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Concerning
that part of devotion which relates to times and hours
of prayer. Of daily early prayer in the morning. How we
are to improve our forms of prayer, and how to increase
the spirit of devotion.
HAVING in
the foregoing chapters shown the necessity of a devout
spirit, or habit of mind, in every part of our common
life, in the discharge of all our business, in the use of
all the gifts of God; I come now to consider that part of
devotion, which relates to times and hours of prayer.
I take it
for granted, that every Christian, that is in health, is
up early in the morning; for it is much more reasonable to
suppose a person up early, because he is a Christian, than
because he is a labourer, or a tradesman, or a servant, or
has business that wants him.
We
naturally conceive some abhorrence of a man that is in bed
when he should be at his labour or in his shop. We cannot
tell how to think anything good of him, who is such a
slave to drowsiness as to neglect his business for it.
Let this
therefore teach us to conceive how odious we must appear
in the sight of Heaven, if we are in bed, shut up in sleep
and darkness, when we should be praising God; and are such
slaves to drowsiness, as to neglect our devotions for it.
For if he
is to be blamed as a slothful drone, that rather chooses
the lazy indulgence of sleep, than to perform his proper
share of worldly business; how much more is he to be
reproached, that would rather lie folded up in a bed, than
be raising up his heart to God in acts of praise and
adoration!
Prayer is
the nearest approach to God, and the highest enjoyment of
Him, that we are capable of in this life.
It is the
noblest exercise of the soul, the most exalted use of our
best faculties, and the highest imitation of the blessed
inhabitants of Heaven.
When our
hearts are full of God, sending up holy desires to the
throne of grace, we are then in our highest state, we are
upon the utmost heights of human greatness; we are not
before kings and princes, but in the presence and audience
of the Lord of all the world, and can be no higher, till
death is swallowed up in glory.
On the
other hand, sleep is the poorest, dullest refreshment of
the body, that is so far from being intended as an
enjoyment, that we are forced to receive it either in a
state of insensibility, or in the folly of dreams.
Sleep is
such a dull, stupid state of existence, that even amongst
mere animals, we despise them most which are most drowsy.
He,
therefore, that chooses to enlarge the slothful indulgence
of sleep, rather than be early at his devotions to God,
chooses the dullest refreshment of the body, before the
highest, noblest employment of the soul; he chooses that
state which is a reproach to mere animals, rather than
that exercise which is the glory of Angels.
You will
perhaps say, though you rise late, yet you are always
careful of your devotions when you are up.
It may be
so. But what then? Is it well done of you to rise late,
because you pray when you are up?
Is it
pardonable to waste great part of the day in bed, because
some time after you say your prayers?
It is as
much your duty to rise to pray, as to pray when you are
risen. And if you are late at your prayers, you offer to
God the prayers of an idle, slothful worshipper, that
rises to prayers as idle servants rise to their labour.
Farther;
if you fancy that you are careful of your devotions when
you are up, though it be your custom to rise late, you
deceive yourself; for you cannot perform your devotions as
you ought. For he that cannot deny himself this drowsy
indulgence, but must pass away good part of the morning in
it, is no more prepared for prayer when he is up, than he
is prepared for fasting, abstinence, or any other
self-denial. He may indeed more easily read over a form of
prayer, than he can perform these duties; but he is no
more disposed to enter into the true spirit of prayer than
he is disposed to fasting. For sleep thus indulged gives a
softness and idleness to all our tempers, and makes us
unable to relish anything but what suits with an idle
state of mind, and gratifies our natural tempers, as sleep
does. So that a person who is a slave to this idleness is
in the same temper when he is up; and though he is not
asleep, yet he is under the effects of it; and everything
that is idle, indulgent, or sensual, pleases him for the
same reason that sleep pleases him; and, on the other
hand, everything that requires care, or trouble, or
self-denial, is hateful to him, for the same reason that
he hates to rise. He that places any happiness in this
morning indulgence, would be glad to have all the day made
happy in the same manner; though not with sleep, yet with
such enjoyments as gratify and indulge the body in the
same manner as sleep does; or, at least, with such as come
as near to it as they can. The remembrance of a warm bed
is in his mind all the day, and he is glad when he is not
one of those that sit starving in a church.
Now you
do not imagine that such a one can truly mortify that body
which he thus indulges: yet you might as well think this,
as that he can truly perform his devotions; or live in
such a drowsy state of indulgence, and yet relish the joys
of a spiritual life.
For
surely no one will pretend to say that he knows and feels
the true happiness of prayer, who does not think it worth
his while to be early at it.
It is not
possible in nature for an epicure to be truly devout: he
must renounce this habit of sensuality, before he can
relish the happiness of devotion.
Now he
that turns sleep into an idle indulgence, does as much to
corrupt and disorder his soul, to make it a slave to
bodily appetites, and keep it incapable of all devout and
heavenly tempers, as he that turns the necessities of
eating into a course of indulgence.
A person
that eats and drinks too much does not feel such effects
from it, as those do who live in notorious instances of
gluttony and intemperance: but yet his course of
indulgence, though it be not scandalous in the eyes of the
world, nor such as torments his own conscience, is a great
and constant hindrance to his improvement in virtue; it
gives him eyes that see not, and ears that hear not; it
creates a sensuality in the soul, increases the power of
bodily passions, and makes him incapable of entering into
the true spirit of religion.
Now this
is the case of those who waste their time in sleep; it
does not disorder their lives, or wound their consciences,
as notorious acts of intemperance do; but, like any other
more moderate course of indulgence, it silently, and by
smaller degrees, wears away the spirit of religion, and
sinks the soul into a state of dulness and sensuality.
If you
consider devotion only as a time of so much prayer, you
may perhaps perform it, though you live in this daily
indulgence; but if you consider it as a state of the
heart, as a lively fervour of the soul, that is deeply
affected with a sense of its own misery and infirmities,
and desires the Spirit of God more than all things in the
world: you will find that the spirit of indulgence, and
the spirit of prayer, cannot subsist together.
Mortification of all kinds is the very life and soul of
piety; but he that has not so small a degree of it, as to
be able to be early at his prayers, can have no reason to
think that he has taken up his cross, and is following
Christ.
What
conquest has he got over himself; what right hand has he
cut off; what trials is he prepared for; what sacrifice is
he ready to offer unto God, who cannot be so cruel to
himself as to rise to prayer at such time as the drudging
part of the world are content to rise to their labour?
Some
people will not scruple to tell you, that they indulge
themselves in sleep, because they have nothing to do; and
that; if they had either business or pleasure to rise to,
they would not lose so much of their time in sleep. But
such people must be told that they mistake the matter;
that they have a great deal of business to do; they have a
hardened heart to change; they have the whole spirit of
religion to get. For surely he that thinks devotion to be
of less moment than business or pleasure; or that he has
nothing to do because nothing but his prayers want him,
may be justly said to have the whole spirit of religion to
seek.
You must
not therefore consider how small a crime it is to rise
late, but you must consider how great a misery it is to
want the spirit of religion, to have a heart not rightly
affected with prayer; and to live in such softness and
idleness, as makes you incapable of the most fundamental
duties of a truly Christian and spiritual life.
This is a
right way of judging of the crime of wasting great part of
your time in bed.
You must
not consider the thing barely in itself, but what it
proceeds from; what virtues it shows to be wanting; what
vices it naturally strengthens. For every habit of this
kind discovers the state of the soul, and plainly shows
the whole turn of your mind.
If our
blessed Lord used to pray early before day; if He spent
whole nights in prayer; if the devout Anna was day and
night in the temple; [Luke ii. 36, 37] if St. Paul and
Silas at midnight sang praises unto God; [Acts xvi. 35] if
the primitive Christians, for several hundred years,
besides their hours of prayers in the daytime, met
publicly in the churches at midnight, to join in psalms
and prayers; is it not certain that these practices showed
the state of their heart? Are they not so many plain
proofs of the whole turn of their minds?
And if
you live in a contrary state, wasting great part of every
day in sleep, thinking any time soon enough to be at your
prayers; is it not equally certain, that this practice as
much shows the state of your heart, and the whole turn of
your mind?
So that
if this indulgence is your way of life, you have as much
reason to believe yourself destitute of the true spirit of
devotion, as you have to believe the Apostles and saints
of the primitive Church were truly devout. For as their
way of life was a demonstration of their devotion, so a
contrary way of life is as strong a proof of a want of
devotion.
When you
read the Scriptures, you see a religion that is all life,
and spirit, and joy, in God; that supposes our souls risen
from earthly desires, and bodily indulgences, to prepare
for another body, another world, and other enjoyments. You
see Christians represented as temples of the Holy Ghost,
as children of the day, as candidates for an eternal
crown, as watchful virgins, that have their lamps always
burning, in expectation of the bridegroom. But can he be
thought to have this joy in God, this care of eternity,
this watchful spirit, who has not zeal enough to rise to
his prayers?
When you
look into the writings and lives of the first Christians,
you see the same spirit that you see in the Scriptures.
All is reality, life, and action. Watching and prayers,
self-denial and mortification, was the common business of
their lives.
From that
time to this, there has been no person like them, eminent
for piety, who has not, like them, been eminent for
self-denial and mortification. This is the only royal way
that leads to a kingdom.
But how
far are you from this way of life, or rather how contrary
to it, if, instead of imitating their austerity and
mortification, you cannot so much as renounce so poor an
indulgence, as to be able to rise to your prayers! If
self-denials and bodily sufferings, if watchings and
fastings, will be marks of glory at the day of judgment,
where must we hide our heads, that have slumbered away our
time in sloth and softness?
You
perhaps now find some pretences to excuse yourselves from
that severity of fasting and self-denial, which the first
Christians practised. You fancy that human nature is grown
weaker, and that the difference of climates may make it
not possible for you to observe their methods of
self-denial and austerity in these colder countries.
But all
this is but pretence: for the change is not in the outward
state of things, but in the inward state of our minds.
When there is the same spirit in us that there was in the
Apostles and primitive Christians, when we feel the weight
of religion as they did, when we have their faith and
hope, we shall take up our cross, and deny ourselves, and
live in such methods of mortification as they did.
Had St.
Paul lived in a cold country, had he had a constitution
made weak with a sickly stomach, and often infirmities, he
would have done as he advised Timothy, he would have mixed
a little wine with his water. But still he would have
lived in a state of self-denial and mortification. He
would have given this same account of himself:-- "I
therefore so run, not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as
one that beateth the air: but I keep under my body, and
bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I
have preached to others, I myself should be a
castaway." [1 Cor. ix. 26, 27]
After
all, let it now be supposed, that you imagine there is no
necessity for you to be so sober and vigilant, so fearful
of yourself, so watchful over your passions, so
apprehensive of danger, so careful of your salvation, as
the Apostles were. Let it be supposed, that you imagine
that you want less self-denial and mortification, to
subdue your bodies, and purify your souls, than they
wanted; that you need not have your loins girt, and your
lamps burning, as they had; will you therefore live in a
quite contrary state? Will you make your life as constant
a course of softness and indulgence, as theirs was of
strictness and self-denial?
If
therefore you should think that you have time sufficient,
both for prayer and other duties, though you rise late;
yet let me persuade you to rise early, as an instance of
self-denial. It is so small a one, that, if you cannot
comply with it, you have no reason to think yourself
capable of any other.
If I were
to desire you not to study the gratifications of your
palate, in the niceties of meats and drinks, I would not
insist much upon the crime of wasting your money in such a
way, though it be a great one; but I would desire you to
renounce such a way of life, because it supports you in
such a state of sensuality and indulgence, as renders you
incapable of relishing the most essential doctrines of
religion.
For the
same reason, I do not insist much on the crime of wasting
so much of your time in sleep, though it be a great one;
but I desire you to renounce this indulgence, because it
gives a softness and idleness to your soul, and is so
contrary to that lively, zealous, watchful, self-denying
spirit, which was not only the spirit of Christ and His
Apostles, the spirit of all the saints and martyrs which
have ever been amongst men, but must be the spirit of all
those who would not sink in the common corruption of the
world.
Here,
therefore, we must fix our charge against this practice;
we must blame it, not as having this or that particular
evil, but as a general habit, that extends itself through
our whole spirit, and supports a state of mind that is
wholly wrong.
It is
contrary to piety; not as accidental slips and mistakes in
life are contrary to it, but in such a manner, as an ill
habit of body is contrary to health.
On the
other hand, if you were to rise early every morning, as an
instance of self-denial, as a method of renouncing
indulgence, as a means of redeeming your time, and fitting
your spirit for prayer, you would find mighty advantages
from it. This method, though it seems such a small
circumstance of life, would in all probability be a means
of great piety. It would keep it constantly in your head,
that softness and idleness were to be avoided, that
self-denial was a part of Christianity. It would teach you
to exercise power over yourself, and make you able by
degrees to renounce other pleasures and tempers that war
against the soul.
This one
rule would teach you to think of others: it would dispose
your mind to exactness, and would be very likely to bring
the remaining part of the day under rules of prudence and
devotion.
But above
all, one certain benefit from this method you will be sure
of having, it will best fit and prepare you for the
reception of the Holy Spirit. When you thus begin the day
in the spirit of religion, renouncing sleep, because you
are to renounce softness, and redeem your time; this
disposition, as it puts your heart into a good state, so
it will procure the assistance of the Holy Spirit: what is
so planted and watered will certainly have an increase
from God. You will then speak from your heart, your soul
will be awake, your prayers will refresh you like meat and
drink, you will feel what you say, and begin to know what
saints and holy men have meant, by fervours of devotion.
He that
is thus prepared for prayer, who rises with these
dispositions, is in a very different state from him who
has no rules of this kind; who rises by chance, as he
happens to be weary of his bed, or is able to sleep no
longer. If such a one prays only with his mouth, -- if his
heart feels nothing of that which he says, -- if his
prayers are only things of course, -- if they are a
lifeless form of words, which he only repeats because they
are soon said, -- there is nothing to be wondered at in
all this; for such dispositions are the natural effect of
such a state of life.
Hoping,
therefore, that you are now enough convinced of the
necessity of rising early to your prayers, I shall proceed
to lay before you a method of daily prayer.
I do not
take upon me to prescribe to you the use of any particular
forms of prayer, but only to show you the necessity of
praying at such times, and in such a manner.
You will
here find some helps, how to furnish yourself with such
forms of prayer as shall be useful to you. And if you are
such a proficient in the spirit of devotion, that your
heart is always ready to pray in its own language, in this
case I press no necessity of borrowed forms.
For
though I think a form of prayer very necessary and
expedient for public worship, yet if any one can find a
better way of raising his heart unto God in private, than
by prepared forms of prayer, I have nothing to object
against it; my design being only to assist and direct such
as stand in need of assistance.
Thus
much, I believe, is certain, that the generality of
Christians ought to use forms of prayer at all the regular
times of prayer. It seems right for every one to begin
with a form of prayer; and if, in the midst of his
devotions, he finds his heart ready to break forth into
new and higher strains of devotion, he should leave his
form for a while, and follow those fervours of his heart,
till it again wants the assistance of his usual petitions.
This
seems to be the true liberty of private devotion; it
should be under the direction of some form; but not so
tied down to it, but that it may be free to take such new
expressions, as its present fervours happen to furnish it
with; which sometimes are more affecting, and carry the
soul more powerfully to God, than any expressions that
were ever used before.
All
people that have ever made any reflections upon what
passes in their own hearts, must know that they are mighty
changeable in regard to devotion. Sometimes our hearts are
so awakened, have such strong apprehensions of the Divine
Presence, are so full of deep compunction for our sins,
that we cannot confess them in any language but that of
tears.
Sometimes
the light of God's countenance shines so bright upon us,
we see so far into the invisible world, we are so affected
with the wonders of the love and goodness of God, that our
hearts worship and adore in a language higher than that of
words, and we feel transports of devotion, which only can
be felt.
On the
other hand, sometimes we are so sunk into our bodies, so
dull and unaffected with that which concerns our souls,
that our hearts are as much too low for our prayers; we
cannot keep pace with our forms of confession, or feel
half of that in our hearts which we have in our mouths; we
thank and praise God with forms of words, but our hearts
have little or no share in them.
It is
therefore highly necessary to provide against this
inconstancy of our hearts, by having at hand such forms of
prayer as may best suit us when our hearts are in their
best state, and also be most likely to raise and stir them
up when they are sunk into dulness. For, as words have a
power of affecting our hearts on all occasions, as the
same thing differently expressed has different effects
upon our minds, so it is reasonable that we should make
this advantage of language, and provide ourselves with
such forms of expression as are most likely to move and
enliven our souls, and fill them with sentiments suitable
to them.
The first
thing that you are to do, when you are upon your knees, is
to shut your eyes, and with a short silence let your soul
place itself in the presence of God; that is, you are to
use this, or some other better method, to separate
yourself from all common thoughts, and make your heart as
sensible as you can of the Divine presence.
Now if
this recollection of spirit is necessary, -- as who can
say it is not? -- then how poorly must they perform their
devotions, who are always in a hurry; who begin them in
haste, and hardly allow themselves time to repeat their
very form, with any gravity or attention! Theirs is
properly saying prayers, instead of praying.
To
proceed: if you were to use yourself (as far as you can)
to pray always in the same place; if you were to reserve
that place for devotion, and not allow yourself to do
anything common in it; if you were never to be there
yourself, but in times of devotion; if any little room, or
(if that cannot be) if any particular part of a room was
thus used, this kind of consecration of it as a place holy
unto God, would have an effect upon your mind, and dispose
you to such tempers, as would very much assist your
devotion. For by having a place thus sacred in your room,
it would in some measure resemble a chapel or house of
God. This would dispose you to be always in the spirit of
religion, when you were there; and fill you with wise and
holy thoughts, when you were by yourself. Your own
apartment would raise in your mind such sentiments as you
have when you stand near an altar; and you would be afraid
of thinking or doing anything that was foolish near that
place, which is the place of prayer and holy intercourse
with God.
When you
begin your petitions, use such various expressions of the
attributes of God, as may make you most sensible of the
greatness and power of the Divine Nature.
Begin,
therefore, in words like these: O Being of all beings,
Fountain of all light and glory, gracious Father of men
and Angels, whose universal Spirit is everywhere present,
giving life, and light, and joy, to all Angels in Heaven,
and all creatures upon earth, etc.
For these
representations of the Divine attributes, which show us in
some degree the Majesty and greatness of God, are an
excellent means of raising our hearts into lively acts of
worship and adoration.
What is
the reason that most people are so much affected with this
petition in the Burial Service of our Church: Yet, O Lord
God most holy, O Lord most mighty, O holy and most
merciful Saviour, deliver us not into the bitter pains of
eternal death? It is, because the joining together of so
many great expressions gives such a description of the
greatness of the Divine Majesty, as naturally affects
every sensible mind.
Although,
therefore, prayer does not consist in fine words, or
studied expressions; yet as words speak to the soul, as
they have a certain power of raising thoughts in the soul;
so those words which speak of God in the highest manner,
which most fully express the power and presence of God,
which raise thoughts in the soul most suitable to the
greatness and providence of God, are the most useful and
most edifying in our prayers.
When you
direct any of your petitions to our blessed Lord, let it
be in some expressions of this kind: O Saviour of the
world, God of God, Light of Light; Thou that art the
brightness of Thy Father's glory, and the express Image of
His Person; Thou that art the Alpha and Omega, the
Beginning and End of all things; Thou that hast destroyed
the power of the devil; that hast overcome death; Thou
that art entered into the Holy of Holies, that sittest at
the right hand of the Father, that art high above all
thrones and principalities, that makest intercession for
all the world; Thou that art the Judge of the quick and
dead; Thou that wilt speedily come down in Thy Father's
glory, to reward all men according to their works, be Thou
my Light and my Peace, etc.
For such
representations, which describe so many characters of our
Saviour's nature and power, are not only proper acts of
adoration, but will, if they are repeated with any
attention, fill our hearts with the highest fervours of
true devotion.
Again; if
you ask any particular grace of our blessed Lord, let it
be in some manner like this: O Holy Jesus, Son of the most
High God, Thou that wast scourged at a pillar, stretched
and nailed upon a cross, for the sins of the world, unite
me to Thy cross, and fill my soul with Thy holy, humble,
and suffering spirit. O Fountain of mercy, Thou that didst
save the thief upon the cross, save me from the guilt of a
sinful life; Thou that didst cast seven devils out of Mary
Magdalene, cast out of my heart all evil thoughts and
wicked tempers. O Giver of life, Thou that didst raise
Lazarus from the dead, raise up my soul from the death and
darkness of sin. Thou that didst give to Thy Apostles
power over unclean spirits, give me power over my own
heart. Thou that didst appear unto Thy disciples when the
doors were shut, do Thou appear unto me in the secret
apartment of my heart. Thou that didst cleanse the lepers,
heal the sick, and give sight to the blind, cleanse my
heart, heal the disorders of my soul, and fill me with
heavenly light.
Now these
kind of appeals have a double advantage; first, as they
are so many proper acts of our faith, whereby we not only
show our belief of the miracles of Christ, but turn them
at the same time into so many instances of worship and
adoration.
Secondly,
as they strengthen and increase the faith of our prayers,
by presenting to our minds so many instances of that power
and goodness, which we call upon for our own assistance.
For he
that appeals to Christ, as casting out devils and raising
the dead, has then a powerful motive in his mind to pray
earnestly, and depend faithfully upon His assistance.
Again: in
order to fill your prayers with excellent strains of
devotion, it may be of use to you to observe this farther
rule:
When at
any time, either in reading the Scripture or any book of
piety, you meet with a passage that more than ordinarily
affects your mind, and seems, as it were, to give your
heart a new motion towards God, you should try to turn it
into the form of a petition, and then give it a place in
your prayers. By this means you will be often improving
your prayers, and storing yourself with proper forms of
making the desires of your heart known unto God.
At all
the stated hours of prayer, it will be of great benefit to
you to have something fixed, and something at liberty, in
your devotions.
You
should have some fixed subject, which is constantly to be
the chief matter of your prayer at that particular time;
and yet have liberty to add such other petitions, as your
condition may then require.
For
instance: as the morning is to you the beginning of a new
life; as God has then given you a new enjoyment of
yourself, and a fresh entrance into the world; it is
highly proper that your first devotions should be a praise
and thanksgiving to God, as for a new creation; and that
you should offer and devote body and soul, all that you
are, and all that you have, to His service and glory.
Receive,
therefore, every day as a resurrection from death, as a
new enjoyment of life; meet every rising sun with such
sentiments of God's goodness, as if you had seen it, and
all things, new created upon your account: and under the
sense of so great a blessing, let your joyful heart praise
and magnify so good and glorious a Creator.
Let,
therefore, praise and thanksgiving, and oblation of
yourself unto God, be always the fixed and certain subject
of your first prayers in the morning; and then take the
liberty of adding such other devotions, as the accidental
difference of your state, or the accidental difference of
your heart, shall then make most needful and expedient for
you.
For one
of the greatest benefits of private devotion consists in
rightly adapting our prayers to those two conditions, --
the difference of our state, and the difference of our
hearts.
By the
difference of our state, is meant the difference of our
external state or condition, as of sickness, health,
pains, losses, disappointments, troubles, particular
mercies, or judgments, from God; all sorts of kindnesses,
injuries, or reproaches, from other people.
Now as
these are great parts of our state of life, as they make
great difference in it by continually changing; so our
devotion will be made doubly beneficial to us, when it
watches to receive and sanctify all these changes of our
state, and turns them all into so many occasions of a more
particular application to God of such thanksgiving, such
resignation, such petitions, as our present state more
especially requires.
And he
that makes every change in his state a reason of
presenting unto God some particular petitions suitable to
that change, will soon find that he has taken an excellent
means not only of praying with fervour, but of living as
he prays.
The next
condition, to which we are always to adapt some part of
our prayers, is the difference of our hearts; by which is
meant the different state of the tempers of our hearts, as
of love, joy, peace, tranquillity, dulness and dryness of
spirit, anxiety, discontent, motions of envy and ambition,
dark and disconsolate thoughts, resentments, fretfulness,
and peevish tempers.
Now as
these tempers, through the weakness of our nature, will
have their succession, more or less, even in pious minds;
so we should constantly make the present state of our
heart the reason of some particular application to God.
If we are
in the delightful calm of sweet and easy passions, of love
and joy in God, we should then offer the grateful tribute
of thanksgiving to God for the possession of so much
happiness, thankfully owning and acknowledging Him as the
bountiful Giver of it all.
If, on
the other hand, we feel ourselves laden with heavy
passions, with dulness of spirit, anxiety, and uneasiness,
we must then look up to God in acts of humility,
confessing our unworthiness, opening our troubles to Him,
beseeching Him in His good time to lessen the weight of
our infirmities, and to deliver us from such passions as
oppose the purity and perfection of our souls.
Now by
thus watching and attending to the present state of our
hearts, and suiting some of our petitions exactly to their
wants, we shall not only be well acquainted with the
disorders of our souls, but also be well exercised in the
method of curing them.
By this
prudent and wise application of our prayers, we shall get
all the relief from them that is possible: and the very
changeableness of our hearts will prove a means of
exercising a greater variety of holy tempers.
Now, by
all that has here been said, you will easily perceive,
that persons careful of the greatest benefit of prayer
ought to have a great share in the forming and composing
their own devotions.
As to
that part of their prayers which is always fixed to one
certain subject, in that they may use the help of forms
composed by other persons; but in that part of their
prayers which they are always to suit to the present state
of their life, and the present state of their heart, there
they must let the sense of their own condition help them
to such kinds of petition, thanksgiving, or resignation,
as their present state more especially requires.
Happy are
they who have this business and employment upon their
hands!
And now,
if people of leisure, whether men or women, who are so
much at a loss how to dispose of their time, who are
forced into poor contrivances, idle visits, and ridiculous
diversions, merely to get rid of hours that hang heavily
upon their hands; if such were to appoint some certain
spaces of their time to the study of devotion, searching
after all the means and helps to attain a devout spirit;
if they were to collect the best forms of devotion, to use
themselves to transcribe the finest passages of
Scripture-prayers; if they were to collect the devotions,
confessions, petitions, praises, resignations, and
thanksgivings, which are scattered up and down in the
Psalms, and range them under proper heads, as so much
proper fuel for the flame of their own devotion; if their
minds were often thus employed, sometimes meditating upon
them, sometimes getting them by heart, and making them as
habitual as their own thoughts, how fervently would they
pray, who came thus prepared to prayer! And how much
better would it be, to make this benefit of leisure time,
than to be dully and idly lost in the poor impertinences
of a playing, visiting, wandering life!
How much
better would it be, to be thus furnished with hymns and
anthems of the saints, and teach their souls to ascend to
God, than to corrupt, bewilder, and confound their hearts
with the wild fancies, the lustful thoughts of lewd poets!
Now
though people of leisure seem called more particularly to
this study of devotion, yet persons of much business or
labour must not think themselves excused from this, or
some better method of improving their devotion.
For the
greater their business is, the more need they have of some
such method as this, to prevent its power over their
hearts, to secure them from sinking into worldly tempers,
and preserve a sense and taste of heavenly things in their
minds. And a little time regularly and constantly employed
to any one use or end, will do great things, and produce
mighty effects.
And it is
for want of considering devotion in this light, as
something that is to be nursed and cherished with care, as
something that is to be made part of our business, that is
to be improved with care and contrivance, by art and
method, and a diligent use of the best helps; it is for
want of considering it in this light that so many people
are so little benefited by it and live and die strangers
to that spirit of devotion, which, by a prudent use of
proper means, they might have enjoyed in a high degree.
For
though the spirit of devotion is the gift of God, and not
attainable by any mere power of our own, yet it is mostly
given to, and never withheld from, those who, by a wise
and diligent use of proper means, prepare themselves for
the reception of it.
And it is
amazing to see how eagerly men employ their parts, their
sagacity, time, study, application, and exercise: how all
helps are called to their assistance, when anything is
intended and desired in worldly matters; and how dull,
negligent, and unimproved they are; how little they use
their parts, sagacity, and abilities, to raise and
increase their devotion!
Mundanus
is a man of excellent parts, and clear apprehension. He is
well advanced in age, and has made a great figure in
business. Every part of trade and business that has fallen
in his way has had some improvement from him; and he is
always contriving to carry every method of doing anything
well to its greatest height. Mundanus aims at the greatest
perfection in everything. The soundness and strength of
his mind, and his just way of thinking upon things, make
him intent upon removing all imperfections.
He can
tell you all the defects and errors in all the common
methods, whether of trade, building, or improving land or
manufactures. The clearness and strength of his
understanding, which he is constantly improving by
continual exercise in these matters, by often digesting
his thoughts in writing, and trying everything every way,
has rendered him a great master of most concerns in human
life.
Thus has
Mundanus gone on, increasing his knowledge and judgment,
as fast as his years came upon him.
The one
only thing which has not fallen under his improvement, nor
received any benefit from his judicious mind, is his
devotion: this is just in the same poor state it was, when
he was only six years of age, and the old man prays now in
that little form of words which his mother used to hear
him repeat night and morning.
This
Mundanus, that hardly ever saw the poorest utensil, or
ever took the meanest trifle into his hand, without
considering how it might be made or used to better
advantage, has gone all his life long praying in the same
manner as when he was a child; without ever considering
how much better or oftener he might pray; without
considering how improbable the spirit of devotion is, how
many helps a wise and reasonable man may call to his
assistance, and how necessary it is, that our prayers
should be enlarged, varied, and suited to the particular
state and condition of our lives.
If
Mundanus sees a book of devotion, he passes it by, as he
does a spelling-book, because he remembers that he learned
to pray, so many years ago, under his mother, when he
learned to spell.
Now how
poor and pitiable is the conduct of this man of sense, who
has so much judgment and understanding in everything, but
that which is the whole wisdom of man!
And how
miserably do many people, more or less, imitate this
conduct!
All which
seems to be owing to a strange, infatuated state of
negligence, which keeps people from considering what
devotion is. For if they did but once proceed so far as to
reflect about it, or ask themselves any questions
concerning it, they would soon see that the spirit of
devotion was like any other sense or understanding, that
is only to be improved by study, care, application, and
the use of such means and helps as are necessary to make a
man a proficient in any art or science.
Classicus
is a man of learning, and well versed in all the best
authors of antiquity. He has read them so much, that he
has entered into their spirit, and can very ingeniously
imitate the manner of any of them. All their thoughts are
his thoughts, and he can express himself in their
language. He is so great a friend to this improvement of
the mind, that if he lights on a young scholar, he never
fails to advise him concerning his studies.
Classicus
tells his young man, he must not think that he has done
enough when he has only learned languages; but that he
must be daily conversant with the best authors, read them
again and again, catch their spirit by living with them,
and that there is no other way of becoming like them, or
of making himself a man of taste and judgment.
How wise
might Classicus have been, and how much good might he have
done in the world, if he had but thought as justly of
devotion, as he does of learning!
He never,
indeed, says anything shocking or offensive about
devotion, because he never thinks, or talks, about it. It
suffers nothing from him but neglect and disregard.
The two
Testaments would not have had so much as a place amongst
his books, but that they are both to be had in Greek.
Classicus
thinks that he sufficiently shows his regard for the Holy
Scripture, when he tells you, that he has no other books
of piety besides them.
It is
very well, Classicus, that you prefer the Bible to all
other books of piety: he has no judgment, that is not thus
far of your opinion.
But if
you will have no other book of piety besides the Bible,
because it is the best, how comes it, Classicus, that you
do not content yourself with one of the best books amongst
the Greeks and Romans? How comes it that you are so greedy
and eager after all of them? How comes it that you think
the knowledge of one is a necessary help to the knowledge
of the other? How comes it that you are so earnest, so
laborious, so expensive of your time and money, to restore
broken periods, and scraps of the ancients?
How comes
it that you read so many commentators upon Cicero, Horace,
and Homer, and not one upon the Gospel? How comes it that
you love to read a man? How comes it that your love of
Cicero and Ovid makes you love to read an author that
writes like them; and yet your esteem for the Gospel gives
you no desire, nay, prevents your reading such books as
breathe the very spirit of the Gospel?
How comes
it that you tell your young scholar, he must not content
himself with barely understanding his authors, but must be
continually reading them all, as the only means of
entering into their spirit, and forming his own judgment
according to them?
Why then
must the Bible lie alone in your study? Is not the spirit
of the saints, the piety of the holy followers of Jesus,
as good and necessary a means of entering into the spirit
and taste of the gospel, as the reading of the ancients is
of entering into the spirit of antiquity?
Is the
spirit of poetry only to be got by much reading of poets
and orators? And is not the spirit of devotion to be got
in the same way, by frequently reading the holy thoughts,
and pious strains of devout men?
Is your
young poet to search after every line that may give new
wings to his fancy, or direct his imagination? And is it
not as reasonable for him who desires to improve in the
Divine life, that is, in the love of heavenly things, to
search after every strain of devotion that may move,
kindle, and inflame the holy ardour of his soul?
Do you
advise your orator to translate the best orations, to
commit much of them to memory, to be frequently exercising
his talent in this manner, that habits of thinking and
speaking justly may be formed in his mind? And is there
not the same benefit and advantage to be made by books of
devotion? Should not a man use them in the same way, that
habits on devotion, and aspiring to God in holy thoughts,
may be well formed in his soul?
Now the
reason why Classicus does not think and judge thus
reasonably of devotion, is owing to his never thinking of
it in any other manner than as the repeating a form of
words. It never in his life entered his head, to think of
devotion as a state of the heart, as an improvable talent
of the mind, as a temper that is to grow and increase like
our reason and judgment, and to be formed in us by such a
regular, diligent use of proper means, as are necessary to
form any other wise habit of mind.
And it is
for want of this, that he has been content all his life
with the bare letter of prayer, and eagerly bent upon
entering into the spirit of heathen poets and orators.
And it is
much to be lamented, that numbers of scholars are more or
less chargeable with this excessive folly; so negligent of
improving their devotion, and so desirous of other poor
accomplishments; as if they thought it a nobler talent to
be able to write an epigram in the turn of Martial, than
to live, and think, and pray to God, in the spirit of St.
Austin.
And yet,
to correct this temper, and fill a man with a quite
contrary spirit, there seems to be no more required, than
the bare belief in the truth of Christianity.
And if
you were to ask Mundanus and Classicus, or any man of
business or learning, whether piety is not the highest
perfection of man, or devotion the greatest attainment in
the world, they must both be forced to answer in the
affirmative, or else give up the truth of the Gospel.
For to
set any accomplishment against devotion, or to think
anything, or all things in this world, bears any
proportion to its excellency, is the same absurdity in a
Christian, as it would be in a philosopher to prefer a
meal's meat to the greatest improvement in knowledge.
For as
philosophy professes purely the search and inquiry after
knowledge, so Christianity supposes, intends, desires, and
aims at nothing else but the raising fallen man to a
Divine life, to such habits of holiness, such degrees of
devotion, as may fit him to enter amongst the holy
inhabitants of the kingdom of heaven.
He that
does not believe this of Christianity, may be reckoned an
infidel; and he that believes thus much has faith enough
to give him a right judgment of the value of things, to
support him in a sound mind, and enable him to conquer all
the temptations which the world shall lay in his way.
To
conclude this chapter. Devotion is nothing else but right
apprehensions and right affections towards God.
All
practices, therefore, that heighten and improve our true
apprehensions of God, all ways of life that tend to
nourish, raise, and fix our affections upon Him, are to be
reckoned so many helps and means to fill us with devotion.
As Prayer
is the proper fuel of this holy flame, so we must use all
our care and contrivance to give prayer its full power: as
by alms, self-denial, frequent retirements, and holy
readings, composing forms for ourselves, or using the best
we can get, adding length of time, and observing hours of
prayer: changing, improving, and suiting our devotions to
the condition of our lives, and the state of our hearts.
Those who
have most leisure seem more especially called to a more
eminent observance of these holy rules of a devout life.
And they, who, by the necessity of their state, and not
through their own choice, have but little time to employ
thus, must make the best use of that little they have. For
this is the certain way of making devotion produce a
devout life.
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