Pray for the Peace of JERUSALEM. A Visitation Sermon, PREACHED AT Gainsbrough, May 7 th'. 1691. By NATHANAEL TAYLOR, M. A. and Master of the Grammar-School at Brigg in Lincolnshire. Psalm 133.1. Behold how good, and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in Unity. LONDON, Printed for Abel Roper at the Mitre in Fleetstreet. 1691. TO THE Reverend Mr. JOHN HUTTON, ARCHDEACON of STOW, And my Brethren of the Clergy in that Archdeaconry in the County of LINCOLN, All Present and Future Happiness. WHen I was obliged to appear to preach a Visitation Sermon amongst you, I made it my business not to court Applause, nor use a popular Text; but to insist on what might really be suitable to our Times, and serviceable to our Church and Holy Calling. And considering the Foreign War our Nation is engaged in, the intestine Schism our Church and Religion suffers by, I could not suppose a more fit Subject might be found, than what I chose, to oblige the Prayers and Endeavours of all our Church's. Members for its Peace; which I am sure none can be against, but such Incendiaries as delight in public Miseries. When I appeared, I must gratefully own, the Serenity of your Complexions shown what you are happy in, and my Endeavours wanted, an inward Goodness and Candour. But tho' my Sermon was then received so kindly by many of you, yet have I and it met with such Censures and Reflections since, that I am forced to let it speak for itself. And as I never yet was concerned in the least Prosecution of any Dissenter, (though living always in the midst of them, I endeavoured by Reasons to reconcile them to our Church:) So I hope these Pages will demonstrate me to have had no other Design, than the uniting us at home, that our Church and Nation may be happy, whose Felicity next to God's Glory, I shall ever make the great End of my Study, who am, Brigg- School, May 23. 1691. Your Humble Servant, Nathanael Taylor. Psalm 122.6. Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem: They shall prosper that love thee. THIS Psalm, as also the two preceding, and Twelve succeeding Psalms, are styled Psalms or Songs of degrees; whether because * Godwin 's Jewish Antiq. l. 2. c. 1. p. 65.6. Ainsworth, on Psal. 120. Pelling's Good old way. p. 50. sung upon the 15 Steps that went up into the House of the Lord, as R. David Kimchi, on Psal. 120, thought, and the Chaldee Interpretation favours; or because they were select Psalms chosen and sung by the Jews at their return from their Babylonian Captivity, as other Expositors † Diodate in Assembly. lec. Wilson 's new Diestonary. suppose, I shall not determine; both may be probable, these Psalms generally speaking of 1 Psal. 124.1, 2, 3.132.5, 13.133.3. the excellency of the Temple, inviting to it, and directing to Duty in i●, and some of them expressly 2 Psal. 124.6, 7.126.1.2. mentioning their Slavery under, and happy deliverance out of their Captivity of Babylon. However, about the penning of this Psalm, Expositors ‖ 〈◊〉 Jans. ●●n. ●●emel. agree 'twas penned by the Prophet David, after he had conquered Jerusalem 3 2 Sam. 5, 6, 7, 8. (which was then held by the Jebusites,) and had brought the Ark of God thither, 4 2 Sam. 6.15. Psal. 122.4. and made Jerusalem the place of the public Worship of God, who after owns Jerusalem and Mount Zion as the place where he would dwell, and where his Rest should be; as appears fully at Solomon's 1 2 Chron. 7.12. ●… 18. Dedication of the Temple. Jerusalem in the Original of the Text, is expressed in the Dual Number, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and some * Pasor 's Lex. on the Word. thence think it to refer to the Earthly Jerusalem, the place of God's public Worship here; and the Heavenly Jerusalem where his Throne of Glory is, and his Saints with him, shall enjoy happiness hereafter: And indeed St. John, Rev. 21.2. expresseth that place of Glory by Jerusalem. But because those Heavenly Mansions are no ways disturbed with noise or clamour, can't be infested with Schism or Heresy, nor can the fury of Men or Devils disturb their Peace; I shall humbly beg leave to suppose another sense of it, and that is, that Jerusalem in the Text, refers to the Church Militant on Earth, whether of Jews, as literally before Christ, or the Christian Church of both Jew and Gentile, by Allegory, since Christ as St. Paul useth it, Gal. 4.26. And then besides some Modern Expositors, † Bucer & Jansen. the ancient Father St. Prosper, ‖ St. Prosper in Psal. 122.2. expounds the place of the Christian Church. Non in ista Hierusalem quae occidit Prophetas & lapidavit ob se missos, quae ad impietates multas stare non potuit, sed in illa Coelesti Jerusalem, quae est Sanctorum omnium Mater, Filii ipsius stare laetantur: Qui licet invia sint & adhue illo tendunt, ita tamen quasi pervenerint guadent, quia de Adipiscendis fide, forma non dubitat. And if the Prophet David, and the Jewish Nation were so joyful under their Oeconomy, much more cause have the Christians to rejoice under the Gospel Dispensation; they had but the shadow, we the substance; they believed in a Christ to come, we in a Christ already come. And of all Christians, we the Ministers and Members of this best of Churches, the Church of England, have reason to bless God for, and rejoice in the happiness as yet continued to us, that we have Peace in our Jerusalem, that we may go into the House of the Lord; that we have liberty to dispense, and you to hear, and receive the Gospel and its Ordinances. But since the Ambition of some, and the fiery Zeal of others from abroad, endeavour to consume us, the Schisms and Heresies at home to undermine us, many to divide us, the remissness in our Office, and irregularity in the Lives of our Members to betray us, it concerns every Christian and Minister to practise the Duty of the Text. Nor is it beneath the greatest Prelate, or above the meanest Laic, while in the Church Militant on Earth, with David 1 Psal. 122.1. to 6. in this Psalm to delight in, and to be zealous for our Religion himself, and entreat others in the words of the Text, to Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem, and let all prosper that love her. In the words are Three Parts. Divis. of the Text. I. A Precept, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the 70 Expetite. Jun. Trimel. II. What to Pray for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Peace of Jerusalem, that there may be no War without to disturb her, nor Schisms within to divide her. III. The motive to this Prayer; They shall prosper that love thee. Of these in their Order. I. Here is a Precept to a Duty, Pray, not coldly, Part I. but earnestly, for Jerusalem's welfare. Every mercy for our private use, or the public Good, comes from God, 2 James 1.17. Mat. 7.7, 8. who gives freely to all that importune him by Prayer; and surely we have little desire of, or care for our own or the Church's Peace, if we pray not for it: So great Mercies are worth our ask, or else God may justly think us unworthy their enjoying. The Prophet David resolved never to forget his Jerusalem, 1 Psal. 137.5, 6. and wished his Tongue might cleave to the roof of his Mouth, if he preferred not Jerusalem to his chief Joy. And how earnest do we find him interceding with God for it? Do good unto Zion, O build 2 Psal. 51.18, 19 up the Walls of Jerusalem. But especially in Psalm 80, where he complaining of the Church's Misery, and how that the Wild Boar wasted it, and the wild Beasts devoured it; Begs of God to return and visit his Vineyard, to cause his Face to shine on his People, and save them. And surely this should excite our Zeal; we are in as great danger, environed with Enemies who strive to devour us; and our Church like its Dear Master, is nigh being Crucified between Papists and Dissenters. And 'tis the God of Peace that can only grant and continue ours; 'tis he that makes Men of one Mind in an House, and who can cause our Enemies 3 Prov. 16.7. to be at peace with us, or stop their Fury against us. And suppose no other means were left but Prayer, yet that may be prevalent with God to grant us Peace in our Days: The Israelites under their Egyptian Bondage, when denied the public Worship of God, and deprived of uniform and unanimous petitioning him, for deliverance, had their Sighs and 4 Exed. 2.24.3.7. Groans heard by him, and they prevailed with God to send them Moses for their Deliverer. And if the Sighs or Closet Prayer of a private Christian shall 5 Mat. 6.6.7.7. be answered, and where Two or Three are met together in Christ's Name, 6 Mat. 18.20. he promiseth their Prayers shall be heard, how prevalent must the Prayers of an whole Congregation, yea of all the Members of this Church of God in this Nation be? When God accepted of Solomon's Temple, he promised 1 2 Chron. 7.14. that in all Calamities, would his People assemble there and pray, he would hear them, and grant their Desires. Nor are we without Instances of the prevalency of of the Prayers of God's People in behalf of the Church's safety and its Enemy's overthrow. Moses by Prayer 2 Exod. 17. 1●. prevailed for the Destruction of the Amalekites, and the preservation of the Israelites. When Hezekiah heard of Senacherib's Blasphemy against God and his Religion, and his Bloody design against his Church, he by Prayer prevailed with God to destroy 3 2 King. 19.2 Chron. 20.19, 22, 21. Senacherib's Army, and preserve his Church. When Jerusalem's Wall was broken down, and its Inhabitants were in a very distressed condition under Artaxerxes, Nehemiah prayed, and God gave 4 Ne●e●. 1. Chap. 2. him favour with the King, so that he got an order for the redress of the City and People. In a word, while Daniel was praying for Jerusalem's restoration, 5 Dan. 9. 2●.21, 22, 23 he had an Angel dispatched to inform him, that his Prayer was heard, and granted. So that no Calamity or Troubles can be so great or many, felt and feared by the People and Church of God, but by Prayer they may prevail for Deliverance. And God is the same Almighty God as ever, his promises to the Christian Church as full and free as to the Jewish; and therefore to remove all Troubles felt, and to prevent all Miseries feared, let Ministers and People from the highest to the lowest, from one end of the Land to the other join in the performance of the Duty of the Text. Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem; and the Lord grant us a gracious Answer. But Prayer to God is not what alone is required of us for the Peace of Jerusalem. For Verbs of Affection in the Holy Language imply Action; nor can he have any earnest desires God should grant what he prays for, the Peace of Jerusalem, who takes not all care he can, and useth his utmost endeavours to promote it. And indeed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text is from the Radix, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is rendered by Buxtorf, not only Petiit but Consuluit; and the Prophet David explains it, Psal. 122.8. by I will seek thy Good. And Jansenius in his Paraphrase on that Verse hath it: Precando optavi tibi bona, & omni studio tibi prodesse, quod in me est conatus sum. Bucer comments on it thus; Omnes suas quisque curas, omnes cogitationes convertat, quo illi omnia secundat. And he adds the Reason; Nam quicquid serio petimus, ad id parandum quoque, si quid ad hoc modo possumus, totis viribus ferimur. So that we must not only in observance of this Precept, pray to God, and that with all Importunity, Zeal and Affection; but with our utmost endeavours seek after, consult for, and labour to promote what is the subject to be prayed for, and the Second part of the Text. II. Part II. of the Text. The Peace and Prosperity, the Integrity and Welfare of Jerusalem, as the Original Word imports; but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Septuagint hath it, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Dr. Duport translates it. In the 70, some suppose * Jansen. in loc. an error of the Accusative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Genitive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, unless by way of Emphasis, the Psalmist meant; and the 70 would Translate it, O pray for the Peace, the Peace I say of Jerusalem. However † Ainsworth in loc. both will oblige our care, and endeavour to promote those things that make for the Peace of Jerusalem, of which I shall humbly offer Four. 1. Unanimity in Doctrine; Thus this Jerusalem of God is styled a City compact together, Psal. 122. v. 3. and the Psalms in our Common-Prayer-book, as a Paraphrase on it, render if a City at Unity in itself, and most agreeable to the Original, if we may take Bithner's * Bithner 's Lyra Prophet. i● Loc. Judgement, who tells us the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports Consociata, united in one Society, unanimous; and yet as if this was not enough to declare its unanimity, the Original hath as it were an exegetical Word more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying ‖ Buxtorf. Lexicon. ad unum simul; so that God's Jerusalem or Church, is a Society of People Compacted, United, and by such an Unanimity knit together. And as the Rule of the Jewish Church for their Faith to which they adhered, was the Law 1 Isa. 8.20. and Testimony, declining what was not agreeable to it; and to this Law and Testimony, the Scriptures, our Saviour appealed 2 John 5.39. to prove himself to the Jews their promised Messiah. So our Church of England allows of nothing for Doctrine but what is plainly made known in Scripture, or may be genuinely deduced from it. Our Faith is founded on the Sacred Word of God, epitomised in the Apostle, and explained by the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds, confirmed by the Writings and Decrees of the Primitive Fathers and Counsels, and sealed with the Blood of Martyrs. Our Church in her Articles, adores the holy and undivided Trinity, without any Rivals of Saints or Angels; receives the Faith of Christ without any thing that destroys his Divinity, as Images and Pictures, or that nulls his Humanity, as Transubstantiation; and owns all his Offices without the Doctrines destructive to them of the Pope's Supremacy and Infallibility, of Merits and Purgatory, and so Believers of the Gifts and Graces of the Holy Ghost, as to be free from Enthusiasm or Profaneness. She admits of no Doctrine concerning many States of Creation, Apostasy, Grace and Glory that any way eclipseth God's Glory and Mercy, and Christ's Merits and Satisfaction; but all things in her Articles and Homilies are so proposed, as may most set forth God's goodness, and Man's vileness, our Misery by Sin, and Happiness through a Saviour, and all this in so plain and familiar a Style, and in our own Language, that no Member of her, can justly plead a cause of Ignorance of her Principles. Let us then be Unanimous in our Doctrines, and have a care of basely betraying or denying her, or Apostatising from her: It becomes not us to prostitute our dear Mother to the pleasure of every Malcontented Adversary, to subtract from her Ancient Catholic Principles, or to add to their new Opinions, as this or the other Party pleaseth, whose Zeal against our Church outruns their Knowledge of her Doctrines: And when I earnestly beg to lay aside prejudice and heat, and employ that Liberty of Conscience granted them, in searching impartially, and seriously weighing our Doctrine in the 39 Articles, and Book of Homilies; I doubt not but they would soon find Reason and Religion persuading them to repent of their past Folly and Sin of Schism, and to unite with us, and pray for the Peace of our Jerusalem, Our Church of England, which is the envy of all Dissenters, and the Glory of the whole Christian World. For us Ministers, in public or private, to detract from the Doctrines of our Church, is Judas like, to kiss and betray her: And let us but seriously ask the Dissenters, or consider with ourselves, should we recede from our Received Principles, where should we centre? Are our Adversaries agreed what to ask? And if we should grant what they now desire, would they adhere to their present Proposals, or oblige their Congregations to unite with us? How indeed can this be thought on, when there are so many Sects contrary to us, and to one another amongst us? The Papists deny the Truth of our Church, because of their Multitude: The Dissenters separate from us, because we are so many, and not selected Congregations: The one upbraids us with Novelty, the other dislikes our Antiquity, and would have us change our Religion as often as they please. To gain some, we must part with the Apostolic Regimen of our Church by Bishops; and instead of one, have every one to Lord it over us. To bring in others, we must throw away Infant-Baptism, and reduce the Church to Heathenism again, and make it always gathering, never gathered. To engage a third Party, we must deny all Christianity, in a manner, Christ's Incarnation, both Sacraments, the Resurrection of these our Bodies, and must own an Infallibility in every one. whenas now but one pretends to it, and he grandly mistaken in it too. To reconcile the Papist, we must disown almost all the Articles of our Church, and not only them, but of our Creed also; and receive Twelve new ones on necessity of Salvation, tho' of no longer Date as such, than the Trent Conventicle. Nor is this all, to unite with them, we must not only lay aside Christianity, but our Humanity also; and must deny our Reason and Senses to believe Transubstantiation: For tho' we see, smell, taste, and feel Bread and Wine, yet must we believe it to be Christ's Flesh and Blood, the same he had of the Virgin Mary. And now consider where we should stop, or what a Chaos our Church would thus be! Jerusalem would become a Babel; and it would be a strange Reformation, in order to our being purer and better reform, to lay aside Religion, Reason, and our Senses, and turn any thing but Christians and Men. The Heathens had a Form of Doctrine delivered down to them, to which they so adhered, that one saith * Cotta in Cicero. de Nat. Deorum l. 3. , Opiniones a majoribus acceptas defendam, & defendi semper, nec me ex ea opinione quam a majoribus accepi de cultu Deorum immortalium ullius unquam oratio aut docti aut indocti movebit. Much more reason surely have we to keep to our Religion which is truly Apostolical, was that Faith once delivered to the Saints, Judas 3. Rev. 2.10. and in which being constant to Death, we may expect a Crown of Life. Let us then not be wheedled or frighted to recede from Antiquity, or be imposed upon by Novelty. We have subscribed the Thirty Nine Articles, and they include the Book of Homilies. Let us not then, against our Judgement, our solemn Profession and serious Subscription of them, turn from, or be ashamed of the best of Churches: 1 Tim. 7.20. Such Persons may remember that Hymeneus and Philetus are stigmatised for their Apostasy to all Posterity. Let us rather propagate this Faith by Catechising, that the People committed to our Care, when Men, may not be Children tossed to and fro with every wind of Doctrine, Eph. 4.14. and after some years preaching among them, Heb. 5.12. have need to be taught again what are the first Principles of the Oracles of God. The Heathens own the necessity of instructing Youth, * Theog. v. 1001.2. — 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Roman Orator † Cicero, l. 4. ad Heren. accounts it a great piece of Wisdom, and the greatest Service we can do in our Generation: God calls for it, and our Church enjoins * Can. 59 it, Prov. 22.6. punishing its continued neglect, with Suspension and Excommunication; most, if not all Dissenters practise it. And shall they be industrious to propagate Error, and we not careful to train up our People in the true Faith? God forbidden! Let our past remissness make us more zealous in this Practice. Our Church enjoins a Catechism which contains the Sum of the Christian Religion, the Credenda in the Creed, the Agenda in the Ten Commandments, the Petenda in the Lord's Prayer, and the Recipienda in the Doctrine of the Sacraments; and she explains them all concisely, obliging her Members to their performance from their Vow in Baptism, and the Benefits they receive thereby. This Practice would stop the Divisions of this, and lay the Foundation for the Peace of our Jerusalem in another Generation, by causing an Unanimity amongst Men in Religion; to which see how earnestly St. Eph. 4.1, 2, to 8. Paul beseecheth all Christians from their being Children of one God, Members of one Christ, etc. And let me beg (with the sincerest Affection of a Christian and Minister) the Dissenters to unite with us against a Common Enemy, and not expose themselves and us to inevitable Ruin, by their needless Divisions; for 'tis impossible (if they bring Ruin upon us) themselves should escape in that public Misery. In a word; If a common Officer commanding you in the King's Name, can make you keep the Peace in a Civil Sense; if Julius Caesar could, Sueton. Jul. Caes. c. 78. and did appease the Roman Decumani when multiplying, by that Trisullable, Quirites, intimating they were Roman Gentlemen and Soldiers, and ought not to quarrel amongst themselves; let me as an Ambassador of the God of Peace, beg, 2 Cor. 5.20. and begging prevail from that Tetragrammaton compounded of quiescent Letters, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with every of the Members of Christ's Church, or that own themselves the Children of the God of Peace, by Unanimity of Doctrine to endeavour the Peace of our Jerusalem; and let our Prayers, St. Prosper in loc. and St. Prosper's words conclude this Head, Fiant unitas & abundantin diligentium te. 2. Another thing conducing to the Peace of Jerusalem, is, Uniformity in Worship: This we find the Israelites exemplary in, Psalm 122.4. in this Psalm, Let us go, say they, into the House of the Lord— our feet shall stand in thy Gates, O Jerusalem, whither the Tribes go up, the Tribes of the Lord unto the Testimony of Israel, to give thanks to the Name of the Lord. They must be very Strangers to Heathen Writers, who know not, that as they had their Gods, so they had their Temples set apart wherein to worship them, and a distinct Order of Men to be Priests to perform that their Worship; Arist. Polit. l. 7. c. 8. T. 3. p. 581. c. 9 p. 583. which Order, the Philosopher (to the shame of many Christians) accounted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the chief Order; and he gives this good reason for it, because they had, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Care of Divine things, the Worship of their Gods. And that they had Forms of Prayer, is plain from their Historian, Liv. l. 4. c. 30. who tells us, That when through a great Drought, about 326. V C. Diseases fell on Man and Beast, Animos multiplex Religio & pleraque externa invasit, novos ritus sacrificando, etc. Donec publicus jam pudor ad primores civitatis pervenit, cernentes in omnibus viris sacellisque peregrina atque insolita piacula pacis Deum exposcendae: Datum inde negotium Aedilibus, ut animadverterent, ne qui Dii nisi Romani, new quo more quam patrio colerentur. And as for the Jewish Church, that was under a Theocracy, the immediate Government of God himself, and had Forms prescribed by him, and observed by them. Aaron and his Sons were especially set apart by God for the Ministry, and were consecrated by Man also; Heb. 5.4. Exod. 28. they had their appointed places for Worship, the Tabernacle in the time of their sojourning, and the Temple after; and the People were (especially the Males) obliged to appear three times in the Year before the Lord, in the place the Lord had chosen, which was where the Ark or Tabernacle was, at first in Shiloh, after at Jerusalem, where the Leaned Mede observes, Mede 's Works, l. 1. c. 48. on Deut. 16.7. Assembly in Deut. 16.17. they had not only stated times by God, but a place; they were to appear not at every place of their own choosing, but at one of the Lords choosing. They had also general Feasts appointed by God, the Passover, agreeable with our Easter; and their Pentecost, or Feast of Weeks suitable to our Whitsuntide. Their Sacraments of the Circumcision and the Passover, with their Order and Ceremonies, Gen. 17.10. Exod. 12. were appointed by God to be observed by them, on pain of being cut off from Israel. Yea, they had Forms of Prayers and Praises prescribed them by God: Thus Aaron was ordered how to bless the Children of Israel, or pray to God for them. And the Lord spoke unto Moses, saying, Numb. 6.23.24.5, 6. speak unto Aaron, and unto his Sons, saying, On this wise ye shall bless the Children of Israel, saying unto them, The Lord bless thee and keep thee, the Lord make his face to shine upon thee, and be gracious to thee. Which Form we use in our Visitation of the Sick. Thus also in a time of Gods punishing them, Hosea 14.2. Hosea from God tells the people a Form of Prayer, saying, Take with you words, and turn unto the Lord, say unto him, Take away all our Iniquity, and receive us graciously, so will we offer the Calves of our Lips. And by the Prophet Joel a public Fast being set apart, Joel 2.17. the Ministers were charged to use what is part of our Litany, Spare thy people, O Lord, and give not thine heritage to reproach. But what need particular Instances of the Jewish Forms of Prayer, whenas the whole Book of Psalms was the Jewish Liturgy, or their Vocal Service, which is intimated by the Titles of the Psalms, Mode l. 1. c. 1. p. 2, 3. showing them to have been recommended to the several Choirs and Masters of Music; and by their beginning with Oremus, Cantemus Deo, Venite exultemus, 'tis plain they were Forms used by the Jews in their praying to, and praising of God. And as for the Christian Church, the ever-blessed Jesus, our great Lord and Master, not only instituted the Christian Sacraments, Baptism and the Supper of the Lord, as agreeable (as could consist with the Gospel-Oeconomy) with the Jewish Circumcision and Passover, which were Types of them, but did himself teach his Disciples and all Christians a Form of Prayer; for though He in Matth. 6. seems to propose it as a Pattern to pray according to it, yet at another time when his Disciples asked him to teach them to pray, as St. John also taught his Disciples: Luke 11.1, 2. 3, 4. He charged them in express Words, when they prayed, to say, Our Father which art in Heaven, etc. And himself and his Apostles used Forms of Prayer: Thus our Saviour, tho' filled with the Holy Ghost above all Pretenders to it now, yet repeats the same Petition in the same Words thrice, Mat. 26.39, 42, 44. Father, if it be thy Will, let this Cup pass from me. And St. Paul in most of his Epistles useth the same Form of Prayer in the beginning, Rom. 1.7. 1 Cor. 1.3. 2 Cor. 1.2. Gal. 1.3. Eph. 1.2. Rom. 16.24. as Grace be unto you, and Peace from God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ. And he useth also the same Form of Blessing at the end of them: The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all, Amen. 1 Cor. 16.23. Phil. 4.23. 1 Thess. 5.28. 2 Thess. 3.18. Philemon 25. And since the Apostles days, 'tis easy to prove Forms of Prayer have been used by the Christian Church all along in the public Worship of God. And since the Church of God always used Forms of Prayer, Dr. Cumber. Dr. Falkner. why should not we be uniform in our Worship? A Worship serious and devout, Dr. Hamond. concise and pathetical; a Service suited to all Occasions of Prayer or Thanksgiving for the Church in general, or private Christians in particular. Fox. Acts, vol. 3. A Liturgy compiled and reform from Popish Errors by those who died Martyrs for it, and did especially recommend it to Posterity. Our Worship, blessed be God, Oracles of God, a Christ. Birthright, by the Author of the Whole Duty of Man, p. 183.4. is not concealed from the people in unknown Tongues, as the Popish is, and must be where Popery prevails; for in our time some of the French Bishops and Clergy having translated the Roman Mass-Book into the French Tongue, that that People might understand it; The than Pope Alexander VII. damned the Book and Translators as Heretical, order the Book to be burnt, and the Translators to be excommunicated. So great a Crime is it for poor Souls in that Communion to understand their Prayers, who only say them as Parrots, who are taught to prate they know not what: But thanks be to God, our Service is in the known Tongue of the Nation; so that every Member of our Church may (as St. St. August. on Psal. 18. Augustine saith a man ought) serve God, not chattering like Birds, but with the Reason and Understanding of a Man. Every person of our Communion may know what Petition or Thanksgivings are to be put up to God, and so join them with suitable Affections. And indeed our Devotions are accompanied with such Zeal and Fervency by all true Members of our Church, that as Tertullian styles it, Tertul. Apol. c. 39 We offer holy Violence to God, besieging him by Prayer. And like those Devotions in St. Basil's time, through the Unanimity, Uniformity, and Zeal of the devoties, she thunders out Prayers and Praises, each Member striving to exceed other in this holy storming of Heaven for Mercies wanting, and in returning Praises for Blessings received, and all this without any expectation of our Prayers being heard or answered for our Merits, but through the Merits and Mediation of the ever-blessed Jesus alone. Let us, Ministers, then be uniform in our Worship; we have all declared our unfeigned Assent and Consent to all things in our Service, Act of Uniformity, 12 Car. 2. before our Respective Diocesans at our Institutions, and before our several People soon after our Inductions; and 'twould be a shame to us, and a Scandal to the Church, for us to act otherways. And as for our Brethren of the Laity, What can they desire better, and more edifying than our Divine Service, where they know what to petition, and to bless God for, and may join both with suitable Affections, and are not confined to the Extemporary Prayer of a Minister, with any of whose Petitions they know not whether they can join, till heard; and too many may, upon good grounds probably, not say, Amen. The Minister being the Mouth of the People to God in Prayer, as he is the Mouth of God to them in preaching, aught to pray what the people understand, may be most affected with, and may hearty say Amen to; which surely is best done by a Form of Prayer understood by them before. This would prevent that Consusion the Church and Congregation would be in, if every one was left to his private Devotions and Petitions. St. Paul rejoiced to see the Order in the Church of the Colossians; for by their Uniformity in Worship, an awful Reverence would be gained to Religion, and its very Enemies could not but think them the Servants of the God of Order; whenas should one come into a Congregation that is not uniform, but one hath an Hymn, another an extemporary Prayer, a third a Form, every one as he thinks fit at his Devotion, would not a Man think that Congregation mad, as St. Paul infers, 1 Cor. 14.23, 26.33. and however grants, such a Course unedifying, and not of God, who is not the Author of Confusion, but of Peace, as in all the Churches of the Saints. Yea, was the greatest Pretender to, or Pleader for Extempore Effusions against Forms of Prayer, but to speak to his Landlord, a great Man, or however to the King, I am confident he would a little consider, and premeditate what Form of Words he should express himself in; much more ought we to do, when we who are but Dust and Ashes, are to speak in our Prayers to the great God. Solomon's Advice surely is very necessary, That we take heed when we go into the House of God, Eccles. 5.2. and be not rash with our Mouths, or let our Hearts utter any thing before God; for God is in Heaven, and we upon the Earth, therefore let our words be sew. And indeed to avoid the Battology of the Pharisees, Mat. 6. our Saviour taught us that Compendium, the Lords Prayer. And let any Opposer of our Forms consult but their Directory, and they will find almost as great a Formality, and as strictly enjoined, tho' with less Piety and Devotion: Directory, Preface, p. 8. And the very Compilers of that Book in its Preface declare for Uniformity in Divine Worship, for two Reasons; (1.) To answer the Expectations of other Reformed Churches; and, (2.) To perform what they were obliged to, by their Promise in their Solemn League and Covenant. Now how can they be uniform without a Form? Or can their Directory, which they established, (when they threw away the Church's Liturgy) show their Uniformity, when every Minister is left to pray as he pleaseth? 'Tis true indeed, it prescribes and enjoins the Matter and Pattern of Prayer, why then may not fit words to express that Matter in, be enjoined? Is not the prescribing the Matter for Prayer, as much formal, and as great a stinting of the Spirit, as to enjoin fit words? Or can the Spirit dictate Words, and not the Matter, to their Pastors? If they be for Uniformity, why not pious Matter in suitable Expressions, as our Liturgy enjoins? If not for Uniformity, Why do they pretend to it, Ludovicus Capellus, Thes. Theolog. de Liturgia, p. 656, ad 670. and by their Reasons for that pretence, grant what is easily proved, That all the Reformed Churches beyond Sea, whether from Calvin or Luther; and also the Assembly of Divines themselves did see the Necessity and Advantage, and did use Forms of Prayer, and that with great Reason. For surely the Prayer put up by the whole Congregation, with which all Congregations of our Church through the Nation join, must be more acceptable to, and prevalent with God, than the private Prayer of a single person that hath scarce another in the whole World joining with him. But however they please to act, let us, the Ministers and Members of the Church of England, adhere to our Liturgy and Uniformity in Worship. Let the Ashes of our Reformers and its Compilers, warm us with Zeal for it, and make us ashamed to disown that for which they died. Let us show ourselves the Tribes of the Lord, Psal. 122.4. as the Text imports, by our Uniformity of Worship in our Jerusalem, that our Prayers may be prevalent for its peace: And let others that will not do so, answer it at their perils; the Text implying, they are not, nor do belong to the Tribes of the Lord, that neglect this uniform Worship of him, as St. Prosper remarks on that Verse. St. Prosper in loc. 3. A third thing tending to the peace of Jerusalem, is Impartiality of Discipline. The People of the Jews had God himself for their Legislator, and had both Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws to punish Sin by; and so have we Christians from the same God and Christ, in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, the just and holy God endeavouring in them by Threats of Temporal, Spiritual, and Eternal Misery to deter the Wicked from the evil of his way, and by Promises of Felicity for both Soul and Body here and hereafter, to encourage the Good in the way of Holiness. But, alas! such is man's stupidity, that he is led more by Sense than Faith, and is more afraid of temporal Mulcts and Punishments from the Civil and Ecclesia. stical Magistrates, than of the Frowns and Threats of Eternal Vengeance from the great God. And therefore, as the Philosopher observed, Arist. l. 5. c. 5. de Moribus. T. 3. p. 79. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Law of Nature commanding us to live according to every Virtue, and forbidding every Vice: All Nations have provided Laws for the punishment of the one, and the encouragement of the other. And were the Statutes and Laws Civil and Ecclesiastical of our Nation, impartially executed, we should soon see Sin disgraced, the Sinner ashamed, the Sabbath better kept, our Churches fuller, and have greater hopes for the peace of our Jerusalem. Let not then those to whom the Executive Power of them is committed, connive at, or partially punish sin, lest we incur the Censure we cast on the Church of Rome too justly, of selling Pardon of Sins for Mony. I would gladly hope the Concern of our Religion, Letter to Bishops, 1689. the Danger we are in, the late Request and Command of our Governors, will engage the impartial procedure of Justice to punish Vice wherever. But this being not mine, but the Civil and Ecclesiastical Magistrates Province, I shall leave it, and only beg they would endeavour by such a good Administration, the Peace of Jerusalem, to which nothing can more conduce than it, as what would promote what I shall urge in the last place for Jerusalem's Peace; and that is, 4. Integrity and holiness of Conversation in all its Members. Plautus Persa. Act 4. Sc. 4. The Comedian's Observation is very true; Oppidum, si incolae bene sint morati, pulchre munitum arbitror: But if Vice abound in a City or Nation, Centuplex murus rebus secundis parum est. And the sacred Writ affords as many sad Instances of persons, whose sins cried for, Gen. chap. 6, 7. and pulled down Vengeance on the places of their Habitations, witness the Inhabitants of the old World, and of Sodom and Gomorrha. Gen. chap. 18.19. Sin disturbs inward Peace, hinders outward Comforts, and exposeth to inevitable Ruin; no wonder then every of God's People the Jews were charged to be Holy, Leu. 11.44. as their God was Holy; and we Christians are commanded, if we dare to name the Name of Christ, to departed from Iniquity: 2 Tim. 2.19. Titus 2.11, 12, 14. And if we expect Salvation through him hereafter, to be a peculiar People to him in serving him here. And if the sins of common Christians add to the sins of the Nation and Church, and call for Vengeance on both, much more will the sins of Ministers be provoking. The Learned Dr. Dr. Cave 's Introduct. to vol. 2. L. Fathers, p. 32. Cave tells us, the very Heathen Emperor Julian commanded the Heathen Priests to abstain from all vile and wicked Actions, to study, and live strictly, performing Religion with a great care. We are sure the great God forbids all Natural, much more Moral Deformities in his Ministers under the Law, Leu. 21.23. and charged them to bear on their Breasts Vrim and Thummim, Learning and Sincerity, Exod. 28, 30, 36, 39 etc. and on their Foreheads or Conversation, Holiness. And Christ, under the Gospel, expects no less. The Charge St. Paul gives to St. Timothy, and in him to all Ministers, is great; 1 Tim. 4.14. To be an Example in Conversation as well as Doctrine, in Purity as well as Faith. And no Church can more strictly enjoin her Ministers an Holy Life, than ours doth. Can. 75. But since the best of men on this side Heaven have their failings; and as St. Rom. 7.18, to 24. Paul himself found reason to complain of his sinfulness, I shall turn my Advice to you, into Prayer to God for us all, Prayer for Ernber Week. in our Church's Words for all her Ministers; That God would so replenish all of us called to this holy Function, with the Truth of Doctrine, and Innocency of Life— That both by Life and Doctrine, we may set forth the Glory of our God, and set forward the Salvation, not only of ourselves, but of all men. And I promise myself, that all of us will endeavour effectually to answer, Amen. And thus have I considered the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the things that make for the Peace of Jerusalem, which we ought to pray for, and endeavour after: Unanimity in Doctrine, Uniformity in Worship, Impartiality in Discipline, and Integrity in Conversation. And to incite to the practice of these, I shall very briefly add a few Motives. 1. The Zeal the Heathens had for their Religion: For tho' by our Apostasy we depraved God's Image, Rom. 3.23. in which we were created; yet the very Remains of that Image in fallen Man did dictate to him the Being of a God, and that he ought to be worshipped; Cicero l. 2. 〈◊〉 Nat. D●oru●… so that the Roman Orator brings in one Saying, Omnibus innatum est, & in aninto quasi insculptum Deos esse— esse Deos ita perspicuum est, ut id qui negat, vix eum sanae mentis existimem. And the Orator himself saith, Cicero l. 1. de Legibus. In hominibus nulla Gens est neque tam immansueta, neque tam fera, quae non (etiamsi ignoret qualem habere Deum, deceat tamen) habendum sciat. And the Philosopher tells us how God is known by them; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. de Mundo, c. 6. T. 1. p. 863. And as they acknowledged a God, so they seldom mentioned his Name, especially Jove's (which may probably be a Contract of the Jews, and our Jehovah) without some Epithet declaring their Esteem of, and Honour for him; as Jupiter Optimus Maximus, Immortalis, etc. And 'tis probable they had some notion of a Christ, and the Son of God becoming Man; and perhaps this was the reason why about the time of our Saviour's Birth, Sueton. Aug. Caesar, c. 53. Bishop Taylor L. of Christ. S. 4. p. 25. Platina, f. 6. Euseb. Hist. l. 2. c. 2. Augustus Caesar, in Honour to our Saviour, Dominum se posthac appellari, ne a Liberis quidem aut Nepotibus, vel serio vel joco passus est. However, 'tis certain Tiberius Caesar, under whom our blessed Saviour suffered, would have had our Christ reckoned among the Number of their Gods. And as they had thus a Notion of God, and Honour for him, so they made it their first and chief Business to take care of his Worship: Thus one; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythag. v. 1. Phocyl. v. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉— And another, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nor was the Worship of God their chief Business, but they were zealous and uniform in it; Ovid. Metam. l. 1. thus Ovid brings in Jupiter declaring it: Signa dedi venisse Deum, vulgus precari Coeperat— And of Dencalion and Pyrrhus' Zeal, Ovid tells us thus: Templi tetigere gradus procumbit uterque, Lib. eodem. Pronus humi gelidoque pavens, dedit oscula saxon. But it would be tedious to insist on their Devotion, let one Instance serve for all to show their Zeal for Religion. Val. Maximus saith of the Heathen Rome; Val. Max. l. 1. c. 1. n. 9 Omnia post Religionem ponenda semper nostra Civitas duxit, etiam in quibus summae majestatis conspici decus voluit. Surely then we Christians, and Ministers of the best of Churches, aught to esteem its Peace, and our Religion more than our Lives and Fortunes: A Religion far better than they (poor Creatures) could pretend to. Their Heathen Idols, even that at Delphos, being silenced at our Saviour's Death, as Plutarch himself grants, Plutarch. de Orac. defect. Dr. Cave introduct. to v. 1. L. Fath. p. 10. Dr. Heylin's Cosmog. l. 2. Phocis. and others witness; which was a Demonstration that Christ came to put an end to their Idolatry; and certainly if they were so zealous for their Idolatry, it should excite our Zeal for Christianity, and our Prayers and Endeavours for the promoting and continuing the Peace of our Jerusalem. 2. Consider the fidelity of the Jews to their Temple and Religion. Scripture abounds with Evidences of their strictness in their Services and Devotions, and how hardly any of them closed with Christ, when he came, tho' their promised Messiah, but in zeal to their Law and Church, they cried out, Crucify him, crucify him. And as for the Honour the Jewish Nation had for their Temple at Jerusalem, 'tis recorded, Philo Legat. ad Cajum, cited by Bp. Usher in power of Princes obed. of Subject. p. 191, to 198. That when the Emperor Cajus, after our Saviour's time, would have had his Image set up in the Temple at Jerusalem, with the Title he had assumed to himself, of New Jupiter, all the Old Men, Young Men, and Boys in one rank; all the Old Women, young Ones, and Virgins in another, offered themselves to be slain by the Emperor's Fury, rather than they would suffer their Temple to be prosaned with Idolatry. Euseb. Hist. l. 3. c. 5, 6, 7, 8. Dr. Cave, v. 2. L. F. L. St. Simeon, p. 94, 95. v. 1. L. F. L. St. Stephen, p. 11. L. St. Cyril, p. 352, 353. Tho' afterwards this Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed by Titus Vespasian, and scarce one stone left upon another, according to our Saviour's Prediction, Matth. 24. And when the Emperor Julian, to prove Christ a false Prophet, did encourage the Jews to rebuild it, no sooner had they cleared the Rubbish, and laid the Foundation, but a terrible Earthquake shaked it down, and all the Buildings about it, and destroyed the Undertakers of it: And when the next day others attempted it, a great Fire broke out, and forced them to give over, as is attested by Writers Heathen as well as Christian. By which the ever-blessed Jesus demonstrated his putting an end to the Jewish Oeconomy, and his bringing the World to a purer Religion, that of the Gospel, Christianity. And surely if the Jews were so zealous for, and so faithful to their Religion, which was so obscure and chargeable, so burdensome and troublesome, we should join all our Prayers, and use all our Endeavours for the Peace of our Jerusalem, and the Welfare of our Religion which sets us free from that Yoke of Bondage, Gal. 5.1. Mat. 11.28, 29. easeth us of those Burdens, and makes our Service perfect Freedom. Especially, 3. If we consider the Zeal of the Primitive Christians, who, rather than they would comply with the Worship of false Gods, or suffer their own Worship of the true God to be profaned, were themselves sacrificed, and rather chose to part with their Lives, Dr. Heylin 's Cosmog. in 4ᵒ. l. 3. p. 193, 293. Leigh on Caesar's, p. 247. 9 than their Religion, witness the Disciples and Apostles of the ever-blessed Jesus, most of whom died Martyrs, witness the Ten Primitive Persecutions; in the last of which under Dioclesian, 'tis said 5000 Christians were martyred for every day of the year, except the first of January, on which they shed no Blood, as St. Hierom writes. Nor did our Religion lose by their Sufferings, but was rather the more propagated, occasioning that Christian Adage, Sanguis Martyrum est semen Ecclesiae. Let the like Zeal be in us, our Faith is the same, our Hopes, and Encouragements of Support under, and of Glory after Sufferings, are as great as they had; they were Flesh and Blood as well as we. Let us not then fear to bear a Cross with Christ on Earth, if called to it, since we expect to wear a Crown with him in Heaven. Death we must meet with; and to suffer it for Christ's and our Religion's Cause, will make that which is a Debt to Nature, an Advantage to us; our thus suffering here, adding to our Crown of Glory hereafter. 2 Cor. 4. 1●, 18. For assuredly, if they who live to Christ, shall be happy with Christ, much more shall they be glorious, who with the Noble Army of Martyrs, die for Christ, rather than they will disown, or betray him. 4. Let us be earnest and zealous in our Prayers and Endeavours for our Religion, and the Peace of our Jerusalem, from the sad Effects of Schism in the Church, and Civil War (its usual Product) in the State. See how St. Paul brands those who cause Divisions, and deters us from them: Now, I beseech you, Rom. 16.17. mark them which cause Divisions and Offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have learned, and avoid them: For they that are such, serve not the Lord Jesus Christ, but their own Bellies, and by good Words and fair Speeches, deceive them that are simple. And the same Apostle tells us of some that withstood Moses and God's Institution among the Jews, as Jannes and Jambres; 2 Tim. 3.5. to 9 and he parallels the Christian Schismatics with them, who having a show of Godliness, but not the power of it, creep into houses, and lead silly Women captive. Leu. 10.2. We read also of some that usurped the Priest's Office under the Law, as Nadab and Abihu; but their false Fire provoked God to burn them; Nemb. 16. and Korah doing the like, the Earth opened and swallowed him up, and Fire burnt his Companions. Let this deter all from Schism and usurping of the Priest's Office, who are not called to it, as God under the Law and Gospel, appoints; called by God, Heb. 5.4. Exod. 28. and consecrated by Men in Authority to do it, as Aaron was. Yea, Christ himself, tho' endowed with a greater measure of the Spirit, than any now can pretend to, yet took not on him that Office, without a Commission from his Father, 1 Joh 3.1, 2. as Nicodemus grants. And as God sent him, he sent his Apostles, ordaining them to the Work of the Ministry, 1 Joh. 20.21. and they ordained others, 1 Tim. 5.22. and appointed Bishops over Churches, and charged them to lay hands suddenly on no man, and to ordain them whom they found fit for the Ministerial Office. Titus 1.5. Let the black Mark St. Paul (as is premised) fixeth on the Schismatic, deter from it; and surely none can be fond of becoming their Proselytes, whenas twice St. Paul styles all such, simple People, and silly Persons, Titles with which few are pleased. And as the ill Consequences of Schism in the Church may incite us to pray for the Peace of Jerusalem, and oblige us to unite among ourselves, so surely the Danger and Fears of a Civil War in the Nation (the usual Effect of Schism in the Church) will enforce us to the Duty. Methinks that dreadful Account of the Civil War between Caesar and Pompey, Lucan, l. 2. v. 102.3 Lucan. gives us, may affright us Stat cruor in Templis, multaque rubentia caede Lubrica saxa madent, nulli sua profuit aetas; Non senis extremum pinguit urgentibus annis, Praecipitasse diem, ne primo in limine vitae Infantis miseri nascentia rumpere fata. — Infandum Domini per viscera ferrum Lucan lib. cit. v. 145. Exegit famulus, Gnati maduêre Parentis Sanguine, certatum est cui cervix caesa parentis Cederet. V 180. Auulsae cecidere manus, exsectaque lingua Palpitat, & muto vacuum ferit aere motu Hic aures, alius spiramina naris aduncae Amputat, etc. But we need not go so far for sad Instances of the Effects of Civil Wars; if we look back into our late Times, might we not find our Church a Chaos, and the Nation an Aceldama, when Persons out of a pretended Zeal against Popery, murdered their Lawful Sovereign, and were imposed on by Popish Emissaries in their several Conventicles? What Person was then so sacred? What Place so secure, but it was profaned and injured? The Royal Diadem and Sacred Mitre trod underfoot, and no tye of Religion or Nature hindered them from Sacrilege and Murder. From which Wounds our Church and Nation yet retain Scars, and the Original of all our late or present Fears may be thence dated. Let then the fiery Zeal of those of the Roman Communion, (whose most cogent Arguments are Sword and Faggot) make us abhor that Religion which the Christian World grows weary of, and I hope will in short time throw off: Let the Commotions in Germany, the sad Catastrophe of our Royal Martyr, and the dreadful Effects of those times dissuade us from being imposed on by such Incendiaries, and oblige us to pray for, and to our utmost power endeavour the Peace of Jerusalem. Because, Lastly, of the Motive in the Text, They shall prosper that love thee; Buxtorf. Bithner, ●ansenius, Prosper. where the original Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comes from the Radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies, Tranquilli erunt, faelices erunt, they shall be happy both in Mind and Body; all inward Contentment, all outward Felicity shall be enjoyed by them that are at Unity with, and uniform to our Jerusalem, our Church of England, which I am confident will be continued and preserved by God, as long as he hath a Church upon Earth. Let then all Dissenters from us, I beseech them, see the design of their and our Enemies of Rome, whose grand Endeavour is to divide us, and so destroy us by ourselves; and let it influence them to unite with us against a common Adversary. Let them lay aside that unreasonable and unjust Prejudice against our Church, of being Popishly affected, by ask themselves seriously, What Party of Dissenters did, or dared to speak or write against Popery a few years since, when they at the same time did apprehend it coming in like a Deluge? Nay, they rather then closed with, and are now fond of a Liberty of Conscience, whereby Popery is most probably to be promoted, and the Dissenters imposed on in their own Meetings by Popish Emissaries. It was (as must be confessed) the Church of England Men alone, who from their Pulpits and the Press, (as they had no Reason to be ashamed to own their Religion, so) were not afraid to defend it; and have shown that 'tis our Church which is the greatest Bulwark against Popery, by daring rather to suffer for it, than betray it, to arrive at the greatest Honours, or keep the grandest Privileges. And would our dissenting Brethren but unite with us, (which they have just cause to do) 'twould free them from the Trouble and Distracting of halting between divers Opinions; this would free the Nation and Church from Schism and Faction, cause both to enjoy peace, make us all happy at home, and formidable abroad: This would, in a word, prepare us for God's Spirit and its Graces in the Church, where all its Members were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Acts 2.1. of one mind, when the Holy Ghost descended on them, and would entitle both Church and State to God's protection, that the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against us. And therefore with the words of my Text, let Tongue and Heart of every one of us pray earnestly for, and let all our Endeavours be to the promoting of the Peace of our Jerusalem; and we need not doubt, but the God of Mercies, who ever took care of his Church amongst us, will grant us the gracious Answer of the next words, They shall prosper that love thee. To which, God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, Three Persons, and one God, be ascribed of us, and all the World, all Praise and Thanksgiving, now and evermore. Amen. FINIS.