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

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left in my misery for I have forfeited my relation and am no more worthy to be called thy Son yet I hope thou wilt not let me perish who feedest thy meanest servants A Meditation preparatory to Prayer when we doubt of the favour of God to us HE that hath a considerable request to make to an earthly King must approach without a present in his hand but my request is to the King of Kings to whose laws I have been disobedient false to his Government refractory to his summons and ingrateful for his former favours But what can I offer to him that needs nothing what can I give to him whose both my self and all I have are his favour indeed is so sweet so desirable and so universal a comprehension of all happiness that I could freely give all I have or can do or may procure for the purchase of it but the whole world is a vanity to him neither can such trifles blind his eyes or bind his hands buy his mercy to the unworthy or pervert his justice from the sinner I could methinks expose my body to the sharpest torments my soul to the heaviest sorrows and my life to the cruelest Tyrant if I were sure of his everlasting mercy afterwards and would account my self happy in the purchase but it cost more to redeem a soul I can give nothing but it is his already and I can suffer nothing but what I have deserved what then oh where shall I have a peace-offering which may not be dispised I am told nothing is more acceptable then a broken heart t is strange can an heart polluted with the guilt and enslaved to the Power of sin stupid to apprehend slow to desire and impatient to wait for and unable to perform any good but witty to invent and vigorous to prosecute unsatiable to desire and unwearied to pursue all evil and now more vile then ever by reflecting upon its own vileness shaken with fears torn in pieces with sorrow and even a terror to it self miserable and poor blind and naked can this heart be a fit sacrifice for so glorious and all-seeing so holy and pure a God can he like that which I abhor how can it be but let me recall that hasty word for he hath said it who best knows what will please himself and if he value it it is worthy for the true worth of every thing is to be judged by his estimation of it Who knows but such a broken heart may be a greater evidence of his power and mercy a fitter instrument of his praise and glory a plainer table to describe his grace and draw his image on then any other Such a heart I have and if this serve I am happy I will give it freely to thee oh Lord who despisest not the meanest gift if there be sincerity in the giver It was broken before with fear but it is now dissolved with love I am ashamed it is no better but thy mercy is the greater in accepting it and it will become better by being thine oh how am I filled with admiration of the freeness and fulness of thy mercies in comparison of which the greatest humane compassion seems cruelty and I dare proclaim to all that in thee are all the mercies of the world united and thou art mercy it self in the highest degree if my disobedience and negligence contempt and ingratitude could have separated thee from thy mercy I had now met thee in fury taking vengeance without pitty for I have seemed to live as if I had designed to Dare thee to turn away thy self from me and to try thy utmost patience the least part of which baseness would have turned my best friends in the world against me but behold the mercy of my God continues still oh let me have the shame of an ingrateful sinner and thy name have the glory of thy inexpressible pitty even to those who are almost ashamed to ask pardon and let me to whom thou hast shewed such compassion have the honour to be an instance of thy goodness to all the world but have I such a father why then do I lye still with this load of guilt upon my soul and this heavy burden of sorrow upon my spirit what do I get by these vain complaints but waste my time and double my misery by sad reflections I can neither have help from my self nor any creature but from my Father alone to whom mercies are as proper as misery is to me and if I through fear or sorrow sit still here and starve I have not so much pity for my self as he would have for me if he saw me thus grieved for abusing his mercies wherefore I will arise and go though I think I shall scarce have the face to ask more I have spent the last so ill and I shall be ashamed to tell him how base I have been but as I was not ashamed when I did evil so I must have shame when I suffer the desert of it I will go bathed in tears blushing for shame accusing my self and only relying on the bowels of a Father will beg only so much mercy as will banish despair and quiet my mind and give me some little hope and revive my languishing faith and if I may have this I will be content though I be not entertained with assurance and certain expectations for the least favourable look is more then I have deserved yet I see the tender Father upon the first sight of the returning prodigal whom he had never sent for but was driven home by his own miseries yet he runs to meet him takes the words out of his mouth and receives him with all the demonstrations of love and the caresses of a deer affection and is my God less merciful who hath invited me so often and promised me so largely I have done ill to stay so long but I will go now high in my desires low in my expectations sorrowing for my offence and begging his mercy and I hope though I carry no merits of my own to his justice yet I carry misery enough to make his bowels of compassion yearn upon me and then I cannot perish Amen Thus we see the Church hath shewed her care of these poor contrite ones in selecting the most and choicest of these sentences for them who are the best though the least part of the people and though such are vile in their own eyes (t) Psal 15.4 Old Transl Chal. Par. Viles prae oculis suis yet they are dear to God and highly valued by all good people and tenderly indulged by the Church who wishes there were more of this blessed temper § 5. THe next sort of men who come to pray are involved in gross ignorance and such are inappre●ensive of their guilt and unacquainted with their danger who know not what to ask nor of whom nor why but these be instructed before they pray or otherwise they will neither confess aright nor amend at all
condition but wast conceived in t●e Virgins womb and born like unto us only void of sin How chearfully didst thou embrace a bitter and bloody Passion to satisfie the Divine Justice provoked by our offences and when thou hadst by suffering the wrath due to us overcome the sharpness of that sting of death which our sins had armed it with the whole world found the benefit of thy Cross For by those merits thou didst open those gates of mercy which iniquity had shut against all mankind for hereby alone admittance into the kingdom of heaven is granted to all believers that are or were or ever shall be hereafter And no such can be excluded for now thou sittest as a glorious conqueror at the right hand of God to intercede that the faithful may have the benefit of thy purchase to keep possession for them and finally to receive them to partake with thee in the glory of the Father which thou now injoyest and canst dispose it to whom thou pleasest To our great comfort therefore we believe that thou who hast been our Redeemer and art our Advocate shalt come with millions of Angels in great glory to try all the world and particularly to be our Iudge with full Power to condemn or acquit us We therefore knowing our guiltiness and that we cannot account to thy Justice do before hand beg thy mercy and most humbly pray thee help thy servants with thy infinite merits and abundant grace and to answer for them whom thou hast so deerly bought and redeemed with thy most precious blood that we may not loose the benefit nor thou the glory of thy gracious purchase Since all men must stand or fall then at thy sentence Oh do thou acquit thy faithful ones and by applying thy merits make them to be numbred with thy Saints that being placed on thy right hand they may have a part with thee and them in Glory unspeakable and everlasting And that thou mayest have mercy on them in thy Kingdom give them here all that may fit them for it and bring them to it O Lord save thy people from all evil which might dishearten or defile them and bless thy Church with all good things which may make it flourish as thine inheritance and encourage it in well-doing Be thou a shepheard to watch over and feed thy servants a King to defend and govern them in all thy holy wayes and when Sathan and his instruments design to cast them down rescue and lift them up by thy grace above their power and malice that they may be safe for ever Particularly be mindful of us in this Congregation who will never forget thee but as we daily taste of thy mercies so Day by day we acknowledge them in thy house and we magnifie thee for them with these sacred hymns Thou art an everflowing spring of comfort therefore we ever praise thee and we worship thy name both now in this world and will glorifie it in thy Kingdom ever world without end And as by our daily paying thee this Tribute of Praise we declare our selves thy servants Vouchsafe O Lord to remember our frailty and by thy grace to keep us this day which we have begun in thy service holy pure and without sin that our present sacrifice may be accepted and our hearts fitly disposed against the next opportunity We have so often fallen into sin and so sadly smarted for our folly that we must now most earnestly beseech thee O Lord to forgive and have mercy upon us for all that is past and again to have mercy upon us and deliver us for the remaining part of our lives We beg compassion of thee in all humility O Lord let thy mercy come to us and lighten upon us not for our merits nor after the proportion of our deserts but our faith even like as we incouraged by thy promises most readily and firmly do put our trust in thee and hope for it And though we do not challenge it by desert yet we believe thou wilt not frustrate any of our expectations for every one of us renouncing all other helps can say O Lord in thee alone have I trusted because I knew thy grace and bounty Let me not now ask in vain Oh let me never be put to shame before the world or the devil nor be confounded by being sent away empty Amen The second Hymn after the First Lesson at Morning Prayer § 5. WE shall briefly pass over this Hymn because it is seldom used and sufficiently plain it being an invitation of all Creatures to praise God And though it be not in the Canon of Scripture yet it is an excellent Paraphrase on the 148 Psalm and comes so near it in words and sense that we must reproach that if we despise this And we have the practice of the Primitive Church to justifie our use of it wherein it was not sung only four times in the year as in the present Roman Church but on all solemn occasions in the assemblies of the faithful from the beginning as Ruffinus and St. Augustine (d) In omni solemnitate in sac●is fidelium decantatur Ruffinus l. 2. adv Hieron ap Six● Senens Biblioth Aug. Serm. 47. temp assure us And the duty which it invites us to ought to recommend it which is to praise God for all his works 'T is true they are so excellent that they do of t●emselves declare the Power and Wisdom of their great Creator (e) Psal 19.1 Bona enim ex s●ipsis v●ce ●●emittunt neque enim Sol vel Luna interprete ege●● 〈◊〉 ipsa lux palam testatur quod totum mundum illustrant Philo. And yet since we have benefit by them and understanding to observe and speech to express his glory who made them God calls on us to lend them a tongue to glorifie him with and by so doing we may fill our souls with reverence and noble thoughts of the Lord of all things Our aptness to be forgetful of the rare contrivance and unthankful for the usefulness of his works makes this Hymn often needful but it is alwayes proper to be used after the History of the Creation or the relation of those miracles wherein God useth the Creatures as Instruments of his Justice or Mercy And then we may in this Form learn the order of Gods works for the method is exact and beginning with the Heavens and the hosts thereof descends to the air the Earth and Sea reckoning up all the furniture of them and concluding with a particular exhortation to the Sons of Men who are concerned in them all to give praise to the Lord their maker the Order will inform our understanding the exactness quicken our memory and the comprehensive and devout manner of address will enlarge our affections if we attend it and desire to profit by it and then it will need no other recommendations The Analysis of the Benedictus or first Hymn after the second Lesson In this
probable he was a person considerable very likely him whom the Jews call Simeon the first who lived at this time and was the son of the most famous Rabbi Hillel (i) Vid. Scultet Exerc. Evang. l. 1. c. 61. and Light-foots Harm on this place who opposed the received opinion of the temporal Kingdome of the Messiah for it is certain our Simeon did so or he had never thus rejoyced over a Messiah presented by so mean Parents in swadling clothes at the gates of the Temple It was not the object that appeared to his eyes but the illumination of the Spirit and the prospect of his Faith that elevated his affections Wherefore we need not pretend to dismiss this holy song by alledging it was an extraordinary occasion for the writings of th● Apostles which are daily read among us do as clearly represent him the Saviour of the world to the eye of Faith and set him before us as evidently in the house of God as any bodily sight could do to him and if our minds be inlightened and our faith firm as his we have the same occasion and ought to rehearse it with the same devotion The mercy is made sufficiently plain to us it we were but as apprehensive of the advantages it brings to us and all men as he was I know not why we should wish to live any longer then till we have obtained hopes of a share in it But we have houses to build families to propagate and designs to compleat and all before we are willing to dye We desire something besides nay perhaps more then an Interest in Jesus and therefore we dare not joyn in this noble wi●h But he was dead to the world before and had been impatient of a longer stay but only for the promise to have a sight of Jesus in the flesh And when this long-wished for happiness was come to pass his expectations are answered and all his desires filled He values nothing here but humbly craves his dismission His holy soul that came from God can find no rest on the waters of this world and therefore desires to return with an Olive-branch of peace to its dear Lord (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 C●em Al. Strom. 4o. Mortem Stoici appellare solent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arrian where it was sure of rest and joy among the best of friends He now desires leave to depart from the flesh which he had long esteemed his Prison wherein he was confined by his infirmities (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Themistius ap Stobae and shut up from beholding the glories of God which he now longs to see more then ever by this last experience of his Truth and Mercy and he knew that death would set him free his desires and joy begin to swell too big to be confined in the walls of flesh and now he is even straitned till he be let loose into the regions of glory to praise him face to face And yet his extasies transport him not beyond the measures of obedience and humility for he first asks his Masters leave nor will he go till he have Commission but he intimates he had stript himself of all worldly desires and had his inner coat his flesh in his hands ready to lay it down and run whenever the watch word (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ar. was given His hopes and desires to see his Saviour had alone made his life acceptable and the fulfilling of them makes even death most welcome to him because he knew that Jesus came to disarm death and by satisfying for sin to deprive it of that sting which made it terrible to all men All the sin-offerings of the law were but weak armor to encounter death nor could they so fully purge or appease the Conscience as that it should not accuse in the fatal hour But the perfect Sacrifice of the death of Jesus doth so fully avert Gods wrath that all that believe in him can triumph over death meet it with courage and embrace it with peace as the end of their fears and the entrance into their felicity (n) 1 Cor. 15.55 Non est timendum quod liberat nos ab omni timendo How can he fear death that hath his sins forgiven or how can he doubt Gods mercy that beholds his Son with faith and love or how can he question the truth of Gods Promises that embraces Jesus the greatest of all in his arms He that knows Gods power is persuaded of his love and convinced of his truth can dye in peace and lye down with joy in the assurance of a blessed Resurrection And this we may do for it was only their priviledge who lived then to see Jesus and whoever looked on him so as to dare to dye then must behold him by faith and thus we may see Christ not only with Simeon presented in the Temple but with St. Steven standing at the right hand of God not only in his rising but his full glory Why then are we so fixed to this world so desirous to stay so loath to depart so sad when God calls Oh let us look on this our Redeemer so stedfastly and embrace him so tenderly in our hearts that it may appear he is dearer to us then our very lives Let us love him so intirely that nothing may satisfie us without him and trust so fully in his merits and mercies that we may live chearfully and dye peaceably Let us say with this devout Old man Lord I do now so clearly perceive thy purposes of mercy so confidently believe thy promises of forgiveness and so firmly rely on the hopes of glory that I resolve to be ever thy servant I desire to stay no longer in this world then to get assurances for a better Earths vanities do not make me wish to live nor deaths terrors afraid to dye If thou callest me this day Lord I come I can live with patience or dye in peace for I see him that will preserve me in life or death and gives me hopes that whether I live or dye I am the Lords I was not with Simeon in the Temple to behold my Saviour with my bodily eyes but I have had thy Salvation as clearly manifested in this thy holy word as if I had seen him with my eyes Lord grant me thy holy Spirit that I may behold him with the same faith and embrace him with the same affections that he did and then I shall chearfully joyn in a Nunc Dimittis and being daily ready to dye shall ever be fit to live and thy will shall be done in my life or death Blessed Lord thou hast even to our dayes by these holy writings sufficiently manifested thy Son before all our faces and it is our carelesness ingratitude and unbelief that hides him from our eyes and makes us hug these vanities and fear to leave them But thou hast done thy part and I will praise thee for sending this bright and glorious Sun
since they were ushered in by Faith and Charity the best preparatives to that duty We have all owned that we have one Lord and one Faith and now we are preparing as bretheren and fellow-souldiers to unite our requests and to send them to the throne of God But first in token of our mutual Charity the Church appoints instead of the antients kiss of peace a hearty salutation to pass between the Minister and People he beginning in the phrase of B●az to his Reapers The Lord be with you (o) Ruth 2.4 Psal 129.8 which was after drawn into common use as a form of salutation to all and used by St. Paul in his Epistles (p) 2 Thess 3.16 to which the people are to return a good wish for their Minister in a form taken from the same Apostle (q) 2 Tim. 4.22 Galat. 6.18 desiring the Lord may be with his spirit Which is no invention of our own but mentioned in an Antient Counsel (r) Placuit ut Episcopi ●resbyteri uno modo salutent populum dicentes Dominus vobiscum ut respondeatur à populo Et cum Spiritu tuo s●cut ab ipsis Apostolis traditum omnis retinet Oriens Concil Brace primum Can. 21. and there affirmed to have been instituted by the Apostles and as it there appears retained in the Liturgies especially of the Greek Church but sure it never had a fitter place then in our excellent service where it succeeds the Creed as the Symbol and bond of peace St. John forbids us to salute or to desire God to be with any that cleave not to this right Faith (s) 2 Ep. 5. J●hn ver 10.11 But when the Minister hath heard every one profess his Faith in the same words with himself how chearfully and without scruple may he salute them as bretheren and they requite his affection with a like return 'T is too sadly true that little differences in Religion make wide separations and the most incurable animosities Why then should not our exact agreement be as forcible an uniter of all our hearts since the profession of the same Faith hath ever been reputed the firmest bond of Charity (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo. Wherefore when these endeering offices have warmed our hearts with mutual love these expressions will not barely signifie the affections between the Minister and his people but may be used as the exercise of their Charity by way of P●ayer for one another Let the spirit●al man meditate how often Sathan is among the sons of God how m●ny of his flock which now are preparing to joyn with him are oppressed with hard hearts or disturbed with vain thoughts and then let him earnestly pray the Lord may be with them that his Prayers be not in v●in for them Let the people also remember how comfortable and advantagious it will be to them that he who is their mouth to God may have a pure heart and a fervent spirit and with these thoughts let them most hear ily require their Pastors prayer by desiring the Lord to be with his spirit that both may by acknowledging t●eir insufficiency and declaring their Charity obtain a blessing of God for each other and find the benefit of these short Petitions in every part of the suceeding Off●ces § 2. Let us pray We can do nothing in Religion without the Divine presence and Assistance and therefore the Minister and People must mutually beg that for each other and then they must joyn in their Petitions In the beginning of which is placed this short and antient Exhortation So often repeated in all the old Liturgies (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alibi Dominum oremus postulemu● vid. Liturg S. Jacobi S. Basilii c. whereby the Priest gives the signal of battel or the watch word to all the assembly that they may set on their enemies with courage and besiege even Heaven it self with a holy importunity And as the Cryer of old in the Heathen Sacrifices proclaimed his HOC AGITE and warned all to attend what they were about so doth the Minister charge you against all wandring thoughts which are never more frequent nor pernicious then in holy duties desiring you not to rest sati●fied in his Petitions for you but to let your heart go along with him that they may be accepted as your Prayers though pronounced with his lips He injoyns all to pray and that with him and for one another for it is a great work we have to do and we must now take off our thoughts from all other things and wholly mind this § 3. Lord have mercy upon us Christ have c. Lord have c. The best beginning for our requests is a Petition for Mercy whereby we acknowledge our unworthiness declare our misery and confess we cannot expect our Prayers should be heard unless it may please God first to have mercy upon us Like those poor Lepers (x) Luke 17.11 12. eminus tanquam immundi Levit. 13.45 clamant Jesu Domine miserere nostri we discerning Jesus afar off cry out unclean and beseech him to have mercy on us for we are defiled dust and ashes and how shall we dare to draw near to him or open our mouths before him till he be pleased to pitty and cleanse us As to this particular Form it is originally taken out of Davids Psalms (y) Psal 6.2 Psal 51.1 Psal 123.3 where it is sometimes repeated twice together to which t●e Church hath added Christ have mercy upon us that it might be a short Litany and a supplication for mercy to every Person in the Trinity (z) Imploramus misericordiam Domini per Kyrie eleeson Chri●e c. Kyrie c. ita ut tres articulos aliquo modo divinae majestatis trinitatis in Ecclesiâ celebre●us Amalar Fort. de Eccl. off because we have offended every Person and are to pray to every Person and need the help of every Person calling both the Father and Holy Ghost by the same title of Lord as being partakers of only one and the same Divine Nature and the Son by another title who also did partake of our humane Nature as Durand Rational l. 4. c. 12. doth observe And as Tho. Aquinas adds being under a three sold misery of ignorance guilt and punishment we thrice implo●e mercy And because we need that when ever we pray (a) Quia ante omnem Orationem sacerdotùm necesse est misericordiam Domini implorare Durand Rat. ut supr it was used both in the Eastern and Western Churches and become customary in the time of Theodosius the younger so that it was decreed by a Councel (b) Et quia dulcis nimis salubris consuetudo int●omissa est ut Kyrie eleeson frequentiùs cum grandi compunctione dicatur Placuit etiam nobis ut in omnibus Eccles●is nostris ista consu●tudo Sancta ad Matutinum ad Missas ad Vesperam
should dis-esteem us since we have deserved it such a heart the Prodigal had when he thought a servants place too good for him (l) Luke 15.19 such the Publican (m) Chap. 18.13 when he durst neither look up nor come near and he that wants it and thinks well of himself after his sin cannot confess heartily nor desire pardon devoutly nor for sake what he thinks hath done him no harm Wherefore let us labour to have this right knowledge of our selves and of our sins and that we may be ashamed of both let us consider we have shewed so much folly and rashness disingenuity and ingratitude obstinacy and perversness by breaking such holy laws of so great a God and so gracious a Father for so small a price and are thereby so miserable that we shall for ever be disgraced if we repent not Sin is a more just cause of shame then any thing in the world for it shews a man to be a base and abominable person nay it makes him degenerate into a beast (n) Psal 73.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arr. in Epict. lib. 1. cap. 3. which if we seriously think upon it will beget in us a dis-esteem of our selves and a true opinion of our own unworthiness which is an excellent disposition for the begging or receiving of pardon 2. A Penitent heart viz. a sad and sorrowful spirit which is most becoming one that sees his actions to have been base vain and d●ngerous and therefore must ever accompany us in confession of our sins Now if we are of ingenuous tempers the Gospel will produce this viz. The beholding the wounds of Jesus which we have made the long suffering we have abused the grace we have rejected and the comforts and benefits we have lost and forfeited But if we are more obdurate the Law must effect it viz. the sight of Gods justice and the consideration of the curse we have deserved and the danger we are in of endless torments for those poor perishing pleasures these things duly weighed will help us to draw water before the Lord (p) 1 Sam. 7.6 Ch. Par. Hauserunt aquas è puteo cordis sui abundè lachrymati sunt coram domino resipiscentes as the Israelites did from the pits of our hearts and pour them out by the channels of our eyes and this sorrow for what is past will both make our confession acceptable and help us to the third requisite 3. An obedient heart that is a takeing up such a dislike against sin as to resolve stedfastly if we can get those pardoned we have committed that we will never more do that which hath caused so much shame and sorrow to us and till we have brought our hearts to this all our confession and sorrow are not repentance but onely a purpose to repent (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex Strom. 2. Nor will all the rest prevail either to a removal of the guilt or dominion of sin Therefore let us learn how to confess Humility will make our confession sincere Sorrow will make it earnest and Holy purposes will make it prevalent § 6. To the end that we may obtain forgiveness of the same by his infinite Goodness and Mercy There is nothing more pleasant to us then the contemplation of Gods infinite goodness and mercy but we are therein apt to forget his justice and to think the one will exclude the other because we measure God by our selves in whose narrow hearts these two dispositions are not at once contained and hence when we hear of infinite mercy we are apt to presume of pardon upon any terms But the Church from Gods Word assures you that a sinner cannot be forgiven no not by this infinite mercy unless he bring an humble penitent and obedient heart and that you are to esteem it infinite goodness that you may be forgiven upon these terms For you must know that Justice without a Mediator doth not admit a sinner to second thoughts nor accept of any Repentance at all and therefore it is an high act of Grace that so holy a God so justly offended and highly provoked will be reconciled upon any terms and let us not neglect our endeavours to get our hearts thus disposed for we had need be so prepared or else Mercy it self will reject us Some may here perhaps scruple at the expression to the end and Question whether in our confession we ought not rather to aim at Gods glory then our own forgiveness Such must know they quarrel with the language of holy Writ (s) Acts 2.38 Chap. 3.19 where men are exhorted to repent that they may be forgiven and further they do not understand what Gods glory is if they separate it from his doing good to his creatures and representing his excellencies to them wherefore to aim at Gods glory and our own forgiveness is all one for by confessing we own his power to forgive we shew our trust in his goodness and hope in his mercy and desire that the Almighty by accepting and doing us good may demonstrate himself to be what we believe him to be viz. a God gracious and merciful c. that we and all the world may admire him for it and praise him for evermore § 7. And although we ought at all times humbly to acknowledge our sins before God This concession of the Churches declares that the Publique Prayer ought not to excuse any from Private Devotions These we account the Principal but the other we recommend as very useful and necessary so that we neither incourage the lazy who neglect the private nor allow the Precise who undervalue the Publique one ought to be done so as not to leave the other undone We find our Saviour and his Apostles after the manner of the devout Jews were wont to go to the Temple and Synagogues at the hours of Prayer and yet both he and they did seek retirements for more private Devotions And the Scripture teacheth us to Pray at all times in all places and with all sorts of prayer (r) Ephes 6.18 1 Timoth. 2.8 Psalm 111.1 that none might be excused from either nor can one be alledged to exclude the other for they are mutual helps to one another for he that hath been most careful in private Confession will be the fittest for and most advantaged by the other yet he that is so prepared must not think the coming to Gods house superfluous because we cannot do this too often nor too openly since many of our sins are manifest and require a publique declaration And by this open Confession we shall be freer from the suspition of hypocrisie in our Closet We must remember we stand in need of Gods help every moment and therefore we have reason to beg it often and we can never beg it in humility unless we confess those sins that make us unworthy of it and since we sin dayly a dayly Confession is highly requisite and that not only
3.8 So that being compassed with so much guilt and finding no help on Earth it becomes the Soul in this fear with Jehosophat 2 Chron. 20.12 to fly to heaven and say I have no might O God against this great Multitude of transgressions that is set in array against me neither know I what to do but my eyes are upon thee my onely refuge and last hope and unless I find health and help in thee I must inevitably Perish But Lord do not cast me off but have mercy c. But although this sense be very genuine we may take the freedome for the inlarging our thoughts and assisting our Devotions to pursue the Metaphor and explaine it in that manner as a generall inference c. § 8. But thou O Lord have mercy upon us miserable sinners When we have thus discovered our deplorable condition we must not run away from God by the entertainment of despairing thoughts both because it is impossible to escape him (q) Non est quo fugias à Deo irato nisi ad Deum placatum August in Psal 7. and by attempting to fly from God we run into the evils we fear and hasten from him that alone can help us to what we desire and need Let us come therefore but not with the Pharisees I thank thee (r) Luke 18.11 but with the Publicans Lord be merciful as the Church from his Example hath taught us And when we are before him let us not ask any favours till we have begged a removal of the evils which are upon us viz. The guilt the punishment and the dominion of sin which are here so contrived into three Petitions that every one is joyned with a Motive to enforce it so that our Misery pleads for Mercy our free Confession cries for a removal of the Punishment and our hearty Reformation begs deliverance from all our contracted Indispositions The first thing in our view is our present Misery which is so plain we cannot over look it and so great we cannot but feel it and we are taught to beseech our God to look upon it for Misery is the proper object of Mercy (s) Misericordia est alienae miseriae quaedam in nostro corde compassio qua utique si possumus subvenire compellimur August Civ Dei l. 9. c. 5. That benigne Attribute is ever looking upon the Creatures present sufferings without reflecting on the deserts of the sufferer and is moved with the sight of a distressed Person whatever be the cause of his calamity Therefore when nothing else in God can give any comfort to a poor sinking sinner that knows he is not more miserable then he hath made himself by his wickedness then he can lay hold of this The Publican that dares not look up to heaven can yet say Miserere and as Mercy is the sinners chiefest comfort so it is that Attribute that moves God to forgive and pardon (t) Rom. 11.32 Hebr. 8.12 Psalm 51.1 2. so that to beg for mercy and desire forgiveness are all one as in that eminent Penitential Psalm David begins with Have mercy on me and immediately explains it by the removing his offences in like manner here we pray for pardon in our Have mercy on us because Mercy is the Almoner to distribute this principal act of Divine bounty and grants out all pardons It is not from any desert in us but a meer compassion of our distress and a pure act of Free grace that disposeth God to take away sin * Isai 43.25 We have no friend in the Court of Heaven to obtain it but Mercy and no Argument to plead for it but Misery if we come with We have prayed fasted waited (u) Isai 58.3 we seem to apply our selves to Gods Justice But he that from a heart secretly groaning under the apprehensions of its distress cries out for Mercy because he is Miserable he shall pierce Mercies ears and cause her to open her compassionate eyes to see and stretch out her gracious hand to help and if she be thy Advocate she will cause the bowels of the Almighty to yearn upon thee (x) Jerem. 31.20 Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vide 1 Reg. 3.26 prop. viscera matris vel i●volnera quibus foetus in utero continetur at saepe pro misericordid Dei with the same affection that the tender Mother did when she heard the cryes of her poor sprawling infant under the merciless sword of the bloody executioner But then you must be sure first to view your sin and danger fully that you may be fully convinced of your Misery and cry in a pungent sense thereof most earnestly Lord have Mercy for otherwise this will be a feigned cry and an intolerable abuse of this sweet Attribute what can provoke God more then for a man to call Mercy forth which is ready enough to come and then through impenitence or laziness or not discerning our need of it to send it back empty alas such are more miserable because they see not their misery (y) Nihil est miserius misero non miserante seipsum and they are never like to be delivered from that misery because by these feigned calls they have so often mocked God and affronted this their only friend that if at last they call in earnest when Death is before their eyes Mercy then will not come § XI Spare thou them O God that confess their faults The elder brother that knew the fidelity and constancy of his service expects a large reward but the poor Prodigal that was conscious of his offences will esteem it a high favour to escape a severe Chastisement and utter exclusion from his Fathers house and presence they that are not sensible of their guilt fear not punishment and esteem a deliverance scarce worth the asking But he that considers the multitude of his own offences and Gods abhorrency of them and remembers the terrors of his threatnings and strictness of his justice the fierceness of his anger when he begins and the impossibility of avoiding that stroke which no place can hide him from (z) Josh 8.20 Non erat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in eis Manus ad pugnandum vel pedes ad fugiendum RR. LXX Vulg. Masius Nen erat iis locus ut Deut. 2.37 C. P. J. nostr Vers Non erant in eis vires ita Drus no hands resist no feet fly from nor no strength endure To this poor soul Gods pity is desirable and it is accounted a great mercy he hath not yet felt the weight of Gods wrath such an one begs earnestly he never may feel it or however not sink eternally under it he can pray as heartily before the stroke come as othe●s when the smart extorts it from them When the Israelites heard the cry of Egypt and saw the slaughter of so many first born (a) Exod 12.13 Fagius in locum they then thought it a mercy not to be slain worthy the celebrating with
(u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alexandr Paedag. as the Christians form of praising God above 100 years before the Councel of Nice An. 190. besides it appears it was used in the service of the Church before or somewhat very like it (x) Gloria Deo Patri honor item adoratio cum filio collegâ unà cum Sancto vivificatore Spiritu Athanasius because the Arrians did alter the antient form into Glory be to the Father by the Son and in the holy Ghost for which they are sharply reprehended by the Orthodox Fathers who afterward annexed it to their publique Devotions in this Form in which we now have it All which doth not only prove the Antiquity of it but teach us that it may serve for two purposes first as a form of Praising God and glorifying every Person of the Trinity which was the first design of those that invented it Secondly as a shorter Creed and declaration of our Faith in the Trinity in Unity which was the use it was fitted to afterwards I wish we might have no occasion to make use of it in the second sense as a Teste for Hereticks though the Disciples of Socinus and Fanatick Enthusiasts do even still deride or deny this mistery but if there were no such it might still serve its principal end to be a Form of ascribing all Praise and Glory to the Supreme Being and an Act of Adoration to each Person which we are obliged particularly to pay because every one of the Persons in the Trinity hath done peculiar benefits for us so that it is our Duty to Praise the Father for our Creation the Son for our Redemption the Holy Ghost for our Sanctification The Father hath sent us into the world and preserves and provides for us in it The Son hath lived with us and died for us and being returned to his Glory is still mindful of us The Holy Ghost doth come to us and stay with us as a guard and a guide a comforter and an advocate cleering our minds cleansing our hearts quickening our affections and enforcing our prayers and shall we not then be highly ungrateful if we pay not a particular tribute to every Person in special as well as to all in general Remember the Angels sung praise to the undivided and ever-blessed Trinity in the morning of the Creation the beginning of all time (y) Job 38.7 and they and all the world do it now and both men and Angels shall continue this Jubilee to eternity As long as goodness endures (z) Omnes tam orationes quam oblationes cessabunt in seculo futuro sed oblatio gratiarum nunquam cessabit R.D.K. Psal 100.4 gratitude and praise cannot cease This was and is and ever shall be done in all ages and generations (a) Psal 145.4 The Patriarchs and Prophets did it in the beginning of the Church the Apostles and Martyrs in the first planting of the Gospel All these though removed to heaven continue to sing praises to the Trin-une God there as we and all Pious Christians do here and there will never want tongues in Heaven nor Earth to sing this gratulatory Hymn for all generations Observe further the Comprehensiveness of these few words which extend to all things as well as to all times and persons and present at once to our view all the Mercies of God past present and to come and are an acknowledgment that all the good that ever was or shall be done or is now enjoyed in heaven or earth hath proceeded from this all-sufficient and ever-flowing fountain to whom this tribute of praise is and was and ever will be due Behold then oh pious soul a glorious Quire of Angels Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Saints and Martyrs in Heaven with all holy Men and Women in all the world at once with united voices and joyful hearts to sing this triumphant Song let this inspire thee with holy raptures and extasies of Devotion to bear a part here on earth and when thou art taken hence thy place shall be supplied by the succeeding generations and thou shalt be advanced to a state as endless as his mercy where thou shalt praise him to eternity What better form can we have to glorifie God by then this which is a declaration of our faith a discharge of our homage in which we acknowledge his former mercies and confess his present favours to us and all the world and glorifie him for both we hope in him for those that are to come expecting all from him and resolving upon those returns of Eucharist which we will for ever make to him How can this be done too often or repeated too frequently surely his mercies are more frequent then our praises can be Those that censure this as a vain repetition would ill have digested the hundred blessings (b) Deut. 10.12 R. R. legunt pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro quid leg centum unde unusquisque benetur centum benedictiones quotidiè reddere which the Jews are bid to say every day and might be offended at Davids seven times a day (c) Psal 119.64 and St. Pauls charge to rejoyce alwaies (d) 1 Thess 5.18 Philip. 4.4 but as God never thinks it too often to relieve us let us never think his praises too many tedious or impertinent but in Psalms Letanies and every thing let us give thanks and when Gloria Patri is not in our mouths let it be in our heart that we may never forget his benefits To this we shall only add the particular reason why the Church hath placed it in the close of the penitential part of daily Prayer and that is in imitation of holy David who commonly when he hath made his Confession and declared his distress (e) Psal 6.9 and 130.7 and begged pardon and deliverance turns his petitions into Praises because of his lively hope of acceptance so we being full of hopes that our gracious Father will forgive us for his Sons sake by the Ministry of his spirit We I say do now give glory to the Father who granteth this Absolution to the Son who purchased and obtained it and to the Holy Ghost who sealeth and dispenseth it to us and we also call to mind those innumerable instances of the like infinite mercies to poor sinners which have been and ever shall be to the worlds end and what heart can conceive or tongue express that exstasy of ravishing pleasures which we shall feel at the last day when we and all true Penitents that ever were or shall be shall all joyn in singing songs of praise to our deer Redeemer whom we shall love much because much is forgiven us we can foresee those Anthems which shall then be sounded on the battlements of Heaven by millions of glorious souls rescued from destruction and we by Faith have such a sense hereof that we begin now that Song that we shall sing for evermore § 5. Praise ye the Lord the Lords
benedicam tibi laudabo nomen tuum c. Vulg. Lat. only altering the Tense and Person Lord help us for we are thy servants paying thee the daily tribute of Praise Whatever thou bestowest on us will not be forgotten nor bu●ied in ungratefull silence We meet in thy house every day to magnifie thee in this manner and to set our the glory of thy Name in every thing thou dost for u. Withold not thy mercy for we will not withold thy Praise and since we resolve daily to do the work of Angel● Lord keep us pure as they are for praise is neither seemly nor acceptable in the mouth of a sinner Let not us who are thy servants in the morning be the devils slaves before night (z) Coepisti meliùs quam desinis ultima primis Distant but preserve us holy all day that our afternoon sins may not rob us of the benefit of this dayes Praises nor indispose us against the next morning when our duty will return Dear Jesus look on our frailty and strengthen us look on our guilt and misery and Pardon us We cry earnestly and double our request Jesus Master (a) Math. 20.30 31. have mercy on us have mercy on us for our needs are great and pressing unless we find mercy for former sins we must be condemned by thee and except we obtain mercy for future assistance we shall be overcome by Sathan Oh shut not out our Prayer consider not our merits but our distress we know we deserve nothing but we have great hopes such is thy transcendent goodness that we shall have what we desire Those that were better then we have put words in our mouths who in the Psalms (b) Psal 33.22 Sit misericordia tua Domine super nos quemadmodum speravimus in te Psal 31.1 In te Domine speravi non confundar in aeternum Vulg. Lat. did not urge thee as if they had been worthy but only trusted in thy mercy and so do we We rely not on our selves or any Creature but on thee alone for we know thou canst help us and we have a persuasion thou wilt All the world sees by our daily attendance on thee that all our expectations are from thee Oh do not disappoint those hopes that are grounded on thy tender mercy least Sathan upbraid us and the world slight us (c) Ezra 8.22 Psal 22.7 8. and then which way can we look Lord be it unto us according to our Faith Amen Amen The Paraphrase of the Te Deum WE Praise thee most heartily for all we have learned out of thy holy Word O God and it shall be our care as it is our duty to observe thy Will since we acknowledge thee to be the Lord to whom we owe all Duty and Obedience We esteem it our happiness and honour to be accounted thy servants who art Lord of all the world and a●l the earth with its Inhabitants joyns with us and doth worship thee who a●t from Eternity and in all ages hast been acknowledged to be the Father everlasting Nor doth this lower world alone own thy Supremacy but Praise is given to thee by the several Orders of all An●●●s who with harmonious voices cry aloud in proclaiming thy glory which is ever set forth by all the hosts of the Heavens the Thrones Dominions Principalities and the Powers that are therein To thee O God triumphant Hymns are sung in that Celestial Quire For the Cherubin on one side and the Seraphin on the other with ravishing melody chart thy Praise and in their mysterious adorations they continually do cry one to another Holy Father Holy Son Holy Spirit three Persons but one Lord thou art t●e most mighty God of Savaoth the supream commander of all the hosts of Heaven of us and the innumerable myriods of blessed Spirits Thou makest us happy with beholding and the Sons of men with expecting thy glory so that all the Inhabitants of Heaven and Earth rejoyce in thee because all parts of the Universe are full of those manifestations of thy power and goodness which declare the majesty of thy glory Thus the Angels sing and for our great comfort many of our bretheren now glorified bear a part with them The glorious company of the Apostles who Preached Christ and with unwearied diligence and patience admirable courage and fidelity shewed he was come to save the world these are now in those regions of bliss and there for ever praise thee As also all those harbingers of thy Sons comming inspired at sundry times and in divers manners these are now met in glory and make up the goodly fellowship of the Prophets whose words we read on earth but they now are happy in beholding him of whom they foretold and now continually praise thee To all which blessed numbers are added those undaunted Legions who sealed the truth of the Prophets predictions and the Apostles preaching with their blood even The noble army of Martyrs who conquered infidelity and cruelty by Faith and Patience these now are passed from torments to their reward and they with all other Saints and Angels with united hearts and voices sweetly praise t●ee Oh Lord we long to be there that we might see thee as clearly and praise thee as heartily as they do But since we can now know thee only by Faith we must glorifie thee by agreeing with The holy Church even our faithful bretheren throughout all the world in the Confession of that True Faith whereby every good Christian doth acknowledge thee to be what thou hast revealed thy self to be in thy holy word We believe in that Trinity which the Angels worship even in thee the Father who by creating and governing all the World declaredst thy self to be of an infinite Majesty And we believe in him that is equal in glory with thee and one in nature thine honourable true and only begotten Son who hath redeemed us that we of slaves of Sathan might be thy adopted Sons We do believe and acknowledge also the Holy Ghost to be very God equal to and with the Father and the Son and is the advocate for us in Heaven and the Comforter of us on the Earth And these Three Persons are One God Thy gr●cious condescension O blessed Jesus shall not Eclipse thy Divine Perfection for though thou camest in our likeness to Redeem us yet we believe thou art equal with the Father and the King of Glory for thou ever wa st most glorious in thy self and thou O Christ art anointed of God a King and Priest for ever From eternity thou art God neither hadst thou thy beginning when thou wast made the Son of Man for thou art the everlasting Son begotten of the Father before the world began Yet blessed be thy name thou didst change thy Glory for Misery and sufferedst thy Eternity to be measured by time for when thou tookest upon thee that glorious design to deliver man from eternal death thou didst not abhor the meanest
Hymn God is praised 1. For the Redemption both as to 1. The nature of it as it is an act 1. Of Gods Mercy ver 68. 2. Of his Power ver 69. 3. Of his Truth being the fulfilling of His Word ver 70 and 71. His Promise His Covenant 72. His Oath ver 73. 2. The end of it viz. 1. Our safety ver 74. 2. Our obedience which must be 1. Universal in the parts Holiness towards God Righteousness towards man 2. Sincere before him 3. Constant all our life ver 75. 2. For the Promulgation considering 1. The Instrument and that for 1. His Office to be a Prophet Harbinger 2. His Duty to Prepare v. 76. Instruct 3. The end for Remission ver 77. 2. The cause why i● was now to be thus made known 1. In general Gods Mercy 2. In particular in regard 1. Of him that was to come ver 78. 2. Of the end of his coming ver 79. A Practical Discourse on the Benedictus § 6. THE Gospel which hath now been read for the second Lesson doth not only require our attention but command our gratitude because it brings that good news which is the cause of great joy to all people The Angels sing and all holy men to whom it was revealed entertain the news with Hymns of Praise And if we be as sensible of the mercy as they were and as thankful as we ought to be for the benefit thereof we shall rejoyce as heartily as they did since it is as much our concern as theirs And how can we better express our gladness for all that the Gospel records of what Jesus hath done for us then in those sacred forms indited by the holy Spirit with which devout Persons welcomed our Lord into the world And these will be most acceptable to God and most beneficial to us both to help us with fit expressions and to ingage us to sing them with the same heart and affections which were in the first Composers and particularly with the Devotion of holy Zachariah the Author of this Hymn who after nine months silence recovering his speech stays not to rejoyce in that personal Mercy but immediately being filled with the Divine Spirit the inexpressible joy that filled his heart before now breaks forth in these words Blessed be the Lord God of Israel c. Wherein he in the Phrase of Antient times (f) Gen. 9.26 Psal 41.13 declares the wonderful goodness of God And we ought to joyn with him not scrupling the Jewish form of expression because if we be true Christians and have the circumcision of the heart we are the Children of the Promise (g) Rom. 9.8 the seed of Abraham and the Israel of God And this God of our Israel hath in a more excellent manner delivered ●s from the slavery of Sathan then he did them from the bondage of Egypt And yet though this Spiritual Redemption be much greater there is such a similitude in the method and circumstances that it appears that was a type of this and therefore Zac●ariah alludes to Gods delivering the people from Aegyptian misery For as then he first visited them (h) Exod. 3.16 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and considered their misery (i) Gen. 21.1 Visitavit Chal. Par. Recordatus est ita Syr. Luc. 7.16 Arab. Respexit ita Vulg. Ruth 1.6 and then he rescued them with a mighty hand So in our case he visited us in all senses he remembred our calamity he looked on our misery considered our distress and came himself to see us and made such a visit as men and Angels admire at He came in our nature clothed with our infirmities and stayed with us and dwelt among us And all this to Redeem us not by doing miracles but by suffering death not only by conquering our inraged enemies but satisfying an offended God buying our lives with his dearest hearts blood And by taking our Punishment when himself was innocent he freed us both from the sin and the wrath due to it (k) Suscipiendo poenam sine culpâ culpam delevit poenam August that we might with freedome and hope serve our reconciled God Well may we call this a Mighty Salvation being accomplished with as much Power as it was undertaken with Love Behold how many helpless Creatures he delivers from cruel burdens mighty oppressors and dreadful expectations nay from the just vengeance of an angry terrible and Almighty God from endless and unsufferable flames as horrid as unavoidable This was indeed a horn of Salvation (l) Cornu robur Imperium vocat Hieron Hab. 3. Vide Dan. 7.24 cap. 8.21 1 Sam. 2.10 Chal. Par. pro Cornu habent Regnum Ecclus 49.5 that is a Royal Princely succour and rescue such as became the Son of so Victorious a King as David was nay such as became the Son of God when he undertook to restore the Kingdom of Divid which now literally Herod and the Romans had usurped but spiritually sin and guilt had overcome yet Jesus will retrieve it and set it up for ever not to deliver us from Temporal but Spiritual enemies not from Tribute but Damnation and shall not we rejoyce at his Coronation It is certain there is not a more illustrious mercy then this which was proclaimed so early to our first Father (m) Gen. 3.15 and repeated so often by all the Prophets (n) Act 3.24 Deut. 28.7 Jerem. 23.6 Isai 25.8 men of excellent holiness approved integrity and unquestionable truth These all as if they had but one mouth unanimously agreed in the publication hereof This is the mercy that was so fully confirmed by Covenants and Oaths (o) Gen. 12.16 Heb. 6. to Abraham and all the faithful This was believed and hoped for by the Jews and expected by the very Gentiles (p) Percrebuerat Oriente toto vetus constans opinio ut eo tempore Judae à profectus rerum poteretur Tacitus Annal. Vid. Numb 24.17 This is that good news which cheared Adam after his fall rejoyced Abraham in his peregrination revived Jacob on his dying bed (q) John 8.56 Gen. 49.18 and supported the Patriarchs in all their troubles although they only saw it at a distance and hoped and waited for the light while they themselves were in the dark But when Zachary beheld the morning star and saw the day begin to spring which had so long been wished and desired he is ravished with holy joy like the Northern people after a tedious night when they perceive the Sun approach And shall not they that lived by the bare hope of this and he that was so overjoyed at the first glimpse of it condemn us who are daily taught that he is come and hath confirmed Gods truth and answered all their expectations if we rejoyce not at least as much in the performance as they did in the promise Behold how God hath favoured us to let us behold the accomplishing of the desire of all Nations
advantage which occasions that joy wherefore we are most of all obliged to rejoyce with the blessed Virgin both as she was the Mother of our Redeemer according to the flesh and because we may be so according to the spirit the Lesson we now heard is out of the Old Testament and as there we find the Records and Examples of the Divine Mercy to the Pious and humble and of his Vengeance upon the Proud and arrogant so here we find a Form of Praise for those dispensations of Gods Providence and since all the deliverances of Gods people there related are founded on this mercy of our Redemption or flow from it or are directed to it this Hymn will teach us to turn the Old Testament into Gospel and with the holy Patriarchs (l) Gen. 49.18 Non expecto redemptionem Sampsonis quae est salus transitoria sed expecto redemptionem Messiae filii David Targ. ever to apply all to this great salvation of which all other mercies were but types Behold then the Mother of Jesus saying to you Oh praise the Lord with me (m) Psal 34.4 and let us magnifie his name together let us shew forth the greatness of his power and goodness for we cannot set out his Perfections with any advantage nor represent him greater then really he is as we often magnifie one another but then we magnifie the Lord when we declare what we apprehend him to be and let us advance his glory as high as is possible for there is no danger of exceeding our Praises will be short but they must be real wherefore before we can bear a part in this Anthem we must get our souls affected with a sense of his infinite Power and our minds exalted with the belief of his excellent mercy so our praise shall be no complement but our soul and spirit shall bear their part and our thanksgiving may be real as his favours are let his wonderful love present it self to your affections and bring out your wonder and joy your hopes and desires to behold the sweetness till these passions begin to be enamoured on it and moved by it and then they will carry a lovely notion and fair Idea of it to the mind and so effectually recommend it that the whole inward man shall be ravished with the beautiful prospect and every faculty of the soul and part of the affections shall unite into a devout celebration of the divine love and mercy Behold the holiest of Women observe where she fixes her eye and whether she directs her Praises she rejoyceth not in her own excellencies nor doth she magnifie her self but God her Saviour which may check our vanity who are so apt in a prosperous success and unexpected exaltation to sacrifice to our own deserts (n) Hoc ego feci non fortuna dict Timoth. ducis to crown our selves though we snatch it from the head of Heavens King but sure since he gives the blessing he deserves the honour (o) Tuum Domine est bonum tua itaque est gloria Qui enim de bono tuo gloriam sibi quaerit non tibi fur est latro similisque diabolo qui voluit furare gloriam tuam August Soliloqu c. 15. and he that paies it not is a double thief and steals the gift and the glory also for both are his She that was the Mother of Jesus after the flesh thinks it no disparagement to confess her Son to be her Saviour but rejoyceth that he was so let not us then think we are saved from temporal evils or can be from eternal death without him and let us esteem it a greater honour to us and a surer ground of our rejoycing that the most high God is become our Salvation then if we had our strength in our own hands § 2. There is nothing gives the dimensions of Gods love to us more truly then the sight and sense of our vileness when we behold our selves so low and despicable as indeed we are then the glories of the Divine Majesty in stooping to us and looking on us in our low estate will shine in their native lustre when we see how worthless we are and what favour we have obtained beyond our expectations as much as our deserts then our souls will magnifie the Lord in the apprehensions of his greatness and our spirits rejoyce in the admirable goodness of God our Saviour Thus the blessed Virgin was inspired with these Seraphical extasies of joy by looking on the mean Condition in which this infinite mercy surprised her she was not arrived to the honour of marriage and in the opinion of the daughters of Jerusalem who esteemed it a huge reproach and a great affliction (p) 1 Sam. 1.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX pro sterilitate ut Gen. 29.32 to be without Children her estate was disgraceful and her fortunes were really dishonourable for though she sprung from the blood Royal of Judah yet she was then a poor obscure maid unknown to the world but regarded by him that loves to lodge in the lowest hearts (q) Isai 57.15 of the poor and pious as well as in the highest heavens she was in her lowest estate the Lords hand-maid and devoutly served him day and night and her Piety sanctified her Poverty and drew the eye of God to regard her as he will the meanest of us if our obedience equal hers and especially if our minds be as low as our estate is for so was this excellent Virgins who by lowliness here means not her humility for it had argued Pride to have so high a conceit of her lowliness of mind as to believe it obliged Gods favour there it was her meanness and poverty (r) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abjectionem humilem conditionem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verò humilitatem significare asserit Erasmus which she so freely confesseth and heartily praiseth God for regarding No doubt her humility was eminent in her afflicted condition for when she was advanced to be the Mother of the Worlds Saviour she seeks no greater honour then to be stiled the hand-maid of the Lord ver 38. Oh Blessed Soul that was ever the same neither dejected in her affliction nor puffed up with her exaltation but serves God chearfully in the one and praises him heartily for the other She beholds an infinite and lasting honour prepared for her not alone among the daughters of one place or Generation (s) Gen. 30.13 Syr. pro gloriâ med for she was to be the Mother of a Universal and Everlasting blessing which all former ages had desired and all future times should rejoyce in and Both would proclaim her happy above all Women who should be the Instrument of this Mercy And yet she resigns all this glory to him that gave it her and declares whence she received it (t) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophilac in loc that not her name but his may have the glory and sure she deserves
freely to purchase Gods favour but though men be thus appeased yet he must have something he likes better and truly the Sacrifices most likely to be accepted of God who needs no outward things are a broken spirit which trembles at his Anger and hateth it self for its sins and is almost dashed to pieces betwixt fear and sorrow Whoever therefore brings such a broken and a contrite heart let him think it never so vile yet O God thou whose favour such alone desire wilt not despise nor reject but accept and embrace both it and those that bring it 2. If they shall further argue against themselves that they deny not Gods gracious nature but that they fear their iniquities have turned his love into hatred his mercy into fury and his kindness into indignation Behold in the next place a free discovery of what God is to sinners (k) Dan. 9.9 for the Jews were then in captivity but had so grievously offended that Daniel who much desired their restauration scarce knew how to plead for them till at last he finds an Argument in Gods gracious Nature viz. That mercies and forgiveness that is many nay infinite mercies and forgiveness for numberless sins were Gods peculiar possession a principal part of his Name (l) Exod. 34.6 the chiefest of his Attributes and inseparably annexed to his Essence and therefore the sins of his creatures cannot make any change in God Mercy in the creatures is by communication from him but he is the original and fountain which is never dry therefore Daniel confesseth they are sinners but denies that therefore it is impossible to hope for pardon for their evil doings could not rifle his treasures nor rob him of his Attributes nor alter his Nature That continues the same still and therefore there is mercy to be had He confesses them guilty of all sorts of sins that is sins of commission and that even to an absolute rebelling and forsaking of God and apostacy from him (m) LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ita Vulg. Vat. by Idolatry and then also Omission and neglect of walking in Gods law though they were taught and instructed in it therefore they deserved no mercy But God is the fountain of mercies still and therefore there is yet hope Other Translations generally read not though but because we have sinned which is but a further illustration of the same sense viz. We may see and be convinced that Mercy is Gods peculiar possession because we have done such vile things and yet he hath spared us that we might by our humiliation give him occasion to forgive us and this his pity in sparing shews his intention of restoring us and therefore should quicken us to address to him who hath it solely in his own power Daniel will not go to the King of Babylon not to the best nor greatest on the earth No Mercy is Gods and so we have the better hope to obtain it Dan. 9.9 Why should we because we have formerly sinned remain hopeless of ever being received since we know that To the Lord Jehovah who is peculiarly our God as inseparably annexed to his Essence and as his own proper possession belongs mercies infinite and forgivenesses more then our sins can need and since they are his we hope we shall have them though we are unworthy for though we have sinned by breaking his laws and rebelled against him by forsaking his Covenant neither have we done what he commanded us nor obeyed the voice of the Lord our God who charged us by his servants to walk in his laws and tread in that plain and pleasant path which he set before us though all this be true we are sorry for it but will not despair because God can yet restore us 3. To enforce both the former and encourage these humble souls whose desires are too big for their faith here is a lively example of one (n) Luke 15.18 19. whose condition was as miserable his faults as great and his reception as unlikely as theirs can be And yet he comes and speeds that you may take example hereby and do likewise The example is that of the prodigal son who had voluntarily forsaken his Fathers house and carried away his full portion which he wasted lavishly and consumed in all manner of riot and excess never thinking of nor regarding his father all the time of his madness till extreme want had restored him to the use of his Reason (o) ver 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad seipsum rediens and put him into his wits again and then he blames himself for lying still either in his sin which is lapsus animae the fall of the soul resolving to arise by repentance or else you may understand his lying along or sitting on the ground to be a posture of sorrow (p) Isa 3.26 But he sees he may sit disconsolate for ever and be no nearer to his fathers house wherefore he resolves to take courage and arise and not sit alwaies bemoaning himself with a vain and ineffective grief but repenting himself to return home His father had not called him nor had he any assurance he should be received only he knew if he sate still he must starve and if he were repulsed he could suffer no more He comes not to make any apology but to bring in accusation against himself he hoped indeed that his offence could not unty the bands of that dear Relation and therefore calls him Father but confesseth he had forfeited the title of Son and not onely broken the law of Nature but of heaven that is of the God of heaven (q) Coelum pro Deo ponitur quoniam est ejus habitaculum Elias Tisb Psal 73.9 who expresly requireth this Obedience He could have wished a return to his Fathers Table but that were Presumption to expect only he hopes he will not see him starve and if he be set with the meanest servants that will be prevented But the Father is readier to hear then the Son to desire and what his unworthiness made him ashamed to ask his Fathers Bounty made him willing to bestow and he that scarce hoped to be admitted a servant is once more owned as a dear son This he found and so shall they that follow his example Luke 15.18 19. Why do I sit still in my sin vainly bemoaning my folly while I am like to starve surely I will take courage and I will arise by repentance and with prayer and supplication make haste and go by faith to my Father who can relieve me and perhaps may have pity on me For to move his bowels toward me as soon as I see him I will fall down and will say unto him Father who didst beget me that am now so wretched I here confess that I have sinned by my ungodly courses against Heaven and the God that dwells there and before thee being so ungrateful for all thy love that I justly deserve to be disowned and
lest his Mercy become the support of iniq●ity his Holiness the entertainer of what he hates and his Goodness the encouragement to the breach of his Laws And if this seem difficult that you must forsake all evil and do the contrary good before you can be accepted you must consider the benefit of it is the saving your souls alive this will preserve you from a two-fold death the least of which is worse then bodily death a dying in sin and a dying for sin for while you go on to practise these sins you are really dead (d) Impii etiamsi videantur vivere miseriores tamen sunt omnibus mortuis carnem suam sicut tumulum circumferentes cui infaelicem infoderunt animam quae intra humum volvitur terrenae avaritiae cupiditatibus caeterisque vitiis includitur ut gratiae coelestis auram spirare non possunt Ambros de Cain Ab. Ephes 2.1 1 Tim. 5.6 though you have a name to live because you so long have no sense of any good nor motion toward it nor any union ●ith God whose departure from the soul of the sinner is as real a death to the soul as it is to the body to have the soul separated from it But by forsaking your sins God will be moved to return and revive you and so you shall not dye eternally whereas the wicked man that lives in his sins first God forsakes his soul and then his soul forsakes his body (e) Revel 3.1 and so begins his eternal misery (f) Cum anima à Deo deserta deseri● Corpus Aug. where his soul lives only to feel torments but never more to enjoy any good To prevent which you must turn out of that evil way that leads to both these deaths and your souls shall live in glory for though Gods justice oblige him to punish you for the old score yet our Lord Jesus hath by his death purchased a Covenant of Repentance for us wherein God ingageth to receive us and he promiseth to satisfie the former Debt if we repent and amend (g) Ezek. 18.27 Though I might easily revenge my self on the sinner for all his old transgressions yet through my Son Christ Jesus I do here promise when the wicked man who is walking in the wayes of death not onely confesseth his fault but also turneth away from those paths and being really grieved for what is past abstaineth from his wickedness and never more practiseth those sins that he hath formerly with so much delight committed if this wicked man amend his life and doth that which is lawful and allowed by my word so that his wayes be good and right in my eyes I will forgive the punishment and remove the power of his sins so that while impenitent sinners are dead in sin here and die eternally for it hereafter he shall save his soul alive and I will give him life everlasting A Meditation preparatory to Prayer for the instruction of such as are mistaken IS it possible I should be all this while deluded so grosly to imagine my eyes open and my way direct and to suppose I have hitherto dwelt in light when indeed my eyes are shut and my feet are wrong and my mind over-spread with the mist of Error and the Aegyptian Darkness of a stupid Ignorance Thy Word O Lord is a light to my feet not onely to shew me which is the right way but to let me know when I am in the wrong which I never suspected till I met with the faithful conduct of thy sacred Oracles How have I given up my soul to false g●ides who that I might not enquire after the right way would never acquaint me I was wandring from it had I followed them still I had stumbled on the threshold of hell while I expected to arrive at the gates of heaven Blessed be thy Name I now see I have been straying from thee the fountain of all true happiness and have been in vain seeking content where it is not to be found and this disappointment drives me to seek it where it is Had I not been a stranger to my own heart I had not been so far out of the right way But I have supposed my self clear only because I never considered wherein I was guilty and have flattered my self with the pleasing thoughts of my own innocence so that I have been as secure as if I really had been so I have relyed on my own vain imaginations being glad to spare my self the labour of a farther inquiry and most foolishly I have accounted this a Peace which was no other but want of a sense of my real danger I find my chief design hath been to seem good and persuade my self I was so that I might be more quiet in the ways of evil and might neither be accused by my own Conscience nor allarumed by thy dreadful threatnings since I supposed they did not belong to me But alas how miserable would the event of this self deceit have been for thou oh my God didst see and wouldst have condemned me for all my blasphemous and repining thoughts against thee my malicious envious disdainful and treacherous thoughts against my neighbour thou heardest all those false and slanderous vain and filthy words I uttered with my mouth those deceitful and unjust cruel and uncharitable works which I committed with my hands thou sawest yea all that formality and hypocrisie ambition and pride lust and covetousness that lay in the secret corners of my heart were apparent in thy sight and what did it avail me not to see them thy vengeance would have come as certainly and more terribly because it was not expected It is most strange I should never see this vast heap before but sure I have wilfully shut my eyes lest I should discern that I was loath to believe and unwilling to amend and thus my Iniquities continue still But now I see them by thy mercy and I believe I have offended thee as much by hypocrisie in concealing them as by my disobedience in committing them Therefore now I will ingenuously confess them because the graciousness of thy Nature and the truth of thy Promises and the satisfaction of the Lord Jesus are sufficient to procure a pardon for those who dare so far trust to thy Mercy as to become their own accusers and while I thus discover my sore to the Physician of souls though it be dishonourable and troublesome 't is the onely way to have it cured and cleansed had not Jesus dyed for me upon my confession thy Justice would have proceeded to punish but now by thy promise to him it will oblige thee to forgive me and deliver me Yet since my God hath so graciously convinced me of the evil and danger of those courses I have taken I will not rest in a bare confession I am in the wrong but by his grace will return from it and utterly forsake all these my follies His Mercy perhaps is great enough to
thee nor their danger to me and therefore I have not fully renounced them nor yet absolutely returned to thee and thy wayes and therefore thou hast not blessed my Confessions which have rather been looked on by me as an indulgence to go on since my former offences were so easily pardoned then an engagement to forsake my iniquities But now I know my vileness in making so slight addresses for so great a favour and my solly to cheat my self of so considerable a blessing and my sloth to slip so many fair opportunities by my deceitful behaviour before thee O Lord I have deceived my self and I am hugely ashamed that having offended so dear a Father I have been no more really concerned and having so gracious a God to turn to I am yet so far distant from thee by pretending to turn to thee If I want pardon or peace the blame must lye upon my own negligence for thou art apt to give and ready to forgive long before thou punishest sinners but soon entreated to receive Penitents and doest most joyfully lay aside thy resolutions of judgment when we perform our purposes of amendment Oh my soul will not this real goodness of thy God shame thy hypocrisie will it not pierce thy heart to see whom thou hast offended and thaw thy hopes to behold whom thou art turning to His holiness is mixed with long suffering his justice with mercy his decrees allayed with limitations and is it fit to approach him without love or fear hopes or desires gratitude or admiration or is the forgiveness so mean a favour that it deserves no more hearty applications sure enough my hypocrisie hath hindered my pardon wherefore I begin to detest it and hereafter I will look more to the dispositions of my heart then the posture of my body I will set him before me whose love I have abused and whose patience I have tyred who is so gracious to spare me and so willing to be reconciled to me a most ungrateful wretch that so when I come to him I may have my eyes filled with tears my cheeks with blushes and my heart with sorrow I will remember who I am that go that I may be humble what I go for that I may be earnest and who I go to that I may be full of faith and hope so shall my addresses not be in vain but all these gracious attributes shall be made good to me Amen Having thus applyed these Portions of holy writ to your own souls we must desire you will observe that to these Sentences of Gods Word is annexed by the Church a pertinent exhortation least any should not sufficiently undrestand these places or not carefully practice what they know to be required by them The Words of Scripture are first laid down to shew we impose not this Duty of Confession upon you but that God requires it and then the Minister proceeds to this pious inference from them that so what God commands may be rightly understood and particularly applyed and duly practised by all people and no man may plead ignorance or forgetfulness to excuse him from this necessary Duty to which we are directed in the following Words SECT II. Of the Exhortation after the Sentences The Analysis or Division of the Exhortation The parts of this Exhortation are three 1. A loving Compellation Dearly beloved brethren the Scripture c. 2. A Profitable instruction in which is shewed 1. That we must confess Affirmatively to acknowledge and confess our manifold sins and wickedness Negatively and that we should not dissemble nor cloak them The Reason Because we are before the face of Almighty God our heavenly Father 2. How we must confess 1. With a sense of sin but confess them with an humble lowly 2. A sorrow for it Penitent 3. Resolutions against it and obedient heart 3. Why we must confess For pardon to the end that we may obtain forgiveness of the same by his infinite goodness and mercy 4. When we must confess 1. in general alwayes Although we ought at all times humbly to acknowledge our sins before God Yet ought we most chiefly so to 2. In particular in publick where we meet Do when we assemble and meet together 1. To render thanks for the great benefits we have received at his hands 2 To set forth his most worthy praise 3. To hear his most holy Word 4. To ask those things which are requisite and necessary as well for the body as the * soul 3 An earnest supplication in which there is 1. The person exhorting * Wherfore I pray and beseech you 2. The parties exhorted as many as are here present 3. The thing requested to accompany me to the throne of the heavenly grace 4. The manner of doing this Internally with a pure heart Externally and humble voice saying after me A Practical Discourse on the Exhortation § 1. Dearly beloved Brethren The Minister begins with this affectionate and courteous salutation after the example of S. Paul S. Peter and S. John who frequently begin their Exhortations in their Epistles in this language the better to engage their attention for which cause it is used here not as an idle complement but a significant indication from whence this Admonition proceeds viz. from love For he that loveth the souls of his people and hears what God expects from them and sees the danger of their neglect cannot in pity suffer them to go on and perish without warning or instruction and the people may see he hath no ends of his own but is engaged by his love to become their Mo●itor as they are his deerly beloved Brethren Wherefore the Admonitions of Ministers should ever be accepted as the effects of their true affection to us though it proves too often otherwise for flatterers and dissemblers that will extenuate or connive at our faults are usually listed among our friends But those who discover our danger and reprove our vices and advise us to amend these we hate as Ahab did Micaiah for men are so foolish or unworthy as not to distinguish between the reproaches of an Enemy and the reproofs of a Friend because when we have done evil there is some disgrace in either but the management and design are directly contrary (a) Probra tam amicus quam inimicus objicit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Paedag l. 1. c. 9. and if any reproof proceed from kindness surely it must be this which comes from him that is your spiritual Father yet salutes you as Brethren and reckons himself under the same obligation and toucheth your offences with so much tenderness only his Master hath charged that he shall reprove you and not hate you in heart (b) Levit. 19.17 for the neglect of this duty would argue he hated you and cared not to see you perish § 2. The Scripture moveth us in sundry places We may easily foresee if the Minister did only by his own authority command us to repent his words would
(p) Psalm 119.59 set your sins before you to keep you humble (q) Psalm 51.3 but not to weaken your hands from doing Gods will (r) Lament 3.40 When your sorrow hath made you hate sin and long for peace with God it hath proceeded far enough and to continue this Corroding Plaister is to protract and hinder the Cure experience tells us that many good men suffer for want of this advice for fearing they should grieve too little they study to increase their sorrow by ever beholding the dark side of the Cloud which fills their hearts with benumming fears their heads with unworthy jealousies and all their duties with distrust and unbelief whereas if they would set themselves to work and oyling their wheels with love and hope leave their desires of Pardon to Jesus to sue out they might find more convincing proofs of the Divine Mercy in his assistance of their endeavours then ever they shall gain by fruitless sighs and tears sad wishes and empty speculations 2. The dissembling hypocrite who also looks not forward but not because he fears he cannot as the former but because he resolves he will not amend his life only finding his Conscience terrified and uneasie he would say or promise any thing to be quit of the present smart but this proceeds rather from a weariness of suffering for evil then a hatred against doing wickedly and such mens cries for mercy are only to stop the mouth of their accuser without any resolutions of becoming better if they procure their quiet nay perhaps they do it in hopes to sin hereafter with less opposition But the Miserable wretches deceive and tire themselves in an endless Circle of sinning and Repenting striving for a little false peace that they may do that which will renew their trouble and then they repent again as they call it though indeed they never repent because they never amend (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Strom. 2o. and in this are worse then the most blind and obdurate sinners because they see they have done amiss and yet will do it again Oh let such consider this hereafter and know till they both desire and endeavour a change in their Manners they cannot be forgiven § XIV Live a Godly righteous and a sober life The Jews call that place Mich. 6.8 the law in three words Justice Mercy and Humility and St. Paul hath given us both Law and Gospel in as few (t) Titus 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Epistle to Titus from whence this Petition is taken for the principal end of Christs coming of the preaching of the Gospel and of the Communications of Gods grace he there shews to be that we might live 1. Godlily in observance of all Duties of Piety to God 2. Righteously in discharging all offices of Justice and Charity to others 3. Soberly in performing what relates to our own bodies and souls and this is the whole Will of God And surely he that confesseth he hath offended in all and desires forgiveness of all must needs pray for the amendment of all that hath been amiss or his Repentance cannot be sincere The true Penitent takes not out such Duties as comply with his Interest and omits the rest nor craves allowance in those sins that agree with his constitution and design and forbears the rest but forsakes all iniquity as displeasing to God and as that which Jesus smarted for and which will deprive him of grace and glory Those therefore that would excuse their injustice and uncharitableness to others or their own voluptuousness by a strict Devotion have never truly repented nor those who wish there were no more required then outward justice that they might take liberty in other matters God allows none of these commutations nor the Church who orders us to pray for Religion and justice and sobriety all together some of them perhaps may please us better but they all alike and only together please God if we seek our own ease we may choose what we like best but if we truly love God we must embrace all for they all depend on one another and he that breaks or leaves one link loose weakens as well as shortens the whole chain But let us view the Particulars 1. A Godly life which may challenge the first place in regard the observations of piety are the foundation of justice and sobriety and the neglect opens the door to all manner of wickedness (u) Heu primae scelerum causae mortalibus aegri● Naturam nescire Dei Sil. Ital. Sublatâ pietate tollitur justitia Cicero how should he that is a rebel to his Prince be just to his fellow-subjects The first is the fear of God or the godly life and it is the giving God his due inwardly and outwardly 1. Inwardly in that complete precept of loving him before all above all and more then all things in giving him the chiefest place in our thoughts will understanding and desires so that we admire nothing more then his wisdome fear nothing more then his threatnings and design nothing more then his glory (x) Deut. 6.5 Matth. 22.37 toto corde ut omnes cogitationes totâ animâ ut omnem vitam totâ mente ut omnem intellectum in Deum conferas Aug. de dec Christ This is that loving God with our whole heart when we confide in his Truth hope in his Mercy rest on his Omnipotence and wait for his Bounty And if thy heart be thus disposed it will discover it in outward significations viz. endeavours to know him speaking honourably of him in a readiness to praise him pray to him and worship him in all opportunities publique and private This is the sum of the first Table of the Law wherein we are commanded to love and own honour and fear God exclusively to all others to worship him in purity to reverence his name and all that bears the impresses of it and to observe religiously those solemn times dedicated to his service which is called walking with God (y) Gen. 5.22 C. P. ambulavit in timore coram domino and worthy of him (z) 1 Thess 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and such a godly life is suitable to those confessions we make of his Wisdome Power and Mercy and doth express we are really grieved for walking in contrary Paths 2. A Righteous life which is more then a Negative can express and is by some falsly confined to the doing no evil to our neighbours (a) Justitia in eo sita est ut abstineatur alienis neque noceatur non nocenti ita Porphyr Quod tibi fieri non vis alterine feceris The Heathens said do not to others what you would not have done to you But Christ changes it into the positive (b) Matth. 7.12 ideo mihi placent Christiani quòd quae sibi fieri velint ipsi aliis faciunt Severus Imperat. and the Christians did that to others which they would
our selves into this estate but thou O Lord who seest our distress have mercy upon us and let thy bowels yearn upon so wretched a spectacle forgive that horrid guilt that doth amaze us for though we deserve no pitty yet thou knowest we are most miserable sinners like to be eternally condemned by thy Justice if thou dost not pardon us and certain to perish under thy vengeance whensoever thou beginnest to punish us but for thy pity and compassion sake spare thou them O God that knowing they have deserved thy wrath and fearing before it comes do of their own accord confess their faults in hopes to find mercy and a deliverance if it please thee from temporal judgments however from eternal Although O Lord our God when thou hast removed thy Judgments unless thou also take away that security and presumption impenitence and unbelief the sad remains of our sins we shall want thy favour still which is our only happiness therefore we further pray Restore thou that health and comfort that former joy and peace freedom and strength we had before we did offend For we now groan under that deadness which seized on us upon the withdrawings of thy holy spirit and do see and lament those sins which did occasion it we ●ow relent and are of the number of them that are penitent and resolve if thou wilt cleanse us from the dregs of these corruptions never to do the like again We confess we have no merit to deserve these things and so no ground in our selves to expect them but we hope thou wilt grant us all these requests for Pardon Pe●ce and Restauration because they are oh thou God of truth according to thy Promises which thou madest so freely out of thy everlasting love and resolvest so fully to perform that that thou hast openly declared and proclaimed these thy gracious intentions unto mankind on purpose that such poor sinners as we who are not excepted might not despair but come in upon thy general summons and lay hold on those comfortable promises which are made in Christ Iesus our Lord who Purchased this favour for us by his death and now lives to dispense his benefits to those he dyed for in whom thou art reconciled to us so that we not only hope for a Pardon but mindful of his intercession we beseech thee to give us thy holy Spirit and grant O most merciful Father unto us who deserve nothing on our own account to be so powerfully assisted by thy grace for his sake who is now pleading in heaven for us that we who have earnest desires and unfeigned purposes to amend though we cannot satisfie for the time past may hereafter give all diligence to fulfill the end of Christs coming and answer the design of thy forgiving us that we may live a godly and religious life in observance of all our duties to thee that we may love and fear thee honour and adore thee believe in thee and rely upon thee long for thee and delight in thee above all the world daily seeking to know thee praying for thy help praising thee for thy Mercies and waiting in hopes of the eternal injoyment of thee that by serving thee we may be inabled also to lead a Righteous life in all justice honesty and charity to our Neighbours hurting no man in thought word or deed but ready to relieve and help all to our power doing ever unto others what we would have done to our selves And lastly grant that by thy Divine aid we may live a Temperate Chast and a sober life Mortifying our lusts moderating our desires restraining our appetites so that we may avoid all carnal delights that would cloud our reason engross our thoughts pollute our bodies and souls or unfit us for thy service Which if thou shalt please to do for us thy mercy in forgiving our grievous sins thy pity in delivering us from apparent mine and thy grace in strengthening us to live a reformed life will not only be our advantage but turn to the glory of thy holy name which shall be praised by us and all the world for these incomparable testimonies of thy unspeakable Loving-kindness now and evermore And in token of our earnest desire of all these Petitions we unfeignedly sign them by heartily saying Amen Lord grant it may be so SECTION IV. Of the Absolution §. 1. Of Absolution in General SIN doth abridge the Soul of its free converse with God and by the terror of it binds the soul down with fear and by it the wicked are reserved in chains to the judgment of the great day wherefore it is compared to a bond (s) Acts 8.23 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the sinner is said to be holden in its cords (t) Prov. 5.22 but since Christ came to loose those bonds (u) Isai 66.1 they are now prisoners of hope (x) Zach. 9.12 because Jesus hath the keys of death and Hell and he can loose whom he please by forgiving that is absolving and unloosing those bonds But because he is now invisible and imployed in heaven to intercede for us before his departure he appointed his Apostles to supply his place giving them Commission (y) Math. 16.19 Chap. 18.18 John 20.22 23. by a visible and external application of this power to support the spirits of all true Penitents till himself should come to ratifie this Absolution upon which ground the Bishops and Priests of the whole Christian Church have ever used to absolve all that truly Repented and at this day it is retained in our Church and is a part of the daily office which being so useful and necessary and founded on holy Scripture needs not any arguments to defend it but that the ignorance and prejudice of some makes them take offence at it and principally because it hath been so much abused by the Papal Church so that it may perhaps help the Devotion of many if we discover the true meaning of Absolution and the mistakes of our adversaries on both sides as well those who make it nothing as those who urge it as instar omnium those who would rob us of it as those who would ensnare us by it 1. The true judgment of the Church of England concerning Absolution may best be gathered from the Liturgy in which are three forms of Absolving set down The first declaratory here which is a solemn promulgation of pardon by a Commissionated person repeated every day when the whole Congregation confess their sins wherein they are assured of forgiveness if they Repent and believe and this is fitted for a mixt Company of good and bad men where many hypocrites feign Repentance but this Absolution gives no encouragement to such Only it assures all that there is a Pardon and shews on what terms it may be had so that to those who truly do repent it is present remission to those that do not it is a Monitor that they may repent it comforts the Godly and
of the Christian Church prove Christ to be God (u) Ergo qui remittit Deus est quia nemo remittit nisi Deus Hilar. in Math. Can. 8. because he forgave sin which none but God can do (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in 1 Cor. 15. and his son Jesus who is also very God and purchased this Mercy of Absolution with his own blood (y) Ille solus peccata dimittit qui pro peccatis mortuus est Ambr. Veniam peccatis quae in ipsum commissa sunt solus potest ille largiri qui peccata nostra portavit Cypr. wherefore we give to God the things which are Gods and plainly declare he is the Author we the dispensers only of this favour and the Witnesses and Messengers to bring certain news thereof (z) En fili certificate remissa tibi esse peccata hujus me testem habebis Vade in Pace Fer. in Matth. 9. And this is more comfort to the Penitent the Supreme Judge he from whose Sentence is no Appeal Pardoneth thee fear not the state of Agag whom Saul had pardoned but God had not wherefore Samuel hewed him to pieces in the midst of his vain hopes that the bitterness of death was past He Pardoneth that hath no equal to examine or approve much less superiour to disanul his actings Our absolution is profitable when the Persons are meet to receive it (a) Tunc enim vera est absolutio Praesidentis cum aeterni arbitrium sequitur judicis Greg. hom 26. but the stamp of God will make it currant in Heaven it self The Priests Pardon is not compleat at present till it be ratified at the last day But he Pardoneth at this present while we are holding out this Absolution he that knows who among you are true believers and really Penitent is at this instant sealing your Pardon in Heaven which makes ours to be valid we then are but the Messengers and interpreters but it is our great Master that Absolveth because what we do is Pronounced in his name dispensed by his Authority offered on his Condition and confirmed by his Approbation § 9. All them that truly repent and unfeignedly believe his holy Gospel These two acts Repentance and Faith are by Christ (b) Mark 1.15 and his Apostles (c) Act. 20.21 made the Conditions of all the Gospel promises and without them no Absolution can be had those that have these no man can condemn but without these no man can acquit it was therefore a great arrogance in those Ecclesiasticks in St. Hieroms time who imagined they could save or destroy at pleasure (d) ut vel damnent innocentes vel solvere se noxios arbitrantur Hierom. Com in Matth. l. 3. Nec Angelus nec Archangelus potest nec Dominus ipse si peccaverimus in poenitentiam deferentibus non relaxat Ambros Epist 28. ad Theodos and it is as great a vanity in any to believe a Servant acting contrary to his Masters known Will because it will be insignificant wherefore if any by hypocrisie shall think to surprize an Absolution Or if he that dispenseth an act by prejudice or corruption you must know it is he must ratifie the Pardon who can see whether these qualifications are in him that receives it or no and though we hold out this Act of a Grace to all yet our Master pardons none but such as do repent truly and believe unfeignedly and how many soever do so if they have been the worst of sinners they shall every one be forgiven Let us then take care to come 1. With an h●mble lowly penitent and obedient heart sorrowing and being ashamed fearing exceedingly confessing humbly and resolving heartily against all sin let us beware that a hard heart and a customary confession and hypocritical pretences do not ruine our hopes and blast our desires for he only Pardoneth the real Penitent 2. Let us bring with us an unfeigned Faith in his Gospel trusting in the assurances of his Promises and persuading our selves of the necessity and excellence of his laws and confirming our souls in the expectations of his rewards and this Faith unfeigned (e) 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Tim. 1 5. will open the door of Mercy but for that bold challenge which some make to the promises and the benefits of the Gospel while they are void of hatred to sin or love to God it is only feigned to stifle the accusations of Conscience and ward off the threats of the Law and to give the man liberty to sin and God will never accept such to remission but discover these men had no other ground for their confidence but only because they had persuaded themselves of a falshood Remember you come to him that searcheth the heart for a Pardon and strive that your Repentance may be true and Faith cordial and sound as you hope for mercy from him and learn by this order first to repent of your former evil ways before you entertain too particular confidences of Gods love and your interest in Jesus but if you have truly repented the more firmly you believe the greater will be Gods glory and the sweeter your comfort and the speedier will your Absolution be confirmed Though your iniquities are heinous and innumerable if upon the sight you have had of them you do condemn your self with real purposes of amendment and notwithstanding your unworthiness if you can trust to the Merits of Jesus and believe all the gracious Promises of the Gospel shall be fulfilled to you I doubt not to assure this your Repentance and Faith shall pass the test of God himself and your desires shall be satisfied in his mercy § 10. Wherefore let us beseech him to grant us true Repentance and his holy Spirit The whole duty of a Minister consists in instruction and exhortation (f) Acts 2.40 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first to convince the understanding the second to engage the affections both which parts of his Office the Priest doth here exercise for hitherto he hath testified there is Remission to be obtained and now he exhorts to seek for it for in this Section we are directed how to obtain in the following we are encouraged by the Benefits to be had thereby now this present exhortation is a conclusion inferred from all the former parts of this Absolution which are in this word wherefore urged as so many motives to quicken our addresses viz. 1. Since God who is full of power and mercy would not the death of us sinners but desires we may live therefore we may cheerfully come to him for help who will be as well pleased with the opportunity of giving as we with the mercy of receiving 2. He hath Commissionated Ministers to be the Heralds of his willingness to forgive wherefore let us in answer to this gracious Proclamation go in and submit to him who though he be the offended Party first sent to us to be reconciled 3. He hath assured us he
then he would by fraud or flattery lying or cheating deceive his neighbour of what is justly his If any here object many rich men have goods laid up for many years and need not ask their daily bread I answer The Rich need Gods blessing to prosper and preserve what they have as the poor do to give them what they have not nor can their meat nourish them (l) Matth. 41.4 their garments warm them or their pallaces defend them without his blessing what one hath more then another is here confessed to be the gift of God and Christ teacheth the rich humility by shewing them whence their abundance came and by whom it is continued and least they should despise the poor they learn that if God withdraw his blessing they will soon become both alike wherefore he that hath as well as he that hath not must every day on his knees beg a piece of bread or a power to use it and a blessing upon it And thus we have begun to pray for our selves and Jesus teacheth us to begin at the lowest step and first to ask relief for our bodies assuring us that our Heavenly Father cannot hear his Children cry for bread and not supply them and when he hath done so we may from his kindness in lesser things be encouraged to ask for our Souls which he is more concerned for but it would seem presumption for us to ask the greatest first who do not deserve the least Genes 32.10 § 7. And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us The Particle and connects this to the former Petition and declares we are continuing those requests which concern our selves and we have need to look further then our earthly needs least if we obtain a supply for them from his bounty (m) Consequens erat ut observata Dei liberalitate clementiam ejus precaremur quid enim alimenta proderunt si illi reputamur reverà quasi taurus ad victimam Tertull. and do not procure a Pardon from his mercy our food should fat us for the slaughter If we rightly apprehend the danger of our souls all the enjoyments of this life can yield no more pleasure to us then the curious fare presented to that Persian Captive designed to be sacrificed when he remembred the knife and the Altar The fears of Gods eternal vengeance will imbitter all our abundance and therefore we add a prayer for forgiveness without which we cannot relish our daily bread nor do we think our food so necessary as the remission of our offences the want of that could but bring us to a temporal death but without this we shall loose everlasting life and dye in eternal misery and the necessity is also as universal for as no man can live without bread so no man can live comfortably here or happily hereafter without mercy for all men have sinned (n) Rom. 3.23 S●i●bat Dominus se solum sine delicto esse Tert. and those sins cannot be done away without mercy which every man that lives by bread must pray for even the best of men and as often as they pray for that even every day they must also ask Pardon of Almighty God because no day is wholly inoffensive and our Lord Jesus would here set our sinfulness daily before our eyes to make us constantly sensible that we are unworthy of the meat we eat and all outward blessings which we receive and to make us continually humble and penitent He knew before that even the best of men had sin and prescribes this petition as daily useful to all his Disciples and those who out of ignorance or pride think they have no sin do exclude themselves out of the number of his Schollers who have all learned to pray for Absolution But to be more particular let us observe how many Duties are exercised in these few words even all that becomes the address of a true Penitent Confession and self-accusation Contrition for and Aggravation of the s●ns deprecation of the punishment with acknowledgement of the justice thereof Faith in a Redeemer and hope in his Merits First we herein daily confess our sin our very asking pardon is an acknowledgment we are guilty and we appropriate them to our selves (o) Exomologesis est petitio veniae qui petit veniam delictum confitetur Tert. de Orat. for though Jesus did suffer the Punishment we acted the Crimes which we here being mindful of his bitter Passion do own with sorrow calling them Our Trespasses and in that word we signifie the vast number of our transgressions this plural indefinite word declares them very many which we have committed against God and our neighbour not against one but all his laws not once but many times And further we confess they are as heinous as numerous viz. trespasses and injuries done to God himself by us his poor Creatures (p) 1 Sam. 2.25 in his own person or in his subjects our neighbours of whose Rights he is the Protector and the avenger of their wrongs we have broke down the hedge of Gods laws and by our disobedience disowned his supremacy and denied that duty which we owed to him whereupon sins are called debts (q) Matth. 6.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same Luke 11.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confer Luke 13.2 cum ver 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost de poen 2. Debitum in Scripturis delicti figura est quod perinde judicio debeatur nec evadat justitiam exactionis nisi donetur exactio Tertul. ut supr because God being our supream Lord Creator and preserver we are bound to obey all his pleasure and to do his commands specially having voluntarily promised this in our Baptism wherefore if we pay not God this due and vowed obedience we are debtors to him and must discharge and satisfie by suffering the Penalty (r) Si non reddit faciendo justitiam reddit patiendo miseriam August unless we can find a surety to undertake for us Oh what can set out the heighnousness of sin more lively it is a wrong and injury done by us poor miserable wretches against the Laws and Authority and the Rights of that God who made us and whose Covenant-servants we are and to this we must add that we are liable to his just and severe threatnings and may be if God please summoned to his Bar endited for this Debt nay Condemned for it to eternal Torments for the satisfaction But only that his Mercy and Wisdome hath found a gracious Redeemer who hath taken these Trespasses upon himself and made a fuller satisfaction for them then we could have done by eternal sufferings And it must be supposed we believe the satisfaction of Christs death and by it hope for a Remission or else what encouragement have we to ask pardon and confess a debt when we are insolvent and that to a just and true God that must have satisfaction this were to ask impossibilities
scribam aut quid omnino non scribam hoc tempore nescio Tacit Annal. not knowing what to answer being full of inward confusion And sin hath this effect not only on evil men but as much if not more on the best whose ingenuity produceth a shame that will stop their mouths as much as the wicked mans terrors of which the famous Origen is an instance who having been compelled to sacrifice once (i) Epiphan Panar l. 2. Tom. 1. haeres 64. was long after struck dumb with reading the 16 verse of the 50th Psalm But unto the ungodly saith God what hast thou to do c. and broke off with tears not able to proceed further which least it should happen to us and a guilty conscience should spoil the musick of our Praises or seal up our lips in Prayer we here do beseech him by speaking peace to our souls to give us such hope of his forgiving mercy that whereas our fear shame and grief makes us stand mute as so many guilty persons before him we may have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a freedom of speech in his presence when by the comforts of his Spirit the terrors of offending slaves are changed into the liberty of reconciled sons which mercy if he grant you do all engage to use it to his glory and resolve it shall kindle the flames of gratitude and love in all your hearts and your mouths shall bear witness to it as you are praising him for other things you will think of this pardoning mercy and redouble your Eucharistical gratulations and no doubt this Petition shall be heard for you desire it not only for your own benefit but to fit you to set forth his praise We have cau●e when we go about to glorifie God to cry out we are of unclean lips (k) Isai 6.5 but if God send hopes of remission when the Seraphim toucheth our lips and taketh away our iniquity then we shall be fit for all holy duties and with that Prophet readily say Here I am Lord send me § 3. O God make speed to save us O Lord make haste to help us These words are frequently repeated in the Book of Psalms and are not much varied from that form of Exclamation (l) Psal 118.25 Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Obsecro Jehovah serva nunc Jun. Trem. which the Jews contracted into Hosanna which signifies Save now Lord we beseech thee but the old Latine Liturgies (m) Deus in adjutorium meum intende Psal 70.1 vid. Graec. V. D. D. Duport 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut LXX do assure us it is taken out of the 70th Psalm though it be found also Psal 40. ver 13. and there you may behold David surveying his sins more numerous then his hairs more weighty then his heart could bear terrified with which sad spectacle he breaks out into this passionate ejaculation and it may well befit our mouths who so lately have been Confessing our offences and it contains all that any penitent sinner about to put up his Petitions need sue for by way of Preparation viz. Deliverance and safety from evil and help in that which is good We suppose our selves like a besieged City our sins behind threaten us and our corruptions have blocked us up before and fear is on every side yet still the way to heaven is open and we send these Prayers upwards to the place where the King of Heaven resides for a speedy rescue to be granted to his distressed subjects (n) 1 Sam. 11.4 2 Chron. 20.12 when we look back and see our innumerable iniquities we cry out O God make speed c. when wee look forward to all those duties which we are to do and the great opposition we are sure to meet with we say Oh Lord make hast c. Our guilt will make speed to pursue us and Sathan to destroy us and evil thoughts to hinder our Devotions wherefore we must beg that our gracious God will also make hast to save and help us just now when we are in danger and need and it will double (o) Bis dat qui ci●ò dat Senec. the kindness we need not fear he will call these speedy cries impatience or presumption but prudent fear of our imminent danger and a right apprehension of our urgent necessities and for our comfort let us remember they that are the most liberal are the most speedy (p) Proprium est liben●èr facientis ci●● facere Sen. in doing good he that we make request to hath charged us (q) See Prov. 3.8 never to put off a necessitous person till the morrow if we have it in our power as he ever hath it in his to help us wherefore be assured he will save and help thee this day and by the speed of his help give thee cause in the next place to sing Glory be to the Fa●her c. § 4. Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen Although the words of this excellent Hymn are not in Scripture yet it is a Paraphrase on the Song of the Seraphims (r) Isai 6.3 Vnde hymnum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 originem duxisse fertur in Eccl. Graec. and is expresly grounded on Gods word (s) 1 John 5.7 not only as it is an act of Adoration to Almighty God but as it is a particular address to each person of the blessed Trinity who being equal in their Godhead are equally to be worshiped which if it were needful might be fully proved but it is sufficiently done already This truth indeed by the malice of the Devil and the envy of ambitious and wicked men hath met with more opposition then all other Christian Doctrines the Arrians Sabellians Eunomians Apollinarists Macedonians and almost all Hereticks denied either the Divinity of one or Equality of all the Persons but the Church got this advantage (t) Multa quippe ad fidem Catholicam pertinentia dum haereticorum callidâ inquietudine agitantur ut adversùs eos defendi possint considerantur diligentiùs intelliguntur clariùs instantiùs praedicantur Aug. de Civ Dei Lib. 16. cap. 2. by it that this fundamental article was more narrowly examined clearly explained and fully proved then otherwise it had been and among other good effects of these bad causes was the composure of this Eucharistical Hymn as some think or rather the enjoyning it in daily use which I rather believe for there are many footsteps of it before Arrius time or any of those Councels which condemned him and though before the danger of this heresie every one of the Fathers had a form of Doxology of his own yet with little variety of words they all expressed the same thing viz. to ascribe all honour and glory to the three Persons of the glorious Trinity Nay these very words are set down by Clemens of Alexandria
and be careful to express those practical inferences that are all along drawn from them in our lives and conversations heartily desiring we may live by these holy principles of truth and in these we must exercise especially Faith and Love concluding them with giving Glory to the Father who hath made us partakers of a right Faith in his Son by his Spirit and remembring that every Person of this Glorious Trinity joyns in these eminent works of Creation Providence Redemption and Sanctification let us heartily praise God the Father Son and Holy Ghost for all that is done or designed for the sons of men Let thy soul say Oh Lord I confess the truth of these things I believe them fully and I admire them highly and will ever love thee for declaring them I acknowledge thy Power in Creating thy Bounty in sustaining thy Wisdome in ordering and thy Mercy in relieving and preserving all the World I discern thy love in our Redemption I hope in thy might for a resurrection to life and I trust in thy Mercy for a share in thy glory Glory be to the Father c. for all this 2. The Psalms of Exhortation which are serious admonitions backed with powerful motives and convincing arguments and cleer examples by which we are stirred either to some Acts of moral Virtue (b) Psal 15. and 101. or to some Duties of positive Religion to fear God or study his Law or observe his Will (c) Psal 1. and 34. and 119. or else we are warned against sin by threatnings and examples (d) Psal 7. and 58. and 64. particularly against distrust in God by the History (e) Psal 78.105 106. of his Providence over his own people That we may profit by these it is requisite that we do weigh the promises and motives to holiness so seriously that we be convinced of our folly in neglecting these duties and resolved to set upon the sincere performance of them and it is necessary that we consider the evils that are appointed for and threatned to all sorts of sins and the sad instances and examples of sinners that have been made miserable thereby till we find our hearts moved with fear and penitence and till we have taken up purposes of speedy forsaking those dangerous courses so that here we are to exercise humility and Repentance fear of God and pious resolutions which being finished in the Doxology is a superadded act of Praise to the Father for sparing us to the Son for interceding for us and to the Holy Ghost for warning and convincing us and this Glory be to the Father c. doth declare you are thankful for the admonition and resolved to take warning and full of hopes of the Divine assistance to help you to forsake the evil and follow the good In these Psalms take the same resolutions which holy David did and encourage your selves with the same hopes love what he loves desire what he longed for believe and expect what he promiseth to himself hate what he hated take warning by what he observed and fear the same sad event if you go on in the same way with those sinners that are made examples to you evermore praising God for these gracious discoveries and saying Glory be c. 3. The Psalms of Supplication which are most ardent Petitions for all good things for your selves your Bretheren and the whole Church in all circumstances and upon all occasions These are private Prayers for Pardon of sin (f) Psal 25. and 51. and 143. for Restauration to Gods favour (g) Psal 4. and 42. and 63. for Patience in trouble (h) Psal 39. and 88. for deliverance from Spiritual or Temporal enemies (i) Psal 55. and 59 and 71. and 74. and also publique Prayers for the King (k) Psal 21. and 72. and for the Church and people of God (l) Psal 68. and 79. and 80. and such like Which that we may be fitly disposed for we must have a quick and feeling sense of our own and our bretherens wants a firm belief of Gods all-sufficiency a strong confidence in the intercession of Jesus Christ and a full persuasion of the acceptableness of these requests which are drawn up by the Holy Ghost And these devout prayers will give us occasion to shew our care of our own souls and our universal charity to all the world our love to Gods Church and our intire dependance on his Power and Mercy and may fitly be closed with a giving Glory to the Father who heareth us to the Son who pleads for us in Heaven and to the Holy Ghost who directs and assists us on Earth and we have cause to bless him who hath heard both our and others Prayers and will do so to the end of the world giving all persons in all ages past present and to come great-cause of Eucharist and thanksgiving for by this Gloria Patri added to our Prayers we declare our confidence and hope that he will grant us our desires who is and was and ever shall be the helper of all that flee to him for succour and we call to mind that many are now praising him in heaven for hearing these very Petitions we now put up Art thou poor or miserable sick or weak despised or slandered persecuted or oppressed here thou mayest breath out thy complaints to him that can help thee or those that are so Art thou under trouble of conscience or fear of Gods anger worsted by temptation or sluggish in holy duties or any waies spiritually indisposed here are most proper and pertinent forms for thy comfort and redress Art thou a well-wisher to all the world a lover of Gods people a friend to the Peace of Kingdoms and a faithful Subject to thy own Prince hast thou any detestation for sinners or desire of their Conversion any pitty for the calamitous and wishes for their deliverance if thou bring a charitable heart thou mayest pray for all or any of these in such prevailing words that ere thou hast done speaking thou mayest have such assurances of a gracious return as to sing Glory be to the Father c. 4. The Psalms of thanksgiving are those joyful songs of Praise and Eucharist and lovely descriptions of the Divine goodness to the World but especially to us and all his own people Such are those wherein God is praised for all his mercies (m) Psal 103. and 136. and 145. for those bestowed on our bodies (n) Psal 116. and 130. health plenty (o) Psal 65. and 104. victories over our enemies (p) Psal 18. and 144. and 149. as also for what he hath done for our souls (q) Psal 66. and 111. and 118. and in these Psalms are most earnest exhortations to joyn in praising his holy Name and most exact Characters of all Gods gracious dealings with us and all mankind wherefore that we may joyn in heart and voice let us bring with us hearts fully sensible of our
baseness and unworthiness mightily convinced that God hath often done good to us and others and deeply affected with the freeness frequency and fulness of his mercies and favours for here we are to exercise love and gratitude and to imitate the Quire of heaven who survey the whole world and pay the tribute of glory to him whose mercy and goodness they see and admire in every thing and so may we and then our souls shall readily comply with Davids courteous invitations to bless the Lord. Oh my God I behold what thou dost for all mankind and I feel what I have received I confess my unworthiness and admire thy goodness in all things And then the Glory be to the Father c. is a recapitulation of all those foregoing causes of glorifying every Person in the glorious Trinity or all of them and must be an acknowledgment that all mercies are dispensed to us by the Father for the Sons sake through the Ministry of the Holy Spirit and upon this account all honour and glory is and was and ever shall be due to Father Son and Holy Ghost O my ingrateful heart which sees so much cause of praising God every day for his works and his goodness to others and for what we have experience of and yet hath not learned fully to love God and constantly to praise him Come to the sweet singer of Israel he will excite thee by his example in every thing to give thanks learn of him to rejoyce with them that rejoyce learn of him to love and sing Glory be c. and thou shalt sing new songs in the New Jerusalem for ever By such means as these we ought to tune our hearts for this heavenly musick if we would have it please God and profit us and if by the help of Gods good spirit we have in some measure well performed this our next care must be that we loose not those good affections 3. Therefore endeavour to nourish these holy flames on the altar of thy heart by a holy life such as the inspired Penmen of these Psalms lead themselves (r) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athanas and such as they exhort others to and so shalt thou be every day fit to joyn in this office and be alwaies prepared to accompany the Church with suitable affections to all the several parts of Psalmody Remember these Anthems are designed not only to raise Devotion in publique but to assist holiness in private (s) Verba vivenda non legenda and by letting thee feel the comfort of that in Gods house which may strengthen thee to do his will afterwards and to set us all upon our guard against sin and Sathan who design to discompose our minds by presenting sensual pleasures and carnal allurements but you that have tasted sweeter and nobler delights will certainly despise those vain and empty pretenders to satisfaction and wish no other joy then to praise God among his servants on Earth here and among his Saints in Heaven hereafter And if this be your desire the constant use of these Psalms will make them so familiar that you will never want holy Meditations ejaculations answers to Sathans temptations and Mementoes of a holy life which is the only way that leads to the happiness you desire SECTION VIII Of the Lessons § 1. BEfore we begin to read or hear the holy Scripture it will be useful that we consider first their own excellency to engage our love to them Secondly The Providence of God in the Composing and Preserving them to excite our Reverence Thirdly The Care of the Church in fitting them to our use to encourage our diligence First The Scripture must needs be excellent because it is the Revelation of the whole Will of God so far as is necessary for our Salvation And we believe as God hath taught us and with the Primitive Church (t) 2 Tim. 3.15 In q●ibus inven●untur illa omnia quae continent f d●m moresque vivendi Aug. doc Chris l. 2. c. 17. Sacrae divinitùs inspira●ae Scripturae per se abunde sufficiunt ●d veritatis indicationem Athan. in Idol Antiquam fidei Regulam Euseb hist lib. 5. that it is the compleat Repository of all Divine truths that concern faith or manners and therefore we own it to be the Rule of our lives and the foundation of our Faith and in all our considerable (u) Sancta Synodus Christum assess●rem capitis loco adjunxit Vene●ondum enim Evangelium in● Sancto throno collocavit Cy●ill See Dr. Cosens History of the Canon controversies we place it in the Throne as the Councels of Ephesus and Aquileia did for the moderator and determiner of such doubts and differences This is the guide of our Consciences the ground of our hopes the evidence of our inheritance and the Law by which we shall be judged at the last day (x) John 5.45 Revel 20.12 Wherefore it is the duty (y) John 5.39 and interest (z) 2 Tim. 3.15 of every Christian to be conversant in them according to the command of Jesus and the example of all Gods servants who studied them more then any other writings So that Sr. Basil and his friend used no other Book but wholly meditated in this for thirteen years And if it were possible we should exercise our selves in it day and night (a) Josh 1.8 Deut. 17.19 R. Ismael à sororis filio rogatus quodnam tempus Graecorum lectioni impenderet Resp Nullum nisi potest inveni itempus quod nec ad diem neque ad noctem pertinebat è Talin Masius in Jos 1. that is alwaies But however we must spend so much time upon them that we may be alwaies furnished with precepts to direct promises to encourage and examples to quicken us to do all good and also with Prohibitions to restrain threatnings to affright and presidents to warn us from all evil waies whatsoever And being so constantly useful and so able to shew us all that is necessary to be known believed or to be done we should love them and delight to hear them and know them because ignorance of these Sacred Oracles will lay us open to errors in Judgments (b) Mark 12.24 and wickedness in Practice (†) Psal 119.3 and finally prove the ruine of our Souls § 2. Secondly we must remember it is no ordinary regard which we must give to these holy Pages because God is the Author and his Spirit the enditer of them and in his infinite wisdome and love he hath committed his Will to writing that it might not be corrupted or impaired by the prejudices the malice or forgetfulness of men as all Traditions generally are For the matter of it he could have filled it with amazing Mysteries but consulting our good rather then his own greatness he condescends to our capacities (c) Lex loqui ut nobiscum linguâ ●lio●um hominum Lumen supernum nunquam descendit sine indumento Proverb
high did thus descend to Earth it was to be hoped men would shake off their sloth and since he sent them so fair a notice that they would not be surprised in their carelesness but appear in an Equipage suiting the greatness of his Majesty the dearness of his love and the excellency of his design (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo de Cher. that was to come And this made the good man rejoyce hoping when they saw their danger and were shewed their Redeemer they would fly into his arms for remission and grace and if they did so he is glad for their advantage However he praises God for his mercy since he hath done his part And we have still the same cause of rejoycing for that which was then done by an Agent extraordinary is now performed by the Ministers and Ambassadors of Chri●t and by the Gospel you have now heard which being ever resident among us prepare a lodging for Jesus in your hearts when he comes in the Spirit to offer his grace to you Thus he is set before you not to be gazed at but to be entertained And if you upon the warning prepare for him by Repentance you shall also have Remission and then you may with Zachary bless God for the knowledge of Salvation that the Gospel gives unto you And that the exhortations of Ministers and summons of Gods word may not be as ineffectual to us as those of this great Prophet were to the Jews consider the first cause of all this Mercy both of Gods sending his son to us and giving us so many warnings to receive him It was the bowels of Gods tender mercies (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vulg. Viscera Misericordiae viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affectus Matris erga foetum è Visceribus suis prodeuntem Jerem. 31.20 which yearned to behold us in the hands and under the sword of the merciless executioner and moved him to send his son to rescue us by suffering the stroke for us It was not our merits but our misery not our deserts but distress that prevailed with him we were worthy to dye yet his heart relented and he could not see us bleed and shall we be unmoved to behold him bleed for us and will we dye for all this we were indeed in darkness and could not see our danger and if we had fallen into the pit then it had been our calamity but now the morning appears John teaches Ministers Preach and Christ himself the Sun of Righteousness (c) Malach. 4.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut LXX Jerem. 23.5 Zachar. 3.9 malè Bez. germen conser ver 79. Jesai 9.2 Camer Grotius Christus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicitur à Patribus Judaei horoscopum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocare solent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 1.2 Syr. vert 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scaliger began to spring from the East then and now if we perish 't is our willfulness and deserves no pitty Oh what hath God done to shew us the right way sending first the morning Star the Harbinger of the Suns approach (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo. and when the Heathens were benighted in Idolatry the Jews with evil principles worse practises and sad afflictions then did our Sun display his Beams from on high for he rose not from the Earth but his rising was his fall his course a descent from Heaven to us and if Zachary is so rejoyced with the glimpses we should much more with the Meridian glory he now shines in Let us not only rejoyce in his light for a season but walk by it and if we be in darkness it will shew us our Condition and then guide us into the right way this light will first Convert us and then conduct us The Apostle thought it was high time to awake then (e) Rom. 13.11 12. and sure it is more so now for if in the light of knowledge in the day we do the works of darkness that very light which we refuse to direct us as a guide shall discover us to our shame But take warning and let not this light be set up in vain who would not most thankfully follow a friendly light offered to him in an unknown dark and dangerous way The Devil will lead you up and down after the Ignis fatuus of Enthusiasm and your own imagination till you sink into destruction but this Gospel is a true light be thankful for it for its precepts are t●e Beams of the Sun of Righteousness and do not only admire but follow it and it will not only shew you where you are but carry you where you should be even to everlasting joy and peace Amen The Paraphrase of the Benedictus PRaised and Blessed be the Lord of hosts the God of Israel even of all true believers for he hath shewed us in holy Gospel how he remembred our misery beheld our distress and in pitty sent his son from heaven who hath visited in his Incarnation and redeemed by his death us and all his people throughout the world He hath relieved us when we had no means of help and hath raised up the greatest deliverer that ever was to be a mighty Salvation for us even his Eternal and only Son made man descending as was promised of the tribe of Judah to succeed in the house and restore the Kingdome of his servant David and make it an everlasting Dominion Hereby our God hath not only helped us but manifested his own truth for now he hath make good his Word and done as he spake by his Spirit in the mouth of all his messengers the holy Prophets which have been sent to give notice of this great mercy at sundry times since the world began It rejoyceth our souls to see the fulfilling of that which they so often comforted Gods people with by assuring them that we and they should be delivered by an invincible Redeemer from our enemies Sin and Sathan and nobly rescued from the hands and out of the Power of those that had enslaved us and of all that hate us and seek our ruine This is the blessed time in which the God of truth was pleased to perform the glorious work of our Redemption which was the mercy so much desired by and so graciously promised to our forefathers now he hath vouchsafed to call to mind and to remember the engagements he made to them in his holy Covenant and made them good before our eyes Our gracious Lord is as sure to perform his word as he was ready to promise and we now rejoyce in the verification of the Oath which he unchangeably sware to our forefather Abraham to assure him that he would give us who are his seed by faith his own dear Son for our Redeemer And now what doth the Lord our God require in return for all his mercy and truth but that we being delivered by the death of Jesus from the wrath of God and rescued out of
the hand of our enemies should never by sin put our selves in their power again but being obliged by our Pardon and assisted by his grace henceforth might serve him with a lively faith and chearful hope without fear of being hurt by Sathan or rejected by God So long as we walk in holiness towards him and righteousness toward our Neighbours and if our Religion and Charity be sincere as done before him and constant so as we continue in it all the days of our life we answer all his expectations and need not doubt of acceptance and reward Lord thou camest to make us holy as well as happy and therefore thou hast sent this Harbinger to acquaint us with thy design And thou Child art chosen to give the world warning and shalt be called the Prophet of the highest God thy office shall be to fit men to receive this mighty Saviour for thou shalt go as a Herald before the face of the Lord by severe reproofs and powerful exhortations to prepare his ways by bringing men to repentance Thou art sent to shew the danger of sin and to give knowledge of him that will bring Salvation to his People that they repenting and fearing the wrath to come may forsake all iniquity and fly to Jesus for the Remission of their sins It is high time for us who are guilty of so many sins to take care least by impenitence and unpreparedness we loose the benefit of this salvation which is provided for us through the tender bowels of the mercy of our God whereby he pittied our desperate danger and after our dismal right hath given us the light of the day-spring even his only Son who from on high leaving his Heavenly Throne hath visited us And now hath set up his Gospel among us to give light and discover the dangerous event of sin to them that sit in darkness through ignorance or by horrid guilt are in the valley and shadow of death that so they may be instructed converted and live And to guide our feet when we are thus brought out of our evil and dangerous paths that we may enter into the way that leads to the everlasting Kingdom of Peace we will observe this light and follow this guide and ever praise thee for it saying Glory be to the Father c. The second Hymn after the second Lesson at Morning Prayer Or the 100 Psalm § 9. THE Church hath provided not only for our necessities but our delight giving us the choice of another Hymn which is a Psalm of Praise as the Title tells us and was Composed to be sung by course in the Temple-service (f) Dr. Hammond Paraph. and Annot. on Psal 100. at the time of the Oblation of the Peace-Offering and yet it is not so appropriate to the Jewish service but it may well fit the Christian worship being a double exhortation to publick Praise which is most due to God for the publication of his Gospel and besides it is addressed to all Nations and so is a fit return for so universal a Mercy as the Redemption is There is no difficulty in the Method or Phrase and therefore we shall only note That the first Exhortation in the three first Verses is both to direct and quicken us in the duty of Divine Praise directing us in the two first Verses concerning the Persons by whom the manner how and place where we must perform it and the third Verse contains the Motives which are taken first from the Nature of God secondly from his Works both in Creating us and taking special care of us as of the sheep of his Pasture Wherefore the fourth Verse renews and inforceth the Duty even to come into Gods house with hearts full of gratitude and joy lauds and benedictions and the fifth Verse gives new reasons of it and more spiritual motives to it first because of his Essential goodness secondly his Endless Mercy thirdly his infallible truth All which are manifested so clearly in his holy Gospel that the world never had such a Testimony of them before and therefore this Hymn directly looks upon us who have heard this good news and obligeth us to bless God for that infinite Grace and Mercy and Truth which he shewed in giving his Son to us for which we must ever ascribe Glory to the Father c. SECTION X. Of the Hymns for the Evening Prayer and first of the Magnificat The Analysis of the Magnificat This Hymn hath two Parts 1. A general Thanksgiving containing 1. The Acts of Praise Magnifie and Rejoyce 2. The Instruments Soul and Spirit 3. The Object of it The Lord God c. 2. The special reasons for it 1. Upon her own account considering 1. Her present Meanness 2. Her future Honour 3. The Author of her happiness He that is Mighty He that is Holy 2. Upon the account of others 1. For the general disposals of his Providence Giving to the Pious Mercy Humble Exaltation Poor Supplies Procuring to the Proud Shame Mighty Humillation Rich Want 2. For the particular grace of the Redemption in which God shewed His Mercy In remembring of us His Power In sending help to us His Truth In keeping his word with us A Practical Discourse on the Magnificat § 1. THE Blessed Virgin whom God chose to be the Instrument of the greatest blessing that ever the World had by the fruit of her lips as well as of her Womb hath given apparent testimony of the extraordinary presence of the Divine Spirit with her and in her For this sacred Hymn breaths forth such lovely mixtures of faith and fear humility and love charity and devotion that it appears she was full of grace as well as highly favoured And it should be our wish and endeavour to repeat it with the same affections and holy fervours with which she indited it Perhaps we think we have not the same occasion 'T is true God the Word took flesh in her Womb and that is her peculiar Priviledge But if we receive the word of God and the motions of the holy Spirit that attend it we may turn that word into (g) Verbum Carnem facere est Verbum in Opus Scripturas in operas convertere Bish Andr. Ser. 6. flesh by Faith and Obedience if we so hear as to practice (h) Sit in singulis Mariae anima Nam etsi secundum carnem una Mater est Christi secundum fidem tamen omnium fructus est Ambros in Luc. we do conceive Christ by Faith and he is formed in us (i) Omnis enim anima concipit Dei verbum si tamen immaculata immunis à vitiis intemerato castim●niam pudor● custodiat Idem by the overshadowing power of the Holy Ghost and a pu●e heart and he is by holiness brought forth for Christ himself calls such (k) Matth. 12.50 by the name of his Mother We are to rejoyce with all that do rejoyce but especially when we are sharers in the mercy and
(g) Filius abdicatus in gratiam rediens Graecis dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pater 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scult exer and received into grace again and thus the Promise made to Abraham is made good and the Lord becomes the God of his seed for ever Oh my soul acknowledge the gracious dealings of thy most merciful Father but above all praise him for the mercies of the Gospel for what comfort were it to be raised by the fall of our temporal enemies to a fading honour if a miserable Eternity did succeed but now by Faith in Jesus thou art not only secured in thy low estate but mayest behold an immoveable Throne an immortal Crown prepared for thee high as Heaven while all the proud workers of iniquity shall fall low as hell never to rise again Glory be to the Father c. The Paraphrase of the Magnificat O Praise the Lord with me all ye that behold his inexpressible goodness which hath exalted my affections and filled My soul with such glorious apprehensions that with all its powers it doth magnifie and set forth the admirable greatness of the Lord my mind also and my spirit ravished with the contemplation of his infinite goodness doth rejoyce with joy unspeakable in God who hath vouchsafed to become my Saviour I cannot sufficiently express his Mercy nor my gratitude For he that is the Majesty of Heaven by his marvelous condescension hath regarded and cast a gracious eye on the poverty and the lowliness of my condition who am so inconsiderable and never aimed higher then to be reputed amongst the meanest of his servants and called by the name of his handmaiden I am most despicable in the worlds eyes and vile in my own yet he hath conferred on me a high and lasting honour for behold he hath passed by the more noble and chosen me to be the Mother of the worlds Saviour so that from henceforth whenever this mercy is mentioned to the honour of God his favour toward me will be remembred by the people of all generations who shall bless God for it and shall call me blessed and account me happy above all women But I will freely ackno●ledge it was not my own merit nor strength that hath advan●ed me For he that is mighty in Power and infinite in Mercy most freely hath exalted me and hath magnified me his poor unworthy hand-maid his therefore is the glory his the praise and holy and reverend is his Name which I and all his servants will ever love and honour For I am not the only instance of his goodness nor do I confine my Praises to my particular occasion all the world sees and knows that his favour And his mercy is ever shewed on them that fear him so that holy and pious men are blessed by him and shall be throughout all generations while the world endureth Ye servants of the Lord consider how in all the course of his Providence especially in this great Redemption He hath shewed strength and a mighty Power for with his arm he hath secured and lifted up his own and by it he hath scattered the forces and baffled the designs of the proud who thought they only deserved to be respected by God and were so high and safe in the imaginations of their hearts At all times he disappoints such expectations and now as at other seasons he hath put down the wise the honourable and the mighty from their seats and thrones on which their pride had mounted them And hath exalted to that honour the humble and meek even those whom the arrogant most despised He hath filled most plenteously the souls of the hungry that earnestly desired the least favours and satisfied their longings with good things beyond their expectations and the rich whose pride made them think themselves fittest objects of his bounty and yet their abundance abated their desires after it these he hath disappointed and sent empty away And as in all other cases so now He remembring the constant method of his mercy and seeing his peoples distress hath holpen and again restored his servant Israel and all faithful people to favour and the hopes of glory as he promised to the Saints of former ages and particularly to our forefathers to Abraham that he would give a Saviour to Redeem and bring deliverance to us and to his seed for ever The second Hymn after the first Lesson viz. the XCVIII Psalm § 4. SOmetimes instead of the Blessed Virgins Song we use this Psalm to express the same thing even the might of Gods arm and the affections of his heart both shewed to his people Israel his true Church and this is one of Davids triumphant Hymns composed upon some miraculous victory over the enemies of the truth and being intituled a new Song may be applied in the Mistery to the glorious Conquest made over Sin and Sathan by the mighty arm of Jesus or in the letter to those deliverances of the faithful mentioned in the Lessons and a new heart will make it every day a new song by a renewed sense of the Divine goodness for here the people of God incourage one another to praise him for his works which are so admirably contrived ver 1. so mightily performed ver 2. so clearly manifested ver 3. to his own people and all the world ver 4. Wherefore the exhortation is renewed and inlarged and all the world is invited to joyn in this Hymn ver 5. and shewed how to praise him with heart and voice and all sorts of Musick ver 6. and 7. no part of the Earth must be silent but the Inhabitants of Seas (h) Arab. populi fluviorum c. populi montium Clament c. Aspice venturo laetentur ut omnio seclo and flouds hills and valleys must rejoyce not only for past mercies but for the Kingdome of Christ which every temporal deliverance minds us of when he shall come to free his servants from sin and misery and exercise such justice in the trial of all the World that his Saints shall sing a new song of Victory to him for ever in Heaven and we on Earth in hopes of it do at present rejoyce and say Glory be to c. The Analysis of the Nunc Dimittis Luke 2.29 Herein Simeon sheweth 1. The greatness of his joy which appeareth 1. In offering his very life 2. In his readiness to meet death so Willingly Peaceably 2. The reason of it which was 1. His particular happiness 1. In the fulfilling the Promise 2. In the beholding his Saviour 2. The Universal good because 1. Christ was visible to all 2. Beneficial to all bringing light glory to the Gentiles Jews A Practical Discourse on the Nunc Dimittis The first Hymn after the second Lesson § 5. THE Author of this short and comprehensive Hymn was a man eminent for his exact Justice vigorous Devotion lively Faith and extraordinary inspiration and of this the holy Text assures us and it is
Deo propitiante intromittatur Concil Vasens can 5. that it should be said in the Morning and Evening Prayer and in the Communion Off●ce with great Contrition and Devotion By which it appears that though these words were so sacred that the Heathens used them in their Prayers (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arrian in Epict. l. 2. c. 7. yet they learned them either from David or the Christian Church where the use hereof was so familiar that we read that Antioch was delivered from an Earth-quake by the Peoples going barefoot in procession and saying this short Litany Lord have mercy on us (d) Paul Diacon lib. 16. No doubt if with humility and fervency we repeat it Our souls may be delivered from sin and our following supplications might be more acceptable for it signifies Lord be gracious (e) Deus sis propitius Ita Vers Jun. Trem. unto us or shew compassion and favour toward us in receiving and answering the Prayers we are about to make especially the Lords Prayer wherein we must not presume to call God Father until we have intreated for grace and mercy But concerning the repetition of the LORDS PRAYER in this place our designed brevity allows us only here to say that being the best of all Prayers it cannot be used too often and having the best of all Authors for its Composer even him for whose sake all our requests are heard it may seem to consecrate the Petitions annexed to it since they are formed by this Pattern and contain nothing but what is agreeable to this form which hath upon it the Royal stamp of Divine Authority Nor should the frequency of its returns abate our devotion in the use since Jesus did thrice pray in the same words Only as before it was applied for the Confirmation of our Pardon so now it must respect the following Petitions to which we may so heartily unite it that they may be more acceptable for its sake and we may make amends for any Petition thereof which was not so zealously put up by reason of intervening distractions when it was said before by asking that with a doubled earnestness now which then we forgot or slig●tly passed over § 4. Psal 85.7 O Lord shew thy mercy upon us Answ And grant us thy salvation From the recital of that sacred Form of Prayer which Jesus left us we pass to the interlocutory Petitions by this grateful variety taking off the tediousness and adding to the pleasure of the duty as also quickening the attention and uniting the hearts of the performers And herein the Minister begins as the commissionated Embassador of Heaven yet the people follow and bear a part as a badge of their honour and an engagement to their watchfulness charity and devotion while both contribute heat to each others affections and vigour to these short and sweet ejaculations taken for the most part out of the great storehouse of Divine Offices the Psalms of David and being an Epitome of the ensuing Collects for Grace and Peace for Kings Priests and People that they may be replenished with all sorts of blessings The words of which sentences are so significant and comprehensive that it will be hard to make a better Collection and yet so plain and obvious that we discourse of them rather for the help of Devotion then any necessity of explication This first Versicle is a general Petition for Mercy and Salvation and seems to be the sum of all the weekly Collects for one or both of these are commonly the subject of them we prayed for Mercy in the Lord have mercy c. and now we beg some visible token thereof viz. some such wonderful deliverance (f) Psal 36.17 Psal 64. penult that all the world may see and say it is his salvation We need mercy to pardon pitty and help us in the way and we desire salvation at the end even that eternal salvation which is his by inheritance possession and purchase and can only be ours in his right and by his mercy so that it is fit we call it his salvation and first crave mercy (g) Quia non aliunde inducitur Deus ut salvator nisi quia misericors est Calv. in loc before we presume to ask it because we cannot otherwaies merit or obtain it but by his mercy § 5. Psal 20. ult O Lord save the King● Answ And mercifully hear us when we call upon thee This twentieth Psalm whence this is taken may be intituled a Prayer for the King for after many Petitions for his prosperity it concludes with this summary ejaculation even in these very words (h) Psal 20. ult LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ita Vulg. Lat. Vatabl. vide Hammond Annot. Psal 20. d as the Greek Interpreters and their followers do on good grounds read them And for the Phrase it self it is the same with that so usual acclamation God save the King (i) 1 Sam. 10.24 Chal. Par. Sit faelix Rex 1 Kings 1.25.39 2 Kings 11.12 alibi Vivat Rex vel Vivat in aeternum wherein we do in one wo●d wish the King prosperity and peace long life and health victory and everlasting felicity And this we do not as many Parasites only at the Coronation when every one adores the rising Sun but we repeat it most loyally and devoutly every day earnestly desiring his welfare and safety and because in his peace we shall have peace we humbly beg this request may alwaies find acceptance and that we may be heard and our dear and dread Soveraign blessed every day withall pre-ingaging as it were the Almighty against a time of more especial need viz. that when by reason of wars or tumults we come in the behalf of our Prince to beg a particular blessing for Him and his Armies that we may then prevail so that the Praying as well as fighting legiors may be esteemed the defence and guard of his Person and his Rights § 6. Psal 132.9 Endue thy Ministers with right ousness Answ And make thy chosen people joyful This Prayer for the holy Tribe indited by David seems to have been a part of the Jewish Liturgy for it was solemnly used by Solomon at the d●dication of the Temple Let thy Priests be clothed (k) 2 Chron. 6.46 Exod. 28.2 36. saith he with Righteousness alluding no doubt to the holy Garments appointed for their ministration which did signifie that extraordinary and peculiar sanctity which was required in those who approached so near to God The sense of which Petition our Church hath significantly given in the word endue lightly changed from the Latine indue which refers to the qualifications of the mind as the word Cloth to the covering of the body So that here we pray that they may have souls pure as their linnen Ephod and lives spotless and holy as the garments they are clothed with not content to have their outward man arrayed with the sign but endeavouring to
have their inward man endued and adorned with the purity signified thereby And this Petition we make to him who hath promised to deck his Priests with health (l) Psal 132.16 Isai 61.10 and to cloath them with the garment of salvation and the robe of righteousness that his Saints may re-rejoyce and sing For the holy lives and good success of pious and painful Ministers is an extraordinary and a huge delight to Gods people who therefore do here use it as an argument to enforce their request for the Ministers For we say they are not of the number of those who glory in the crimes of the Ministers of God or rejoyce in their calamities because O Lord we love thee and them wherefore if thou wilt please to give them health and safety righteousness and peace we shall thrive under their care and joyfully follow their good examples the benefit and the pleasure will be ours and the glory shall be thine for this and all thy mercies § 7. Psal 28.9 O Lord save thy people Answ And bless thine inheritance The kindness of the Congregation to the Minister expressed in the last Responsal is here most lovingly and thankfully returned and required by him who now prays for them as heartily as they for him before which cannot but endeer the Priest and people one to another since they daily do thus mutually interchange offices of love Wherefore let both joyn in this comprehensive request that God would save and deliver his people from all evil and bless and furnish them with all good things since they are his peculiar inheritance and so may expect a special defence and relief from their own God But of this before in the TE DEVM § 8. 1 Chron. 22.9 Give peace in our time O Lord Answ Because there is none other that fighteth for us but only thou O God It pleased God to make particular Promises to Solomon Hezekiah and Josiah (m) 1 Chron. 22.9 Isai 39.8 2 Kings 22.20 that he would give peace in their days Wherefore we make bold to ask it for our times from the God of peace our only defence (n) Exod. 14.14 Deut. 1.30 against our enemies They who trust in their bow and rely on their sword care not to ask for Peace because they hope either to awe their foes into quietness or to make advantage by War as being sufficiently guarded and prepared But we even the Church of God know Armies and Navies are useless not only against God but without him and only successful by his blessing So that though we have both yet we account the Divine Providence our greatest security How well this Petition suited the Primitive Christians every one may discern who considers they judged it unlawful while the Emperors were Heathen to fight in their own defence (o) Luke 22.38 ita Explic. ab Origen in Cels l. 5. Ambros de Off. Basil August vid. Arnobius l. 1. p 6. And when Prayers and tears were their only weapons they might most justly (p) Ezra 8.22 be earnest with God for their defence who did so wholly depend on his Protection that his glory seemed concerned in their safety Yet it is not improper for us now though blessed be God we have Christian Princes and their forces to defend us for we wish there may be no occasion to use arms or if there be (q) Bellum gerere malis videtur foelicitas bonis necessitas Augustin we declare we rely not alone on these Preparations unless he please to bless them we know they are unserviceable Wherefore if it please him we desire peace and that he will keep off invasions and Rebellions for our time and so will the following generations for their daies that it may appear we wish to live in peace and do trust alone in the Lord of hosts § 9. Psal 51.10 11. O God make clean our hearts within us Answ And take not thy holy spirit from us Though Peace be accounted the chief of all blessings yet without grace it may do us more harm then good Wherefore we conclude with an carnest supplication for Grace to fit us for and help us in the following devotions We are now to offer up our incense and therefore do beseech the Author and lover of purity in holy Davids words to cleanse the Altars of our hearts that neither the guilt of former offences may unhallow or defile them nor any remaining evil thoughts may disturb the holy cloud but that it may ascend and he a sweet savour before the Throne of God And because it is the Holy Spirit alone which can effect this we pray that our hearts may be so pure as to invite this holy Dove to come unto us and remain with us that it may both make and keep us undefiled both in the remaining part of our Prayers and of our lives If we look back on those portions of the Office which we have performed I hope we shall have cause thankfully to acknowledge that the Divine Spirit hath been with us and excited the flames of our devotion the comfort of which aid makes us earnest for its continuance And certainly we could never have sent up these very sacred ejaculations with such fervent spirits united hearts and harmonious voices if the same spirit of zeal and love had not inspired us Therefore let the sweetness of this experience encourage us to beg that the Holy Ghost may stay among us so that we may as affectionately joyn in those Prayers where the Minister is the only speaker as we have done in these wherein we have had the honour and advantage of bearing our Parts and making our Responsals The Paraphrase of the Versicles and Responsals before and after the Lords Prayer Minister MY dear bretheren in the right Faith I do most affectionately salute you desiring The Lord and his grace may be with you to prosper you in that you now are doing Answer And we thankfully return the kindness desiring likewise the Lord may be with thy spirit to compose and excite it while thou speakest to God for us Minister Let not your thoughts wander but now Let us pray to God with fervency and devotion O Lord God the Father pitty pardon and have mercy upon us who are unworthy to call upon thee O Christ the son of God pitty pardon and have mercy upon us whose only hope is in thy Mediation and Redemption O Lord God the Holy Ghost pitty pardon and have mercy upon us and assist us in these our supplications Our Father which art c. Priest Consider our sin and misery with compassion O Lord and now shew some token of thy mercy upon us to our comfort Answ And grant us now and ever such wonderful deliverances from all evil that we may surely obtain thy salvation Priest O Lord thou Governor of all the world be pleased to bless preserve and save the King thine own Anointed Answ And mercifully hear us whose peace is linked
will obtain help from him for us by the power of his undenyable intercession and as a glorious Conqueror commands the Earth and Hell it self So that his might will secure us here and this is our strong Tower in which we believe our selves so safe that upon the confidence thereof we pray for protection and defence and that we may neither fear nor feel harm from any of our opposers and desire this may be granted and decreed in heaven by the mighty interest of our Mediator there and accomplished on earth by the invincible strength of the same Jesus here Amen The Paraphrase of the Collects for Peace O God who by thy constant power and providence art the author of safety and the cause of our peace from without the procurer of amity and lover of concord within thy Church and among thy people Thou art the only true God in knowledge of whom standeth out chief happiness in eternal life and our best means of coming safe thither for thou art the best of all Masters whose service is safe and pleasant because it is perfect freedom from the slavery of Sathan and the fear of his instruments Therefore mighty Lord be pleased to defend us who fly to thy protection and surrender up our selves to thee vowing we are and ever will be thy humble servants Oh keep us safe in soul and body if not from yet however in all assaults which are made upon us by the power malice or cunning of our enemies let their attempts be so constantly frustrated that we under the shadow of thy wings may couragiously proceed in our holy course and surely trusting in thy defence while we are faithful to thy service that we may not so much as fear the power or policy of any adversaries since we have so good grounds to hope thou wilt now and alwaies hear us through the interest and help us through the might of Iesus Christ thy dear son our Lord and only Saviour Amen The Analysis of the third Collect for Grace In this Collect are four parts 1. A confession of the Attributes of God 1. Love O Lord our heavenly Father 2. Power Almig●ty and 3. Eternity everlasti●g God 2. An acknowledgment of his Providence Who hast safely brought us to the beginning of this day 3. A Petition for ●is grace 1. To preserve us from evil 1. In general defend us in the same with thy mighty power 2. In particular from 1. Spiritual and grant that this day we fall into no sin 2. Temporal neither run into any kind of danger 2. To help us in doing good that we may be 1 Directed by him but that all our doings may be ordered by thy governance 2. Accepted of him to do alw●ies that which is righteous in thy sight 4. The means to obtain it through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen A Practical Discourse on the Collect for Grace § 5. O Lord our heavenly Father almighty and everlasting God Peace without Grace is the nurse of vice the sauce of dangerous pleasures It occasions our forgetfulness of God that gave it and becomes an undisturbed opportunity to prosecute and enjoy those lusts which it is apt to breed So that we must not pray for Peace alone but joyned with righteousness and Grace for these God hath united in Scripture (n) Psal 85.10 2 Cor. 1 2. and we must not separate them in our devotions For which cause this Collect for Grace follows that for Peace Grace alone can make Peace true beneficial and lasting and sin is the great boutefen and the greatest enemy to Peace in the world So that by receiving this Collect devoutly we still improve our former request and if we can obtain such grace as to make us just and charitable meek and patient towards one another this world will be the Type of everlasting Peace We shall neither disquiet our selves nor others while our doings are directed by the wisdome and agreeable to the will of the God of peace Since therefore Grace is so necessary for us we must learn where to seek it and its very name will lead (o) Gratia est gratis data non meritis operantis sed miseratione donantis August Epist 120. us to the free and inexhaustible fountain whence it ever flows even to God who gives to all men liberally and upbraideth no man The very Heathens confessed it the gift of God (p) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. Mem. Nulla sine Deo mens bona Seneca who will rejoyce to hear such a request from an humble soul that is sensible of its own weakness and desirous of his strength He will be more ready to grant then you can be to ask (q) Luke 11.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Maxim Tyrius in dissert Consider but the Attributes the Church hath prefixed to this Prayer Is not the Lord your heavenly Father and shall not he pitty and love you and delight to do you good Is he not Almighty and therefore able to relieve you and Everlasting the same yesterday today and for ever Being All-sufficient and never to be drawn dry though we come day by day unto him We have no reason to doubt either his sufficiency his might or his mercy and therefore no cause to fear but this Petition shall prevail We are on Earth but we have a Father in Heaven we are weak but our Lord is Allmighty our time is measured by daies and nights and we grow older every day and must at length have our end but we have a God that changeth not but is the same from everlasting to everlasting Let this chear our hearts (r) Psal 102.25 26 27. and give wings to our Petitions and strength to our faith Let us fly to him and rest upon him for we can never come to him for grace but we are sure to find him furnished with it and both able and ready to bestow it upon us § 6. Who hast safely brought us to the beginning of this day The Mercies of God are new every morning and so ought our Praises to be (s) Lament 3.23 Psal 92.1 2. Occurrere ergo ad solis Ortum ut te Oriens invenint jam paratum Ambr. in Psal 119. offered still with a fresh Devotion to which purpose being now come to the shore it will be a pleasant and profitable prospect to look back on the great deep the darkness of the night which we have passed and now to remember that though we were folded in the arms of sleep the brother of death and were insensible of danger and uncapable of resistance yet we have gone safe through those dismal shades which are the image of hell the embleme of death the opportunity of mischief and the most uncomfortable part of our lives And though the Heathens supposed the Dominion of the Night to belong to the Infernal Powers yet we have found it is under the government of our heavenly Father by whose gracious providence we have been kept therein from
with God and pray every day more heartily to him to deliver him from them and to be more thankful if by the divine mercy he do escape them § 8. But that all our doings may be ordered by thy governance to do alwaies that which is righteous in thy sight through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen If by all that hath been said and our own sad experience we are become so wise as to see we are insufficient for our own conduct I hope we shall in this Petition most humbly commit our waies to the Lord that he may direct our paths and that he may as David speaks (u) Prov. 3 6. ●sal 37.5 and 23. Ideo Deus secundet ac bene fortunet om●●● eventus in cursu vitae nostrae nempe quia nihil tentamus quod non ei placeat Calv. in loc Psal 37. order all our goings and make them acceptable to himself and then they shall be prosperous If his good Spirit be our guide (x) Psal 51.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we shall seldome fall into danger never into sin Oh let us earnestly beseech him that his grace may direct our hearts and his Providence order our lives that we may be blessed in our going out and coming in in our studies and labours commerce and society eating and recreations in our prayers and praises that in all our actions natural civil and religious we may design his glory and be successful The proud man thinks his doings good enough if they are pleasing in his own sight (y) Prov. 16.2 and 21.2 and Prov. 14.12 Quicquid volun● homines se bene velle putant though evil w●ies do frequently appear so to us and thus we may deceive our selves into an unexpected ruine by absolving our selves even when God condemns us The Hypocrite believes his ac●ions excellent if the world commend them if the complying and fashionable out-sides of Religion present him righteous in the eyes of men he sup●●●● 〈◊〉 waies prudently ordered But we must remem●●●●e are not judges of our own nor of one anothers works but must all stand before the judgment seat of God wherefore it is his approbation that we desire It is not the opinion of the malefactor nor the vote of his fellow-prisoners but the sentence of the Judge that must save or condemn Having therefore such a Tribunal to appear before let us beg large measures of his grace to lead us for he will approve of no waies but what his Spirit directs us into and that had need be excellent that appears so to an all-seeing eye Our lives must not be guided by the loose rules of Custome if we expect they should be accounted righteous in his sight But they must be ordered by the exact rule of his holy word and then though all the world condemn us we shall be prosperous here and finally acquitted hereafter Perhaps we judge it impossible our waies should ever appear righteous in his sight but we are mistaken for if we take him for our guide he will not be strict to mark unavoidable defects And it is not our performances but the effects of his own grace that he approves of Nor yet doth he count them righteous for any merit that is in the works or the persons doing them but through the merits and obedience of the Holy Jesus in whose name we therefore make this Prayer not expecting our supplications can be heard or our actions justified for their own worth but through Jesus Christ our Lord desiring he will please by his intercession and merits so to recommend our Persons and Devotions that we may be sanctified by his grace justified by his mercy and finally may be for ever glorified with him and for his sake Amen The Paraphrase of the Collect for Grace O Lord We thy poor finite Creatures upon this Earth do daily remember with much comfort that thou art our heavenly Father and hast pitty on us and being an Almighty and everlasting God art all-sufficient and alwaies able to help us The remembrance of the dangers of the last night doth engage us most heartily to praise thee who ha st safely kept our souls and bodies therein and brought us intire in both to the beginning of this day And this thy Providence doth incourage us to beseech thee gracious●y to defend us from all kinds of evil which this daies occasions may expose us to and to keep us in the same by thy mighty power which alone can make us safe Consider our frailty O Lord and grant that this day we may discover and overcome all the temptations of the world the flesh and the devil so that we fall into no sin let us not by any iniquity great or small displease thee hurt our souls nor run by our own folly into any kind of danger and that we may avoid all the mischiefs with which we are environed we pray that we may not be left to our selves but that all our doings and undertakings in spiritual or temporal concerns may be this day and ever guided by thy Spirit and ●rdered by thy wise and faithful governance for while we follow thy direction thy grace will enable us to do alwaies that which is most profitable to us and best pleasing to thee even that which is though imperfect in it self accounted righteous in thy sight O most merciful Judge through Iesus Christ his merits and intercession for whose sake accept and hear us for he is our Lord and only Saviour Amen SECTION XV. Of the two Collects peculiar to the Evening Prayer WE have chosen this place to insert these parts of the Evening Service because all the following Collects are the same in both parts of the day and the Hymns with these two Prayers being all the difference it is not necessary in our method to separate the Offices and this way every thing comes in its proper place only omitting what is peculiar to the other part of the day The Analysis of the second Collect for Peace in the Evening Prayer In this Collect are three Parts 1. The Person of whom we ask who is 1. The beginner of all good O God from whom all holy desires all good counsels 2. The perfecter of it and all just works do proceed 2. The thing asked for described by 1. It s Name give unto thy servants that peace 2. It s Quality which the world cannot give 3. The Arguments to prevail for it taken from 1. The benefit of the Petitioners as a means of our 1. Holiness that both our hearts may be set to obey thy commandements 2. Safety and also that by thee we being defended from the fear of our enemies 3. Comfort may pass our time in rest and quietness 2. The interest of the Mediator through the merits of Iesus Christ our Saviour Amen A Practical Discourse on this Collect for Peace § 1. O God from whom all holy desires all good counsels and all just works do proceed This Collect hath the same
and thy gracious Providence we being defended from the Power and malice and preserved in safety from the fear of our enemies may never be hurt terrified or disturbed but may pass our time which thou shalt afford us on this earth in rest from our foes and quietness in our own minds Grant us O Lord therefore this Peace for the sake as it was obtained through the merits of thy Son Iesus Christ our Saviour Amen The Analysis of the third Collect for Aid against all Perils This Collect hath only two Parts 1. The Petitions for 1. Mystically Knowledge Lighten our darkness we beseech thee O Lord Literally Comfort 2. Safety intimating 1. The means by which we must be delivered and by thy great mercy defend us 2. The evils from which from all perils and dangers 3. The time in which of this night 2. The motive urged to obtain them for the love of thy only Son our Saviour Iesus Christ Amen A Practical Discourse on the third Collect at Evening Prayer § 5. LIghten our darkness we beseech thee O Lord The declining of the day doth now mind us of the approaching darkness which will shortly wrap us in the shadows of the night And what Petition more seasonable then with holy David to beseech God to enlighten our darkness (o) Psal 18.28 Vul. Deus meus illumina tenebras meas For the night is sad and terrible in it we can see nothing with our bodily eys to entertain or to cheer us and we seem exposed to all the mischie●s (p) Versuta frans callida amat tenebris obtegi Prud. Ovid. Metam 2. Conscia culpae Conspectum lucemque fugit tenebrisque pudorem Celat John 3.20 Job 24.17 of Sathan and those instruments of his who fly the light and hope to cover their sin with this sable Mantle our dangers are many and our fears are sometimes more especially if our eyes be closed by unbelief as well as darkness If we behold not the Divine Providence watching over us and the Angels encamping round about us the very apprehension of the perils of a dismal night may damp our joy and startle our courage and makes us cry out with the Prophets servant (q) 2 Kings 6.15 16 17. What shall we do But let us intreat the Lord to fulfil his promise (r) Psal 112.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccl. 5.17 Psal 97.11 c. Adrian Isagoge that light may arise in our darkness that is in Scripture phrase comfort in our sadness That our hearts may by faith and cheerful thoughts by the assurance of his providence and the operations of his Grace be joyful and pleasant and that the shine of his countenance may make our nights bright as the day illuminated by the Meridian Sun For the inward comforts of Gods Spirit and a sense of his care and favour when the Soul is in fear or sadness do cheer and refresh more then a suddain light doth the wandring Travellour who is misled in a gloomy night These make our dwellings a Goshen while the wicked have thoughts black and dismal and Aegypt is veiled in a horrid shade and terrified with the dark side of the Cloud while the people of God are led all the night thorough with a light of fire so that the darkness and light to them are equally safe and comfortable Or if we desire to spiritualize the Petition more we may take occasion from the approaching night to enlarg our meditations upon our spiritual ignorance and blindness by nature by which our Souls are veiled and in the dark so that we often wander out of the way We stumble in the day and are in danger to run into the shadow of death till the day spring from on high visit us and give us that true knowledg which is usually set out under the name of light (s) Luke 2.32 Hebr. 6.4 illuminati i. e. edocti Wherefore let us humbly beseech our gracious Lord to let the Sun of righteousness arise upon us for whoever follows him doth not wander nor walk in darkness (t) John 8.12 and that we may take heed to Gods holy word as to a light shining in a dark place (u) 2 Pet. 1.19 and a sure guide to true blessedness And then our knowledg shall increase and we shall keep the right path till we arrive to that eternal light which shall never be extinguished When our hearts are clouded with greif shadowed with ignorance and benummed with dreadful ●p●rehensions we are taught to lift up our thoughts to the Father of lights and the God of all comfort who dwells in that light to which no mortal eye can approach whose Countenance is cleer as the sun and bright as lightning And if we can by our beseechings obtain his favour to shine upon us no doubt it will turn our night into day our sorrows into the joyes of the Morning While we are in the darksome cell of this lower world we think of our glorified brethren who dwell in a perpetual brightness and everlasting light and we long to be with them when it may please God But in the mean time we hope he will support and recreate us with some glimpses of those beams which they have the constant and full fruition of § 6. And by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night Comfort and safety are those two things which make a happy night And of whom should we ask these but of God the Lord who is a light and defence (x) Psal 84.11 The hopes of his love makes it comfortable But least we should be deceived in that comfort his mercy and power must keep us safe which here we earnestly desire We may easily perceive we are most miserable without his Providence especially in the night season for then Sathan prepares most violently to assault us supposing it is his hour and the power of darkness And alas how easily may we then be enticed with pleasure transported with malice and revenge or disturbed with evil fancies and imaginations When the Soul is heavy the Senses dull the stomack loaden the flesh strong and the reason weak (y) Stomachus aeger mens somnolenta animus occupatus tunc omne nefas suadere contendunt quando nullus arbiter culpae nullus criminis conscius nullus potest esse erro is testis Ambros in 8. par 119. Psal when the Curtain is drawn and we think no eyes see us neither judg witness nor accuser can espy us how open are our Souls then to all Dangerous temptations And yet our temporal concerns are not more safe for how soon may we be seized by diseases or suddain death or made miserable by theives and Robbers burnings or inundations Are not our lives and limbs estate and friends liable to loss and mischief both suddenly and unavoidably Go we then with all speed to our merciful Father and let us represent our condition to him the consideration whereof
place (m) Titus 2. ver 11. Vatab. Gratia salutaris c. See Psal 132 ver 16. That the Governours may be prudent the Ministers faithful and the People diligent and all of them ready and vigorous for the duties of Religion and every good work § 3. And that they may truly please thee pour upon them the continual dew of thy blessing As the Grace of God is requisite to fit all the members of Christs Church for their several offices and duties so his blessing is necessary to make their labours prosperous Man is called by Philo the coelestial plant having his root reverst (n) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lib. de insid pejor and seeming to grow from heaven And herein the comparison holds that as plants require the influence of heaven to quicken them and the dew thereof to moisten them so those which are set in the Church the garden of God require the salutary spirit of grace to make them live and the irrigations of the divine blessing to make them spring and bring forth fruit It is not from our pains nor your diligence alone that success must come not from him that plants nor him that waters but from God that gives the Increase (o) 1 Corinth 3.5 6. Whole buckets of water poured on by the hand of man will not so much refresh the Plant as the gentler showers and dew from above wherefore the dew is used to express plenty and abundant increase (p) Gen. 27.28 Deut. 33.18 and 28. Hoseah 14.5 particularly in knowledg (q) Deut. 32.1 Aegyptii eruditionem indicantes coelum pingunt rorem fundens Caussin Hieroglyph Horax 35. of which the dew falling from the Clouds was the Hierogliphick among the Aegyptians Let us then most passionately gasp for this prolifick dew that we may not only please God by our constant and ready attendances upon Prayers and other offices but truly and throughly please him by our fruitfulness under these means let it appear by our humility and charity our justice and innocence by the success of the Ministers and the improvement of every Congregation that we do not receive the Grace of God in vain For he is ready to give his blessing if we be fit to receive it he will not only sprinkle but pour it on us because we need large measures and that not only at some seldome seasons but continually at both the morning and evening Sacrifice least affliction or temptation should wither us Oh! what Soul doth not long to be thus watered since nothing can fructify without it nor can any thing dye or be barren that doth enjoy it Let us humbly pray that the good orders of our Bishops the prayers and Exhortations of our Ministers and the constant attendancies of our People may be thus watered from above that we may bring forth an hundred-fold and send forth a pleasant favour of good works (r) Et eum à siecitate continuâ immaduerit imbre tunc emittit illum suum habitum divinum ex sole conceptum cui cemparari suavitas nulla potest Plin. lib. 17. c. 5. Genes 27.27 like the fields of Palestina when watered from the coelestial springs And so should every member of Christs Church live and grow and flourish then which nothing is more desirable § 4. Grant this O Lord for the honour of our Advocate and Mediator Iesus Christ Amen We must not allow either the Clergy or People to ask these Petitions with any designs to advance their own glory or to become famous for their gifts or graces For the end must be the manifestation of the glories of our Advocate and Mediator who at his Triumphant Ascension gave divine gifts (s) Ephes 4.8 unto men and accounts those who are endued with them as so many rays of his glory (t) 2 Cor. 8.23 Sunt Christi gloria quia nihil habent nisi dono Christi Calvin It is Jesus who obtains by his pleading at the Throne of grace both the spirit and the blessing for us and it is he that bestows both upon the Church for which he once gave his body and on which he ever sets his love Let him have the Honour of all the holy and religious performances of his Church and let us earnestly desire that by the flourishing of this his body all the world may see the prevalency of his intercession with God the sincerity of his love to his servants his continual care of them and bounty to them which will surely cause all people to advance and magnifie his holy name Nothing is more the Honour of Jesus now in heaven then that his Church be ruled with pious and wise Governours his Ordinances administred by zealous and holy Ministers and all places abounding with religious loyal and charitable People And what argument will sooner open the ears and pierce the heart of the Father of mercies whose great design is to glorifie his dear and only Son This declares that our Petitions herein comply with his eternal purposes We see the dishonour of some distempered members seems to reflect upon the head and we are grieved for it desiring sincerely the holy Jesus may have as he deserves all glory by the holiness and prosperity of his Church and we hope that Heaven will say Amen hereto The Paraphrase of the Prayer for the Clergy and People O Lord who art Almighty in power and everlasting in duration who hast promised to be ever with thy Church we acknowledg thee the God who alone workest wonders in the calling and hast ever shewed great marvels for the preservation thereof in all Ages wherefore we beseech thee to send down from above suitable gifts and graces upon all estates of men in the Catholick Church particularly upon our Bishops to direct them in the governing upon our Ministers and Curates to assist them in the feeding of thy flock and also upon all Congregations of Christian men and women whose souls thou hast committed to their charge and that the account may be given up to the Ministers comfort and the profit of thy Church let them all be inspired with the healthful and saving Spirit of thy grace to fit them for and assist them in all religious duties And that they all in their several places may truly please thee by a right use of this grace do thou plentifully pour upon them in all holy offices the effectual and the continual dew of thy blessing that thy Messengers pains may be successful and thy peoples lives fruitful in all good works Grant this which we ask of thee O Lord not to advance our own fame but for the honour of him that is our Advocate to obtain them of thee our Redeemer and Mediator to dispense them to ●s for the holiness and happiness of thy Church is the glory of thy dear Son Iesus Christ therefore do thou with us and to us say Amen The Analysis of the Prayer of St. Chrysostome In this Prayer are two Parts