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be employed in this service but that which is made of the skin of a clean beast; no wordmight be written in a different colour, insomuch as when, in the Pentateuch of Alexander the Great, the name of Jehovah was, in pretence of honour, written in golden characters, their great Rabbins condemned the whole volume to be obliterated and defaced; no man might touch it, but with the right hand, and without a kiss of reverence; no man might sit in the presence of it; no man might so much as spit before it; no man might carry it behind him, but must lay it next to his heart, in his travels; no man might offer to read it, but in a clean place; no man might sell it, though the copy were moth-eaten, and himself half famished. And is the word of the everlasting God of less worth and authority now, than it hath been? Or is there less cause of our reverence of those divine oracles, than theirs? Certainly if they were superstitiously scrupulous, it is not for us to be carelessly slovenly, and neglective of that sacred book, out of which we shall once be judged. Even that impure Koran of the Turks is forbidden to be touched by any, but pure hands. It was not the least praise of Carlo Boromeo, the late saint of Milan, that he would never read the divine scripture, but upon his knees: and, if we profess to bear no less inward honour to that sacred volume, why should we, how can we, think it free for us to entertain it with an unmannerly neglect ?

[3.] As to the name and word, so to the services of God, must the efficacy of our holy fear be diffused; and these, whether private or public.

If we pray, our awe will call us, either to a standing on our feet, as servants; or a bowing of our knees, as supplicants; or, a prostration on our faces, as dejected penitents: neither, when the heart is a camel, can the body be an elephant. What prince would not scorn the rudeness of a sitting petitioner? It was a just distinction of Socrates* of old, that "to sacrifice, is to give to God; to pray, is to beg of God:" and who is so liberal as to cast away his alms upon a stout and unreverent beggar?

* Τὸ θύειν, δωρεῖσθαι ἐςὶ τοῖς θεοῖς τὸ δὲ ἐυχεσθαι, αἰτεῖν Tes Seas. Plat. Apol.

If we attend God's message, in the mouth of his holy servants, whether read or preached, our fear will frame us to a reverent carriage of our bodies; so that our very outward deportment may really seem to speak the words of the good centurion; "Now we are all here present before God, to hear all things, that are commanded thee of God," Acts x. 33. We shall need no law to vail our bonnets, save that in our own breast. It was a great word, that Simeon,* the son of Satach, said to the Jewish prince and priest, convented before their Sanhedrim; "Thou standest not before us, but before him that said, Let the world be made, and it was made." Did we think so, how durst we sit in a bold sauciness, while that great embassy is delivered, with our hats on our heads; as if we acknowledged no presence, but of our inferiors? Yea, that which is a shame to say, those very apprentices who dare not cover their heads at home, where their master is alone, yet, in God's house, where they see him in a throng of his betters, waiting upon the ordinances of the God of heaven, think it free for them, equally to put on, and to be no less fellows with their master, than he is with his Maker; as if the place and service gave a public privilege to all comers, of a profane lawlessness. Surely the same ground, whereon the apostle built his charge for the covering of the heads of the women, serves equally for the uncovering of the heads of the men, 66 because of the angels," 1 Cor. xi. 10; yea more, because of the God of the angels, who, by these visible angels of his church, speaks to us, and solicits our salvation.

If we address ourselves to the dreadful mysteries of the blessed sacrament of the body and blood of our Lord Jesus, our fear will bend our knees, in a meet reverence to that great and gracious Saviour, who is there lively represented, offered, given, sealed up to our souls; who, at that heavenly table, is, as St. Jerome truly says, both the guest and the banquet. Neither can the heart that is seasoned with true piety, be afraid of too lowly a participation of the Lord of glory; but rather resolves, that he is not worthy of knees, who will not here bow them; for,

* Talmud.

who should command them, if not their Maker, if not their Redeemer? Away with the monsters of opinion and practice concerning this sacrament. Christ Jesus is here

already tendered to us; and who can, who dares, take him, but on his knees? What posture can we use with our fellows, if we sit with our God and Saviour? At our best, well may we say, with the humble centurion, "Lord, we are not worthy thou shouldest come under our roof;" but, if we prepare not both souls and bodies, to receive him reverently, our sinful rudeness shall make us utterly uncapable of so blessed a presence.

[4.] Neither doth our awful regard reach only to the actions of God's service; but it extends itself even to the very house which is called by his name, "the place where his honour dwelleth." For as the presence of God gives a holiness to what place soever he is pleased to shew himself in, as the sun carries an inseparable light wheresoever it goes, so that holiness calls for a meet veneration from us. It was a fit word for that good Patriarch who sware by his father's fear, when he spake of his Bethel; "How dreadful is this place! This is none other, but the house of God; this is the gate of heaven," Gen. xxviii. 17.

The several distances and distinctions that were observed in the temple of God at Jerusalem, are famously known. None might sit within the verge thereof, but the king; all others either stood or kneeled. I have read of some sects of men so curiously scrupulous, that their priests were not allowed to breathe in their temple; but were commanded, while they went in to sweep the floor, to hold their wind, like those that dive for sponges at Samos, to the utmost length of time; and, when they would vent their suppressed air and change it for new, to go forth of the doors, and return with a fresh supply. But we are sure the Ethiopian Christians are so holily mannerly, that they do not allow any man so much as to spit in their churches; and if such a defilement happen, they cause it to be speedily cleansed.

What shall we then say of the common profaneness of those careless Christians who make no distinction betwixt their church and their barn; who care not to look unto their foul feet, when they come under this sacred

roof; who with equal irreverence, stumble into God's house and their tavern; who can find no fitter place for their ambulatory, their burse, their counting-house, their sepulchre ?

It is recorded of St. Swithin the no less famous than humble bishop of Winchester, that, when he died, he gave charge that his body should not, in any case, be buried within the church; but laid where his grave might be wet with rain, and open to weather and passengers; conceiving, I suppose, that sacred place too good for the repository of the best carcases. Surely we cannot easily entertain too venerable an opinion of the habitation of the Almighty. If our hearts have the honour to be the spiritual temples of God, we shall gladly give all due honour to his material temples: and, doubtless, in all experience, we shall so respect the house, as we are affected to the owner. It was the discipline and practice of the Etruscans, from whom old Rome learned much of her skill in auguries and many mysteries of religion, that those deities whom they desired to harbour in their own breasts, as Virtue, Peace, Modesty, should have temples erected within their walls; but those which were the presidents of wars and combustions, or pleasures and sensuality, as Mars, Venus, Vulcan, should take up with temples without their walls and even so it is, and will be ever with us; if we have a holy regard to the God of Heaven, and adore him as inhabiting our bosoms, we cannot but give all fair and venerable respects to those houses which he hath taken up for his own worship and presence.

[5.] Neither, lastly, can God's very messengers, though partners of our own infirmities, escape some sensible reflections of our fear. It was the rule of the Jews, that the very prince of the people, if he would consult God's oracle, out of reverence to that divine pectoral, must reverently stand before that priest; who, at other times, was bound to give lowly obedience to his sovereign Lord.

What great Alexander did to the Jewish high priest, who knows not? Neither hath the practice of the godly emperors in the Christian church, through all successions of ages, savoured of less regard. Even the late Cæsar Ferdinand, in the sight of our English, not long before

his end, together with his empress, received an episcopal benediction publicly upon his knees.

Away with that insolent pomp of kissing toes, which Justus Lipsius justly called once" foul and servile;" fit for a Caligula, or Maximinus the younger, or a Diocletian. Away with the proud horsing on shoulders, or treading on necks, or the lackeying of princes. It was a moderate word of Cardinal Zabarel, concerning his great master: "So is he to be honoured, that he be not adored." Surely when religion was at the best, great peers thought it no scorn to kiss the venerable hands of their spiritual fathers; and did not grudge them eminent titles of honour.

It was but a simple port that Elijah carried in the world; who, after that astonishing wonder of fetching down fire and water from heaven, thought it no abasement to be Ahab's lackey from Carmel to Jezreel; 1 Kings xviii. 46. yet Obadiah, who was high steward to the king of Israel, even on that day could fall on his face to him, and say, "Art thou that my Lord Elijah."

Not much greater was the state of those Christian bishops, who began now to breathe from the bloody persecutions of the heathen emperors: yet, with what dearness, did that gracious Constantine, in whom this island is proud to challenge no small share, kiss those scars which they had received for the name of Christ! With what titles, did he dignify them! as one, that saw Christ in their faces; and meant, in their persons, to honour his Saviour.

And indeed there is so close and indissoluble a relation, betwixt Christ and his messengers, that their mutual interest can never be severed. What prince doth not hold himself concerned in the honours or affronts that are done to his ambassadors? Those keys which God hath committed to our hands, lock us so fast to him, that no power in earth or hell can separate us: but still that word must stand fast in heaven, He that despiseth you, despiseth me."

In vain shall they therefore pretend to fear God, who contemn and disgrace their spiritual governors. There is a certain plant, which our herbalists call "herba impia”

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