CHAP. XXVI. Of the circumstances of prayer. (Book 26)
ANd thus much of the substantiall points of In∣vocation: Now follow the accidentall, which* 1.1 are the circumstances of Person, Time, and Place. Prayer in regard of persons is either publick or pri∣vate. Publick invocation is the prayer of a congre∣gation, as of a parish or colledge. Of publick prayer we are to make speciall account: For if the prayer of* 1.2 some one man can avail so much (as heretofore I have shewed) what shall we think of publick, where the prayers of so many ascend together unto the Lord? As the flame of one faggot-stick to the flame of the whole faggot or bundle, so is the prayer of one man to the prayer of the whole congregation: for Vis unita est fortior, force united is so much the stronger; and a threefold cable is hardly broken. Our Saviour Christ hath bountifully promised that where two or three be gathered together in his name, there is he in the middest of them, Matth. 18. 20. Yea, such is the presence of the Lord in publick assem∣blies, that those which have been excluded thence have thought themselves banished from the pre∣sence of God, and to be put away from his face. It was the punishment of Cain; and so he esteemed it, Gen. 4. For when the Lord had banished him from that earth which had received his brothers bloud from his hand, v. 11. which was the place of the visible Church, v. 14. he saith, that by reason of this pu∣nishment.