To maintain a devotional spirit
two things are especially necessary; habitually to cultivate the
disposition, and habitually to avoid whatever is unfavorable to it.
Frequent retirement and recollection are indispensable together with
such a general course of reading, as, if it does not actually
promote the spirit we are endeavoring to maintain, shall never be
hostile to it. We should avoid as much as in us lies all such
society, all such amusements as excite tempers which it is the daily
business of a Christian to subdue, and all those feelings which it
is his constant duty to suppress.
And here may we venture to observe, that if some things which are
apparently innocent, and do not assume an alarming aspect, or bear a
dangerous character; things which the generality of decorous people
affirm (how truly we know not) to be safe for them; yet if we find
that these things stir up in us improper propensities; if they
awaken thoughts which ought not to be excited; if they abate our
love for religious exercises, or infringe on our time for performing
them; if they make spiritual concerns appear insipid; if they wind
our hearts a little more about the world; in short, if we have
formerly found them injurious to our own souls, then let no example
or persuasion, no belief of their alleged innocence, no plea of
their perfect safety, tempt us to indulge in them. It matters little
to our security what they are to others. Our business is with
ourselves. Our responsibility is on our own heads. Others cannot
know the side on which we are assailable. Let our own unbiased
judgment determine our opinion; let our own experience decide for
our own conduct.
In speaking of books, we cannot forbear noticing that very prevalent
sort of reading which is little less productive of evil, little less
prejudicial to moral and mental improvement, than that which carries
a more formidable appearance. We cannot confine our censure to those
more corrupt writings which deprave the heart, debauch the
imagination, and poison the principles. Of these the turpitude is so
obvious that no caution on this head, it is presumed, can be
necessary. But if justice forbids us to confound the insipid with
the mischievous, the idle, with the vicious, and the frivolous with
the profligate, still we can only admit of shades -- deep shades, we
allow -- of difference.
These works, if comparatively harmless, yet debase the taste,
slacken the intellectual nerve, let down the understanding, set the
imagination loose, and send it gadding among low and worthless
objects. They not only run away with the time which should be given
to better things, but gradually destroy all taste for better things.
They sink the mind to their own standard, and give it a sluggish
reluctance, we had almost said a moral incapacity, for every thing
above their level. The mind, by long habit of stooping, loses its
erectness, and yields to its degradation. It becomes so low and
narrow by the littleness of the things which engage it, that it
requires a painful effort to lift itself high enough, or to open
itself wide enough, to embrace great and noble objects. The appetite
is vitiated. Excess, instead of producing a surfeit by weakening the
digestion, only induces a loathing for stronger nourishment. The
faculties which might have been expanding in works of science, or
soaring in the contemplation of genius, become satisfied with the
impertinences of the most ordinary fiction, lose their relish for
the severity of truth, the elegance of taste, and the soberness of
religion. Lulled in the torpor of repose, the intellect dozes, and
enjoys, in its waking dream,
"All the wild trash of sleep without its rest."
In avoiding books which excite the passions, it would seem strange
to include even some devotional works. Yet such as merely kindle
warm feelings are not always the safest. Let us rather prefer those
which, while they tend to raise a devotional spirit, awaken the
affections without disordering them; which, while they elevate the
desires, purify them; which show us our own nature, and lay open its
corruptions. Such as show us the malignity of sin, the deceitfulness
of our hearts, the feebleness of our best resolutions; such as teach
us to pull off the mask from the fairest appearances, and discover
every hiding place where some lurking evil would conceal itself;
such as show us not what we appear to others, but what we really
are; such as, cooperating with our interior feelings, and showing us
our natural state, point out our absolute need of a Redeemer, lead
us to seek to him for pardon, from a conviction that there is no
other refuge, no other salvation. Let us be conversant with such
writings as teach us that, while we long to obtain the remission of
our transgressions, we must not desire the remission of our duties.
Let us seek for such a Savior as will not only deliver us from the
punishment of sin, but from its dominion also.
And let us ever bear in mind that the end of prayer is not answered
when the prayer is finished. We should regard prayer as a means to a
farther end. The act of prayer is not sufficient, we must cultivate
a spirit of prayer. And though, when the actual devotion is over, we
cannot amid the distractions of company and business always be
thinking of heavenly things, yet the desire, the frame, the
propensity, the willingness to return to them, we must, however
difficult, endeavor to maintain.
The proper temper for prayer should precede the act. The disposition
should be wrought in the mind before the exercise is begun. To bring
a proud temper to an humble prayer, a luxurious habit to a
self-denying prayer, or a worldly disposition to a
spiritually-minded prayer, is a positive anomaly. A habit is more
powerful than an act, and a previously indulged temper during the
day will not, it is to be feared, be fully counteracted by the
exercise of a few minutes devotion at night.
Prayer is designed for a perpetual renovation of the motives to
virtue; if, therefore, the cause is not followed by its consequence
-- a consequence inevitable but for the impediments we bring to it,
we rob our nature of its highest privilege, and are in danger of
incurring a penalty where we are looking for a blessing.
That the habitual tendency of the life should be the preparation for
the stated prayer, is naturally suggested to us by our blessed
Redeemer in his sermon on the Mount. He announced the precepts of
holiness and their corresponding beatitudes; he gave the spiritual
exposition of the law, the directions for alms-giving, the
exhortation to love our enemies, no, the essence and spirit of the
whole Decalogue, previous to his delivering his own Divine prayer as
a pattern for ours. Let us learn from this that the preparation of
prayer is, therefore, to live in all those pursuits which we may
safely beg of God to bless, and in a conflict with all those
temptations into which we pray not to be led.
If God be the center to which our hearts are tending, every line in
our lives must meet in him. With this point in view, there will be a
harmony between our prayers and our practice, a consistency between
devotion and conduct which will make every part turn to this one
end, bear upon this one point. For the beauty of the Christian
scheme consists not in parts (however good in themselves) which tend
to separate views and lead to different ends; but it arises from its
being one entire, uniform, connected plan, "compacted of that which
every joint supplies," and of which all the parts terminate in this
one grand ultimate point. The design of prayer, therefore, as we
before observed, is not merely to make us devout while we are
engaged in it, but that its odor may be diffused through all the
intermediate spaces of the day, enter into all its occupations,
duties, and tempers. Nor must its results be partial or limited to
easy and pleasant duties, but extend to such as are less alluring.
When we pray, for instance, for our enemies, the prayer must be
rendered practical, must be made a means of softening our spirit and
cooling our resentment toward them. If we deserve their enmity the
true spirit of prayer will put us upon endeavoring to cure the fault
which has excited it. If we do not deserve it, it will put us on
striving for a peaceful temper, and we shall endeavor not to let
slip so favorable an occasion of cultivating it. There is no such
softener of animosity, no such soother of resentment, no such
allayer of hatred, as sincere, cordial prayer.
It is obvious that the precept to pray without ceasing can never
mean to enjoin a continual course of actual prayer. But while it
more directly enjoins us to embrace all proper occasions of
performing this sacred duty, or rather of claiming this valuable
privilege, so it plainly implies that we should try to keep up
constantly that sense of the Divine presence which shall maintain
the disposition. In order to this, we should inure our minds to
reflection; we should encourage serious thoughts. A good thought
barely passing through the mind will make little impression on it.
We must arrest it, constrain it to remain with us, expand, amplify,
and, as it were, take it to pieces. It must be distinctly unfolded
and carefully examined, or it will leave no precise idea; it must be
fixed and incorporated, or it will produce no practical effect. We
must not dismiss it until it has left some trace on the mind, until
it has made some impression on the heart.
On the other hand, if we give the reins to a loose ungoverned
imagination, at other times if we abandon our minds to frivolous
thoughts, if we fill them with corrupt images; if we cherish sensual
ideas during the rest of the day, can we expect that none of these
images will intrude, that none of these impressions will be revived,
but that the temple, into which foul things have been invited, will
be cleansed at a given moment; that worldly thoughts will recede and
give place at once to pure and holy thoughts? Will that Spirit,
grieved by impurity, or resisted by levity, return with his warm
beams and cheering influences to the contaminated mansion from which
he has been driven out? Is it amazing if, finding no entrance into a
heart filled with vanity, he should withdraw himself?
We cannot in retiring into our closets change our natures as we do
our clothes. The disposition we carry there will be likely to remain
with us. We have no right to expect that a new temper will meet us
at the door. We can only hope that the spirit we bring there will be
cherished and improved. It is not easy, rather it is not possible to
graft genuine devotion on a life of an opposite tendency; nor can we
delight ourselves regularly for a few stated moments in that God
whom we have not been serving during the day. We may, indeed, to
quiet our conscience, take up the employment of prayer, but cannot
take up the state of mind which will make the employment beneficial
to ourselves, or the payer acceptable to God, if all the previous
hours of the day we have been careless of ourselves and unmindful of
our Maker. They will not pray differently from the rest of the world
who do not live differently.
What a contradiction is it to lament the weakness, the misery, and
the corruption of our nature in our devotions, and then to rush into
a life, though not perhaps of vice, yet of indulgences calculated to
increase that weakness, to inflame those corruptions, and to lead to
that misery! There is either no meaning in our prayers, or no sense
in our conduct. In the one we mock God, in the other we deceive
ourselves.
Will not he who keeps up an habitual communion with his Maker, who
is vigilant in thought, self-denying in action, who strives to keep
his heart from wrong desires, his mind from vain imaginations, and
his lips from idle words, bring a more prepared spirit, a more
collected mind, be more engaged, more penetrated, more present to
the occasion? Will he not feel more delight in this devout exercise,
reap more benefit from it, than he who lives at random, prays from
custom, and who, though he dares not omit the form, is a stranger to
its spirit?
We speak not here to the self-sufficient formalist, or the careless
profligate. Among those whom we now take the liberty to address, are
to be found, especially in the higher class of females, the amiable
and the interesting, and, in many respects, the virtuous and
correct; characters so engaging, so evidently made for better
things, so capable of reaching high degrees of excellence, so formed
to give the tone to Christian practice as well as to fashion; so
calculated to give a beautiful impression of that religion which
they profess without sufficiently adorning, which they believe
without fairly exemplifying; that we cannot forbear taking a tender
interest in their welfare, we cannot forbear breathing a fervent
prayer that they may yet reach the elevation for which they were
intended; that they may hold out a uniform and consistent pattern of
"whatever things are pure, honest, just, lovely, and of good
report!" This the apostle goes on to intimate can only be done by
thinking on these things. Things can only influence our practice as
they engage our attention. Would not then a confirmed habit of
serious thought tend to correct that inconsideration which, we are
willing to hope, more than lack of principle, lies at the bottom of
the inconsistency we are lamenting?
If, as it is generally allowed, the great difficulty of our
spiritual life is to make the future predominate over the present,
do we not, by the conduct we are regretting, aggravate what it is in
our power to diminish? Miscalculation of the relative value of
things is one of the greatest errors of our spiritual life. We
estimate them in an inverse proportion to their value, as well as to
their duration: we lavish earnest and durable thoughts on things so
trifling that they deserve little regard, so temporary that they
"perish with the using," while we bestow only slight attention on
things of infinite worth; only transient thoughts on things of
eternal duration.
Those who are so far conscientious as not to omit a regular course
of devotion, and who yet allow themselves, at the same time, to go
on in a course of amusements which excite a directly opposite
spirit, are inconceivably augmenting their own difficulties. They
are eagerly heaping up fuel in the day on the fire which they intend
to extinguish in the evening; they are voluntarily adding to the
temptations against which they mean to request grace to struggle. To
acknowledge, at the same time, that we find it hard to serve God as
we ought, and yet to be systematically indulging habits which must
naturally increase the difficulty, makes our character almost
ridiculous, while it renders our duty almost impracticable.
While we make our way more difficult by those very indulgences with
which we think to cheer and refresh it, the determined Christian
becomes his own pioneer; he makes his path easy by voluntarily
clearing it of the obstacles which impede his progress.
These habitual indulgences seem a contradiction to that obvious law,
that one virtue always involves another; for we cannot labor after
any grace -- that of prayer, for instance -- without resisting
whatever is opposite to it. If, then, we lament that it is so hard
to serve God, let us not by our conduct furnish arguments against
ourselves; for, as if the difficulty were not great enough in
itself, we are continually heaping up mountains in our way, by
indulging in such pursuits and passions as make a small labor an
insurmountable one.
We may often judge better of our state by the result than by the act
of prayer; our very defects, our coldness, deadness, wanderings, may
leave more contrition on the soul than the happiest turn of thought.
The feeling of our needs, the confession of our sins, the
acknowledgment of our dependence, the renunciation of ourselves, the
supplication for mercy, the application to the "fountain opened for
sin," the cordial entreaty for the aid of the Spirit, the
relinquishment of our own will, resolutions of better obedience,
petitions that these resolutions may be directed and sanctified --
these are the subjects in which the supplicant should be engaged, by
which his thoughts should be absorbed.
Can they be so absorbed, if many of the intervening hours are passed
in pursuits of a totally different complexion -- pursuits which
raise the passions which we are seeking to allay? Will the cherished
vanities go at our bidding? Will the required dispositions come at
our calling? Do we find our tempers so obedient, our passions so
subservient, in the other concerns of life? If not, what reason have
we to expect their submission in this grand concern? We should,
therefore, endeavor to believe as we pray, to think as we pray, to
feel as we pray, and to act as we pray. Prayer must not be a
solitary, independent exercise; but an exercise interwoven with
many, and inseparably connected with that golden chain of Christian
duties, of which, when so connected, it forms one of the most
important links.
Let us be careful that our cares, occupations, and amusements may be
always such that we may not be afraid to implore the Divine blessing
on them; this is the criterion of their safety, and of our duty. Let
us endeavor that in each, in all, one continually growing sentiment
and feeling of loving, serving, and pleasing God, maintain its
predominant station in the heart.
An additional reason why we should live in the perpetual use of
prayer, seems to be, that our blessed Redeemer, after having given
both the example and the command while on earth, condescends still
to be our unceasing intercessor in heaven. Can we ever cease
petitioning for ourselves, when we believe that he never ceases
interceding for us?
If we are so unhappy as now to find little pleasure in this holy
exercise, that however is so far from being a reason for
discontinuing it, that it affords the strongest argument for
perseverance. That which was at first a form will become a pleasure;
that which was a burden will become a privilege; that which we
impose upon ourselves as a medicine will become necessary as
nourishment, and desirable as a gratification. That which is now
short and superficial will become copious and solid. The
chariot-wheel is warmed by its own motion. Use will make that easy
which was at first painful. That which is once become easy will soon
be rendered pleasant. Instead of repining at the performance, we
shall be unhappy at the omission. When a man recovering from
sickness attempts to walk, he does not discontinue the exercise
because he feels himself weak, nor even because the effort is
painful. He rather redoubles his exertion. It is from his
perseverance that he looks for strength. An additional turn every
day diminishes his repugnance, augments his vigor, improves his
spirits. That effort which was submitted to because it was salutary,
is continued because the feeling of renovated strength renders it
delightful. PRACTICAL PIETY
by Hannah More, 1811
The Influence of the Religion of the Heart, on the Conduct of the
Life Note: See our
devotions page for more excellent
devotions. ______
Our thanks to GraceGems.org for the typed available
version of this book.
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