An introduction to the sacrament, or, A short, plain, and safe way to the communion table being an instruction for the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper / collected for and familiarly addressed to every particular communicant.

About this Item

Title
An introduction to the sacrament, or, A short, plain, and safe way to the communion table being an instruction for the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper / collected for and familiarly addressed to every particular communicant.
Author
Addison, Lancelot, 1632-1703.
Publication
London :: Printed for William Crooke ...,
1682.
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A69505.0001.001
Cite this Item
"An introduction to the sacrament, or, A short, plain, and safe way to the communion table being an instruction for the worthy receiving of the Lords Supper / collected for and familiarly addressed to every particular communicant." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A69505.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2024.

Pages

Page 107

LXXIV.

Nor can I imagine ought should render you backward to make known your Doubts, un∣less it be an improvident surmise that the ripping up of them will discover your Nakedness, and expose you to shame with o∣thers, and beget a discounte∣nance in your self. But there will be no ground left for this surmise, when it is duly consi∣der'd, that the Person to whom you are thus to reveal your self, is a pious and discreet Minister of Gods Word; one who will be as faithful to conceal, as you are to discover your infirmities; and as readie to heal your sores, as you are to rip them up: one too, who will be so far from insulting over your Weaknesses, or thinking ill of you for disco∣vering them, that he will love

Page 108

and encourage your ingenuous and Christian dealing, and re∣store you in the Spirit of meek∣ness, and help to set things at rights between God and your Soul. But suppose the discove∣rie of your Scruples should in∣deed turn to your shame, which is the worst you can fear; yet to abstain from doing it upon this account, is to betray in you a less care of your Soul than of your Body. For the foulest and most shameful Diseases of the Bodie, you can, without blush¦ing, lay open to your Physi∣cian; and will you then be coy and squeamish to confess the sickness of your Soul! of which your care ought to be infinite∣ly greater than of your Bodie, as no less excelling it, than the heavenly Manna did the Ear∣then pot that contain'd it. So that neither fear of shame, nor any thing else, ought to keep

Page 109

you from using such means as any way tend to its Salva∣tion.

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