it; to forsake also all the carnal desires of the Flesh, and not to follow nor be led by them. This Vow we take when we be Children, and understand it not: and, how many are there, who know, and consider, and regard what they have Vowed, when they are be∣come Men, almost as little as they did being Children. Consider the Lives, and Publick Actions of most Men of all Conditions, in Court, City, and Country, and then deny it, if you can, that those three things which we have renounced in our Baptism; the Profits, Honours, and Pleasures of the World, are not the very Gods which divide the World amongst them; are not served more devoutly, confided in more heartily, loved more affectionately, than the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, in whose Name we are Bap∣tized? Deny, if you can, the daily and constant Imployment of all Men, to be either a violent prosecution of the vain Pomp and Glory of the World, or of the Power, Riches, and contemptible Profits of it, or of the momentary or unsatisfying Pleasures of the Flesh, or else of the more Diabolical humours of Pride, Malice, Revenge, and such like. &c.
When we are come to Years capable of Instruction, many, which is lamentable to consider, are so little regarded by themselves or others, that they continue little better than Pagans, in a Common∣wealth of Christians, and know little more of God, or of Christ, than if they had been bred in the Indies. A lamentable Case, and which will one Day lie heavy upon their account, which might have amended it and did not. But many, I confess, are taught to act over this Play of Religion, and learned to say, Our Father which art in Heaven; and, I believe in God the Father Almighty: But, Where are the Men that live so, as if they did believe in earn∣est, that God is their Almighty Father? Where are they that fear him, and trust him, and depend upon him only, for their whole Happiness, and Love him, and Obey him, as in reason we ought to do to an Almighty Father? Who, if he be our Father, and we be indeed his Children, will do for us all the good he can; and if he be Almighty, can do for us all the good he will; and yet, how few are there, who love him with half that affection as Children usually do their Parents, or believe him with half that simplicity, or serve him with half that diligence? And then for the Lords Prayer, the plain truth is, we lie unto God for the most part clean through it, and for want of desiring indeed, what in word we pray for, tell him to his Face as many false Tales as we make Petitions.