.^r- i Sl~^^ ~^r -^ K t ^ ^ y^ « OF TUE Theological Seminary, PRINCETON, N.J. BV 4500 .T28 1835 Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667 Holy living and dying A DO NATION ^v(^it^^^:1^ Keceiued HOLY LIVING AND DYING; WITH PRAYERS: CONTAINING THE COMPLETE DUTY OF A CHRISTIAN. -/ BY JEREMY TAYLOR. TO WHICH IS PREFIXED A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR. THOMAS WARDLE, No. 15 MINOR STREET. STEREOTYPED BY L. JOHNSON. 1835. THE LIFE OF JEREMY TAYLOR, D. D. Jeremy Taylor, the. third son of Nathaniel Taylor, a barber-surgeon- at Cambridge, was born on the 15th of August, 1613. His family, -had formerly held a respect- able rank in Gloucestershire ; and he was lineally de- scended from Dr. Rowland Taylor, chaplain to Archbishop Cranmer, who suffered death at the stake, in the reign of Queen Mary. Jeremy Taylor was taught the rudiments of grammar and mathematics by his father, and in the Free-school at Cambridge he received further instruction. At the age of thirteen he was entered as a sizar of Caius College; and took his degree of master of arts, and was admitted into holy orders, in 1633. About this period he removed to London, having been engaged by a former chamber-fellow, of the name of Risden, to supply his place as lecturer of St. Paul's Cathedral for a short time. Here he preached, says Dr. Rust, " to the admiration and astonishment of his auditory, and by his florid and youth- ful beauty, and sweet and .pleasant air, and sublime and raised discourses, he made his hearers take him for some young angel newly descended from the visions of glory." Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, having heard the fame of Taylor's eloquence, was anxious to hear him, and sent for the young divine to preach before him at Lambeth. The archbishop was highly pleased with his discourse, but ob- served that he was too young for the office he was then filling in St. Paul's. Taylor " humbly begged his grace to pardon that fault, and promised if he lived he would mend it." Being chancellor of the University of Oxford, Laud was desirous that Taylor should remove thither, either be- cause he would be better enabled to advance him there, or, as Dr. Rust says, " to afford him better opportunities of study and improvement than a course of constant preach- ing would allow of." He complied with the chancellor's desire, and in 1635 was admitted master of arts in Uni- • 3 jy THE LIFE OF versity College. The following letter was written by Laud to the warden and fellows of A11-Squ1s College, three days after his admission. ''To the Warden and Fellows of All-Souts College, Oxford. Salutemin Christo. "These are on the behalf of an honest man and a scho- lar ; Mr. Osborn being to give over his fellowship, was with me at Lambeth, and, I- thank him, ffeely offered me the nomination of a scliolar to succeed in his place.' Now having seriously deliberated with, myself touching this bu- siness° and being willing ta recommend such an one to .you as you might thank me. for, 1 am resolved to pitch upon Mr. Jeremiah Taylor, of whose abilities and sufiiciencies every wavs I have received f ery good assurance. And I • do hereby heartily pr^y you to gire, him all furtherance, by yourself and the fellows, at the next election, not doubting but .that he wiM approve himself a worthy and learned member of your society. Ancl though he has had his breeding, for the most-part, in the otlier university, yet I hope that shall be no puejudice to him, in regard that he is incorporated into Oxford, {ut sit eodem qrdinc, g7'adu,(^-c.) and admitted into University College. ■ Neither can 1 learn that there is any thing in your local statutes against it. I doubt not but yt)U will use him with* so fair respects as be- fits a man of his rank and learning; for which I shall not fail to give you thanks. So Ijeave him to .your kindness, and rest ^ " Your loving friend, '^WILLIAM CANT." The following account- of Ihe proceedings on this elec- tion, is extracted from Ilebcr's Life of Taylor, prefixed to the complete edition of his Avorks. " What authority," says he, " Mr. Osborn can have had to dispose in this manner of the nomination' to a fellowship which he was.himself about to resign, or how he could un- dertake to influence an election in which he was to have no voice, is. not very easy to conjecture; "unless we sup- pose him to haiic' spoken the sentimenls of some other of his brethren, who may have desired to pay their visitor the unusual compliment of asking his opinion in the choice of a new member of the'society. The recommendation, how- ■ ever, forcible as it must, hate' been, was not received with JEREMY TAYLOR. V implicit deference, inasmuch as a reasonable doubt existed whether Taylor was strictly cli^nble. Wood, indeed, is wronjy in saying, he was above the age at which he might be chosen ; but the statutes arc express in requiring can- didates to be of three years' standing in the university, whereas ten days had, at the time of the election, barely (lapsed, since Taylor had been incorporated into Oxford. It is true, that Laud seems to have supposed that his ad- mission ad eimdem, as it entitled him to all the privileges of a master of arts, entitled him to whatever advantages were conferred by that standing in the university, which lie must have had in order to take his degree there regularly ; and a very great majority of the fellows, either convinced by this argument, or desirous of straining a point in favour of a candidate so deserving and so powerfully recommended, appear to have espoused his cause, and to have voted in the first instance for his admission. Sheldon, however, the warden, (afterward himself archbishop of Canterbury, and a munificent benefactor to the university,) less pliant or more scrupulous, refused to concur in the election. Under these circumstances, the fellows persisting in their choice, no election at all took place ; but the nomination devolved in due course to the archbishop, as visitor of the college, w^ho thus acquired the right of appointing 'I'aylor, by his sole authority, to the vacant situation, on the 14th of January, 1636."' According to Wood, his preaching at Oxford Avas greatly admired. He was, but at what particular time is not certain, made chaplain to the archbishop ; and in March, 1637-8, w^as presented to the rectory of Uppingham, in Rutlandshire, by Juxton, bishop of London. Taylor was now, to all appearance, settled in a situation of comfortable independence ; and soon afterward, in the 26th year of his age, he entered into a matrimonial alliance with Phoebe Langsdale. At the commencement of the struggle between Charles and his parliament, Taylor joined the king* at Oxford; where he published, in 1642, by his majesty's command, a treatise, entitled " Episcopacy asserted against the Ace- phali and Aerians, new and old ;" which was dedicated to * Previously to the termination of Charles's misfortunes, Taylor received from him, in token of his regard, his watch, and a few pearls and rubies, vliich had ornamented the ebony case in which he kept his Bible. n THE LIFE OF Christopher Hatton, his neighbour and patron ; he was admitted the same year, with many other loyalists, to the degree of Doctor of Divinity, by virtue of thft royal man- date. It was probably about this time, that his rectory of Uppingham was sequestered ; but the confusions which pre- vailed make it impossible to trace his history with certainty. From the Dedication to his " Liberty of Prophesying," it appears that he had sought a refuge from civil commo- tions in Wales. " In the great storm," says he, " which dashed the vessel of the church all in pieces, I had been cast on the coast of Wales, and in a little boat thought to have enjoyed that rest and quietness, which in England, in a far greater, I could not hope for. Here I cast anchor, and thinking to ride safely, the storm followed me with so impetuous violence, that it broke a cable, and I lost my anchor. And here again I was exposed to the mercy of the sea, and the gentleness of an element that could nei- ther distinguish things nor persons : and but that He that stilleth the raging of the sea, and the noise of his waves, and the madness of his people, had provided a plank for me, I had been lost to all the opportunities of content or study ; but I know not whether I have been more pre- served by the courtesies of my friends, or the gentleness and mercies of a noble enemy." According to Wood, he followed the royal army as chaplain; and, in 1644, was taken prisoner by the parliamentary forces which defeated Colonel Gerard before the Castle of Cardigan. How long he remained a prisoner does not appear, nor by what means he was released. This year, his edition of the Psalter, with collects to each psalm, appeared at Oxford, under the name of the right lionourable Christopher Hatton ; but the eighth and an en- larged edition having been published in Taylor's own name, in 1672, its authenticity is now generally acknowledged. About the same time he published anonymously, " A De- fence of the Liturgy," which he afterward expanded into a larger work. Taylor had now recourse to keeping a school, which he carried on in partnership with William Nicholson, afterward bishop of Gloucester, and William Wyat, subse- quently a prebendary of Lincoln, at Newton-hall, in the parish of Lanfihangel. The conductors of this establish- ment produced, in 1647, " A new and easy Institution of Grammar ;" and, in the same year, Taylor published his JEREMY TAYLOR. vii " Liberty of Prophesying," an admirable book, although composed under very disadvantageous circumstances. " I had," says he, in his dedication to Lord Hatton, "no books of my own here, nor any in the voisinage, and but that I remembered the result of some of those excellent discourses which I had heard your lordship make, when I was so happy as in private to gather up what your temperance and modesty forbids to be public, I had come in pra>lia inermis, and like enough might have fared accordingly." Taylor's first wife being dead, he had married for his second wife Mrs. Joanna Bridges, who was possessed of an estate at Mandinam, in Carmarthenshire. By this lady, who is said to have been an illegitimate daughter of Charles L he had several children. As he had engaged in the ofRce of a teacher for a subsistence, it is probable he relinquished it about this period, when it was no longer necessary. In 1648, he published "The Life of Christ, or the great Exemplar," which soon became more popular than any of his preceding compositions. This was succeeded by the well-known and useful w^ork to which this Life is prefixed — his " Holy Living and Holy Dying," composed at the desire of Lady Carbery, the wife of Richard Vaughan, earl of Carbery, a great friend and patron of the author, who resided at Golden Grove, in the same parish in which Taylor lived. He also composed a short Catechism for Children, and twenty-seven Sermons for the summer half- year. In addition to a controversial tract, on the differ- ences between the Roman Catholic and English churches, he, in 1654, extended his Catechism for Children into the manual, which he called " Golden Grove," in honour of the mansion of Lord Carbery. Some expressions in the Preface to this little work, gave offence to the government, and, as we learn from a letter of John Evelyn (who after- ward became a valuable friend of Taylor,) caused his com- mittal to prison. There is considerable obscurity about this event in Taylor's Life. Mr. Ileber conjectures, that he was a second time imprisoned for the same cause; a supposi- tion founded partly on a letter of Evelyn, and on the much stronger evidence of a letter of Taylor, published with his "/>ez/s Jusfijicatvs,^'' alluding to his then being a prisoner in Chepstow-castle. Of this second imprisonment no more is known than of the first, although it is apparent from his letter, that he was at his wife's house at Mandinam viii THE LIFE OF in November, 1655. Taylor, however, was not idle; hfe completed his series of Sermons for the whole year, by the addition of twenty-five Discourses, and also produced his "Unum Necessarium, or the Doctrine and Practice of Re- pentance, describing the Necessity of a strict, a holy, and a Christian Life, and rescued from popular Errors." In this discourse, Taylor's explication of the doctrine of ori- ginal sin, gave offence to his brethren of the church of England, as well as to the Calvinists ; and produced a con- troversy with a Calvinistic preacher of the name of Jeanes. An answer to this essay of Taylor was also publi&hed by John Gaule. Taylor, in a letter dated Feb. 22, 1656-7, and probably addressed to Evelyn, communicates the death of two of his sons, and his intention to be in London before Easter. Thither he accordingly went, and, according to Wood, offi- ciated in a private congregation of Episcopalians. His poverty, to which he so frequently alludes before this time, was now alleviated by a yearly pension settled upon him by his kind friend Evelyn — a proof of his friendship and generosity, which Taylor acknowledges in a letter of " most eloquent gratitude," dated 15th May, 1657. " To John Evelyn, Esquire. " HONOURED AND DEAR SIR, " A stranger came two nights since from you with a letter and a token, full of humanity and sweetness that was, and this of charity. I know it is more blessed to give than to receive, so neither can I envy that felicity of yours, not only that you can, but that you do give ; and as I rejoice in that mercy which daily makes decrees in heaven for my support and comfort, so I do most thankfully adore the goodness of God to you, whom he consigns to greater glo- ries by the ministeries of these graces. But, Sir, what am I, or what can I do, or what have I done, that you think 1 have, or can oblige you ? Sir, you are too kind to me, and oblige me not only beyond my merit, but beyond my mo- desty. I only can love you, and honour you, and pray for you ; and in all this I cannot say but that I am behindhand with you ; for I have found so great effluxes of all your worthiness and charities, that I am a debtor for your prayers, for the comfort of your letters, for the charity of your hand, JEREMY TAYLOR. ix and the affections of your heart. Sir, though you are be- yond the reach of my returns, and my services are very short of toucliing you, yet if it were possible for me to re- ceive any commands, the obeying of which might signify my great regards of you, Icouhl with somcTnore confidence converse with a person so obliging; but 1 am obliged, and ashamed, and unable to say so nmch as I would do, to re- present myself to be, " Honoured and dear Sir, " Your most affectionate, and obliged Friend and Servant, ."JER. TAYLOR." . At the commencement of the ensuing year Taylor was confined in the Tower, on account of the indiscretion of his publisher, who hud prefixed to his "Collection. of Offices," a print of Christ in "the attitude of prayer^ a species of re- presentation at that time considered as tending to idolatry, and prohibited by statute, under the pain of fine and im- prisonnient. We find him,, however, at Says Coiirt on the 25tli February following, so that his restraint was but of short duration. In June, 1658, Taylor left London, and removQ^ to Ireland, an alternate lectureship having been procured him in the town of Lisburii, by Edward, Earl of Conway, who possessed large, estates in the neighbourhood. He obtained letters of recommendation to several persons of rank and influence in. that kingdom, and a passport and protection under .the sign manual of Cromwell himself. Thus the scene of Taylor's usefulness was again changed. He fixed his residence near Portmore, the mansion of his new patron, a delightful neighbourhoodj to w^hich he Avas extremely partial. But his situation w:as insuflicient to raise him to independence, since Evelyn still continued to pay him his yearly pension.' Notwithstanding his se- cluded abode,, articles were exhibited against him, b/ a person named Tandy, to the Irish privy-council, as a dan- gerous and disaffected |)erson. That he had baptized a child with the sign of the cross, was the most important part of the charge ; but this occasioned the renewal of a report that he was inclined to Popery. A warrant w\is accordingly issued, and he was conveyed to Dublin in the mi.dst of w.inter : a severe illness was the consequence. Whether any punishment was inflicted upon him docs 1.10I X THE LIFE OF appear. After a Residence of about two years in Ireland, our author made a journey to London, probably for the purpose of seeing his Ductor Duhitantium through the press. On this work he had been long employed, its pro- gress he had re'garded with much solicitude, and on its completion he had founded his brightest hopes of renown and usefulness. But his expectations were not realized at the timiC of publication, nor has it become popular since. Compilations of this kind, in the Roman- Catholic church, no doubt suggested the usefulness of such a work; but times had altered t(5o much to render it necessary to Pro- testants, and Roman Catholics would have no Tecoiirse to the work of a heretic* Besides, with all its learning and acuteness, it does not possess that fervid eloquence and beauty of composition, which form the charm of his more .popular works. • This year (1660) also produced "The Worthy Commu- nicant," accompanied by his Sermon on the death of Sir George Dalstone. Taylor's journey to London was at a fortunate juncture ; his name appeared subscribed to the declaration of the loyalists, in London and its - vicinity, on the 24th April, and his merit was not overlooked on the restoration ; for he was appointed to the bishopric of Down and Connor, on the 6th of August ; and shortly after- ward was elected chancellor of the university of Dublin. He preached in the January following, on the consecra- tion of the two archbishops and ten bishops, — before the tv;o houses of parliament, on the 8th May, — and again before the. primate at his metropolitan visitation of Down and Connor. In February, in that year, he was made a member of the L'ish privy-council ; and in addition to his former diocess, was intrusted with the administration of the small adjacent one of Dromore, in April. Taylor discharged the duties of his episcopal function with great zeal, min- gled with charity, frequently inviting the puritanical clergy to friendly conferences, and endeavouring to soften down their prejudices against the established church by kindness and attention. " In answer to these advances," says Heber, " the pul- pits resounded with exhortations to stand by the covenant even unto blood : with bitter invectives against the episco- pal order, and against Taylor more particularly ; while the preachers entered into a new engagement among them- JEKEMV TAYLOR. xi selves, to speak with no liisliop, and to endure neither their government nor their pcri^ons ! The virtues and eloquence of Taylor, however, were not without eflect on the laity, who. were at the same time offended by the refusal of their pastors to attend a public conference. The nobility and gentry of the three dioceses, with one single exception, came over by degrees to the bishop's side : and we are even assured by Carte, that during the two years which in- tervened before the enforcement of the Act of Uniformity, the great mnjority of the ministers themselves had yielded, if not to his argument, to his persevering kindness and Christian example." Besides the sermons above alluded to, he published, in 1661, a small manual of rules for his clergy — in 1662, his Via IiitelligencicE — in 1663, "A -Defence and Introduction to the rite of Confirmation," and three sermons — and in the succeeding year, his " Dissuasive, from Popery," which was undertaken by the desire of the collective body of Irish bishops, and was, the last of his publications; but he had written a " Discourse on Christian Consolation," and " Con- templations on the State of Man," which were both pub- lished after his death. This event took place on the 13th August, 1667, after ten days' sickness, in the fifty-fifth year of his age, and the seventh of his episcopacy ; he was buried at Dromore where his friend Dr. Rust preached his funeral sermon. Taylor's sons died during *his life- time, but his widow and three daughters survived him : the eldest tlied unmarried; the second, Mary, married Dr. Francis Marsh, afterward archbishop of Dublin, whose descendants are numerous and wealthy; and the third, Joanna, married Edward Harrison, of Maralave, Esq. several of whose descendants are still living. Jeremy Taylor, presents as fine a pattern of a Christian bishop as the annals of the church of England afford. His fine, though ardent temper, his bland and gentle man- ners, his deep humility, and unbounded charity, were united with extensive learning, an acute and vigorous mind, and a free and excursive spirit of inquiry in the pursuit of truth. " Nature," says his friend Dr. Rust, " had be- friended him much in his constitution ; for he was a per- son of a most sweet and obliging humour, of great candour and ingenuity ; and there was so much of salt and fineness of wit, and prettiness of address in his familiar discourses, Xii THE LIFE OF JEREMY TAYLOR. as made his conversation have all the pleasantness of i comedy, and all the usefulness of a sermon ; his soul was made up of harmony, and he never spake but he charmed hig hearers, not only with the clearness of his reason, but all his words, and his very, tones and cadences, were strangely musical." He was equally amiable in domestic life, as ap- pears from the manner in which he speaks of the death of his sons, and his frequent allusions to domestic happiness. His kind heart is eloquently exhibited in the following passage, extracted from his sermon called ".The Marriage King." " Nothing," he says, " can sweeten felicity itself but love ; but when a man dwells in love tlien the breasts of his wife are pleasant as the droppings on the hill of Hermon, her eyes are fair as the light of heaven ; she is a fountain sealed, and he can quench his thirst, and east his cares, and lay his sorrows down upon her lap, and can retire home to his sanctuary and refectory, and his gardens of sweetness and chaste refreshments. No man can tell, but he that loves his children, how many delicious accents make a man's heart dance in the pretty conversation of those dear pledges — their childishness, their stammering, their little angers, their innocence, their imperfections, their necessities, are so many little emanations of joy and comfort, to him that delights in their person and society." Few have been so anxious to extend, their sphere of use- fulness,' and few have obtained so much success in their endeavours as Taylor. Though belonging to an ecclesias- tical establishment, and naturally desirous not to differ from its canons ; yet where truth required it, he shook off the trammels of authority, and boldly stated his views and opinions to the world. To his heterodoxy oil the subject of original sin, we have before adverted. Our warmest gratitude is due to him for the principles of toleration which he advocated in his " Liberty of Prophesying," and which established the right of every sect to freedom of conscience ; he, indeed, claims toleratioii for those only who acknowledge the Apostles' creed, which he lays down as the rule of faith ; but his arguments are of general ap- plication : and the whole spirit of the work is in favour of universal toleration. % CONTENTS. THE RULE AND EXERCISES OF HOLY LIVING. DeDICATIOiN - PAGE, XX i CHAP. I. — Consideration of the Generallnstruments and Means serving to a Holy Life, by way of Introduction- Sect. I. — The first General Instrument of Holy Living, Care of our l^ime -.-.....7 Rules for employing our Time ...... 9 The benefits of this Exercise - - - . . - L5 Sect. II. — The second General Instrument of Holy Living, Purity of Intention - - - - - - - -16 Rules for our Intentions - - - - . - - 17 Signs of Purity of Intention .......19 Sect. III. — The third General Instrument of Holy Living; or the Practice of the Presence of God 23 Several manners of tlie Divine Presence - - - - 24 Rules of exercising this Consideration - - - - - 27 The benefits of this Exercise 29 Prayers and Devotions according to the Religion and Purposes of the foregoing Considerations ...... 31 For Grace to spend our Time well - - - - - -lb. The first Prayers in the Morning, as soon as we are dressed . ib. An Act of Adoration, being the Song that the Angels sing in Heaven 32 An Act of Thanksgiving, being the Song of David for the Morning ib. An Act of Oblation, or presenting ourselves to God for the Day - 33 An Act of Repentance or Contrition - . . . ib. Prayer or Petition . . - ----- ib. An Act of Intercession or Prayer for others, to be added to this, or any other Office, as our Devotion, or Duty, or their Needs shall determine us 34 For the Church ib. For the King - - - - - ib. For the Clergy ib. For Wife or Husband 35 For our Children ib. For Friends and Benefactors ih. For oiir Family . . - ib. For all in misery .........j5. Another Form of Prayer, for the Morning - - . - 36 An Ejaculation 38 An Exercise to be used at any Time of the Day - - - ib. Hymn, collected out of the Psalms, recounting the Excellences and Greatness of God ib. Another Hymn 39 Ejaculations ib. Prayer ..... .....40 B i^^^f CONTENTS. A Form of Prayer for the Evening, to be said by such who have no Time or Opportunity to say the public Prayers ap- pointed for this Office 41 Another Form of Evening Prayer, which may also be used at Bed-time 43 Ejaculations and short Meditations to be used in the Night, when we wake, - - 44 . Ad Sect. II.] A Prayer for Holy Intention in the Beginning and jH|- Pursuit of any considerable Action, as Study ,Preaching,&c. 46 ' ^ Ad Sect. III.] A Prayer meditating and referring to the Divine Presence .....-.--ib. ^ CHAP. II.— 0/ Christian Sobriety. Sect. I. — Of Sobriety in the general Sense - - - - 47 Evil Consequences of Voluptuousness or Sensuality - - - ib. Degrees ox" Sobriety 48 Rules for Suppressing Voluptuousness 49 Sect. II. — Of Temperance in Eating and Drinking - - - 51 Measures of Temperance in Eating 52 Signs and Effects of Temperance 53 Of Drunkenness - 54 Evil Consequents of Drunkenness 55 Signs of Drunkenness 57 Rules for obtaining Temperance ib. Sect. III.— Of Chastity 59 The Evil Consequents of Uncleanness 62 Acts of Chastity in general 65 Acts of Virginal Chastity - - 66 Rules for Widows, or vidual Chastity - - - ' - - 67 Rules for married Persons, or Matrimonial Chastity - - - ^8 Remedies against Uncleanness 70 Sect. IV.— Of Humility ....... 73 Arguments against Pride, by way of Consideration - - - J,'^ Acts or Offices of Humility - ' , ' ." " ' • "^^ Means and Exercises ibr obtaining and increasing the Grace of Humility 80 Signs of Humility ...---.-- 85 Sect. V.— Of Modesty - . - 86 Acts and Duties of Modesty, as it is opposed to Curiosity - - ib. Acts of Modesty, as it is opposed to Boldness - - - - 89 Acts of Modesty, as it is opposed to Indecency - - - 90 Sect. VI.— Of Contentedness in all Estates and Accidents - 92 Instruments or Exercises to procure Contentedness - - - 96 Means to obtain Content, by way of Considerations - - - 106 Poverty, or a low Fortune -Ill The Charge of many Children 116 Violent Necessities 117 Death of Children, or nearest relatives and Friends - - -118 Untimely Death 119 Death unseasonable 120 Sudden Death, or violent 121 Being Childless - - - - - 122 Evil or Unfortunate Children ib. CONTENTS. XV Our own Death 122 Prayers for the several Graces and Parts of Cliristian Sobriety 123 A Prayer against Sensuality ..-.--- ib. For Tcmperanco ......... ib. For Ciiastity : to be said especially by unmarried Persons - 124 A Prayer for tlie Love of God, to bo said by Virgins and Widows, professed or resolved so to live; and may be used by any one ib. A Prayer to be said by married Persons in behalf of themselves and each other 125 A Prayer for the Grace of Humility ib. Acts of Humility and Modesty, by way of Prayer and Meditation 126 A Prayer for a contented Spirit, and the Grace of Moderation and Patience 127 CHAP. III.— 0/ Christian Justice. Sect. I. — Of Obedience to our Superiors 128 Acts and Duties of Obedience to all our Superiors - - -129 Remedies against Disobedience, and Means to endear our Obe- dience, by way of Consideration 132 Degrees of Obedience 135 Sect. II. — Of Provision, or that Part of Justice which is due from Superiors to Inferiors 136 Duties of Kings, and all the Supreme Power as Lawgivers - ib. The duty of Superiors, as they are Judges .... 139 Tlie Duty of Parents to their Children 140 Rules for married Persons 141 The Duty of Masters of Families 142 The Duty of Guardians or Tutors -143 Sect. III. — Of Negotiation, or Civil Contracts - - - - ib. Rules and Measures of Justice in Bargaining - - - - ib. Sect. IV.— Of Restitution 147 Rules of making Restitution 148 Prayers to be said in relation to the several Obligations and Of- fices of Justice ..-..--. 153 A Prayer for the Grace of Obedience, to be said by all Persons under Command ib. Prayers for Kings and all Magistrates, for our Parents, spiritual and natural, are in the following Litanies, at the end of the Fourtli Chapter ib. A Prayer to be said by Subjects, when their land is invaded and over-run by barbarous or wicked People, Enemies of the Religion or the Government 154 A Prayer to be said by Kings or Magistrates, for themselves and their people 155 A Prayer to be said by Parents for their Children - - - 156 A Prayer to be said by Masters of Families, Curates, Tutors, or other obliged Persons, for their Charges - - - 157 A Prayer to be said by Merchants, Tradesmen, and Handicrafts- men ib. A Prayer to be said by Debtors, and all Persons obliged, whether by Crime or Contract ....... 158 A Prayer for Patron and Benefactors it^. XVI CONTENTS. CHAP. IV.— 0/ Christian Religion. Of the Internal Actions of Religion 159 Sect. I.— Of Faith 160 The Acts and Offices of Faith ib. Signs of True Faith 161 The Means and Instruments to obtain Faith .... 163 Sect. II. — Of the Hope of a Christian ..... 165 The Acts of Hope ib. Rules to govern our Hope ....... 166 Means of Hope, and Remedies against Despair ... 168 Sect. III.— Of Charity, or the Love of God, . - - -172 The Acts of Love to God 173 The Measures and Rules of Divine Love 175 Helps to increase our Love to God, by way of Exercise . - 176 The two States of Love to God 178 Cautions and Rules concerning Zeal - - . - .179 Of the External Actions of Religion 181 Sect. IV.— Of Reading or Hearing tlie Word of God - .182 Rules for Hearing or Reading the Word of God ... 183 Advice concerning Spiritual Books and Ordinary Sermons . 184 Sect. V.— Of Fasting 185 Rules for Christian Fasting 186 The Benefits of Fasting 190 Sect. VI. — Of keeping Festivals, and Days holy to the Lord; par. ticularly the Lord's Day ib. Receiving the blessed Sacrament 192 Sect. VII.— Of Prayer 196 Motives to Prayer - ib. Rules for the Practice of Prayer 197 Cautions for making vows ....... 203 Remedies against wandering Thoughts in Prayer ... 204 Signs of Tediousness of Spirit in our Prayers and all Actions of Religion 205 Remedies against Tediousness of Spirit ..... 206 Sect. VIII.— Of Alms - -_ 210 Works of Mercy, or the several kinds of Corporeal Alms - - 211 Works of Spiritual Alms and Mercy ib. Rules for giving Alms 212 Motives to Charity 218 Remedies against Unmercifulness and Uncharitableness - - 220 1. Against Envy, by way of Consideration - . . . ib. 2. Remedies against Anger, by way of Exercise ... 221 Remedies against Anger, by way of Consideration - - 224 3. Remedies against Covetousness, the third Enemy of Mercy - 226 Sect. IX.— Of Repentance 231 Acts and Parts of Repentance . 233 Motives to Repentance 239 Sect. X. — Of Preparation to, and the Manner how to receive the Holy Sacrament of the Lord's Supper .... 241 The Effects and Benefits of worthy Communicating . . - 248 Prayers for all Sorts of Men and all Necessities ; relating to the several Parts of the Virtue of Religion .... 249 A Prayer for the Graces of Faith, Hope, Charity - - . 250 CONTENTS. XVli Acts of Love, by way of Prayer and Ejaculation ; to be used in Private ,250 A Prayer to be said in any affliction, as Death of Children, of Husband or Wife, in g-rcat Poverty, in Iiiiprisonnient, in a sad and disconsolate Spirit, and in temptation to Despair 25 1 Ejaculations and short Meditations to be used in Time of Sick- ness and Sorrow, or Dang-cr of Death .... 252 An Act of Faith concerninfr the Resurrection and the Day of Judgment, to be said by Sick Persons, or meditated - 253 Short Prayers to be said by Sick Persons - - - - - ib. Acts of Hope, to be used by Sick Persons after a Pious Life - 256 A Prayer to be said in behalf of a Sick or Dying Person - - ib. A Prayer to be said in a Storm at Sea ..... 257 An Act of Resignation ........ 258 A Form of a Vow in the Time of Danger - - . . ib. A. Form of a Prayer to be used for a Blessing on an Enterprise ib. ^\ Prayer before a Journey ....... ib. \d Sect. IV.] A Prayer to be said before the Hearing or Reading the Word of God 259 A.D Sect. V. IX. X.] A Form of Confession of Sins and Repent, ance, to be used upon Fasting Days, or Days of Humilia. tion ; especially in Lent, and before the Holy Sacrament ib. Prayer 262 ."!.] Ex Liturgia S. Basilii magna ex parte .... 263 A short Form of Thanksgiving to be said upon any special Deli- verance, as from Childbirth, from Sickness, from Battle, or imminent Danger at Sea or Land, &c. ... 267 A Prayer of Thanksgiving after the receiving of some great Blessing, as the Birth of an Heir, the Success of an honest Design, a Victory, a good Harvest, &c. .... 269 A Prayer to be said on the Feast of Christmas, or the Birth of our Blessed Saviour Jesus : the same also may be said on the Feast of the Annunciation and Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary 270 A Prayer to be said upon our Birth-day, or Day of Baptism - 271 A Prayer to be said upon the Days of the Memory of Apostles, Martyrs, &c 272 A Form of Prayer recording all the Parts and Mysteries of Christ's Passion, being a short History of it : to be used especially in the ^Veek of the Passion, and before the re- ceiving of the Blessed Sacrament ib. Prayer 276 Ad Sect. VII. VIII. X.] A Form of Prayer or Intercession for all Estates of People in the Christian Church. The Parts of which may be added to any other Forms ; and the whole Office, entirely as it lies, is proper to be said in our Prepa- ration to the Holy Sacrament, or on the Day of Celebration ib, 1. For Ourselves 277 2. For the whole Catholic Church ib. 3. For all Christian Kings, Princes, and Governors . . . ib- 4. For all the Orders of them that minister about holy Things 278 5. For our nearest Relatives, as Husband, Wife, Children, Fa- mily, &.C . . . ib. b3 XVlll CONTENTS. 6. For our Parents, our Kindred in tiie Flesh, our Friends and Benefactors -- 279 7. For all that lie under the Rod of War, Famine, Pestilence : to be said in the time of Plague, or War, &c. - - . 279 8. For all Women with Child, and for Unborn CJiildren - - 280 d. For all Estates of Men and Women in the Christian Church - ib. Ad Sect. X.] The Manner of using- these Devotions, by way of Preparation to the receiving the blessed Sacrament of the Lord's Supper - - 282 A Prayer of Preparation or Address to the holy Sacrament - ib. An Act of Love - . ib. An Act of Desire - 183 An Act of Contrition - . ib. An Act of Faith ib. Petition .... 284 Ejaculations to be said before, or at, the receiving of the holy Sa- crament ib. Ejaculations to be used any time that Day, after the Solemnity is ended ... 287 THE RULES AND EXERCISES OF HOLY DYING. CHAP. I. — A general Preparation towards a holy and blessed Death, by way of Consideration. Sect. I. — Consideration of the Vanity and Shortness of Man's Life 13 Sect. II. — The Consideration reduced to Practice - - - 14 Sect. III. — Rules and Spiritual Arts of lengthening our Days, and to take off the Objection of a Short Life . • - 25 Sect. IV. — Consideration of the Miseries of Man's Life - - 34 Sect. V. — The Consideration reduced to Practice . . - 39 CHAP. II. — A general Preparation towards a holy and blessed Death, by way of Exercise. Sect. I. — Three Precepts preparatory to a holy Death, to be prac- tised in our whole Life 42 Sect. II. — Of Daily Examination of our Actions in the whole Course of our Health, preparatory to our Death-bed - 47 Reasons for a Daily Examination ib. The Benefits of this Exercise 49 Sect. III. — Of Exercising Charity during our whole Life - 54 Sect. IV. — General Considerations to enforce the former Practices 57 The Circumstances of a Dying Man's Sorrow and Danger - 58 CHAP. III. — Of the State of Sickness, and the Temptations inci- dent to it, with their proper Remedies Sect. I.— Of the State of Sickness 61 Sect. II, — Of the first Temptation proper to the State of Sickness, Impatience .- 64 Sect. III. — Constituent or integral Parts of Patience . - . 66 Sect. IV. — Remedies against Impatience, by Vv'ay of Consideration 67 CONTENTS. XIX PAGE. Sect. V. — Remedies against Impatience, by way of Exercise - 74 Sect. VI. — Advantages of Sickness - - . - - 79 Sect. VII. — The second Temptation proper to the State of Sick- ness, Fear of Death, with its remedies - - - - 92 Remedies against the Fear of Death, by way of Consideration - 93 Sect. VIII. — Remedies against the Fear of Death, by way of Exercise 97 Sect. IX. — General Rules and Exercises whereby our Sickness may become safe and sanctified 103 CHAP. IV.— 0/ the Practice of the Graces proper to the State of Sickness, which a Sick Man may practice alone. Sect. I. — Of the Practice of Patience Ill The Practice and Acts of Patience, by way of Rule ... 112 Sect. II. — Acts of Patience, by way of Prayer and Ejaculation - 118 The Prayer to be said in the Beginning of a Sickness - . 122 An Act of Resignation, to be said by a Sick Person in all the evil Accidents of his Sickness ...... 123 A Prayer for the Grace of Patience . - . . . -124 A Prayer to be said when the Sick Man takes Physic - . 125 Sect. III. — Of the Practice of the Grace of Faith, in the Time of Sickness .........ib Sect. IV. — Acts of Faith, by way of Prayer and Ejaculation, to be said by Sick Men in the Days of their Temptation . 129 The Prayer for the Grace and Strengths of Faith - . .131 Sect. V. — Of the Practice of the Grace of Repentance in the Time ofSickness 132 Sect. VI. — Rules for the Practice of Repentance in Sickness - 136 Means of exciting Contrition, or Repentance of Sins, proceeding from the Love of God 139 Sect. VII. — Acts of Repentance, by way of Prayer and Ejacula- tion, to be used especially by Old Men in their Age, and by all Men in their sickness 144 A Prayer for the Grace and Perfection of Repentance - - 145 A Prayer for Pardon of Sins, to be said frequently in Time of Sickness, and in all the Portions of Old Age . - - 147 An Act of holy Resolution of Amendment of Life, in case of Re- covery 148 Sect. VIII. — An Analysis, or Resolution of the Decalogue, anJ the special Precepts of the Gospel, describing the Duties enjoined and the Sins forbidden respectively ; for the As. sistance of Sick Men in making their Confessions to God and his Ministers, and the rendering their Repentance more particular and perfect .... . 149 I. Comm. Thou shalt have none other Gods but me . - . ib. II. Comm. Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven Image, nor worship it 151 III. Comm. Thou shalt not take God's Name in vain - . ib. IV. Comm. Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath Day . 152 V. Comm. Honour thy Father and thy Mother - . . 153 VI. Comm. Thou shalt do no IMurder 154 VII. Comm. Thou shalt not commit Adultery - - - . ib. VIII. Comm. Thou slialt not Steal 155 XX CONTENTS. PAGB. IX. Cornm. Thou shalt not bear False Witness - . - ib. X. Comni. Thou shalt not Covet 156 The special Precepts of the Gospel 157 Sect. IX, — Of the Sick Man's Practice of Charity and Justice, by way of Rule - - ]59 Sect. X. — Acts of Charity, by way of Prayer and Ejaculation; which may also be used for Thanksgiving, in case of Re- covery 163 Prayer 165 CHAP. V. — Of Visitation of the Sick : or the Assistance that is to be done to Dying Persons by the Ministry of their Clergy-guides. Sect. I. — General Observations ...... 166 Sect. II. — Rules for the Manner of Visitation of Sick Persons - 168 Sect. III. — Of Ministering in tlie Sick Man's Confession of Sins and Repentance - -- 171 Arguments and Exhortations to move the Sick Man to Confession ofSins 172 Instruments by way of Consideration, to awaken a careless Per- son, and a stupid Conscience ..... 175 Sect. IV. — Of the ministering to the Restitution and Pardon, or Reconciliation of the Sick Person, by administering the Holy Sacrament 183 Sect. V. — Of ministering to the Sick Person by the Spiritual Man, as he is the Physician of Souls ..... 193 Considerations agaiiist unreasonable Fears of not having our Sins pardoned ......... ib. An Exercise against Despair in the Day of our Death - . 200 Sect. VI. — Considerations against Presumption ... 205 Sect. VII. — Offices to be said by the Minister, in his Visitation of the Sick 208 A Prayer to be said by the Priest secretly - - - - ib. A Psalm 209 Another Prayer ib. A Prayer to be said by the Standers-by 212 Another Prayer - - 214 Ejaculations 215 The Blessing 216 The Doxology ib. A Prayer to be said in the Case of a sudden Surprise by Death, as by a mortal Wound, or evil accidents in Childbirth, when the Forms and Solemnities of Preparation cannot be used 217 Sect. VIII. — A Peroration concerning the Contingencies and Treat ings of our departed Friends after Death, in order to their Burial, &c 218 TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE AND TRULY NOBLE RIGHARD LORD VAUGHAN, EARL OF CARBERY, KNIGHT OF THE HONOURABLE ORDER OF THE BATH. My Lord,— I have lived to see religion painted upon banners, and thrust out of churches, and the temple turned into a tabernacle, and that tabernacle made ambulatory, and covered with skins of beasts and torn curtains, and God to be worshipped, not as he is " the Father of our Lord Jesus" (an afflicted prince, the king of sufferings,) nor as the " God of peace," (which two appella- tives God newly took upon him in the New Testament, and glories in it for ever :) but he is owned now^ rather as " the Lord of Hosts," w hich title he was pleased to lay aside, when the kingdom of the gospel was preached by the Prince of peace. But when religion puts on armour, and God is not acknow- ledged by his New Testament titles, religion may have in it the power of the sword, but not the power of godliness ; and we may complain of this to God, and amongst them that are afflicted, but we have no remedy, but what we must expect from the fellowship of Christ's sufferings, and the returns of the God of peace. In the mean time, and now that religion pretends to stranger actions upon new principles, and men are apt to prefer a pros- perous error before an afflicted truth, and some will think they are religious enough, if their worshippings have in them the prevailing ingredient ; and the ministers of religion are so scattered, that they cannot unite to stop the inundation, and from chairs or pulpits, from their synods or tribunals, chastise the iniquity of the error, and the ambition of evil guides, and the infidelity of the willingly-seduced multitude, and that those few^ good people, who have no other plot in their religion but to serve God and save their souls, do want such assistance of ghostly counsel as may serve their emergent needs, and assist their endeavours in the acquist of virtues, and relieve their dangers, when they are tempted to sin and death ; I thought I had reasons enough inviting me to draw into one body those advices, which the several neces- sities of many men must use at some time or other, and many of them daily ; that by a collection of holy precepts they might less feel the want of per- sonal and attending guides, and that the rules for conduct of souls might be committed to a book, which they might alw ays have ; since they could not always have a prophet at their needs, nor be suffered to go up to the house of the Lord to inquire of the appointed oracles. I know, my Lord, that there are some interested persons, who add scoru lo the afflictions of the church of England, and because she is afflicted by men, call her " forsaken of the Lord ;" and because her solemn assemblies are scattered, think that the religion is lost, and the church divorced from God, supposing Christ (who was a man of sorrows) to be angry with his spouse when she is like him [for that is the true state of the error,] and that he, who promised his Spirit to assist his servants in their troubles, will, be- cause they are in trouble, take away the Comforter from them ; who cannot be a comforter, but while he cures our sadnesses, and relieves our sorrows, and turns our persecutions into joys, and crowns, and sceptres. But concern- ing the present state of the church of England, I consider, that because we now want the blessings of external communion in many degrees, and the circumstances of a prosperous and unafflicted people, we are to take estimate of ourselves with single judgments, and every man is to give sentence concernina; the state of his own soul by the precepts and rules of " C 1 u DEDICATION. our lawgiver, not by the after-decrees and usages of the church ; that is, by the essential parts of religion, rather than by the uncertain significations ot any exterior adherences : for though it be uncertain, when a man is the member of a church, whether he be a member to Christ or no, because in the church's net there are fishes good and bad ; yet we may be sure, that, if we be members of Christ, we are of a church to all purposes of spiritual rehgion and salvation; and in order to this, give me leave to speak this great truth. That man does certainly belong to God, who, 1. Believes and is baptized into all the articles of the Christian faith, and studies to improve his know- ledge in the matters of God, so as may best make him to live a holy life. 2. He that, in obedience to Christ, worships God diligentlj', frequently, and constantly, with natural religion, thatis, of prayer, praises, and thanksgiving. 3. He that takes all opportunities to remember Christ's death by a frequent sacrament (as it can be had :) or else by inward acts of understanding, will, and memory (which is the spiritual communion,) supplies the want of the external rite. 4. He that lives chastely; 5. And is merciful ; 6. And despises the world, using it as a man, but never suflfering it to rifle a duty ; 7. And is just in his dealing and diligent in his calling. 8. He that is humble in his spirit, 9. And obedient to government, 10. And content in his fortune and employment. 11. He that does his duty because he loves God; 12. And especially, if, after all this, he be aflHlicted, and patient, or prepared to suffer affliction for the cause of God : the man that hath these twelve signs of grace and predestination, does as certainly belong to God, and is his son, as surely as he is his creature. And if my brethren in persecution, and in the bonds of the Lord Jesus, can truly show these marks, they shall not need be troubled, that others can show a prosperous outside, great revenues, public assemblies, uninterrupted successions of bishops, prevailing armies, or any arm of flesh, or less certain circumstance. These are marks of the Lord Jesus, and the characters of a Christian : this is a good religion ; and these things God's grace hath put into our powers, and God's laws have made to be our duty, and the nature of men, and the needs of commonwealths, have made to be necessary. The otiier accidents and pomps of a church are things without our power, and are not in our choice ; they are good to be used, when they may be had, and they help to illustrate or advantage it : but if any of them constitute a church in the being of a society and a govenunent, yet they are not of its constitution, as it is Christian, and hopes to be saved. And now the case is so with us, that we are reduced to that religion, which no man can forbid ; which we can keep in the midst of a persecution ; by which the martyrs, in the days of our fathers, went to heaven; that, by which we can be servants of God, and receive the Spirit of Christ, and make use of his comforts, and live in his love, and in charity with all men : and they that do so, cannot perish. My Lord. I have now described some general lines and features of that religion, which I have more particularly set down in the following pages: in which I have neither served nor disserved the interest of any party of Christians, as they are divided by uncharitable names from the rest of their brethren: and no man will have reason to be angry with me for refu.sing to mingle m his umiecessary or vicious quarrels ; especially while I study to do him good by conducting him in the narrow way to heaven, without intricating him in the labyrinths and wild turning of questions and uncertain talkings. I have told what men ought to do, and by what means they may l>e assisted ; and in most cases, I have also told them why : and yet with aa much quickness, as I could think necessary to establish a rule, and not to engage in homily or discourse. In the use of which rules, although they are pla'n, useful, and fitted for the best and worst understandings, and for the nerds of all men, yet I shall desire the reader to proceed with the fol- lowing advices. DEDICATION. iii 1. They that will with profit make use of the proper instruments of virtue, must so live, as if they were always under the physician's hand. I'or the counsels of religion are not to be appHed to the distempers of tlie soul, as men used to take hellebore ; but they must dwell together with the spirit of a man, and be twisted about his understanding for ever: they must be used like nourishment, that is, by a daily care and meditation ; not like a single medicine, and upon the actual pressure of a present necessity. Vor counsels and wise discourses, applied to an actual distemper, at the best are but like strong smells to an epileptic person; sometimes they may raise him, but they never cure him. The following rules, if they be made familiar to our natures and the thoughts of every day, may make virtue and religion become easy and habitual ; but w hen the temptation is present, and hath already seized ujwn some portions of our consent, we are not so apt to be counselled, and we lind no gust or relish in the precept ; the lessons are the same, but the instrument is unstrung or out of tune. 2. In using the instruments of virtue, we must be curious to distinguish instruments from duties, and prudent advices from necessary injunctions ; and if by any other means the duty can be secured, let there be no scniples stirred concerning any other helps : only, if they can, in that case, strengthen and secure the duty, or help towards perseverance, let them serve in that station in which they can be placed. For there are some persons, in whom the Spirit of God hath breathed so bright a flame of love, that they do all their acts of virtue by perfect choice and without objection, and their zeal is w-armer, than tiiat it will be allayed by temptation : and to such persons mortification by philosophical instruments, as fasting, sackloth, and other rudenesses to the body, is wholly useless ; it is always a more uncertain means to acquire any virtue, or secure any duty ; and if love hath filled all the corners of our soul, it alone is able to do all the work of God. 3. Be not nice in stating the obligations of religion ; but where the duty is necessary, and the means very reasonable in itself, dispute not too busily, whether, in all circumstances, it can fit thy particular ; but "super totam materiam," upon the whole, make use of it. For it is a good sign of a great religion, and no imprudence, when we have sufficiently considered the substance of aflairs, then to be easy, humble, obedient, apt, and credulous in the circumstances, which are appointed to us, in particular, by our spiritual guides ; or, in general, by all wise men in cases not unlike. He that gives alms, does best not always to consider the minutes and strict measures of his ability, but to give freely, incuriously, and abundantly. A man must not weigh grains in the accounts of his repentance ; but for a great sin have a great sorrow, and a great severity, and in this take the ordinary advices ; though, it may be, a less rigour might not be insufficient : uy.eiHoSiy.xiov, or arithmetical measures, especially of our own proportioning, are but argu- ments of want of love and of forwardness in religion; or else are instruments of scruple, and then become dangerous. Use the rule heartily and enough, and there will be no harm in thy error, if any should happen. 4. If thou intendest heartily to serve God, and avoid sin in any one in- stance, refuse not the hardest and most severe advice, that is prescribed in order to it, though possibly it be a stranger to thee ; for whatsoever it be, custom will make it easy. 5. When many instruments for the obtaining any virtue, or restraining any vice, are propounded, observe which of them fits thy person, or the circumstances of thy need, and use it rather than the other ; that by this means thou mayest be engaged to watch, and use spiritual arts and observa- tion about thy soul. Concerning the managing of which, as the interest is greater, so the necessities are more, and the cases more intricate, and the accidents and dangers greater and more importunate ; and there is greater skill required, than in the securing an estate, or restoring health to an infirm JDody. I wish all men in the world did heartily believe so much of this, as is true ; it would very much help to do the work of God. IV DEDICATION. Thus, my Lord, I have made bold by your hand to reach out this little scroll of cautions to all those, who, by seeing your honoured names set be- fore my book, shall, by the fairness of such a frontispiece, be invited to look into it. I must confess, it cannot but look like a design in me, to borrow your name and beg your patronage to my book, that, if there be no other worth in it, yet at least it may have the splendour and warmth of a burning- glass, which, borrowing a flame from the eye of Heaven, sliines and bums by the rays of the sun its patron. I will not quit myself from the suspicion : for I cannot pretend it to be a present either of itself fit to be offered to such a personage, or any part of a just return ; but I humbly desire, you would own it for an acknowledgment of those great endearments and noblest usages, you have past upon me : but so, men in their religion give a piece of gum, or the fat of a cheap lamb, in sacrifice to Him, that gives them all that they have or need : and unless He, who was pleased to employ your Lord- ship, as a great minister of his providence, in making a promise of his good to me, the meanest of his servants, " that he would never leave me nor forsake me," shall enable me, by greater services of religion, to pay my great debt to your honour, I must still increase my score ; since I shall now spend as much in my needs of pardon for this boldness, as in the reception of those favours, by which I stand accountable to your Lordship in all the bands of service and gratitude; though I am, in the deepest sense of duty and affec- tion, my most honoured Lord, your Honour's most obliged and most humble Servant, JER. TAYLOR. THE RULE AND EXERCISES OF HOLY LIVING, &c. CHAPTER I. CONSIDERATION OF THE GENERAL INSTRUMENTS AND MEANS SERVING TO A HOLY LIFE, BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION. . IT is necessary, that every man should consider, that, since God hath given him an excellent nature, wisdom, and choice, an understanding soul, and an immortal spirit, having made him lord over the beasts, and but a little lower than the angels ; he hath also appointed for him a work and a service great enough to employ those abilities, and hath also designed him to a state of life after this, to which he can only arrive by that service and obedience. And therefore, as every man is wholly God's own portion by the title of creation, so all our labours and care, all our powers and faculties, must be wholly employed in the service of God, even all the days of our life ; that, this life being ended, we may live with him for ever. Neither is it sufficient that we think of the service of God as a work of the least necessity, or of small employ- ment, but that it be done by us as God intended it ; that it be done with great earnestness and passion, with much zeal and desire ; that we refuse no labour : that we bestow upon it much time ; that we use the best guides, and arrive at the end of glory by all the ways of grace, of prudence, and religion. And indeed, if we consider how much of our lives is taken up by the needs of nature; how many years are wholly spent, before we come to any use of reason : how many years more, before that reason is useful to us to any great purposes; how imperfect our discourse is made bv c 2 5 ■ 6 INTRODUCTION TO HOLY LIFE. our evil education, false principles, ill company, bad exam- ples, and want of experience ; liow many parts of our wisest and best years are spent in eating and sleeping, in necessary businesses and unnecessary vanities, m worldly civilities and less useful circumstances, in the learning arts and sciences, languages or trades ; that little portion of hours, that is left for the practice of piety and religious walking with God, is so short and trifling, that, were not the goodness of God infinitely great, it might seem unrea- sonable or impossible for us to expect of him eternal joys in heaven, even after the well spending those few minutes, which are left for God and God's service, after we have served ourselves and our own occasions. And yet it is considerable, that the fruit, which comes from the many days of recreation and vanity, is very little ; and, although we scatter much, yet we gather but little profit : but from the few hours we spend in prayer and tho exercises of a pious life, the return is great and profitable ; and what we sow in the minutes and spare portions of a few years, grows up to crowns and sceptres in a happy and a glorious eternity. 1. Therefore, although it cannot be enjoined, that the greatest part of our time be spent in the direct actions of devotion and religion, yet it will become, not only a duty, but also a great providence, to lay aside for the services of God and the business of the Spirit, as much as we can ; because God rewards our minutes with long and eternal happiness ; and the greater portion of our time we give to God, the more we treasure up for ourselves ; and " No man is a better merchant than he, that lays out his time upon God, and his money upon the poor." 2. Only it becomes us to remember, and to adore God's goodness for it, that God hath not only permitted us to serve the necessities of our nature, but hath made them to become parts of our duty ; that if we, by directing these actions to the glory of God, intend them as instruments to continue our persons in his service, he, by adopting them into religion, may turn our nature into grace, and accept our natural actions as actions of religion. God is pleased to esteem it for a part of his service, if we eat or drink ; so it be done temperately, and as may best preserve our health, that our health may enable our services towards him : and there is no one minute of our lives (after we are come to CARE OF OUR TIME. 7 the use of reason,) but we are or may be doing the work of God, even then, when we most of all serve ourselves. 3. To which if we add, that in these and all other actions of our lives we always stand before God, acting and speak- ing, and thinking in his presence, and that it matters not that our conscience is sealed with secrecy, since it lies open to God ; it will concern us to behave ourselves carefully, as in the presence of our judge. These three considerations rightly managed, and applied to the several parts and instances of our lives, will be like Elisha, stretched upon the child, apt to put life and quick- ness into every part of it, and to make us live the life of grace, and do the work of God. I shall therefore, by way of introduction, reduce these three to practice, and show how every Christian may im- prove all and each of these to the advantage of piety, in the whole course of his life ; that if he please to bear but one of them upon his spirit, he may feel the benefit, like a universal instrument, helpful in all spiritual and temporal actions. SECTION I. The first general instrument of holy Living, Care of our Time. He that is choice of his time, will also be choice of his company, and choice of his actions : lest the first engage him in vanity and loss ; and the latter, by being criminal, l)e a throwing his time and himself away, and a going back in the accounts of eternity. God has given to man a short time here upon earth, and yet upon this short time eternity depends : but so, that for every hour of our life (after we are persons capable of laws, and know good from evil) we must give account to the great Judge of men and angels. And this is it which our blessed Saviour told us, that we must account for every idle word ; not meaning that every word, which is not de- signed to edification, or is less prudent, shall be reckoned for a sin ; but that the time, which we spend in our idle talking and unprofitable discoursings, that time, which might and ought to have been employed to spiritual and useful purposes ; that is to be accounted for. For we must remember, that we have a great work to do, many enemies to conquer, many evils to prevent, much 8 CARE OF OUR TIME. danger to run through, many difficultios to be mastered, many necessities to serve, and much good to do, many chil- dren to provide for, or many friends to support, or many poor to relieve, or many diseases to cure, besides the needs of nature and of relation, our private and our public cares, and duties of the world, which necessity and the providence of God have adopted into the family of religion. And that we need not fear this instrument to be a snare to us, or that the duty must end in scruple, vexation, and eternal fears, we must remember, that the life of every man may be so ordered (and indeed must,) that it may be a per- petual serving of God : the greatest trouble and most busy trade and worldly incumbrances, when they are necessary, or charitable, or profitable in order to any of those ends, which we are bound to serve, whether public or private, being a doing God's work. For God provides the good things of the world to serve the needs of nature, by the labours of the ploughman, the skill and pains of the artisan, and the dangers and traffic of the merchant : these men are, in their callings, the ministers of the Divine Providence, and the stewards of the creation, and servants of a great family of God, the world, in the employment of procuring necessaries for food and clothing, ornament, and physic. In their proportions, also, a king, and a priest and a prophet, a judge and an advocate, doing the works of their employ- ment, according to their proper rules, are doing the w^ork of God, because they serve those necessities, which God hath made, and yet made no provisions for them, but by their mi- nistry. So that no man can complain, that his calling takes him off from religion ; his calling itself and his very worldly employment in honest trade and offices is a serving of God ; and, if it be moderately pursued and according to the rules of Christian prudence, will leave void spaces enough for prayers and retirements of a more spiritual religion. God hath given every man work enough to do, that there shall be no room for idleness ; and yet hath so ordered the world, that there shall be space for devotion. He, that hath the fewest businesses of the world, is called upon to spend more time in the dressing of his soul ; and he, that hath the most affairs, may so order them, that they shall be a service of God ; whilst, at certain periods, they are blessed with prayers and actions of religion, and all day long are hallowed by a holy intention. CARE OF OUR TIME. 9 However, so long as idleness is quite shut out from our lives, all the sins of wantonness, softness, and effeminacy, are prevented, and there is but little room left for tempta- tion ; and therefore, to a busy man, temptation is fain to climb up together with his business, and sins creep upon him only by accidents and occasions; whereas, to an idle person, they come in a full body, and with open violence and the impudence of a restless importunity. Idleness is called " the sin of Sodom and her daugh- ters,"* and indeed is " the burial of a living man ;" an idle person being so useless to any purposes of God and man, that he is like one that is dead, unconcerned in the changes and necessities of the world ; and he only lives to spend his time, and eat the fruits of the earth : like a vermin or a wolf, when their time comes, they die and perish, and in the mean time, do no good ; they neither plough nor carry burthens ; all that they do is either unprofitable or mis- chievous. Idleness is the greatest prodigality in the world : it throws away that, which is invaluable in respect of its pre- sent use, and irreparable when it is past, being to be reco- vered by no power of art or nature. But the way to secure and improve our time we may practice iii the following rules. Rules for employing our Time* 1. In the morning, when you awake, accustom yourself to think first upon God, or something in order to his ser- vice ; and at night also, let him close thine eyes : and let your sleep be necessary and healthful, not idle and expen- sive of time, beyond the needs and conveniences of nature ; and sometimes be curious to see the preparation, which the sun makes, when he is coming forth from his chambers of the east. 2. Let every man that hath a calling, be diligent in pur- suance of its employment, so as not lightly or without reasonable occasion to neglect it in any of those times, which are usually, and by the custom of prudent persons and good husbands, employed in it. 3. Let all the intervals or void spaces of time be em- ployed in prayers, reading, meditating, works of nature, recreation, charity, friendliness, and neighbourhood, and means of spiritual and corporal health ; ever remembering * Ezek. xvi. 49. 10 CARE OF OUR TIME. SO to work in our calling-, as not to neglect the work of our high calling ; but to begin and end the day with God, with such forms of devotion as shall be proper to our necessities. 4. The resting days of Christians, and festivals of the church, must, in no sense, be days of idleness ; for it is better to plough upon holy days, than to do nothing or to do viciously : but let them be spent in the works of the day, that is, of religion and charity, according to the rules appointed.* 5. Avoid the company of drunkards and busy bodies, and all such as are apt to talk much to little purpose : for no man can be provident of his time, that is not prudent in the choice of his company ; and if one of the speakers be vain, tedious, and trifling, he that hears, and he that an- swers, in the discourse, are equal losers of their time. 6. Never talk with any man, or undertake any trifling employment, merely to pass the time away ; for every day well spent may become a "day of salvation," and time rightly employed is an " acceptable time." And remember, that the time thou triflest away, was given thee to repent in, to pray for pardon of sins, to work out thy salvation, to do the work of grace, to lay up against the day of judgment a treasure of good works, that thy time may be crowned with eternity. 7. In the midst of the works of thy calling, often retire to God in short prayers and ejaculations ; and those may make up the want of those larger portions of time, which, it may be, thou desirest for devotion, and in which thou tliinkest other persons have advantage of thee ; for so thou reconcilest the outward work and thy inward calling, the church and the commonwealth, the employment of the body and the interest of thy soul : for be sure, that God is pre- sent at thy breathings and hearty sighings of prayer, as soon as at the longer offices of less busied persons ; and thy time is as truly sanctified by a trade, and devout though shorter prayers, as by the longer offices of those, whose time is not filled up with labour and useful business. 8. Let your employment be such, as may become a rea- sonable person ; and not be a business fit for children or distracted people, but fit for your age and understanding. For a man may be very idly busy, and take great pains to SO little purpose, that, in his labour and expense of time, * See Chap. iv. Sect. 6. CARE OF OUR TIME. H he shall serve no end but of folly and vanity. There are some trades, that wholly serve the ends of idle persons and fools, and such as are fit to be seized upon by the severity of laws, and banished from under the sun ; and there are some people who are busy ; but it is, as Domitian was, in catching flies. 9. Let your employment be fitted to your person and calling. Some there are, that employ their time in affairs infinitely below the dignity of their person ; and being called by God or by the republic, to help to bear great burdens, and to judge a people, do enfeeble their under- standings, and disable their persons by sordid and brutish business. Thus Nero went up and down Greece, and challenged the fiddlers at their trade, ^ropus, a Mace- donian king, made lanterns. Harcatius, the king of Par- thia, was a mole-catcher : and Biantes, the Lydian, filed needles. He, that is appointed to minister in holy things, must not suffer secular affairs and sordid arts to eat up great portions of his employment : a clergyman must not keep a tavern, nor a judge be an innkeeper : and it was a great idleness in Theophylact, the patriarch of C. P. to spend his time in his stable of horses, when he should have been in his study, or the pulpit, or saying his holy ofl[ices. Such employments are the diseases of labour, and the rust pf time, which it contracts, not by lying still, but by dirty employment. 10. Let your employment be such as becomes a Chris- tian ; that is, in no sense, mingled with sin : for he that takes pains to serve the ends of covetousness, or ministers to another's lust, or keeps a shop of impurities or intem- perance, is idle in the worst sense ; for every hour so spent, runs him backward, and must be spent again in the remain- ing and shorter part of his life, and spent better. 11. Persons of great quality, and of no trade, are to be most prudent and curious in their employment and traffic of time. They are miserable, if their education hath been so loose and undisciplined, as to leave them unfurnished of skill to spend their time : but most miserable are they, if such misgovernment and unskilfulness make them fall into vicious and baser company, and drive on their time by the sad minutes and periods of sin and death. They that are learned, know the worth of time, and the manner how well to improve a day ; and they are to prepare themselves for such purposes, in which they may be most useful in order 12 CARE OF OUR TLME to arts or arms, to counsel in public, or government in their country : but for others of them, that are unlearned, let them choose good company, such as may not tempt them to a vice, or join with them in any ; but that may supply their defects by counsel and discourse, by way of conduct and conversation. Let them learn easy and useful things, read history and the laws of the land, learn the customs of their country, the condition of their own estate, profit- able and charitable contrivances of it : let them study prudently to govern their families, learn the burdens of their tenants, the necessities of their neighbours, and in their proportion supply them, and reconcile their enmities, and prevent their lawsuits, or quickly end them ; and in this glut of leisure and disemployment, let them set apart greater portions of their time for religion and the neces- sities of their souls. 12. Let the women of noble birth and great fortunes do the same things in their proportions and capacities, nurse their children, look to the affairs of the house, visit poor cottagers, and relieve their necessities, be courteous to the neighbourhood, learn in silence of their husbands or their spiritual guides, read good books, pray often and speak little, and " learn to do good works for necessary uses ;" for, by that phrase, St. Paul expresses the obligation of Christian women to good housewiferv, and charitable pro- visions for their family and neighbomnood. 13. Let all persons of all conditions avoid all delicacy and niceness in their clothing or diet, because such soft- ness engages them upon great mispendings of their time, while they dress and comb out all their opportunities of their morning devotion, and half the day's severity, and sleep out the care and provision for their souls. 14. Let every one of every condition avoid curiosity, and all inquiry into things that concern them not. For all business in things, that concern us not, is an employing our time to no good of ours, and therefore not in order to a happy eternity. In this account our neighbours' neces- sities are not to be reckoned ; for they concern us, as one member is concerned in the grief of another ; but going from house to house, tattlers and busy-bodies, which are the canker and rust of idleness, as idleness is the rust of time, are reproved by the apostle in severe language, and forbidden in order to this exercise. CARE OF OUR TIME. 13 15. As much as may be, cut off all impertinent and useless employments of your life, unnecessary and fantastic visits, long waitings upon great personages, where neither duty, nor necessity, nor charity obliges us ; all vain meetings, all laborous trifles,. and whatsoever spenc^s much time to no real, civil, religious, or charitable purpose. 16. Let not your recreations be lavish spenders of your time ; but choose such which are healthful, short, transient, recreative, and apt to refresh you : but at no hand dwell upon them, or make them your great employment : for he that spends his time in sports, and calls it recreation, is like him whose garment is all made of fringes, and his meat nothing but sauces; they are healthless, chargeable, and useless. And therefore avoid such games, which require much time, or long attendance ; or which are a})t to steal thy affections from more severe employments. For to whatsoever thou hast given thy affections, thou wilt not grudge to give thy time. Natural necessity and the ex- ample of St. John, who recreated himself with sporting with a tame partridge, teach us, that it is lawful to relax and unbend our bow, but riot to suffer it to be unready or un- strung. 17. Set apart some portions of every day for more so- lemn devotion and religious employment, which be severe in observing : and if variety of employment, or prudent af- fairs, or civil society, press upon you, yet so order thy rule, that the necessary parts of it be not omitted ; and though just occasions may make our prayers shorter, yet let no- thing "but a violent, sudden, and impatient necessity, make thee, upon any one day, wholly to omit thy morning and evening devotions ; which if you be forced to make very short, you may supply and lengthen with ejaculations and short retirements in the day-time, in the midst of your em- ployment or of your company. 18. Do not the "work of God negligently"* and idly; let not thy heart be upon the world, when thy hand is lift up in prayer ; and be sure to prefer an action of religion, in its place and proper season, before all worldly pleasure, letting secular things, that may be dispensed with in them- selves, in these circumstances wait upon the other: not like the patriarch, who ran fl'om the altar in St. Sophia to his stable, in all his pontificals, and in the midst of his * Jer. xlviii. 10. D 14 CARE OF OUR TIME. office, to see a colt newly fallen from his beloved and much- valued mare Phorbante. More prudent and severe was that of Sir Thomas More, who, being sent for by the king, when he was at his prayers in public, returned answer, he would attend him, when he had first performed his service to the King of kings. And it did honour to Rusticus, that, when letters from Cassar were given to him, he refused to open them, till the philosopher had done his lecture. In honouring God and doing his work, put forth all thy strength; for of that time only thou mayest be most con- fident that it is gained, which is prudently and zealously spent in God's service. 19. When the clock strikes, or however else you shall measure the day, it is good to say a short ejaculation every hour, that the parts and returns of devotion may be the measure of your time : and do so also in all the breaches of thy sleep ; that those spaces, which have in them no di- rect business of the world, may be filled with religion. 20. If, by thus doing, you have not secured your time by an early and fore-handed care, yet be sure by a timely diligence to redeem the time, that is, to be pious and reli- gious in such instances, in which formerly you have sinned, and to bestow your time especially upon such graces, the contrary whereof you have formerly practised, doing actions of chastity and temperance with as great a zeal and earnest- ness, as you did once act your uncleanness ; and then, by all arts, to watch against your present and future dangers, from day to day securing your standing ; this is properly to redeem your time, that is, to buy your security of it, at the rate of any labour and honest arts. 21. Let him, that is most busied, set apart some "so- lemn time every year,"* in which, for the time, quitting all worldly business, he may attend wholly to fasting and prayer, and the dressing of his soul by confessions, meditations, and attendances upon God ; that he may make up his accounts, renew his vows, make amends for his carelessness, and retire back again, from whence levity and the vanities of the world, or the opportunity of temptations, or the distraction of secu- lar affairs, have carried him. 22. In this we shall be much assisted, and we shall find the work more easy, if, before we sleep, every night we ex- amine the actions of the past day with a particular scru- * 1 Cor. vii. 5, CARE OF OUR TIME. 15 tiny, if there have been any accident extraordinary ; as long discourse, a feast, much business, variety of com- pany. If nothing but common hath happened, the less examination will suffice : only let us take care, that we ^^p not without such a recollection of the actions of the mP as may represent any thing that is remarkable and great, either to be the matter of sorrow or thanksgiving : for other things a general care is proportionable. 23. Let all these things be done prudently and mode- rately, not with scruple and vexation. For these are good advantages, but the particulars are not divine command- ments ; and therefore are to be used, as shall be found expedient to every one's condition. For, provided that our duty be secured, for the degrees and for the instruments every man is permitted to himself and the conduct of such who shall be appointed to him. He is happy, that can se- cure every hour to a sober or a pious employment : but the duty consists not scrupulously in minutes and half hours, but in greater portions of time ; provided that no tninute be employed in sin, and the great portions of our time be spent in sober employment, and all the appointed days, and some portions of every day, be allowed for reli- gion. In all the lesser parts of time, we are left to our own elections and prudent management, and to the consi- deration of the great degrees and differences of glory, that are laid up in heaven for us, according to the degrees of our care, and piety, and diligence. The Bejiejfits of this Exercise. This exercise, besides that it hath influence upon our whole lives, it hath a special efficacy for the preventing of, 1. Beggarly sins, that is, those sins which idleness and beggary usually betray men to ; such as are lying, flattery, stealing, and dissimulation. 2. It is a proper antidote against carnal sins, and such as proceed from fulness of bread and emptiness of employment. 3. It is a great in- strument of preventing the smallest sins and irregularities of our life, which usually creep upon idle, disemployed, and curious persons. 4. It not only teaches us to avoid evil, but engages us upon doing good, as the proper busi- ness of all our days. 5. It prepares us so against sudden changes, that we shall not easily be surprised at the sud- den coming of the day of the Lord : for he, that is curious of his time, will not easily be unready and unfurnished. 16 PURITY OF INTENTION. SECTION II. The second general instrument of holy Living, Purity of Intention. ^ That we should intend and design God's glory in e^V action we do, whether it be natural or chosen, is ex- pressed by St. Paul,* " Whether ye eat or drink, do all to the glory of God." Which rule when we observe, every action of nature becomes religious, and every meal is an act of worship, and shall have its reward in its propor- tion, as well as an act of prayer. Blessed be that good- ness and grac: of God, which, out of infinite desire to glo- rify and save mankind, would make the very works of na- ture capable of becoming acts of virtue, that all our life- time we may do him service. This grace is so excellent, that it sanctifies the most com- mon action of our life ; and yet so necessary, that, without it, the very best actions of our devotion are imperfect and vicious. For he that prays out of custom, or gives alms for praise, or fasts to be accounted religious, is but a pha- risee in his devotion, and a beggar in his alms, and a hy- pocrite in his fast. But a holy end sacrifices all these and all other actions, which can be made holy, and gives distinctions to them, and procures acceptance. For, as to know the end distinguishes a man from a beast, so to choose a good end distinguishes him from an evil man. Hezekiah repeated his good deeds upon his sick bed, and obtained favour of God, but the pharisee was accounted insolent for doing the same thing ; because this man did it to upbraid his brother, the other to obtain a mercy of God. Zacharias questioned with the angel about his message, and was made speechless for his incredulity; but the blessed Virgin Mary questioned too, and was blame- less ; for she did it to inquire after the manner of the thing, .but he did not believe the tiling itself: he doubted of God's power, or the truth of. the messenger ; but she, only of her own incapacity. This was it, which distinguished the mourning of David from the exclamation of Saul ; the con- fession of Pharaoh from that of Manasses ; the tears of Peter from the repentance of Judas ; " for the praise is not in the deed done, but in the manner of its- doing. If * 1 Cor. X. 31. PURITY OF INTENTION. 17 a man visits his sick friend, and watclies at his pillow for charity's sake, and because of his old aflection, we approve it : but if he does it in hope of legacy, he is a vulture, and only watches for the carcass. The same things are honest and dishonest : the manner of doing them, and the end of the design, makes the separation." Holy intention is to the actions of a man that which the soul is to the body, or form to its matter or the root to tlie tree, or the sun to the world, or the fountain to a river, or the base to a pillar : for, without these, the body is a dead trurfk, the matter is sluggish, the tree is a block, the world is darkness, the river is quickly dry, the pillar rushes into flatness and a ruin ; arid the action is sinful, or unprofitable and vain. The poor farmer, that gave a dish of cold water to Artaxerxes, was rewarded with a golden goblet ; and he that gives the same to a disciple in the name of a disciple, shall have a crown : but if he gives water in despite, when the disciple needs wine or a cordial, his re- ward shall be, to want that water to cool his tongue. But this duty must be reduced to rules : — Rules for our Intentions, 1. In every action reflect upon the end: and in your un- dertaking it, consider why you do it, and what you propound to yourself for a reward, and to your action as its end. 2. Begin every actipn in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: the meaning of which is, 1. That we be careful, that we do not the action without the permission or warrant of God. 2. That we design it to the glory of God, if not in the direct action, yet at least in its consequence ; if not in the particular, yet at least in the whole order of things and accidents. 3. That it may be so blessed, that what you intend for innocent and holy purposes, may not, by any chance, or abuse, or misunder- standing of men, be turned into evil, or made the occasion of sin. 3. Let every action of concernment be begun with prayer, that God would not only bless the action, but sanctify your purpose : and make an oblation of the action to God : holy and well intended actions being the best oblations and presents we can make to God ; and, when God is entitled to them, he will the rather keep the fire upon the altar bright and shining. d2 18 PURITY OF INTENTION. 4. In the prosecution of the action, renew and re-enkindle your purpose by short ejaculations to these purposes : " Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name, let all praise be given :" and consider "Now I am working the work of God : I am his servant, I am in a happy employ- ment, I am doing my master's business, I am not at my own dispose, I am using his talents, and all the gain must be his :" for then be sure, as the glory is his, so the reward shall be thine. If thou bringest his goods home with in- crease, he will make thee ruler over cities. 5. Have a care, that, while the altar thus sends up a holy fume, thou dost not suffer the birds to come and carry away the -sacrifice : that is, let not that, which began well, and was intended for God's glory, decline and end in thy own praise, or temporal satisfaction, or a sin. A story, told to represent the vileness of unchastity, is well begun ; but if thy female auditor be pleased with thy language, and begins rather to like thy person for thy story, than to dis- like the crime, be watchful, lest this goodly head of gold descend in silver and brass, and end in iron and clay, like Nebuchadnezzar's image ; for from the end it shall have its name and reward. 6. If any accidental event, which was not first intended by thee, can come to pass, let it not be taken into thy pur- poses, not at all be made use of ; as if, by telling a true story, you can do an ill turn to your enemy, by no means do it ; but, when the temptation is found out, turn all thy enmity upon that. 7. In every more solemn action of religion, join toge- ther many good ends, that the consideration of them may entertain all your affections ; and that, when any one ceases, the purity of your intention may be supported by another supply. He that fasts only to tame a rebellious body, when he is provided of a remedy either in grace or nature, may be tempted to leave off his fasting. But he, that in his fast intends the mortification of every unruly appetite, and ac- customing himself to bear the yoke of the Lord, a contempt of the pleasures of meat and drink, humiliation of all wilder thoughts, obedience and humility, austerity and charity, and the convenience and assistance to devotion, and to do an act of repentance; whatever happens, will have reason enough to make him to continue his purpose, and to sanctify it. And certain it is, the more good ends PURITY OF INTENTION. 19 are designed in an action, the more degrees of excellency the man obtains. 8. If any temptation to spoil your purpose happens in a religious duty, do not presently omit the action, but rather strive to rectify your intention, and to mortify the tempta- tion. St. Bernard taught us this rule : for when the Devil, observing him to preach excellently and to do much benefit to his hearers, tempted him to vain glory, hoping that the good man, to avoid that, would cease preaching, he gave this answer only ; " I neither began for thee, nei- ther for tjiee will I make an end." 9. In all actions, which are of long continuance, deliber- ation, and abode, let your holy and pious intention be actual ; that is, that it be, by a special prayer or action, by a peculiar act of resignation or oblation, given to God ; but in smaller actions, and little things and indifferent, fail not to secure a pious habitual intention ; that is, that it< be included within your general care, that no action have an ill end ; and that it be comprehended in your general prayers, whereby you offer yourself and all you do, to God's glory. 10. Call not every temporal end, a defiling of thy inten- tion, but only, 1, when it contradicts any of the ends of God ; or 2, when it is principally intended in an action of religion. For sometimes a temporal end is part of our duty ; and such are all the actions of our calling, Avhether our employment be religious or civil. We are commanded to provide for our family : but if» the minister of divine of- fices shall take upon him that holy calling for covetous or ambitious ends, or shall not design tlie glory of God prin- cipally and especially, he hath polluted his hands and his heart ; and the fire of the altar is quenched, or it sends forth nothing but the smoke of mushrooms or unpleasant gums. And it is a great unworthiness to prefer the interest of a creature before the ends of God, the Almighty Creator. But because many cases may happen, in which a man's heart may deceive him, and he may not well know what is in his own spirit ; therefore, by these following signs, we shall best make a judgment, whether our intentions be pure, and our purposes holy. Slg}is of Purity of Intention. 1. It is probable our hearts* are right with God, and our » See Sect. I. of this Chapter, Rule 18. 20 PURITY OF INTENTION. intentions innocent and pious, if we set upon actions of reli- gion or civil life with an affection proportionate to the quality of the work ; that we act our temporal affairs with a desire no greater than our necessity; and that in actions of reli- gion, we be zealous, active, and operative, so far as prudence will permit ; but in all cases, that we value a religious de- sign before a temporal, when otherwise they are in equal order to the several ends : that is, that whatsoever is ne- cessary in order to our soul's health be higher esteemed, than what is for bodily ; and the necessities, the indispensa- ble necessities, of the spirit, be served before the needs of nature, when they are required in their several circumstances; or plainer yet, when we choose any temporal inconveni- ence, rather than commit a sin, and when we choose to do a duty, rather than to get gain. But he that does his re- creation or his merchandise cheerfully, promptly, readily, and busily, and the works of religion slowly, flatly, and without appetite ; and the spirit moves like Pharaoh's chariots, when the wheels were off: it is a sign, that his heart is not right with God, but it cleaves too much to the world. 2. It is likely our hearts are pure, and our intentions spotless, when we are not solicitous of the opinion and censures of men ; but only that what we do be our duty and accepted of God. For our eyes will certainly be fixed there, from whence we expect our reward : and if we de- sire, that God should approve us, it is a sign we do his work, and expect him our ptiymaster. 3. He that does as well, in private, between God and his own soul, as in public, in pulpits, in theatres, and mar- ket places, hath given himself a good testimony, that his purposes are full of honesty, nobleness, and integrity. For what Helkanah said to the mother of Samuel, " Am not I better to thee than ten sons ?" is most certainly verified concerning God ; that he, who is to be our judge, is better than ten thousand witnesses. But he, that would have his virtue published, studies not virtue, but glory. " He is not just, that will not be just without praise : but he is a righteous man that does justice, when to do so is made infamous ; and he is a wise man, who is delighted with an ill name, that is well gotten." And indeed that man hath a strange covetousness, or folly, that is not contented with this reward, that he hath pleased God. And see what he PURITY OF INTENTION. 21 gets by it. He that docs good works for praise or secular ends, sells an inestimable jewel for a trifle ; and that, which would purchase heaven for him, he parts with for the breath of the people ; which, at best, is but aii*, and that not often wholesome. ^ 4. It is well also, when we are not solicitous or trou- bled concerning the eflect and event of all our actions ; but that being first b}^ prayer recommended to him, is left at his dispose : for then, in case the event be not answer- able tQ>^\T desires, or to the eflicacy of the instrument, we have nothing left to rest in, but the honesty of our pur- poses ,• which it is the more likely we have secured, by how much more we are indifferent concerning the success. St. James converted but eight persons, when he preached in Spain : and our blessed Saviour converted fewer than his own disciples did ; and if thy labours prove unprosperous, if thou beest much troubled at that, it is certain thou didst not think thyself secure of a reward for thine intention ; which thou mightest have done, if it had been pure and just. 5. He loves virtue for God's sake and its own, that loves and honours it, wherever it is to be seen ; but he that is envious or angry at a virtue, that is not his own, at the perfection or excellency of his neighbour, is not covetous of the virtue, but of its reward and reputation ; and then his intentions are polluted. It was a great ingenuity in Moses, that wished all the people might be prophets ; but if he had designed his own honour, he would have prophesied alone. But he that desires only, that the work of God and religion shall go on, is pleased with it, whosoever is the instrument. 6. He that despises the world, and all its appendant vanities, is the best judge, and the' most secured of his intentions ; because he is the farthest removed from a temptation. Every degree of mortification is a testimony of the purity of our purposes ; and in what degree we de- spise sensual pleasure, or secular honours, or worldly reput- ation, in the same degree we shall conclude our heart right to religion and spiritual designs. 7. When we are not solicitous concerning the instru- ments and means of our actions; but use those means, which God hath laid before us, with resignation, indiffe- rency, and thankfulness ; it is a good sign, that we are rather intent upon the end of God's glory, than our own conveniency, or temporal satisfaction. He that is indiffe- 22 PURITY OF INTENTION. rent whether he serve God in riches or in poverty, is rather a seeker of God than of himself; and he that will throw^ away a good book because it is not curiously gilded, is more curious to please his eye, than to inform his understanding. 8. When a temporal end consisting with a spiritual, and pretending to be subordinate to it, happens to fail and be defeated, if we can rejoice in that, so God's glory may be secured, and the interests of religion ; it is a great sign our hearts are right, and our ends prudently designed and ordered. • When our intentions are thus balanced, regulated, and discerned, we may consider, 1. That this exercise is of so universal efficacy in the whole course of a holy life, that it is like the soul of every holy action, and must be provided for in every undertaking; and is, of itself alone, sufficient to make all natural and indiffisrent actions to be adopted into the family of religion. 2. That there are some actions, which are usually reck- oned as parts of our religion, which yet, of themselves, are so relative and imperfect, that, without the purity of inten- tion, they degenerate : and unless they be directed and proceed on to those purposes, which God designed them to, they return into the family of common, secular, or sin- ful actions. Thus, alms are for the charity, fasting for tem- perance, prayer is for -religion, humiliation is for humility, austerity or sufferance is in order to the virtue of patience ; and when these actions fail of their several ends, or are not directed to their own purposes, alms are mispent, fast- ing is an impertinent trouble, prayer is but lip-labour, hu- miliation is but hypocrisy, sufferance is but vexation ; for such were the alms of the pharisee, the fast of Jezabel, the prayer of Judah reproved by the prophet Isaiah, the humi- liation of Ahab, the martyrdom of heretics ; in which no- thing is given to God, but the body, or the forms of religion ; but the soul and the power of godliness is wholly wanting. 3. We are to consider, that no intention can satisfy an unholy or unlawful action. Saul, the king, disobeyed God's commandment, and spared the cattle of Amalek to reserve the best for sacrifice : and Saul, the Pharisee, per- secuted the church of God, with a design to do God ser- vice : and they that killed the apostles, had also good pur- poses, but they had unhallowed actions. " When there is both truth in election, and charity in the intention ; PRACXrCE OF THE PRESENCE OF GOD. 23 when we go to God in ways of his own choosing or ap- proving, then our eye is single, and our hands are clean, and our hearts are pure. But when a man does evil, that good may come of it, or good to an evil purpose, that man does like him, that rolls himself in thorns, that he may sleep easily; he roasts himself in the fire, that he may quench his thirst with his own sweat ; he turns his face to the east, that he may go to bed with the sun. I end this with the saying of a wise heathen : " He is to be called evil, that is good only for his own sake. Regard not, how full hands you bring to God, but how pure. Many cease, from sin out of fear alone, not out of innocence or love of virtue ;" and they, as yet, are not to be called innocent but timorous. SECTION III. The third general instrument of holy Living : or the Practice of the Presence of God. That God is present in all places, that he sees every ac- tion, hears all discourses, and understands every thought, is no strange thing to a Christian ear, who hath been taught this doctrine, not only by right reason, and the consent of all the wise men in the world, but also by God himself in holy Scripture. " Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? Can any hide himself in secret places, that I shall not see him ? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and earth ?"* " Neither is there any creature, that is not manifest in his sight : but all things are naked and open to the eyes of him, with whom we have to do."f " For in him we live, and move, and have our being.":]: God is wholly in every place ; included in no place ; not bound with cords except those of love ; not divided into parts, not changeable into several shapes ; filling heaven and earth with his present power, and with his never ab- sent nature. So St. Augustine expresses this article. So that we may imagine God to be as the air and the sea ; and we all enclosed in his circle, wrapped up in the lap of his infinite nature ; or as infants in the wombs of their pregnant mothers : and we can no more be removed from the presence of God, than from our being. * Jer. xxiii. 23, 24. t Heb. iv. 13. t Acts vii. 28. 24 PRACTICE OF THE Several Manners of the Divine Presence* The presence of God is understood by us, in several manners, and to several purposes. 1. God is present by his essence; which, because it is infinite, cannot be contained within the limits of any place ; and because he is of an essential purity and spiritual na- ture, he cannot be undervalued by being supposed present in the places of unnatural uncleanness : because as the sun, reflecting upon the mud of strands and shores, is unpol- luted in its beams, so is God not dishonoured, when we suppose him in every of his creatures, and in every part of every one of them ; and is still as unmixt with any un- handsome adherence, as is the soul in the bowels of the body. 2. God is every where present by his power. He rolls the orbs of heaven with his hand ; he fixes the earth with his foot; he guides all the creatures with his eye, and re- freshes them with his influence: he makes the powers of hell shake with his terrors, and binds the devils with his word, and throws them out with his command; and sends the angels on embassies with his decrees : he hardens the joints of infants, and confirms the bones, when they are fashioned beneath secretly in the earth. He it is, that as- sists at the numerous productions of fishes ; and there is not one hollowness in the bottom of the sea, but he shows himself to be Lord of it, by sustaining there the creatures that come to dwell in it : and in the wilderness, the bittern and the stork, the dragon and the satyr, the unicorn and the elk live upon his provisions, and revere his power, and feel the force of his almightiness. 3. God is more specially present, in some places, by the several and more special manifestations of himself to extraordinary purposes. First, by glory. Thus, his seat is in heaven ; because, there he sits encircled with all the outward demonstrations of his glory, which he is pleased to show to all the inhabitants of those his inward and secret courts. And thus they, that " die in the Lord, may be properly said to be " gone to God ;" with whom although +K-xr wpre before, vet now they enter into his courts, into , . X /jie ieuiiue and splendour the'secret of Ins tabernacle, ntotn ^^^^^^ ^^^^ ^l^i^ of his glory. That is ^f ^f^^^^fi ^lesire to be dissolved is dwelling, or bemg with him. PRESENCE OF GOD. 25 and to be with Christ ;" so said St. Paul. But this man- ner of Divine presence is reserved for the elect people of God, and for their portion in their country. 4. God is, by grace and benediction, specially present in holy places,* and in the solemn assemblies of his ser- vants. If holy people meet in grots and dens of the earth, when persecution or a public necessity disturbs the public order, circumstance, and convenience, God fails not to come thither to them : but God is also, by the same or a greater reason, present there, where they meet ordinarily, by order, and public authority ; there God is present or- dinarily, that is, at every such meeting. God will go out of his way to meet his saints, when themselves are forced out of their way of order by a sad necessity : but else, God's usual way is to be present in those places, where his servants are appointed ordinarilyf to meet. But his pre- sence there signifies nothing, but a readiness to hear their prayers, to bless their persons, to accept their offices, and to like even the circumstance of orderly and public meeting. For thither the prayers of consecration, the public autho- rity separating it, and God's love of order, and the reason- able customs of religion, have, in ordinary, and in a certain degree, fixed this manner of his presence ; and he loves to have it so. 5. God is especially present, in the hearts of his people, by his Holy Spirit ; and indeed the hearts of holy men are temples in the truth of things, and, in type, and shadow, they are heaven itself. For God reigns in the hearts of his servants : there is his kingdom. The power of grace hath subdued all his enemies ; there is his power. They serve him night and day, and give him thanks and praise ; that is his glory. This is the religion and worship of God in the temple. The temple itself is the heart of man ; Christ is the high-priest, who from thence sends up the incense of prayers, and joins them to his own intercession, and presents all together to his Father; ^d the Holy Ghost, by his dwelling there, hath also consecrated it into a temple ;:}: and God dwells in our hearts by faith, and Christ by his Spirit, and the Spirit by his purities ; so that we are also cabinets of the mysterious Trinity ; and what is this short of heaven itself, but as in- * Mat xviii. 20. Heb. x. 25. 1 1 Kings v. 9. Ps. cixxviii. 1, 2. X 1 Cor. iii. 16. 2 Cor. vi. 16. E 26 PRACTICE OF THE fancy is short of manhood, and letters of words? The same state of life it is, but not the same age. It is heaven in a looking-glass, dark, but yet true, representing the beauties of the soul, and the graces of God, and the images of his eternal glory, by the reality of a special presence. 6. God is especially present in the consciences of all persons, good and bad, by way of testimony and judgment : that is, he is there a remembrancer to call our actions to mind, a witness to bring them to judgment, and a judge to acquit or to condemn. And although this manner of pre- sence is, in this life, after the manner of this life, that is, imperfect, and we forget many actions of our lives ; yet the greatest changes of our state of grace or sin, our most considerable actions, are always present, like capital letters to an aged and dim eye ; and, at the day of judgment, God shall draw aside the cloud, and manifest this manner of his presence more notoriously, and make it appear, that he was an observer of our very thoughts, and that he only laid those things by, which, because we covered with dust and negligence, were not then discerned. But when we are risen from our dust and imperfection, they all appear plain and legible. Now the consideration of this great truth is of a very universal use, in the whole course of the life of a Christian. All the consequents and effects of it are universal. He that remembers, that God stands a witness and a judge, beholding every secrecy, besides his impiety, must have put on impudence, if he be not much restrained in his temptation to sin. " For the greatest part of sin is taken away, if a man have a witness of his conversation ; and he is a great despiser of God, who sends a boy away, when he is going to commit fornication, and yet will dare to do it, though he knows God is present, and cannot be sent off: as if the eye of a little boy were more awful, than the all- seeing eye of God. He is to be feared in public, he is to be feared in private : if you go forth, he spies you ; if you go in, he sees you : when you light the candle, he observes you ; when you put it out, then also God marks you. Be sure that while you are in his sight, you behave yourself, as becomes so holy a presence." But if you will sin, retire yourself wisely, and go where God cannot see : for no where else can you be safe. And certainly, if men would always actually consider, and really esteem this truth, that God is PRESENCE OF GOD. 27 the great eye of the world, always watching over our actions, and an ever-open car to hear all our words, and an un- wearied arm ever lifted up to crush a sinner into ruin, it would be the readiest way in the world, to make sin to cease from amongst the children of men, and for men to approach to the blessed estate of the saints in heaven, who cannot sin, for they always walk in the presence, and behold the face of God. This instrument is to be reduced to practice, according to the following rules. Rules of exercising this consideration. 1. Let this actual thought often return, that God is omnipresent, fillkig every place ; and say, with David,* " Whither shall I go from thy Spirit, or whither shall I flee from thy presence ? If I ascend up into heaven thou art there : if I make my bed in hell thou art there," &;c. This thought, by being frequent, will make an habitual dread and reverence towards God, and fear in all thy actions. For it is a great necessity and engagement to do unblamably, when we act before the Judge, who is infallible in his sen- tence, all-knowing in his information, severe in his anger, powerful in his providence, and intolerable in his wrath and indignation. 2. In the beginning of actions of religion, make an act of adoration, that is, solemnly worship God, and place thy- self in God's presence, and behold him with the eye of faith ; and let thy desires actually fix on him, as the object of thy worship, and the reason of thy hope, and the fountain of thy blessing. For when thou hast placed thyself before him, and kneelest in his presence, it is most likely, all the following parts of thy devotion will be answerable to the wisdom of such an apprehension, and the glory of such a presence. 3. Let every thing you see represent to your spirit the presence, the excellency, and the power of God ; and let your conversation with the creatures lead you unto the Creator ; for so shall your actions be done, more frequently with an actual eye to God's presence, by your often seeing him in the glass of the creation. In the face of the sun, you may see God's beauty ; in the fire, you may feel his heat warming ; in the water, his gentleness to refresh you : he it is that comforts your spirits when you have taken cordials ,* it is the dew of heaven that makes your field give * Psalm xiii. 7, 8. 28 PRACTICE OF THE you bread ; and the breasts of God are the bottles that minis- ter drink to your necessities. This philosophy, which is ob- vious to every man's experience, is a good advantage to our piety ; and, by this act of understanding, our wills are check- ed from violence and misdemeanour. 4. In your retirement, make frequent colloquies, or short discoursings between God and thy own soul. " Seven times a day do I praise thee : and, in the night season also, I thought upon thee, while I was waking." So did David ; and every act of complaint or thanksgiving, every act of rejoicing or of mourning, every petition and every return of the heart in these intercourses, is a g(^ng to God, and appearing in his presence, and a representing him present to thy spirit and to thy necessity. And this was, long since by a spiritual person, called, " a building to God a chapel in our heart." It reconciles Martha's employment with Mary's devotion, charity and religion, the necessities of our calling and the employments of devotion. For thus, in the midst of the works of your trade, you may retire into your chapel, your heart ; and converse with God by frequent addresses and returns. 5. Represent and offer -to God "acts of love and fear," which are the proper effects of this apprehension, and the proper exercise of this consideration. For, as God is every where present by his power, he calls for reverence and godly fear : as he is present to thee in all thy needs, and relieves them, he deserves thy love : and since, in every accident of our lives, we find one or other of these appa- rent, and, in most things, we see both, it is a proper and pro- portionate return, that to every such demonstration of God, we express ourselves sensible of it, by admiring the Divine goodness, or trembling at his presence ; ever obeying him, because we love him, and ever obeying him, because we fear to offend him. This is that, which Enoch did, who thus " walked with God." 6. Let us remember, that God is in us, and that we are in him: we are his workmanship, let us not deface it; we are in his presence, let us not pollute it by unholy and im- pure actions. God hath " also wrought all our works in us :"* and because he rejoices in his own works, if we defile them, and make them unpleasant to him, we walk perversely with God, and he will walk crookedly towards us. * Isa. XXV i. 12- PRESENCE OF GOD. 29 7. "God is in the bowels of thy brother;" refresh them, when he needs it, and tlien you give your alms in the pre- sence of God, and to God ; and he feels the relief, which thou providest for thy brother. 8. God is in every place : suppose it therefore to be a church : and that decency of deportment and piety of car- riage, which you arc taught, by religion, or by custom, or by civility and public manners, to use in churches, the same use in all places ; with this difference only, that, in churches let your deportment be religious in external forms and cir- cumstances also ; but there and every where, let it be reli- gious in abstaining from spiritual indecencies, and in readi- ness to do good actions ; that it may not be said of us, as God once complained of his people, "Why hath my beloved done wickedness in my house?"* 9. God is in every creature ; be cruel towards none, nei- ther abuse any by intemperance. Remember, that the creatures, and every member of thy own body, is one of the lesser cabinets and receptacles of God. They are such, which God hath blessed with his presence, hallowed by his touch, and separated from unholy use, by making them to belong to his dwelling. 10. He walks as in the presence of God, that converses with him in frequent prayer and frequent communion ; that runs to him in all his necessities ; that asks counsel of him in all his doubtings ; that opens all his wants to him ; that weeps before him for his sins ; that asks remedy and support for his weakness ; that fears him as a judge ; reverences him as a lord ; obeys him as a father ; and loves him as a patron. The Benefits of this Exercise. The benefits of this consideration and exercise being universal upon all the parts of piety, I shall less need to specify any particulars : but yet, most properly, this exer- cise of considering the Divine presence is, 1. An excellent help to prayer, producing in us reverence and awfulness to the Divine Majesty of God, and actual devotion in our offices. 2. It produces a confidence in God, and fearless- ness of our enemies, patience in trouble, and hope of remedy ; since God is so nigh in all our sad accidents, he is a disposer of the hearts of men and the events of things, he proportions out our trials, and supplies us with remedy, * Jer. ix. 15. secun. vulg. edit e2 30 PRACTICE OF THE and, where his rod strikes us, his staff supports us. To which we may add this ; that God, who is always with us, is especially, by promise, with us in tribulation, to turn the misery into a mercy, and that our greatest trouble may become our advantage, by entitling us to a new manner of the Divine presence. 3. It is apt to produce joy and re- joicing in God, we being more apt to delight in the partners and witnesses of our conversation ; every degree of mutual abiding and conversing being a relation and an endear- ment : we are of the same household with God ; he is with us in our natural actions, to preserve us ; in our re- creations, to restrain us ; in our public actions, to applaud or reprove us ; in our private, to observe us ; in our sleeps, to watch by us ; in our watchings, to refresh us : and if we walk with God in all his ways, as he walks with us in all ours, we shall find perpetual reasons to enable us to keep that rule of God, "Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice." And this puts me in mind of a saying of an old religious person, " There is one way of overcoming our ghostly enemies; spiritual mirth, and a perpetual bearing of God in our minds." This effectively resists the devil, and suffers us to receive no hurt from him. 4. This exercise is apt also to enkindle holy desires of the enjoyment of God, because it produces joy, when we do enjoy him; the same desires that a weak man hath for a defender ; the sick man, for a physician ; the poor, for a patron ; the child, for his father ; the espoused lover, for her betrothed. 5. From the same fountain are apt to issue humility of spirit, apprehensions of our great distance and our great needs, our daily wants and hourly supplies, admi- ration of God's unspeakable mercies : it is the cause of great modesty and decency in our actions ; it helps to recollec- tion of mind, and restrains the scatterings and looseness of wandering thoughts ; it establishes the heart in good pur- poses, and leadeth on to perseverance ; it gains purity and perfection (according to the saying of God to Abraham, "walk before me and be perfect,") holy fear, and holy love, and indeed every thing that pertains to holy living : when we see ourselves placed in the eye of God, who sets us on work, and will reward us plenteously, to serve him with an eye-service is very displeasing; for he also sees the heart: and the want of this consideration was declared to be the cause why Israel sinned so grievously, " for they say, The PRESENCE OF GOD. 31 Lord hath forsaken the earth, and the Lord seeth not :"* " therefore the land is full of blood, and the city full of per- verseness."t What a child would do, in the eye of his father ; and a pupil, before his tutor ; and a wife, in the presence of her husband; and a servant, in the sight of his master ; let us always do the same ; for we are made a spectable to God, to angels, and to men ; we are always in the sight and presence of the all-seeing and almighty God, who also is to us a father and a guardian, a husband and a lord. Prayers and Devotions, according to the religion and purposes of the foregoing considerations. L — For grace to spend our time loell. O eternal God, who, from all eternity, dost behold and love thy own glories and perfections infinite, and hast cre- ated me to do the work of God after the manner of men, and to serve thee in this generation, and according to my capacities ; give me thy grace, that I may be a curious and prudent spender of my time, so as I may best prevent, or resist, all temptation, and be profitable to the Christian commonwealth, and, by discharging all my duty, may glo- rify thy name. Take from me all slothfulness, and give me a diligent and an active spirit, and wisdom to choose my employment : that I may do works proportionable to my person, and to the dignity of a Christian, and may fill up all the spaces of my time with actions of religion and charity ; that, when the devil assaults me, he may not find me idle ; and my dearest Lord, at his sudden coming, may find me busy in lawful, necessary, and pious actions ; im- proving my talent entrusted to me by thee, my Lord; that I may enter into the joy of my Lord, to partake of his eter- nal felicities, even for thy mercy's sake, and for my dearest Saviour's sake. Amen. Here follows the devotion of ordinary days ; for the right employment of those portions of time, which every day must allow for religion. The first prayers in the morning as soon as we are dressed. Humbly and reverently compose yourself, with heart lift-up to God, and your head bowed, and meekly kneeling upon your knees, say the Lord's prayer : after which, * Psalm X. 11. tEzek. ix.9. 32 DEVOTIONS FOR use the following collects, or as many of them as you shall choose. " Our Father, which art in heaven," &c. I. — An Act of Adoration^ being the song that the angels sing in heaven. Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come :* heaven and earth, angels and men, the air and the sea, give glory and honour, and thanks to him, that sitteth on the throne, who liveth for ever and ever.f All the blessed spirits and souls of the righteous cast their crowns before the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever.ij: Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory, and honour and power : for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are, and were created. Great and marvellous are thy works, O Lord God Almighty : just and true are thy ways, thou King of saints. § Thy wisdom is infinite, thy mercies are glorious ; and I am not worthy, O Lord, to appear in thy presence, before whom the angels hide their faces. O holy and eternal Jesus, Lamb of God, who w^ert slain from the beginning of the world, thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every nation, and hast made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign with thee for ever. Blessing, honour, glory, and power be unto him, that sitteth on the throne, and to the Lamb, for ever. Amen. IL — An Act of Thanksgiving, being the song of David, for the morning. Sing praises unto the Lord, O ye saints of his, and give thanks to him for a remembrance of his holiness. For his wrath endureth but the twinkling of an eye : and in his pleasure is life ; heaviness may endure for a night ; but joy cometh in the morning. Thou, Lord, hast preserved me this night from the violence of the spirits of darkness, from all sad casualties and evil accidents, from the wrath, which I have every day deserved ; thou hast brought my soul out of hell ; thou hast kept my life from them that go down into the pit : thou hast showed me marvellous great kind- ness, and hast blessed me for ever ; the greatness of thy glory reacheth unto the heavens, and thy truth unto the clouds. Therefore shall every good man sing of thy praise * Rev. xi. 17. t Rev. v. 10. 13. X Rev. iv. 10. $ Rev. xv. 3. ORDINARY DAYS. 33 without ceasing. O my God, I will give thanks unto thee for ever. IlaFlelujah. III. — A?i Act of Oblation, or presenting ourselves to God for the day. Most holy and eternal God,Lord and Sovereign of all the creatures, I humbly present to thy Divine majesty, myself, niy soul and body, my thoughts and my words, my actions and intentions, my passions and my sufferings, to be dis- posed by thee to thy glory ; to be blessed by thy provi- dence ; to be guided by thy council ; to be sanctified by thy Spirit; and, afterward, that my body and soul may be received into glory : for nothing can perish, which is under thy custody : and the enemy of souls cannot de- vour what is thy portion, nor take it out of thy hands. This day, O Lord, and all the days of my life, I dedicate to thy honour, and the actions of my calling, to the uses of grace, and the religion of all my days, to be united to the merits and intercession of my holy Saviour, Jesus ,• that, in him and for him, I may be pardoned and accepted. Amen. IV. — An Act of Repentance or Contrition. For, as for me, I am not worthy to be called thy servant ; much less am I worthy to be thy son : for I am the vilest of sinners and the w^orst of men : a lover of the things of the world, and a despiser of the things of God ; proud and envious, lustful and intemperate, greedy of sin, and impa- tient of reproof ; desirous to seem holy, and negligent of being so ; transported with interest ; fooled with presump- tion and false principles; disturbed with anger, with a peevish and unmortified spirit, and disordered by a whole body of sin and death. Lord, pardon all my sins for my sweetest Saviour's sake : thou, who didst die for me, hoh Jesus, save me and deliver me : reserve not my sins to be punished in the day of wrath and eternal vengeance ; but w^ash aw^ay my sins, and blot them out of thy remem- brance, and purify my soul wuth the waters of repentance, and the blood of the cross ; that, for what is past, thy wrath may not come out against me ; and, for the time to come, I may never provoke thee to anger or to jealousy. O just and dear God, be pitiful and gracious to thy servant. Amen. V. — The Prayer, or Petition. Bless me, gracious God, in my calling to such purposes, 34 DEVOTIONS FOR as thou shalt choose for me, or employ me in : relieve me in all my sadnesses ; make my bed in my sickness ; give me patience in my sorrows, confidence in thee, and grace to call upon thee in all temptations. O be thou my guide in all my actions ; my protector in all dangers ; give me a healthful body, and a clear understanding ; a sanctified and just, a charitable and humble, a religious and a con- tented spirit ; let not my life be miserable and wretched ; nor my name stained with sin and shame ; nor my condi- tion lifted up to a tempting and dangerous fortune : but let my condition be blessed, my conversation useful to my neighbours, and pleasing to thee ; that, when my body shall lie down in its bed of darkness, my soul may pass into the regions of light, and live with thee for ever, through Jesus Christ. Amen. VI. — A?i Act of Intercession or Prayer for others, to be added to this or any other office, as our devotion, or duty, or their needs, shall deteimine ns. O God of infinite mercy, who hast compassion on all men, and relievest the necessities of all that call to thee for help, hear the prayers of thy servant, who is unworthy to ask any petition for himself, yet, in humility and duty, is bound to pray for others. For the Church. O let thy mercy descend upon the whole church ; pre- serve her in truth and peace, in unity and safety, in all storms, and against all temptations and enemies ; that she, offering to thy glory the never-ceasing sacrifice of prayer and thanksgiving, may advance the honour of her Lord, and be filled with his Spirit, and partake of his glory. Amen. For the King. In mercy, remember the king; preserve his person, in health and honour ; his crown, in wealth and dignity ; his kingdoms, in peace and plenty ; the churches under his protection, in piety and knowledge, and a strict and holy religion : keep him perpetually in thy fear and favour, and crown him with glory and immortality. Amen. For the Clergy. Remember them, that minister about holy things; let them be clothed with righteousness, and sing with joyful- ness. Amen. ORDINARY DAYS. 35 For Wife or Husband, Bless thy servant [my wife, or husband] with health of body and of spirit. O let the hand of thy blessing be upon his [or her'\ head, night and day, and support him in all ne- cessities, strengthen him in all temptations, comfort him in all his sorrows, and let him be thy servant in all changes ; and make us both to dwell with thee for ever in thy favour, in the light of thy countenance, and in thy glory. Amen. For our Children. Bless my children with healthful bodies, with good un- derstandings, with the graces and gifts of thy Spirit, with sweet dispositions and holy habits; and sanctify them throughout in their bodies, and souls, and spirits, and keep them unblamable to the coming of the Lord Jesus. Amen. For Friends and Benefactors. Be pleased, O Lord, to remember my friends, all that have prayed for me, and all that have done me good. [^Here name such, whom you would especially recommend.^ Do thou good to them, and return all their kindness double into their own bosom, rewarding them with blessings, and sanctifying them with thy graces, and bringing them to glory. For our Family. Let all my family and kindred, my neighbours and ac- quaintance [here name lohat other relations you please^, re- ceive the benefit of my prayers, and the blessings of God ; the comforts and supports of thy providence, and the sanc- tification of thy Spirit. For all in Misery. Relieve and comfort all the persecuted and afflicted ; speak peace to troubled consciences : strengthen the w^eak : confirm the strong : instruct the ignorant : deliver the op- pressed from him that spoileth him, and relieve the needy that hath no helper ; and bring us all, by the waters of com- fort, and in the ways of righteousness, to the kingdom of rest and glory, through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. To God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ : to the eternal Son, that was incarnate and born of a Virgin ; to the Spirit of the Father and the Son, be all honour and glory, worship and thanksgiving, now and for ever. Amen. 36 DEVOTIONS FOR Another Form of Prayer, for the Morning. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Our Father,