H ^^M B Bf MS jffl K KEF* ^H BSsi BBS JwBBwiPMi ■ ■ ■ MM *«»•* ■ I : v >**;•' ^1 3*4: H , ■ I * s»*j" ■ ^ ^H M ■ ■ ■ ■ I ">\V ■i ^fl sniini o ^ ^ s\ V %. ++ © ® . ® the editor's preface. ix vouchsafed to us, to nourish in ourselves the spirit of reve- rence, and to form ourselves to habits of obedience. Habits of humility, of purity, of self-denial, of self-distrust, of re- serve — such habits generated and quickened by cordial love to God, make up the temper which such doctrines are de- signed and fitted to work in us. These habits, however, are as tender plants of slow growth, and need all the help and protection of which we can avail ourselves. As a powerful help in the formation of such habits, the work now repub- lished offers itself to our notice. It has had the benefit of being tried. Bishop Wilson informs us, that the circulation of this book, combined with that of the Paraphrase on the Catechism, amongst the parishioners of Winwick, soon produced " such a number of constant, devout communi- cants, as at that time were hardly to be seen in any parish in England." There is no reason, why, with God's blessing, it should not again produce similar good effects — effects, be it observed, which are the surest indications of the existence of those moral habits of which we have been speaking. Its fitness then to mould us into habits of obedience, is the one great recommendation of the following work. As a witness to the doctrines held of old, as now, in the Church of England — and as affording proof, from its numerous appropriations of ancient prayers and Catholic Customs, that the devotional spirit of our Church is in harmony with that of the ancient Church, — it is also on both these accounts especially valuable. Like the very similar work of Bishop Cosin, it may serve " to let the world understand, that they who give it out and accuse us here in England, to have set up a new Church, and a new Faith, to have abandoned all the ancient forms of piety and devotion, to have taken away all the religious exercises and prayers of our forefathers, to have despised all the old ceremonies, and cast behind us the blessed Sacraments of Christ's Catholic Church — that these men do little else but betray their own infirmities, and have i ® ® ® X THE EDITOR'S PREFACE. more violence and will, than reason or judgment, for what they say 1 ." Those who have learned to thank God, for having given His Church the benefit of Bishop Wilson's truly apostolical example, will see in this work a yet further value. Its author was the Bishop's maternal uncle, and when it is remembered that Bishop Wilson's earliest years 2 were pass- ed under his uncle's roof, for the purpose of having his edu- cation superintended by him, and that afterwards, on his entering the Ministry, the first years of his Ministerial life were also passed there, in the capacity of Curate to one of his uncle's Chapelries — the Chapelry of Newchurch : it will not, we think, be doubted, that the instructions he there re- ceived, and the "primitive example" there set him, were, under God, mainly instrumental in giving to his character that tone and colouring, which have so justly made him the praise and glory of his age. The following devotions — living impressions, as it were, of the living mould — bring the tutor of Bishop Wilson again before us : and it may be devoutly hoped that as their author when living, succeeded in forming one of the noblest characters in the Church's modern Calen- dar, so now, though absent from us in body, this his work, instinct as it everywhere is with his own saintly spirit, may tend to produce many more such characters to the glory of God, and the edification of His Holy Church. When this work first appeared, it was stated in the title-page, that it was intended for the use of devout per- sons. It is now reprinted entire, without any alterations or omissions. The Editor trusts he may be pardoned, if, after having 1) Bishop Cosin's Devotions. Preface. 2) The circumstance of Bishop Wilson having been in early life edu- cated by Dr. Sherlock, is left unnoticed by his biographers. The Editor here inserts it upon the authority of his friend Mr. Henry Shaw, of Land- Gate, Ashton in Winwick ; one of whose maternal ancestors, Mr. John Sherlock (son of one of the Doctor's cousins), was Bishop Wilson's fellow- pupil, both having been educated together by Dr. Sherlock. ®— ® -® THE EDITOR S PREFACE. XI obtained the sanction of the Head of the parish, and of the several Incumbents within its limits, he ventures most ear- nestly to recommend these Devotions to the parishioners of Winwick generally, and, more especially, to that portion of them residing within his own district of Brynn and Gars- wood. For the use of the parishioners of Winwick, these Devotions were originally composed ; and we are told by Bishop Wilson, that their author before he died had the satisfaction of" seeing many of them form their lives accord- ing to this model." May He " Who filleth all things living with plenteousness," grant their descendants grace to imitate their example ! In so doing they will be indeed " practising the Communion of Saints," and they will be also obeying the Divine command, " Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for vour souls 1 ." H. H. S. Ashton in Winwick, August. 5, 1840. 1) Jer. vi. 16. -® -® Mr. HOLLAND : I send you a short account of Dr. Sherlock's life. If you think fit you may prefix it to his "Practical Christian," which you are going to reprint. This account might easily have been enlarged, but then it would not have been so agreeable to the character and modesty of the Doctor, who always declined being known any more than he was obliged by the duties of his calling; so that the blessing of a most exemplary life, was confined, for the most part, to the limits and observations of one single parish. That primitive method of devotion, which you are going to reprint, will need no better recommendation, than the good acceptance of the former impressions ; which, together with the testimony of those who know the advantage of observing the stated hours of prayer, will encourage you to hope that your undertaking may benefit both yourself and many others. I heartily wish it may do so, and remain Your affectionate friend, THOMAS SODOR AND MAN. Isle of Man, Sept. 23, 1712, m - — — — — ■ ■■• — -® A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. When writings of this kind either find or help to make us devout, we usually desire to know something of the au- thor of them. To gratify such into whose hands these 14 Devotions" may fall, and to discharge (as far as this poor acknowledgment will go) a debt of gratitude, is the design of this short account of Dr. Richard Sherlock's life. He was born at Oxton in Wirral, in the county of Ches- ter, November 11, 1613, which village very sensibly feels the blessing of having been his birth-place ; where he has settled an uncommon, but very useful charity 1 . 1 ; Oxton is in the parish of Woodchurch. In Woodchurch Church there is the following public record of two of Dr. Sherlock's charities ; the latter is the one to which his Biographer especially alludes. 41 Richard Shirlock, Dr. of Divinity and Rector of Winwick, in his life time, in the year 1670, gave £50 to the poor of the parish of Woodchurch, the interest whereof to be laid out in bread and distrihuted amongst the poor of the said parish every Lord's Day, at the discretion of the Minister and Churchwardens for ever." " Richard Shirlock, Rector of Winwick aforesaid, anno 1677, gave to the Township of Oxton, the place of his birth, £50 to be laid out in cows for the poor of the said town, paying for every cow yearly, on St. Mark's Day, the sum of -2s. 6d., which said hire is to maintain and keep up the stock for ever " The above, as its orthography indicates, is a verbatim et literatim copy. •© ®- — — _® Xvi SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR When I have said that he was born of very honest and religious parents, the pious reader will not be offended that he finds nothing more considerable in the account of his family 1 . That his parents were such, an especial instance of his mother's piety, will not be improper to be here mentioned ; because it is probable God blessed her with so worthy a son, to convince her and all that read this, that such as fear Him, and seek to avert His judgments, do never seek Him in vain. Her father, in his younger years had taken such liberties, as made her justly fear his offspring might hear of it another day : which affected her so sensibly, and especially after she became a mother of children herself, that she very often, and with tears begged of God to suspend His just declaration of " visiting the sins of the fathers upon the children unto 1) Dr. Ormerod, in his History of Cheshire (vol. ii, p. 291), hazards the conjecture, that Dr. Sherlock " was most probably son of the Rector of Woodchurch, of the same name ;" and of this Richard Sherlock, the Rector he alludes to, he elsewhere states, that " he occurs in 1618, and dying the 30th of August, was buried at Woodchurch, September 1, 1643." This last date shows that his conjecture is erroneous: for Bishop Wilson intimates that the mother of the younger Richard, was a widow previous to the com- mencement of his College education, and that he took his degree as early as 1633, which is ten years before the death of that Rector. Still, as Oxton is part of that parish, and as the parent stock of the Sherlocks are said to have been located there for two centuries before the Doctor's time, it is highly probable that he was a near relative of that Rector ; and that such relationship was one link in the chain of causes, which providentially led to his being educated for the same profession. By the kindness of the present Rector of Woodchurch, it has been ascertained that the parish registers, owing to the concise manner in which almost all the entries of that date are made, do not furnish any means for tracing the parentage of our Author ; his Baptism is there thus briefly recorded, " Richardus Sherlock, baptized 16th November, 1613." In Baine's History of Lancashire, and other publications, it is stated, that Dr. Sherlock of Winwick, was the grandfather of Bishop Sherlock. This too is incorrect. The Bishop was son of Dean Sherlock, whose father was a citizen of London. Family tradition, however, makes them to be related to our Author, but does not determine the degree of their relation- ship. d) ' 1 ■ ' ' ' " * -<•> ® g> OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. Xvii the third and fourth generation of them that hate Him." And her posterity have many reasons (though not proper to be mentioned here) to believe she was heard in that she feared. This circumstance should not have been mentioned, but in hopes that some who read it may be led to consider, how many suffer for the iniquities of their forefathers, while none of their posterity are found to u stand in the gap," and put a stop to the judgments which God has determined to "pour out upon the families which call not on His Name." This pious mother (in confidence that God would hear her prayers) being now become a widow, gave her son an education suitable to her abilities. She sent him first to Oxford 1 , and afterwards, upon the account of a less expensive education, to Trinity College near Dublin, where he* pro- ceeded Master of Arts, A. D. 1633, as afterwards in the year 165), Doctor in Divinity. And now, having both in his own, and his mother's in- tentions, been dedicated to the more immediate service of God, he entered into Holy Orders' 2 , and had a cure of souls conferred upon him in Ireland, which he attended until he was forced to quit that, and that Kingdom by the releMion which broke out in 1641. From thence he went to England, Chaplain to one of those regiments sent by the Marquis of Onnond to the King's assistance ; and which soon after, were unfortunately routed near Nantwich. Upon this, Mr. Sherlock returned to Oxford, where he was courteously received, and soon after elected one of the 1) He was "originally (as it is said) a Student of Magdalen Hall." Wood's Athen. Oaou. vol. ii. p. 833. 2) Wood (ibid.) lead? us to suppose, that he was Ordained immediately after taking his Master's degree, and adds, that " soon after, he became Min- ister of several small p Irishes in Erel'ind} united tognhvr, and yielding no more than £80 a year." The Editor has not been able to obtain any parti- culars of his Ordination, nor the names of the united parishes in Ireland where he ministered. CanonicJly, he could not have been Ordained earlier than A. D. 1636. O @ — — — — @ Q — © Xviii A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR Chaplains of New College, and continued there, until he was turned out by the Parliament visitors 1 . Not willing to be unemployed, he became Curate to Dr. Jasper Maine, at Cassington, until both the Doctor and his Curate were ejected. About which time Sir Robert Bindlosse of Borwick in Lancashire, returning from bis travels, Mr. Sherlock was well recommended to him, and as kindly received for his Chaplain. It was at this time, and in this neighbourhood, that George Fox began to broach and vent his new doctrines. Mr. Sher- lock being of reputation for learning and piety, Fox had the vanity to attempt to imake him his proselyte, or which is more likely, to make himself more famous by so remarkable an adversary. To this end he sends him a set of queries and demands an answer, in terms exceeding confident of victory. Mr. Sherlock was a man by no means fond of contro- versy ; "Practical Christianity" was his talent and delight ; and, but that this proud boaster gave him an insufferable dis- turbance, deluding many poor people into an opinion that his queries were unanswerable, perhaps he had never engaged in any thing of that nature. At last, to prevent the spreading mischief, he published several small tracts, namely : " The Quaker's Wild Questions Briefly Answered ;" to which he annexed, " A Discourse of the Holy Spirit, His workings and impressions on the souls of men;" as also "A Discourse of Divine Revelation, 1) On his coming to Oxford, "he preached often before the Court and Parliament, became Chaplain to the Governor, as also Chaplain of this House, (New College,) and in tho year 1646, had his Bachelor of Divinity's degree bestowed upon him." [Walker, sufferings of the Clergy, part. ii. p. 130.] Wood informs us, that this Degree was " conferred upon him in con- sideration of several Sermons that he preached either at Court or before the Parliament in Oxon." Whilst Curate of Cassington — " an obscure village near Woodstock in Oxfordshire," — he was allowed £16 a year for his pains (the Vicarage being of trifling value), "a good part whereof he gave away to the poor of that place." Athen. Oxon. ® -, ® ® — ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. xix mediate and immediate:" and another " of Error, Heresy, and Schism." All which by the blessing of God had their effects, although that heresy spread too fast abroad, by being overmuch despised in other places. While he continued with Sir Robert Bindlosse he was, in the words of Micah 1 , u A Father and a Priest to him." The office of a Chaplain is an employment that requires as much Christian courage, conduct, and piety, to discharge it faithfully (where there are so many temptations, and so much need of virtue to overcome them) as any state of life whatever. And therefore it often happens that such as seek or accept that charge in hopes of preferment, do find a necessity of quitting either those hopes or a good con- science. One instance of Mr. Sherlock's behaviour in this part of his life, in which he showed a true Christian contempt of his own interest, will neither tire nor be unedifying to the reader. His patron had a just esteem for the Church and her Ministers, both at that time under a cloud, and being every way what they call an accomplished gentleman, it was no wonder that very many were fond of the honour of convers- ing w T ith him ; which had this unhappy effect, that it made him in love with company and many of the evils that attend it, and too many of the family followed his example. To make some amends, as they thought, for these liberties, they expressed an uncommon concern for the interest of the suffer- ing Church ; not considering that if we shall be shut out of Heaven for our sins, it will be no great comfort to us what Church we were members of on earth. The Chaplain saw this with grief, and therefore, after general discourses and intimations had had little or no effect, he applied to his patron more closely, and in a letter he wrote to him, laid down his and the vices of the family in 1) Judges xvii. 10. © — ® XX A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR terms so home and serious and yet so mannerly, that one could not imagine a mind so void of goodness, as to be of- fended with his holy freedom. He desired him to consider what injury he did to the distressed Church, for which he always expressed so commendable a zeal. He intimated to him, that this was both the cause of her sufferings, and that which made her the scorn of her enemies; that her friends did her more dishonour than they could do her hurt; so that she may truly say, in the words of Zechariah, " These are the wounds which I received in the house of my friends 1 ." He assured him, that for his own part he durst not seem to countenance such criminal liberties ; lest the enemy should say, that the Ordinances of the Gospel were profaned with the consent of her Ministers. And then, forgetting, or rather despising his own interest, the uncertainty of the times, and all the expectations he might have from a person of so good an interest in the world, he earnestly pressed either to be hearkened to in this matter, or to be immediately discharged from his office 2 . His patron was so far from being offended with this just liberty of his faithful Chaplain, that he heard him with sub- mission, knowing well Whose ambassador he was, and ever after honoured him as his friend ; and would by no means part with him, until he thought his own entertainment too mean for so worthy a person ; and then he most effectually recommended him to a true son and lover of the Church, the Right Honourable Charles, Earl of Derby ; who made him his domestic Chaplain, and reposed so much confidence in him, that upon the restoration of the Royal Family, he prevailed upon, and entrusted him with a commission to set- 1) Zech. xiii. 6. 2) Dr. Whitaker, in his History of Lonsdale, appended to his History of Richmondshire (vol ii. p. 312), gives an interesting Memoir of Dr. Sherlock. Alluding to Dr. Sherlock's request to be discharged from Lis ( hapluincy, if his remonstrance were not listened to, he remarks, " This it must be remem- bered was at a time when the regular Clergy were starving, and he himself would not have known where to procure a subsistence." ® — - — ~© ® ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXI tie the affairs of the Church of Man, which during the great Rebellion had suffered in her Doctrine, Discipline, and Worship. This difficult work he went through, while his fellow- commissioners settled the Civil and Military affairs, to the entire satisfaction of the Lord and people of that island ; which, by the blessing of God, continues as uniform in her Worship, as orthodox in her Doctrine, and as strict and regular in her Discipline, as any Christian Church in the world. Upon the Doctor's return from that happy island, by the favour of his noble patron, he obtained a presentation 1 to the Parsonage of Winwick, from King Charles the Second, the patronage being at that time in dispute, and immediately after, upon the expiration of a lease of ninety-nine years, his Living became one of the best in England. This was so far from transporting him, that it made him grow more jealous of himself, knowing full well, that the more he had, the more he was to account for. The first thing, therefore, he set himself to, besides the ordinary duties of the Ministry, was to compose and publish a short and plain Paraphrase upon the Church Catechism, exceedingly well suited to the capacities of his people. After this, to use his own words, because " Doctrine without practice is but a body of religion without a soul to quicken it,"' he published the following Summary of Christian Practice. And having freely given a considerable number of both these books amongst his parishioners, the good effect soon appeared in such a number of constant, devout communicants, as at that time, were hardly to be seen in any parish in England ; and by the great care of its Rectors, that parish still continues exemplary for its order and discipline. His preaching was like his devotions, plain and practical. And although until he grew much into years he was a con- stant Preacher, yet he always entertained in his house, at 1) A. D. 1664. ® — — — - © XXii A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR least three Curates for the service of his Church and Chapels. So that both on account of the Doctor's primitive example, as also the choice he made of persons to serve at the Altar, Winwick became a very desirable place for young Divines to improve themselves in the work of the Ministry. An undertaking which, as well as any other art, requires time and good instructions and experience to be tolerably perfect in it. Ars artium est cura animarum, saith St. Gregory. This is true priestcraft, to be able, by the grace of God, to conduct men to eternal life ; an employment or craft, which we have no reason to be ashamed of, notwithstanding the reproach of late cast both upon the name and thing. Having so well provided for the instruction of his parish in " things pertaining to life and godliness," he set himself very earnestly to bring his people to a decent uniformity in the public worship of God. And this he brought about in a short time chiefly by the example of his own most humble and devout behaviour ; and where that would not do, he made use of rebukes, and a zeal which few people were proof against. So that his Church and Chapels soon became re- markable for that good order he then introduced, and which still continues a pattern to most other Churches. He would not suffer even strangers to give an ill example of irregularity or indevotion to his parishioners, so that either for fear, or for conscience sake, all complied with the edify- ing usages of the place. I will give the reader but one instance, to show how far a holy boldness and zeal for the honour of God and His ser- vice may go towards reforming an abuse, which all people of piety would wish to see done. A person of the first quality being at his Church, and a gentleman of his retinue not behaving himself with that dis- cretion and seriousness which the place and service required ; the Doctor, without any regard to the number or quality of the gentleman's friends, ordered him to be turned out of the & ___ — © ® _ (5) OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. Xxiii Church. This unexpected rebuke soon changed his behav- iour ; and being by the Church-Wardens permitted to stay till the service was ended, he then according to the notorious profane way of that gentleman, said to his company — They threaten us with the devil, but I fear him not half so much, as I do that old gentleman in the long beard : meaning the Doctor. He suffered none to be baptized in private houses except in cases of necessity, as the Rubric directs, and he had the satisfaction of seeing this complied with, without those ill consequences which people are apt to fear ; who had rather give way to the importunities of the ignorant, than be at the pains to inform them better ; and can with less reluctancy disobey the Church than disoblige a private person. The truth is, if clandestine baptisms are less scandalous than clandestine marriages, yet the consequence of the first may be more fatal. And the dangeY is, lest that Sacrament should thereby become contemptible, as they say it is in some parts of the Greek Church, where it is deemed of little more importance, than as it is an occasion of the meeting of friends and their good entertainment. Some years before his death, when he had well considered all that had been said upon that subject, he published a small tract, u Of the irregularity of a Private Prayer in a Public Congregation." He was indeed of opinion that there was no occasion for longer prayers than what the Church pre- scribes in her Liturgy, which provides for all the ordinary wants of Christians, and which, where it is read with delibe- ration, and heartily closed with, is found to be long enough to satisfy, and were it not for the excellent variety of its offices, to tire the generality of worshippers, for whom it was composed. And verily, if such as are most fond of the other way would but sincerely make the experiment, and endeavour to keep their minds intent upon the public service, they would find their souls sufficiently satisfied with the provision the Church © ~® Q ® Xxiv A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR hnth made for them, without longing for a less choice if not a less safe entertainment. It is true while he lived with Sir Robert Bindlcsse, he was obliged through the iniquity of the times, and that his Ministry might not be stopped, to compose a prayer out of the Church Service ; and the reader may be assured that few of the gifted preachers of those days were more admired than was Dr. Sherlock, for his very plain and affecting prayer before his Sermon, even by them that would have despised him, had they known whence he borrowed it 1 . He was so strict a resident, that for near thirty years, he was scarce so many weeks all put together absent from his flock. During which time, he kept up a constant and decent hospitality, but the greatest part of his revenues, which were very considerable, he employed in charities of one kind or other 2 . Indeed, he considered his great incomes as a. mere depo- situm, and himself only as a steward ; and therefore though he was kind enough to his relations, yet he did not think fit to confine his kindness to them. Possessio Ecclesice sumptus est egcnorum, was his maxim, as well as St. Am- brose's. Any worldly aim or concern had so little share in his 1) During his stay at Borwick Hall, " he was compelled in order to pre- vent his being silenced by the governing powers, to decline the literal use of the Common Prayer, but he digested out of it, a formula of worship as nearly approaching to it as he thought safe, and constantly used it to the great edi- fication of a crowded audience " The Chapel where Dr. Sherlock officiated, " is now razed to the foundations;" but Borwick Hall " is still standing." (Dr. Whitaker. Ibid.) — Borwick is in the parish of Warton, and Lucas, in his history of Warton, speaking of Dr. Sherlock, tells us, that " his memory is yet precious in this parish." 2) Not to name many other valuable gifts, both in his life-time and at his death, to his own and many other parishes, the sum of £11. 85. bd. arising chiefly from Dr. Sherlock's charitable bequest, is yearly expended in the purchase of Bread, which is distributed among the poor of the paiish of Winwick. <•> * ——————— ® ® ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXV affections, that after he had heen for so many years possessed of one of the best Livings in England, at his death he left behind him not above one year's profits, and even these in a great measure to pious uses. He always satisfied himself with the bare necessaries of life, and his temperance was every day such, that one of his Curate's allowance would have defrayed all his personal expenses. About three years before his death, being informed that the next advowson of Winwick had been obtained for the Master of University College 1 , the Doctor immediately invited him down into the country, and without being offended with the sight of his successor, he not only received him courteously, but thinking himself in his old age un- equal for so great a burden, he desired him to accept of the cure and the profits of that great Rectory, reserving to him- self a very moderate share of the incomes for his own future subsistence. As he had lived, so he died, a member as well as an ornament of the Church of England ; notwithstanding the reproach raised and industriously spread abroad, that he was a Papist in disguise. This was said both by Papists and Dissenters, and both had the same end in propagating the calumny — the disservice of that Church which he adorned by his most- exemplary life. After all there was no ground for this slanderous report, except such as might shame those that built any thing thereon. It was said, for instance, that he burnt incense' in the Church. Now the truth of that matter was this : his worthy patron, Charles Earl of Derby, the Easter after the Restoration, desiring to countenance by his own presence the now re-established worship of the Church, chose to receive the Lord's Supper at his parish Church, rather than in his Chapel at Latham. The Doctor suspecting what he found too true, that the Chancel had been as little regarded as the 1) Obadiah Walker, M. A. -_ @ ® XXvi A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR Lord's Supper, which had not been administered in that Church for some years past, went a few days before to see things put in order; and cleansing the Chancel, which it seems had been more frequented by dogs and swine than men, it raised such an insufferable stench, that he was obliged to order frankincense to be burned the day before the solem- nity, that his congregation might not be discomposed by such an unexpected nuisance. This was improved so far as to make him a Papist. Nay, so unreasonable a prejudice had many against him, that reading upon his induction, the title of the twenty-second Article, u Of Purgatory," one who had not the patience to hear any more, went out of the Church in great indignation with these words spoken aloud, — " If you be for purgatory, you shall be none of my teacher." As for the Papists themselves, his excellent answers to some persons of note, who had written to him after they had been perverted to that Communion, will witness for him, at least to them, that he was no favourer of their errors. They might indeed envy the Church of England such an ornament, who most truly practised the Christian duties of temperance, mortification, self-denial, chastity, and devo- tion after a primitive manner, and which are by the members of that Church too often made a work, not of love to God, but of necessity, and therefore are performed by halves. Whereas he voluntary chose the severities of a single life, at the same time that he approved of chaste marriage in others of his own order. If he fasted much, and was continually in prayer, he called these means of religion, and not religion itself. If he gave much alms to the poor, and denied himself many satisfactions, which he could easily have purchased, he did not, however, pretend to merit by these exercises of piety, no more than a steward pretends to merit by being faithful, or a sick man by being orderly. He died some months after the Revolution, and before any measures were taken to try who did not approve of the ways engaged in to bring it about ; so that it would be im- @r ® . ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXvii pertinent to say what lie would have done, had he lived a few weeks longer, in a case in which he was exceedingly reserved. He had always preached up passive obedience and non- resistance in the sense of the Church in her Homilies, and he was of a life too retired, of a religion too practical, and of a mind too regardless of any worldly interest, to have con- cerned himself in a controversy altogether new to him. It is probable the barbarous anarchy, the confusion and misery of the late Rebellion, in which he had been a sufferer, had made strong impressions upon his mind in prejudice of what was then acting. He had in his younger years been imposed upon by some people, who seemed to have nothing so much at heart, as the glory of God and the welfare of the Church and nation. But when he saw what in truth they aimed at, he abhorred their hypocrisy, and became so affectionate a lover of the Monarchy, and of that Church which suffered with it, that with the zeal of Mephibosheth 1 he would never be prevailed on to shave his beard after the King was murdered. He was neither surprised by death nor afflicted with any of those ailments which are generally the forerun- ners of that great change. As he had lived a life of the strictest temperance, and had enjoyed an uninterrupted health, scarce knowing by experience what sickness was, his disso- lution was accordingly without violence or any remarkable agonies 2 . 1) 2 Sam. xix. 24. 2) The following extract from Dr. Sherlock's will, is instructive, as show- ing the character of his piety, after so long a life, spent in the practice of self-denial and other acts of practical obedience. " In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, Amen. The fourteenth day of June 1689. I, Richard Sherlock, Doctor of Divinity of the Church of England, Priest and Rector of Winwick ; being, though far in years, yet God be blessed of sound mind and perfect memory, and mindful of the great account I must give up before the just Judge of the world, of all my actions and enjoyments in this present life. In order there- unto I do make this my last will and testament, revoking all other by these presents heretofore declared by me either in word or writing. ® -© ©— ® XXviii A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR He was of a body so spare and light, that until a few days before he died he could walk as nimbly as a youth, which was his constant exercise for a quarter of an hour before he eat ; and which no doubt contributed very much to prolong his life to so considerable an age; for he died in his seventy- sixth year. The following devotions show his inward man better than any draught that can be made of him by any other pen. And when the reader is assured that what he there peruses was the Doctor's constant exercise, he need not be told that he was a most devout Christian, and not less sincere ; since he so strictly observed himself, what he so earnestly recom- mended to others 1 . And he had the satisfaction of knowing long before he died, that very many had formed their lives according to this model. Some years before his death he caused his gravestone to be laid in the place where his body was afterwards buried ; which from thenceforward, became to him a place of more particular devotion, whenever he could secure himself from being seen of men, which, of all things, he abhorred. He ordered the following epitaph to be engraven in brass and fixed upon his stone. EXUVIJS RICHAKDI SHERLOCK, S. T. P. " First, in all humility and all godly sorrow for my sins, my many, very many sins, both of my youth and riper age ; I do bequeath my soul into the merciful hands of my dear Redeemer, Who offered up His innocent soul a sacrifice for my soul, and for the many sinful pollutions thereof, all which I humbly beg may be washed away, through faith in His blood which was shed for them." In Dr. Sherlock we discover no traces of any of those meritorious self- lighteous feelings, which men in our day assign as the inseparable attendants of a life spent, as his was, in self mortification, and the daily bearing of the Cross. 1) "He had his stated hours of prayer not only in the day-time, but in the night, when he rose from his bed and went into his Chapel." (Dr. Whitaker.) He adds in a note, — " I suppose that at that time there was a domestic Chapel in the Parsonage House of Winwick, as at Houghton-le- Spring, and perhaps at the houses of a few other very opulent livings." ® — — ® ® — — <3> OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. Xxix INDIGNISSIMI HUJUS ECCLESIiE RECTORIS OBIIT 20 DIE JUNII, AN. AETATIS 76. A If NO DOM. 16S9. SAL INFATUATUM CONCULCATE. A certain person 1 who very well knew the Doctor's life and merits, and who had a venerable regard for his memory, subjoined this farther inscription. EN VIRI SAXCTISSIMI MODESTIA ! QUI EPITAPH1UM SE INDIGNUM INSCRIBI VOLEBAT, CUM VITA ET MERITA EJUS, LAUDES OMNES LOXGE SUPER.AREXT. And now I have only this to add. to this short account, that if any who knew Dr. Sherlock, wonder that I have omit- ted so many known instances of his great mortification, self- denial, and contempt of the world : I have only this to an- swer, that as he had, to be sure, good reasons for laying himself under such a discipline, as might rather discourage than edify the inexperienced; so whenever the Holy Spirit powerfully influences the heart, He will direct men to the most proper exercises and expressions of their love to God, and such as are most agreeable to the advances they have made in the ways of religion. And as the Doctor, in his life-time, did never attempt, to use his own words, magisterially to impose his methods of d.vo.ion upon others, so neither do I think it needful, after his death, to enumerate the particular instances of his aus- terities and other exercises of piety, which, or at least such as will be as well pleasing to God, will always be the fruits and ornament of a life so devoted to God as his w r as. The following additional account of Dr. Sherlock's life, forms the concluding portion of the Funeral Sermon preached by his friend and Curate, the Rev. Thomas Crane, M. A., from the text Job xix. 25 — 27. 1) Mr. Henry Prescot of Chester. ® — ®— -® XXX A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR "I have yet a large province behind, were T but able to manage it : I must, and do ingenuously confess, that some undeserved favours to me, when and whilst I was a student in the College, did always incline me to do him service, whose exequies we now celebrate ; however, being conscious to myself of my own insufficiency to discharge this task as it ought to be, that he was pleased to lay upon me, made me wish, and unfeignedly desire, that one more fit and better accomplished, had been employed upon this solemn occasion. "One main advantage that I have herein, before a stran- ger, is, that I need not be inquisitive, nor much solicitous after the memorable passages of his Life ; for those I presume are much-what known to me already, having enjoyed his company, and obtained his converse for many years together. Notwithstanding at this present, I cannot, without a more mature deliberation, and less disturbance and distraction of my thoughts, present you with any other than a rude, imme- thodical, and imperfect draught of his life : and wherein you find the representative to fall short, as it needs must, of that idea, that may worthily be conceived of this venerable person, I hope you will have so much Christian candour as to connive at the defects of your brother, and so much chari- ty for me, and respect for the deceased, as to pity rather than deride my weakness ; and wish, as I myself have done, that one more judicious and rhetorical had been the present undertaker. 44 1 know the very naming of him is enough to all that knew him : and to read, and seriously to meditate upon his devout and practical pieces, will be sufficient for them that knew him not. Albeit virtue hath no more than merit when it is commended, yet justice will that it should have its due ; for though it cannot be bettered thereby, yet in so doing it is righted. " He was early matriculated in the University, too early I have heard him say with some regret 1 j for to send raw and 1) He was admitted into the College when he was about 14 years of age : © — ® — ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXxi green youth thither, before the tongues be learned and understood, is a great diskindness to it, proves often such a defect, that will hardly after be made good without double diligence and industry : in that such will be obliged to study, before they can understand an author ; which falls out other- wise when well schooled beforehand, for that then they read with much ease and delight, as well as profit. " After, as I conceive, he had commenced Master of Arts in the University of Dublin, he entered into Holy Orders, and was presented to a Cure, and undertook first the Pastoral Charge in that now distracted Kingdom of Ireland : when instantly the Rebellion there breaking forth, he was forced thence, leaving and losing his books, and what he had. Nor was England after that, for any long time more kind or aus- picious to him, for that the torrent of wars did quickly over- flow the nations : however, he was always steadfast to his principles, steady in allegiance, and faithful to his Sovereign ; promoting his interest with great zeal and courage, as much as lay within his sphere. For his loyalty he sustained and suffered very much deprivation, and for some time imprison- ment, as many worthies did besides him. At the last, when driven out of Oxford, (where for some space he was resident, and one of the Chaplains in New College, officiating also at one of the Churches in the town,) by good providence he found shelter in a small village near adjoining, where he lived obscurely, yet he said very happily, for that he was at rest, for which, as he intimated, he -was constrained to become the more studious and industrious. And how well he improved his time, and what progress he made in learning, will sufficiently appear by what he writ, without any further observation. That which I find recorded of S. Remigius, may well be attributed unto him ; — Ut primum disciplinarian capax factxis est, non rnodo natu majores, §c. That from the time of his first capacity of learning, he outstripped those that were superior to him in age, as well in excellency of parts, as proficiency in study and maturity in moral viitues. I was enforced to make this remark, for that it was reported, that I had derogated from his worth and parts by my late expressions, rendering him thereby as mean and despicable. How deserving such censures are, let the reader be judge, and tell, whether the same be not temerarious, if not captious and perverse. ® ~® © ® XXXii A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR and not envied there, because the place was of no great value • save that the people were very kind and respective to him, and had a deference for him j which made his Min- istry more effectual, as well as life more comfortable ; for truly so it is, that wherever the people are prejudiced, or disaffected, (though a man had the tongue of men and Angels,) he shall, as one expresseth it, sooner preach out his heart amongst them, than preach what is good into their hearts. " But what corner of the nations was then left long unran- sacked? Here also they found him, and drove him out; insomuch that he was sore hurried and posted to and fro, being not able to fix his station long in any one place, except in one loyal family in the North 1 . " Till at last, by a most strange and propitious revolution, the King and royal issue returning, and the kingdoms settling after so much war and bloodshed, his Noble, and Right Honourable Patron, Charles Earl of Derby, whose Chaplain he was, as he had been long before to his grandfather, the Right Honourable William Earl of Derby, presented him to this place : so that his lot at the last fell unto him in a goodly heritage 2 , which might, as no doubt it did, in some measure compensate for his former losses and great sufferings. And for this I have heard him say, with much gladness of heart, for he thanked God when he spake it, that never any Bene- fice was more frankly and freely bestowed than his was • which was much, very much to the honour of his noble Pa- tron, whose necessities, notwithstanding, might be very great and urgent, because of his and the Earl his father's late troubles and sufferings for loyalty's sake, which are not here to be recounted. " As for his painfulness in his Cure, let his own words be heard, or he being dead yet speaketh, and preacheth to us ; thus ou may read him in his Dedicatory Epistle to his Parishioners in his Practical Christian. 4 As for the discharge' of my duty, though I cannot say I have been so prudent, and 1) Borwick Hall. 2) Winwick. © - " © Q — ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXxiii diligent, as the high and holy nature of my function requires, vet you know I have not omitted frequently to put you in mind of the whole will of God, in the careful observance whereof the health of your souls consisteth.' And lest any should be at a loss for the contents of God's holy will, he there further informs us, that the same is collected out of the whole body of Holy Scriptures, and summed up into general heads by the Church of Christ in her Catechism. 4 The which,' saith he, ' though by a strange fanatic humour it be slighted, and by self-conceited persons derided, yet contains all things, both of faith and fact, necessary to salvation, being rightly, clearly, and fully understood.' For this end he hath paraphrased the same : which how much in vogue and esteem throughout the nation, the many editions thereof do fully demonstrate. 11 He would often tell his hearers of such that have itching ears, who through the desire of much hearing, upon the pre- tence of going on to perfection, were apt to run off the very foundation. Alike to this, is that of a late Reverend Prelate (Bishop Nicolson) who thus expresseth himself: ' Ever since Sermonizing hath justled out the necessary instruction of Catechising, the people have been possessed with strange errors in religion, and hurried on by the spirit of giddiness, of faction, and of rebellion.' " He was evermore for what was practical, much more for that than what was controversial in Divinity : he seemed rather to decline than encourage and countenance disputes ; as if thereby he dreaded greater differences : which often falls out, that more strifes are engendered and multiplied by hotly and stiffly arguing it, than are quelled thereby. " He was very strict and regular in his life and conversa- tion, no less observant of the Church's Orders and Constitu- tions : he would not admit of private prayer in public, of no other there than what the Church enjoined to be used, as pre- 3 ® — <§> — ® XXXIV A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR scribed and established by authority 1 . And pray ! with what face can men pretend to be of the Church, and guides to the people, when they will not be ruled nor regulated thereby, acting as she enjoins ? u As for his hospitality and acts of charity, they have been deservedly much famed : he gave much alms, and daily administered to the necessitous, to such that were in prison and distress : he clothed the naked, and provided bread for the hungry, contributed much towards the settling of a stock of bread and clothes for the poor for ever. His charity was diffusive, for not only his own but other parishes were warmed by its bountiful influence. He hath made such provision for the indigent, that the children which are yet unborn may gratefully commemorate him. He was much conversant in watching, fasting, and praying, as well as alms- deeds, with him they inseparably accompanied each other. He showed himself in all things a pattern of good works, the mirror of holiness, the sampler of Christian piety. His zeal was such in providing for the sick and needy, as to deny himself those things that were convenient for him, that he might be better able to supply the wants of the necessitous. He had learned that the glory of one of his high and holy function consisted much in making provision for the poor, as his shame did in studying to enrich himself 2 . Wherefore his principal care for this was, to lay up his treasure in Hea- ven by a faithful dispensation (as a careful steward) of that which God had given him upon earth. 1) For this I may, and do refer alt such that require further satisfaction, and more particular information herein, to a brief discourse of his, entituled, The Irregularity of a Private Prayer in a Public Congregation. In a Letter to a Friend, Anno Dom. 1674. And since then reprinted and enlarged. However, he thought it prudence to conceal his name, for that custom had so much prevailed to the contrary. See also Pulpit Conceptions, Popular Deceptions. There is more of this in the Preachers Guard and Guide, alias Rex Theologus, wherein is ranked the use of long prayers of our own conceiving before Sermon, among the innovations these later times have made. 2) Ignominia Sacerdotis est, propriisstudere, Sec. ® ® ® <§) OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXXV 11 He was very spare and slender of body ; and it was thought he impaired its strength very much by his frequent fasting and abstinence. However he would not endure to be told thereof; for upon any such suggestion, he was ready to reply, That he did eat and drink too much ; and that many, if not most, of men (using the proverb) did dig their graves with their teeth. Upon this account, for that he was so much devoted to austerity of life, and was so strict an observer of the holy time of Lent, and other stated Fasts of the Church ; for this and the like, the ignorance of some, and that, and ill-will in others, would needs have him tainted with Po- pery. " He often forsook his warm bed in the cold season of the night, that he might betake himself to his devotions ; so that he spent the time in watching, weeping, and praying, when others were at their repose, and sleeping. He esteemed time most precious, reckoning of that as lost, more than what was necessary for rest and refreshment to the body, that was not employed in prayer, study, Christian visits, and such like ; insomuch, that that very character, which was given to St. Hierom by the Author of his Life, may very well be bestow- ed on this reverend person 1 : — That he would indulge sleep no more (scarce that) than only to satisfy the necessity of na- ture ; that he remitted nothing of pains and industry for reading or study ; nor of his alacrity in prayer : so that it was a wonder to see a body, that had sustained so much by labour, vigi- lance, and fasting, to continue so full of vigour and active- ness. Moreover, as if he had (what can we imagine less ?) some secret and invisible monitor still at hand to instigate him thereunto, he would frequently, and that instantly, de- part the company, retire into secret, to pour forth his soul into pious, and fervent ejaculations 2 ; when and where his 1) Somnusnon ad delicias, sed ad naturae capiturnecessitatem: Cams jam totus aspersus, nihil ex studiorum assiduitate remittit Mirumeiat in cor- pore jejuniis et estate consumpto, tantum spiritus, tantum vigere fortitudinis. 2) Saepe accidit, ut dum inter alios versaretur, et cum illis Sermonem ® — ■ — ! ® ®— -® XXXVI A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR zeal and transports have been such, that he hath been often overheard; which in charity we must conclude was not de- signedly, and out of vain affectation to be overheard, that he might be taken notice of; no, but we must impute the same to the mere raptures of devotion. That of venerable Bede, which he ascribed to his predecessor S. Cuthbert, is very applicable to this Reverend Pastor 1 , — That he fulfilled his duty in daily prayers in behalf of the people committed tojiis charge, and he taught them nothing by his words, whereof he did not give them a good example by his deeds. " He had David's Psalms ad unguem, making responses all by heart ; evening and morning, as the Church prescribes, he attended public prayers : and upon the more solemn days of Fasting and Humiliation, as upon Ash-Wednesday, Good- Friday, &c, after Divine Service had been celebrated in the Church, he would in his private Chapel read prayers again, making then use of the Psalms and Lessons, as appointed by the Calendar in ordinary course for the day, when those that were proper and peculiar to that day had been read before. " Whenever the Absolution was pronounced, or the Bene- diction given, being upon his bended knees, he bared his venerable gray hairs, and lowly bowed his head, as if he would have kissed the ground. " Very often in private he hath been seen and heard to weep, and pray, and beat his breast ; not only kneeling, but sometimes throwing himself flat upon the earth ; lying pros- trate on the ground, as if he had been licking up the dust; thus profoundly humbling himself, even to the lowest. Since he has already paid the last debt to nature, we may safely speak ; for that it is impossible to humour the dead into dan- ger, or in this case to melt ourselves away into flattery. misceret, intus Deum se alloquentem sentiens, discederet in cubiculum ibi cor suum coram Domino effundens, &c. In Vit. Th. a Kempis. 1) Commissam namqno sibi plebem et orationibus, protegebat assiduis, et admonissionibus, &c. Bed. Eccl. Hist. lib. iv. cap. 28. ® -® I - ® OF THE FOLLOWING DEVOTIONS. XXXvil M A good old man, like to this pious one, who is now become our present subject, being much importuned to de- clare, what his studies and contemplations for the most part were : — at last, breaking the bounds of modesty, he made this answer 1 , — That he for his part, was daily conversant in, and much meditating upon the four last things, Death and Judgment, Heaven and Hell. These we may well presume possessed much the thoughts of the deceased, for that in writing he hath expatiated hereupon, and recommended the same to our serious meditations. " It were easy to multiply instances of this nature, for we have a very virtuous and copious subject ; the whole narra- tive of his life would take up much, and justly challenges a far better and more able pen ; but brevity necessitates me, that I be not tedious, to pass by many memorable passages. There is nothing of untruth, as I conceive, that can deservedly be charged upon me for what I have already said ; I fear there is more of virtue and piety than hundreds will ever imitate or practise. However, let a man live or act never so well, there will be some Momus or other to carp, some prejudiced and disaffected to traduce and censure him, and never under- stand the worth, till they find the want of him ; which great numbers will be sure to do, I mean the poor that he fed and clothed, who can be no feigning nor personating, but real mourners for his death. " Having led his life in an holy and chaste celibacy, being never wedded to any save God, and the people that were committed to his care and trust, of w T hose spiritual welfare he was very tender ; and having spun out his days to the 76th year of his age, he seemed to be weary of the world, and to wait for his dissolution ; wherein his God hath gratified him, having brought him to his fathers, and in a good old age delivered him from the miseries of this sinful world, it may be from much evil to come. Which God 1) Se quotidie versari, &c. ® . __ ® ®_ -® XXXV111 A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE AUTHOR. in mercy prevent, and of His infinite goodness grant ' that among the sundry and manifold changes and chances of this mortal life, our hearts may surely there be fixed, where true joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.' " ®" "® <•>- -<•> PARISHIONERS OF WINWICK, IN LANCASHIRE. Good People : The cure of your souls being by the Divine Providence incumbent upon me, very unfit to undergo so great a charge, especially considering the liberty which most men do now assume in the way of religion : in the discharge of my duty, though I cannot say I have been so prudent and diligent, as the high and holy nature of my function requires ; yet you know I have not omitted frequently to put you in mind, which is one principal part of my office, of the whole will of God, in the careful observance whereof the health of your souls consisteth. The contents of God's revealed will, being delivered and dispersed through the whole body of Holy Scriptures, are collected and summed up into general heads by the Church of Christ, in her Catechism : the which, though by a strange fanatic humour it be slighted, and by self-conceited persons derided, yet contains all things both of faith and fact neces- sary to salvation, being rightly, clearly, and fully understood. Did you therefore rightly understand, and seriously con- sider, wherein your soul's health and edification chiefly con- sists, you would be better pleased with the frequency of ®- @ © ® xl EPISTLE TO THE PARISHIONERS Catechising, and be more versed in those essentials of reli- gion, than in the hearing of many sermons, which are of less concern. I have not spared my pains in preaching, nor my purse in the maintenance of others to assist me herein. But by long experience it is evident, that Sermons (what through the variety, several modes and methods on the one hand, and what through the great abuse thereof on the other) have not that influence upon the minds of men as becometh " sound doctrine," but have too much sway with" men of itching ears, who heap to themselves teachers after their own lusts :" who, upon pretence of going on to perfection, go off the foundation, wax vain in their imaginations, and their foolish hearts are darkened, whilst they conceit themselves enlight- ened. And therefore, for your more ready, easy, and constant instruction, I have committed to writing, and made public, The Summary of Christian Doctrine, being the Catechism of the Church of England Paraphrased. And because doctrine without practice is but a body of religion without a soul to quicken it ; I have here added a Summary of Christian Practice, in the ensuing rules of self- examination, which will equally discover unto you your sins and miscarriages past, and serve for a guide to direct you in the future ordering of all the actions of your lives in the ways of godliness. In both which Summaries, I have endeavoured to be both brief and plain, delivering only what I conceive generally necessary to salvation, and expressing the same in the most easy way to be understood : as knowing that multitude of words, various, acute, and quaint affected expressions, espe- cially in the essentials of religion, though they may more please, do not so much profit, nay, they do really rather dis- tract than instruct the minds of most. For it is not the rattling of the leaves, but the fruits of the tree of knowledge, that feed the soul to life eternal. ® *® ®. ® OF WINWICK. xli The prayers prescribed upon any the ensuing considera- tions, are not by way of one long continued oration without intermission, but divided into several shorter prayers : and this because, 1. The heat of holy zeal is hereby better maintained, and kept flaming in the soul, whilst the ending of one prayer and beginning another, adds new fervour to the soul's devo- tion. 2. Long prayers do tire the spirits, clog the memory, distract the mind, and damp that celestial fervour which is the life of all holy and acceptable prayers. 3. Such are all those prayers which are truly the prayers of God's Holy Spirit, and stand upon record in Holy Writ : they are all divided and cut short into so many distinct verses, as into so many several shorter prayers. 4. Thus Christ has commanded us to pray, 3Iatt. vi. 7 — 9. And according to this pattern, the prayers of Christ's Church, even for the length thereof, are generally framed. My primary intention in the ensuing Discourse, was chiefly to direct you for the worthy receiving of the Holy Communion of the Body and blood of Christ, whereufito a thorough self-examination is absolutely necessary. And being desired to enlarge my Meditations upon that blessed Sacrament, I have therefore now divided the former edition into two parts : the first, of Self-examination ; and the second, of the Holy Communion. Wherein I must necessarily tell you, that since the dan- ger of unworthy receiving is equivalent to the benefit of the worthy ; it therefore concerns every one of you, that hath any sense and sincere care of his soul's health, as strictly to " examine himself, before he eat of that Bread, and drink of that Cup," as he believes he shall be examined before the great Tribunal of Heaven ; and accordingly to purge and purify his soul by confession, contrition, and all the sacred acts and offices of true repentance, the practice whereof is in the following leaves delivered. © — ■ : — ® ® — ® Xlii TO THE PARISHIONERS OF WINWICK. I shall not further enlarge this Epistle, more than to pray, that God may be pleased to assist you by His Divine grace, carefully to observe such useful instructions as be herein given you : not vainly jangling, and talking of religion ; but, according to the covenant you have made with your God, u to keep His Holy Will and Commandments, and to walk in the same all the days of your life ;" remembering Who it is that hath said it, " If thou wilt enter into life, keep the Commandments. 1 " And that you may observe the one as the way to the other, I humbly beg may be thine for me, as it is mine for thee, even the constant prayer of Your respective Pastor, RICHARD SHERLOCK. 1) Matt. xix. 17. ® _____ @ -® TO THE PIOUSLY AFFECTED READER. It is the happiness of man, above that of the beasts that perish, that he can both converse with himself and the blessed Creator of himself, Who hath enstamped His Divine Image upon his immortal soul, to have his conversation in Heaven ; and amidst the most startling changes of this mor- tal life, have his heart surely fixed there where true joys are to be found. Mens in Ccelis, quies in terris. If we set our affections on things above, all will be in quiet here below ; so that we may securely sail through the troubled waters of the many various opinions and divisions, uncharitable contentions and disputes in religion, too irreli- giously maintained and managed to the great decay both of its life and lustre in the hearts and lives of its professors. And finally, through all the turbulent sects and factions of these last and most tempestuous times, to arrive safely at the much-desired haven of the Heavenly Land of Promise ; where alone dwells unity and peace, sweet blessed peace, and that joy which is unspeakable and full of glory : whither may our mutual prayers for each other, with such devout ®- -® xlh TO THE READER. tears and sighs which are the breathings of the Holy Spirit j of God, waft and conduct us all, through the alone merits of j our dear Redeemer : and this I humbly beg may be thine as ! it is mine, even the constant prayer of thy loving brother in the Lord, RICHARD SHERLOCK. ■«- -<2> 3 -® CONTENTS. PART I. CHAPTER I. Of the Great Necessity of Self-Examination .... 49 CHAPTER II. The Rule of Self-Examination by the Vow in Baptism 58 CHAPTER III. ,The Rule of Self-Examination by the Creed ; or, by the second part of the Vow in Baptism, To believe all the Articles of the Christian Faith 65 CHAPTER IV. The Rule of Self-Examination by the Decalogue : or by the third part of the Vow in Baptism, To keep God's holy Will and Commandments, &c 67 CHAPTER V. The Examination of Religious Actions 98 ®- -© <§>- ® xlvi CONTENTS. CHAPTER VI. The Examination of Repentance 101 CHAPTER VII. Considerations with Directions in the Confession of Sin 103 CHAPTER VIII. A Form of Confession of Sin, fitted to the Rules of Self- Examination, whereunto every one may add or sub- tract, as he finds himself guilty or not guilty . . . 114 CHAPTER IX. An ancient Form of Confession, extant Biblioth. Pa- trum 142 CHAPTER X. The Lord's Prayer Paraphrased 149 CHAPTER XI. The Seven Penitential Psalms Paraphrased . • . . . 154 Meditations upon the Tears of a Devout Soul . . . 186 CHAPTER XII. Meditations and Prayers to be Partakers of the Merits of what our Blessed Redeemer hath done and suf- fered for us 193 Meditations upon the Disease and Cure of the Soul . 203 ® — ' — — ® ® — ® CONTENTS. Xlvii PART II. • CHAPTER T. Of the two general Christian Duties required, in order to the Holy Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ . . . . 213 CHAPTER II. Meditations and Prayers preparatory to the Holy Com- munion, the week before 227 CHAPTER III. Meditations and Prayers for the Friday especially before the Communion 233 CHAPTER IV. St. Augustine's Recommendation of the Passion of Christ unto God the Father 242 CHAPTER V. St. Ambrose's Commemoration of our Saviour's Passion 2-15 CHAPTER VI. St. Gregory's Prayers upon the Passion of Christ . . 249 CHAPTER VII. The Form of Prayer used by our Lord upon the Cross, viz. the twenty-second Psalm Paraphrased .... 251 CHAPTER VIII. Meditations and Prayers preparatory to the Blessed Sa- crament, on Saturday night, or Sunday morning before 264 $ ® ®- ® xlviii CONTENTS. CHAPTER IX. Meditations upon your going to Church ; with some short Directions for your demeanour in the House and in the Service of God 271 CHAPTER X. Meditations and Prayers at the Blessed Sacrament . . 281 CHAPTER XI. Psalms of Praise and Thanksgiving after the Holy Com- munion : . . . . 295 Meditations upon the Dwelling of God in the Hearts of His People 303 Meditation III. Holy Breathings of the Soul after God 312 Meditations upon Unity in the Public Worship of God 315 The hundred and thirty^third Psalm Paraphrased . . 318 ^M^»4M M&£ -® THE PRACTICAL CHRISTIAN. PART I. CHAPTER I. jz rzz c-?.z^: zzizssity of szlf-zxamination. Whosoever believes as a Christian his soul to be immortal, being either entitled to everlasting joy through faith and obedience to the Gospel of Christ, or liable to eternal wo a through disobedience and misbelief, must be very stupid and sottish, if he do not frequently " examine himself 5 ," whether he may reasonably conclude he is in the state of grace and salvation ; or of sin, and of death the " wages thereof ." " All the works of the righteous and of the wise are in the hand of God : and no man knoweth either love or hatred, by all that is before him'." God hath kept secret to Himself His decrees of eternal salvation and damnation of each particular person : but yet each man's conscience, impartially examined, will acquaint him with very much of his condition, a John v. 28, 29. c Rom. vi. 23. b Psalm iv. 4 ; 2 Cor. xiii. 5 ; Gal. vi. 4. d Eccles. ix. 1. ®- -® ® 9 50 THE GREAT NECESSITY [PART I. whether of wisdom or folly, of righteousness or sin, of life or of death to all eternity. 2. That every man should know himself, is such a fundamental principle of true wisdom, that wise men of old affirmed Nosce teipsum, to be a command immediately derived to the sons of men, by a voice from Heaven, as being absolutely necessary to the right guidance of all the actions of human life upon earth. " Many sciences are invented (saith Bern.) by the sons of men ; but there is none greater, none more profitable, than each man's knowledge of him- self. There is not a more compendious way to the knowledge of God, than the knowledge of a man's self*." He who knows every thing, and knows not him- self aright, knows in effect as much as comes to nothing. 3. The reasonable soul, were it not debauched by the sensual appetite, and distracted by the hurry of exorbitant desires, could not but often remember herself, examine and call to mind the Author and End of her being ; the immortality and dignity of her nature ; what is her errand into this world, and how she shall subsist in the world to come; what is her chiefest good, and wherein her perfection and felicity consists : which cannot be merely to eat and drink and sleep, purchase lands, build houses, satisfy the lusts of the flesh, swell with pride of life. She would consider that she is stamped after the image of e Bern, de Interiori Domo, c. 12. 0. @ ® ® CHAP. I.] OF SELF-EXAMINATION. 51 God, and her happiness consists in the knowledge, love, and enjoyment, of the Divine Majesty, and in the imitation and representation (according to her model) of the perfections of the Godhead. It is peculiar to God alone, to be essentially blessed in Himself, even in the contemplation and fruition of His own perfections from everlasting to everlasting. And yet so great is the goodness of God, that he hath made man capable of the same blessedness with Him- self; to enjoy not another, but the same felicity which God Himself enjoys in the enjoyment of Himself. That is the great end and perfection of man's being in nature, eVen through all the degrees of grace, to see the fair beauty of God in glory, and to love Him and praise Him for ever. But, alas ! vain " man being in honour, hath no understanding," considers not the honour of his being after the image of his Maker; but receives his divine immortal soul in vain, whilst he follows the sway of his sensual irrational appetite, and " is compared to the beasts that perish'." 4. And well it were for all such inconsiderate and imprudent persons, if their souls were as perishing and mortal as those which animate the beasts of the field. But to their eternal sorrow it is far otherwise : for there is an account to be given by every man of his immortal soul, and of the image of God stamped thereupon ; how this blessed image hath been either defaced or kept undefiled ; how it hath been obscured, f Psalm xlix. 12. ® ®_ ® 52 THE GREAT NECESSITY [PART I. or how shined ; how deformed, or how beautified, through all the actions of each man's life. For " God will bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good or whether it be eviF." 5. Upon every man's examination, both in his par- ticular, and in the general judgment, depends his ev- erlasting well-being, or undoing for ever : each man's condition then shall be unchangeable, whether it be of glory, or misery. " They that have done good, shall go into everlasting life ; and they that have done evil into everlasting fire' 1 ." The execution of this saying can no more fail, than the eternal God Him- self can fail, Who is the Fountain of truth and right- eousness. 6. Since this great trial then shall be upon life and death eternal, it will be wisely done to try before- hand. Such is the advice of the wise Siracides : " Before judgment, examine thyself; and in the day of visitation thou shalt find mercy 1 ." To examine, accuse, judge and condemn thyself in this life, may, through the merits of Christ, acquit thee in the life to come. So saith the Apostle ; "If we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged'." 7. Now then (sinful man) delay not to pass judg- ment upon thyself: remember that the great Judge Himself hath said it, "I will reprove thee, and set be- fore thee the things that thou hast done 1 ." Be wise g Eccles. xii. 14 ; Rom. ii. 16 : xiv. 10 ; 2 Cor. v. 10. h Matt. xxv. 46. i Ecclus. xviii. 20. k 1 Cor. xi. 31. I Psalm 1. 21. I ® ® <•)- ® CHAP. I.] OF SELF-EXAMINATION. .")'.) then, and prevent this sad and dismal reproof, by set- ting in order before thyself all the sins of thy life. And to this trial of thyself, these following particulars do necessarily concur. (1.) A Tribunal must be erected; and this is not to be without thee, but within thee, even in thine own heart'". (*2.) The Judge to sit upon this seat of judicature, must be thy reason guided by the law of the Most High ; wherein beware of a misunderstanding and " wresting" of the letter of the law, to pass any un- just and partial sentence upon thyself, for that may undo thee for ever 11 . (3.) The Witnesses to be produced against thee, are, The conscience bearing witness, and the thoughts the meanwhile accusing or excusing one another : and thus shall it be also " in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Christ Jesus"." (4.) The Executioners that stand ready to seize the criminal, are, Fear and Terror, and an horrible dread overwhelming the soul 1 . These do ever attend, (5.) Self-Condemnation, which is an unfeigned and sad acknowledgment to have incurred the dismal sentence of condemnation to death eternal. To pre- vent which, (6.) Execution must be done, and the blood of the guilty soul must be shed. It is not to be believed or hoped, that a black, dis- m 1 John iii. 20, 21. n 2 Pet. iii. 16. ? o Rom. ii. 15, 16. p Phil. ii. 12 ; Ps. Iv. 5. ® ~ ® ®_ — — ® 54 THE GREAT NECESSITY [PART I. eased soul, should recover its health and beauty after the image of God, except she bleed plentifully ; bleed in the tears of compunction and godly sorrow ; bleed in the confession of her sins, with an abhorrence of them, for the filthiness, guilt, and danger contracted by them, so, as for the future, to renounce and abjure them for ever. 8. Thus to examine, judge and condemn thyself, is the same Christian duty which is called Repent- ance. For as by self-examination, so by repentance, such as know not themselves, through pride and ig- norance, attain this saving knowledge in the acknow- ledgment of the truth, " and recover themselves out of the snares of the devil, who are taken captive by him at his willV The great necessity of repentance, in order to escape eternal perdition, is most clearly and positively affirmed by our Lord, saying, " Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish*"." And He saith the same words again, at the same time, and in the same text recorded; 1. To enforce the great ne- cessity of repentance, against all carnal, careless, self- conceited and seduced persons. 2. To manifest His great goodness, " Who would not have any to perish, but that all should come to repentance"." 9. Sinners we are all, less or more 1 ; but God, in great mercy, has ordained and commanded repent- ance, as the great antidote against the poison of sin, and preservative from death' 1 . And that repentance, q 2 Tim. ii. 25, 26. r Luke xiii. 3, 5. s 2 Pet. iii. 9. t James iii. 2. u Matt. iii. 7, 8. I ® : ® © ® CHAP. I.] OF SELF-EXAMINATION. 55 which is thus salutary, consists of two general parts : 1. To confess with sorrow our sins past ; 2. For ever to abjure and forsake them. And to such a true pen- itent only is mercy promised*. 10. To both these general heads of true repent- ance, a full knowledge and deep sense of all heinous sins, even punctually and particularly, is absolutely necessary. For no man can confess his sins, who knows them not; nor forsake them, who is not feel- ingly sensible of the guilt and danger contracted by them v . Self-examination is therefore commanded, as a previous duty necessarily conducing to a true con- version 7 , or (which is the same) to a true repentance, both in respect of all its integral parts, and also of the fruits meet for repentance, which are no other but the " good works 3 " of a new obedience. 11. " The just man falleth seven times 1 :" and up- on consideration of his seven times daily failings, he hath seven times daily confessions to the praise of God i ; with frequent lamentations in the night also. 6 . At least twice a day, morning and evening, he takes a view of his miscarriages the by-past day and night, confessing and bewailing his frequent backslidings ; and in all holy humility imploring, with tears of godly sorrow, the pardon of his daily offences, with firm resolution of more care and caution, more zeal of in- x Prov. xxviii. 13 ; John viii. 11 ; 1 John i. 9. y Psalm li. 3 ; Isaiah lix. 12. z Psalm iv. 4 ; Lam. iii. 40. a Col. i. 10. b Prov. xxiv. 16. c Psalm cxix. 164. d Jos. vii. 19. e Psalm vi. 6 ; Ixxvii. 6. ®- -® •] OF SELF-EXAMINATION'. 57 and peace, mercy and grace, sanctification and re- demption. Hence arise in the heart holy resolves of new obedience, with holy breathings after God and His salvation. Therefore is this duty of self-exami- nation, called the magazine or storehouse of all Chris- tian virtue. 14. And because, to receive worthily " the Com- munion of the Body and Blood of Christ," is the chiefest of all Christian performances, and requires the practice of all Christian virtues ; therefore, after an especial manner is self-examination commanded as a necessary preparative to that Sacramental feast ; which, from the doctrine of St. Paul, we are taught in the principles of our religion, where, in the last question of the Catechism it is demanded, " What is required of them that come to the Lord's Supper ?" and it is answered, " To examine themselves, whether they truly repent them of their former sins." ®- -® ®^ -® CHAPTER II. THE RULE OF SELF-EXAMINATION BY THE VOW IN BAPTISM. Since self-examination is a duty of so great, so high, so general concernment as hath appeared ; it will be necessary that it be sincerely and thoroughly performed, not slightly, partially, and deceitfully ; not by any false rules and erring opinions, but by such a rule as will not deceive us, w T hen we shall come to our great examination and trial at the last day. 2. There are too many who do flatter and deceive themselves, by a bare and naked faith in Christ ; by virtue whereof, they conceit themselves to be justified, and of the number of God's elect, and assured of sal- vation. But these are groundless presumptions, ex- cept thy "-faith" do "purify thy heart from all inordi- nate affections' 1 ;" and " cleanse thy hands from all sinful actions 1 ;" and be also "fruitful in all good works." It is an undoubted truth, that " whosoever believ- eth in the only-begotten Son of God, shall not perish, but shall have everlasting life 1 ." But then this saving' faith must not be only speculative in the brain, and fruitful in the fancy, and presumptive of the Divine h Acts xv. 9. i 2 Cor. vii. 1 j James iv. k John iii. 16. ®~ -® $ . ® : LP. II.] EXAMINATION BY THE VOW IN BAPTISM. 59 favour; but such a faith as is practical in the heart, lively, vigorous, and working by love, which is the fulfilling of the law, and implies an universal obedi- ence to the Gospel of Christ. 3. The true rule of self-examination, which will not deceive us. is that according to which we shall be examined and tried at the last day ; and that is not our notions, and conceptions, and presumptions of or upon a bare faith in Christ, but the rule of Christian charity, as it is the life of faith, and a compendium of the holy Gospel of Christ . 4. The sum of evangelical obedience, is expressed in that vow which every true Christian hath made when he was baptized or christened. And by this, as St. Gregory observes', every man may try the truth of his faith in Christ. For as no man can be said to be faithful, who* keeps not his promise : so neither can any Christian be said to have any true faith towards God, if he performs not the promise he hath made unto Him : for herein doth his righteous- ness consist, and hereupon his everlasting salvation depends, through the merits of Christ. 5. This Baptismal vow, is the condition upon which we are admitted into the Covenant of Grace. and "made members of Christ, children of God, and heirs of the Kingdom of Heaven."' And therefore they who perform not this condition, but slight, neglect, or negligently observe the same, do uncovenant them- selves, and return again to their natural state of sin 1 Matt. xxv. 35: 9 Thess. i. BL m Gregor. Horn. 19. i ® ©_ ® 60 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. and misery ; " become children of wrath, enemies of God, and heirs of eternal damnation"." 6. The holy Christian religion we all profess, is no other but God's Will and Testament, wherein a goodly inheritance is promised and bequeathed ; but not to be obtained, as St. Augustine observes , except, as in all other testaments, we observe the will of the testator : nor is there any thing more clearly expressed in the revealed will of God, than this, That the bene- fits of the Covenant of Grace belong only to them, who keep the condition therein required 1 *. 7. Every wilful sin is a breach of this covenant, and contracts therewith the sin of perjury, and incurs the forfeiture of all the precious benefits of the mem- bers of Christ, children of God, and heirs of Heaven : so that no man can reasonably conclude himself with- in the Covenant of Grace, until the leaven of wicked- ness, which is a breach of its condition, be strictly searched out and expurged . According therefore to this covenant, which we have every one (rightly christened) made with God, it concerns every man to examine himself, who hath any care of his soul. 8. This condition consists of three general heads, called in Holy Writ by the three names of, 1. Re- pentance, 2. Faith, 3. Obedience, containing there- under the whole duty of a Christian man. 9. Repentance consists not only in confession, n Heb. x. 23. 26—29. o Aug. Ser. de Tern. 167. p Deut. vii. 9, 10 ; Psalm xxv. 10 ; lxxxix. 28 — 32 ; ciii. 17, 18 ; cxxxii. 11, 12 ; Jer. xi. 3—5 ; Heb. ii. 2, 3. q 1 Cor. v. 7, 8. ®~ ® ® (S CHAP. II.] THE VOW IN BAPTISM. 61 with sorrow for sin past ; but in performance for the future of that grand evangelical duty whereby we for- sake sin, renounce all " fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness r ," " deny ungodliness and worldly lusts 5 :" the which, with several more expressions of the same nature, are the very same in sense with the first part of our Baptismal vow ; viz. " To forsake the devil and all his works, the pomps and vanities of this wicked world, and all the sinful lusts of the flesh," which is frequently remembered to be one of the two main ends of all that Christ hath done and suffered for us 1 . 10. This being therefore " the preparation of the Gospel of peace' 1 ,'' and " the foundation of religion 3 "/' is the first general rule of self-examination, BY THE FIRST PART, To forsake the devil and all Ms ivories ; And it highly concerns us surely to do this, since they are the children of the devil, who do his works 7 . The devil's first and general work was apostasy : he abode not in the truth ; " he kept not his first es- tate 2 ." Here then, in the first place, consider seriously and impartially, nay, daily, if not hourly, thou hast yielded to the suggestions of Satan, and become like unto him, by swerving from thy first profession of the holy Christian faith, and vow of obedience to God's commands when admitted into covenant with God in Baptism. r Eph. v. 11. s Tit. ii. 12. t Luke x. 17—19. Col. i. 13. Tit. ii. 19. Heb. ii. 14, 15. u Eph. vi. 15. x Heb. vi. 1. y John viii. 44. z Jude 6. ® — ® <§) <•) 62 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. The more particular works of the devil, are, 1. Pride ; whereby he fell from being an angel of light, to be a spirit of darkness". 2. Lying ; for " he is a liar, and the father of it\" 3. Malice, hatred, envy, with all the degrees of murder both in will and deed : "he was a murderer from the beginning . " 4. Slander, backbiting, and " accusing of the brethren 1 ;" from whence he takes the name of devil. 5. Tempting unto sin : that is the incessant work of the devil, who " continually goes about like a roar- ing lion, seeking whom he may devour 1 ." Examine then, whether, according to thy promise made unto God, thou hast manfully fought under the banner of Christ, against the crafts and assaults of the devil, tempting thee to any of these sins, or to any other miscarriage either in judgment or practice ; and hast not rather suffered thyself, oftener than thou canst possibly imagine, to be taken in his " snares, and led captive by him at his will'." The pomps and vanities of this toiclced world. These are, in other words, " the pride of life," and "the lust of the eyes," which are positively af- firmed to be inconsistent with the love of God*. Upon this head examine, 1. Hath not thine heart been puffed up with the wind of vain-glory, which vents itself by boasting and a Isaiah xiv. 14, 15. b John, viii. 44. c Ibid. d Rev. xii. 10. e 1 Pet. v. 8. f 2 Tim. ii. 20. g 1 John ii. 16. 0- (2) ® — ® CHAP. II.] THE VOW IN BAPTISM. 63 bragging of "vain things" of the world which profit not , by over-costly and garish apparel 1 , high vaunting, imperious language, strutting gait, affected gestures, supercilious and scornful looks', affecting and " re- ceiving the honour which is from man, more than the honour which cometh from God only 1 ?" 2. Have you not esteemed yourself more than others your equals, if not superiors"; either in respect of your worldly wealth and estate, place of credit and superiority' 1 , greatness of wit, readiness of elocution, boldness to outvie, cunning to overreach your neigh- bour, or in any other of those worldly qualifications and endowments, which usually swell the vain minds of worldly men with conceitedness of their own worth, and makes them "love the praise of men more than the praise of God ?" 3. Have no idle and lewd company, nor yet the ill example of others, allured you to follow any of those sinful customs of the world, which have some outward show of pomp and seeming bravery, but are really vain and empty of all true worth 5 ? Have you not delighted yourself in such "lying vanities," and loved even to be cozened both of your time and trea- sure in pursuance of them q ? Have you not loved and served mammon more than God r , by preferring the sordid service of your worldly ends and interests, before the sacred service h Psalm xii. 2. i Isaiah iii. 16, &c. k Ecclus. xix. 29, 30. 1 John v. 44. m Phil. ii. 3. n Psalm xlix. 6. o John xii. 43. p Psalm cxliv. 11 ; Prov. i. 10, &- <§> CHAPTER III, THE RULE OF SELF-EXAMINATION BY THE CREED ; OR, BY THE SECOND PART OF THE VOW IN BAPTISM, " TO BELIEVE ALL THE ARTICLES OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH." " He that believes" (all the fundamental articles of the Christian faith) " shall be saved; but he ehat believeth not, shall be danined 5 ." Here then examine, 1. If you have learned, being young, what are these articles or points of Christian faith whereunto you were baptized or christened ; and if you can now give a ready account of your faith ; and this both in the very words of your Creed, and also in the full sense and true meaning of each article thereof h . 2. Do you steadfastly believe the infallible truth of each article, though perhaps you understand it not in its full extent ? Are you zealously affected with them all, resolved to die in this faith, and, if occasion be, to die for it, "resisting even unto blood 1 ," whatever may oppose or infringe the same ; " earnestly con- tending for that faith which was once given to (or by) the Saints," the holy Apostles of our Lord !< ? g Mark xvi. 16 ; John xii. 48. hi Pet. iii. 15. i 1 Tim. vi. 12 ; 2 Tim. iv. 7. k Jude 3. 5 © ® ® ® 66 SELF-EXAMINATION BY THE CREED. [PART I. 3. Dost thou not only believe with the heart, but also frequently confess this faith with the mouth ? for as " with the heart man believeth unto righteousness," so, " with the mouth confession is made unto salva- tion 1 ." 4. Have neither the senseless neglect of some, nor the profane scoffs of others, made thee also neglect or be ashamed to confess thy faith in public ? And if so, thy faith is not sincere : for he that truly " be- lieveth in God, will not be ashamed™" openly to pro- fess it ; remembering that there is a dismal shame and confusion of face threatened to him that is " ashamed of Christ and His words"," which are summed up in the Creed. 5. Hast thou lived in the practice of this faith, framing both the affections of thy heart, and the ac- tions of thy life , according to what each article doth imply, and implicitly command ? For thus " the just man lives by his faith p ." 6. Have you not been mistaken in the nature of a true Christian faith, making it to be a presumption upon the promises of the Gospel abstract from obe- dience to the precepts thereof? And hath not thy faith been rather notional in the brain, than practical in the heart and life? been more in talk and dispute, and verbal profession, than in love and good works q , and holy conversation? For " the kingdom of God is not in word but in power r " of holy actions, or in the keeping the Covenant of thy God. 1 Rom. x. 10. m Rom. x. 11. n Mark viii. 38. o James ii. 18. p Hab. ii. 4 ; Rom. i. 17. q Gal. v. 6 3 James ii. 17, r 1 Cor. iv. 20. -® <•) ® CHAPTER IV. THE RULE OF SELF-EXAMINATION BY THE DECALOGUE ; OR, SY THE THIRD PART OF THE VOW IN BAPTISM, " TO KEEP GOD'S HOLY "WILL AND COMMANDMENTS, AND TO WALK IN THE SAME ALL THE DAYS OF THY LIFE." To obey God's commands, is properly to " serve" Him 5 ; which is frequently affirmed to be the plain road-way to Heaven 1 . And it were a high presumption, as St. Augustine observes, to hope to obtain what God has promised, except we carefully observe what He has commanded. These commandments are " the same which God spake in the twentieth chapter of Exodus"," the rule of righteousness being the same under the Law and under the Gospel ; only in the one it is more plainly and fully understood than in the other. Here then a more large and particular examination of thyself is required ; by all the duties commanded and sins forbidden in the precepts of the moral law. THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. £1)ou sjjalt i)abe nxine otjer <&otrs fctft J&e. EXAMINATION BY THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. The duties enjoined in this commandment, are, s Eccles. xii. 13. t Matt. xix. 17 ; Rev. xiv. 12. Aug. de Sanct. u Matt. xix. 18, 19 ; Mark x. 19. €>- ®- ® 68 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. I. To believe in God. Since faith in God, is the ground of all religious worship, examine, First, Whether truly and without all doubting, or harbouring any secret atheistical thoughts x , you do believe the being of God and His providence over all. Secondly, That you believe of Him what He truly is, a pure, spiritual, invisible Essence 7 , a God most wise 2 , most holy, eternal, and infinite, infinitely mer- ciful and infinitely just% infinitely great and glorious b , omnipotent and immortal, without beginning of days, or end of time ; and, in a word, that His excellency, perfection, and felicity in Himself d , is beyond all that the wit of man or angel can conceive 6 . Thirdly, That you believe in Him as the great Creator of the world f , Redeemer of all men, and Sanctifier of His Church and people, Three Persons, Father, Son and Holy Ghost g , one God over all, blessed for ever. And because the faith of most is but notional and verbal only, daily decaying as the world draws nearer to an end h , examine the sincerity of your faith by these essential properties thereof. 1. If it purify your hearts from all unworthy thoughts of God 1 , and vile affections that separate from Him. x Heb. xi. 6. y John iv. 24. z 1 Tim. i. 17, a Ecclus. xvi. 11, 12. b Psalm lxxvii. 13, 14 ; Deut. xxviii. 58. c Psalm xc. 2. d Matt. v. 48. e Job xi. 17. f Isaiah xl. 28. g Matt, xxviii, 19 ; 1 John v. 7. h Luke xviii. 8. i Acts xv. 9. ® — ® <•> : ® CHAP. IV.] THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. 69 2. If it increase Divine love in your heart : which was Mary Magdalen's faith". 3. If it make you devout and intense in your prayers : which was the woman of Canaan's faith 1 . 4. If thereby you cleave unto God, and make Him your choice, above all the pleasures and treasures of the world : which was Moses's faith"'. 5. If it make you strong, to resist even unto blood : which was the faith of all Martyrs". 6. If it bring forth the fruits of good works : which was Cornelius's faith, and is the life of faith . II. To trust in Him. 1. Examine, first, w r hether both in prosperity and adversity your mind hath so been stayed in the Lord, as not to be puffed up by the one, or dejected by the other p . 2. Have you not betrayed your trust in the care and providence of God q , so as either to distract your mind with carking cares for worldly concerns, or yet to use any unlawful means to acquire or preserve health, wealth, credit, liberty, or life itself? 3. Have you not " leaned to your own under- standing 1 "," trusted to your own wit, policy, strength, riches 5 , nor yet in the favour and power of any mortal man 1 , to the weakening of your dependence on God alone ? k Luke vii. 47. 1 Matt. xv. 28. m Heb. xi. 24—26. n Heb. xi. 33, 34. o Act? x. 2 ; James ii. 26. p Psalm Ixii. 1 ; 2 Thess. iii. 3. q 1 Pet, v. 7. r Prov. iii. 5. si Tim. v. 17. t Jer. xvii. 5, 7. ® : ® (§)— — — ® 70 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. III. To hope in Him. 1. Whether to enjoy God, and those joys which are in His presence attainable' 1 , be the great and main object of your hope*, as being created after His image, and to attain the perfection of your being in the beatifical enjoyment of His sacred Majesty 7 . 2. Hath your hope to enjoy God been accompa- nied with a conformity to the nature of God, " being holy as He is holy, merciful as He is merciful 2 ? 77 For you hope in vain to see God in Heaven and enjoy Him, except you be Godlike a . 3. Have you so hoped to enjoy the promises of God, as to obey His precepts, and be fruitful in all good works? " Hope in the Lord, and be doing goodV your hope is otherwise but a sinful presump- tion, or at the best but " the hope of the hypocrite that perisheth . 77 4. Hath not your hope in the mercies of God, through the merits of Christ, emboldened you to go on in any known sin unrepented of, and banished grace out of thy heart ? IV. To fear God, 1. Hath thy fear of God's judgments equally bal- anced thy hope in His mercies, revering His justice, and the direful threats and examples thereof in His holy Word, so as not to dare to sin against Him ? " Fear the Lord, and depart from evil 1 . 75 u Psalm xvi. 11. x Psalm Ixxi. 5 ; Jer. xvii. 7. y Psalm Ixxiii. 24—26. z 1 Pet, i. 15, 16 ; Luke vi. 36. a Matt. v. 8, 9. b Psalm xxxvii. 3. c Job viii. 13. d Psalm iv. 5; Prov. iii. 7; Phil. ii. 12. <5) ® -® CHAP. IV.] THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. 71 *2. Have you not more feared to sin in the sight of men, than in the presence of God ; more feared to displease man, than to incur the displeasure of the Almighty ; more feared to lose thy credit amongst thy neighbours and companions, than to hazard the loss of God's favour; nor yet more feared the penalty of human laws, than the threatenings of the Divine 6 ? 3. Hath thy fear of God been rather filial, a fear to offend so gracious a Father ; than servile, for fear of punishment 1 ? But because we are commanded " to work out our salvation with fear and trembling 5 :" examine, whether the filial fear of God prevail in your heart, and gather strength over the servile fear, till at last it be quite " cast out by perfect love h ;" which is the next duty in this commandment enjoined. V. To love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all, fyc v This Divine love includes all these graces, and all the particulars of the duties we owe unto God 1 . And because every man pretends to love God, how falsely and deceitfully soever he think or say it, there- fore this Divine affection is to be strictly examined by these following rules. And, 1. As thy hope, so thy love of God is not sincere, except thou be in some good measure con- formed to his nature, " pure, as He is pure," " just," " good," " gracious," — as God is so. H Be ye follow- ers of God as dear children, and walk in love k ." e Prov. xxix. 25 f Isaiah li. 12 3 Luke xii. 4, 5. g Phil. ii. 12. h 1 John iv. 18. i Matt. vii. 22 ; 1 Cor. xiii. 1, 2, &c. k Eph. v. 1, 2. -® ® <•> 72 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. 2. If the will of God be the rule of thy will, and moderator of all thy affections, loving what He loves, hating what He hates 1 , even to the love of thine ene- mies™, and hatred of thy friends, if in competition with the love of God 11 . 3. If the chief end of all your actions be to please God, more than to please yourself, or to pleasure any person, how great and high, how near or dear so- ever . 4. If it be the joy of your heart to come into the House of the Lord p ; to converse with Him in holy prayers, public and private ; to contemplate His per- fections and felicities, so as to be inflamed with long- ing desires and affectionate breathings after Him ; to glorify Him both with heart and voice, both with your lips and in your life q , 5. If you be quick, ready, active, regular, and constant in your obedience to all His commandments 1 ". 6. If you long to have a more full enjoyment of God in the world to come ; and do not rather prefer a troublesome temporary abode in this life, before the pleasures of God's right hand in the other 5 . By these rules you may examine yourself, whe- ther you love God " in deed and in truth," and not in conceit and verbally only. VI. To call upon God, and give Him thanks. In the habitual practice of the former graces of 1 Psalm xcvii. 10. m Matt. v. 44. n Lake xiv. 26. o 1 Thess. ii. 4 ; Matt, xviii. 8 ; Matt. x. 37. p Psalm cxxii. 1 ; Isaiah ii. 3 -, Psalm xxvii. 4 5 Psalm xlii. 1,2$ Psalm lxxi. 20, &c. q Matt. v. 16; 1 Pet. ii. 12. r John xiv. 15. s Psalm lxiii. 1, 2 ; 2 Cor. iv. 18 ; v. 1—3. ® & ® ® CHAP. IV.] THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. 73 the Spirit, consists the " worship of God in spirit 1 :" and they are all put in practice chiefly by holy prayers unto God and praises of Him", which is therefore the principal part of God's outward worship. And, 1. Here examine how frequently you have slighted and omitted to call upon God x , being hereunto obliged, both publicly in the congregation, and pri- vately in your closet, morning and evening at least, signified by the " morning and evening sacrifice. 53 2. How often hath any slight occasion and pretence made you neglect this indispensable duty of prayer, especially the Public Prayers of the Church ? and have you not been secretly glad when any such occa- sion hath happened ? 3. Being come into the House of God, have you not neglected to join in the Prayers and Service of God there celebrated, and, through ignorance and dulness, or a sinful shame, omitted to " lift up your voice in the congregation, to praise the Lord in hymns and psalms and spiritual songs V an d audibly to say Amen to the Prayers of the Church ? For it is not the Minister's duty only to pray and preach in the Church ; but " in the Temple of the Lord doth every man speak of His honour 7 ." 4. Have you not been "too rash with your mouth to utter any thing before God a ," that is either unfit, impertinent, or unlawful to be asked ; but have first weighed all your words in " the balance of the Sanc- t John iv. 23, 24. u Psalm 1. 23. x Psalm cxxxiv. 2 ; Matt. vi. 6; Psalm lv. 17 ; Eccles. xi. 6. y Eph. v. 19 ; Psalm cvi. 48. z Psalm xxix. 9. a Eccles. v. 2. ® © ®- 74 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART L tuary b ," and have framed all your prayers according to the pattern which our Lord hath given us, both by His own prayer and the prayers of His Church ? 5. Have you prayed for others ; for all superiors, and relations of every kind , and not only for such as are your friends, but for your very enemies also d ? 6. Have you first endeavoured to " purify your heart"" from all hypocrisy, and to " cleanse your hands" from all your actual sins by true repentance, before you make your approaches to the most holy God by prayer ? 7. Do you practise as you pray, in the careful use of those means which God hath appointed, to obtain your petitions f ? 8. Do you daily praise God for His great glories in Himself, and give Him thanks for His manifold graces% both general to all men, special to His Church and people, and particular to yourself ex- pressed ? And do you show forth the praises of God, not only with your lips, but in the good works of your life, that others may be thereby excited to glorify Godalso h ? b Hos. xiv. 2 ; Matt. vi. 9. c 1 Tim. ii. 1. d Matt. v. 44. e James iv. 8. f James i. 6—8. g Eph. v. 20. h Matt. v. 16. <•>- ® — . . ® CHAP. IV.] THE SECOND COMMANDMENT, 75 THE SECOND COMMANDMENT. self mv gtaten image, fct, aXAMDJA^IOH BY THE SECOND COMMANDMEifT. Have you not in your phantasy, misrepresented the most pure and spiritual God, under any bodily shape or visible being whatsoever 1 ? 2. Have you not served the creature more than the Creator, making " a god of the world k " by ambi- tion, and " covetousness, which is idolatry 1 ," or " a god of your belly™" by luxury, and the too much in- dulging of carnal delights ? 3. Have you not " set up your idols in your own heart 11 ," idolized your own imaginations , by believing and worshipping God otherwise than himself hath prescribed, either immediately in His holy Word , or mediately by the ministry of His holy and true Church -? 4. Have you worshipped God as with all internal devotion of soul, so also with all external, humble, and low prostration of body r ? For in being forbidden to fall down to serve idols, or any false gods, you are thereby bidden to fall down in serving the Lord. 5. If " you abhor idols'," examine if you have not been guilty of sacrilege, which "is to rob God in tithes and offerings 1 ," or of whatsoever is devoted to His service. Both of which sins are equally con- i Deut. iv. 15, &c. k Rom. i. 25. 1 Col. iii. 5. m Phil. iii. 19. n Ezek. xiv. 4j Psalm lxxxi.9, 12. o 2 Cor. x. 5. p Deut. iv. 2. q Heb. xiii. 7. r Psalm xiv. 6; 1 Cor. vi. 20. s Rom. ii. 20. t Mai. iii. 8. ® ® ® ® 76 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. demned by this law : for as by idolatry, God is robbed in His service ; so by sacrilege, in the support and maintenance of His service. THE THIRD COMMANDMENT. 2Tj)oit sjalt not tafce tjje Name of tfje 3LorTr tyv <£olf m batn, EXAMINATION BY THE THIBD COMMANDMENT. Have you not profaned the Name of God, either, 1. In your thoughts, by entertaining any misbe- coming apprehensions of God's Majesty, and such as are vain and mean, and far below the Name of God, which is " Great," " Wonderful," and "Holy u ?" or, 2. In your words x , by any scurrilous and irrev- erent discourses of God, or impertinent and unseemly addresses unto Him ? or, 3. In your actions, by the ungodliness and injus- tice of your conversation, giving occasion to others "to blaspheme His Name 7 ?" 4. Have you taken no false 2 and unlawful* oaths, nor yet been guilty of too ordinary, customary swear- ing in discourse, or cursing by the dreadful Name of God, which is only to be mentioned for adoration and blessing ? 5. Have you carefully observed those lawful oaths you have taken in order to subjection to higher pow- ers, nor yet have taken any that have been contrary thereunto" ? u Psalm xcix. 3. x James ii. 7. y 2 Sam. xii. 14 3 Rom. ii. 23, 24. z Lev. xix. 12. a Matt. v. 34 3 James v. 12 3 Psalm cix. 17. b Ezek. xvii. 18, 19 3 Zech. viii. 17. ® (8 (•)— -(•) CHAP. IV.] THE THIRD COMMANDMENT. 77 6. Have you to the utmost of your power observed all just promises made unto others, though to your prejudice in your outward affairs ? And because the Name of God is to be honoured in all things that have His Name enstamped there- upon' 1 ; you may therefore upon this commandment examine as to the duties you owe, first, To the Word : secondly, To the Sacraments'; thirdly, To the House of God. As to the Word of God. 1. Have you a far more venerable esteem for the " Word of God," than for " the word of man 6 ," though spoken in the pulpit, wisely distinguishing betwixt the Divine inspiration of the one, and the human in- vention of the other ? 2. Do you believe unfeignedly all that God hath spoken in His holy Word, whether by doctrine or ex- ample, promises or threatenings f ? and have the prom- ises of God's Word allured you to obey its precepts, and the threats 5 (confirmed by examples) deterred you from doing what is therein prohibited ? 3. Have you not placed your religion in the bare reading of Holy Scriptures, and hearing of Sermons, without due consideration of the weight and true meaning of what you have heard or read h , and with- out the careful practice thereof in your life 1 ? 4. Have you not made your own " private inter- c Psalm xv. 4. d Lev. xxi. 6 ; Deut, xxviii. 58 ; Jer. xxxiv. 15, 16. e 1 Thess. ii. 13. f Psalm xix. 7, &c. g Psalm xc. 11. h Mark iv. 24. i James ii. 22. ® — ' ® <§> ■ ® 78 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. pretation" of Scriptures'", nor " wrested" any text to another sense than the Holy Spirit of God intended therein, either to please your own fancy, or maintain some private opinion" 1 , or to minister to contention and dispute"? 5. Have you not used the Word of God in ordi- nary and common talk, either to excite to merriment and laughter, or to show your own wit, and secretly boast of your reading and readiness therein ? As to the Sacraments which Christ hath ordained in His Church. 1. In general; Have you a very high and holy esteem for those blessed means of grace and mysteries of salvation, believing unfeignedly the great necessity and efficacy both of Baptism and the Lord's Supper , and not upon any pretext or pretences neglecting the devout and reverent use of either, as occasion and opportunity hath been offered ? 2. Have you not profaned the consecrated Ele- ments of either Sacrament, by esteeming and using them as common things p ? 3. As to Baptism in particular, your grand duty is, to examine yourself frequently by that solemn vow you made when christened, confessing and bewailing your manifold transgressions thereof, and daily re- newing your covenant with God ; resolving and prom- ising daily to forsake the devil, the world, and the k 2 Pet. i. 20. 1 2 Pet. iii. 16. m 1 Tim. vi. 3—5. n Tit. iii. 9. o John iii. 5 j vi. 53. p Acts x. 14, 15. ® ® <•) — ® CHAP. IV.] THE THIRD COMMANDMENT. 79 flesh, and devoting yourself to the sacred service of God by a true and lively faith, and obedience to His commandments. The breach of which vow unto God is a greater offence than that of ordinary swearing : because in the one God is but called upon as a Wit- ness; but in the other he is a Party concerned. Concerning the Sacrament of the holy Body and Blood of Christ, examine, 1. How often you have neglected to come, being invited, to that blessed feast q . And here consider the causes of this sin: which are, 1. Ignorance of your duty 1 ", joined with a slothful and careless neglect to take pains for instruction, or apply yourself to your Pastor for direction. 2. The terror of unworthy re- ceiving considered 5 , but the duty to receive not re- membered. 3. Impenitence, and continuance in sirr, preferred before the sacred religious actions of a due preparation, and devout participation of that Bread of Life. 2. Notwithstanding which impediments, examine, Have you not presumed to come to that sacred feast, being ignorant of the nature, of the ends, and benefits thereof, and so received the same unworthily, " not discerning the Lord's Body" 1" Or having know T - ledge, 3. Have you accordingly prepared yourself aright, to come unto that celestial banquet; and that, 1. By a thorough examination of yourself, to find out your q Isaiah to. 1—3. r Isaiah v. 13. s 1 Cor. xi. 28, 29. t Isaiah to, 7. u 1 Cor. xi. 27, 29. © <§> ® ® 80 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. sins and failings 1 *, 2, by a full confession of them to God, and in some cases to man, and that, 3, with all contrition and godly sorrow for sin, and 4, with a full purpose of amendment ; renewing your covenant with God", contracted in the foregoing sacrament of Bap- tism, and now to be sealed in the sacrament of Christ's Blood. Have you with all reverence and humility 7 ', both of soul and body, approached to that Sacrament ? and have you received the same, 1, with a lively faith in the mercies of God, through the merits of Christ* ; 2, with all devotion and thankfulness of heart, in the grateful acknowledgment of God's infinite love, in giving His Son to be both " the price" of your re- demption, and "the food" of your soul b ; 3, with an entire and unfeigned charity towards all men ; 4, be- ing inwardly affected with a spiritual joy in the Lord 1 . 5. After the participation of those Divine mys- teries, examine i 1. Whether you feel your former sin- ful motions, sensual and worldly lusts dying and de- caying in your heart ; 2* Whether you have any sense of God's mercy refreshing your soul as to the pardon of your sins past 6 ; and 3. Of grace quickening and strengthening you to serve God more sincerely and industriously for the time to come. If not, you may justly suspect yourself guilty, either of an undue pre-' x 1 Sam. vii. 6 ; James iv. 8—10 ; Acts iii. 19. y Heb. X. 16, 17. z 1 Cor. vi. 20. a Rom. v. 1,2. b John iii. 16 ; 1 Tim. i 15 ; 1 Pet. i 18, 19 ; John vi. 51. c Matt. v. 23—25. d Isaiah xii. 3. e Rom. xiv. 17. ®- o _ @ CHAP. IV.] THE THIRD COMMANDMENT. 81 paration, or some sinful defect in the participation thereof And because the Name of God is called not only upon His Word and Sacraments, but also upon the place where those are administered ; examine whether you have made your approaches to that House which is called by His Name, " the Temple of the Lord," " the House of God/' &c, and demeaned yourself therein with that lowly reverence and humility'-, both inward and outward, as becomes the place that is separate to His service, and sanctified by His special Presence therein' 1 . If otherwise, remember with hor- ror, " if any one defile" or profane " the Temple of the Lord, him shall God destroy ; for the Temple of God is Holy 1 ." It is here objected, that the immediate following words, " which Temple ye are," do imply this text to relate to Holy Persons, not to any Holy Houses of God. But it is answered, That this makes not void that duty of holiness which becometh the House of God, but rather confirms the same : for these words, " which Temple ye are," are an illation or conse- quence flowing from this which the Apostle takes for an undeniable principle, " The Temple of God is Holy." And the plain and full meaning of the whole verse is in other words briefly this. The Material Temple, or House of God, is a figure of the Mystical Temple, or people of God. As therefore the Material Temple is an holy place, being sanctified to the holy f 1 Cor. iii. 17 ; Psalm xciii 5 j Matt. xxi. 13. g Psalm v. 7; cxxxii. 7. h Psalm xi. 14 ; Hab ii. 20. i 1 Cor. iii. 17. 6 © — — ■ ® ® — © 82 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. service of the most holy God ; and whosoever profanes the same, by irreverent and indecent carriage there, him will God destroy ; so the people of God, being His Mystical Temple, must keep themselves undefiled and pure both in heart and life, that God destroy them not. THE FOURTH COMMANDMENT. Skemerober tjjat tjou keep i}oI» tfje 2i3i>, &c. EXAMINATION BY THS FOURTH COMMANDMENT, Have you wisely distinguished betwixt times sa- cred and profane 1 ", by esteeming of such days as are devoted to the service of God, in a select and separate respect, from such as are common or ordinary days allowed for the service of man ? 2. Have you not omitted the Christian duties re- quired to the sanctification of the Lord's Day, and of every day holy to the Lord; 1, the public prayers with thanksgivings, the " psalms and hymns and spir- itual songs 1 " in the Lord's House; 2, the offices of charity, alms-deeds, visiting the sick m ? 3. Have you not profaned any days devoted to God's Public Worship, by doing such servile works that might be omitted, or by going unnecessary journeys, or by spending the same in idle or vain sports, luxury and wantonness"? 4. Have you observed not only the Festival days, k Ecclus. xxxiii. 7 — 9. 1 Eph. v. 19 ; Isaiah \vi. 7. m Matt. xii. 12 j Mark iii. 4. n Isaiah lvi. 2 ; Exodus xx. 10 ; Isaiah lviii. 13. © ® ®— -® CHAP. IV.] THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT. 83 but also those days of fasting and humiliation , which hath been observed in all ages of the Church of Christ, by the devout people of God, and are enjoined by law- ful superiors, in order to the obedience we owe to the commands of God p ? 5. Have you kept the true Christian spiritual Sab- bath, which is, to rest from the service of sin, and to be wholly devoted to the service of God here q ; so that you may reasonably hope to keep an eternal sabbath of peace and joy with God, and all the choir of Heav- en hereafter ? THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT. honour X\yo father antr fyv mother, &z< EXAMINATION BY THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT, The Christian duties enjoined in this command- ment, are as many as there are relations of superiority and inferiority amongst men. 1. As to your natural parents 1 " : Have you not been stubborn and irreverent in your carriage towards them ? Have you not secretly despised them in your heart, nor openly published their infirmities 5 ? Have you not slighted their wholesome admonitions, nor disobeyed their lawful commands 1 ? Have you not neglected to comfort and relieve them, to the best of your power and skill, in their sickness, wants, weak- o Joel i. 14 ; Matt. vi. 16 ; 1 Cor. vii. 5. p Lev. xvi. 29, 30. q Heb. iv. 9—11. r Deut. xxi. 18, 19 ; Prov. xx. 20 ; xxiii. 25. s Prov. xxx. 17. t Prov. i. 8 ; iv. 1 ; xiii. 1 ; Eph. v, 1 ; Ecclus. iii. 12, 13. ® — ® ® — ; ' — ■ 84 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. ness, and old age ? and have you not secretly coveted their estates, though by their death u ? 2. If you be a father or a mother of children, ex- amine, 1. Have you taken care to see they were right- ly and in due time baptized ? 2. That they be taught, as soon as they are able to learn x , what a solemn vow was made in their name when baptized, with the prin- ciples of religion implied therein, and depending thereupon ? 3. To correct them for their offences, that they contract not a custom in sin y ? 4. To give them good example ? 5. To pray for them in private, and openly to give them your blessing" ? 6. To pro- vide for them according to your ability 1 ; and not to spend in needless riot, or otherwise, what ought to have been reserved for their maintenance 1 3. As to your civil father, who is " the King as supreme 11 ;" Have you not been censorious and mal- apert, in judging and traducing him or his govern- ment ? Have you not grudged to pay him toll or tri- bute ; refused to obey his lawful commands ; had no hand in rising up against him, nor contributed there- unto, by sowing sedition and faction, spreading infa- mous reports 1 4. As to your spiritual fathers, the Bishops and Pastors of Christ's Church" ? Have you not despised their calling , but honoured them according to their respective degrees and stations in the Church of u Mark vii. 11, 12. x Eph. vi. 4. y Heb. xii. 9 — 11. z Ecclus. iii. 9. a 1 Tim. v. 8. b 1 Pet. ii. 13, 14 ; Jude 8 ; 2 Pet. ii. 10, 11. c Rom. xiii. 6. d Tit. iii. 1 j Rom. xiii. 1, 2 ; Prov. xxiv. 21 ; Eccles. x. 20. e 1 Tim. iii. 1, 13. f Luke x. 16 ; 1 Tim. v. 17. -® ® CHAP. IV.] THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT. 85 Christ ? Have you not slighted and disobeyed those commands and admonitions which God by them hath given you- ? Have you not denied or diminished their dues, or paid them grudgingly? Have you not for- saken your lawful Pastor, to follow after factious preachers, or such who more tickle your itching ears 1 ' ; which is the issue of a corrupt heart, and the high- road to error and falsehood ] Have you not been an- gry, when told of your faults, or put in mind of the errors of your ways, and refused to return and amend thereupon 1 ? 5. Have you been respective and lowly in your demeanour to all your superiors, whether in age or office, learning or judgment, temporal estate and pre- ferment, giving to each the honour due to their res- pective conditions 1 '; and this though you have no de- pendence upon them, nor hopes to receive any bene- fits from them 1 6. Have you been meek, gentle, courteous, and affable unto all men, as becomes the spirit of a true Christian' ; not high and haughty, churlish and dis- tasteful, in your carriage towards any ; slighting, un- dervaluing, scorning your equals, if not your betters, in some respects? However, the truly humble good Christian " esteems others better than himself "V 7. If you have any person under your command, as a master of a family 1 , Have you not been over-harsh and rigorous towards any of your servants, nor de- g Heb. xiii. 17 ; Ecelus. vii. 29. h John x. 4, 5 5 2 Tim. iv. 3, 4. i Prov. xxix. 1 ; Isaiah xxix. 21. k Rom. xii. 10 ; 2 Tim. ii. 20 ; 1 Pet. ii. 17. 1 Tit. iii. 3. m Phil. ii. 3. n Eph. vi. 9. © ® © © 86 SELF-EXAMINATION BY [PART I. frauded them of their wages 1 and have you preserved them, to your power, from the wrongs of others ? and have you taken care, what in you lies, for the good of their souls ; that they be catechized in the principles of religion, and duly frequent the Public Worship of God, both in church and family p ? 8. If you be a servant, examine, Have you been obedient to your master in all his lawful commands 01 ? just and true in the managing his business, so that he hath suffered no loss, either by your carelessness or dishonesty ? and hath your carriage towards him been submissive and meek, not answering again, when pro- voked by hard language ? 9. In a word, Have you obeyed that admonition of St. Paul, which is the more full meaning of this fifth commandment, " Render therefore to all men their due ; tribute to whom tribute is due, custom to whom custom, fear to whom fear, honour to whom honour. Owe no man any thing, but to love one another ; for he that loveth another, hath fulfilled the lawV THE SIXTH COMMANDMENT.