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A64572 A preservative of piety in a quiet reasoning for those duties of religion, that are the means and helps appointed of God for the preserving and promoting of godliness. Namely, I. Of four Christian-duties, viz. 1. Reading the Scriptures. 2. Preparation for the Lords Supper. 3. Estimation of the ministry. 4. Sanctification of the Lords-day-Sabbath. II. Of four family-duties, viz. 1. Houshold-catechising. 2. Family-prayer. 3. Repeating of sermons. 4. Singing of Psalms. With an epistle prefixt, to inform and satisfie the Christian reader, concerning the whole treatise. By William Thomas, rector of the church at Ubley in the county of Somerset. Thomas, William, 1593-1667. 1662 (1662) Wing T988; ESTC R37887 203,614 274

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benefits of this Redeemer Answ. Not so because Christ and his saving benefits are applyed and received only by faith which all have not but the elect only and which they that want are condemned already because they believe not in the Name of the only begotten Son of God 17. Quest. Is there not something also to be known and believed concerning the Church Answ. Yes we are to believe that there is an holy Catholick that is Universal Church or Congregation gathered out of all quarters of the world wherein forgiveness of sin in the Name of Christ is preached communion of Saints exercised and eternal life obtained 18. Quest. Is nothing required in Christians but faith Answ. Yes we are to know also that we are bound to lead a godly life that is a life ordered according to the Word of God in righteousness and holiness without which none shall see the Lord 19. Quest. But in many things we offend all What are we therefore to mind further in regard of our sin and manifold disobedience Answ. In regard of our sinful estate naturally and our f●ilings continually we are further to know that Repentance is necessarily required for without that we must perish And is to be still renewed for in that way we must look for pardon and yet ever come to Christ for procuring life Joh. 5.40 Mat. 11.28 20. Quest. What are we to know concerning our estate after death Answ. That the souls of the faithful do immediately after death live with Christ in blessedness but the souls of the wicked go immediately into Hell-torments 21. Quest. And what shall become of the bodies of both Answ. There shall be a resurrection of the bodies of the just and the unjust at the last day at which time all shall appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ in their own persons to receive the things done in their bodies according to that they have done whether it be good or bad 22. Quest. What doth the Scripture declare concerning the last and everlasting disposal of the persons of men at that day Answ. As they are and as they die so they shall be disposed of hereafter The wicked therefore and such as would do nothing for Christ shall go away into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternal Having spoken thus far concerning the General Doctrine of Scripture and the Main Points of Religion the knowledge whereof is more necessary to Salvation I shall now proceed to speak more particularly of the Sacraments and in special of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper of which I should have made mention and inserted them in the fore-going general Instructions but that I purposely reserved them to a peculiar and larger Explication in the now ensuing Questions and Answers An help for unlearned Christians that they may not be unworthy Receivers 1. Quest. What is mans chiefest happiness and only blessedness Answ. To approach unto God in and through Jesus Christ and to partake in a near acquaintance and fellowship with him Job 22.21 2. Quest. Why should all happiness be summ'd up in the enjoyment of God Answ. If they were blessed who continually stood before Solomon how much more they who enjoy the only wise God with Jesus Christ his Son and together with him all things also which are laid up in him which we shall have here as is needful from him and shall have for ever hereafter in all fulness with him 3. Quest. Who are they that are partakers of this blessedness Answ. They whom God is pleased to choose and to take into Covenant with himself not only as persons called but as persons chosen 4. Quest. What are the means whereby we are partakers of the benefit of the Covenant of Grace for our everlasting blessedness Answ. This is done by the Ordinance of God and more especially by the Word and the Sacraments 5. Quest. What difference is there between these two Ordinances Answ. The Word is the Writing reporting and declaring and the Sacraments are the Seals confirming and assuring the benefits of the Covenant unto us 6. Quest. Shew more fully what a Sacrament is Answ. It is a special Ordinance of God signifying and setting before our eyes sealing unto our hearts and conveying into our souls through the Spirit the singular and saving benefits of the Covenant of Grace 7. Quest. What be the parts of a Sacrament Answ. The outward sign which we see and the inward grace which we do not see unless by the eye of faith As in our bodily sustenance there is the food upon the Table which we see but the strength and life which that food gives us we see not but yet feel and find it afterward 8. Quest. How many Sacraments be there Answ. No more then Christ hath appointed for Sacraments that is to say Two only Baptism and the Lords Supper 9. Quest. What is the difference between these two Answ. By Baptism there is an ingrafting into Jesus Christ and a right solemnly manifested unto the Covenant and so the whole benefit thereof is in Gods good time enjoyed by every Infant that belongs to Him and by all them that keep the vow of their Baptism By the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the same Covenant is renewed and the good things thereof are more abundantly afforded to all that are by Baptism received into Christ and his Church for their spiritual nourishment and increasing with the increases of God 10. Quest. Since there is so much good continually coming in by the Sacrament of the Lords Supper What course is to be taken that we may enjoy it Answ. The course which God hath prescribed and which therefore shall certainly be blessed to make this Sacrament beneficial to us is this Let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup 1 Cor. 11.28 11. Quest. What are the things belonging to this Examination Answ. We are to be taught and to learn these two things especially What we are to receive and how we are to receive it And then to examine whether those things be in us that are in worthy Receivers of so great mysteries 12. Quest. What is it that we do receive in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Answ. We receive Bread and Wine as the outward signs and together with them if we receive as we ought the Body and Bloud of Christ as the thing signified 13. Quest. Since Christ's natural Body and Bloud are not to be looked for in the Sacrament shew more plainly what is meant when it is said We receive his Body and Bloud Answ. The meaning is that every worthy Communicant receiveth Jesus Christ with all his benefits He receiveth not only the benefits but
blessedness pronounced to wit as it is together with hearing a means of keeping And this we see God made to be the way to the Eunuchs blessedness The reading Eunuch that could not at first see Christ in the Scripture he read yet saw so much by the help of Philip whom God sent to him when he was reading that he believed with all his heart and came to Jesus by Baptism unto eternal life for believing and blessedness comming to Christ and life go together Luk. 1.45 Joh. 5.40 20.31 After these reasons of reading Scripture I shall proceed to the answering of some Objections the first whereof concerns those that are higher the other such as are meaner and lower Object 1. Men that have their heads and hands full of business may perhaps plead that they have no time to read Scripture in regard of their many and pressing imployments Answ. 1. They who frame this Objection had need to take heed that it be not made a protection for omitting Prayer also and so letting pass some dayes without having any thing to do with God such may know that it is to be but peny-wise to be so thrifty of time for worldly business as to have no leisure to look up to God If they did re●d Scripture well they would find such good Husband●y put under the head of Vanity for Except the Lord build the House keep the City and so carry on and prosper mens affairs it is in vain to rise early to sit up late or to bestow a mans labour in them A man had better gain some time from his sleep then to have no time for the service of God and to leave some business undone then to have all ill-done or to be undone because he prospers so well without God Prov. 1.32 2. I answer That although Christians will find it both profitable and needful to set apart certain times and that ordinarily every day for reading Scripture lest there be a loss of the duty for want of an appointed time to do it in yet I shall not prescribe any particular time nor how much of Scripture any should read at that time the division of the Scriptures into Chapters will help that way but that which I press as necessary is the thing it self and that every Christian be a serious Reader of Scripture I deny not but some are so hurryed with the necessary occasions of their Calling that it is not easie for them to have a time perhaps in a whole day to read a Chapter I mean to have a time at times and on some days but yet at other times they may and by enjoying a freer opportunity make themselves and their souls some recompen●e in regard of former omissions which I advise them to do and withal wish them to remember that it is as hath been said the mark of a blessed man to meditate in Gods Word day and night and that David that was still taken up with the persecutions of a King that is of Saul or with the imployments of a King when he was King himself and a man of War also yet was very much in the meditation of the Law of God yea it was his meditation all the day that is he took all occasions to exercise his thoughts in it reading it no doubt as Kings were commanded to do Deut. 17.19 and then reading it in his heart in his recurrent meditations according to all opportunities There is but one thing that hinders Davids imitation and the following of so good an example and that is the want of Davids affection which breathes and breaks out in this holy exclamation O how I love thy Law and thence follows his meditation all the day Love desires union and longs to be much with the thing loved Gods great complaint is I have written to him the great things of my Law but they were counted as a strange thing Divers now a dayes look strangely upon Scripture their countenance as it is said of Laban in regard of Jacob is not towards it as it was yesterday and the day before but would they claim kindred of it and say unto Wisdom thou art my Sister and to Vnderstanding thou art my Kinswoman and so grow into an holy familiarity with it ther as neer kinred love to look much one upon another so would they look often and with delight into the Book of God and by the frequent reading of it supply themselves with the matter of that heavenly meditation which the Scripture marks in and makes the marks of the choisest servants of God I come now to the Objections of the other sort and which ordinary people use to make to whom I do especially direct this discourse Object 2. We hear the Scriptures r●ad in the Congregation and may not that suffice for us who must of necessity follow our Callings that we may live in the world Answ. 1. We cannot but think that the Eunuch coming to Jerusalem to worship Act. 7 27. heard the Scriptures read there that being one part of the service performed at their Feasts as is expresly declared at the Feast of the Passover when it is said that Hezekiah spake comfo●tably to the Levites that taught the good knowledge of God In which teaching reading is presupposed for we find it express'd otherwhere and namely that in the Feast of Trumpets the Law was brought before the Congregation and was read from the morning until the mid-day And it is more like it was read at the Feast of Pentecost to which the Eunuch came because in that Feast they remembred the singular benefits of the Lords giving of the Law in M●unt Sinai unto them at that very time and their freedom from the cruel Laws of the Egyptians under which they had lived before But though the Law were thus read and heard read in publick yet a good man though a great man is not content to sit and hear the Word read in the Congregation which is I grant a great duty Neh. 8.3 but he reads also in private yea the Eunuch returning from the Feast and the Reading there reads also sitting in his Charet and Philip is sent to joyn himself to the reading-Charet Answ. 2. As for those that say They are imployed all the week in worldly business they ought to know that they have so much the more need to read Scripture that in the crowd of earthly cares and concernments they may not lose their God and their Souls It 's true that ruder people are ready to resolve that it is to be left to Ministers and Monks as Chrysostom relates their words to read Scripture I have wife and children and houshold care sayes one and another why do you press me to read it Now it 's true that it doth most and very highly concern Ministers to read Scripture And that not only for guarding themselves against those Errors which men
them in their judgements especially coming far short of their attainments Chrysostom exceeds others in his holy zeal and professeth he will rather give up his soul and life then the Lords Body to any unworthily and will rather suffer his own blood to be poured forth then give up the most sacred Blood of Christ unless to a worthy R●ceiver I confess his words are very high and yet there are two things that may preserve that height of zeal from being contemned by those that are worse or censured by those that are better for he declares himself 1. To speak of very notorious sinners that in all things are like Dogs and Swine And 2. moving this Objection against himself How can I know what this or that man is he answers They are not unknown men that I thus discourse or dispute of but such as are known Now put these two together that he speaks of the foulest sinners and that known to be such and then perhaps upon serious consideration he will rather be thought wo●thy of imitation then guilty of exuberancy and straining too far in such expressions Sure Calvin thought him so and therefore being much put to it by the opposition of a notorious person that for many wickednesses was interdicted and forbidden to come to the Lords Table and yet had prevailed so far against the discipline as that it seems he meant to have rushed in I say Calvin being thus put to it he breaks out in his Sermon with much vehemency into these words But I saith he following Chrysostom will rather suffer my life to be taken from me then endure that this hand of mine should reach forth these holy things to the judged contemners of God I observe that he saith to such as are judged so But suppose things be at that pass that Church government is wanting or interrupted or so corrupted as that the purging of the Church in an orderly way of Discipline cannot be obtained Must a Minister therefore deliver the Body and Bloud of Christ to evident and eminent contemners of God Or ought he not rather to suspend his act and to forbear the administration of the Supper to such while such I shall leave the answering of this to those that be very free for free-admission upon whose spirits notwithstanding they being men of understanding and piety I find such a convincement as concerning this necessary restraint that in the upshot it comes to this Though Professors must not be debarred from their right or the use of their right by any single Minister Yet saith a learned man we require in h●m so much piety that in prudence discretion and charity to the soul of a notorious and scandalous person he withdraw the Sacrament from him for a time till he give in evidence of his amendment Such another saying the same Reverend Author hath concerning those who are very grosly ignorant closing in both and much in words with one that wrote before him on the same subject a man of parts and I believe so well minded that he meant not to do any hurt in his Plea for General Admission to the Sacrament save that a m●n may quickly be a means of that evil which he doth not mean His words as to the matter of gross Ignorance are these I must confess if you will say that some are so grosly ignorant that they are not capable for the present to learn or be instructed by publick teaching then may you have the liberty for me to number them amongst Ideots and such as have not the use of reason and so deal with them accordingly that is as he saith after except and exclude them It 's true that the Author in relation to these ignorant persons seems to build much upon their receiving instruction when they are at the Sacrament but the question he●e is not What they may possibly attain when they be there but What they have attained befo●e that they may be regularly there Will not present gross ignorance weigh more to refuse them then possible knowledge to receive them I say possible but not probable for it is not like they should learn much by being at a Sacrament who have heard many Sermons concerning Sacraments and yet have learned in a manner nothing Unto this I must further add that the question here is not Whether these grosly ignorant persons are so far uncapable as to be numbred among Idio●s for they are wise enough in their generation and element but Whether they are not so far unteachable and intractable as that they cannot be justly numbred among discerners of the Lords Body to wit because they know not neither WILL they understand Indeed if they would yield themselves to instruction and endeavour to attain Sacramental knowledge suitable to their parts and breeding then though dismissed formerly they might be received freely But that being not done when as discerning and damnation are so near Who can bid them draw near The words of the same Author concerning a scandalous cariage are these I am willing to grant Where there are scandals 1. N●torious that they offend the Congregation 2. So open that they need no proof nor debate 3. In the present fact so that no repentance can be pleaded such may be dealt withal as ipso jure excommunicate Thus ingenuous he is and thus much he yields out of the reverence he bears to the reason of the Church that shuts out such from the Sacrament whereby he confirms with me this present reason for Sacrament-restraint taken from the judgment of the Church of God Yet I do not find that the Church excludes such as he doth that is as accounting them presently the objects of Excommunication but as not thinking them fit subjects in that stare for Sacrament-reception That clause therefore as ipso jure excommunicate would be a little further weighed which if I mistake not the Author adds to keep intire his Tenet of free-admission to the Lords Supper that is of all that are Church-members He was provident therefore in declaring those scandalous offenders which he describes to be excommunicate that is to be indeed or in right no Members and so his free-admission of all Members will stand the better But here I have these things to Reply 1. That the before-described notorious persons are notwithstanding members because not yet actually cast out for Was not the incestuous person notwithstanding his horrible sin and the common same thereof when Paul wrote I say was not he yet a Member How could he be put away and cast out if he were not with in 2. To punish him actually de facto as one not reputed a member who is excommunicate only de jure that is is under such an offence as may be a cause of Excommunication and which hath a tendency in it to that censure is not fair but like punishing a Malefactor before a tryal which the above-named Author
Christ himself crucified for As in our bodily nourishment we have not only sustenance by it but receive into our bodyes the substance of it And as the Graffe wholly lives the same life with the Stock to which it is united so we being united to Christ do so eat his flesh and drink his bloud and by our faith feed so upon him as to live the same life with him partaking in all his benefits for our spiritual relief because we have communion with Him first For we must have the Son before we have life 1 Joh. 5.12 14. Quest. Declare yet more fully how we can receive Christ since we are here on Earth and he is in heaven Answ. Though we receive Christ really and t●uly yet not corporally and carnally but spiritually We take not his flesh and bloud into our mouths and stomacks as we do the Bread and Wine but into our souls by faith through the Spirit of God whereby we dwell in him and he in us And thus we may receive him though he be in Heaven and we here for Faith goes as it were from Earth to Heaven and there fastens on him and the Spirit on the other side descends down from the head still to supply us with more and more of that fulness which is in Jesus Christ for us 16. Quest. Declare more particularly those benefits of the death of Christ which we receive in this Sacrament Answ. They are principally and plainly these Forgiveness of sin Strength to do God service And to overcome our spiritual Enemies the Devil the World and the flesh And nourishment for our souls to eternal life 17. Quest. How doth it appear that forgiveness of sin is to be expected and enjoyed in the holy use of this Sacrament Answ. Because I see the Wine on the Lords Table which shews that if I receive as I ought I receive the Bloud of Christ which is shed for me and for many for the remission of sins 18. Quest. What is there that sheweth that we receive strength also to do God service Answ. That both the Bread and Wine may put us in mind of for even as Bread strengthens mans heart and Wine makes it glad and both make a man fit and able for his ordinary business so doth the grace of Christ reached forth in this Ordinance strengthen the soul for the performance of every part of Gods service for his flesh is meat indeed and his blood drink indeed and therefore doth what meat and drink do in a spiritual and soul-sustaining way 19. Quest. How appeareth it that strength is received here against spiritual Enemies Answ. We may easily conceive it because we find that Bread and Wine and such ordinary food do not only enable a servant and any other man to labour but a souldier also to fight who otherwise would soon faint whence we may collect that there is such a vertue in the Body and Blood of Christ received by faith as not only to make us able to do God service but also to fight with and get victory over all the Enemies of our Salvation whom by the strength of Christ we overcome 20. Quest. How is it made plain that we receive at the Lords Table that food which nourisheth our souls to eternal life Answ. Because Bread and Wine and such ordinary food maintain the life of the body for many years together As therefore this perishing food maintains a perishing life so the meat which the Son of Man gives unto us in the Word and Sacrament nourisheth the soul to eternal life for it is not a food that perisheth but which indureth in us unto everlasting life Joh. 6.27 21. Quest. What reason have we to gather from the signs in the Sacrament that these several benefits are in it and by it as by an Ordinance of God bestowed upon us Answer Because God sets such familiar signs before our eyes for this purpose that we who are othe●wise weak to conceive of heavenly things may collect and gather what in this blessed Sacrament is done for the Soul by what we know by experience this our ordinary food doth for the Body Christ speaks and that in his Sacrament-Institutions earthly things to lead us and that in our own way to the understanding of things heavenly Joh. 3.12 22. Quest. Open this a little more fully Answ. It will be yet more clear by considering that as John the Baptist was a Prophet and more then a Prophet so the Sacraments are signs and more then signs that is they are appointed of God to be a means of conveying those heavenly things which they do represent unto us and of putting us into actual possession thereof 1 Cor. 10.16 12.13 yet not by any power in themselves but only by the working of the Holy Ghost and the blessing of Christ on his own Institution Act. 8.13 with ver 21. 23. Quest. Thus much for what we do receive in the Sacrament Declare now how we ought to receive it Answ. These five things Knowledge Desire Repentance Faith and Charity are things needful for a right and worthy receiving 24. Quest. What is that we ought to know when we come to Communicate in this Sacrament Answ. It is needful for us to know in general two things First our selves and our own estate that is that we are all by nature and in our selves vile and wretched creatures deserving nothing but death and damnation Secondly That there is no way to be saved but only by Christ and that therefore we come to the Word and Sacrament to receive him because we cannot be saved without him 25. Quest. In what manner must we know this Answ. We must know both these not sleightly but feelingly We should know our sin with such feeling and sorrow as a wounded man knows his wound who knows it as we say with a witness And we should know Christ with such feeling desi●e and joy as the wounded man knows the Surgion by whom he is to be cured whom he knows with another kind of knowledge then he doth an ordinary man In these two to wit the feeling knowledge of sin as the worst thing and of Christ as the best and only desirable thing consists the substance of saving Religion 26. Quest. Is there nothing else to be known Answ. Yes we should more particularly know in some measure the nature of a Sacrament and be able to discern what we have to do withall in the Lords Supper to wit not only with Bread and Wine but with the Body and Blood of Christ that we may not dishonour him nor indanger our selves by an unworthy medling with it 27. Quest. What is the next thing required in a worthy Receiver Answ. That which is the mark and fruit of the former knowledge and which shews the necessity of it that is Desire or an holy hungring and thirsting after that Bread and that
be written by Baruch to wit that they might be read and repeated to those to whom they were first delivered by the mouth of Baruch And the remainder of the Chapter sheweth also that they were again read and repeated before the Nobles and the King And this declareth the use of Noting Sermons which is not to lay them up in Books and there leave them but to repeat and communicate them to others Indeed it 's true that what was done here was done by the Lords direction and what was read here was read in the Lords House But there being no just cause to appropriate this course for the substance of it to any time or people we have reason to say that this Divine direction at this time casts an honour and an approbation upon the same course in the generallity at all times and Gods end in this Reading and Repeating in His House justly mindes us of the benefit that may be had from it in our own houses I mean according as the matter is which is preached written and repeated for it is not always of that kind that these words here were but whatever sort of matter it be this Writing and Repeating is a way to make it more familiar to us and fruitful in us Thus of this Scripture The second Scripture that I shall mention is Col. 4.16 where the Apostle ordereth first that the Epis●le written to the Colossians should be read among them And then that they should cause it to be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans for it was not written as one saith to Colossians as Colossians for the substance of it but to the Colossians as Christians and so it was for the use of Christians generally albeit there was it's like a special respect in it to other Churches in the same Countrey and namely that of Laodicea which it is conceived laboured under the same spiritual diseases that the Colossians did and sure were in danger of being taken with those Errours that are mentioned in the second Chapter of that Epistle Now as this Scripture makes much for the reading of Scripture and for the communicating of holy Instructions by one Church to another so by the like reason and for the same ends it recommendeth also the imparting of the things of God once delivered by Ministers as this Epistle was by Paul by one Christian to another and that especially where their Interest Opportunity and Charge lies most which we know to be in their respective Families Unto the two former Scriptures I shall add one General Sentence more which though I intend not to insist upon yet Ingenuity and Piety will make it helpful to this holy Exercise The words are these God hath spoken once twice I have heard this which howsoever it may be understood of our hearing twice because God speaks to us twice yet it is also a good Interpretation and very suitable to the words as they are rendred in our Translation which Ca●vin writing upon those words reciteth to wit that though God speak but once yet we should hear it twice that is revolve it ponder it and make our selves to hear it again and again which will be aptly applyed to the matter in hand if we say that when God speaks once that is by his Minister in Preaching then we are to hear twice that is as by Meditation in our hearts so also by Repetition wherein there is apparently a second hearing in our houses Hitherto of Scripture-Grounds for Family-Repetition I proceed now to the Reasons that may be given of this labour of Love and whereby the minds of godly persons may be confirmed in this practise of Piety In the first place I shall lay down a General reason drawn from the manifold profit that ariseth from Sermon-Repetition For thereby 1. The Sermon is better understood by a second skanning 2. Better remembered by a new recalling 3. Better digested and nourishing better by chewing the cud that is by fetching up that spiritual food again which is already received but not sufficiently prepared and therefore it must be gone over again that being well concocted the Soul may prove the better by it 4. Better laid up in the heart by harrowing after the first sowing unto which Meditation and Repetition may be compared whereby any thing harder is broken and the seed sown is covered and kept safe Writing without reciting lays the Sermon up in the Book and there leaves it but Repetition houseth it in the heart which is the proper place where it ought to dwell 5. Better expressed in the life by those fresher and stronger impressions in the heart which the calling of that we have heard to mind and to a new consideration leaves behind it Now the better impressions there be within and the more the Word is wrought into the heart the better expressions and the more holy fruit there will be without for Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Matth. 12.34 And so the hand worketh the foot walketh and the whole man acteth Thus in general In the next place I shall make use of some more particular Reasons of Repetition and that both in regard of our selves and others In regard of our selves There are three things considerable 1. That this Reviewing of Sermons and spending more of our time and thoughts upon them is an effectual means of growing up in a right knowledge of Religion for the abilities and studies of Ministers especially their Scripture-studies are much sum'd up in their Sermons which therefore being first attentively heard which writing ties the hearer unto and afterward more deliberately considered of in the Repetition do thereby possess the hearer in a good degree with the Ministers sufficiency besides that he freeth himself also from that sad imputation of being ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth Hence it is that the Beroeans were so careful of and are so much commended for not only an hearing with all readiness of mind but also a taking up of what they had heard into their thoughts afterward Searching the Scriptures whether those things were so yea Hence also Ministers themselves do write and preach the same things again and again because whatsoever tediousness there be in it in it self and to themselves yet they are sure it is safe for their people and a great Preservative against the Infection of Errour which is so much against Christians safety and salvation 1 Cor. 15.1 2. 2. It is to be carefully considered and weighed that faithful Ministers and provident Pastors speak to the diseases of their people as Paul did to the disease of the Romans which was a backwardness in receiving the Faith and so the Apostle James to the disease of those to whom he wrote which was though they received and professed the Faith yet to be careless of a godly life and those good works wherein Faith if it
hearing of thy Word heedfully the receiving of thy holy Sacrament preparedly the keeping of thy Sabbath conscionably praying to thy Majesty often and earnestly together with conversing with good company as there shall be liberty and occasion and a gaining of time to commune with our own hearts and so to think on our wayes as that we may turn our feet to Gods testimonies Thus and every other good way O our God lead us by thy good Spirit into the land of uprightness and into a state of blessedness And because it is our duty to pray for thy Church whereof we are members as w●ll as for our selve● yea and our honour also who art but dust and ashes to be admitted so to do therefore we beseech thee Do well in thy good pleasure unto Sion build thou the wals of Jerusalem Make it the study of those that are thy people to be an holy people as thou their God art an holy God Where thy Church hath rest make them careful to walk before thee in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost that so their peace may be continued or they prepared for trouble if their quiet state be altered Where thy Church is in trouble make them mindful of and able for that truly penitent humbling themselves before thee and faithful seeking unto thee whereby their peace and prosperity may be restored Strengthen in all parts their hearts and hands that stand in the just defence of Religion and Right In special manner we beseech thee to have a gracious respect to this sinful Nation with the adjoyned Dominions Enable with all eminent gifts and especially sanctifie mo●e and more with saving grace the Kings most Excellent Majesty our Supreme and most gracious Governour and so pour forth thy Spirit upon all in higher Authority that they may with all wisdom diligence faithfulness and good success manage the great affairs of State Be pleas'd to establish and ever to preserve and stand by the two great Ordinances of Magistracy and Ministry that by the preaching of the one the power of the other and thy blessing on both Errour and Ungodliness may be restrained truth and holiness may be promoted and in that way all outward good things may be ministred Bless we humbly pray thee outwardly as thou seest meet but especially spiritually all that fear thy Name yea have mercy on them call them and put thy fear into them that yet fear thee not In special we desire thy favour in behalf of those to whom we have any relation and whom we are desired or ought to pray for more particularly this Family In singular mercy vouchsafe thy grace to any in it that yet want it and encrease thy grace in those that have it Extend thy compassion O thou that art the Father of mercy to those that be any way afflicted with sickness pain poverty injustice reproach restraint And more especially to those that suffer either in Conscience or for Conscience Give them all wisdom to see what thou intendest grace to give thee what thou expectest strength to bear what thou inflictest and in thine own way and time make them glorious by deliverance And now O Lord we return humble thanks unto thy Majesty for the mercies of this day in regard of our souls and bodies and businesses desiring that we may still make a good use of all our crosses And so craving pardon in Jesus Christ for the sins of this day for which we are here before thee to judge our selves we resign up our persons and all we have into thy gracious hands beseeching thee so to watch over us this night as that our souls may be kept from sin our bodies from sickness our goods from loss and those decreasings that we deserve And withal so to bless our Rest unto us that we may awake with cheerfulness in the morning well enabled for thy Service and the duties of our Callings the day following And all this for Jesus Christs sake in whom we beseech thee to accept these our poor and weak Prayers which we conclude with his absolutely perfect Prayer saying as he hath taught us Our Father which art in Heaven c. A shorter Prayer for the Morning MOst gracious God we do here humbly present our selves before thee to offer unto thee the Sacrifice of praise that is the fruit of our lips and to give thanks unto thy Name for the rest of the night past and the mercies of this morning We confess thou mightest justly have awakened us out of our sleep at mid-night as thou didst the Egyptians with a great cry or else have made our sleep as when thou smotest their first-born the sleep of death but we have lien down in peace and slept because thou Lord only makest us dwell in safety Truly the light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is to the eyes to behold the Sun but How excellent is thy loving kindness in causing the Sun of Righteousness to arise unto us with healing in his wings Blessed be thy Name for giving the Lord Jesus to be a light to lighten us Gentiles as well as to be the glory of thy people Israel And that we have together with him and not without him all things also We praise thee for the health of our bodies the peace of our mindes for our understanding and all the powers of our Souls for our sight and hearing and all the parts of our bodies for the liberty of our Persons the blessings of our Estate and all the comfort we enjoy in our Friends and Relations Yea for all those fatherly Corrections whereby thou hast sought to drive our foolishness far from us and to make us mend our pace in the wayes of Wisdom In special we thank thee for any well-grounded hopes we have of a better life and that Inheritance which is incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for us and for which also we are preserved O Lord We are less then the least of all thy mercies and if thou lay upon us the heavyest of thy judgements we have no right to complain being men of death and such as have deserved everlasting condemnation For we brought into the world with us a corrupt nature wherein is the seed of all sin and by reason whereof in the whole course of our lives we have neglected or done negligently what thou requirest and have moreover too too carelesly rusht into those evils both in thought word and deed which thou forbiddest But since thou art a God that delightest in mercy and that hast been pleas'd out of thine infinite love to mankind to lay upon thine only Son the iniquity of us all We that are the sheep that have gone so far astray come boldly unto the Throne of Grace in his Name intreating thy Majesty that by that Lamb of
the adjoyning Kingdoms from the beginning of the year even to the end of the year Make our gracious King a glorious Defender of the Faith Worship Wayes and Servants of Jesus Christ Let the Spirit of wisdom and the fear of the Lord rest on those Eminent Persons of his Majesties Privy Council ennoble with grace the whole Nobility Give a Spirit of Government and of Godliness to all in Authority that under his Majesty and his Magistracy we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty Let thy Ministers O Lord be clothed with righteousness and so let thy Saints shout for joy As for our selves and others that live under the light Give us grace we beseech thee to live as lights in the world holding forth the Word of Life in our life that so thy faithful Labourers may rejoyce in the day of Christ that they have not run in vain nor laboured in vain Bless we pray thee all our Friends and all we ought to pray for whether Friends or Enemies especially bless those belonging to us with spiritual blessings in heavenly things yea minister to them and us and all thine all those good things of any kind which we have or should have asked either for our selves or them And now O Lord with humble thanks for the mercies of this day we commend our selves and all we have into thy gracious hands intreating thee to preserve us from the sins and sorrows of the night and to grant us that safe and quiet rest whereby our bodies may be restored and our spirits revived for the service of the day following And that for Christs sake thine only Son and our alone Mediator and Advocate In whose Name therefore and in the confidence of whose Intercession we come unto thee and to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost three Persons and one God we render as is most due all Honour Obedience and Thanksgiving now and evermore Amen I shall only add two short Prayers for Children whereby they may be trained up to this necessary duty that so they may get much acquaintance with God by beginning betimes if they live longer and may not be without all acquaintance with God and Godliness if they die sooner A Prayer for Children for the Morning MOst high and holy God who hast set thy glory above the Heavens and yet out of the mouths of little Children yea of Sucklings hast ordained strong and powerful praise I bless and magnifie thy Name which is so excellent for that out of thine unspeakable love thou hast given to thy children and to their children Jesus Christ and together with him all things that I am born in thy Church that thou hast so provided for my bringing up that I may know of a child the holy Scriptures which are able to make me wise unto Salvation that by thee I have been holden up from the womb who have been no way able to look to my self And in particular for that thou hast kept me in safety this last night and raised me up comfortably this morning O Lord I confess I am a transgressor from the womb for who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean not one And though I have lived but a while in the world yet I have sinned much so that it were just with thee suddenly to seize upon me and to take me out of this world before I am prepared for a better But Lord look upon me not as I am in my self but in Jesus Christ and in and through him pardon me who am so sinful Teach me who am so ignorant Sanctifie me who am so corrupt Make me to remember thee my Creator in the dayes of my youth Help me to hide thy Word in mine heart that I may not sin against thee but may thereby even while I am young clense and amend my wayes Order my steps in thy Word that no iniquity may have dominion over me And that I may not be wanting in any duty that thou requirest of me Grant me thy grace O God that I may be subject and obedient to my Parents and Governours tractable to my Teachers diligent in my business humble and gentle in my behaviour fearful to learn of any that which is evil and careful to learn of all that which is good Be pleased O Lord to strengthen and perfect my natural parts but especially vouchsafe that as I grow in years so I may grow in grace Protect and bless me I beseech thee this day throughout that in the evening I may praise thee for thy great goodness in Christ Jesus To whom with thee O Father and God the Holy Ghost be rendred all Glory Dominion and Service now and evermore Amen A Prayer for Children for the Evening O Most wise and gracious God I acknowledge my self a simple and sinful Creature I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my Mother conceive me That foolishness which is bound in the heart of a child is fast bound in mine and that corruption which abides in all abounds in me which sadly shews it self in my backwardness and unwillingness in better things and my self-will and earnestness to walk in the wayes of mine heart and in the sight of mine eyes though for all such things thou wilt bring me to judgement Notwithstanding all this Be pleas'd O blessed Father to look upon me in thy Christ as thy child Unto me and into me let every good and saving gift come down from the Father of lights Give me so much understanding as to know my sin and judge my self for it so much repentance as to feel my sin and abhor my self for it and so much faith as to flie to Christ for pardon and power against it Lord Refuse not to give me that pardon Lord deny not to give me that power Give me grace to know thee the God of my Fathers and to serve thee with a perfect heart and a willing mind for the Lord searcheth all hearts and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts If I seek him he will be found of me but if I forsake him he will cast me off for ever Bless O God all thy people especially those whom thou hast made neer unto me more especially my Parents and those that have the care of me Make them wise and willing to do me good and me humble and careful to receive it I praise thee O thou that art the Keeper of Israel for keeping me this day Be pleas'd O Lord who doest neither slumber nor sleep this night to watch over me and to raise me with health and strength to do thee service the day following And all this for Jesus Christs sake thine only Son and my alone Saviour in whose Name I call upon thee as he hath taught me Our Father which art in Heaven c. FINIS Some Books printed
providing for honest things not only in the sight of the Lord but in the sight of men Let thy fear O God who art great and terrible be upon our hearts and before our eyes all the day long that so we may presume to do nothing which it will or should grieve us to think upon at night Let there be cause rather to bless thee in the Evening as for thy goodness toward us so for some goodness in us and that the day hath not passed without using our Talents so as to bring in some advantage to our great Lord mean-while being here before thee to confess how good thou art every way unto us we would not go out of thy presence without praising thee our most merciful God for ordaining such peace for us as that we may with safety both abide at home and go abroad about all our occasions It is of thy great goodness that we are not forced to go in by-ways for fear of violent men but the high-wayes are freely occupyed and we have cause to rehearse the righteous acts of the Lord towards the Inhabitants of his Villages who now dwell without fear in such undefenced places In special we bless thee our gracious God for that Government whereby we enjoy this peace and liberty humbly beseeching thee to settle still amongst us and ever to preserve over us a religious and righteous and rightful Magistracy for our present tranquillity and felicity And ever to establish amongst us an able and faithful Ministry for the saving of our souls and our everlasting happiness in the day of the Lord Jesus for whom we bless thee in whom we enjoy and joy in thee and to whom with thee O Father and the Holy Spirit we acknowledged to be due and desire from our souls to give all Glory Majesty Dominion and Power now and evermore Amen A Family-Prayer for the Evening O Most holy and most glorious Lord God we poor and polluted creatures acknowledge our selves altogether unworthy to be admitted into thy presence so much as to confess our sins yet since thou art pleased to offer thy self unto us in Jesus Christ under the name of a Father assuring us that If we confess our sins thou art faithful and just to forgive us our sins we are therefore bold in him to come before thee confessing O Father that whereas at first we were made very good and very like God Now through our own fault and fall every one of us is shapen in Iniquity and in sin did our mother conceive us And besides this corruption of nature enough of it self to condemn us Against Thee Against thee only for there is but one Law-giver have we sinned in the whole course of our lives Justly O Lord mayest thou draw up an heavy charge against us for our sins of omission upon which our Saviour will pass his last Sentence for we cannot but acknowledge that we have left made light of and like leaking vessels let slip many Sermons Our fruits after much seed sowen have been so few that we deserve our stripes should be many unto which this other evil is added that we have often sleighted the Lords Supper either by not caring to receive it or by neglecting to prepare for it We have idled away also or profaned many Sabbaths at least we have gone heavily under the service of that day which we should call a delight And whereas heart-searching is exceeding needful for the well-ordering of our hearts and lives we confess that many examinations of our hearts and wayes for which thou hast hearkened we have neglected yea though this duty of Prayer by our selves and in our Families be so needful so beneficial and such an al-sanctifying service yet for a long time either we have been very careless and mindless of it or else careless and heartless in it But besides all these omissions and neglects of duty we do further confess that we have committed much evil and been guilty of much Rebellion against thy Majesty yielding ordinarily unto Satans temptations who never ceaseth to put fair colours upon the forbidden fruit rushing often into evil company and partaking with them in the unfruitful works of darkness and when we have been alone sadly and securely satisfying the lusts of our evil and distempered hearts especially in the evils more pleasing and sutable to our sinful natures In regard of all which and all other our many and great transgressions we deserve O most just God to be deprived of all thy blessings and to be laden with thy judgements as we have laden thee with our sins But whilest we are displeased with our selves for them and it is in our hearts desire not only to confess them but forsake them and turn to thee from them We beseech thee O Father of Mercies in the Name and for the merits of Jesus Christ to be merciful to us sinners laying every one of our sins for we are not able our selves to bear the least of them upon that Lamb of God on whom the Lord hath laid the Iniquity of us all freeing us also of thy free grace from all those evils which are either on us or due unto us for the same And that we may be hereof assured Give us we pray thee that most excellent grace of Faith without which the Word of Promise and of Pardon cannot profit that thereby receiving the forgiveness of our sins our spirits may rejoyce in God our Saviour which since we cannot do but in the Publicans way who said God be merciful to me a sinner that is in a way of repentance therefore do thou O Lord work and if any thing of godly sorrow be already wrought do thou more and more work so upon our ever too-hard-hearts as that we may remember our former evil wayes and doings that have not been good and lothe our selves in our own sight for all our iniquities Nor let us lothe our sins only and our selves for them but leave them also and settle it in our hearts after thou hast spoken peace to us not to turn again to folly And because our own resolutions are soon altered and by our own strength we cannot prevail therefore we beg of thee our God to whom power belongeth so much strength as that though sin while we a●e here dwell within us yet it may not have dominion over us especially let us be strong in the Lord and the power of his might for the subduing of our special sins and those Goliahs that seem to set at defiance the whole Army of the Graces of God in us Neither let it suffice us to depart from evil unless also we do good and live soberly righteously and godly in this present world And that this may be better done Good Lord make us mindful of the use of all good means of a godly life such as are the