A booke of Christian prayers, collected out of the auncie[n]t writers, and best learned in our tyme, worthy to be read with an earnest mynde of all Christians, in these daungerous and troublesome dayes, that God for Christes sake will yet still be mercyfull vnto vs

About this Item

Title
A booke of Christian prayers, collected out of the auncie[n]t writers, and best learned in our tyme, worthy to be read with an earnest mynde of all Christians, in these daungerous and troublesome dayes, that God for Christes sake will yet still be mercyfull vnto vs
Author
Day, Richard, b. 1552.
Publication
At London :: Printed by Iohn Daye, dwellyng ouer Aldersgate,
1578.
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Subject terms
Prayers -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19989.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A booke of Christian prayers, collected out of the auncie[n]t writers, and best learned in our tyme, worthy to be read with an earnest mynde of all Christians, in these daungerous and troublesome dayes, that God for Christes sake will yet still be mercyfull vnto vs." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19989.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2024.

Pages

Let vs pray

[illustration]
In song, in daunce, in pipes in play: We lost our life, now wrapt in clay.

[illustration]
¶ The Music. Strike vp thy play: Daunce with me away

Page [unnumbered]

O God, mercifull Father, that de∣spisest not the sighing of a con∣trite hart, nor the desire of such as be sorrowfull, mercifully assist our pray∣ers that we make before theé, in all our troubles and aduersities, when so euer they oppresse vs: And graciously heare vs, that those euils which the craft, and subtiltie of the deuill, or man, worketh against vs, be brought to naught, and by the prouidence of thy goodnes they may be dispersed, that we thy seruants (being hurt by no persequutions) may euermore geue thanks vnto theé, in thy holy church through Christ our Lord.

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