Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n father_n son_n teach_v 6,372 5 6.6786 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

officia Dei honor in patre fidei testimonium in nomine oblatio obsequii in voluntate commemoratio spei in regno petitio vitae in pane exomologesis debito●um in deprecatione sollicitudo tentationum in postulatiene tutelae Tertul de Orat. here is our belief of his goodness our persuasion of his love our desire after his holiness our subjection to his Authority and hope of his Kingdome our willingness to suffer and readiness to do his will here we declare our dependance on his Providence and contentedness with his dispensations our Penitence for former sins and resolutions of amendment our sense of our own frailty and our trust in his mercy and grace and all this ending with acts of Faith and Love joy and praise Devotion and Adoration So that this Divine Form is fitted for all times and all places and all persons The ignorant must use it because he may understand it the knowi●g that they may understand it better the sinner that he may be holy the holy man least he become a sinner the rich prays thus for the sanctification of his gifts the poor for the supply of his wants in private it extends to particular needs in publique it unites us all into one soul and makes us equally desire (r) Non singulis privatam precem mandavit sed Oratione communi concordi prece pro omnibus jussit orare Cypr. Epist 8. others good with our own being indited in a publique stile so that though it be useful every where yet it is especially fitted for the Assemblies of the Church where all Antiquity used it as the Salt of all other offices (s) Sat omnium divinorum o●●ctorum● and we in Imitation of them for our Church prescribes it after the Absolution for acceptance after the word of God read and the recital of the Creed for assistance in holiness and confirmation in Faith in the Letany for deliverance from evil in the Communion Service to dispose us for a penitent hearing of the Laws of God never too often nor never superfluously as you may observe afterwards for how can we too often joyn his most perfect Prayer to ours that are so imperfect since by him both we and our prayers are alone made acceptable Those that presented Petitions to the Roman Emperors drew them up by the direction of some judicious Lawer but we have this Sacred Form from the wonderful Counsellor who came out of the Bosom of God and knew his treasures as well as our wants he best could inform us what was fit for us to ask and what most likely for him to grant he was to go to Heaven to be our Advocate there and he hath taught us this that there may be a Harmony between our requests and his What zeal and height of devout affections are sufficient to offer up this Prayer with drawn up by the great Master of Requests and orderer of all entercourse between God and Man how sure is this of acceptance (t) Animata suo privilegio ascendit coelum commendans patri quae filius docuit Tertull. which is stamped with his Image signed with his hand and sent in his name his Power will make it prevalent and Gods love to his dear Son most acceptable (u) Dum prece Oratione quam filius docuit ad patrem loquitur faciliùs audiamur Cypr. for what can pierce the ears sooner or melt the heart of a tender Father more readily then the voice of his only and Beloved Son use it therefore Reverently and heartily and doubt not to be heard The Division of the Lords Prayer The Lords Prayer hath three Parts 1. The Preface or Compellation 2. The six Petitions which concern Expressing 1. Charity to Men Our 2. Faith in God Father 3. Fear of God which art in Heaven Either Gods Glory by 1. The Reverence of his Attributes hallowed be thy Name 2. The Exercise of his Authority thy Kingdome come 3. The fulfilling of his Will thy Will be done in earth as it is in Heaven Or our own good in 1. Temporal supplies give us this day our daily bread 2. Remission of sins past and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us 3. Deliverance for the future from Sin and lead us not into temptation Punishment but deliver us from evil Being an acknowledgement of God 1. As Supreme for thine is the Kingdome 2. As Omnipotent the Power 3. As Gracious and the Glory 4. As Eternal for ever and ever Amen 3. The Conclusion or Doxology A Practical Discourse on the Lords Prayer § 2. OUr Father which art in Heaven This was the usual Preface to the Jewish Forms of Prayer who stiled God their Father which was in heaven (x) Pater noster qui es in coelis fac nobis gra iam Sed. Tephil Lusitan Deus noster qui in coelo unicus es in lib. Musar But since they owned not God the Son they could not justly call God Father and being in bondage to the Law (y) Galat. 4.6 Servis ●ancillis non permissum Abba vel Imma● Dominis suis dicere in Gem. they were Servants rather then Sons and such by their own rule might not call their Masters by the name of Father This Appellation suiteth us better who are by Jesus adopted to be the Sons of God and by his Spirit who obtained that priviledge we are taught to cry Abba Father (z) Gal. 4.6 he that is the eternal Son of God himself who hath alone right to this Name hath put the words in our mouths and what fitter words to begin our Prayers then these two which include the principal requisites of Prayer Faith and Charity no man can call God his Father but by Faith and he must be in Charity that can add Our Father which cannot be said devoutly but by him that is free from wrath to man or doubting (a) 2 Tim. 2.8 'T is certain God is our Father for he hath created us after his own Image and begotten us again by the washing of Regeneration he feeds and cloths us preserves and provides for us he teacheth us what is right and correcteth us when we do amiss and Finally he hath done like a Father in providing an eternal inheritance for us (b) 2 Cor. 12.14 even such as men make for their Children (c) 2 Sam. 7.19 G. P. Talis enim est provisio humana He hath ever expressed a Fatherly love to us and care of us and tenderness toward us and this Jesus obligeth us to acknowledge (d) Isai 63.16 that while we call him Father we may be gratefull to him and have the affections of Children upon us when we come to him in our needs trusting in his mercy persuaded of his All-sufficiency rejoycing in hope and filled with love and joy and comfortable expectations because we are going to our Father and least if we were uncharitable to our Bretheren that unlikeness to
along with every sentence and seal it with a most hearty assent There are many truths which do not concern us whether they be true or false and in such cases a general persuasion that they may be true will suffice But these principles of our Faith are the ground of our Prayers the rule of our lives and must be received with the same evidence that the Mathematicians postulata are on which his following demonstrations depend so that without the admission of these he can do nothing Remember you must conduct the affairs of your life by this profession you must venture your souls at your death on these principles nay if need be you must seal these Truths with your blood therefore do not slightly repeat them but let them sink into your heart and be so assured of them that no pleasure or profit may intice you to walk contrary to it or deny it nor no threats or pains affright you from confessing it and rejoyce in this daily opportunity to express the constancy of your faith and every day protest your belief as solemnly as if you were to dye for it 3. Our mind can never want imployment for all the faculties and powers thereof because in the repetition we are to make a particular application of every Article that it may produce those effects and serve those ends for which it was revealed And it is absurd if not impious to think that God did discover these sacred truths only to enlarge our speculations or experience our credulity All that is true is equally so and the reason why these truths are more necessary to be believed then others is not because they are more certain but more u●eful to assist our devotions and direct our conversation then any other propositions that Gods word doth contain where they are not barely taught but ever applied either as incouragements to the worship of God or arguments to a holy life Nor are they intended so much to make us wiser as to perswade us to become better (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Paedag. And if they have not this effect upon us our Faith excels not the Confession of the Devils (i) Matth. 8.29 James 2.19 who did acknowledge Jesus the Son of God and yet opposed the purposes of that mistery and so had no benefit by their acknowledgment This light is set up to direct us and it is expected that we should work and walk by it And that will appear when our Devotions suit these principles and our practices are the genuine products of our profession For therefore Heaven did reveal this Creed and therefore the Church inserts it here And that we may learn to use it to these purposes let us more particularly consider 1. How we may apply it to assist our Prayers In order whereunto we must observe that our Faith is the basis on which our Petitions are built the sole engagement to us to make them and the principal motive to God to hear them who hath so often required that we should pray with Faith and without the least wavering or distrust (k) Matth. 21.22 1 Tim. 2.8 Heb. 11.6 James 1.6 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agitatur scil dubitans at non progreditur vide item Jac. 5.15 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. If we come to God we must believe that he is and that he will reward those that wait upon him without which persuasion the Gentiles themselves did never (l) Veneramini Dees colitis non credentes illos esse propitias aures vestris supplicationibus accommodare Arnob adv gentes lib. 2. worship their false Gods nor can we pray to the true with either courage zeal or comfort till we have possessed our souls with right opinions of him And this we may do by a reciting our Creed before our Prayers which is an impenetrable armor against all those discouragements and fears which Sathan is apt to assail us with Let us not pray like those that know not God but imitate the holy servants of God in Scripture who alwaies begin their supplications with a brief Confession of their Faith in Gods Power (m) 1 Kings 8.23 Nehem. 9.6 1 Chron. 29.11.12 Daniel 9.4 and Providence his Mercy and his Covenant as we do ours with the declaration of our Faith Oh what holy fervours doth it put our souls into to contemplate the Power of an Almighty Father the love of a most merciful Redeemer and the grace of the holy Spirit our sanctifier Doth it not teach us reverence and fear sincerity and longing desires hope and chearful expectations thus to set God before us in our Creed in the beauty of his Attributes and the glory of his works When we have professed our belief in the Father Almighty that made Heaven and Earth how readily shall we run to him for the supply of our temporal necessities When we have protested our assurance that the eternal Son of God was made man born among us lived with us and dyed for us and arose again and returned to his glory to prepare a place for us and plead our cause can we then forbear to cry for pardon and peace for conversion and salvation or shall we doubt to be accepted Again have we owned our belief of that holy Spirit which is the Author and finisher of all grace and are we not then fitly disposed and strongly moved to petition for his aid that we may continue true members of Christs body and enjoy a Communion with the Saints remission of our sins restauration of our body and an eternal life of glory If we did not premise our Faith to our Prayers it might be suspected we spoke to him we knew not and asked what was unfit to be desired or impossible to be obtained But now all these stumbling blocks are removed and our Creed is made an excellent preparatory to the following Collects every Petition of which are directed by grounded on and enforced from some of these Articles which if we thus apply them will shew us how fitly we may desire these things and what reason we have to hope they shall be granted And secondly we must learn to apply these Articles of our Faith to the right ordering of our lives not repeating them as empty notions and airy speculations but as the principles and rules of practice For why should the Christians belief alone be supposed sufficient without some Acts deduced from it The Merchant believes there are Jewels and rarities in other lands (n) Estne operis in vitâ negotiosum aliquod quod non fide praecunte suscipiunt actores Arnob. l. 2. Nihil est quod in vitâ geri possit si non credulitas praecesserit Ruffin in Symbol and he puts to Sea and attempts the purchase The Countryman sows the Scholar studies and the Souldier fights according to the principles of advantage they believe will come upon those endeavours And doth the Religious man only believe and sit
will Absolve none without true Repentance wherefore let us beg of him who requires this Condition to give what he requires (g) Domine da quod jubes jube quod vis D. Augustin upon all these considerations let us beseech c. if we now make not our applications it will be a despising his love slighting his Message and sending back his servants empty oh let us earnestly pray for true Penitence we are encouraged by his gracious nature engaged by his courteous offer of a treaty urged by necessity as being not like to be forgiven without it further we must ask these favours of him from whom comes every good and perfect gift (h) James 1.17 for if we consider what we ask we shall easily discern they must not be sought any where else Repentance is a change of the notions of the mind the choices of the will the actings of the affections and passions induring new joys and sorrows hopes and fears desires and aversations so that it is a kind of new Creation (i) Ephes 4.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he alone that brought life out of death and light out of darkness can bring us from the death of sin and darkness of iniquity to the life and light of holiness and Piety * Nulla sine Deo meus bona Seneca we can fall down by our own weight but we cannot rise out of this narrow Pit without help nay we sink lower for our hearts are as backward to repent as forward to sin and by frequent commissions we love sin more and are more loth to part with it yesterday we mistook by accident to day we desire to be again in such circumstances to morrow we shall run into them (k) viresque acquirit eundo so that we must not trust in our own hearts (l) Prov. 28.1 but seek repentance from God and his holy Spirit which being both so necessary for us and of so incomparable advantage to us let us humbly beg this on our knees beseeching God to grant them to us which word grant (m) Acts 11.18 denotes a free act of grace from a Prince to his Subject though few offending Subjects can have a Pardon granted out upon their Repentance yet God deals so with us and hath not only promised to forgive us when we do repent (n) John 6.37 but to give us grace that we may repent (o) Acts 5.31 and if we have his gracious assistance no doubt we shall repent truly and not fall into Ahabs hypocrisie Israels treachery (p) Psal 78.34 nor Judas his despair Oh let us pray for his holy spirit of grace which will open our eyes to see our sirs and soften our hearts to mourn for them and strengthen our purposes to amend them and this will be a true Repentance which contains in it an unfeigned Faith which is here understood though not expressed for Faith and true Repentance are so inseparably joyned that in Scripture Repentance is put for them both in many places (q) Matth. 4.17 compared with Mark 1.15 because he that is truly humbled and really purposed to amend doth ever trust in Gods mercy or else it may be understood when we pray for his holy Spirit we mean to produce in us all graces especially Faith which is that gracious fruit of the Spirit of Adoption (r) Gal. 4.16 for by it we call God Father and as such rely on him 'T is certain if we can prevail with God for his holy Spirit it will bring both Faith and all Graces with it and will assist us to do good when Repentance hath taken us off from our evil courses this will keep out those lusts which Repentance began to exclude but observe Repentance goes first for you must not expect this holy Dove will abide in impure places (s) Pietas inducit Spiritum Sanctum R. R. ad Candida tecta columbae when the unclean Spirit expects his house to be swept and garnished (t) Matth. 12.44 we may then hope to have our Prayers for Gods holy Spirit heard when Repentance hath prepared his lodgings in our hearts § 11. That those things may please him which we do at this present Having thus taught you who to pray to and what to pray for it remains that we shew the great advantages of having your Prayers heard that so you may not put up so weighty a request without such hearty desires and zealous affections as are suitable to it for this one Petition granted will procure you 1. Present acceptance 2. Future assistance 3. Endless happiness true Repentance and Gods holy Spirit will assure all this to you but if you pray not so devoutly and earnestly as to obtain them your Absolution must be cancelled your services rejected your souls continue polluted here and be condemned to endless misery hereafter so that we hope your own Interest will quicken you most passionately to beg for these to which purpose consider them severally 1. If your Confession Prayers and Endeavours be such as can prevail with God to give you a true Repentance and his holy Spirit then all the duties now performed shall be acceptable particularly and in the first place that which we Ministers are doing viz. pronouncing the Absolution this shall be confirmed by God and he will assent to it so that your Pardon shall be inrolled in Heaven and then all other duties that we and you do shall be pleasing to God and beneficial to you our mutual and common Prayers shall be answered our praises accepted our hearing shall be converting and salutiferous our Communicating an infallible conveyance and irrevocable seal of Grace and peace But without Repentance all our prayers and praises and all we do (u) See of this at large before in Sect. 2. shall be rejected as a mocking of God without his holy spirit also all our observances are harsh and unpleasing flat and dull in Gods account it is this good Spirit that makes our hearts and tongues agree this inlightens our minds to see our wants quickens our memory to remember them toucheth our hearts with a sense of them confirms our Faith that God can supply us and enlarges our affections to beg the relief of them In a word this Spirit of God helps us to ask inclines him to give and fits us to receive all we pray for so that God is not pleased when we worship him without it (x) Gal. 4.6 John 4.24 Rom. 8.26 and denies nothing when we have it so that our Saviour accounts (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 11.13 Is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 7.11 it the same to pray for the holy spirit and all good things which spring from it And now who would not earnestly beseech for such a true Repentance as might invite this Holy Spirit into their hearts which will be the seal of their Pardon and make all they do well-pleasing to God to please him
is the Christians highest aim it was Davids prayer (z) Psal 19.14 and the greatest blessing the Priest could wish (a) Numb 6.24 25 26. Psal 20.3 4. that Almighty God might accept them Poor Socrates after many a tedious step in a virtuous but afflicted state (b) An diis placent quae feci nescio hoc autem solum scio me sedulò haec egisse ut placerent could not tell whether he had given content to his Deities or no but whoever of you have the grace of Repentance and the holy spirit are not in those uncertainties but have Enochs Testimony Heb. 11.5 that you do please God § 12. And that the rest of our lives hereafter may be pure and holy this is the second benefit and motive earnestly to pray for these things for so you shall not only be welcomed at present with a gracious smile but all your lives long be reputed as the friends of God and by his help shall be preserved as pure as a true Repentance hath made you and as holy as those are who are under the Guard of the Spirit of holiness Pray therefore with all your soul for a true Repentance or else as soon as your soul is washed it will return to its impure wallowings and all your labour is in vain hitherto (c) 2 Pet. 2.22 laterem lavare for a feigned repentance will send Absolom away for a while but upon the next Enterview will hurry us with more passion into his embraces whereas the deep wounds of the true penitent make sin hateful to him while he lives and he that gets on a white garment with so much difficulty will not easily sully it but carefully preserve it pure as his tears have made it And upon the same ground be very pressing for the holy spirit Which if you can obtain you shall not only be preserved from the spots of sin but shall shine with the lustre of a holy life for our goodness is apt to vanish (d) Hos 6.4 we are wavering and soon weary unless we have that establishing spirit (e) Psal 51.14 David prays for and then all duties will be easie and we shall be strong for love and the sense of his assistance will carry us cheerfully through them all so as to be our pleasure not burden and when we are arrived to this nothing can bribe us to forsake them Oh happy soul that is thus begun to be restored to that purity and holiness which are part of Gods Image (f) Ephes 4.24 and parcels of the Divine Perfections blessed is he that is so far advanced that God is not like to forsake him because he hath made him holy pure and a fit temple for the inhabitation of his spirit nor is he likely ever to forsake that God whose mercy hath saved him whose grace doth refresh him whose waies please him and his glorious bounty which faith discovers doth still allure him to press forward to neerer unions and unseparable connexions no state under the Sun is to be longed and wished for like this which a true Repentance and Gods holy Spirit brings us to § 13. So that at the last we may come to his eternal joy through Iesus Christ our Lord Amen There is nothing more desirable then the sweet peace of a good Conscience but only that which is the end and perfection thereof and that is that happiness which is infinite and endless which the Scripture calls an eternal and everlasting joy (g) Isai 35.10 Chap. 61.7 51.11 which neither men nor devils can lessen or interrupt much less put a period to it And if God give us true Repentance it will preserve us from the sins which forfeit this and if he add his holy spirit it will safely lead us into those paths of righteousness which lead thither where we can desire no more because we have all that is desirable There are no cares to disturb no fears to allay nor sorrows to abate those ravishments of delight for ever there is joy which far surpasseth the half-sad and mixed pleasures which this world hath being nothing else but pure joy which pleaseth by its own excellence and by having no fears nor possibility of defailance in degree or continuance we tast something of it in the charming calm of a strong faith and a quiet conscience with undeceived expectations of Gods love but this is but the land-skip of our heavenly Canaan which Jesus hath purchased for us and God the Father will grant unto us and the most holy Spirit will be our guide thither (h) Psal 51.14 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole glorious Trinity is concerned for us and will cooperate with us to put us into possession of them and then rejoyce over us to all eternity The Father who forgave us the Son who dyed for us and the Blessed Spirit who wrought effectually in us will Communicate this their joy with us and to us for ever And lastly to shew that you thankfully follow these Directions of the Ministers and have in your own heart and thoughts most devoutly petitioned God for a true Repentance and his holy Spirit by means whereof all these incomparable benefits may redound to you in testimony I say hereof you sum up all in a Petitionary Amen desiring it may be so and assenting also to the truth of all this It is most true and therefore oh so be it unto you Amen The Paraphrase of the Absolution BE it known to every one of you that hath confessed his sins with an humble lowly Penitent and obedient heart that Almighty God Supreme King of Heaven and Earth whose Royal Prerogative it is fully to acquit or finally to condemn being the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who assumed our nature and suffered for our sins this great God by his Merits is of an angry Judge become a tender Father and hath solemnly sworn he is one who desireth not neither taketh pleasure in the death or damnation of a sinner though never so justly deserving it but rather chuseth to have opportunity to shew mercy and therefore he useth all possible means that he may turn from his wickedness which will bring the sinner into condemnation that by leaving these paths of death he might be forgiven and live in holiness and comfort here and in everlasting glory hereafter And to confirm this his good will and keep penitent sinners from despair he hath given and in holy Scripture communicated Power by vertue of his Supreme Authority and Commandment for the exercise of this power for when poor sinners need comfort he hath given special charge to his Ministers lawfully chosen by himself and those he appoints to be his Ambassadors to declare at all times his willingness to pardon all and pronounce Absolution more particularly and plainly to those that by returning and obedience do own him even to his People being Penitent for all their offences as you now from your
(u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alexandr Paedag. as the Christians form of praising God above 100 years before the Councel of Nice An. 190. besides it appears it was used in the service of the Church before or somewhat very like it (x) Gloria Deo Patri honor item adoratio cum filio collegâ unà cum Sancto vivificatore Spiritu Athanasius because the Arrians did alter the antient form into Glory be to the Father by the Son and in the holy Ghost for which they are sharply reprehended by the Orthodox Fathers who afterward annexed it to their publique Devotions in this Form in which we now have it All which doth not only prove the Antiquity of it but teach us that it may serve for two purposes first as a form of Praising God and glorifying every Person of the Trinity which was the first design of those that invented it Secondly as a shorter Creed and declaration of our Faith in the Trinity in Unity which was the use it was fitted to afterwards I wish we might have no occasion to make use of it in the second sense as a Teste for Hereticks though the Disciples of Socinus and Fanatick Enthusiasts do even still deride or deny this mistery but if there were no such it might still serve its principal end to be a Form of ascribing all Praise and Glory to the Supreme Being and an Act of Adoration to each Person which we are obliged particularly to pay because every one of the Persons in the Trinity hath done peculiar benefits for us so that it is our Duty to Praise the Father for our Creation the Son for our Redemption the Holy Ghost for our Sanctification The Father hath sent us into the world and preserves and provides for us in it The Son hath lived with us and died for us and being returned to his Glory is still mindful of us The Holy Ghost doth come to us and stay with us as a guard and a guide a comforter and an advocate cleering our minds cleansing our hearts quickening our affections and enforcing our prayers and shall we not then be highly ungrateful if we pay not a particular tribute to every Person in special as well as to all in general Remember the Angels sung praise to the undivided and ever-blessed Trinity in the morning of the Creation the beginning of all time (y) Job 38.7 and they and all the world do it now and both men and Angels shall continue this Jubilee to eternity As long as goodness endures (z) Omnes tam orationes quam oblationes cessabunt in seculo futuro sed oblatio gratiarum nunquam cessabit R.D.K. Psal 100.4 gratitude and praise cannot cease This was and is and ever shall be done in all ages and generations (a) Psal 145.4 The Patriarchs and Prophets did it in the beginning of the Church the Apostles and Martyrs in the first planting of the Gospel All these though removed to heaven continue to sing praises to the Trin-une God there as we and all Pious Christians do here and there will never want tongues in Heaven nor Earth to sing this gratulatory Hymn for all generations Observe further the Comprehensiveness of these few words which extend to all things as well as to all times and persons and present at once to our view all the Mercies of God past present and to come and are an acknowledgment that all the good that ever was or shall be done or is now enjoyed in heaven or earth hath proceeded from this all-sufficient and ever-flowing fountain to whom this tribute of praise is and was and ever will be due Behold then oh pious soul a glorious Quire of Angels Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Saints and Martyrs in Heaven with all holy Men and Women in all the world at once with united voices and joyful hearts to sing this triumphant Song let this inspire thee with holy raptures and extasies of Devotion to bear a part here on earth and when thou art taken hence thy place shall be supplied by the succeeding generations and thou shalt be advanced to a state as endless as his mercy where thou shalt praise him to eternity What better form can we have to glorifie God by then this which is a declaration of our faith a discharge of our homage in which we acknowledge his former mercies and confess his present favours to us and all the world and glorifie him for both we hope in him for those that are to come expecting all from him and resolving upon those returns of Eucharist which we will for ever make to him How can this be done too often or repeated too frequently surely his mercies are more frequent then our praises can be Those that censure this as a vain repetition would ill have digested the hundred blessings (b) Deut. 10.12 R. R. legunt pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro quid leg centum unde unusquisque benetur centum benedictiones quotidiè reddere which the Jews are bid to say every day and might be offended at Davids seven times a day (c) Psal 119.64 and St. Pauls charge to rejoyce alwaies (d) 1 Thess 5.18 Philip. 4.4 but as God never thinks it too often to relieve us let us never think his praises too many tedious or impertinent but in Psalms Letanies and every thing let us give thanks and when Gloria Patri is not in our mouths let it be in our heart that we may never forget his benefits To this we shall only add the particular reason why the Church hath placed it in the close of the penitential part of daily Prayer and that is in imitation of holy David who commonly when he hath made his Confession and declared his distress (e) Psal 6.9 and 130.7 and begged pardon and deliverance turns his petitions into Praises because of his lively hope of acceptance so we being full of hopes that our gracious Father will forgive us for his Sons sake by the Ministry of his spirit We I say do now give glory to the Father who granteth this Absolution to the Son who purchased and obtained it and to the Holy Ghost who sealeth and dispenseth it to us and we also call to mind those innumerable instances of the like infinite mercies to poor sinners which have been and ever shall be to the worlds end and what heart can conceive or tongue express that exstasy of ravishing pleasures which we shall feel at the last day when we and all true Penitents that ever were or shall be shall all joyn in singing songs of praise to our deer Redeemer whom we shall love much because much is forgiven us we can foresee those Anthems which shall then be sounded on the battlements of Heaven by millions of glorious souls rescued from destruction and we by Faith have such a sense hereof that we begin now that Song that we shall sing for evermore § 5. Praise ye the Lord the Lords
and be careful to express those practical inferences that are all along drawn from them in our lives and conversations heartily desiring we may live by these holy principles of truth and in these we must exercise especially Faith and Love concluding them with giving Glory to the Father who hath made us partakers of a right Faith in his Son by his Spirit and remembring that every Person of this Glorious Trinity joyns in these eminent works of Creation Providence Redemption and Sanctification let us heartily praise God the Father Son and Holy Ghost for all that is done or designed for the sons of men Let thy soul say Oh Lord I confess the truth of these things I believe them fully and I admire them highly and will ever love thee for declaring them I acknowledge thy Power in Creating thy Bounty in sustaining thy Wisdome in ordering and thy Mercy in relieving and preserving all the World I discern thy love in our Redemption I hope in thy might for a resurrection to life and I trust in thy Mercy for a share in thy glory Glory be to the Father c. for all this 2. The Psalms of Exhortation which are serious admonitions backed with powerful motives and convincing arguments and cleer examples by which we are stirred either to some Acts of moral Virtue (b) Psal 15. and 101. or to some Duties of positive Religion to fear God or study his Law or observe his Will (c) Psal 1. and 34. and 119. or else we are warned against sin by threatnings and examples (d) Psal 7. and 58. and 64. particularly against distrust in God by the History (e) Psal 78.105 106. of his Providence over his own people That we may profit by these it is requisite that we do weigh the promises and motives to holiness so seriously that we be convinced of our folly in neglecting these duties and resolved to set upon the sincere performance of them and it is necessary that we consider the evils that are appointed for and threatned to all sorts of sins and the sad instances and examples of sinners that have been made miserable thereby till we find our hearts moved with fear and penitence and till we have taken up purposes of speedy forsaking those dangerous courses so that here we are to exercise humility and Repentance fear of God and pious resolutions which being finished in the Doxology is a superadded act of Praise to the Father for sparing us to the Son for interceding for us and to the Holy Ghost for warning and convincing us and this Glory be to the Father c. doth declare you are thankful for the admonition and resolved to take warning and full of hopes of the Divine assistance to help you to forsake the evil and follow the good In these Psalms take the same resolutions which holy David did and encourage your selves with the same hopes love what he loves desire what he longed for believe and expect what he promiseth to himself hate what he hated take warning by what he observed and fear the same sad event if you go on in the same way with those sinners that are made examples to you evermore praising God for these gracious discoveries and saying Glory be c. 3. The Psalms of Supplication which are most ardent Petitions for all good things for your selves your Bretheren and the whole Church in all circumstances and upon all occasions These are private Prayers for Pardon of sin (f) Psal 25. and 51. and 143. for Restauration to Gods favour (g) Psal 4. and 42. and 63. for Patience in trouble (h) Psal 39. and 88. for deliverance from Spiritual or Temporal enemies (i) Psal 55. and 59 and 71. and 74. and also publique Prayers for the King (k) Psal 21. and 72. and for the Church and people of God (l) Psal 68. and 79. and 80. and such like Which that we may be fitly disposed for we must have a quick and feeling sense of our own and our bretherens wants a firm belief of Gods all-sufficiency a strong confidence in the intercession of Jesus Christ and a full persuasion of the acceptableness of these requests which are drawn up by the Holy Ghost And these devout prayers will give us occasion to shew our care of our own souls and our universal charity to all the world our love to Gods Church and our intire dependance on his Power and Mercy and may fitly be closed with a giving Glory to the Father who heareth us to the Son who pleads for us in Heaven and to the Holy Ghost who directs and assists us on Earth and we have cause to bless him who hath heard both our and others Prayers and will do so to the end of the world giving all persons in all ages past present and to come great-cause of Eucharist and thanksgiving for by this Gloria Patri added to our Prayers we declare our confidence and hope that he will grant us our desires who is and was and ever shall be the helper of all that flee to him for succour and we call to mind that many are now praising him in heaven for hearing these very Petitions we now put up Art thou poor or miserable sick or weak despised or slandered persecuted or oppressed here thou mayest breath out thy complaints to him that can help thee or those that are so Art thou under trouble of conscience or fear of Gods anger worsted by temptation or sluggish in holy duties or any waies spiritually indisposed here are most proper and pertinent forms for thy comfort and redress Art thou a well-wisher to all the world a lover of Gods people a friend to the Peace of Kingdoms and a faithful Subject to thy own Prince hast thou any detestation for sinners or desire of their Conversion any pitty for the calamitous and wishes for their deliverance if thou bring a charitable heart thou mayest pray for all or any of these in such prevailing words that ere thou hast done speaking thou mayest have such assurances of a gracious return as to sing Glory be to the Father c. 4. The Psalms of thanksgiving are those joyful songs of Praise and Eucharist and lovely descriptions of the Divine goodness to the World but especially to us and all his own people Such are those wherein God is praised for all his mercies (m) Psal 103. and 136. and 145. for those bestowed on our bodies (n) Psal 116. and 130. health plenty (o) Psal 65. and 104. victories over our enemies (p) Psal 18. and 144. and 149. as also for what he hath done for our souls (q) Psal 66. and 111. and 118. and in these Psalms are most earnest exhortations to joyn in praising his holy Name and most exact Characters of all Gods gracious dealings with us and all mankind wherefore that we may joyn in heart and voice let us bring with us hearts fully sensible of our
baseness and unworthiness mightily convinced that God hath often done good to us and others and deeply affected with the freeness frequency and fulness of his mercies and favours for here we are to exercise love and gratitude and to imitate the Quire of heaven who survey the whole world and pay the tribute of glory to him whose mercy and goodness they see and admire in every thing and so may we and then our souls shall readily comply with Davids courteous invitations to bless the Lord. Oh my God I behold what thou dost for all mankind and I feel what I have received I confess my unworthiness and admire thy goodness in all things And then the Glory be to the Father c. is a recapitulation of all those foregoing causes of glorifying every Person in the glorious Trinity or all of them and must be an acknowledgment that all mercies are dispensed to us by the Father for the Sons sake through the Ministry of the Holy Spirit and upon this account all honour and glory is and was and ever shall be due to Father Son and Holy Ghost O my ingrateful heart which sees so much cause of praising God every day for his works and his goodness to others and for what we have experience of and yet hath not learned fully to love God and constantly to praise him Come to the sweet singer of Israel he will excite thee by his example in every thing to give thanks learn of him to rejoyce with them that rejoyce learn of him to love and sing Glory be c. and thou shalt sing new songs in the New Jerusalem for ever By such means as these we ought to tune our hearts for this heavenly musick if we would have it please God and profit us and if by the help of Gods good spirit we have in some measure well performed this our next care must be that we loose not those good affections 3. Therefore endeavour to nourish these holy flames on the altar of thy heart by a holy life such as the inspired Penmen of these Psalms lead themselves (r) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athanas and such as they exhort others to and so shalt thou be every day fit to joyn in this office and be alwaies prepared to accompany the Church with suitable affections to all the several parts of Psalmody Remember these Anthems are designed not only to raise Devotion in publique but to assist holiness in private (s) Verba vivenda non legenda and by letting thee feel the comfort of that in Gods house which may strengthen thee to do his will afterwards and to set us all upon our guard against sin and Sathan who design to discompose our minds by presenting sensual pleasures and carnal allurements but you that have tasted sweeter and nobler delights will certainly despise those vain and empty pretenders to satisfaction and wish no other joy then to praise God among his servants on Earth here and among his Saints in Heaven hereafter And if this be your desire the constant use of these Psalms will make them so familiar that you will never want holy Meditations ejaculations answers to Sathans temptations and Mementoes of a holy life which is the only way that leads to the happiness you desire SECTION VIII Of the Lessons § 1. BEfore we begin to read or hear the holy Scripture it will be useful that we consider first their own excellency to engage our love to them Secondly The Providence of God in the Composing and Preserving them to excite our Reverence Thirdly The Care of the Church in fitting them to our use to encourage our diligence First The Scripture must needs be excellent because it is the Revelation of the whole Will of God so far as is necessary for our Salvation And we believe as God hath taught us and with the Primitive Church (t) 2 Tim. 3.15 In q●ibus inven●untur illa omnia quae continent f d●m moresque vivendi Aug. doc Chris l. 2. c. 17. Sacrae divinitùs inspira●ae Scripturae per se abunde sufficiunt ●d veritatis indicationem Athan. in Idol Antiquam fidei Regulam Euseb hist lib. 5. that it is the compleat Repository of all Divine truths that concern faith or manners and therefore we own it to be the Rule of our lives and the foundation of our Faith and in all our considerable (u) Sancta Synodus Christum assess●rem capitis loco adjunxit Vene●ondum enim Evangelium in● Sancto throno collocavit Cy●ill See Dr. Cosens History of the Canon controversies we place it in the Throne as the Councels of Ephesus and Aquileia did for the moderator and determiner of such doubts and differences This is the guide of our Consciences the ground of our hopes the evidence of our inheritance and the Law by which we shall be judged at the last day (x) John 5.45 Revel 20.12 Wherefore it is the duty (y) John 5.39 and interest (z) 2 Tim. 3.15 of every Christian to be conversant in them according to the command of Jesus and the example of all Gods servants who studied them more then any other writings So that Sr. Basil and his friend used no other Book but wholly meditated in this for thirteen years And if it were possible we should exercise our selves in it day and night (a) Josh 1.8 Deut. 17.19 R. Ismael à sororis filio rogatus quodnam tempus Graecorum lectioni impenderet Resp Nullum nisi potest inveni itempus quod nec ad diem neque ad noctem pertinebat è Talin Masius in Jos 1. that is alwaies But however we must spend so much time upon them that we may be alwaies furnished with precepts to direct promises to encourage and examples to quicken us to do all good and also with Prohibitions to restrain threatnings to affright and presidents to warn us from all evil waies whatsoever And being so constantly useful and so able to shew us all that is necessary to be known believed or to be done we should love them and delight to hear them and know them because ignorance of these Sacred Oracles will lay us open to errors in Judgments (b) Mark 12.24 and wickedness in Practice (†) Psal 119.3 and finally prove the ruine of our Souls § 2. Secondly we must remember it is no ordinary regard which we must give to these holy Pages because God is the Author and his Spirit the enditer of them and in his infinite wisdome and love he hath committed his Will to writing that it might not be corrupted or impaired by the prejudices the malice or forgetfulness of men as all Traditions generally are For the matter of it he could have filled it with amazing Mysteries but consulting our good rather then his own greatness he condescends to our capacities (c) Lex loqui ut nobiscum linguâ ●lio●um hominum Lumen supernum nunquam descendit sine indumento Proverb
Apostles are ravi●hed with his glory whom they saw in his weakn●ss The Prophets are delighted with him whom they prophesied of but never beheld before The Martyrs are transpo●ted with his love and forgetting all their torments solace themselves in his joyes and every gaping wound (d) Quot vulnera hiantia tot ora laudantia Deum is a mouth to chant out his Praise Oh what honour is it to serve such a Lord what delight to be admitted to so glorious a society Summon up all the powers and f●culties of your souls and as they fill Heaven do yo● fill the Earth with setting out the Majesty of his Glory § 3. The second part of this Hymn in the eleven following versicles is a Confession of Faith And eve●y A●ticle thereof is a f●rther motive to praise God eit●er fo● the g●ory of his Essence or the mercy that appears in his works And since we see God at present only by Faith the Profession of that Faith is to us reputed a glorifying of him (e) Rom. 15.6 The Saints and Angels have a f●ll view and what they ●o by Joy we do by Faith and holy desires of a nearer union A●d certainly we cannot set out the Majesty of his Glory better then by assenting to that Revelation which his Truth hath made of himself and by confessing him that the glorious Hosts of Heaven adore and the Universal Ch●●ch doth and ever did acknowledge For so we agree in a sweet harmony with the Saints and Angels in heaven and with all holy men our Bretheren on the earth For the unanimous consent of the Servants is a manifestation of the Masters honour And it is an evidence that our Lord is really such and so glorious as we believe him to be since all unite in the profession of it A●d this holds good most evid●ntly in the great mistery of the Trinity which the Celestial Quire owns by their Trisagium Holy H●ly Holy And the Catholick Church hath most unanimously acknowledged most sacredly kept and most courageously defended above all other Articles so that all those agree in this who differ in many other points Let us then chearfully acknowledge the infinite Majesty of the Father who governs all Creatures and declare the honour of his true and only Son whose Glory is great in our salvation Let us confess the Divinity of that holy Spirit who is our Advocate in Heaven and our Comforter (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 u rumque signif Johan 14.16 1 Ep. Johan 2. ver 1. upon the Earth Above all let us be carefull that the humiliation of our mercifull Redeemer do not abate of our esteem To prevent which the Church in this Hymn as also in all her Creeds makes the largest and most particular Confession of the Son of God and we have here a full account of Divinity and Humanity because by the malice of Sathan these have been so confounded and mistaken by so many Heresies and we have also a recital of those works of his which most concern us because it is the interest of us all to know and believe these which more directly tend to our salvation then any other of the works of God and therefore do more strongly engage our gratitude for we shall find abunda●t matter of Praise both in what Jesus is in his nature and what he hath done for us He is very God and therefore we give ●im that title which alone belongs to the Lord of hosts and St. Ambrose the best interpreter of this Hymn saith (g) Psal 24 7. 10. Quis est iste Rex gloriae Respondetur à scientibus Dominus virtutùm ipse est Rex gloriae Ergo Dominus virtutùm est ipse filius Ambros de Fide lib. 4. that twenty fourth Psalm was sung by the Angels at our Saviours Resurrection those who came with him calling to those in Heaven to open the gates for the King of Glory who answered them as it is in that Psalm And we may call him the King of Glory both as he is very God and because he hath purchased Glory for us and shall distribute it to us and shall receive glory and praise from us and all that are partakers of it And his glory depends not on our praises but is inseparable from his nature because he is the true and only begotten Son of God not Created as the Angels nor Adopted as Men but by Eternal Generation Coeternal with the Father and Coequal What though he was born in time the Son of Man this doth not take away his Being the Son of God nor change his nature but express his love and engage our affections Dear Jesus whether hath thy love carried thee from Glory to misery from the highest Throne in Heaven to the lower parts of the Earth (h) Ephes 4.9 Pudorem exordii nostri non recusa●i● sed contumelias naturae nostrae transcurrit Hilar How hast thou pursued ●s through all the stages of our infelicity from the dishonours of the Womb to those of the Tombe not abhorring the meanest place that was pure nor the lowest condition that Innocence could be put into What cause have we to bless thee (i) Ideo quod homo est Christus esse voluit ut homo possit esse quod Christus est who wert pleased to become what we were that we might be not what we deserved but as thou art Holy Saviour we believe and rejoyce in believing that thou wast born like us livedst with us and diedst for us and that death was our life it was shameful and inglorious sharp and tormenting so terrible as might startle a great confidence in a good cause But it was not more bitter to thee then sweet to us We even we Oh Lord had armed Death with a sting sharp and venomous for our sin had provoked the Divine wrath And this sting though with the suffering (k) 1 Cor. 15.57 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Devicto mortis a●uleo Ambr. of inexpressible dolours thou hast pulled out and having satisfied the Justice of God canst now triumph over death it self and enable us with comfort to say O Death where is thy sting with which thou didst threaten all the World with unavoidable destruction Who can behold what thou hast suffered and we have escaped and not be ravished with thy Love Oh blessed Lord Jesus The way to Heaven was ever open to Innocence but we all had sinned and come short of the glory of God Heaven gates were shut against us and Hells mouth open to receive us And in this estate our life had been worse then death by the dreadful expectations of deserved vengeance and our death had certainly delivered us up to feel what we feared Do we live with any comfort 'T is thou hast removed our fears Can we dye with any peace It is thou alone hast renewed our hopes if any men that are or ever were or shall be are admitted into this Kingdome
benedicam tibi laudabo nomen tuum c. Vulg. Lat. only altering the Tense and Person Lord help us for we are thy servants paying thee the daily tribute of Praise Whatever thou bestowest on us will not be forgotten nor bu●ied in ungratefull silence We meet in thy house every day to magnifie thee in this manner and to set our the glory of thy Name in every thing thou dost for u. Withold not thy mercy for we will not withold thy Praise and since we resolve daily to do the work of Angel● Lord keep us pure as they are for praise is neither seemly nor acceptable in the mouth of a sinner Let not us who are thy servants in the morning be the devils slaves before night (z) Coepisti meliùs quam desinis ultima primis Distant but preserve us holy all day that our afternoon sins may not rob us of the benefit of this dayes Praises nor indispose us against the next morning when our duty will return Dear Jesus look on our frailty and strengthen us look on our guilt and misery and Pardon us We cry earnestly and double our request Jesus Master (a) Math. 20.30 31. have mercy on us have mercy on us for our needs are great and pressing unless we find mercy for former sins we must be condemned by thee and except we obtain mercy for future assistance we shall be overcome by Sathan Oh shut not out our Prayer consider not our merits but our distress we know we deserve nothing but we have great hopes such is thy transcendent goodness that we shall have what we desire Those that were better then we have put words in our mouths who in the Psalms (b) Psal 33.22 Sit misericordia tua Domine super nos quemadmodum speravimus in te Psal 31.1 In te Domine speravi non confundar in aeternum Vulg. Lat. did not urge thee as if they had been worthy but only trusted in thy mercy and so do we We rely not on our selves or any Creature but on thee alone for we know thou canst help us and we have a persuasion thou wilt All the world sees by our daily attendance on thee that all our expectations are from thee Oh do not disappoint those hopes that are grounded on thy tender mercy least Sathan upbraid us and the world slight us (c) Ezra 8.22 Psal 22.7 8. and then which way can we look Lord be it unto us according to our Faith Amen Amen The Paraphrase of the Te Deum WE Praise thee most heartily for all we have learned out of thy holy Word O God and it shall be our care as it is our duty to observe thy Will since we acknowledge thee to be the Lord to whom we owe all Duty and Obedience We esteem it our happiness and honour to be accounted thy servants who art Lord of all the world and a●l the earth with its Inhabitants joyns with us and doth worship thee who a●t from Eternity and in all ages hast been acknowledged to be the Father everlasting Nor doth this lower world alone own thy Supremacy but Praise is given to thee by the several Orders of all An●●●s who with harmonious voices cry aloud in proclaiming thy glory which is ever set forth by all the hosts of the Heavens the Thrones Dominions Principalities and the Powers that are therein To thee O God triumphant Hymns are sung in that Celestial Quire For the Cherubin on one side and the Seraphin on the other with ravishing melody chart thy Praise and in their mysterious adorations they continually do cry one to another Holy Father Holy Son Holy Spirit three Persons but one Lord thou art t●e most mighty God of Savaoth the supream commander of all the hosts of Heaven of us and the innumerable myriods of blessed Spirits Thou makest us happy with beholding and the Sons of men with expecting thy glory so that all the Inhabitants of Heaven and Earth rejoyce in thee because all parts of the Universe are full of those manifestations of thy power and goodness which declare the majesty of thy glory Thus the Angels sing and for our great comfort many of our bretheren now glorified bear a part with them The glorious company of the Apostles who Preached Christ and with unwearied diligence and patience admirable courage and fidelity shewed he was come to save the world these are now in those regions of bliss and there for ever praise thee As also all those harbingers of thy Sons comming inspired at sundry times and in divers manners these are now met in glory and make up the goodly fellowship of the Prophets whose words we read on earth but they now are happy in beholding him of whom they foretold and now continually praise thee To all which blessed numbers are added those undaunted Legions who sealed the truth of the Prophets predictions and the Apostles preaching with their blood even The noble army of Martyrs who conquered infidelity and cruelty by Faith and Patience these now are passed from torments to their reward and they with all other Saints and Angels with united hearts and voices sweetly praise t●ee Oh Lord we long to be there that we might see thee as clearly and praise thee as heartily as they do But since we can now know thee only by Faith we must glorifie thee by agreeing with The holy Church even our faithful bretheren throughout all the world in the Confession of that True Faith whereby every good Christian doth acknowledge thee to be what thou hast revealed thy self to be in thy holy word We believe in that Trinity which the Angels worship even in thee the Father who by creating and governing all the World declaredst thy self to be of an infinite Majesty And we believe in him that is equal in glory with thee and one in nature thine honourable true and only begotten Son who hath redeemed us that we of slaves of Sathan might be thy adopted Sons We do believe and acknowledge also the Holy Ghost to be very God equal to and with the Father and the Son and is the advocate for us in Heaven and the Comforter of us on the Earth And these Three Persons are One God Thy gr●cious condescension O blessed Jesus shall not Eclipse thy Divine Perfection for though thou camest in our likeness to Redeem us yet we believe thou art equal with the Father and the King of Glory for thou ever wa st most glorious in thy self and thou O Christ art anointed of God a King and Priest for ever From eternity thou art God neither hadst thou thy beginning when thou wast made the Son of Man for thou art the everlasting Son begotten of the Father before the world began Yet blessed be thy name thou didst change thy Glory for Misery and sufferedst thy Eternity to be measured by time for when thou tookest upon thee that glorious design to deliver man from eternal death thou didst not abhor the meanest
be undoubtedly received by every Christian And no man is necessarily obliged to believe any thing in order to his salvation that is not contained therein (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc de Orthod Fid. l. 1. c. 1. or necessarily deduced thence So that the whole Word of God may be called our Creed because it is the rule of our Faith And yet because the truths therein revealed are dispersed and variously presented according to the several occasions of their manifestation and since they are liable to be misunderstood by ignorance and carelesness or misrepresented to us by malice and interest it seems almost necessary that the fundamental Articles of our Faith should be collected thence and reduced to one comprehensive sum which may be learned early remembred easily and retained unanimously and constantly by all Christians On which grounds there was in the Apostles times a form of sound words (p) 2 Tim. 1.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epist. Jud. ver 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philip. 3.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that Faith which was delivered to the Saints and which they are charged to keep with all fidelity that they might all be of the same mind and walk by the same rule And if the consent of Antiquity be of any Authority this form of the Apostles Creed was that which they all agreed upon (q) Discessuri ab invicem norman prius futurae praedicationis in commune constituunt Ruffinus in Symbol Omnes Orthodoxi Patres affirmant Symbolum ab ipsis Apostolis conditum Sixt. Senens Bib. before their parting to be a standing rule and measure for the Christian faith So that it hath ever since been of great authority in the Church and though the cavils of some hereticks made it fit to explain some Articles more largely and gave occasion to the composing of new Creeds at Nice and Constantinople c. yet these were never intended to abate the Authority of this which of all others hath been received most generally And those were accounted Orthodox and Catholique (r) Hanc legem sequentes Christianorum Catholicorum nomen jubemus amplecti reliquos vero dementes haeretici dogmatis infamiam sustinent Theodos Grat. Imp. who did embrace it and all others branded with the infamous names of Hereticks and Deceivers But whoever desires a fuller account hereof or a large explication of all the Doctrines herein contained must be referred to those Excellent Persons who have so well performed that task it being our design now only to consider it as it is here made use of in our daily Devotions and so what is to be said will come under some of these heads 1. The place it obtains in our Liturgy 2. The time when 3. The reasons why and 4. The manner how it is to be repeated § 2. This antient Confession of our Faith is most judicially set by the Church after the ending of the Lessons out of holy Scripture For the Creed receives both its Being and Authority from thence since it is collected from the Word of God and proved by it and what can be more seasonable then for us after the reading of Holy Writ to declare our persuasion of all that is contained therein especially of the Articles treated of in the now read Portion By repeating our Creed here we do set to our seals (s) John 3.33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to confirm the Truth of God and all revealed by him and do gratefully acknowledge and declare those salutary mysteries we have learned from these Divine Oracles And we may further consider that as the Creed follows the Lessons out of which it sprang so it precedes the Prayers which are grounded on it And the publique profession of our Faith before we pray is the vindication and the foundation of the Petitions we make for therefore we ask these things and in this manner because we believe in an Invisible God who is an Omnipotent Creator a most merciful Redeemer and a most gracious Comforter Hence we pray to the Father in the Name of the Son by the assistance of the holy Spirit in fellowship with the Saints for the forgiveness of sins and a joyful resurrection And all this we are directed and encouraged unto by the belief of this Creed which by exercising that most necessary companion of our Prayers viz. Faith is an excellent preparative to our addresses Which secondly may partly account for the time and frequency of its repetition which ought to be as often as we solemniy read or pray and so not to be omitted at any time in publique Assemblies where the Antients observed the use of it and we may receive great benefit by a devout imitation of them in arming our souls hereby against all doubting or evil thoughts which disturbe us most in our attendance upon the service of our heavenly Master (t) Cum horremus aliquid animo recurrendum est ad Symbolum Quando enim sine militiae sacramento miles in tentorio bellator in praelio Ambr. So that as the Germans excluded him from their sacrifices that came without his shield so should he be from our Church-devotions that holds not up this shield of Faith by which he may overcome all the fiery darts of the Devil And as if it could never be repeated too often we find holy Ambrose (u) Symbolum quoque specialiter debemus tanquam nostri cordis signaculum antelucanis horis quotidie recensere ad Virg. l. 3. commending it to his Virgins as the first exercise of their morning piety and St. Augustine prescribing it to his Catechumens to be used both Night and Morning not as a Prayer as some ignorant Persons mistake it but as a foundation to build their Prayers on (x) Accipite filii regulam fidei quod Symbolum dicitur in corde scribite quotidie dicite apud vos antequam dormiatis anteq●am precedatis symbolo vestro vos munite de Symb. ad Catech. l. 1. a Memento to whom they were made and a ground of their hope that they should be accepted and for the same reasons we now place it in our Morning and Evening Prayer § 3. But the fitness and necessity of its daily repetition will more fully appear and we shall be better instructed in our duty therein by a more particular account of the reasons thereof the principal of which are 1. To fix it in our memories and record it there that it may never go out of our minds being daily revived by a fresh recital for this being the sum of those principles which we are to square our lives by the Test to discern the temptations of Sathan and the false doctrines of hereticks by (y) Nulla enim unquam extitit haeresis quae non hoc Symbolo potuit damnari Coelestin ad Nest we can no more be without it then the Architect without his Rule and the Goldsmith without his touchstone And
which hath enabled us with one accord and a fervent devotion to make our Addresses to thee with new affections even in the presenting these our daily and common supplications unto thee we confess thou hast helped us to ask and therefore hope thou intendest to give and the rather because thou hast assured us and dost promise that when two or three even the smallest number of the faithful in obedience to thy command are gathered together to offer up their united prayers to the Father in thy name they shall find thee present in the midst of them for thou wilt grant their requests Wherefore since we have called upon thee by thine aid and are assembled in thy name fulfill now O Lord unto us this gracious promise and mercifully accept the desires and meditations which have been sent from the hearts the prayers and Petitions uttered from the mouths of thy Servants supplying their wants with the best things and at the fittest times as may be judged by thy infinite wisdome most expedient for them But however thou dealest in all other things let the interest of our souls be secured both here and hereafter by thy granting us in this world daily experiments and further knowledg of thy truth in the fulfilling of thy promises and the granting of our prayers that so we may never forsake thee here and in the world to come our happiness shall be compleated by thy bringing us then to life everlasting through Jesus Christ our Lord Amen The Blessing taken out of 2 Corinth 13. ver ult § 9. THe grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost be with us all evermore Amen In all Religious Assemblies it hath been the custome to dismiss the people with a Blessing which was wont to be pronounced by the principal Person present (k) Heb. 7.7 sometimes by the King (l) 2 Sam. 6.18 1 Kings 8.55 but most commonly by the Priests (m) Numb 6.23 24 ver c. whose office was to bless in the Name of the Lord. And therefore under the Law there was a particular form of Benediction which the Jews to this day observe so religiously that they believe it ought to be repeated in the Holy Tongue (n) Fagius in Numb 6. Buxtorf Synag c. 14. See Nehem. 8.6 and to be received by the People with all reverence bowing their heads and prostrating their bodies so that no man may presume to look upon the Priests hands when they are stretched out to give it because they say then the glory of God rests upon them And in the Christian Church also they ever concluded with a blessing 't is likely the same we now use being endited by the Holy Spirit and used by St. Paul in the close of his Epistle to the Corinthians concerning which it was ordered that the Assembly should bow their heads (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Constit Ante benedictionem sacerdotis egredi populus non presunat Concil Agath can 31. when it was pronounced and decreed by a Councel that none might depart out of the Church till it was given But to give a greater strength to these Orders let us consider the excellency of this Divine Blessing and sure its own perfections will oblige us to stay for it and engage us to receive it with all devotion and reverence The legal Benediction was no more but a wish for temporal felicity but this contains the whole order of our salvation and brings in the glorious Trinity with the several gifts of each Person to make us compleatly happy The Father indeed is first in order but we begin with the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that is the benefits purchased by his Passion because that is the first mover in our acceptance and obtains both the love of God the Father and the Communication of the Holy Ghost What can the pious soul ask or desire which is not comprehended in this Blessing here is the grace of the Son to pardon our sin the love of the Father to supply our wants the fellowship of the Blessed Spirit to strengthen our weakness The first to redeem us the second to justifie us the third to sanctifie us and all these not only at this present but to be confirmed to us and remain with us even when we are gone from the holy place in life and death and for ever Nor are these only desired but they are pronounced over us by the Embassador of God whom he hath sent to bless in his name and this Minister of Heaven being cheared with observing our Devotion doth from his soul wish and Ministerially as far as in him lies dispense these unspeakable blessings to us And what he doth on Earth shall be ratified in Heaven to every truly holy man Oh let us bow our heads and open our hearts to receive this universal blessing as from God himself and depart from the holy place full of comfort and joy that we have such a preservative against all evil and such a guide and encouragement to all good even the blessing of God to be with us and remain upon us for ever and to this let all the people say Amen The Blessing Paraphrased LEt The Grace and all the benefits of the death of our Lord Iesus Christ merit our Absolution and the love of God the Father seal our justification and the fellowship and Communication of the Graces of the Holy Ghost perfect our sanctification And let all these at present be with us and rest upon us all evermore Amen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS ERRATA The Reader is desired to excuse and amend the following Errata occasioned by the Authors great distance from the Press PReface page 8. read Pet. p. 8. marg l. 12. r. infirmorum p. 12. l. 5. r. recover it ib. marg l. 3. r. confectus p. 18. l. 2. r not approach p. 21. l. 1. r. had need be p. 22. marg l. 13. r. accipiat ib. l. 21. r. Magistri ib. l. 23. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 29. marg l. 3. r. Acies p. 32. l. 21. r. not be p. 35. l. 14. marg r. Quinque p. 43. l. 3. r. Sec. 1. § 5. p. 22 p. 66. marg l. 8. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 70. marg l. 4. r. tribus p. 72. l. 22. r. bloodshot p. 81. marg l. 10. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 90. marg l. 13. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 94. l. 12. r. in your p. 96. l. 4. r. sectile p. 105. marg l. 8. r. ignoscentium p. 114. marg l. 1. r. r. Lev. 10.13 p. 118. l. 29. r. it act ib. marg l. 11. r. nisi p. 129 marg l. 12. r. Med. p. 174. l. 24. r. reference p. 184 l. 30. dele 11 p. 199. marg l. 14. r. è p. 216. marg l. 13. r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 229. l. 35 r. his Divinity p 259. l. 21. r. therefore it p. 260. marg l. 13. r. hi ve●o p. 269. marg l. 1. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 271. l. 3. r. enobled p. 313. marg l. 3. r. Prus ib. marg l. ult r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 315. l. 31. r. the other p. 319. l. 15. r. reciting p. 320. marg l. 18. r. occurre p. 349. marg l. 17. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
in the World if examined strictly will be found faulty in some particular and therefore there is no ground for us to Contend who are the vilest and worst of all if God resolve to punish there is Cause enough to be pleaded against the most holiest Person in the world therefore if we fear God will chastise us we must not pretend we are innocent and therefore hope to be spared but rather confess our evil-deservings without a judgment to force us and let our hope of sparing be founded on his Mercy not our Purity we are sinners but we may be spared for all that for if all Sinners must suffer the whole World must be condemned (o) Rom. 3.19 Sure God spares many and though many that are spared are better then we yet none altogether innocent none but must be judged with favour and mercy and if he please to judge us so we may escape also however 't is the best way if we fear Gods Anger to pray the Suit may be stopt for we do own our sins and the Lyon spareth the prostrate and that God may deliver us we may Pray with him Psalm 143.2 Lord thou chargest me with many sins and intendest to punish me for them and I come not to assert my self cleer but before thou summonest knowing my guilt I pray thee enter not into judgment neither reckon strictly in justice with thy Servant who confess I have deserved Punishment but hope thou wilt spare me who rely only on thy Mercy which is my best plea for in thy sight who seest so exactly and hatest sin so perfectly by defending their Innocence shall no Man not the holiest Person living in this dangerous World be acquitted or be justified without a favourable allowance which I beseech thee also shew to me Thirdly We are to consider that the very Corrections of God are mixed with so much Mercy and allayed by a supply of inward Comforts and made tolerable by his gracious purposes in sending them that we ought not altogether to decline them for if we feel no smart for our sin we may more easily run into it again (p) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Origen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. and consequently go on in it and pull upon our selves Eternal misery And the poor humbled Soul who sees the punishment of sin to be a being forsaken of God deprived of grace and glory delivered up to be a slave to the vilest lusts here and a Companion of the vilest Persons and horridest Devils hereafter will account a temporal Chastisement which delivers him from that a benefit and a favour and with Saint Augustine (q) Domine hic Vre seca liga ut pareas in aeternū will pray to be scorcht and scarrified lanced and bound here that they may be spared hereafter and this may perhaps teach you instead of fearing and flying Afflictions to desire as the Prophet Jeremy Chap. 10.24 to have some gentle correction with Gods smallest rod * 2 Sam. 7.14 Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Virgâ hominum infirmiorum with which he strikes his own Children for he is so merciful that we ought not to be afraid to fall into his gracious hands only to pray as the Prophet doth he will deal gently with us especially if we apprehend some Affliction likely to fall upon us then we must not absolutely desire God to lay by his Rod but to use it with judgment (r) Cum judicio modicè Junius Heb. in modo that is gently with consideration to our weakness or in a sober way in judgment (s) LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V. Vatab. in judicio not as a furious angry person falls on a man who values not how nor where he striks nor cares if he take away our life but that it may please God in his Discipline to proceed as a sober and compassionate Judge that we may be amended and survive the strokes and be warned by the pain against future rebellions not so as that we should faint under his hand And if either we need or desire or are likely to be chastised we must not run from God but our best course is on trust of Gods compassion to deliver up our selves quietly to suffer and with Jeremy not to desire a total sparing but a mitigation Jerem. 10.24 Since thy justice obligeth thee to punish sinners and I have deserved so justly to suffer and am so apt to go on in sin till I smart for it I do beseech thee Correct me here with temporal afflictions O Lord that thou mayest spare me hereafter but let not this correction be proportionable to my deserts nor thy displeasure but let it be inflicted moderately with judgment and consideration of my infirmities punish me not in thy anger as thou dost thy enemies least thou bring me to nothing so that I fall under thy hand and survive not to be amended by it A Meditation Preparatory to Prayer in the fears of Gods Anger OH my soul what fearful tremblings are these have seized on thee so that the thoughts of God that have been and ought to be thy greatest comfort are now become thy terrour and amazement Whence is this miserable alteration that thou canst behold nothing but Judgment in the Father of Mercies and Anger in the Fountain of Love What hath provoked him that delights to spare to be resolved to punish Surely my sins are very many for it is not a few can incense him and they have more then ordinary aggravations for he is not so highly displeased at small offences and certainly I have often committed them and long continued in them for he begins not to frown upon the first misdemeanor Alas the case is too apparent My sins are both very many and exceeding great frequently repeated and of long continuance I have despised Mercy and now I am likely to feel Judgment Miserable wretch that I am I have tyred out the patience of a long-suffering Father and run from the embraces of a loving Saviour rejected the offers of a most indulgent holy Spirit so that now I fear I have stopped up the fountain of his Mercy (t) Isai 59.2 and unsealed the treasures of his vengeance (u) Deut. 33.34 And I ought rather to wonder how God could spare me so long then why he should strike me now since many have been cut off for fewer and lesser sins I see I have most justly deserved to suffer the worst of evils and therefore should esteem it an incomparable favour to be onely corrected with a temporal affliction if I might be so excused But it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God (x) Hebr. 10.31 who I fear will begin by these and increase them till I be ruined by them and drop into a sad eternity Therefore O Lord my flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy Judgments (y) Psalm 119.120 I know no
left in my misery for I have forfeited my relation and am no more worthy to be called thy Son yet I hope thou wilt not let me perish who feedest thy meanest servants A Meditation preparatory to Prayer when we doubt of the favour of God to us HE that hath a considerable request to make to an earthly King must approach without a present in his hand but my request is to the King of Kings to whose laws I have been disobedient false to his Government refractory to his summons and ingrateful for his former favours But what can I offer to him that needs nothing what can I give to him whose both my self and all I have are his favour indeed is so sweet so desirable and so universal a comprehension of all happiness that I could freely give all I have or can do or may procure for the purchase of it but the whole world is a vanity to him neither can such trifles blind his eyes or bind his hands buy his mercy to the unworthy or pervert his justice from the sinner I could methinks expose my body to the sharpest torments my soul to the heaviest sorrows and my life to the cruelest Tyrant if I were sure of his everlasting mercy afterwards and would account my self happy in the purchase but it cost more to redeem a soul I can give nothing but it is his already and I can suffer nothing but what I have deserved what then oh where shall I have a peace-offering which may not be dispised I am told nothing is more acceptable then a broken heart t is strange can an heart polluted with the guilt and enslaved to the Power of sin stupid to apprehend slow to desire and impatient to wait for and unable to perform any good but witty to invent and vigorous to prosecute unsatiable to desire and unwearied to pursue all evil and now more vile then ever by reflecting upon its own vileness shaken with fears torn in pieces with sorrow and even a terror to it self miserable and poor blind and naked can this heart be a fit sacrifice for so glorious and all-seeing so holy and pure a God can he like that which I abhor how can it be but let me recall that hasty word for he hath said it who best knows what will please himself and if he value it it is worthy for the true worth of every thing is to be judged by his estimation of it Who knows but such a broken heart may be a greater evidence of his power and mercy a fitter instrument of his praise and glory a plainer table to describe his grace and draw his image on then any other Such a heart I have and if this serve I am happy I will give it freely to thee oh Lord who despisest not the meanest gift if there be sincerity in the giver It was broken before with fear but it is now dissolved with love I am ashamed it is no better but thy mercy is the greater in accepting it and it will become better by being thine oh how am I filled with admiration of the freeness and fulness of thy mercies in comparison of which the greatest humane compassion seems cruelty and I dare proclaim to all that in thee are all the mercies of the world united and thou art mercy it self in the highest degree if my disobedience and negligence contempt and ingratitude could have separated thee from thy mercy I had now met thee in fury taking vengeance without pitty for I have seemed to live as if I had designed to Dare thee to turn away thy self from me and to try thy utmost patience the least part of which baseness would have turned my best friends in the world against me but behold the mercy of my God continues still oh let me have the shame of an ingrateful sinner and thy name have the glory of thy inexpressible pitty even to those who are almost ashamed to ask pardon and let me to whom thou hast shewed such compassion have the honour to be an instance of thy goodness to all the world but have I such a father why then do I lye still with this load of guilt upon my soul and this heavy burden of sorrow upon my spirit what do I get by these vain complaints but waste my time and double my misery by sad reflections I can neither have help from my self nor any creature but from my Father alone to whom mercies are as proper as misery is to me and if I through fear or sorrow sit still here and starve I have not so much pity for my self as he would have for me if he saw me thus grieved for abusing his mercies wherefore I will arise and go though I think I shall scarce have the face to ask more I have spent the last so ill and I shall be ashamed to tell him how base I have been but as I was not ashamed when I did evil so I must have shame when I suffer the desert of it I will go bathed in tears blushing for shame accusing my self and only relying on the bowels of a Father will beg only so much mercy as will banish despair and quiet my mind and give me some little hope and revive my languishing faith and if I may have this I will be content though I be not entertained with assurance and certain expectations for the least favourable look is more then I have deserved yet I see the tender Father upon the first sight of the returning prodigal whom he had never sent for but was driven home by his own miseries yet he runs to meet him takes the words out of his mouth and receives him with all the demonstrations of love and the caresses of a deer affection and is my God less merciful who hath invited me so often and promised me so largely I have done ill to stay so long but I will go now high in my desires low in my expectations sorrowing for my offence and begging his mercy and I hope though I carry no merits of my own to his justice yet I carry misery enough to make his bowels of compassion yearn upon me and then I cannot perish Amen Thus we see the Church hath shewed her care of these poor contrite ones in selecting the most and choicest of these sentences for them who are the best though the least part of the people and though such are vile in their own eyes (t) Psal 15.4 Old Transl Chal. Par. Viles prae oculis suis yet they are dear to God and highly valued by all good people and tenderly indulged by the Church who wishes there were more of this blessed temper § 5. THe next sort of men who come to pray are involved in gross ignorance and such are inappre●ensive of their guilt and unacquainted with their danger who know not what to ask nor of whom nor why but these be instructed before they pray or otherwise they will neither confess aright nor amend at all
property (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herodot of a King to do what he pleases But as Gods Kingdome is scarce visible upon Earth so neither is the accomplishment of his Will for those that renounce his Authority become Lords (e) Psal 12.4 to themselves and do their own Will even where it displeaseth God and though his Will be at last done upon them in their final ruine yet this is not so properly his Will not voluntas beneplaciti his pleasure no more then the malefactor doth his Princes will when he suffers death by his Laws for a capital crime because he that made that Punishment did appoint it to terrifie from the Crime and it was not his intention any should suffer by it so it is the Will of God that all men should live holily here (f) 1 Thess 4.3 and happily hereafter (g) 1 Tim. 2.4 Vt salvi simus in coelis in terris quia summa est voluntatis ejus salus eorum quos adoptavit Tertull. ut supr and if any will be wicked it is also his will they shall suffer for it but then his will is not properly done on them that suffer but only on supposition they were obstinate sinners which he would not have them to be Wherefore we pray that his first and principal Will may be done in the Conversion and Salvation of all men And having lately viewed the upper part of his Kingdome where they are ever happy by a full and free obedience to his Heavenly Will we long and wish and desire that this lower part of his Kingdome where so many are yet totally in Rebellion and others frequently revolting when they do profess subjection even that this World were modelled by that heavenly pattern (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Strom. 40. as exactly as is consistent with the frailty and mutability of such a state for 't is easie to discern that all the miseries in this world spring from our disobedience to the Laws and our acting contrary to the Will of God so that if the corrupt affections of the better sort were subdued and the evil actions of the more impious did cease and all did guide their actions by the will of God we might be very happy even in this world and should begin our Heaven upon Earth so that we also pray that since 't is Gods will for all to live holily (i) Quid autem Deus vult quam incedere nos secundum suam disciplinam Tert. that this will of his may be accomplished and because our Heavenly Father hath innumerable blessed Spirits there to perform his will and they do it cheerfully and readily fully and constantly we see how much our endeavours come short of them and how little reason we have to be puffed up for our imperfect duties which are begun with reluctancy deferred by sloth or interrupted by vanity carried on heavily shaken with fears and sometimes broken off by sin and this prospect doth humble us while we behold them flying on the wings of love and zeal and our selves creeping by fears and uncertainties and it ought to trouble us that we can do the Will of so great and good a Master in no better manner and then we shall strive and pray that we may know Gods will as fully and desire to do it as fervently and be enabled to accomplish it as pleasantly and as constantly as the glorious Hosts of Heaven do both the lights in the lower Orbs which exactly observe the laws of their Creation (k) sicut coelestia semper inconcussa suo volvuntur sidera motu and those glorious Angels and blessed Spirits which in the regions of bliss do delight continually (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Constit l. 2. cap. 56. to serve him Oh what affections are vigorous enough to pray for the same obedience and unity consent and uniformity among Gods Children as is there above where every one moves in his own place without disturbance thwarting or opposition making perfect Harmony and keeping exact peace and this is Gods will But the word be done seems to others to have a passive signification viz. That whatever happens to us or any by the will of God whether good or evil it may not be displeasing to us and this further shews why we prayed his Kingdome might come that so he may administer all things as he pleaseth for we are not jealous as the Subjects of earthly Princes sometimes are least our God should make his will an arbitrary law because his Holiness and Mercy Truth and Justice are his will we are most sure whatever is his will is best for us be it Judgment or Mercy plenty or want health or sickness life or death it is the best for us whether we apprehend it or no and we ought to wish it may be done because we know he wills no evil to us (m) eò nobis benè optamus quod nihil mali sit in Dei voluntate Tert. and if something we think ill descends from him we may say as Melito did to the Emperor about the Persecutions (n) Si quidem te jubente hoc faciunt bonum credamus quicquid justo imperatore jubente committitur Euseb l. 4. Histor Eccl. c. 25. in hoc dicto ad sufferentiam nos ipsos admonemus Tert. If thou commandest them they are good because injoyned by a just Authority surely though it may seem hard at present it is judged fittest for us by him that knows our temper and need so did the Author of this prayer learn submission (o) Matth. 26.42 and illustrated this petition by his example and so St. Paul (p) Acts 21.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythag. and to murmure against Gods choice was forbidden by a Heathen and is so impious and foolish that it is a wishing God out of his Throne and the reins out of his hands that we might sit there and rule all things by our own will as if we wished our former petition unsaid Sure we must not only cease to be Christians but sober men before we can fancy our selves wiser to contrive and fitter to dispense all things then God himself is Socrates his prayer was for what was convenient not what he might desire (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ap Juvenal Permittes ipsis expendere numinibus quid Conveniat nobis rebusque sit utile nostris that is plainly that Gods will might be done And if we were our own Carvers we should through rashness and folly passion and prejudice ever choose the worst and having such experience of our mistakes Jesus teacheth us to desire God to order us as he pleases and if we can live this petition believeing the pleasure of God to be alwaies best we shall have comfort in all Conditions and shall glorifie God by such noble opinions of his Wisdome and Power of his love and mercy more then by whole burnt-offerings and
his Pasture shews he feeds us his hand expresseth his ruling of us wherefore if we want any good let us remember our God feeds all much more his own sheep let us pray to him and our King will furnish us Or if we fear any evil let us call to mind his hand is over us his particular providence is engaged for us he watches over us night and day Let us but trust in him and pray to him for the continuance of what we have and the supply of what we want and we need fear no evil no cunning Fox nor ravenous Wolf shall ever be able to pluck us out of his hand § 5. Ver. VIII To day if ye will hear his voice c. This first sentence in the Hebrew is annexed to the former Verse as the Condition on which God will accept us as his sheep and answer our prayers by continuing the supplies of his bounty to us and the defence of his providence over us if we will every day hearken to his voice for his own sheep alwaies do so John 10.4 and so must we follow him who is our shepheard and goes before us by his example (h) John 10.3 see Dr. Hammonds Annotations and calls us after by the voice of his Word otherwise we reject him from being a shepheard over us and so he may justly cast us off But the Greek Interpreters begin as we do in imitation of them a new sentence here and are warranted so to do by the change of the Person which is often used in holy Writ but hath a peculiar Emphasis here hitherto we have been speaking to one another to stir up our hearts to praise God and to pray to him Now the Holy Ghost himself (i) Heb. 3.7 to shew that all our Devotions will be in vain unless we resolve to obey (k) Prov. 1. ver 24. comp with ver 28. Gods word is brought in warning us to hear the voice of God as we expect he should hear our petitions Wherefore it is expressed with Majestick Authority if ye will you may if you will I will enable you to do it and it is best for you so to do and I advise you to it or as others if ye will implies a wish Oh that ye would hearken and obey (l) Ita 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 si per O utinam Exod. 32.32 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 19.42 Cap. 22.42 for it is not unfrequent for God to wish we would do that which he knows to be for our good not but that he could make us do it by his omnipotency yet he doth not deal with us as with irrational creatures by force but entreaty (m) Deut. 4.29 and Chap. 32.29 Deus non eo modo quo per causas naturales agit movet hominû● voluntates sed alliciendo Maimon because he abhors such constrained observance therefore he sends his word and his servants every day and gives us sufficient grace every day and we may hear and do his Will every day if our own wilful obstinacy hinder not and if it do he is grieved for us because we will dye (n) Matth. 23.37 Methinks it should melt our hearts to hear our gracious God so passionately wish and so earnestly call for our conversion and to consider how he hath long in vain waited for it adding one day to another even to this very day (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Protreptic Hodiè istud permanebit usque ad finem seculi R.R. yet we put him off when for ought we know this may be our last day and then everlasting night begins with us and though others have their hodiè still we must never more hear this word this sweet to day if we would give all the world for it Oh foolish people how carelesly do you let this irrecoverable treasure this present day pass away and never consider the loss till it be too late The Devil and your wicked hearts say to day you are too busie too much taken up in other concerns and to morrow you will hear his voice and do his will But the Holy Ghost saith if ye will hear it must be to day for this day is yours but to morrow is his whom you provoke by casting away to day and how care you promise what is anothers or how can you expect God should give you more time when you so despise this you have it is likely you may never see another day because the more you have the more you mock God and the further you put him off Gods word read or preached will sound in your ears however this one day more to try if yet you will so hear it as to observe it which is the only right hearing (p) Genes 42.22 if not though your day of grace hath lasted long it shall quickly have an end the Jews had their To day but they would not hear and now they have it no more let us beware by their sad example But least we should be ignorant of the cause of these dangerous delays the good Spirit teacheth us it is by hardness of heart and least any should pretend their hearts were by natural corruption become most obdurate we are here charged that we do not harden them to intimate it is wilfull obstinacy not natural disability (q) Quibus verbis indicatur non ex alio fonte manare nostrum adversus Deum rebellionem quam ex volunta●iâ improbitate dum illius gratiae aditum obstruimus Calvin in Heb. 3.8 for God would take away the stony heart from all who are in Covenant with him if they did not wilfully resist the Holy Ghost (r) Exod. 36.26 Acts 7.51 and like the deaf adder stop their ears and if we consult St. Paul we shall find two causes of hardness of heart First unbelief Heb. 3.12 of the threatnings pronounced against sin as if they should never be inflicted and of the promises made to assist us in and reward us for a holy life as if they should never be performed by which men go on stupidly in sin and fear no evil and slight all the waies of holiness which they think are tedious and unprofitable though the Divine truth affirm the contrary as long as men believe it not all our calls are in vain A second cause of hardening us is the deceitfulness of sin Heb. 3.13 which promiseth present pleasures and profits with all sensual satisfactions and if men believe Sathan in this which is so false and doubt of or deny all that the God of truth affirms what thunder can awaken them they will answer to all the calls of God and his Spirit that they will not leave their fatness (s) Judges 9.9.11 and sweetness since they see no harm in those wayes and find carnal content but do not expect any pleasure in or reward for the other if they could do them Why then do you make excuses or complain you are not
which shined on so many millions of wretched Heathens benighted in the darkness of Idolatry and made them Christian I will bless thee for honouring thy antient but despised people who were more enabled by the birth of Jesus then by all their former Royalties and victorious Trophies and instead of the bright Cloud the glory of the Tabernacle thou hast sent him to pitch his tent among them who was the brightness of thy own glory I am ravished to behold so many joyful souls blessing thee for this light which shined on them in their sins and the confines of eternal darkness and converted and translated them into thy marvelous light And all thy holy Saints in all ages have given thee the glory for all those illustrious beams of Love and Charity Piety Justice and Devotion which shine from their lives and are but the reflexion of the rayes of the grace of Jesus This excellent person rejoyced not only in his own felicity but to behold by the Spirit of Prophecy what joy Jesus was like to bring to me and many thousands of Converts and holy Men to the end of the World Wherefore let us be glad and rejoyce with him for our selves and all people for the light that shines upon us and the glory that is round about us and with all our Souls sing Glory be to the Father c. The Paraphrase of the Nunc Dimittis I Desire not to live in this world any longer then I have laid hold of thy Salvation which since thy Word and Spirit hath now discovered to me I have all I can wish for here therefore Lord now lettest thou thy command go forth that thy servant who hath longed hitherto to injoy thee may depart quietly out of this miserable world and be dismissed from the prison of the flesh I can now leave it in peace being assured thou wilt make good all other Promises since in giving thy dear Son thou hast done so exactly according to thy word My desires are satisfied and my faith confirmed as much as is possible in this world For mine eyes inlightened by thy holy Spirit have seen by Faith in thy blessed word him that is my Redeemer and brings thy salvation to me and all the world I cannot contain nor yet express my joy to behold this lovely Peace-maker w ich thou hast not only manifested in the flesh to the infinite delight of thy servants then but prepared by the discovery of thy holy Gospel to appear most gloriously before the face of all people that ever were or shall be This glorious Sun of Righteousness hath shined on all the Earth his word is a light to lighten the dismal regions of the unconverted heathens and the Gentiles that knew not God His doctrine instructed them and hath converted many and his presence and his grace is the honour and the glory of all true believers the joy and comfort of thy people Israel so that we and all the world are bound to praise thee for thy Gospel and thy son here on Earth and to continue our song to all Eternity when thou lettest us depart from hence Amen The last Hymn after the second Lesson viz. the LXVII Psalm § 6. AFter those parts of the Epistles which are more Doctrinal as containing the excellent principles and precepts of the Christian Religion we may seasonably use this rare piece of Davids devotion which contains most passionate wishes for the propagation of the knowledge of these incomparable truths throughout all the world and zealous desires that they may be known to all as they are to us whereby we declare our high esteem of them our hearty thankfulness for them and our sincere desires that all men might have the benefit and God the glory by them which is a seasonable return for those instructions we have now received out of Gods holy word and these very Petitions are an act of Eucharist and Praise The first Verse is the first Request even that God would be gracious to us in forgiving our sins giving us his grace to profit and outwardly expressing the kindness of his heart by the smiles of his countenance The second Verse is the end why we desire this felicity to his Church that the divine goodness to us may invite many Converts in and the encrease of the Church will be our happiness as it is our desire The third Verse is the second Petition that we and all may so discern the excellency of his Laws that he may be universally praised by Jews and Gentiles Verse fourth both for the holiness of his Commands and the righteous administrations of his Providence And to shew how earnestly we desire Gods glory and how constantly it ought to be paid the same Petition is repeated ver 5. And to encourage all to it the blessed effects of this universal praise are added ver 6. and 7. For when we are thankful God will multiply his blessings the Church shall be replenished with grace and fruitful in good works and more will so be drawn to embrace this Sacred Religion Did we thus earnestly beg his grace to prosper his Word to us and heartily Praise him for it our selves and fervently wish the enlargement of Christs Kingdom God the Father and Jesus Christ even our own God and God the Holy Ghost would assuredly bless us To which holy and undivided Trinity be ascribed all Honour Glory and Praise by us and all the World now and for ever Amen SECTION XI The Analysis of the Apostles Creed In this Creed are two parts shewing what we believe 1 Concerning God 1. In general that there is A God One God I believe in God 2. In special as to the Persons of the Trinity 1. Person the Father His Nature the Father Almighty Works Creation Providence maker of Heaven and Earth 2. Person the Son 1. His Name and Offices Prophet Priest and King and in Iesus Christ 2. His Natures both the Divine and his only Son our Lord Humane in his Conception and Birth who was conceived by the holy ghost born of the Virgin Mary 3. His works 1. Redemption by 1. His Passion suffered under Pontius Pilate was crucified dead and buryed he descended into hell 2. Resurrection the third day he rose again from the dead 3. Ascension and Interces● he ascended into heaven and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty 2. Final Judgement from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead 3. Person whose Name expresseth His Nature a Holy Spirit His Office to sanctifie us I believe in the Holy Ghost 2. Concerning our selves 1. Our Condition as to 1. Union the holy Catholique Church 2. Communion the communion of Saints 2. Our Priviledges 1. As to the Soul the forgiveness of sins 2. As to the Body the resurrection of the body and 3. As to both the life everlasting Amen A Discourse of the Creed § 1. THE Holy Scriptures being a perfect Revelation of all Divine Truth ought to
not to pray that he who rules us may be governed by the will and walk in the waies of God and then judgment shall be executed religion maintained the Nation shall remain in peace and the Church in prosperity the Kingdom established the King and people exceeding happy in each other Evil men for their own designs may advise their Prince to attend nothing but the pursuing his own inclinations and to walk in the ways of his own heart but the Church knows it is his happiness honour and interest to will according to the will of God and act according to his law and therefore orders us to pray for such abundant measures of Grace as may incline his heart and guide his life into all the Paths of true holiness that his eminent dignity may make his virtue exemplary and conspicuo●s and th●t may refle●t again a lustre upon his honour to make him still more glorious And to encourage this Petition we may remember it is desired in heaven as well as on earth by him that can give as well as by us that ask for God himself enjoyns the Prince to have alwaies beside him a Coppy of his law (c) Deut. 17.18 Josh 1.8 to read on it meditate in it ask councel of it (d) Psal 119.124 Heb. viri consilii mei sunt and walk according to it that he might prosper all his daies And from thence came that ceremony still in use of delivering the word of God to the King (e) 2 Kings 11.12 at his Coronation the substance whereof is fully expressed in this excellent sentence which will most heartily be put up by all that desire the glory of God the benefit of the Prince and the welfare of this Nation § 6. Endue him plenteously with heavenly gifts In the first ages of the world there were usually many visible effects of the descent of the holy spirit (g) Numb 11.17 Judges 13.25 1 Sam. 10.10 and Chap. 16.13 upon such as were chosen to govern the people of God to beget in those under them a reverent opinion of these Persons whom all the world hath ever accounted sacred And there are still some footsteps of these miraculous gifts in the power of healing which God hath bestowed upon the lawful heir of this Crown as a testimony that our King is the Lords anointed To which we beseech our heavenly father to add the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might which are so necessary that in our prayers as well as Solomon's choice (g) 1 Kings 3.9 10 11. ubi Grotius ex Men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have the precedence of all outward blessings For these gifts will enable him to determine intricate cases to mannage weighty affaires to countermine subtle devices to disentangle cunningly proposed counsels in which general usefulness and the advisers self-interest are commonly closely twisted Wherefore we pray that he may have so quick an apprehension so sound a judgment and so couragious a mind that like many of his Royal progenitors he may with a spirit almost prophetical unriddle the dark Intrigues of Policy and with an Heroick resolution break through the most rugged difficulties that he may neither fear his Enemies nor too much incourage any of his seeming friends that he may neither be lifted up in prosperity nor dejected by adversity and may tread the narrow path between justice and clemency severity and indulgence and we are to hope that he who hath advanced our Soveraign to this dignity will be mindful of the necessities of his own anointed and fit him for the place he hath called him to so that all his people may reverence and love him and be happy under the Government of so wise and religious a Prince § 7. Grant him in health and wealth long to live Though Solomon chose wisdome and grace yet God added beyond his promise riches and honour long life and health as an accessary to the former (h) 1 Kings 3.11 Mathew 6.33 Wherefore according to our Saviours rule we pray for those in the first place and now we hope our all sufficient Lord who hath endless treasures of all sorts will not deny us these temporal blessings which are requisite to his external felicity And we have the primitive Christians (i) Nos enim pro salute Imperatoris Deum invocamus aeternum paulo post Oramus pro omnibus Imperatoribus vitam illis prolixam imperium securum c. quaecunque hominis Caesaris vota sunt Tert. Apol. cap. 30. Sacrificamus pro salute Imperatoris sed Deo nostro ipsius sed quomodo praecepit Deus purâ prece Idem ad Scapuli cap. 2. for our example in this as well as in other things who though they did offer no incense to fase Gods for the health and safety of the Emperour as the Gentiles did yet did daily and earnestly sacrifice to the true God with fervent prayers beseeching him to give their Princes health and wealth long life and peace and whatsoever Caesar or any man could wish for or desire as we learn out of Tertullian and all the ancient Liturgies But we must take these words in their full latitude and so they will comprehend all outward blessings so health signifies not only the good temperament of the body but as the Latin salus safety from all dangers (k) Isaiah 58.8 And wealth intimates not only riches but all manner of plenty and prosperity (l) Job 21.13 1 Corinth 10.24 And a long life is to be interpreted of a life of comfort and happiness (m) Non vivere sed valere est vita Prov. Rab. ita 1 Kings 1.31 Dan. 2.4 for the life of the miserable is almost a continual dying And now let us put all these together and the sum will be that we earnestly pray that his Majesties life may be long and his years many and prosperous that he may be freed from sickness and want that so his Reign may abound with all blessings Which we ought earnestly to desire for our own sakes because it is our concern the Supream power should be alwaies vigorous and safe prosperous and abounding in all plenty that he may be a terrour to his enemies and a defence to his loving and loyal subjects In his safety we are safe his health and wealth enables him to secure us in that which is ours since his strength and his time his treasures and his power are imployed and expended for the common good And because changes are alwayes dangerous sometimes destructive to a Nation we pray that our King may be long preserved in his gracious Reign over us And no doubt his majesty shall fare the better for the fervent prayers of the Church which he hath so well deserved by being the Restorer and Defender of its ancient doctrine and discipline § 8. Strengthen him that he may vanquish and overcome all his enemies Guiccardine the famous historian tells
assistance is as sure for that is as requisite now as ever and the effect of these mediate gifts and the blessing upon our endeavours is as advantageous and more suitable to the present condition of the Church For the greatest of all wonders which some prefer to the Creation of Light out of the Darkness is not yet ceased viz. the conversion of sinners by that which the profane world account the foolishness of Preaching and then who dares deny but God works great marvels still though not in so magnificent a way Oh therefore let us call upon this Almighty and everlasting God that he will marvellously assist his Ministers and wonderfully bless his People under them that it may appear that he who of old was visibly present with his Church by Miracles may be now perceived to be still among us by extraordinary assistances and admirable success bestowed on his servants § 2. Send down upon our Bishops and Curates and all Congregations committed to their charge the healthful spirit of thy grace This Prayer being made for the whole Church doth here exactly enumerate the several parts of which it doth consist Bishops Ministers and Saints (d) Philip. 1.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illi sunt Ecclesia plebs Sacerdoti adunata pastori suo grex adhaerens S. Cypr. Epist 69. In St. Pauls phrase all which do make a Church And in the antient Liturgies all these degrees are particularly mentioned (e) Pro Archiepiscopo nostro N. honorifico sacerdotio in Christi Ministerio omni Clero populo Dominum postulemus Liturg. S. Basil and prayed for though the same thing be asked for them all the salutary spirit of the divine grace of which every one of them stands in need and the consideration of their several places and offices will be the best guide and help to our affectionate putting up this Petition First the Bishops who as they have the highest dignity in the Church so they have the greatest Charge being to oversee both the People and the Ministers So that by being advanced above all they become servants unto all (f) Ne te efferas officium tibi non potestas injungitur bodiè incipiendum tibi servire omnibus Grotius in Matth. 20. Asserit Judaeos Captivos ita loqui ad Ethnarcam suum vid. Matth. 20.27 1 Cor. 9.19 Apud nos qui in perant serviunt iis quibus videntur imperare Aug. Civ De. l. 19. c. 14. and on them as on the Apostles (g) 1 Cor. 11.28 Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lyes the care of all the Churches They are to endeavour to preserve the Church in peace and prosperity by electing fit persons into the Ministry and ordering the externals of divine worship with decency and to edification by preventing haeresies and Schisms among the Clergy and by enquiring into and censuring all publique crimes both in Clergy and People and by consulting upon occasion about the most important affairs of Church and State which is a burden for the shoulders of an Angel And if we consider how necessary and beneficial this office is to us (h) Ecclesiae salus in summi sacerdo●i● i. e. Episcopi dig●itate consistit cui si non exors quaedam ab omnibus detur potestas tot e●●●i●●tur schismata q●ot sacerd●tes Hier. advers Lucifer and how impossible to be duly performed without extraordinary measures of the Spirit of Grace we shall no doubt earnestly beg it for all of this Sacred order especially for him whom we live under whom though we do not here as the antients did mention by name yet we daily remember with a particular affection Secondly Curates by which we are not to understand stipendiary persons but all the inferior Clergy to whom the Bishops do commit the curam animarum cure or charge of Souls which name however abused by vulgar acceptation mindes us of the original of those we now call Ministers For at first the sole charge of every City and the adjacent parts lay upon the Bishop till by the encrease of the faithful it became necessary for him to take unto himself certain Curatores Deputies to whom he committed the office of instructing reserving to himself the rights of Government and Superiority as is excellently proved by some of our own Authors and these acting as the seventy with and under Moses and taking part of the Burden on them are therefore properly called here by the name of Curates And let all that have undertaken this weighty charge most devoutly pray for themselves and all their Brethren and all the faithful people of God joyn with us in so doing For our office is to chatechise and instruct the ignorant to exhort and incourage the good to rebuke and convince sinners to confirm the doubting to win the gain-saying to comfort the sad visit the sick to preach to our congregations to pray with and for them to administer the holy Sacraments and in a word to take care of the Souls of the living and bury the bodies of the dead Wherefore the Prayers of Christs flock had need be fervent for them since this cannot be done without the aid of the Spirit of grace especially because Ministers must be able to teach their Auditors by the innocence of their lives (i) Non statim boni sacerdotis est aut tantummodo innocentèr agere aut tantummodo scientèr praedicare cum innocens tantum sibi proficit nisi d●ctus sit doctus sine doctrinae sit Authoritate nisi innocens sit Hilar. Pict de Trin. l. 8. as well as by the vastness of their learning and had need be free of the crimes with which they charge others least their reproofs become their own reproach rather then their neighbours amendment Lastly the people who are to hear and learn from these spiritual guides must be prayed for that they may be open to instruction easy to advice gentle upon reproofs willing to learn and receive Gods word diligent to practise it and full of all benign dispositions and replenished with Justice Charity and Devotion Remember holy brethren how seriously God and his Spirit hath charged you with his people and how strictly he will require them from you so that if through your default any perish (k) 1 Kings 20.39 Ezek. 33.9 you are accountable to God for them Consider how ineffectual both your prayers and instructions (l) Magisteria fornisecus adjutoria quaedam sunt Cathedram in coelo habet qui eorda docet Aug. in Epist Johan Tract 4. will be unless the Spirit of grace bless them and then pray heartily for your Congregation and let them who are to suck these breasts pray for a healthful nurse a pious painful zealous and knowing Pastor nay let us all Ministers and People desire with and for one another that spirit of saving grace that may make the whole body of the Church healthful and every member strong active and useful in its