne this day haue I bogotten thee Psal. 2. 7. He shall call me Thou art my Father my God and my strong saluation Psal. 89. 27. And I will make him my first borne higher then the Kings of the earth verse 28. Shew vs thy mercy ô Lord and grant vs thy saluation Psal. 85. 7. Lord saue vs now Lord sende vs now prosperity Through thy tender mercy whereby this day spring from on high hath visited vs. To giue light to them that sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and to guide our feete into the way of peace Cant. Zach. The Prayer GRatious Lord Iesus Christ the Sonne of God and Sauiour of man the ioy of Angels and dread of diuels the Iewes Messiah the Gentiles starre the hope of the liuing and resurrection of the dead the way to all that come vnto thee the truth to all them that know thee and the life to all them that belieue in thee Make good all thy glorious gratious titles to me Lord protect me Iesu saue me Christ my anointed King rule me my anointed Priest sanctifie me my anointed Prophet reueale vnto mee the secrets of thy Kingdome O Christ whose name is an oyntment powred out annoint me with the oyle of gladnesse this day aboue others This is the day which the Lord hath made I wil reioyce and be glad in it nay I dare take the note higher This is the day in which the Lord was made I will exult and triumph in it Thou which madest all dayes wert this day made of a woman and made vnder the Law From all eternity it was neuer heard that eternity entred into the Kalender of time supreame Maiesty descended into the wombe immensity was comprehended infinity bounded vbiquity inclosed and the Deity incarnated Yet this day it was seene for this day the Word became flesh God became man and to effect this wonderfull mystery a Virgin became a Mother One deepe calleth vpon another one miracle begetteth another The Sunne bringeth forth all other dayes but this day brought thee forth the Sonne of righteousnesse If wee set our voices and instruments and heart-strings to the highest straine of ioy at the birth of great Kings and Princes What ought I to doe this day on which thou the king of heauen wast born vpon the earth At the mariage of great Personages men giue full scope to all manner of expressions of carnall ioy euen oftentimes to the very surfeit of the senses with pleasure How then should I bee rauished with spirituall ioy at this time when heauen and earth the diuine nature and humane were married The contract was in heauen before all times but the marriage was this day consummated in the vndefiled bedde of the Virgin Lord who this day cammest downe to me draw me vp to thee and giue me accesse with more confidence and bouldnesse for now thou art become my brother and ally by bloud The rayes of thy diuine Maiesty will not dazle the eyes of
houlding thy deere purchase O let not thy hate of sinne extinguish thy loue to thy creature Let not any thing that I haue done preiudice thee in the merit of that which thou hast suffered for me My sins deserued eternall wrath of thy Father but thou hast borne it My wonton delights and impure pleasures deserued stripes and wounds but thou hast receiued them My hainous crimes deserued death but thou hast suffered it for me This day my first parent Adam was made a liuing soule and this day thou the second Adam wert made a quickning Spirit This day he sinned in a garden and this day thou sorrowedst in the garden This day he tooke the fruite of the forbidden tree and this day thou wert hung vpon the accursed tree This day he was cast into a dead sleepe and his side opened and his wite Eue formed of his ribbe was flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone this day also thou wert cast into a deadly sleepe and thy side opened and thy Spouse the Catholicke Church brought foorth not by water onely but by water and bloud the water of regeneration and bloud of explation and sanctification This day Adam brought the curse vpon himselfe and all his posterity this day thou prouidedst an euerlasting blessing for thy selfe and all thy members That which he lost thou hast regayned with aduantage that which he did thou hast suffered for that which I owed thou hast discharged on the very day by taking all his and our debts vpon thee and laying downe an al-sufficient price to satisfie for them O giue me an hand of faith to receiue so much of this infinite sum as may discharge my debt and strengthen this my hand that I may hold it fast and tender it to thy Father and receiue from him an absolute and generall acquittance signed with thy blood and sealed with thy Crosse bearing date the very day of thy consummation of all things at thy death If thou bad'st required a greater thing we should haue done it for what will not a man doe for his life How much more when thou ●arest belieue and liue cast your selues vpon me and I will saue you from drowning in euerlasting perdition receiue the price of your ransome and bee freed When thou holdest out the golden Scapter of thy grace if wee will not take hold on it wee deserue double d●mnation for refusing so easy a meanes of saluation Adam belieued Eue and Eue the Serpent to her and our ruine why should not I much rather belieue thy Church thy Spouse and thy Spouse thy Word to saluation What should with-hold my faith from apprehending my hope from ex●ecting the promises of thy Gospell confirmed by so many miracles test●fied by the Church in all Ages signed with the blood of so many Martyrs and 〈◊〉 to my soule and conscience by the holy Spirit Doth it shake and stagger my faith that thy workes recorded in holy Scriptures so farre transcend nature and the mysteries of sauing truth soare aboue humane reason But this demonstrateth rather faith to be faith and thee ô God to be true God Faith is not faith if reason comprehend it God cannot be God if nature limit him Am I the more auerse from embracing thy Gospell because it crosseth and checketh my naturall dispositions and in clinations But the cause is most euident thy Law is iust holy and pure but I am wicked prophane and impure The physick is for the most part the better which the patient liketh worst because it exasperateth the paine for the time Haue I the lesse loue and liking to the most holy faith because it restraineth my carnall liberty and abridgeth mee or altogether depriueth mee of worldly comforts and contentments But am I not spirit as wel● as flesh Haue I not a Law in my minde controlling the Law of my members Is it not much better to sowe vnto the Spirit that I may reape peace ioy and life euerlasting then sowe to the flesh and of the flesh reape nothing but corruption Thy Gospell ô gracious God restraineth my carnall but enlargeth my spirituall liberty it denieth mee sinfull but it promiseth me holy delights and pleasures it moderateth the desire and vse of temporarie comforts and ioyes but assureth mee that my heart shall be filled with eternall Am I ready to be beaten off from my holy profession and beliefe by blowes and strokes persecutions losses imprisonment banishment scorne of the world and disgrace This should make mee hold it the faster for the Gospell foretelleth that these things should befall true b●lieuers and it is an honour to mee to beare the ●adge of m●●profession and to drinke with thee my Sauiour in thine owne Cup. It is my profession to be thy Souldier and he is no Souldier that endureth not hardnesse I can expect no crowne without a Conquest no Conquest without a battaile no battaile without blowes and wounds and what are these light and momentary afflictions to an eternall weight of glory Thus doth th● Word conquer my reason and yet it will not yeeld I resolue to belieue Lord strengthen my resolution I doe belieue Lord helpe mine vnbelief All things past haue so come to passe as the Oracles of thy truth fore-shewed they should and how then can I doubt of things future reuealed in them The deluge was foretold 120 yeeres before and at the prefixed time it ouerranne the whole world Thy peoples bondage in Aegypt for 400 yeeres and their after deliuery is no otherwise described by Moses then it was in a dreame many Ages before deliuered to Abraham Thou calledst thy Shepheard Cyrus and thine annointed Iosias by name to their functions long before either of them or their forefathers were conceiued The 4 famous Monarchs pictured out in Nebuchadnezzars Image succeeded in their order The Assyrian represented by the golden head the Persian by the siluer armes and shoulders the Grecian by the thighs of brasse and the Romane by the leggs of yron And do we not see at this day the stumpe of that Image and the feete partly yron in the Turkish and partly of clay in the Germane Empire Thy Birth and Death ô Sauiour was fore shadowed in Types and fore-spoken of by Prophets euer since the world began and since thy comming into the flesh and finishing all things at thy death in Ierusalem Not a syllable or one iot of any of thy words haue passed without their accomplishment Ierusalem is destroyed the Temple made euen with the ground and neuer could be built againe The Iewes are dispersed into all nations The Gospell is preached through the whole world the man of sinne is euery day more and more discouered and why should I not then belieue as certainly that the heauens shall passe away shortly with heate and the elements melt with fire and thy signe bee seene in the clowdes and those that are in their graues be awaked with the sound of the last Trumpe and meete thee in the aire
Abraham of the most high God possessor of heauen and earth Gen. 14. 19 And blessed be the most high God who hath deliuered thine enemies into thy hand ver 20. I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies and of all the truth which thou hast shewed to thy seruant For with my staffe I passed ouer this Iordan and now I am become two bands Gen. 32. 10. And when they heard that the Lord had visited the children of Israel and that he looked vpon their afflictions they bowed their heads and worshipped Exod. 4. 31. Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song vnto the Lord saying I will sing vnto the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously the horse the rider hath he throwne in the Sea Exo. 15. 1. Then sang Debora and Barak c. Iud 5. 12. sequ And Anna prayed vnto the Lord and said My heart reioyceth in the Lord my horne is exalted in the Lord 1. Sam. 21. sequ vsq ●d 11. And Dauid spake vnto the Lord the words of this Song in the dayes that the Lord had deliuered him out of the hand of all his enimies c. 2. Sam. 22. 1. sequ See Psal. 8. 9. 18. 21. 27. 30. 34. 45. 46. 47. 48. 65. 66. 68. 75. 77. 81. 85. 89. 92. 95. 96. 98. 99. 100. 103. 104. 105. 107. 108. 111. 113. 115. 117. 118. 124. 134. 135. 136. 138. 144. 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. Blessed be the Lord God that hath giuen rest vnto his people Israel according to all that he had promised and hath not failed one word of all his good promises which he promised by the hand of Moses his seruant 1. Kin 8. 5. Blessed be the Lord God of our Fathers who hath put such a thing as this in the Kings heart Ezr. 7. 27. O Lord thou art my God I will exalt thee I will praise thy Name for thou hast done wonderfull things thy counsels of old are faithfulnesse and truth Isay 25. 5. The writing of Ezekiah king of Iuda when he had beene sick and was recouered of his sickenesse I said c. Isa. 38. 9. 10. vsq ad 21. Then was the secret reuealed vnto Daniel in a night vision then Daniel blessed the God of heauen Dan. 2. 19. Blessed be the Name of God for euer and euer for wisedome and might are his verse 20. I thanke thee and praise thee ô thou God of my fathers who hast giuen me wisedome and might and hast made knowne vnto me what we haue desired of thee v. 23. I will sacrifice vnto thee with the voice of thanksgiuing I will pay that I haue vowed Saluation is of the Lord Ionah 2. 9. MARIE said My soule doth magnifie the Lord c. Luke 1. 46. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel c. v. 68. And the shepheards returned glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard and seene Luke 2. 20. And immediately he rose vp and departed to his owne house glorifying God Luke 5. 25. And there came feare on all and they glorified God saying A great Prophet is risen among vs and God hath visited his people Luke 7 16. When he had laid hands on her immediatly she was made straight and glorified God Luke 13. 13. And one of them when he saw that he was ●ealed turned backe and with a loude voyce glorified God Luke 17. 15. And immediatly hee receiued his sight and followed him glorifying God and all the people when they saw it gaue praise vnto God Luke 18 45. And he leaping vp stood and walked and entred with them into the Temple walking and leaping and praising God Acts 3. 8. Paul when he saw the brethren thanked God and tooke courage Act. 18. 15. I thanke God alwayes c. Rom. 7. 21. See 1. Cor. 14. 14. 10. 30. 14. 18. 15. 57. 2. Cor. 9. 15. Eph. 1. 16. Phil 1. 3. Col. 1. 12. 1. Thess. 1. 2. 2. 13. 2. Tim. 1. 3. Phil. 4. To him be glorie and dominion for euer 1. Peter 5. 11. To the onely wise God our Sauiour be glorie and maiesty dominion and power now and for euer Iud 25. To him that hath loued vs c. be glorie and dominion for euer and euer Reuel 1. 5. 6. Offer vnto God thanksgiuing and pay thy vowes to the most High Psal. 50. 14. Turne to the Lord say vnto him Take away all iniquity and receiue vs graciously so we will render the calues of our lips Hos. 14. 2. Let no vncleanenesse c. be once named amongst you neither iesting which is not conuenient but rather giuing of thanks Eph. 5. 3 4. In euery thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiuing let your requests be made knowne vnto God Phil. 4. 6. Giuing thanks to the Father which hath made vs meete to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. Being rooted and built vp in him and established in the faith as ye haue bin taught abounding therein with thanksgiuing Col. 2. 7. Whatsoeuer ye do in word or deede doe all in the name of the Lord Iesus giuing thankes to God and the Father by him Col. 3. 17. Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thankesgiuing Col. 4. 2. In euery thing giue thankes for this is the wil of God in Christ Iesus concerning you 1 Thes. 5. 18. Wee are bound to thanke God for you alwaies brethren 2 Thes. 1. 3. 2. 13. I exhort therefore that first of all supplications prayers intercessions and giuing of thankes bee made for all men 1 Tim. 2. 1. Commanding to abstaine from meates which God hath created to bee receiued with thanksgiuing 1 Timothie 4. 3. By him therefore let vs offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually that is the fruit of our lipps giuing thankes to his Name See more at the end of the preparatory Admonition to Prayer A PSALME OF THANKSGIuing for recouerie I Will magnifie thee ô Lord for thou hast set mee vp and not made my spirituall foes to triumph ouer me Psal. 30. 1. O Lord my God I cryed vnto thee and thou heardest me v. 2. Thou Lord hast brought my soule out of hell thou hast kept my life from them that go downe into the pit v. 3. Sing praises vnto the Lord ô ye Saints and giue thankes vnto him for a remembrance of his holinesse v. 4. For his wrath endureth but for the twinkling of an eye and in his pleasure is life heauines may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning v. 5. O what great troubles and aduersities hast thou shewed me Psal. 71. 18. Yet diddest thou turne and refresh me and broughtest me from the deepe of the earth againe Thou hast turned my heauinesse into ioy thou hast put off sackloth and girded me with gladnesse Psal. 30. 11. Praise