A SERMON Before the QUEEN AT WHITEHALL, MAY 29. 1692. By F. ATTERBURY, Student of Christ-Church. Published by her Majesty's Special Command. LONDON, Printed for Tho. Bennet at the Half-Moon in St. Paul's Churchyard, 1692. PSAL. L. 14. Offer unto God Thanksgiving. AMong the many Excellencies of this pious Collection of Hymns, (for which so particular a Value has been set upon it, by the Church of God in all Ages,) This is not the Least, that the true Price of Duties is there justly stated; Men are called off from resting in the Outward Show of Religion, in Ceremonies and Ritual Observances; and taught rather to practise (that which was meant by these things, and to which they were designed to lead,) sound, inward Virtue and Piety. The several Composers of these Hymns were Prophets; Men, whose Business it was, not only to foretell Events, for the Benefit of the Church in succeeding Times; but to correct and reform also what was amiss in the present Race of Men, with whom they lived and conversed: To preserve a foolish People from Idolatry, and false Worship; To rescue the Law from corrupt Glosses, and the superstitious Uses which were made of it: And to put Men in mind of (what they were so willing to forget) that Eternal and Invariable Rule, which was before these Positive Duties, and would be after 'em, and was to be observed even Then in preference to 'em. The Discharge, I say, of this part of the Prophetic Office, taking up so large a room in the Book of Psalms, has been one reason, (among many others) why they have been always so highly esteemed of: Because we are from hence furnished with such an Account of things, as takes off the Exceptions of those unreasonable Men, who run down all revealed Religion, as a Pretence and a Trick, from what they imagine they see of it, in that of the Jews. The whole of which they first suppose to lie in Outward Performances; and then easily persuade themselves, that God could never be the Author of such a mere Piece of Pageantry, and Empty Formality: That it could never be agreeable to the Divine Nature, to delight to be worshipped by a Company of wild and unaccountable Ceremonies. Which Objection of Theirs we should not know what to say to, unless we could prove out of the Psalms, and other parts of Prophetic Writing, that the Jewish Religion was something more than bore Outside and Show.— And that Inward Purity, and Spiritual Devotion was a Duty Then too, as well as Now. One great Instance of this Proof is in the words now before us, which are taken out of a Psalm of Asaph's, written on purpose to set out the weakness and worthlessness of external Performances, when compared with more vital and substantial Duties. To enforce which Doctrine, God himself is brought in as delivering it. Hear, O my People, and I will speak: O Israel, and I will testify against thee: I am God, even thy God. The Preface is very solemn, and therefore that which it ushers in, we may be sure, is of no common Importance. I will not reprove thee for thy Sacrifices, or thy Burnt-Offerings, to have been continually before me. That is, I will not So reprove thee, as if These were the Only, or the Chief Things I required of thee. I will take no Bullock out of thy house, nor He-goat out of thy folds. I prescribed thee not Sacrifices for my Own sake, because I needed 'em: For every Beast of the Forest is mine, and the Cattle upon a thousand Hills. Mine they are, and were, before ever I commanded Thee to offer 'em to me; so that (as it follows,) If I were hungry, yet would I not tell thee, for the world is mine, and the fullness thereof. But can ye be so gross and Senseless, as to think me liable to Hunger and Thirst▪ as to imagine that wants of that kind can touch me? Will I eat the Flesh of Bulls, or drink the Blood of Goats?— Thus does he expostulate severely with 'em, after the most graceful manner of the Eastern Poetry. The Issue of which is a plain and full Resolution upon the Case, in those few words of the Text.— Offer unto God Thanksgiving. Would you do your Homage in the most agreeable way? would you render the most acceptable of Services? Offer unto God Thanksgiving. The use I intent to make of these words is, from hence, to raise some Thoughts, about that very excellent and important (but much neglected) Duty of Praise and Thanksgiving: A Subject not unfit to be discoursed of at this Time; whether we consider, either the more than ordinary Coldness that appears o'late in men's Tempers, towards the practice of This (or any other) part of a warm and affecting Devotion; The Great Occasion of setting aside This particular Day in the Calendar, some years ago: Or the Fresh Instances of mercy and goodness, which God even Now has been pleased to bestow upon us. Answering at last the many Prayers and Fast, by which we have besought him so long for the Establishment of Their Majesty's Throne, and for the Success of their Arms: and giving us at length an Opportunity of appearing before him, in the more delightful part of our Duty; in the voice of Praise and Thanksgiving, among such as keep Holy days. Offer unto God Thanksgiving. Which that we may do, let us inquire first what is meant by offering Praise and Thanksgiving unto God, and then how reasonable it is, that we should do so. Our Enquiry into what is meant here, will be very short: For who is there, that understands any thing of Religion, but knows; that to offer Praise and Thanks to God is, to have a lively and devout Sense of his Excellencies, and of his Benefits; to recollect 'em with Humility and Thankfulness of heart; and to express these Inward Affections by suitable Outward Signs of 'em; by reverend and lowly Postures of Body, by Songs and Hymns, and Spiritual Ejaculations: either Privately or Publicly; either in the Customary and Daily Service of the Church, or in its more Solemn Appointments, upon extraordinary occasions. This is the Account which every Christian easily gives himself of it; and which therefore it would be needless to enlarge upon. I shall only take notice on this Head; that Praise and thanksgiving do, in strictness of Speech, signify Things somewhat different. Our Praise is properly terminated on God, on the Account of his natural Excellencies and Perfections; and is that, by which we give Honour to all his several Attributes; but Thanksgiving is a narrower Duty, and Imports only, a grateful Sense and Acknowledgement of past Mercies. We praise God for all his glorious Acts, of every kind, that regard either us, or other men; for his very Vengeance, and those Judgements which he sometimes sends abroad in the Earth: But we thank him only for the Instances of his Goodness; and for Such only of those, as We ourselves are concerned in. This, I say, is what the Two words strictly mean: but since the Language of Scripture is generally less exact; and uses either of 'em often, to express the other by, I shall not therefore think myself obliged, in what follows, thus nicely always to distinguish 'em. Now the great Reasonableness of this Duty of Praise or Thanksgiving, and Our several Obligations to it will appear; if we either consider it absolutely in itself, as the Debt of our Natures; or compare it with other Duties, and show the Rank it bears amongst 'em: Or set out, in the last place, some of its peculiar Properties and Advantages, with regard to the devout Performer of it. Praise and Thanksgiving, considered absolutely in themselves, are, I say, the Debt▪ and the very Law of our Nature. We had such Faculties on purpose bestowed on us, as made us fit to satisfy this Debt, and to obey this Law: And they therefore never work more naturally and freely, than when they are thus employed. 'Tis one of the oldest pieces of Reasoning, that Philosophy has acquainted us with; and which has ever since been taught and kept up by the wisest Men of all Ages, that the Original Design of making Man was, that he might Praise and Honour Him that made him. Whe● God had finished this goodly-Frame of things we call the World, and put together the several parts of it, according to the Skill of his infinite Wisdom, in exact Number, Weight, and Measure; there was still wanting a Creature in these lower Regions, that could apprehend the Beauty, Order, and exquisite Contrivance of it:- that from contemplating the Gift, might be able to lead itself up to the great Giver; and do Honour to all his Attributes. Every Thing indeed, that God made, did, in some Sense, glorify its Author; inasmuch as it carried upon it the plain Mark and Impress of the Deity; and was an Effect worthy of that first Cause from whence it flowed: And Thus might the Heavens be said, at the first moment in which they stood forth, To declare his Glory, and the Firmament to show his Handy work. But this was an imperfect, and an improper Glory: The Sign signified to no purpose here Below, where there was no Body to take notice of it. Man therefore was framed to supply this want; en●●ed with Powers fit to find out, and to acknowledge these unlimited Perfections: and then put into this Temple of God, this Lower World, as the Priest of Nature, to offer up the Incense of Thanks and Praise for the mute and the insensible Part of the Creation. This I say has been the Opinion all along of the most thoughtful Men down from the most Ancient Times: And tho' it carry no Demonstration in't, yet is it what we cannot but agree to, if we will but allow that Man was made for some End or Other; and that he is capable of perceiving that End. For then, let us search, deliberate, and inquire never so much, we shall find no other Account of him, that we can rest upon so well. If we say he was made purely for the good Pleasure of God, and because He would have it so, this is, in effect, to say, that he was made for no End; or for none that we can discern. If we say again, That he was designed as an Instance of the Wisdom, and Power, and Goodness of God, this indeed may be the Reason of his Being in general; For 'tis the common Reason of the Being of every thing besides. But it 〈◊〉 no Account, why he was made such a ●●●ng as he is, a reflecting, thoughtful, inquisitive Being: The particular Reason of this must be drawn from the Praise and Honour that was to be given to God by him, if we will have any Reason at all of it. This therefore is the Debt and Law of our Nature. And it will more distinctly appear to be such, if we consider the two Ruling Faculties of our Mind, The Understanding and the Will, apart; in both which it is deeply founded: in the Understanding, as in the Principle of Reason, that owns and acknowledges it; in the Will, as in the Fountain of Gratitude and Return, which violently constrains us to pay it. Reason was given us as a Rule and Measure to value things by: by the help of which we were to proportion our Esteem of every thing, according to the Degrees of Perfection and Goodness that were in it. It cannot therefore, if it does its Office at all, but apprehend. God as the best and most perfect being; it must necessarily own and give him the Honour of his infinite Perfections. And thi●● what is strictly meant by Praise: which ●●●●●fore is expressed often in Scripture by confessing to God, and acknowledging him; by ascribing to him what is his Due: And as far as This Sense of the word goes, 'tis impossible to think of God without praising him. For it depends not on the Understanding (on a sound and uncorrupted Understanding, I mean) how it shall apprehend things, any more than it does on the Eye, how its Objects shall appear to it. The Duty takes a further and surer hold of us, by the means of our Will, and that strong bent towards Gratitude, which the Author of Nature has fixed there. There is not a more active Principle, than This, in Man; and That surely which deserves its utmost Force, and should set all its Springs a-work, is God; that Great and Universal Benefactor, from whom we received every thing, we either are or have; and to whom we can possibly repay nothing, but our Praises, or (to speak more properly on this Head, and according to the strict Import of the Word) our Thanksgivings. Who hath given to God (says the great Apostle in his usual Figure) and it shall be recompensed unto him? A Gift it seems always requires a Recompense— Nay, but of him, 〈◊〉 through him, and to him are all things;— Of him, as the Author; through him, as the Preserver and Governor; to him, as the End and Perfection: To whom therefore (as it follows) be Glory for ever, Amen! Gratitude consists in an equal Return of Benefits, if we are able; or of Thanks if we are not. Which Thanks, therefore must rise always as the Favours received are in Proportion great, and the Receiver incapable in Degree of making any other Sort of Requital. Now since no Man has benefited God at any Time, and yet every Man in each Moment of his Life, is continually benefitted by him; what strong Obligations must we needs be under to thank Him? 'Tis true, our Thanks are really as little worth to him, as any other kind of Return would be: In themselves indeed they are so; But his Goodness has made 'em, otherwise: He has declared he will accept 'em in lieu of the vast Debt we owe. And after that, which is fittest for us to dispute how they come to be an Equivalent, or to pay 'em? It is therefore the Voice of Nature, as far as Gratitude itself is so, that the Good Things, we receive from above, should be sent back again thither in Thanks and Praises; As the Rivers run into the Sea; to the place (the Ocean of Beneficence) from whence these Rivers came, thither should they return again. We have considered the Duty absolutely, we are now to compare it with others, and to see what Rank it bears among 'em. And Here we shall find, that among all the Acts of Religion immediately addressed to God, this is much the Noblest, and most Excellent. And indeed, if what has been laid down be allowed, That the end of Man's Creation was to praise and glorify God, it must needs be so. For That cannot but be the most noble and worthy Act of any Being, which is the very End and Design of it. Other parts of Piety, such as Confession and Prayer; were not Originally designed for Man, nor Man for Them: They imply Gild and Want, with which the State of Innocence was not acquainted. Had Man continued in That, his Worship had been all paid to Heaven in pure Acts of Thanksgiving. And he had had nothing to do, but to enjoy the Goods of Life, as Nature directed, and to praise the God of Nature that bestowed 'em. But being fallen from Innocence and Abundance; having contracted Gild, and forfeited his Right to all sorts of Mercies; Prayer and Confession became necessary, for a time, to retrieve the Loss, and to restore him again to that State, where he should be able to live without 'em. These are fitted therefore for a lower Dispensation: before 'em in Paradise, there was nothing but Praise; and after 'em too, there shall be nothing but that in Heaven. Our perfect State did at first, and will at last consist in That: and therefore That is the Excellence and the Honour of our Nature. 'Tis the Same Argument, which the Apostle hath used for the preference of Charity, to Faith and Hope, and every Spiritual Gift. Charity faileth not, says he; that is, is not a Virtue useful only in this Life, but will go along with us also into the next:— But whether there be Prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be Tongues, they shall cease; whether there be Knowledge, it shall vanish away. These are Gifts of a Temporary Advantage, and shall all perish in the using. For we know in part; and we prophesy in part— Our present State is imperfect, and therefore what belongs to That, and only That, must be imperfect too. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away. The same Argument, we see, that sets Charity above the rest of Christian Graces, will give Praise also the Pre-eminence over the other Parts of Christian Worship; and we may conclude our reasoning therefore, as He does his: And now abideth Confession, Prayer and Praise; these three: But the greatest of these is Praise. It is so certainly on other Accounts, as well as this: Particularly, as it is the most disinterested part of our Religious Service, such as has the most of God, and the least of ourselves in it, of any we pay: And therefore approaches the nearest of any to a pure, and free, and perfect Act of Homage. For, though a good Action does not grow immediately worthless by being done with the Prospect of Advantage, as some have strangely imagined; yet it will be allowed, I suppose, that its being done without the Mixture of that End, recommends it so much the more, and raises the Price of it. Does Job serve God for nought? was an Objection of Satan's, which employed, that those Duties were most valuable, where our own Interest was least aimed at: And God seems, by the Commission he then gave him to try Experiments upon Job, thus far to have allowed his Plea. Now our Acknowledgements and Requests are purely for ourselves: our own. Interest is the direct Aim of them. But Praise is a generous and unmercenary Principle, which proposes no other End to itself, but to do, as is fit for a Creature endowed with such Faculties, to do towards the perfectest and most beneficent of Being's; and to pay the willing Tribute of our Honour there, where the Voice of Reason directs us to pay it. God has indeed annexed a Blessing to the Duty, and when we know this, we cannot choose in the Act of Praise, but have some Regard to it. However that is not our direct Aim in it, nor was it the first Motive that stirred us up to it. Had it been so, we should naturally have had Recourse unto Prayer, and breathed out our Desires in That Form which most properly belongs to them. In short, Praise is our most Excellent Work; a Work common to the Church Triumphant and Militant, and which lifts us up into a Communion and Fellowship with Angels. The Matter of it is always the Perfection of God's Nature; and the Act itself, is the Perfection of Ours. I come now, in the last Place, to set out some of its peculiar Properties and Advantages, which recommend it to the Devout Performer. And First— It is the most pleasant part of our Devotions. It proceeds always from good Humour, and a Cheerful Temper of Mind; and it cherishes, and promotes it mightily in us. For it is good to sing Praises to the Lord, (says One, whose Experience in this Case, we may rely upon) for it is pleasant, and Praise is comely. Prayer and Penitence are the Languageof the Indigent and the Guilty; the Breathe of a Sad and a Contrite Spirit: Is any afflicted? let him pray: But— Is any merry? let him sing Psalms. The most natural and lively way of men's expressing the Mirth of their Hearts, is in a Song. And Songs are the very Language of Praise, Appropriated peculiarly to this End in Religion, and scarce of any other Use in it. Indeed the whole Composition of this Duty is such, as throughout speaks Ease and Delight to the Mind. It proceeds from Love, and from Thank: fullness: From Love, the very Fountain of Pleasure; the Passion, which gives every thing we do or enjoy, its Relish and Agreeableness. From Thankfulness, which involves in it the Memory of past Benefits; the actual Presence of them to the Mind, and the repeated Enjoyment of 'em. And as its Principle is, such is its End also. For it procureth Quiet and Ease to the Mind, by doing somewhat towards satisfying that Debt, which it labours under; by delivering it of those Thoughts of Praise and Gratitude; those Exultations it is so full of; and which would grow uneasy and troublesome to it, if they were kept in: If the Thankful refrained, it would be Pain and Grief to him: But then, then is his Soul satisfied as with Marrow and Fatness, when his Mouth praiseth God with Joyful Lips. It is another great Effect of Praise, that it enlarges the Powers and Capacities of our Soul; turning 'em off from little and low things, upon their Greatest and Noblest Object, the Divine Nature; and employing 'em in searching out all the Wonders of it. We see what difference there is between Man and Man; such, as there is hardly greater between Man and Beast: And this proceeds all from the different Sphere of Thought which they Act in, and the different Objects they converse with. The Mind is Essentially the same in the Peasant and the Prince, the Forces of it naturally equal in the untaught Man, and the Philosopher: Only the one is busied in mean Affairs, and within narrower Bounds; the Other Exercises himself in Things of weight and moment: And This it is, that puts the wide distance between 'em. Noble Objects are to the Mind, what the Sunbeams are to a Bud or Flower: They open and unfold; as it were, the Leaves of it; put it upon exerting and spreading itself every way; and call forth all those Powers, that lie hid and locked up in it. The Praise and Admiration of God therefore brings this Advantage along with it, that it sets our Faculties upon their full Stretches, and improves 'em to all the Degrees of Perfection, of which they are capable. It (farther) Promotes in us, an exquisite Sense of God's Honour; and an high Indignation of Mind, at every thing, that openly profanes it. For what we value and delight in, we cannot with Patience hear slighted or abused. Our Own Praises, which we are constantly putting up, will be a Spur to us to procure the Glory of God in every Other instance of it: and will make us set our Faces against all open and avowed Impieties. Which methinks should be considered a little by those Men, who can be silent under the foulest dishonours done to Religion, and its great Author. For tamely to hear God's Name blasphemed by Others, is no very good Argument that we have been used to Honour and Reverence him in good earnest, Ourselves. It will (beyond all this) work in us a deep Humility; and a Consciousness of our own Imperfections. Upon a frequent Attention to God and his Attributes, we shall easily discover our own Weakness and Emptiness: Our swelling thoughts of ourselves will abate; and we shall see and feel, that we are lighter, to be laid in the Balance, than even Vanity itself. And This is a Lesson, which, to the most part of Mankind, is, I Think, very well worth learning. We are naturally Presumptuous and Vain; full of Ourselves, and regardless of every thing besides: Especially, when some little Outward Privileges distinguish Us from the rest of Mankind; then, 'tis odds, but we look into Ourselves with great degrees of Complacency; and are wiser and better every way, without doubt, than seven Men, that can render a Reason. Now nothing will contribute so much to the Cure of this Vanity, as a due Attention to God's Excellencies, and to the Praise of 'em. By comparing These with our Own, we shall learn not to think of ourselves more highly than we ought to think of Ourselves; but to think soberly: We shall find more satisfaction in looking upwards, and humbling Ourselves before Our common Creator, than in casting Our Eyes downward with Scorn upon our Fellow-Creatures, and setting at nought any part of the Work of his Hands. The vast distance we are at, from Real and Infinite Worth, will astonish us so much, that we shall have no Mind to value Ourselves on those lesser Degrees of Pre-eminence, that Custom, or Opinion, or some little accidental Advantages have given Us over other Men. I shall mention but one Use of it more, and 'tis This; That a conscientious Praise of God will keep Us back from all false and mean Praises, all. Fulsome and Servile Flatteries, such as are in use among Men. Praising, as 'tis commonly managed, is nothing else but a Trial of Skill upon a Man, how many good Things we can possibly say of him. All the fine Characters that ever were made, are heaped together, and thrown into One, for His sake. And no matter, whether it belongs to him, or not; so there be but enough on't. Which is one deplorable Instance (among a thousand) of the Baseness of humane Nature; its small regard to Truth and Justice; to Right, or Wrong; to what is, or is not to be praised. But He, who has a deep Sense of the Excellencies of God upon his Heart, will make a God of nothing besides: He will give every thing its just Encomium, Honour where Honour is due; and as much as is due; because it is his Duty to do so: but the Honour of God will suffer him to go no further. Which Rule, if it had been observed, a Neighbouring Prince, (who now, God be thanked, needs Flattery something more than ever he did) would have wanted a great deal of that Incense that has been paid him. Upon these Grounds does the Duty of Praise stand, and these are the Obligations that Tie us to the Performance of it. 'Tis the End of our being, and the very Rule and Law of Our Nature; flowing from the Two great Fountains of humane Action, the Understanding and the Will, naturally, and almost necessarily. It is the most Excellent part of our Religious Worship; enduring to Eternity, when the rest are to be done away; and paid even Now after the frankest manner, with the least regard to Our own Interest. It recommends itself to us by several peculiar Properties, that Belong to it: As it carries more Pleasure in it, than all other Kind's of Devotion; as it enlarges and exalts all the Powers of the Mind; as it breeds in Us an exquisite Sense of God's Honour, and a Willingness to promote it in the World: as it learns us to be Humble and Lowly Ourselves; and yet preserves us from the Baseness of Flattery, from bestowing mean and undue Praises upon Others. A great deal more might be said for it, if This were not sufficient: For no Subject affords more Room for our Praises, than the Praise of God itself, if we had leisure to pursue it. I shall now shut up the Arguing part of this Discourse, with a short Application to Two sorts of Persons; the Careless, and the Profane. One of which Neglects the Practice of so Important a Duty, and the other lives in Defiance of it. A Neglect in this Case, is certainly the Grossest that can be: 'Tis (we see) the Neglect of our Duty, our Honour, our Interest, and our Pleasure all at once. 'Tis to omit doing that which we were purposely sent into the World to do: And without doing which, all the other Affairs of Life are but one continued Impertinence. That, which we have so many Obligations to do, and no Excuse for leaving undone: For Praise is within every Man's Reach: There is no One but has it in his Power to be Thankful. God commanded the Jews to acknowledge his Sovereignty and Beneficence, by Sacrifices, a Costly and a Troublesome way of Worship. Of Us he requires only the Cheap and Easy Offering of Our Thanks and Praises— And shall we not pay it? Alas! we do not! Every thing proves an hindrance to us in the way to this our Bounden Duty and Service: We are too idle or too busy to attend upon it. And even when we find Leisure enough; yet how cold and how insensible are we whilst 'tis going forward! We draw nigh unto him with our Lips (perhaps) but our Hearts are far from him. And do we then know what it is to praise God becomingly? Do we remember how the great Teacher of Thanksgiving summons up every One of his Faculties to assist him in it? Praise the Lord O my Soul! and all that is within me, praise his holy Name! 'Tis a Work that will employ all that is within us, that will call for all the Application, and Vigour, and Warmth that we can possibly bestow upon it Cold, unmoved Praise, is no Praise! the Sacrifice of it can be no longer acceptable than 'tis burning. To those Men who live in the Contempt of this Duty, we have also something to say, if they would but hear us. They are generally such, as pretend a high Sense of the Dignity of humane Nature, and bear no small Respect to their own Understandings. Now, though Other Parts of Religious Worship should happen to be too mean and low for such great Minds to take up with; yet This, methinks, might deserve to be thought equal to 'em. Let Confession and Prayer go only for the Arts of Whining and Begging, and be as much beneath 'em as they imagine, yet surely Praise has something so great and so noble in it, that they cannot look down upon it. 'Tis a Subject fit for the most enlarged Capacities to dwell on; and such an One, as even Those would certainly find themselves raised and improved by. If it were possible for These Men to have a Relish of any thing of this Kind, we would desire 'em to make the Trial: To take the Te Deum into their Hands, and to read it attentively; and then tell us truly, whether they did not find their Minds filled, and their Affections strangely raised by the Images they met there: Whether they did not perceive themselves to be somewhat above themselves, in the using it. And all this done by that Majestic Plainness and Simplicity of Thought that goes through it! Unadorned by Words! Unenlivened by Figures! 'Tis the Matter alone which supports the Expression: And because that Matter is pure, genuine Praise, therefore is it so lofty and so moving. But alas! we speak in vain! The Men who are bold enough to slight a Duty of this Rank and Character, will easily slight every thing that can be offered to bring 'em to it. All we can say to 'em is, that as God made 'em for his Glory, so, whether they will render it to him or not, he will certainly serve the Ends of that Glory upon 'em, one way or another. And therefore, if they will not freely Praise him for his Goodness in this World, they shall surely, whether they will or no, contribute to the Praise of his Justice in the Next. Thus have I attempted to set out the great Reasonableness of this Duty, and to stir You up to the Practice of it. And certainly, it was never more reasonable, than on This Occasion, when we commemorate such Past Mercies, and feel such Present Ones. The Restoration of the Monarchy, and of all those Blessings in Church and State, that came along with it; The Re-establishment of the Beauty of Praise in our Sanctuary; The Return of Peace and Plenty; Of Learning, and all the Arts of Civil Life; The Reducing us from Confusion and Rage into Order and Friendliness, and making Us a Nation at Unity in itself; Lovely at home, and Terrible abroad: These were such sound and substantial Blessings, as will wear well; and, though done a great while ago, will yet deserve a great while hence a Place in our Calendars. Neither Love to our Country, nor the Honour we bear to Those who Rule over Us; neither Our Gratitude to God, nor our goodwill towards Men will suffer such Wonders of Providence to slip out of our Minds; or the Day, in which they were brought about, easily to grow Old upon Us. The Benefits we then received were indeed exceeding great, and would justly claim a larger Share in our Present Thoughts, had not the Goodness of God taken 'em off a little from thence, by calling 'em to the Acknowledgement of New Loving Kindnesses. For behold what Glorious Things the Lord has again done for Us! Blessing Their Majesty's Forces with a great and signal Victory over the most haughty and insolent of Enemies. A Victory— so Early, so Complete, and so Cheaply purchased, that we have Reason to hope, it may fix the Fortune of the War, and put an End to the Destructions of the Destroyer: To whom, we trust, God has now said, as he did once to the Sea itself. Hitherto shalt Thou come, and no further; and here shall thy proud Waves be stayed. Blessed be God who did not utterly cast out our Prayers, and our Supplications: but delayed only to Answer 'em, till a Day of Salvation, till an acceptable Time; when the Mercy would be dearer to Us, and his Goodness more remarkably seen in the bestowing it! When we were Alarmed with Invasions from abroad, and Conspiracies at home; when Men threatened to swallow us up quick: When Success was now so requisite to preserve the Honour of the Nation, to support Their Majesty's Throne, and to strengthen the Hands of Their Allies; Then did He appear, and own Our Cause; Then was the God of Hosts, our Strength, and our Shield. Surely, There is no End of that Goodness, which continues thus to pursue us! Which vouchsafes to establish to Us, and to our Posterity those Blessings, under which we have been so unthankful, and so ingrateful already! and to give us fresh Opportunities of Praise, which I hope we shall make better use of! Let us therefore, Offer unto God Thanksgiving! and not That only, but Ourselves also, our Souls and Bodies, to be a Reasonable, Holy and Lively Sacrifice: Let us render him the Fruit of our Lips, and the Obedience of our Lives! that these Blessings may not prove a Curse to us; but that He may still be Our God, and we may be His People! To him with the Son, and the Holy Ghost, be all Honour, Praise and Glory, henceforth and for Evermore. Amen. FINIS.