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A09659 A godlie exposition vpon certeine chapters of Nehemiah, written by that worthie byshop and faithfull pastor of the Church of Durham Master James Pilkington. And now newly published. In the latter end, because the author could not finish that treatise of oppression which he had begonne, there is added that for a supplie, which of late was published by Robert Some, D. in Diuinitie Pilkington, James, 1520?-1576.; Foxe, John, 1516-1587.; Some, Robert, 1542-1609. Godlie treatise of the church. In the ende .. a treatise against oppression. 1585 (1585) STC 19929; ESTC S114273 162,441 172

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Sacraments sacrifices which thou appointedst vs to keepe in thy Religion and in them to worship the we haue not duelie regarded and kept but cast them awaie and followed the fashions of the heathen people about vs and such as we deuised our selues Our Priestes and Prophets haue taught vs lies and deuises of their owne heades yet haue we beene more readie to heare beleeue and follow them then thy holie will and word declared vnto vs in thy Booke oflife The Ciuill lawes by which thou appointedst thy common wealth to be ruled we haue broken disobeied liuing at our owne luste pleasure Our Iudges Rulers and lawyers haue sought their owne gaine more then Iustice to their people oppressing them wrongfullie There is no goodnesse in no sorte of vs Prince Priest People Iudge Ruler and all sortes from the highest to the lowest we haue all run astraie we denie it not but with many tears greiuous heart we fal before thy throne of mercie earnestlie crauing faithfully beleeuing to find mercie grace and pardon at thy hands With these and such like words he powred out his greife before the Lord. For no doubt he spake much more then is here written but these maie suffice to teach vs the like 8. Remember I besecch thee the word that thou commaundedst Moses thy seruant saying Ye will offend I will scatter you among the heathen 9. And if ye turne vnto mee keepe my commaundements doe them if ye were cast to the vttermost partes of heauen from thence I will gather you and will bring you to the place which I haue chosen to set my name there 10. They are thy seruants and thy people whom thou hast redeemed in thy great powre and with thy mightie hand 11. I beseech thee my Lord I praie thee let thy eare be bent to the praier of thy seruants which desire to feare thy name And giue good successe I praie thee to thy seruant this daie and graunt him mercie in the sight of this man And I was the Kings cupbearer Giue me leaue Lord I beseech thee to speake vnto thee and put thee in remembrance of those things which thou seemest to vs to haue quite forgotten Thou forewarnedst vs by thy faithful seruant Moses that Ifwe offended thee thou wouldst driue vs out of that pleasant countrie which thou gauest vs and scatter vs among the heathen people in all countries yet ifwe would turne vnto thee again and keepe thy commaundements there was no parte vnder heauen so farre of nor none so mightie or cruel against vs but thou wouldst bring vs again and settle vs in that place which thou hadst chosen and appointed vs to call on thy name there The first parte O God we finde too true we haue sinned and thou hast punished vs we haue broken thy lawes and thou hast scattred vs into all countries And if we liued among a people that knew thee or loued thee our banishment and losse of our countrie would be lesse grieuous vnto vs. But alas good God we liue amongst them that hate thee and laugh at vs they worship Gods of their owne making and thinke them to be of greatermight then thou the almightie and euerliuing God art This griefe we can-not digest this is so tedious vnto vs that we cannot be merry vntil thou restore vs. After our long captiuitie by Nebuchad-nezzar in Babilon thou seemedst to remember vs some thing moouedst the good king Cirus to giue licence to as many as would to goe home and build thy temple againe and this was some good token of thy loue and fauour toward vs but yet alas O Lord there be as many yeares or moe past since Cirus began this our deliuerance and y et we liue among the vnbeleeuing Persians a people as cruell and wicked as the Babilonians and the Caldeans were thou chaungest our captiuitie from one Kingdome to another and from countrie to countrie yet we neuer a whit the better We are not brought to thy promised place and holie land our Citie is burned vp and lieth vnhabited the walles are pulled downe and the gates lie open that our enemies may rush in on euerie side spoyle and murther vs at their pleasure By thy good seruant King Darius thou didst build vs a Temple to call vppon thy name in it that was some good hope that thou wouldst fullie deliuer vs from our enemies and mercifullie restore vs to our vndeserued countrie Thou seemest O Lord to haue kept parte of thy promise but yet the greatest parte is behinde Remember O God I beseech thee thy promise and bring vs home againe finish the thing that thou hast so prosperouslie begunne Thy enemies will thinke that eyther thou canst not or wilt not performe thy promise Arise O Lord deliuer vs fully that the world may know that thou art a true god in keeping thy promise Let thy enemies see that there is no people so strong to holde vs nor countrie so far of but thou both canst wilt destroy them that rebel against thee fully deliuer vs and bring vs home againe Pardon my rude boldnes gratious God which so saucily speake vnto thee the griefe of my heart is so great it brusteth out I cannot hold in but talke vnto thee as one doeth to another The faithfull hope that I haue in thee that thou wilt perfourme thy promise fullie maketh me thus boldely to speake yet the greatnes of our miserie and the weaknes of our faith maketh manie to thinke that thou hast forgotten vs. Beare with our weaknes and pardon our impatience The sick man that lieth in great paines looketh for the phisitians comming thinketh he cōmeth but slo wlie when he maketh all the haste he can and when he is come except he giue him some ease quicklie he thinketh that eyther he cannot or will not help him But the wisedome of the phisitian is such that if he should purge or let him blood presentlie it were great daunger or if he should satisfie his phantasie letting him eate and drinke what he list it would increase his paines and therefore he tarieth vntil he see better occasiō giuen so we O Lord lie in great paines and thinke thou tariest long we would gladlie haue our desires fulfilled but thy wisedome seeth the time is not yet come Giue vs patience O God to tary thy leysure or rather a speedifull deliueraunce Our weaknes is such that we cannot but murmure and grudge at our delayes and thinke thou hast forgotten vs. Beare with our foolishnes O Lord which cannot vnderstand the secret wisdome ofthy doings we iudge the according to our owne wits as we thinke good and submit not ourselues to thy wisdome which knowest what time is best and meetest for vs to taste of thy vndeserued goodnes We thinke thou hast forgotten vs is thou speedely satisfie not our desires Arise gratious God and deliuer vs that the world may see that thou remembrest thy promise
returne home againe to the king with thankes that they had conueyed him so farre on his way safelie 10. And Sanballat As Nehemiah was glad that god had prospered his doings so well hitherto so others were as sory For at his comming into the countrie Sanballat Tobias were so sore greeued that any man found such fauor with the king that he might procure any good thing to ward the children of Israel that if he had not brought the kings letters with him he could not haue escaped their displeasure It is not manifest in the text what countrie these men bee of but I can well encline to that opinion which thinketh that Sanballat was A Moabite of the Citie Horonaim which Esay in the 15. and Ieremy 48. speake of and that Tobias was an Ammonite because the Moabites Ammonites were euer frō the beginning most cruell against the Israelites in their comming out of Egipt and al their doings though they came and were borne of neere kinsemen Abraham was vncle vnto Lot of Abraham came the Israelites of Lot when he was dronken came the Moabites Ammonites gotten by his owne daughters And this is commonly seene that both those which bee so bastardlie borne against nature prooue not honest and when displeasure groweth among kinsfolke and specially for Religion as this was it scarce can bee forgiuen Sanballat by interpretation signifieth a pure enemie and Tobias was a seruant and yet crept into great authoritie as the other was These two points may wel agree to the papists and all enemies of gods trueth for they will lurcke priuely vntill time serue them to shew their cruelty and then they will rage feirselie and so wil slaues and seruants that come to authority frō base degree Salomon saith there be three things that trouble the world where of the first is a seruant when he com meth to be a ruler for then he waxeth so proud cruell that he forgetteth what he was he disdaineth al men but him self The Papists are bastardlie borne of spiritual whordome seruethe Pope as slaues in al his superstitions they come of Agar the bond woman not of Sara the free woman and therfore hate the true children of god which beleeuing the promises of God are saued and they will be saued by their owne workes contrary to the scripture and so greeued when they see any thing pro sper with them that for verie malice and enuie they pyne away as these two wicked Imps doe here shew them selues because they would not see Ierusalem restored As the building of this Ierusalem had manie enemies so the repayring of the heauenly Ierusalem by the preaching of the glorious Gospel of Christ Iesus hath manie moe The malice and enuy of worldlings against all those that set vp the kingdome of Christ and pull downe the pride of mans heart is so great that it can neuer be satisfied If malice had not blinded these men what harme was it to them to see the Iewes doe well and God worshipped there The Iews neuer went about to inuade or conquere their countrie and yet they could not enioy their owne countrie without much trouble of these enuyous people Enuie euer disdaineth to see other doe wel and specially such as liue well and serue the lord Christ and is glad of other mens mischeif and harme for then they thinke none shall be able to withstand their pleasures and deuises The people of Canaan when they heard of Iosua and the Israelites comming with so great courrage to possesse their cou ntrie were so dismaied that their courage melted away like wax at the fire Herod and al Ierusalem were astonied when they heard tell that a new king Christ being but a childe was borne and yet the Angels songe for ioy When our sauiour Christ was crucified and buried his disciples were sad and the Iewes reioyced but when Christ had conquered death and was risen againe then the disciples were gladde and the Iewes were sadde Thus one thing worketh diuersly in diuers men Nehemiah was glad that he had found such fauour with the King to build Ierusalem Sanballat and his fellowes were as sory that any should doe it The Gospell hath foretolde that it should so fall out with the worldlings and the Godlie the one shall reioyce when he seeth Gods glory florish and the other shalbe grieuously tormented in conscience The world shalbe glad saith Saint Iohn but ye shall weepe and yet this your sorrow shalbe turned into ioy for God will notsee his seruants ouerwhelmed with trouble but he will deliuer them Dauid describing at large the manyfolde blessings that God powreth on them that feare him in the ende of the Psalme saith The vngodly shal see it and it shall greeue him he will gnash with his testh and pyne away for mallice but the desire of the vngodly shall perish There cannot be a greater greife to an ill man then to see a good man doe well When there was a question moued before King Frederick among his Phisitians what was best to make the sight cleare and some said fennel some Saladine some Glasse some other things as they thought good Actius Syncerus a noble-man standing by said he thought Enuie was the best when euery man either laughed or marueiled at his saying he yealded a reason and said Enuie maketh any thing that she seeth to appeare better then it is for the Enuious man thinketh another mans Corne to be better then his owne and another mans Cow to giue more milk and the least good thing that a good man hath seemeth great in his eye that cannot see other thriue espieth diligentlie with great greife the smalest things the good man doeth and that is said he to make the eye-sight cleerest when euery smalething shalbe best espied Enuy is worse then any poison of other beasts The snake the adder the toad haue deadlie poison in them wherewith they hurte others and yet it hurteth not them-selues but Enuie is so poisonful a thing that it killeth him that hath it first and hurteth not other for he fretteth with him-selfe he fumes he pynes away to see others doe well he eateth not nor sleepeth quietly nor can be merie vntil he see some mischiefe fall on the good man and as the canker eateth and consumeth hard yron and brasse so malicious Enuy with fretting consumeth out enuyous stomachs When Sanballat and Tobias hearing but of Nehemiahs comming into the countrie and that he had found such fauour with the King to buyld Ierusalem were thus greeued with malicious enuie to see the Iewes doe well what sundry attempts they made afterwards to ouerthrow that buylding the residue of this booke will declare How the enuious Papists disdayning to see Gods gospell take place in any countrie doe rage fret fume pyne away for sorow and anger how they haue blooded and bathed their hands in their Breethrens blood and yet cannot be quiet the world seeth it to