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A13732 The soules alarum-bell Wherein the sicke soule (through the horror of conscience) being awakened from security by the sight of sinne, hath recourse to God by meditation and prayer. By H. Thompson. Thompson, Henry, fl. 1618. 1618 (1618) STC 24024; ESTC S100563 111,521 484

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a hard matter to bee passed away from those things which doe not so neerely touch man how bitter I pray you will the separation be of soule body two such kind louing familiars who haue alwaies liued sweetly together euen from the mothers wombe surely they cannot bee separated without great griefe If the Oxe doe commonly lowe and mourne when his yoke-fellow which was wont to draw with him is taken away how will euery one of vs mourn when the soule shall be separated from the body Then will they with teares repeate their sinnes againe and againe and cry out O death bitter death doest thou 〈◊〉 separate vs And when the cogitation of so sharpe a separation is deepely setled in our minds then griefe followeth grief and sorrow commeth vpon sorrow for then it commeth presently to mind what a miserable condition the body and soule shall be in after the separation When a man beginneth to recount with himselfe that his body after a few houres shall be buried in a graue or darke tombe hee cannot cease from wondering at so abiect and miserable a condition What the body that now liueth which seeth heareth speaketh shall ●it bee made after one houre in a moment blinde deafe dumbe without spirit without life It shall haue then in stead of a large Pallace a base Sepulcher in stead of a soft bed the hard ground for delights rottennesse for sweete smels stinkes and in stead of seruants and familiar friends wormes And thus this cogitation of the graue will very sore trouble and terrifie a man in these extremities yet notwithstanding euery man feareth much more when he beginneth to consider what condition remaineth for the soule When Man beholdeth that eternitie and that new Region vnknowne to al men liuing which he then alone naked is to enter and when he vnderstandeth that there is to bee found in the same both euerlasting glory and perpetuall paine and miserie and knoweth not of which he shall take his part it cannot bee told with how great feare with what carefulnesse and with what exceeding sorrow hee shall be tormented when he perceiueth plainely that after two houres hee shall be either in eternall ioyes or in euerlasting paines Is not this a crosse very heauy surpassing all other crosses this vncertainty of a blessed or cursed estate which after a small time the sinner expecteth the remembrance of his sins and feare of the iust iudgement of God without hope of remission or faith in Christ is a hell to the mind not to be expressed For by how much the Kingdome which he desireth is of largenesse and by how much the firy furnace which he feareth is terrible by so much the greater shall this perturbation be considering also that Angels shall come to carry the faithfull vp into Heauen and infernall spirits to carry the wicked and infidels into hell But there is yet a farre greater perturbation then this namely that he shall call to mind the accoūt which he is to make to God of all his words deeds and thoughts for of it self 〈◊〉 is a horrible thing to thinke vpon the day of iudgement the which horror will wonderfully and extremely vexe disquiet the Diuels themselues for as so long as we liue they set forth vnto vs the mercy of God and doe also commend the same and doe striue all that they can to keepe vs from meditating of his iustice iudgements euen so now on the contrarie they extenuate and make his mercy insufficient and doe set before our eies the greatnesse and seuerity of the Lords iustice Then will the sinner beginne to tremble and fal into desperation and will beginne to reason thus with himselfe If God for the sinnes of others spared not his onely Sonne will he spare me which am guilty of so many sinnes If this be done in the green tree what shall befall that which is seare and drie If the Prophets if the Apostles if the Martyrs after they liued godly so many yeeres entred not into the Kingdome of Heauen without tribulations what other place can bee left for mee but that of hell fire which know no good that I haue done If the Scripture be true which saith He will render to euery man according to his workes what should I which haue done so many horrible and great wickednesses looke for but eternall torments If that of the Apostle bee true as in deed it is when he saith That which a man soweth that shall he reape what shall hee reape but eternall death which hath made so cursed a so wing I● no polluted thing shall enter into the Kingdome of God how shal I which am altogether filthy and vncleane haue hope to make so happy and blessed an entrance Then all his sinnes which he committed with so greater desire and facility when hee liued shall violently inuade the sinfull man like an hoast of enemies then the feare of punishment will open the eyes which sleeping security in sinne before had shut then ambition pride thefts murthers adulteries fornications gluttonies drunkennesse lying periury idle words vncleane thoughts negligent slacknesse and all that naughty is will come to remembrance O how heauy and grieuous will they then seeme to be which now seem so light and are done with so much sweetnes and pleasure How greatly will they then torment the minde of the sinner Who is able to expresse that last agonie wherein the soule fighteth with sore and painefull sicknesse with the temptations of diuels with feare of the iudgement to come and all this at one instant Then commeth that last perturbation the failing of all the senses as the fore-runner of death approaching which vehemently terrifieth At what time the breast swelleth the speech groweth hoarse faint and hollow the eyes sinke the nose beginneth to be sharpe the countenance waxeth pale the feete die and the arteries send forth a cold sweate These things which do thus appeare outwardly are grieuous and full of horror but they are without all comparison more greeuous horrible which are felt inward●● for as Saint 〈◊〉 writeth of blessed 〈◊〉 saying Though hee had many yeeres serued God yet did hee feare at the time of his departure What shall they doe who many yeeres haue serued the Diuell and their execrable wickednesses and who haue prouoked God vnto wrath whither shall they goe whose helpe shall they craue what counsell shall they take If they look vpward they shall see the drawne sword of Gods Iustice if downeward they shall see a gulfe gaping and hell fire there if the time past they shall see all things vanished away like a shadow if the time to come they shall behold the eternitie of Worlds which shall last without end Who can bee able to resist and abide the assault of the diuels who will bee then busiest in their desire to bestirre them with all their might and maine What shall then sinfull men doe which are left in this estate Returne they cannot and
by this time haue beene like Saints among men whereas if God at this present time should call vs to iudgement it would appeare that wee had applied our hearts our minds our hands our feet our tongues yea and our whole bodies to riches and pleasures to lying deceiuing to swearing and forswearing and to all kind of sinne and wickednesse but to true vertue and wisedome wee haue not applied our hearts God of his mercy giue vs grace to see our former sinnes truely to repent vs of them and to amend our liues hereafter that wee may liue with him for euer If Man could perswade himselfe that this were his last day as it may be if God so please hee would not deserue his repentance vntill to morrow If hee could thinke that this is his last meate that euer hee shall eate he would not surfet If he could beleeue that the words which hee doth speake to day should be the last wordes that euer hee shall speake hee would not offend with his tongue in lying swearing and blaspheming If he could be perswaded that this were the last lesson the last admonition that euer GOD would affoord him to call him to repentance hee would both heare and reade it with more diligence then euer he had done before Let vs remember our selues while it is to day lest we repent our selues when it is too late Who can assure himselfe of life till to morrow or what if we should liue three foure or fiue yeeres or what if twenty yeeres Who would not liue here like a Christian twenty yeeres to liue in Heauen with CHRIST eternally Wee can be content to serue seauen yeeres apprentiship with great labour and royle to be instructed in some trade that wee may liue more easily the rest of our dayes and wee must labour notwithstanding afterwards and can we not be content to labour in the things of God a little while that wee may rest from our labors euer after CHRIST saith to his Disciples when hee found them sleeping Could not you watch 〈◊〉 boure And can we not pray can wee not first can we not suffer a little while Hee which is 〈◊〉 can 〈◊〉 little further one step more to saue his life and therefore GOD would not haue Men know when they shall die because they should make ready at all times hauing no more certainty of one houre then another Seeing therefore the case standeth thus let vs looke to our selues and let vs take counsell of him which is an Aduocate before hee will be a Iudge for no man knoweth so well what is necessary for vs against that day as hee that shall bee the Iudge of our cause Hee therefore crieth thus vnto vs Walke while ye haue the light lest the darkenesse come vpon you take heed watch and pray for ye know not when the time is bee yee like men waiting the comming of their Lord. They who thus watch and waite are sure to make a most ioyfull departure from this life and to be receiued into the Lords ioy Of which happy dissolution the Scriptures thus record I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure or dissolution is at hand I haue fought a good fight and haue finished my course I haue kept the faith henceforth there is laid vp for me the Crowne of righteousnesse 〈◊〉 Tim. 4 6. 7. 8. As the Hart brayeth for the Riuers of waters so panteth my Soule after thee O God my Soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God when shall I come to appeare before the presence of God Psal 42. 1. The righteous shall liue for euer their reward also is with the Lord and the 〈◊〉 High doth 〈◊〉 for them therefore shall they receiue a gracious Kingdome and beautifull Crowne at the Lords hand for with his right hand shall hee couer them and with his arme shall ●ee defe●● them Wis 5. 26. Bring my soule out of prison that I may praise thy name Psal 142. 7. I desire to 〈◊〉 and to be with Christ which is best of all Phil. 1. 13. For wee know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle be destroied wee haue a building giuen of God that is a house not made with hands but eternal in the Heauen 2 Cor. 5. 1. Iesus the son of Syrach giueth vs a verie profitable admonition to 〈◊〉 vnto God from sinne and wickednesse so speedily as possiblie wee can in these words Chap. 5. Because thy sinne is forgiuen ●ee not without feare to heape sinne vpon sinne and say not the mercy of God is great hee will forgiue my manifold sinnes for mercy and wrath come from him and his indignation cometh downe vpon sinners Make no ●arrying to turne vnto the Lord and put not off from day to day for suddenly shall the wrath of the Lord breake forth and in thy security thou shalt be destroied Salomon giueth vs most excellent counsell saying Remember now thy Creator in the daies of thy youth while the euill laies come not nor the yeeres approach wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Hereunto agreeth the saying of Saint Augustine that is Repent while thou ar● in health so doing wee are without danger because we haue repented at what time wee might haue sinned These diuine testimonies might satisfy a Christian man that their hope is vaine and full of perill which deferre their conuersion and repentance albeit but for one houre yet it shall bee shewed by other reasons that it may more plainely appeare how needfull a thing it is for man with all speede to repent There be diuers causes why a man cannot without great labor and great difficultie forsake sinne and follow righteousnesse The first cause is a custome in sinning the which being now made as it were another nature can verie hardly be ouercome For as Mithridates vsed to eate poyson so long that nature in the end could very well brooke and disgest it and the people called Cimmerij are so well acquainted with darkenesse wherein they liue continually that they cannot wel endure the light euen so men that liue continually in sinne and wickednesse are so in vse therewith as all things contrary vnto their custome greatly offend them by which custome as Augustine affirmeth dishonest and filthy things seeme vnto them honest and pure And as Houses and Lands and other things by long continuance of time bring to him that holdeth them a Plea of Prescription and being so prescribed cannot be recouered without a great priuiledge had from the Prince euen so sinnes and vices when they haue a long time by custome prescribed vnto themselues the soule of the sinner men striue in vain except GOD the most mighty King by a singular priviledge of his Grace doe turne a stony heart into a fleshy heart for if sinne become as it were the wife of our youth wee shall hardly leaue it O how easie saith Saint Augustine is the entrance into sinne but the comming out verie
An● thou must purpose with thy selfe to doe ●othing that day which may displease God but meditate in thy minde some godly meditations desiring his assistance for the furtherance of the true seruing his omnip●tent Mai●sty ● A Prayer before wee settle our selues to our De●●tions O Most gracious Lord giue me leaue to present my selfe before thy diuine Maiestie and to poure out my vnworthy prayers in the sight of thy most mighty and glorious presence Behold mee O Lord not in my merits but in the multitude of thy mercies I now com● to make manifest my necessities and to vtter my griefe● vnto thee I come as a poor● and needy wretch vnto ● God of infinit glory I com● as a worme of the Earth vnto my Soueraigne Make● and Creatour I come as ● guiltie hainous offende●● I am not worthy to lift v● mine eyes to Heauen mu●● lesse to open my mouth in thy glorious presence o● presume to talke with ● Lord and King of so great ● Maiesty being my selfe bu● slime and ashes but ô Fathe● of mercies and God of all comfort thou promisest that who asketh shall receiue ● who knocketh shall bee le● in who seeketh shall finde● Thou inuitest the greatest ●inners and refusest not to ●eelde thy assistance to any ●hat will vse it grant mee ●herefore grace now to pray ●nto thee as my duety and ●hy desert requireth grant ●e a pureintention a fer●ent deuotion and an atten●●ue mind that it be not car●ed away with impertinent ●oughts nor any other di●raction but with humble ●eart firme hope and per●ct charity I may effectual●e pray vnto thee and aske ●f thee that which thou see●t most for thy glory and ●y good gra●t Lord I be●ech thee that thou wilt ●elpe mee to pray worthily ●at thou maiest mercifu●ly ●rant my Petitions keepe ●y thoughts from wandring r●straine my imaginations and preserue my sences from being distracted● defend O Lord my weak● heart from ghostly assaults● and so fixe my minde vpon thee that I be not carrie● away from consideration o● thy presence grant mee distinctly to pronounce my words attentiuely to apply my thoughts and to bee wholly rauished and possessed with zeale and true deuotion O Lord grant me to aske forgiuenesse with ● deepe contrition and ful● purpose of amendement ● grant me to craue thy benefits with hearty thankfulne●● for those which I haue receiued Grant mee to pray for my selfe with a perfect resignation vnto thy will and ●or all others with true cha●itie and sincere affection Affoord O Lord such com●ort to my soule as thou ●eest fit ●or mee and by the ●ssistance of thy spirit inspire ●hy good motions into mee ●hat I may feele them forci●ly accept them thankefulie and fulfill them effectu●llie Finally I humbly be●eech thee of thy mercy and goodnesse that I may praise ●hee with a true repentant ●eart to appease the fury of ●hy anger against me where●y I may come to enioy ●ith thy Maiesty eternall ●lorie without end Amen A Morning Prayer O Most gracious LORD and Omnipotent Father thou which made●● Heauen and Earth the Sea and all that is therein together with thy dearely beloued Son IESVS CHRIST and with thy holy Spirit thou hast brought vs to the beginning of this day thorow thy goodnesse now we beseech thee that this day wee fall into no sinne bu● that we may accomplish thy holy will by directing ou● words framing our thoghts and disposing our doing accordingly Helpe vs an● further vs O Lord in all ou● Prayers that whatsoeuer w● doe may alwaies take beginning from thee and being so begun wee may proceede in true seruing of thee who art the Fountaine 〈◊〉 light and most peereless● spring of Wisdome LORD vouchsafe that the beames of thy wonderfull glorie may beate against my darke and smal vnderstanding and driue from me two kinde of mists to wit sinne and ignorance wherein I was borne Thou O Lord that makest the tongues of little Infants to be eloquent teach me to rule my tongue and let thy grace and blessing bee pou●ed on my lippes Giue mee sharpnesse of vnderstanding thy heauenly word and ability to retaine it a facility to serue a good kind of interpretation a good place to vtter my words and that they may tend to thy glory and guide my entrance to the matters I speake of direct my proceeding in the same and make perfect my conclusion Come Holy Ghost fill my heart with thy faith and kindle in mee the fire of thy loue doe thus good Lord who diddest bring the Gentiles to the vnity of thy saith by all kindes of diuers and strange languages send out Lord thy holy Spirit and all things shall be created and thou shalt make fresh the face of the Earth and thou that hast taught the Hearts of thy faithfull by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost giue mee the same spirit right vnderstanding and alway to reioice in thee make mee forsake Sathan and cleaue to thee ô Christ who art the way truth and life shew me thy wayes ô Lord and teach me thy pathes direct my steps according to thy word that no vnrighteousnesse reigne ouer mee Ma●e my going perfect in thy wayes that my steps be not moued Lord whi hart the Father of grace an● mercie desend me from my enemies and receiue mee at the houre of my death Good Lord grant I may depart in a good houre out of this World and that I may arise from the death of sinne and walke in newnesse of life that when I shall rise againe at the latter day when our life shall be seene manisestly of all men I also may bee openly but fauourably seene of thy glory who liue●● and reiguest one GOD World without end Amen Another Prayer for the Morning O Lord God and my heauenly Father I do here present my selfe with my morning sacrifice vnto thy Omnipotent Maiestie crauing thy mercifull aide for the strengthening of my weake faith at this present that thereby I may be made the more apt and able to serue thy heauenly Maiesty in all holinesse and true sincerity of heart And now that the time allotted for my feeble senses is expired and that the spring of the morning approacheth I offer vp my bounden duety of praise and thankesgiuing to thy euer blessed and glorious Maiestie vpon whom all the houres and moments of life depend for adding yet more space vnto my daies for granting me a larger time of repentance for the obtaining of thy grace and exercise of vertue and amendement of my sinfull life O eternal and euerliuing God who art the guardian to all true beleeuers make me euermore to magnifie and extoll thy mercies and in true token of this my thankefulnesse hauing nothing more neere vnto me then my selfe I here offer and present my selfe body and soule vnto thy hea●enly will and pleasure beseeching thee to dispose of me as of thine owne to direct the remainder of my life to thy Honour and seruice
Heauen an● Earth bee rendered praise and thankesgiuing Worl● without e●d Amen Another Morning Prayer O Blessed Lord tho● hast established thy Throne in Heauen and tho● gouernest all things by thir● imperiall power I will m●g●ifie thee O God and praise thy name World without ●nd I will giue thee thankes ●lwaies and make thy name glorious for euermore Lord ●onfirme in mee that which ●hou hast wrought and fi●ish the worke thou hast begu●●e in me to the glorie of thy name and the sauing of ●●y soule at the dreadful day of thy v●sitation for thy mere●es sake O Father of goodnesse and mercy let the depth of thy bounty dry vp the depth of my sinnes and giue mee grace to ef●ect thy will and then command mee what thou plea●est Lord giue me patience ●onstancy and perseuerance ●n my calling and duety of ●ife according to thy will ●nd direction and then let my course of life be in what thou wilt appoint Good Father bee thou my guide and ●ule of l●●e and then all my actions shall be squared● and fitted by the aime of thy word to my great comfort Lord let not the world with her smile beguile mee nor with ●er ●rownes afright me Arme me with sanctity strength and wisdome that Sathan deceiue mee not let not my owne conscience betray mee to his malice let me euery day encrease my strength in thee to the welfare of my soule And good Lord giue me grace patiently and thankfully to take all thou shalt lay vpon me good Father deliuer me this day from sinne and all other mischiefe that may befall me through my frail●ty and keepe me as the apple of thy eye Lord hide me vnder the ●hadow of thy wings from the vngodly and them that goe about to trouble mee Mine enemies compaste mee ●ound about Lord bee thou my guard and defence let not mine enemies haue the ●oper hand of me O Lord ●leanse mee from my secret off●aces and let my morning teares and the sorrow●ull sighing of my heart ●ome before thy presence ●nd alwaies be acceptable in ●hy sight And I beseech thee good Father to cast vpon me ●he eye of thy great clemencie that through the ef●ects of thy spirit I may ob●aine life euerlasting Amen A short Prayer for the Morning O Lord God in the multitude of thy mercies I doe heere present my selfe vnto thee beseeching thee to heare me and to addresse my heart truly and zealouslie to call vpon thee O Heauenly Father who like a diligent watchman doest alwaies attend thy faithfull people whether they awake or sleepe and mightily defendest them not onely from Sathan that olde enemy of Mankinde but also from all other aduersaries so that by thy godly power they bee preserued harmelesse I most heartily thanke thee that it hath pleased thy Fatherlie goodnesse to take care of ●●ee thine vnprofitable ser●uant this night past that thou hast both safely kept me from all my enemies and ●lso giuen me sweete sleepe to the great comfort of my ●ody I most intirely beseech ●hee O most mercifull Father to shew the like kindnesse towards me this day in ●reseruing my body and ●oule that as my enemies may haue no power ouer me so I likewise may nei●her thinke breathe speake ●r doe any thing that may ●e displeasant to thy Father●●e goodnesse dangerous to ●y selfe or hurtfull to my ●eighbour but that all mine ●nterprises may bee agreea●le to thy most blessed will ●hich is alwaies good and godly doing that which may aduance thy glory answere to my vocation an● profit my neighbour who●● I ought to loue as my selfe ● that whensoeuer thou callest me from this vale of miserie I may bee found th● Childe not of darknesse bu● of light and so for eue●raigne with thee in glory which art the true and euerlasting light to whom with thy dearely beloued Sonne IESVS CHRIST our onely Sauiour and the Holie Ghost that most sweet comforter bee all honour and glorie Amen A Meditation to be vsed before thou go●st to bed AT night before thou goest to bedde examine wel thy conscience It is good that euery man doe not onely weekelie but euery day and houre examine himselfe ●● driue from his soule all negligence and sloath and enrich his minde with godlinesse Whereupon the Poet writeth very well Let not thy sluggish sleepe close vp thy waking eye Vntill with iudgement deepe thy daily deeds thou trie It is meet then to examine our consciences of the grieuous offences which wee haue committed against GOD and to call to remembrance how wee haue offended his omnipotent Maiestie from the time we did rise vnto this present by thought consent deed● sla●kenesse or omitting that which ●endeth to the true seruice and ●onour of our Lord and Sauiour IESVS CHRIST by offending of our Neighbour b● passing our time idlie in praying after a ●●olde sort with small deuotion and in neglecting of our duty by such slothfulnesse that we thereby fall into ●rronious sins which turn● very i●i●rious to our soules Therefore let vs with true sorrow and gr●ese and with a remorse of conscience duly consider the great offence wee comit against so mercifull a GOD then preparing our selues to prayer let vs giue God his d●● in seruing him in holinesse and righteousnesse with most humble thankes for his great ●●rci●s and benefits which hee so liberally bestowed vpon vs ●●nie waies as in making vs reasonable Creatures after his o●ne si●ilitude and likenesse ●nd by his infinite loue in shed●ing his most precious bloud ●●l●●ring v● ther●by from the ●●tt●●●lesse pit of hell M●r●●●●r hee h●th pr●mised and is alw●i●s ready to giue ●● euerlasting life if wee i● faith tr●ly seeke it ●t his ●ercifull ●●nds ●●d walk● in his La●es and follow his Comm●nde●ents Let vs co●sid●r ●is gre●t loue th●t ●● bath 〈◊〉 v● in the Holy Ghost when wee were ignorant a●d in laying his shining loue vpon vs with the light of faith which h●th preserued vs from a gr●●t●● danger For example through pri●● his Maiesty dro●e out of Hea●en th●se which were so●●t●●es gloriou● shining Angels being disobedient to his Law and chased Adam out of Paradise for hi● disobedience in not obeying his heauenly will Further his Iustice hath cast many a o●e into the deepe ●●ngeon of bell there to be tormented with perpetuall paine punishment for their sloathfull negligence in seruing of him How much then are wee bound vnto the Lord in giuing vs so many exa●ples whereby we might serue him aright as true Christians ought to do● but his mercie is infinite full of patience and long suffering If wee will at any time seeke and call to him for grace ●ow gently doth hee lay his r●dd● of correction vpon vs whereby we may acknowledge our offences in turning to him in the sinceritie of our hearts minding neuer more to offend him whereas otherwise it might please ●im to destroy vs suddenly O what a g●●tle and lo●ing Father is this that hath
more care of vs then we ha●e of our sel●es How often hath he spa●ed vs when wee haue fallen into sinne whereas if his l●●●●ad not beene gr●at to vs hee might easily ●a●● th●●●ne vs downe into perpetuall destruction without giuing vs ti●● of repentance Therefore let vs call to mind how dangerous a thing it is to offend so mercifull a Father let vs call to mind● why wee should put our soules into so great a danger considering wee see that hee strikes many ti●es suddenlie witho●t gi●ing any repentance ●● all If ●●●●●●●● but diligently consider t●● danger w●●rest in by our idle and cold seruing of GOD q●estionlesse wee should betake our selues to a better seruing of him Say we should die and leaue this life this present night what iudgement should we look or expect or to what place should wee bee brought where should wee giue and make account for euerie idle word we speake for whatsoeuer wee thinke or doe Of what a hard and fearefull thing is this vnto vs if wee would but duly consider what wee lose in not seruing God truly Let vs giue ouer this lazie seruing of God and leaue the idle vanities of the World which luls vs asleepe in the lap of destruction It is fit that we earnestly enforce our thoughts still to be calling to GOD for mercy and remission of our sins promising from the bottome of our hearts to be more carefull and to vse greater diligence for the amendement of our wicked liues And if it please his diuine Maiesty to take our liues away this night desire him according to his infinite mercie to deale mercifully with vs not according to our deseruings which are meerely naught but according to his righteousnesse which is all good but if it please his omnipotencie to prolong our daies any further here in this world pray that he will so infuse into our hart the oile of his grace that we may magnifie him in a better fashion then we haue usually done heretofore and pray that he will giue vs grace ●o liue discreetely vprightly and godlily in this life and in the World to come to giue vs life euerlasting Amen A Prayer for the Euening O Most worthy redeemer and Sauiour of Mankind I avile and a wretched sinn●● in hope of pardon and forgiuenes of my great offences doe here humbly prostrate my selfe before thy sacred f●ete this night confessing vnto thee and accusing my selfe of all my faults and heinous transgressions where-with vnto this houre I haue so offended thee my Lord and Maker and that I haue not trembled to commit those execrable sinnes for which if thy mercies were not great towards me I should remaine as a lost sheepe I must needs confesse my most great ingratitude which I haue committed vnto this houre against thee my onely Lord and Redeemer so vnthankefull to thee for all thy loue graces and benefits bestowed vpon me and that thou hast so patientlie spared mee so long a time persisting in euill and continuing my wicked and vngracious courses that in mercie thou hast tollerated so great contempt of thy diuine will and Commandements yea so exceeding and great hath beene thy loue that in stead of casting mee into hell fire thou hast kept me vnder the shadow of thy wings as for these my offences I had iustly deserued thou contrariwise hast spared mee for amendemnt of life for which cause how often hast thou knockt at the doore of my heart by thy heauenlie inspirations how often hast thou preuented ●ee with blessings allured mee with comforts drawne me with fauours yea forced mee many times by crosses and afflictions to seeke vnto thee and yet neither hath my flintie heart beene mollified therewith nor my will reclaimed A wonder it is that now at last comming to finde the foulenesse of my errour my very heart doth not burst with extremitie of contrition Hath Hell it selfe sufficient torment to punish such wickednesse and to take vengeance of such exceeding ingratitude vnworthie I am to bee called thy Creature or whom the earth should beare much lesse affoorde nourishment and things necessarie for preseruation of my health nay doubtlesse had not thy mercie with-held them both Heauen and Earth the Elements and all Creatures had long ere this taken vengeance of me for such horrible contempt and abuses O how many thousands in the World by thy righteous iudgements are alreadie condemned to the neuer ending torments of hell fire who neuer came neere the measure of any mortal transgressions Yea who in comparison of me a sinfull caitiffe might rather bee Saints in Heauen then damned soules adiudged as they be vnto eternall perdition But now O mercifull Father and God of pittie and compassion in vnfeined sorrow and remorse of conscience for all my misdeeds I throw my selfe downe at thy feete this night humbly beseeching thee to be reconciled vnto mee to pardon all my offences both new and olde to looke vpon me a miserable and a wretched sinner with the eye of mercie as thou diddest the penitent Publican the ●●nner Magdalen and the Apostle that thrice denied thee Bee pleased to admit mee again into thy grace and fauour Lord I pray thee work that speedilie in mee for which cause thou hast so long spared mee Wo is mee that I should leaue so louing and so kinde a Father who hath not ceased to procure my good that I haue refused to bestow vppon him my heart who would haue made an habitation for his owne abode therein which by keeping from him my selfe haue defiled it with much filth and corruption Yea made it a vessell of impietie a stew of vncleane thoughts and cogitations in a word I confesse my selfe to be the most vicious Creature vpon the Earth Yet the rather will I throw my selfe into the Sea of thy mercie for as my sinnes bee numberlesse so be thy mercies endlesse But most louing Father if thou wilt thou canst make mee cleane Lord heale the wounds of my soule for vnto thee doe I open the sore Remember thy selfe sweete Lord of that comfortable speech pronounced by the mouth of one of thy Prophets Thou hast committed folli● with many Louers yet turn● thee againe vnto me and I wil receiue thee Much confidence haue I Lord in this thy sweete and comfortable saying with all my heart do I returne vnto thee and to none else I am that prodigall child I am that vnfaithful seruant who haue separated my selfe from the Father of lights from whom all goodnesse doth flow I haue forsaken the fountaine of lluing w●ters and haue digged vnto my selfe Ci●●●rnes which will hold no water contenting my selfe with such barren comforts as the Creatures did affoord mee such momentanie sading pleasures as to the great detriment of my soule I h●ue ●ried to be lighter then cha●●e and more vaine then vanitie itselfe But what is past gracious God let it be cancelled and forgotten and for the time to come let there be an eternall league
beseech thee saue my enemies from thy wrath and forgiue them that haue offended thee like as I would bee forgiuen in those things whereby I haue offended thee Giue mee grace to order my life O Lord and the workes of my bodie soule with resolued intent neuer to offend thee whereby I may receiue the reward of thy infinite ioy and eternall felicitie O Lord Iesus Christ grant mee whatsoeuer thy diuine wisdome knoweth most expedient for mee and that this miserable life is not worthy to obtaine Grant at the houre of my death I neuer fall from thee when as I shall bee accused for my hainous offences and sinnes committed against thy omnipotent Maiestie I beseech thee breake my froward heart and make it obedient vnto thee Lord keepe me from sudden death and preserue mee so by thine almightie hand and grant me sweete Father to haue a contempt of this World that I may with a i●yfull heart come into thy blessed presence Let the remembrance of thy death make mee ioifull wherby I may endure temptations tribulations and make mee so to loue thee that I may come to inherite that ioifull immortall and glorious life most excellent blisse and endlesse felicitie which is ordained in thy heauenlie Kingdome and for thy seruants prepared Lord grant me these supplications which I haue made to thee at this present grant me here in this Pilgrimage a gracious life and ● blessed ending free from debt and deadly sinne and after my death bring mee to euerlasting life there to haue an endlesse blisse and felicitie Amen A Prayer to GOD for hi● great goodnesse vnto Man O My Soueraigne Lord Iesu the very true Son of Almightie God that sufferedst death for my sake I beseech thee Lord haue mercie on mee that am a wretched sinner but yet thy creature For thy tender passion keepe me from all perils bodilie and ghostlie and especiallie from all things that may turne to thy displeasure And with all my heart I thanke thee most mercifull Lord for the great mercies which thou hast shewed me in the great dangers which I haue beene in as well in soule as in bodie and that thy grace and endlesse mercie hath alway kept and saued mee since the houre of my birth vnto this day Lord I beseech thee let thy mercie be continued towards mee and for my great offences vnkindnesse wretched and sinfull life Lord ● humblie aske pardon for the same at thy Almighti● hands And I thanke thee mo●● gracious Lord for thy gre●● benefits and graces which thou hast so largely bestowed on me before many other Creatures who haue bette● deserued then I. Lord I doe here meekeli● prostrate my selfe in heart a● it becommeth thy seruant promising neuer to offen● thee more tendering all honour and praise to thy holi● name who liuest raigne one God World witho●● end Amen A Prayer to GOD to deli●er vs from our ghostlie Enemies MOst deare Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ I beseech thee of thy benigne goodnesse and mercie to protect saue keepe and defend me against the assaults of my ghostlie enemies for I haue no other trust hope nor succour but thee alone Grant me therefore most gracious Father to dread loue thee aboue all things in this present life and after this life ended to enioy the Kingdome prepared for all true beleeuers Further I beseech thee that thou wilt vouchsafe out of thy great mercie and clemencie to shew thy bountifull goodnesse vpon me an● to forgiue me all my sinnes and grant that I may perseuere euerlastinglie in al● goodnesse and serue thee aright that after this life ● may raigne with thee in euerlasting glorie Worl● without end Amen A Prayer to GOD da●lie to be saide O My most blessed Lord the wel spring of pity and Fountaine of endlesse mercie I humbly beseech thee to giue mee grace so to spend this my transitory life in vertuous and godly exercises that when the day of my death shal come though I feele paine in my body yet I may feele comfort in my soule and with a faithfull hope of thy mercie imbrace thy messenger so contentedlie that I may w●llingly thorow thy grace and strength depart out of this vale of mis●ri● in loue towards thee and charitie towards the World that I may hasten me to that glorious Coun●rey wherein thou hast purchased mee an inheritance for euer with thy most precious bloud O my sweete Sauiour and Lord Iesus Christ I beseech thee while thou doest suffer mee to liue in this World be so gracious a Father as to giue vnto me a contrite and cleane heart quiet and patient a bodie chaste humble and obedient to follow thy will and alwaies ready to do thee seruice To thee O God bee al● praise which hast ●ermitte● mee to accomplish thi● worke grant O ●ord● i● may bee to thee ac●eptable to my soule healthf●l and to others profitable through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen A Prayer to be vsed at all times O Heauenly Lord and Omnipotent Father the patterne of all goodnes and follower of all vertues most stoute ouerthrower of all wickednesse and sharpest rooter vp of vices mercifullie behold my frailety and pronenesse to euill Helpe me with thy super●al power that I may learne ●o despise all earthly plea●●res and the vanities there●● and loue all celestiall and ●eauenly things Make mee resist all sinne which stands betweene thy ●aiesty and my weake spi●●t ready to ouerthrow mee ●● thy mercies were not assi●●ant to my poore soule Make me to withstand all ●●mptations firmely to im●race vertue to eschew all ●orldlie honours and car●all delights and to bewaile ●●ine offences committed in ●y sight I beseech thee restraine my ●●bridled desires with thy ●●uing hand whereby I may ●●staine from a leude and ●ose life and accustome my selfe with goodnesse to th● end that by thy benefit an● gift of grace by the true wo●shipping and seruing of th● Omnipotent Maiestie I ma● possesse the Crowne of eue●lasting life in thy Kingdome● prepared for thine ●le● World without end Amen A Prayer to bee daily saide vnto our Lord Iesus Christ O Maker of Heauen an● Earth King of King● Lord of Lords which of nothing diddest make mee t● thine Image and likeness● and didst redeeme mee wit● thine owne blood when I sinner was not worthy t● name to call or with he● to thinke vpon thee Humbly I desire meek●ie pray thee that thou gent●ie wilt behold mee thy sin●ull and wre●ched seruant O haue mercie on mee thou which ●adst mercy on the woman of Canaan vpon Mary Magdalen vpon the ●ublican vpon the thiefe ●anging on the Crosse Vnto thee I confesse Lord ●y sinnes which if I would cannot hide from thee Haue mercy Lord on me or I am a wretched sinner ●hich haue sore offended ●ee in pride couetousnsse ●luttony letchery vainglo●●e hatred enuie adulterie ●●est lying backbiting ●orting dissolute and wan●●n laughing idle words ●aring tasting sleeping ●orking and many more waies
I fraile man and most wretched sinner haue offended thee Therefore I most humbly pray and beseech thy gentlenesse who for my health and saluation descendedst from Heauen and diddest hold vp Dauid that hee should not fall into sinne Haue mercy vpon me O Christ who didst forgiue Peter that did forsake thee Thou art my Creatour my Helper and Maker my Redeemer my Gouernour my Father my Lord my God my King thou art my helpe my trust my strength my defence my redemption my life my health and my resurrection thou art my stedfastnesse my refuge and succour my light and my helpe I most humbly and heartily desire pray thee helpe ●nd defend mee Make mee ●●rong comfort me make me stedfast make me sober●y mery giue me the light of thy spirit and visite mee reuiue me again who am dead for I am thy making and thy worke O Lord despise me not I am thy seruant thy bondman although euill vnworthy and a sinner But whatsoeuer I am whether I bee good or bad I am euer thine Therefore to whom shall I flie except I flie vnto thee If thou cast mee off who shall or wil receiue me If thou despise me and turne thy face from me who shall looke vpon mee and recognise and acknowledge me Although I be vnworthy to come to thee although I be vile and vncleane thou canst make me cleane If I be dead thou canst r●uiuemee for thy mercy is much morethen mine iniquitie thou canst forgiue me more then I can offend Therefore O Lord doe not consider nor haue respect to the number of my sinnes but according to the greatnesse of thy mercie looke on me a most wretched sinner Lord say vnto my soule I am thy health who saidest I will not the death of any sinner but rather that he liue and be conuerted Turne me O Lord to thee and bee not angry with me I pray thee most meeke Father for thy great mercie bring mee vnto that blisse that neuer ●hall c●●sse so bee it A●en A Prayer for the r●miss●● of sinnes O Lord God if we wretched sinners had not ●y thy tender mercies and ●ouing promises in Holie Scripture the comfort of our weake consciences and sorrowfull hearts we see no other remedy so great and ●infinite are our sinnes but that wee must needes despaire But for as much as whatsoeuer things are written are written for our learning that through patience and the comfort of Scriptures wee may haue hope though our sinnes be neuer so many neuer so abhominable yet they doe not so much make vs sad as thy louing kindnesse and ●ender mercie● make vs glad Our sinnes we consesse are innumerable but thy mercies are also infinit tho● art that most gentle Lord which wilt not the death of a sinner but rather that hee turne and liue Thou for repentance sake wilt not see the sin●es of men thou confessest that thou camest into this World to saue sinners to call not the righteous but sinners to repentance and to seeke that which was lost Thou callest vnto thee all those that are diseased and loaden with the heauy burthen of sinne and promise●t that thou wilt case them yea by thy Prophet thou saiest If wee will wash and make clean● our sel●●s put away our euill thoughts out of thy sight cease from doing eui●● and violence learne to doe right apply our selues to equitie deliuer the oppressed helpe the fatherlesse to his right and heare the widowes co●plaint though our sinnes were as ●ed as scarlet ●et shall they be made whi●●● then snow and though they were like purple yet they shall be made like white 〈◊〉 Yea thou saiest moreouer that for thine owne sake euen for thy mercy names sake thou wilt be good vnto vs fauour vs● and so cast away all our sinnes behind thy backe tha● thou wilt ne●er remember them more O Lord thou art the God which cannot lie thou art the soules truth thou art faithfull in thy words and holy in all thy workes For according to these thy louing promises hast thou euer dealt with the chi●dren of men whensoeuer they repented and turned vnto thee when they forsooke their sinful liuing and called vpon thy holy name thou forgauest all their s●ns and healedst all their infirmities thou also sauedst their life from destruction and crownedst them with mercie and louing kindnesse For thou O Lord God a●●full of compassion and mercie long suffering and of great goodnesse thou wi●● not alway be chiding neither wilt thou keepe thine anger for euer neither wilt thou deale with vs after our sinnes nor yet reward vs according to our wickednesse For looke how high the Heauen is in comparison of the Earth so great is thy mercie towards them that feare thee Looke how wide the East is from the West so far●e dost thou set our sinnes from vs yea like as a Father pittieth his owne children euen so art thou mercifull vnto them that feare thee For thou knowest whereof we be made thou remembrest that wee are but dust that a man in his time is but gras●e and flourisheth as a flower of the fi●ld and as soone as the wind goeth ouer it is gone and the place thereof knoweth it no more but thy mercifull goodnesse O Lord endureth for euer and euer vpon them that feare thee Of these thy louing kindnesses and tender mercies who hath not tasted if hee sought it with all his heart Thou diddest forgiue Dauid both his whoredome and manslaughter when hee repented and confessed his sinne How oft diddest thou call back the plagues of thy vengeance when the Children of Israel lamented their sins and turned vnto thee How mercifull diddest thou shew thy selfe to the N●n●●ites when they repented humbled themselues in thy sight How louingly spakest thou to that sinfull Woman in the Gospel and forgauest her all her sinnes because shee repented and beleeued Peter thy Disciple although most cowardly denying thee after that he had bitterly wept and lamented his sinnes thou diddest behold with thy mercifull eye and fauourably receiue him againe into the number of thy holy Apostles One of them that died with thee being a thiefe after he had called vnto thee for grace thou didst place in Paradise and make him partaker of thine eternall felicity Many other notable examples of thy great mercies find wee in Holy Scripture which will not suffer vs to despaire of thy clemencie and goodnesse be our sinnes and wickednesse neuer so ma●y but they rather encourage ●s boldly to come vnto the Throne of thy Grace that we may receiue mercie and finde grace to helpe in ●ime of neede O most gentle Sauiour thou art that most louing Shepheard who didst diligent●y seeke the wandering sheepe louingly laide it vppon thy shoulder● and tenderly brought it home againe seeke vs who haue so long run astray lay vs vpon thy mercifull shoulders and bring vs home againe vnto the companie of thy faithfull Thou art that mercifull Sama●●tane who beholding the
passe thou through thy vnspeakable power makest easie in them and bringest to a fortunate end Wee therefore being fullie perswaded of thy bent and readie goodnesse of thy present helpe of thy sweete comfort in all miseries and necessities knowing also by the testimonie of thy Word how great intollerable the paines of Women are that trauell of childe if through thy tender mercies they be not mittigated and eased most h●mbly pray thee for Iesus Christ his sake thy Sonne our Lord that thy louing kindnesse may make that easie and tollerable which sinne hath made hard and painefull Ease O LORD the paines which thou most righteouslie hast put vpon all Woemen for the sinne and disobedience of our Grand-mother Eue in whom all wee haue sinned and giue vnto all such as haue conceiued and bee with childe strength to bring forth that Childe which thou wonder●ully hast wrought in them be present with them in their trouble helpe them and deliuer them Let thy power bee shewed no lesse in the safe bringing forth then in the wonderfull fashioning of the Childe that that which thou hast begunne in them may come vnto good successe Make them glad and ioyfull Mothers that they through thy goodnesse being safely deliuered and restored to their olde strengths may liue and praise thy blessed name fo●euer Amen A Thankesgiuing vnto GOD for their deliuerance O LORD GOD among other thy great benefits yea and those innumerable which thou daily bestowest vpon vs thy needy and poore Creatures this is not the least O most mercifull Father that thou of thy tender goodnesse doest vouchsafe for the conseruation of mankind to preserue the Woemen that are with childe and to giue them safe deliuerance of their burthen by this meanes making them glad and ioyfull Mothers For these thy benefits and good will towards vs wee so heartily thanke thee as heart can thinke beseeching thee to worke such thanke●ulnesse in the hearts of all Mothers that they being not vnmindfull of this high benefit of their safe deliuerance wrought onely by the Sauiour of all mankinde may shew themselues thankeful vnto thee for this thy goodnesse and neuer forget that thy present helpe and most sweete comfort which thou mercifullie shewest vpon them in their great trauailes labours and paines when they fled vnto thy holie name for succour as vnto a strong bull-warke and holie de●ence Continue thy fauour towards them O Lord by making them ioyfull Mothers of many children and indue them with long life that they may see their Childrens Children And the Children that thou gauest vnto them make thou as in age so likewise in wisdome and in the aboundance of thy holy Spirit to encrease that they may haue fauour both with thee and with all good men vnto the glory of thy most blessed name one GOD World without end Amen A Prayer for a sicke Man O Almighty GOD and all full of mercie which art the onelie Father of helpe and true Physician of our bodies soules in thy hands are life and death thou bringest to the graue and pullest backe againe Wee came into this World vpon a condition to forsake it whensoeuer thou wouldest call vs and now the Summoners are come thy fetters hold mee and none can loose me but he which bound me I am sicke in bodie with paine and in soule for feare of condemnation LORD thou hast stricken me but in iudgement shew mercie I deserued to die so soone as I came to life but thou hast preserued me till now and shall this mercie be in vaine as though we were preserued for nothing Who can praise thee in the Graue I haue done thee no seruice since I was borne but my goodnesse is to come and shall I die before I beginne to liue But good Lord thou knowest what is best of all and if thou conuert me I shal be conuerted in an houre and as thou acceptedst the will of Dauid as well as the act of Solomon so thou wilt accept my desire to serue thee as well as if I did liue to glorifie thee The spirit is willing but the flesh is fraile and as I did liue sinfully whensoeuer thy Spirit was from me so I shall die vnwillingly vnlesse thy Spirit prepare me Therefore deare Father giue mee that minde which a sicke man should haue and encrease my patience in my paine and call vnto ●y remembrance all that which I haue heard or read or felt or meditated so strengthen me in this houre of my trauaile that I which neuer taught any good while I liued may now teach others to die to beare their sickenesse patiently Applie vnto mee all the mercies of thy beloued Sonne as if he had died for me alone be not from me when the enemy comes but when the Tempter is bustest let thy Spirit bee busiest too and if it please thee to loose me out of this prison and when I shall leaue my earth to earth let thy Angell carry vp my soule as they did Lazar●● and place me in one of those mansions which thy Sonne is gone to prepare for me This is my Mediator which hath reconciled mee and thee when thou diddest abhorre me for my sinne● and thou diddest send him from H●auen to vs to shew that thou art bound to heare him for vs. Therefore in him I come vnto thee in him I call vpon thee O my Redeemer my Preseruer and my Sauiour to thee bee all praise with thy Father and the Holy Spirit for euer and euer Amen A Prayer to be saide before the receiuing of the holy Communion THy loue towardes vs O most gentle Father is so great and vnmcasurable that it can by no meanes be expressed by mouth nor sufficiently conceiued in heart and this thy loue is without any deserts on our behalse freely and willinglie O Heauenly Father thou hast sent downe thy only Son Christ Iesus from the glorious seate of thy diui●●e Maiestie to take our flesh vpon him and to become per●ect man of the substance of a pure and vndefiled Virgiu Mary through the operation of the Holie Gh●st O thou that art this our Mediatour thou taughtest the will of thy Heauenly Father confirming the same with wonderfull mercies vnto the great comfort of many which then liued and vnto the perfect establishment of our faith which liue at this present a●ter thou haddest trauelled in this World certain yeeres the time afore appointed from euerlasting of thy Heauenly Father drawing nigh that thou mightest giue thy selfe an oblation and sweete smelling sacrifice to God the Father for the sins of the whole World euen so many as repent beleeue and amend willing that so noble and worthy a benefit of our redemption should not bee forgotten nor fall out of remembrance who art the sole Authour of our saluation and the onely comfort of weake consciences when thou hadst eaten the Paschall Lambe with thy Disciples according to the appointment of the Law thou tookest bread into thy hand gauest thankes
vnto his ende Here good Reader is both the manner the method the forme the fashion how to meditate and what to meditate as time and necessity shall require with a requisite regard and serious consideration that our holy meditations may bee the more gracious in the eyes of God and successefull in our desires and occasions that God may blesse both them and vs with an happy Earnest in this World of the eternity in the World to come whether by his blessed will so prospering this intended meanes that it may be able to bring vs to the blessed Hauen of rest and endlesse ioy The Lord of life and death in whose hands is the breath of euery liuing thing so direct vs that wee may learne to number our dayes that wee may run out the short race of our sinfull Pilgrimage in godlinesse of holy meditation with much patience looking to Christ Iesus the Authour and finisher of our faith that when we shall haue finished these dayes of sinne wee may bee translated to a better life in the Kingdome of Glory which GOD hath purchased to vs in the blood-shedding of his beloue● Sonne To whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be rendered all glory maiesty power and dominion now euer Amen Thine in the Lord Henry Thompson What the Soule loseth by mortall sinne THe grace of the Holy Ghost The friendship and familiaritie with God All mortall vertues infused and of Gods Spirit The inheritance of the Kingdome of Heauen The portion of Gods children and patronage of his Fatherly prouidence which he hath ouer the iust The peace and quietnesse of a good and cleere conscience What misery the Soule gaineth by mortall sinne COndemnation to eternall paine to bee quite cancelled out of the Booke of life To become of the childe of God the thrall of the Diuell To bee changed from the Temple of the Holy Ghost into a denne of theeues a nest of vipers a ●inke of corruption How a Soule is prepared to Iustification by degrees Faith setteth before our eies God is a iust Iudge Angry with the bad Mercifull to the repentant Of this Faith by the gift of God Spirit arises a feare by cōsideratiō of Gods Iustice and Our owne sinnes This feare is comforted by hope grounded in Gods mercie and The goodnes of Christ Of this hope ariseth loue and charitie vnto Christ For louing vs without desert Rredeeming vs with so much loue Of this loue followes sorrowe for offending Christ of whom we haue been so mercifully Created Redeemed Sanctified and called to his Faith Of this sorrow ariseth a firme purpose to auoide all sinne which GOD aboue all ●things detesteth The Diuel aboue all things desireth And aboue all things hurteth the soule THE SOVLES Alarum-Bell CHAP. I. That GOD his beginning was without beginning and is and shall bee euer without end THere was euermore a Thing being and that Thing that was euer before all other things must needs be without be ginning and must be the first Maker and the first Cause of all things which hath no maker nor no cause out of whom as out of the verie fountaine and will of all causes euery thing taketh his being So that Thing which was first being must needes bee the Exo. 3. 14. cause and foundation of all things and of all beings and that First cause or Maker is among all people called Ioh. 8. 58. God Then sith God is the first cause of euery thing Iob. 1. 2. 3. 4. and the first principall cause of the being of euery thing it requireth that there bee in him such a being that it must bee the most perfect most substant all being and the most sure being that is or can bee which shall neuer haue end For if it shall haue an end it is not the most perfect most substantiall and most sure being for it must bee such a being which excludeth euery imperfection that soonest tendeth to Not being There is no time past in which hee was not no time present in which he is not nor no time to come in which he shall not bee So that of necessity it followeth that his being was euer without beginning and is and shall bee euer without end therefore conueniently God is called Omnipotent as being of most power and might Then sith God is the cause of all things and Gen. 1. 1. euery thing taketh his effect by God and commeth of God as of his first cause Pro. 8. 22. and euery thing that taketh any effect hath neede of the cause for without the cause the effect could neuer haue Iohn 1. 1. 2. 3. 4. been Therefore it must follow that euery thing hath neede of God and that God hath neede of nothing And likewise that thing that Act 〈◊〉 14. 24. hath no life nor neuer had life may not by his owne Ephes 1 11. power make a thing to haue life But wee see in this world man beast to haue life which life proceeded and came first from that Creator which is very life in whom first must needs bee life Then sith God is first Creator and causer of euery thing which hath life it followeth that in him there was euer a life And as I haue said before because the being of God is the first being and cause of Gen. 1. 7. the being of euery thing the most perfect most substantiall and most sure being and because that thing which hath being and life also is more worthy then that thing which hath but being onely as the trees herbes which haue a quicknesse of life whereby they grow and increase haue a more noble and worthy being then a dead stocke or a dead stone which grow not and as the brute beast which hath a life sensitiue and power to moue it selfe and memory hath a more noble and worthy being then the Tree or herbe which hath but quickning and growing without power to moue or memory and also as the being of man which hath both life sensitiue power to moue memory and vnderstanding hath a more worthy being then the brute beast which hath but life sensitiue power to moue and memory without vnderstanding so it must needs follow that vnderstanding is the cause of the most worthy being And sith that God hath the most noble and worthy being that can bee it must needs follow that in God there must bee knowledge and vnderstanding and that the same being of God must bee with the same knowledge and vnderstanding And then if the being of God as I haue proued before be without beeginning and ending eternall infinite without measure and his being is and hath been euer most perfect and as hee himselfe may bee himselfe so may he himselfe vnderstand himselfe so that his being cannot bee seuered from his knowledge and vnderstanding nor his knowledge and vnderstanding seuered from his being it must follow that hee vnderstandeth all knoweth euery thing that was
weakenesse to bid him depart and say him Nay It is Matt. 16. 20. but a bitter recompence to buy the pleasures at so deare a rate as at the price of the soule in euerlasting confusion for our life is short and fading and but the length of a shanne and if thou thinke it more take the Counters into thy hands and see what reckoning thou canst make of it What is past grieues thee with the remembrance thereof because so much of thy time is spent what is present burdeneth thee with the weight thereof because in sweat and soare study and trauell thou doest waste thy time what is to come troubleth thee with the vncertainty of it lest the graue do swallow thee before thou see it Yea make thine account as thou oughtest and thou shalt find it swifter then the Weauers shuttle Iob 7. 6 and speedier then a post on the wings of the wind Iob 9. 25. Then in consideration of this and whatsoeuer hath beene spoken to the vn●lothing of our nakednesse and humbling vs before God to the pulling off our robes of leuity and lightnesse and the preparing our bodies to the graue and our soules to this insuing exercise of holy meditation to the daunting of all flesh All must come and the houre may be neere but it cannot be farre off and howsoeuer wee forget it it will bee sure to remember vs. Therefore let vs know that here as Pilgrimes and strangers wee wander hauing no abiding City but wee seeke for one to come But wee must not seeke to find it here nor suffer the vaine applause of the world and the vainer conceit of our selues to make vs forget where wee liue remembring that wee are of our selues but as trees turned vpwards hauing no sap from the Earth but refreshed and moistened with the deaw of Heauen Let vs so prouide for our iourney that wee misse not the Ci●y wee seeke for Let vs so runne our race that we obtaine the victorie and reward we runne for and therefore if thou expect in thy labour blessing in thy peace continuance in affliction comfort in thy death triumph in thy iudgement ioy respect in thy life sob●iety in thy calling honesty in thy pleasures iudgement in thy sorrowes in thy life religion If God be not with thee to direct thee that thou stray not to correct thee that thou presume not to sustaine thee that thou famish not to pardon thee that thou despaire not to support thee that thou stumble not to strengthen thee that thou fall not and to sanctifie thee that thou sinne not and to glorifie thee that thou perish not If the Lord thorowout the whole course of thy life and in thy death be not present and powerfull to thee thou faintest in the one and failest in the other and desperation enuironeth thee on euery side for where the Lord keepeth not watcheth not but turneth away his face all the miseries in the World then will lay their siege Therefore to him let vs day and night send vp our supplications and prayers vnfainedly without ceasing like incense into the aire whereby that mercifull and louing Sauiour of mankind may continue his goodnesse towards vs and giue vs that what we want to support vs by his grace to direct vs by his Spirit and so leade vs thorowe this exemplarie World of sinne and wickednesse with our eyes so looking forward fixed on him that we let not temptations in at their windowes so captiuating our desires vnto the omnipotency of his Maiesties will that with Lot we may be righteous in a City in a World of vncleannesse that so wee may saue our soules at the last though we lose all the vaine pleasures in the World besides The losse of 〈◊〉 soule would more 〈◊〉 Sathan then 〈◊〉 sorroweth for the da●nation of his owne but Christ our louing Sauiour he being ou● onely and chiefe Precursor into Heauen euen vnto his last breath being not vnmindfull of his little flocke did as Abraham vnto Isa ack● as Dauid vnto Salomon as Tobias vnto his son bequeathed vnto his a few small houres before his glorification his best and principall legacy being eternall life confirming it vnto them in his last and latest prayer made for his Apostles This is life eternall that we know thee to bee the onely very God without beginning or ending and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ That wee know him who he is and Rom. 11. what he is 1 Who he is euen the principall and singular essence from whom and by whom all things were created all things are preserued all things shall be dissolued 2 What hee is great in wisdome and therefore knoweth powerfull in strength and therefore can plentifull in loue and therefore will crowne those which hee knoweth and know those euerlastingly which hee loueth and loue those most tenderly which know and acknowledge him By his knowledge he will rule by his strength defend by his loue embrace all that know and acknowledge him that know him after a long and earnest seeking him and acknowledge him by a most gracious and happy finding him seeking him among their miseries finding him in his mercies seeking him in the croud and preasse of their sinnes finding him in the top of his Crosse seeking Him in finding our selues finding him in seeking our selues As wee desire to know and find God so wee must endeuour by all means possible to know and seeke out our s●lues and make a true inquisition about our selues before wee can attaine and reach vnto the right knowledge of him that made vs. For God being as he is without beginning and ending and not subiect to definition or Description must be shadowed per posteriora because hee hath not priora he being primum principium the primary cause principall ground of euery principle yea that principium principiorum that illimited wonderfull and vnsearchable Alpha must bee Apoc. 1. comprehended and knowne by his effects It is meere dotage in Philosophie to search out causes of Principles when they are Principles they haue not precedent causes and therefore those things that borrow not their proofe demonstration from fore-running causes their brightnesse and luster must appeare by their effects Since then God in regard of his being which is without ending is incomprehēsible and void of all demonstration mans frailtie must labour to know him by his effects and works For the inuisible wisdome of God is seene by the creation of the world and if in any creature the perfect Art of Gods omnipotencie may be comprehended it is in nothing more then in man vpon whom he hath set the stampe of his owne image Man therefore must know him giue him that due reuerence of honor which pertains to the omnipotencie of his Maiestie for in knowing GOD man knowes himselfe as being his workmanship Therefore wee ought to loue and know him as our Ma●er Creator Redeemer First know thy selfe with the eye of experience then know
God with the eye of contemplation first know thy selfe poore in miserie and then know God rich in mercie first know thy selfe groning and backe broken vnder the burthen of sinne and then know God easing and refreshing thee thus laden first know thy selfe Deaths free-hold possession and then know God the breaker and bruser of the Serpents head first know thy selfe to bee the weake subiect of all mortalitie and then know God in the donation of his Spirit the earnest-penny of mans immortalitie Man must know that hee is no long liuing creature that as soone as he is borne he is coupled with famine with thirst with heat with cold and many more infirmities And for his death hee may bee compared to snowe quickly come and as quickly gone or like to a rose at morning faire at euening withered Therefore seeing wee are so suddenly gone here to day to morrow vanished man must first know from whence he is and then let him blush for shame secondly where hee is then lament with grones thirdly whither he will and then tremble with feare At his naked natiuity hee laments with crying at his worldly entertainment trembles with feare for his doubtfull end what shall become of him O let man blush for shame he is flesh and therefore farre from God let him lament with grones that he is in the world for therefore is he wide of heauen let him tremble with feare that hee must die hee being obuious to the iawes of hell To bee briefe man must know himselfe aright both within and without behinde before and on all sides before his peruerse and ouerthwart nature will know the right way to follow God in his steps But on the contrary man is prone to euill and to the sweet and pleasing remembrance of that which is bad on this side lacke of patience in aduersitie on that side too much pride and haughtinesse in prosperitie nay what vice is it that man wants on euery side wounds and nothing but wounds imprinted stamped in his soule and fraile flesh by the custome of sin yet vpon his repentance hee shall finde God aboue him powerfull beneathe him plentiful before him watchfull behinde him wonderfull on this side bountifull on that side carefull and on euery side mercifull mercifull in forgetting mercifull in forgiuing our sinnes and the onely pathway to perfection Heraclitus a Heathen in superstition a Philosopher in profession on a time triumphing as it were with himselfe how hee had spent the day cried out with a loud voice The honour of the well-spent day is this I haue sou●ht my selfe which of al knowledge next to God is most necessary for man in knowing himselfe knowes God It is an hard thing to be tongue-tide in secrecy to dispose the time rightly or to suffer iniuries patientlie it is an hard thing to tolerate aduersity with quietnesse and as hard a thing it is to bee a good Man The hardest lesson that a man can learne is to know himselfe what is the stile of Mastership in Arts if a man perfectly knowes not himselfe Knowledge puffeth vp but selfe-knowledge pu●leth downe Knowledge is so far wide of true knowledge that in ignorance of God it crieth with Pharoah Exo. 5. But selfe-knowledge plunged in the depth of its owne knowledge aspireth to know the true knowledge of God Exod. 18. Iethro confesseth the Lord is greater then all Gods Knowledge mounteth vpon the wings of pride boasteth with Lucifer I will make the starres my foote-●toole But selfe-knowledge couered with the veile of humilitie falleth downe with Iob and worshippeth knowledge But selfe-knowledge is not hasty in pace nor multiloquious in words keeping time in going and obseruing a meane in speaking and at once breakes vp the chest of his heart vnto the Lord for his mercifull fauour herein Aristotle by nature coueted knowledge and that itching desire of Eue as soone as she was out of the shell testifieth no lesse for the hope of much knowledge shee lost her selfe in ignorance swallowing as shee thought the bait of knowledg which turned in the end to the bane of ignorāce Yet if knowledge suffer a difference and men beare more then an indifferent minde vnto it there is none more pleasing none more profitable then this selfe-knowledge pleasing in respect of God profitable in respect of man Gen. 28. It is the ladder of Iacob that reacheth from earth to Heauen that Geometricall square that squareth out Man at a spanlength and then measureth Psal 39. God the Alpha and Omega vvhich filleth Heauen and Earth that Arithmeticall Calendar of Mans age that first declareth his time to be three●●ore yeeres and ten and then vvith Moses ascendeth the Mount to take a suruey of Gods eternitie The dee●er Man vvadeth into the s●lfe-knovvledge the neerer he shall arriue to God himselfe It shall bee more then Thomas his Credo to conceiue God inwardly Ioh. 20. then to thrust thy finger into his side it shall be more then the Centurions Mat. 27. testimonie to acknowledge him in thy heart then before the multitude to confesse him vvith the lippes it shall be more then Simeons Nunc Dimittis to take hold of him in a troubled spirit then to imbrace his infancie in the flesh it shall bee more then Philips sufficit to view Iohn 14. him in thy selfe then to behold him in the heauens Looke not on the superficies and outside of thy selfe saith the Poet but rather let thy conscience bee thy looking-glasse whereby thou maiest dresse and attire thy selfe fit for heauen that will tel thee how to get the wedding robe by innocencie of life that wil teach thee how to put it on by a liuely faith that will tell thee what his progenitors haue been that will teach thee what thy state is now that will tell the histories of Adam that will tell the lessons of thy selfe that will tell thee that Adam brought sinne into the world that will tell thee therfore how thou maist study the law of God we must study it because it is a school master to bring vs vnto Christ and there like a true Naturalist shalt thou finde the causes of thy sinne hanging vpon record and there like a true Historian reade what others haue done before thee how thou maiest study the Law by reading it with a glosse of the Gospell is because the Gospell is a true interpretation of saluation briefly that will tell thee how thou wast borne vnder infestuous Planets this will teach thee how thou must bee borne againe vnder that Prince of Planets the Sunne of righteousnesse Iob. 3. Defend thy selfe from that which will not teach thee law and learn true perfect knowledge of God whereby thou maiest betake thy selfe wholly vnto him that hee may betake himselfe wholly vnto thee and that thou maiest striue to be bathed in the remission of sinnes rather then to be drenched in the sea of desperation Man and his waies are
sinfull therefore let vs call vpon God still pray vnto him being our Sauiour and mercifull Redeemer it is no shame to bee sorrowfull or to cry to God for the forgiuenesse of our sinnes it is no reproach to beg Gods mercies or hurt to vs to pray his Maiestie to be mercifull in the remission and forgiuenesse of our sins it is no discredit to confesse our faults vnto God and to tell him we are miserable wretched sinners This is the means to quench the extremity of thirsty sinne and to obtaine a refreshing cup with a beaten breast and broken heart to cry vnto God to be a mercifull father vnto vs and to giue vs remission of all our sinnes If lamentable pictures wofull tales carry their force with them to inforce teares from the hearers and beholders eyes then cannot wee but turne prodigall in tears when wee behold this liuely counterfet of sorrow where euery colour hath a speaking griefe euery griefe a mourning tongue to extort and wring teares from the beholders eyes Iacob did Gen. 37. neuer rent his garment in so many peeces for the losse of Ioseph as the true penitent sinner doth his soule for the burthen of his sinnes laying them vpon the ra●ke of repentance stretching them from earth to heauen from himselfe to God Agar be●ng turned out of her ma●ters Gen. 21. house made her eyes ●●e plaintifes of true contri●●on to her solitary wan●ring but the penitent in ●eart being turned out of ●is masters fauour makes ●is hand his heart his eyes ●is tongue and all labour to ●essen the griefe of his dis●ase with a true sorrowfull ●emorse his hands like the ●ellowes blow the fire of ●ontrition to his heart his heart like a limbecke distilleth the soueraigne water of repentance into his eyes who like full cesternes not being able to look vpward returne their streams backe vnto the heart that being ouercharged driues the floud of his affection to his tong his tongue like Aarons censer conuayes the sweet perfume of his precious distillation into the presence of God himselfe And as the Angels celebrated the birth of Christ with a ioyfull hymne so he welcomes his second birth with a sad lamentation much like to Peter when he denied his Master Mat. 26. Sicke men cannot away with any melancholy Sauls frensie could not indure Dauids 1 Sam. 18. Harpe Salomons thousand songs cannot mitigate the smart of the sinners disease that runnes altogether vpon the heart-string not the Harpe-string the spaces falles and rises of a melancholie ditty the first note being raised high to him that is aboue all the second with a temperate stop moued to a meane the third with a heauy touch fitted to the base Heauy O heauy is the note of man and therefore it calles for moderation of God O heauy too heauy is the note of sin and therfore it craues the voyce of mercy Wee may iustly obserue in the penitent sinner first his inuocation to God secondly his humble petitions thirdly his condition in his meditation by vertue whereof hee attaineth to know himselfe to bee the greatest offender and God his only Sauiour and Redeemer Dauid being in the depth of meditation his Psal 39. heart was hot the fire of his zeale was kindled and hee spake Lord teach me to number my dayes in the same precinct and streits of meditations is the penitent sinner his armes like the Phoenix wings hath set his heart on fire by that his zeale is inflamed by his zeale his tongue is inlarged and cals to God for his mercies hee speakes as Dauid in his meditation with iudgement discretion he speakes in his meditation what he wants his prayer directing to obtaine his wants at the hands of his mercifull Sauiour Lastly he speakes speaks authorised with a prouiso and respect to whom hee speakes What is it hee speakes The first regard is the reuerence of the person to whom he speakes God His second consists of a twofold property one drawen from himselfe being a miserable sinner the other from a necessity that GOD would bee mercifull to our mis-spent life The third is couched not so much in quantity of words as in quality of affection his praier is short but very sweet in regard of zeale His last regard aimes at the time for sinne like Noahs floud euery day getting strength was almost Gen. 7. 17. come to the top of Ararat and had almost ouerspread the whole earth so it was high time to stay the swelling rage and fury of it and therefore hee striues to bring it back to a low ebbe and with a smooth calme of an humble petition speakes in a serious meditation to God to forgiue him his sins and to bee mercifull vnto him but helples man cannot helpe but only God in whō and with whom is al cōfort I will not runne vnto the wise man with Pharoah I call not vpon any Idols with the Priests of Baal but with Exod 7. sorrowfull Sara in the gaule of bitternesse with wrinckled Tob. 3. faced Iob smitten on the cheekes with a reproach I Iob. 16. beginne my confession vnto the Lord. I pray not for the strength of body with Samson with Elisha for my enemies Iudg. 16. blindnesse with worldly Balaam for earthly treasures but with the faithfull 2 Pet. 2. Cananitish woman once Math. 15. againe reiected I begge for crummes of thy mercy that thou wilt bee a Sauiour for my sinnes euen I the sonne of sorrow present my selfe vnto thee and as the Leaper Math. 8. intreated for his own cleansing euen so I pray that God will shew his mercy compassion vpon me being wea●ed a long time from the Teattes of thy loue and nourished with the corrupt milke of sinne It is euen I that haue refused thy heauenly Manna and delighted my selfe with the leauen of Aegypt now at the length strucke with the whip of repentance retire and for the ●asing of my griefe presume to solicite thee in this manner O Lord bee mercifull vnto me and forgiue me the great and hainous crimes which I haue committed against thy omnipotent Maiestie I am not of Simon Peters mind that said Lord go Lu. 5. 8. from mee for I am a sinfull man but rather Lord come to mee because I am a wret ●hed and sinfull man Neither doe I crie out with the possessed Iesus thou Sonne of God what haue I to doe Mat. 8. with thee but rather Iesus thou Sonne of God I haue to doe with thee Oh let me haue some interest in thy loue which like a veile couereth the multitude of sins and vniteth the peece-rent heart of the sorrow-beaten sinner It is not with mee as it was with Cain to say my Gen. 4. sinne is greater then can bee pardoned neither am I as yet clasped in that desperation and distrust as to equalize and compare thy mercy to my sinnes I know thy piety to
exceed mans impietie and thy mercy to bee greater then mans misery Sinnes as they cannot choke thy loue so they cannot stand in any degree of comparison with the infinitene● of thy mercy for how much thy greatnesse ouerspreads mans weakenesse so much the goodnesse of thy goodnesse exceeds the euill of his euill and therefore it were first high treason to thy omnipotency and power to say My sinnes are greater then thou canst pardon when thy mercy is like thy selfe great without all quantity good without all quality Secondly it were a wrong vnpardonable to thy will a trespas dangerous to thy truth an iniury too desperate in despairing of thy promises to say Thou wilt not doe what thou canst when with thee to doe is as easie as to will and to wil is ready euerie houre It is worse then the staine of hypocrisie to say I am no sinner for none can challenge to himselfe that priuiledge Sinne was my Mother which brought me into the VVorld and sin is the daughter of my affection in the VVorld the VVorld is become a loathsome Cage of vncleane Birds a troubled Sea diuided into many puddles a dangerous desert nursing and nusling vp strange and venemous creatures where couetousnesse like a burning Serpent breathes out the fire of vnhallowed desires where lust like the Scorpion enuenometh the soule and prouokes it to blacke attempts where pride lies close at the hart like a snaile lurking in the bushes wher nay where else should sinne be when the VVorld is termed the denne and couert of all euill Here euery sinne great and little though euerie little sinne be too great ranges and keeps his Court. The trimme fashion of the VVorld is out of fashion because it is sicke of euery fashion it being composed the vvonderfull checke and countermand of all Art is novv become a miserable Chaos the ruinous and disordered heape of all disorder it is the Stage and Theater of hypocrisie faire and beautifull without but full of foule sinne within like straight grovving reeds satis●ying the eyes vvith a greene and pleasing sight but vvithin nothing more vaine nothing more light nothing more empty like vnto Nabuchadnezars Idol glittering vvith a golden Dan. 3. 1. head yet standing vpon feet of clay by striuing to excell in beauty it hath vvashed avvay all beauty and there is no sure hold for the soules anchor in so slippery a station The effects proue it so for it is become Murthers slaughter-house Thefts refuge VVhoredomes and Oppressions safety and for all sinnes a sinfull Sanctuarie Who can svvallovv Circes Cuppe and not bee transformed Who can taste deadly poyson and escape infection Who can liue in Sodome and not be vvicked Who can breathe in the World and bee no sinner The Infant-blush at mine natiuity vvas it not the tell-tale of my originall sinne how I had tasted of that sovvre fruite vvhich all my auncestors from the first to the last had eaten And from the time of my natiuity how I haue since hewen off my age by sinne filling and fulfilling as Christ saith the measure of my fathers My sinne-prest conscience secretly doth tell me there is no way to hide and smother what I am for if disguised Adam in his figge-leaued coate close and secure as he thought among the bushes could not shelter him from Gods presence how can I promise to my selfe security Well may the blind-folde World being as deepely couered in sinne as I either for weakenesse not see or for the thicke skinne of his own sinne still be dazel-eyed and not behold the heapes and drifts of iniquity but God which hath intelligence of my secret thoughts hath an eare to heare my priuate words an eye to see my light and darke actions God which is the scrutator of our hearts and reines enters the priuy chamber of our hearts and is an eye-witnesse of our sinne before it be hatched Hee knew all things before they were begunne therefore hee must needes know them when they are done He saw thee and Dauid intending adultery before thou and Dauid comitted adulterie If then no running awaye will serue turne no place close enough to smother sinne when euery thing is naked and open to his view into what an hard obduration is man cast how is his face made stiffe with oyly colours of shamelesse impudencie that will feare the presence of the creature and no way stand-in awe or reuerence of the all-presence of the Creator There may be a secret roome where no man comes a secret stage to act sinne where no man sees but is it possible to keepe God out is it possible to blinde his eyes O poore runawaies that we are wee hide not our selues frō God but rather hide God from vs. What though the eyes of thy vnderstanding being darkned thou canst not see him yet hath hee made thee a casement to thy conscience and beholds thee within and without in the cogitation in the action Wherefore if running from God bee but a step to greater sinne then will I runne from sinne to God till I recouer strength in his mercifull eyes As there is no security to hide sinne so there is no remedy to excuse it or to post it off saying The womā which thou ga●est mee did cause mee to sinne as Adam Gen. 3. or as Eue to cleere her selfe saying The Serpent begui●ed mee this is rather an increase then a decrease of sinne the offence was heauier in examination then it had been before in commission for heere the blinde leades the blinde and the further they goe the greater is their danger First they sin and then they flie Secondly they are taken but they denie Thirdlie it being proued they stand out in their owne defence and dispute the case Adam excusing himselfe by the Woman the Woman laying the fault on the Serpent both of them priuily taxing God for placing such and such with them in Paradise But alas this is but a naked shift and to no purpose to bandy words with God neither did he cal them for any such discourse but God as it were lamenting the first fruites of his labor should vtterly perish therefore questioned with our first Parents that the fire of their confession might burne downe the wall which the rancor of sinne had builded between them and God As then hopefull Israel found meanes to supplant the vsurping Canaanites by electing Iuda their guide and Captaine Iudg. 1. so many put to flight that great daring Canaanite that musters vp whole legions of temptations against vs when as Iuda which interpreted signifies confession doth not onely conduct and guide our forces but also blunts the edge of our enemies sword returning his intended poyson to his own confusion The confession of our sinne saith Augustine barres vp the mouth of Hell which stands gaping to deuoure thee and opens the gates of Heauen that willingly would receiue thee Therefore let vs launce the festered soare with the knife of true confession let
directed to God alone for it is neither to be done to Angels nor Saints as Mediators or friends one or other greater or lesser in Heauen or Earth but onely to be offered to the Maiesty of God whose eares bee open to all them that seeke to him in Faith for without true Faith all our Petitions are naught and turne to our vtter confusion Wee must not onely pray with zeale and desire but with fitnesse of congruitie and application for his blessings in our necessities The Prophet Hosea maketh it plaine and saith The Lord at all times will take away all in●quitie and receiue vs graciously so we render vp to him 〈◊〉 calu●s of our lips Nay what is it that hee will not doe for them that put their whole rest vpon his omnipotent Maiestie in all tribulations and anguish of mind If we make our humble supplications vnto him he will stay his furious hand and fill his hand full of mercie he will with-draw his rod of correction and send his rod of comfort hee will sheathe vp his deuouring sword in the hand of his destroying Angell who on euery side strikes downe to the graue emptying houses and streets to fill vp Church yards And vpon our true repentance he will surceasse to send his deue●ring Angell and send his Angell of mercy and grace which is a preseruatiue and the most soueraign restoratiue vnder heauen to make sound againe our diseased conscience which hath been long ●uergrowne with ●inne which 〈◊〉 both h●rt and wound 〈◊〉 now wee acknowledge with a sorrow from our hearts that our sinnes haue procured it at the hand of GOD. In consideration of the great mercies that GOD doth daily hourely heape vpon vs wee must addresse our Petitions to the LORD in another key and forme of supplication meekely kneeling before the LORD our Maker lowly prostrate at the foote-stoole of GODS mercy that his iudgements may be diuerted and turned away from vs. Thus did that great patterne of wisdome Salomon whose foote-steps are worthy our imitation beseeching the LORD of Lords that when wee shall make our prayers according to our necessities either in body or in mind that he would vouchsafe then to heare vs and reach forth his mercifull hand vnto our complaints But these our Petitions cannot ascend vnlesse faith deuotion beare them vp nor can they speede vnlesse they issue from a heart that vowes vnfeined repentance and that calles to mind our sinnes transgressions that haue procured those iudgements that we may truly repent and so wash them from vs whereby God may heare vs and shew his mercifull compassion But this repentance is more bitter then can bee imagined for euery sorrow is not repentance for the● should worldlings repent Some thinke euery confession to bee repentance then had Pharaoh and Saul repented some thinke that euery weeping is 〈◊〉 repentance then had Esau repented some take euery little humiliation to bee repentance then had 〈◊〉 repented some thinke that euery good word and promise is repentance if that were so then should sicke men repent some thinke to ●rie GOD mercy is repentance then should euery ●oole repent But true repentance in ●●de and such as is here ●ent i● more then hanging ●owne of the head like a ●ull-rush or towring out a ●●are to so● out a sighe to ●eare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 cloth or with a verball sound of the lips without the priuity and consent o● the heart within to cri● Lord haue mercy on me an● so rest But it must bee the scourging and launcing of the verie soule with true contrition a downe-right shower 〈◊〉 teares from a broken pen●tent bleeding heart fille● with exceeding bitterness● of sorrow and anguish fo● some committed Let no man thinke it to● early to goe or too early 〈◊〉 beginne to goe to this goo● Schoole not of sharpness● but of sweetnesse not 〈◊〉 paine but of pleasure L●● vs goe to it in our youth● and let Salomon be our T●tor whereby wee shall 〈◊〉 ●aught to remember our Creator in the dayes of our ●outh Let it bee often remem●red that no man thinke it ●o late lest hee omit and ●ose that which hee might ●therwise haue gained What time soeuer the sin●er shall truely repent him ●●om the very bottome of 〈◊〉 heart of his loude and ●isspent life the Lord will ●orgiue and forget and his ●●nnes shall vanish from his ●●ght and presence euen as 〈◊〉 d●aw before the Sunne I say againe he that right●● repents himselfe of his ●ickednesse and vaine life 〈◊〉 is not the misery of this ●retched life nor terror of ●onscience nor malice of ●oes let them be Men or diuels 〈◊〉 be a whole legion to one that shall neuer hinder the ascensio● and blessing of his godl● prayer and it shal● neuer hi●der the forgiuenesse of 〈◊〉 sinne Neuer was the shado● more faithfull to the bodi● then a blessed forgiuenes● to faithfull repentance a●● the good successe whi●● hath beene to a faithfull a●● zealous prayer conceiu●● in the breast and lodged 〈◊〉 the heart and powerful● vttered by the voice of 〈◊〉 tongue and spirit But this great expect●● successe which we looke 〈◊〉 to receiue by our Petitio●● at the hands of GOD mu●● be formed in a more zealo●● fashion then our comm●● ●se is which vse may bee ●ompared to an hypoc●ites ●ustome wanting these ne●essary adiuncts these vnde●ayed vndelaied assistants ●hat blesse the companie wherein they come and 〈◊〉 the suite wherein they 〈◊〉 Solliciters and Plaintifs ●ho beate not the aire with ●ounds that arise from the ●ollow and emptinesse of ●hem like Brooks that roare ●nd make a noise but shew ●●eir empty bottomes that ●ontaine nothing but grauel ●nd filthinesse within like 〈◊〉 our desola●e and onely fa●●ionable prayers both at ●ome and abroade in cham●●r and Church these are ●ypocrites who poure ●orth 〈◊〉 forme of words rather in 〈◊〉 fashion of custome then for any great zeale neither honouring God nor yet furthering the Petitions wee make for our expected desires These things duely considered we must needs think in our minds we remaine in a very wretched and desperate case our affections are so weake that the least occasion or blast of vanitie withdrawes vs from all godly desires whereby wee run both soule and bodie into vtter destruction Very little is the care which remaineth in vs to giue this good GOD our onely Sauiour that sends to all things his due so our turnes be serued and that wee haue receiued at the Lords hands our desire there is all our frail● flesh looketh for till extremities come and then wee make a new shew of repentance with a sorrow for our negligence in the true seruing and honouring of his Omnipotent Maiesty which wee rather doe of a custome then of zeale as the Parrot of 〈◊〉 wee recite the Creede flattering God with our tongues but dissembling with him in our harts which is onely for want of Faith by whose absence our minds are fraught with toies
and fansies which beare away the due reuerence wee owe vnto God For when we haue praied to GOD that hee will giue eare vnto our requests and receiue our petitions they are sonegligently done that we had need pray againe to desire him that hee will out of his bountifull loue and great mercy cast his eye of pitty and not of anger vpon the great offence which was committed in the idlenesse of our prayers and supplications made by vs vnto his diuine Maiestie and that he will forgiue vs our sins committed in our prayers because wee thinke then leas● of him at the time we make our prayer vnto him neuer remembring the Maiestie of his person to whom we● speake nor the Excellencie of the worke wee take in hand neuer rowsing vp the spirit of a sorrowfull repentant heart for our former offences committed but if we ●hance then to stirre vp ou● deuotion to prayer we leaue them halt and lame bodie without soule or soule without deuotion sound of lips without the heart one part of our selues without the other or the whole without a whole clamour without intention But Dauid practised true repentance which may not bee repented of and such were the panges and prickings of Iobs heart vnto GOD My groanings saith he come forth before I eate and my roarings are powred forth Not onely groaning nor crying but also roarings with a continual inundation as one waue dasheth forth another Now when the soule is thus prepared to speake the eares of the Lord are euer open to heare the true penitent sinners cry These are wonderfull passions The hungry Lyon in the desert opprest with extremitie of suffering want neuer roared so much for his prey nor the Hart braying after the water brookes as the goodnesse of the Lord in the soule of the faithfull He is the mighty LORD of Heauen and Earth whose name be blessed and hallowed for euer in Earth as it is in Heauen and blessed are all those that are in loue with his goodnes and tra●● nearest vnto his steps And to giue vs a further example in his owne cause when his soule was hedged in and enuironed round about with vexation euen vnto death when anguish sorrow incompassed him round about as also then in his greatest agony when he cried with a great voice not for particular persons as before hee wept but vndergoing the burthen and punishment of all the sinnes and sinners in the World My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and crying againe with a great voice gaue vp the ghost Therefore the blessed Apostles mentioning the daies of his humanitie and the exercise of his godly and sacred life and fruite of his lips and the passions of his spirit thought it not enough to giue notice to the World that he prayed to his Father that hee praied with teares which trickled downe his blessed cheekes and watered the ground nor of a cry alone weakely sent out but of a vehement and strong cry which if Heauen were brasse were able to pierce through it and find way into the Sanctuary into the eares of the Almighty Such a prayer as it ascends lightly vp borne vpon the wings of Faith so it eue● comes laden heauily downe with a blessing on the head of him that first gaue it flight This Lanthorne of our direction and composition of humilitie and goodnesse this glorious and neuer enough admired LORD of life who prest opprest with the weight burthen thereof groaned vnder the affliction of our sinnes in a most perfect forme of exact obedience with his bleeding teares for vs shewed vs the right forme of faithfull supplications for our selues Let vs then bee importunate and feruent in our praiers that our Petitions may wrestle with GOD and ouercome him For if our praiers bee powred forth in the ●eruentnesse of zeale without wauering then let vs make no doubt but hee wil graciously receiue them into his armes of mercie Way h●e thus grieue● for vs and shall not wee grieue for ourselues groaned hee vnder the weight of our sin being himselfe without sinne onely in compassion and pitty towards vs why then doe not we continuallie groane and grieue It is so farre from vs that in no way wee giue his heauenlie Maiestie his due except in committing finne and drinking it downe the throate with greedinesse and a desiring thirsting appetite euen as Behe●●th drinketh down I●rdan without sense sorrow or griefe for the same The true consideration hereof will enforce and procure in vs a more perfect desire to follow the true prescription that our Sauiour hath prescribed for vs in his holy Gospell which commandeth vs by expresse words to bee importunate and feruent in our prayers that our Petitions may ascend vp to GOD our Lord and onely Sauiour and there to be receiued into his bosome to pre●rent a further and greater danger before the dreadfull Maiestie of the omnipotent LORD of Heauen and Earth who with the breath of his nostrels is able to destroy our bodies and soules change the World and the beauty thereof into a Chaos and ●eape of confusion turne the Sunne into darkenesse and the Moone into blood and alter the property and being of all the Creatures in the World at the twinckling of an eye Considering what we are that speake that offer vp the calues of our lippes and the fruites of our repentance poore naked impotent vnworthy wretches wee should be importunate and with a feruentnesse of zeale poure out our supplications vnto GOD that he wil mercifully heare vs and gently receiue our supplications and according to his won●ed goodnesse satisfie our faithfull requests poured forth vnto him in the name of CHRIST IESVS our Lord and onely helper in all distresse But our wretchednesse and mortality our nakednesse in good workes towards him is such that if there were any spark of true faith in vs it would make vs ashamed as it did our first Parents when they bidde themselues from the presence of their GOD. The view of our sinnes is exceedingly sinful the number the weight the danger thereof hang about our neckes like milstones that we are notable nor worthy to cast vp our eyes to heauē for our sinnes are so exceedingly miserable that the Prophet of GOD being astonished to see either man or the Sonne of man so kindly visited biddeth vs be feruent in our Petitions to GOD. And we must expect an happy successe of our supplications vnlesse we wil cal in question or doubt of the promises of God which are more stable then the pillars of the Earth or the basis of the surest foundation except we will cast our graine into the earth and expect no haruest plant Vines and not drinke the Wine thereof If wee meane to receiue that at GODS hand we doe expect to haue then wee must prepare our selues in another forme to poure out our vnworthy plaints and petitions and thinke that GOD either heareth not or regardeth not at all the
zeale of ●ur importunity w●ll pro●ure his Omnipotent Maie●●ie to gra●t audience If our words and pray●ers will not preuaile then ●et vs ioine thereto our ●eares that GOD may say to ●s as he said to Ezekiah I ●aue seene thy teares They ●re so powerful messengers ●hiefly if they be done in the ●●nceriti● and singlenesse of ●eart No sooner can the thought ●ppeare crauing his merci●ull aide but the eye of his compassion and goodnesse ●s vpon them Then who is it that wil● not worship and serue thi●●ouing Master being so readie at our call to receiue ou● Petitions into his hands o● mercie D●●id saith that God ha● heard the voice of his weeping● Teares and sorrow for ou● sinnes doe cause the eares o● GOD to open vnto our god● lie requests Therefore let v● glorifie this good GOD with our bodies in true humilitie and serue him in spirit and lift vp our soules with Dauid and our hands with Moses our eyes with Peter ●●d our voices with D●b●r● Thus seeking wee shall find thus knocking it shall bee o●ened vnto vs. ●et vs giue our Petitious but the ●●ght voi●e to aske with guestionlesse there is no ●oubt but GOD will heare ●s in his mercie to our im●easurab●e comfort and ●oy It must not be the dumbe ●nd silent which must giue ●n eye to seeke with it must ●ot bee the blinde and care●esse which giues an hand to ●nocke with it must not ●eare to molest and disquiet ●ot onely the doores but all ●he Treasures and Iewels in ●he Kingdome of Heauen ●hich will bee opened vnto ●hose his chosen And whi●her our blessed SAVIOVR ●oth h●●●elf i●nuite vs Come ●nto ●ee all 〈◊〉 that labour ●nd are laden O this is a loue withou● example where the King ●imselfe not onely comman de●h but desire● our appearance Who then shall keep● vs backe where he comman deth Open ye gate● of rightcousnesse and be ye opened ye euerlasti●g doores O what a blessed and comfortable saying is this vnto sinnefull man by so great ● Lord and King Who the● shall oppose themselues against vs What need we to haue a Mediatour an Intercessor or friend when bee himselfe hath giuen his voice and freely calles vs to himselfe alone Though the frankenesse and bounty of his loue hath yeelded acce●●e vnto hi● heauenly Maiesty this great 〈◊〉 four good GOD vnto ●● must not e●bolden vs with ● lesse respect or reuerence in shewing our dutie in the true seruing of him which loue of his doth de●erue more in a farre greater degree then our vaine and ●raile flesh can yeelde vnto ●is Omnipotency and State that fit● in glory at the right ●and of his Father And whereas we are poore ●ormes creeping vpon the ●oote-stoole of this Earth ●ray wee that his Maiestie will bee so gracious as to ●ouchsafe we should spea●●●nto him as it were face to ●●ce to poure out our petiti●ns with our owne voices ●●to his most blessed and sa●●ed ear●● All know by 〈◊〉 exper●ence that the Kings of th● earth keep themselues wit● in a strict watch and wa● r●gard and their persons a●●●ull of Maiestie and terro● and not spoken vnto b●● with difficulty and frien●ship besides the infinite d●straction of suites and bu●●nesses more then the cares 〈◊〉 any mortal man can receiu● driue them of necessity 〈◊〉 the deputation of subord●nate Ministers But in GOD who ride● vpon the Cherubins a●● maketh his enemies 〈◊〉 foote stoole there is neith●● dange of his person nor d●fect in his hearing For h● that ●lanted the eare do● he not heare He that st●●deth and knocketh at 〈◊〉 〈…〉 for ●●●rance when wee knocke at ●is will he not grant en●rance In earthly Courts among which wee liue wee may haue many impediments ●ew will hardly fauour vs but many may hinder vs before we can deliuer our message But at these Heauenlie Gates at which we must alwaies call the LORD alone ●s Porter For when the friend knocked in the Parable of Luke ●t mid-night the heauiest 〈◊〉 deadest houre of the night ●e who was neerest the gate ●irst awaked if hee slept at all and first answered How willing is hee to grant that is so willing to ●e disquieted Now glad to heare our knocke that hat● placed his bed so neere th●● gate Hew truly may we say that hee was not one●● n●cre the gate but th●●ord himselfe and the ver● gate who when his Chi● dren were fast asleepe th● cares of Angels and Saint shut vp hee first and at th● ve●y first call n●y onely he among the rest made answ●● vnto it The LORD is alwaie●●eerer vnto vs then we ar● vnto him Psal 10. Hee ●●●reth the desire of the poore H● first prepareth the heart an● setteth it on worke to pray and when hee hath so don● he bendeth his care vnto ●● giuing vnto vs both th● cause and the effect bo● the blessing and meanes ● ●e blessings The true stand ●ost effectual messenger we ●aue to send our Petition●●y is Prayer poured forth ● the zeale and singlenesse four hearts If we send vp merites the ●arres in Heauen will dis●aine it that we who dwell ●t the foote-stoole of GOD are presume so farre when ●e purest Creatures in Hea●en are impure in his fight If we send vp feare and di●rust the length of the way ●ill tire them out and with ●he weight sinke to the ●round before they come ●alfe way vp to the Throne of saluation If wee send vp blasphenies and curses all the Creautes in Heauen and Earth ●ill set themselues against vs the Sunne and the Moo● will raine downe bloud th● fire hot burning coales th● aire thunderbolts vpon ou● heads But Prayer is a Messenger freed from all these imperfections whom neithe● the irksomnesse of the way or tediousnesse of the passage can hinder from h● purpose quicke of speed● faithfull of trust able ●● mount aboue the Eagles ●● the Skie into the Heauen 〈◊〉 Heauens as a Chariot of fi●● leading vs alost into the pr●sence of GOD to seeke h●● assistance and grace The least finger of hi● right hand is of more puissance then the whole ar●● of flesh or armie of spirit● yea then the whole liue● hole substances of Angels Men of siluer gold silke ●urple and all other Crea●●res So that Prayer shall walke ●●rough life death with●ut controllement If it find Angel● Princip●●ties Powers things present ●nd things to come or any ●ther Creature in the World ●opping her passage and re●uking her forwardnesse ●●e shall cleere her way not●ithstanding and climbe ●●to the presence of her GOD and in his eares deli●er her message Be wee in sicknesse To ●im the true Phisicion that ●nowes both the cause and ●he cure shee comes for ●ealth Be wee in imprisonment There she sollicites a relea●● from him the Lord of libe●tie Be we opprest with p●uertie or want The Earth the LORDS and all th●● dwell therein to him she comes for the blessing 〈◊〉 the Lord maketh rich Are wee afflicted abo●●
to enlighten my mind more and more to the knowledge of thee and my selfe to inflame my heart with true charitie to preserue my senses in thy holie feare that by my will I may neither heare see nor touch any thing that is vncleane or offensiue vnto thee And if in taking of my naturall rest either thorow the suggestion of the enemy or the rebellion of mine own flesh I haue had any disordered motions or vn●haste representations in my slcepe now I am perfectly awake and by thy mercy returned vnto the vse of my reason I do vtterly disclaime the same denying all consent of my will and affections thereunto And now my gracious Lord God for this day being present I may by thy heauenly assistance resolue with my selfe so to liue in this World that I may both auoide all sinne and the occasion thereof and to leaue my accustomed vices and those especially to which I am most prone to fall vnto and that I may refer●e al my actions and endeau●urs to the praise and honour of thy holy name so to best●w my time that this day may not bee lost or passe ouer my head without some good worke tending to the true worshipping of thy holie name which laudable determinations and purpose of the amendment of my leude and loose life may accordingly take effect and giue thy blessing gracious Lord to them all O merciful God I beseech thee according to thy great mercy that thou w●lt b●ot out all mine offences for I am a wretched and a miserable sinner therefore I do heartily desire in all humility to adore and worship thee and to render vnto thee immortal praise and thanksgiuing for all thy blessings and especially for that vnspeakable goodnesse wherein thou diddest send downe thy onely begotten Sonne into this vale of miserie for the worke of our redemption whereby wee are cherished and nourished wherewith wee are cleansed and sanctified and our soules made partakers of all heauenly grace and spirituall blessings for which I yeelde vnto thee all possible thanks that a poore sinfull creature being but a handfull of dust can yeelde vnto thy diuine Maiestie being of no value without thy mercy Also thou hast vouchsafed first to wash mee with the lauer of Baptisme to the remission of that originall corruption contracted in my first Parents and afterwards thou hast brought me to the exer●ises acts of a right faith not ceasing daily to increase the same in mee by the light of thy grace and doctrine of thy holy Word O Lord I humbly thanke thee also that from my Cradle thou hast nourished clothed and cherished me supplying all things necessary for the reliefe and maintenance of this my feeble body for which euermore I wil magnifie thy holy name that in great mercy th●u hast hither to spared me albeit from my youth I haue wantonly ryoted in manifold excesses patiently expecting till by thy grace I might bee awaked from the sleepe of sinne and re●laimed from my vanities and wicked courses haddest thou dealt with mee according to my desarts my soule long ere this had been oppressed with innumerable sinnes and had beene plunged in perdition yea the yawning gulfe of hel had swallowed me quicke Lord in respect of all thy mercies graces and blessings which thou hast poured vpon mee I desire that my heart may be more and more enlarged to render vnto thee a more ample tribute of praise and thankesgiuing And now for those things whereof I stand in need and faine would obtaine at thy hands fi●st onely Lord God neuer leaue me vnto my selfe but let the bit of thy chaste feare be euer in my iawes to curbe and to keepe mee within the compasse of thy Law that I may dread nothing in the world as in the least sort to offend and displease thee for which cause let thy holy loue so temper all trials and temptations which happen vnto mee that I may profit and not lose by them thou my Creator knowest how fraile I am of my selfe and how my strength is nothing Moreouer blessed Lord ● beseeche thee that thou wouldest keepe farte from me thy seruant all pride and haughtinesse of minde all selfe-loue and vaine glory all obstinacie and disobedience all craft and hurtfull dissimulation cast downe and tread vnder my feete the spirit ●● gluttony and letcherie the spirit of sloth and heauinesse the spirit of malice and enuie the spirit of hatred and disdaine that I may neuer despise or contemne any of thy Creatures nor preferre my selfe before others but euer little in my owne sight to think the best of my bretheren and to deeme and iudge the worst of my selfe I●●est me Holy Father with the wedding garment of thy beloued son ●he supernaturall vertue of ●ll things that I may loue ●hee my Lord God with all my heart with all my soule ●nd with all my strength ●hat neither life nor death ●rosperitie nor aduersitie ●or any thing else may fe●arate mee from thy loue Grant that all inordinate af●ection to the transitorie ●hings of this World may ●ailie decay and die in mee ●hat thou alone maiest bee ●astefull pleasant and sauou●ie vnto my soule O my most gracious God ●iue vnto thy seruant an ●umble contrite and obedi●nt heart an vnderstanding ●lwaies occupied in honest ●ertuous cogitations a will tractable and euer prone t● the better affections stayed calme moderate a watch full custody of my senses● that by those windowes n● sin may enter into my soul● a perfect gouernment of m● tongue that no corrupt o● vnseemely language ma● proceede from my lips th● I may neuer slander back● bite or speake ill of m● Neighbour that I may n● busie my selfe in the faul● and imperfections of other but rather attend to the ● mending of my owne leu● life and finallie so long a● am detained in this priso● of my bodie and exild fro● my heauenly Countrie l● this be my portion and t●● comfort of my banishmen● that free from all secul● ●ares and carking solicitude of this present life whollie deuoted to thy seruice I may attend onelie to thee ● may reioice onelie in thee ● may cleaue vnto thee I may rest my soule in thee ●nd sitting in silence I may giue way and entertainment ●o the heauenlie doctrine to ●he good motions and in●pirations of thy holy Spirit In these sweete exercises ●et mee passe the solitarie ●oures of my tedious pilgrimage with patience expe●●ing the shutting vp of my ●aies and an happie end of ●his my miserable life And ●rant ô thou louer of man●ind my Lord and my God ●hat when this my earthlie ●abernacle shall bee dissol●ed being found free from all pollution of sinne as afte● Baptisme I may bee r●ckoned in the number of thos● blessed soules who throug● the merites and passion o● thy deare Sonne are held● worthy to raigne with thee● and to enioy the glorio●● presence of the blessed Trinitie Father So●ne and Holie Chost to whom of al● Creatures i●
of friendship and amitie betwixt vs. Namely that thou wilt be my mercifull Father and that againe I may be thy obedient childe Lord thou soest I doe not aske of thee riches honours or long life but onelie this euen this thing alone which with all possible importunity I vrg● and neuer wil cease to craue that from this present houre to my liues end I may neuer more offend thy diuine Maiestie nor defile my conscience with anie mortall ofsence O Lord grant ● poore sinner this his humble suite for Christ Iesus his sake my alone Sauiour and Redeemer Come holie Spirit the sweetest comforter of Mankinde I beseech thee take the possession of my soule purge and cleanse mee of all sin sanctifie me throughout wash what is corrupted water what is dried heale what is wounded bow what is ●●iffened warme what is cooled call home what is straied make mee ●rulie humble and resigned ●hat thou maiest bee pleased ●o stay and abide with thy seruant O most blessed light and glorious lampe illuminate my minde with the heauen●ie beames of thy wisdome O Paradise of pleasures ● Fountaine of purest de●ights my God giue me thy ●elfe In flame my soule with ●hy celestiall loue teach me ●ouerne me direct and pro●ect mee through the whole ●ourse of my life Establish my mind against ●ll elusions and inordinate feare grant me a right faith an assured hope a si●cer● and perfect charity and that I may preferre thy blessed will pleasure before a●● things in Heauen and Earth And now sweete Iesus vpon the knees of my heart I humbly craue pardon o● these and all other my trespasses knowne and vnknowne yea so inspire my heart with thy spirit that seriouslie I may resolue of amendement of life for the time to come That I may carefullie reforme my selfe of those vsual errors into which this day past and so often as heretofore I haue beene accustomed to fal that I may renewall my good purposes and intentions and accordinglie put them in practise that so finallie after this my short life spent in thy seruice I may at length close vp my daies in peace and happilie end in thee who art blessed for euer Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost liuest and raignest euer one God World without ende Amen A Prayer for Night O My most Soueraigne Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Lampe of light truth I miserable wretch most humbly beseech thee to with-draw and keepe my minde from wandring thoughts distractions this night Lord heare the gro●nings of those who vnder then of sinne and infirmiti●● crie vnto thee Lord loose ●he bonds and shackles of iniquitie wherewith I haue bound my selfe and out of the darke prison of wickednesse whereinto I haue run and captiuated my selfe deliuer my sinfull soule O Lord As thou art my skilful Phisician and best knowest my diseases take me to thy cure O Soune of God my Creatour Redeemer and Sanctifier let thy vnspeakable loue remaine in my soule for euer that I may enioy thee and ioy in thy countenance Thou that leddest the Israelites thy seruants throgh the red Sea and deliueredst them from the bondage of Phar●ah and his cruell Ministers discharge mee of the grieuous weight of my sins where-with my soule is so heauilie laden Thou that desendedst Daniel in the Lions denne desend me this night and euermore Thou that pardonedst Dauids vnspeakable sinnes be mercifull vnto me thou Sonne of God and Sauiour of the World in whom 〈◊〉 lie is my saluation by whom I may become an Angell in Heauen and without whose mercie am a diuell in hell Good God looke graciouslie vpon mee wash me O Lord whose iniquities are as red as bloud and I shall appear before thy almighty Throne as white as snow Lord deliuer mee now this night and in the houre of my death from all the malicious temptations of the old Serpent my enemie adopt mee here thy sonne below that I may become thy seruant aboue and liue with thee and raigne with thee in those ioies which are euer during who with the Father and the Holie Ghost euer liuest raignest World without end Ame● O Lord looke downe from Heauen vpon mee miserable wr●tch that lie here prostrate at thy feete crauing mercie of thy Omnipotent Maiestie for those sinnes which I haue committed this day against thee I humblie beseech thee O Christ which a●● my onelie Sauiour and Redee●●er to extend thy accustomed goodnesse to me this night that I may bee defended from the danger of the enemie and all euill which may befall mee this night good Lord take mee into thy protection of safegard that I may take safe and quiet rest this night to the end I may be the better enabled the next day to serue thee in all godlinesse holinesse of liuing whereby I may haue thy blessings powred downe plentifullie vpon me to the reliefe of me and mine and that after this painefull life ended I may dwell with thee in life euerlasting Amen A Praier to GOD for grace and to d●sp●se the vanitie of the World O Gracious and Omnipotent Father haue mer●ie on mee and forgiue me the great offences which I haue done in the sight o● thee Grant me grace for the loue of thee to despise sinne● and all worldlie vanitie● helpe mee to ouercome all temptations to sinne and the malice o● my ghostli● enemies and to spend my time in vertue and labou● acceptable to thee Repress● the motions of my sinfu●● flesh that mine h●art may bee enamoured of vertue to liue to thine honour and to the comfort of my soule O Father strengthen mee in soule and bodie to execute the workes of godlinesse to the glorie of thy blessed name and profit of my Christian bretheren whereby I may come to thy euerlasting ioy and feli●itie Grant me a firme purpose most mercifull Lord to amend my life and to make recompence for those yeers which I haue misspent to thy displeasure in euill thoughts delectations consentings wordes workes and euill customes whereby I haue deserued damnatiō Lord make mine heart obedient to thy will comfort mee and gi●e mee grace to haue my most ioy and pleasure in thee giue me heauenly meditations gostlie sweetenesse and zeale of thy glorie Rauish my soule with a burning desire to the heauenlie ioy where I shall euerlastinglie dwell with thee ●rant me sweet Sauiour contempt of all damnable pleasure of sinne and misery grant mee a true remembrance of my saluation with a feare of damnation and 〈◊〉 remembrance of thy goodnesse thy gifts great ●i●dnesse shewed to me from my creation vntill this present houre O Lord reduce into my minde my sinnes and disobedience whereby I haue offended thee Lord grant me a right spirit and perfect contrition to obtaine thy grace and from filthy sinne to purge mee O God make mee constant and stable i● faith hope and charity with continuance in vertue direct my will that it may not offend thee but
miserable estate of the wounded man with thy pit●ifull eye camest vnto him madest cleane his wounds pouredst in wine and oileboundest them vp settest him vpon his beast and car●ied him into the Inne and neuer leftest him till hee was perfectly whole O most louing Sauiour vouchsa●e with thy merciful eye to looke vpon my wretched estate which without thy helpe must needs perish my wounds are deadly and not able to be healed of any ●ither in Heauen or in Earth but of thee alone wh● art the true Phisician and hea●est those that are contrite in heart my whole head is sick and the ●eart is very h●a●ie from the sole of the foot vnto the crowne of the head there is no whole part in all our body but all are woūds botches soares and stripes which can neuer bee healed bound vp mollified nor eased with any ointment except thou puttest to thy helping hand Let it therefore please thee of thy great goodnesse to cleanse my wounds to poure in the wine and oile of spirituall gladnesse to binde them vp and neuer to leaue mee till thou hast made me perfectly whole and brought me into thy Heauenly Kingdome Heale thou mee O Lord and I shall bee healed saue thou mee and I shall bee saued Thou art that most tender Father who receiuedst home again with imbracing armes that lost Sonne which had wasted all his goods with riotous liuing so soone as he returned vnto thee and did repent him of his disorder confessed his sinne and humbled himselfe in thy fight thou hadst compassion on him thou didst fall on his necke and kissed him thou didst command thy seruants to bring forth that best garment and put it on thy Son and to put a ring on his finger and shooes on his feete thou gauest commandement to fetch the fat Calfe to kill saying Let vs eate and be merry for this my Son was dead and is aliue againe hee was lost and now is found Shew this thy fauour O most gentle Father to mee thy Childe who haue vngodlily bestowed those good and gracious gifts which thou both louingly and liberallie gauest vnto me This my prodigall and licentious liuing sore grieueth me and I am heartilie sorrie that I haue so grieuously offended thy Fatherly goodnesse notwithstanding according to thy olde wonted goodnesse I most humbly beseech thee for thy name sake to haue mercy on me to forgiue me my sinnes and to receiue me againe into thy sauour take away fro● me all my old beggarlie rags of sinne and put on me that new garment of innocencie that precious ring of faith wherewith I am maned vnto thee and those most godly shoes of that Euangelicall peace that I may walke from henceforth in the wayes of thy holy Commandements and doe that which is pleasant in thy sight Giue me grace vnfeinedlie to repent and to amend my life that the Angels in Heauen may reioice at my conuersion and so wash mee from my sinnes more and more that at the last I may be cleane and appeare beau●●full in my Heauenly Fathers sight thorow thee my onely Sauiour who with the Father and the Holy Ghost ●iuest and raignest one true and euerlasting GOD world without end Amen A generall Prayer for all kind of sinnes AH Lord the most puissant GOD we in Baptisme giuing ouer our selue● vnto thee and vnto thy holy Religion protesting openl● in the face of thy holy Congregation to forsake Satha● with all his pompes an● workes to renounce th● World and all the vainpleasures thereof to mortifie th● flesh and all the lusts of it and from henceforth to di● vnto sinne liue vnto righteousnesse and to leade ● new life Ah Lord this our cou●nant and bargaine made vnto thee wee keepe not b●● too much wretchedly we breake in transgressing thy holy Commandements In stead of performing our seruice due vnto thee we serue Sathan leauing the fulfilling of thy Commandements we obey our owne will The World and the flesh so rage and raigne in vs that we can ●carcely breathe forth any godlinesse By mouth wee professe thee but with our deeds we denie thee wee promise to worke in thy Vineyard but we loiter and worke not In name wee are Christi●ns but in deede wee are Sa●hans bondmen the Worlds ●laues and most vile seruants ●nd drudges to the flesh Oh Lord too too wret●hed is our state and except ●hou shortly helpest we are like vtterly to perish the ragi●g slouds of all kinde of sinne haue so preuailed and almost ouerwhelmed vs. O most gentle Sauiour wee ●aue a will such as it is to doe good but wee find no power nor strength in our soules to ●e●forme it That good thing which wee would wee doe not but the euill doe wee which wee would not do For we know that in vs that is in our flesh dwelleth no good thing And no maruell for wee are by nature the Children of wrath wee are begotten conceiued and borne in sin our senses wits and deuices are euill euen from our yong age vpward Our heart is vncleane wicked froward leude and vnsearchable wee are not able to think a good thought of our selues wee a●e vnprofitable seruants by o●rites fleshly and all that nought is yea w●e are the very b●nd-slaue of sin for euery one that committeth sinne is the seruant of sinne O most sweete Sauiour helpe vs for the glory of thy name Thou camest downe from the right hand of thy Father into this vale of misery to saue that which was lost saue me therefore good Lord which wander abroad like a sheepe destitute of a shepheard suffer not thy blessed body to bee broken and thy precious bloud to be shed for vs in vaine Thou by thy death valiantly conqueredst him that had power of death deliuer me therefore from his raging tyrannie and make mee thy faithfull and obedient seruant Suffer mee not to loue the World neither the things that are in the World seeing that all that is in the World as the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and pride of life is not of thee O Father but of the World and the World vanisheth away and the lusts thereof but he that fulfilleth the will of God abideth for euer Suffer me not to be ouercome with the boyling concupiscence of the Flesh which euer lusteth against the Spirit and is not obedient to the Law of God ●e●ther can bee but giue th●● grace to kill and crucifie the ●lesh with the appetites and ●usts thereof that I may liue ●nd walke in the spirit and be●ome a new Creature let not sinne raigne in my mortall bodie that I should thereunto o●ey in the lusts of it neither ●●●●er thou mee to giue my ●embers as instruments of vn●ighteousnesse vnto sinne but ●o giue my members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto ●●ee And as heretofore I gaue ●y selfe vnto vncleannesse and ●o iniquitie So let mee now ●●om hence●orth giue my selfe ●●to holinesse that ● may bee ●●ctified Kill in
poure his benefits plentifully vpon vs as long as the World endureth Lord God thou hast created made of thine infinite goodnesse and vnspeakable mercie for Mans comfort thy blessed Sunne-shine to be a perpetuall bright Lampe and Candle to be an ingenderer nourisher comforter of all liuing things in this inferiour VVorld This great worke and Fatherly prouidence of God ought to cause vs to praise and magnifie him alwaies and to make vs remember his manifold benefits that hath so louingly created all things for mans sake O Lord as thy mer●ies abound towards vs so grant that we may be as plentifull i● vertuous liuing and conuersation and that wee doe not thorow our wicked liues and euill behauiour pull vpon our felues thy wrath and displeafure in a busing thy good Creatures and in hoording vp the treasure of this VVorld from our need●ull and poore Bretheren and so purchase that curse which the wisedome of God v●tereth by the mouth of Salomon where he saith Who so hoordeth vp his goods shall bee cursed among the people but blessing shall light vppon his head that is liberal to the poore Bring it forth therefore ye couetous that yee may bee partakers of the blessing which is prepared for the righteous And as our Sauiour Christ saith They that are whole neede not the Phisician but they that are sicke You therefore that are sicke and haue neede seeke the helpe of that good Physician in time for there is better remedie to be had in the beginning then after a long delay and tarrying for the preseruation of our sicke soules Lord make vs earnestly and diligently to seeke helpe of the Heauenly Physician which is the pertect curer both of body and soule and make vs to apply those heauenly medicines the Precepts of thy most holie Word to the great and almost incurable diseases of our infected soules in seeking whereof we be all too remisse and slack But yet spare vs good Lord spare thy people and correct vs not in thine anger but in thy mer●y thinke vpon vs for thou art the God of mercy long suffering slow to continue displeasure and ready to forgiue But alasse how shouldest thou cease to punish shouldest shew mercy when wee cease not to sinne and offend but continue still in our wi●●ednesse without repentance What sufficient excuse can wee make or what reasonable let can we lay that thou oughtest not to punish vs Whereas there was neuer more godly preaching neuer more exhortation to repentance seldome the like crying out against sinne neuer more disswading from couetousnesse and vsurie there be daily admonitions to forsake swearing continual calling from all wickednesse beside the number of godly learned Bookes made and set forth and yet cannot all these moue vs once to repent or to desist and forsake our wonted wicked waies and fil●hy affections Defend mee Lord by thy right hand and giue a gracious ca●e to my request for all mans stayes are but vaine Lord cond●●t me in thy waies 〈◊〉 I may giue thankes to ●●ee for thy mercie and goodnesse who ne●er leauest them destitute that put their assured trust in thee who liuest and raignest one God World without end Amen A Prayer for Seruants with their dutie O Christ my Lord and Sauiour who being the Son of the liuing GOD ●● GOD himselfe from euerlasting didst not disdaine at the wil of thine Heauenly Father to make thy selfe of no reputation to become Man to take vpon thee the shape of a Seruant and to obey thy Fathers Commandement to the death yea euen of the Crosse for our saluation refusing no seruice no trauell no labour no paine that might make vnto the comfort of mankinde We most humbly beseech thee to giue all thy Seruants grace to practise thy humilitie and obedience that as thou most willingly didst serue and obey thy Heauenly Fathers good pleasure so they in like manner may with most hearty affection serue and obey their bodily Masters in all things that are agreeing with thy blessed Word not with eye-seruice as Men-pleasers but in singlenesse of heart fearing God that whatsocuer they do they may doe it heartily euen as to the Lord and not vnto Men. For as much as they are sure that they shall receiue the reward of thy Heauenly Inheritance of thee O Lord Christ while truly and faithfully they serue their bodily Masters Grant that so many as are vnder theyoake may count their Masters worthy of all honour that the name of God and his Doctrine bee not euill spoken of and that they may obey them with all feare not onely if they bee good and curteous but also though they bee sroward and please them in all things not answering them againe not picking ought from them but shew good faithfulnesse that in all things they may bring credit to the doctrine of thee our GOD and Sauiour to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be all honour praise and glory for euer and euer Ameu Seruants ought to account their Masters worthy of all honour I T●● 6. 1 and to be subiect vnto them with all feare not onely to the good and curteous but also to the froward 1 Pet. 2. 18 and to please them in all things not answering againe and to be no filchers nor deceiuers of them in any thing but shew all good faithfulnes Tit. 2. 9. 10 in singlenesse of their hearts as vnto Christ not with seruice to the eye as Men-pleasers but as the seruants of Christ doing the will of GOD from their hearts with good will seruing the Lord and not Men. Ephe. 6. 5. 6. 7. A Prayer for Children and their dutie AS thou O mercifull Father hast giuen commandement vnto all Fathers and Mothers to bring vp their Children in thy feare nurture and doctrine so likewise thy good pleasure is that children should honour and reuerence their Parents diligently giue care vnto their vertuous instructions and faithfully obey them As thou hast promised health honour glorie and riches long life and all that good is vnto them that honour reuerence and humbly obey their Fathers Mothers so hast thou threatned vnto disobedient Children ignominy euil same contempt shame dishonor pouerty sicknesse short life and such other plagues Yea in thy holy Law thou dost not onely pronounce them accursed that dishonour their Fathers and Mothers but thou also commandest that if anie Childe be stubborne and disobedient and will not heare but rather despise the commandement of his Father and Mother the same should bee stoned to death without mercy so greatlie doest thou abhorre disobedience and rebellion against all persons but especially against Parents I therefore heartily wishing that the plagues of thy fierce wrath for thou O Lord art a consurning fire may bee farre from them most humbly beseech thee to engraue in the hearts of all Children of whatsoeuer age kinde estate or degree they be true honour heartie reuerence and vnfeined obedience towards their Pare●ts Giue them
onely Sauiour so loue thee that all mine affections may bee set on thee alone and so embrace true godlinesse that our whole life may be a cleere mirrour of all vertue and goodnesse so shall wee through thy mercie bee found worthy guests of this thy Table and receiue these holy mysteries to the saluation of our soules Yea so shall we be well assured of the remission and forgiu●nesse of all our sinnes By the breaking of thy blessed bodie and the shedding of thy precious blood our consciences shall bee quiet our hearts shall be filled with all true and spirituall ioy we shall triumph ouer Sathan sinne death hell and desperation wee shall be partakers of all the fruites and merites of thy blessed passion bee made one body with thee fellow-heires in euerlasting glorie O Lord God let it so come to passe for the honour of thy name Amen A Thankesgiuing after the receiuing of the Communion VVEe thanke thee O Heauenly Father for the blessed passion and glorious death of thy dearely beloued Sonne our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ by whose holy wounds we faithfully beleeue and are assuredly perswaded that thy wrath is not onelie pacified towardes vs bu● that thou also are now become our most mercifull Father and hast freelie forgiuen vs all our sinnes Restore vnto vs thy heauenlie grace and make vs sonnes and heires of thine eternal glorie And because wee should not doubt of thy Fatherlie goodnesse rewards vs 〈◊〉 in the de●th of thy 〈◊〉 the same Son Christ 〈◊〉 Lord hath l●●t vnto vs not onely his holy Word but also a blessed memorial of his death and passion set forth 〈◊〉 the holy b●●ad and wine which weat this present haue receiued both for a remembrance of the breaking of his blessed body and the s●edding of his mo●● pr●●in●● blood 〈◊〉 also for the quietn●sse of our ●●onscience and ●●● the 〈◊〉 of the remissi●● of our ●●●nes through faith●●●●● We 〈◊〉 thee O Hea●●enly Father that we be neuer vnmindefull of this thy exceeding great kindness● not vnthankefull for thy ma●ifolde blessings vnspeakable mercies declared vnto vs in the glorious death of thy welbeloued Sonne but so worke thou in vs through thy holy Spirit that wee may be made worthy members of that bodie whereof thy Sonne and our Sauiour Christ Iesus is the head And that we may so faithfullie beleeue in thee and so ●eruently loue one another alway liuing in thy feare and in the obedience of thy holy law and blessed will that wee being fruitfull in all godly and Christian workes may traine our liues according to thy good pleasure in this transitorie World and after this fraile and short life obtaine the true and immortal life where thou with thy dearely beloued S●nne our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ and the Holy Ghost that most sweete Comforter liuest and raignest one true God in all honour glorie World without end Amen A Prayer to be saide at the recei●ing of the mysterie of Christs B●die in the Communion O Heauenly and blessed Father ●●render vnto thoe most hearty thankes for all thy benefits which thou hast shewed vnto mee a most wretched sinner but especially for that most sweete smelling sacrifice which thy onely begotten Son offered vnto thee on the Altar of the Crosse by giuing his most pure and vndefiled bodie vnto the death for the redemption of Mankinde in remembrance whereof according to thy wellbeloued Sonnes ordinance I now receiue this holie bread most entirely beseeching thee that I may both be partaker of the merites of thy deare Sonnes Body-breaking and also leade a life worthy so great a benefit to the glorie o● thy name Amen A Prayer to be saide at the receiuing of the mysterie of Christs bloud in the holy Communion O Blessed and mercifull Father thy loue towards mee sinful Creature is so exceeding great and vnspeakable that I cannot but giue vnto thee most humble thankes namely for the shedding of the most precious bloud of thy deare Sonne Iesus Christ by the vertue whereof thy wrath stored vp against me wretched sinner is pacified my ransome is paide the Law is fulfilled mine enemies are ouercome put to flight In remembrance of this so noble a victorie and of so great a benefit I am come vnto this Table O merciful Father to drinke of this Cup desiring thee that as my outward man is comforted by the drinking of this wine so likewise my inward man may bee comforted and made strong by true faith in the precious blood of thy most deare Sonne O Lord and my Heauenlie Father giue me thy holy Spirit which may so rule gouerne my heart that I neuer bee vnthankefull nor forgetful of this thine exceeding great kindnes but so traine my life according to thy blessed will that whatsoeuer I doe speake or thinke may bee vnto the glory of thy most blessed name and the health of my soule through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen A Morning salutation to GOD for wisedome for grace and forgiuenesse of sinnes MY Soule O Lord hath desired thee in the night season and I haue also waited for thee in spirit and minde all the morning beseeching thee that thy presence which I sore haue longed for may expell from me all my sinne Lord water the secrets of my heart with thy manifolde graces and mightily en●●●●e the same with thy loue And now my most sweete Lord Iesus Christ I rise and come early to thee in the morning and pray thee from the bottome of my heart that thou wilt hearken vnto my prayers and godlie requests which I doe most humbly in heart offer vnto thee for thou art the wisdome the eternall brightnesse and verie figure of the substance of the Father who hast created all things of nothing And because thou wouldest bring againe Man to the pleasure of Paradise thou camest downe from Heauen into this vale of miserie and by thy holie conuersation thou hast shewed and trod him the path thereunto and for ransome of all Man-kinde thou wouldest bee offered to thy Father as a most immaculate Lambe Open by thy Holy Spirit my stony and hard heart that with the eies of a perfect beliefe ● may alwaies behold thee who art King of Kings and Lord of Lords Giue m● wis●dome truly to consider of thy ●eath and passion that thereby I may profit in thee onely who art as a Booke of charitie for me Grant mee that I be vtterlie destitute of all vanities that now I be not he whom heretofore I haue beene but doe thou alwaies abide in me that so linked vnto thee I neuer s●verue or decline from thee Send downe good Lord thy wisedome from the seate of thy Maiestie that shee may labour and be with mee that I may know what is acceptable in thy sight that my heart and senses may bee enlightened whereby I may vnderstand how to bee a true follower of thy Precepts O my Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ who art most sweete vnto mee