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A18017 Schelomonocham, or King Solomon his solace Containing (among many thinges of right worthy request) King Solomon his politie, his true repentance, and finally his salvation, first presented to the Kinges most excellent Maiestie, and afterward published. Carpenter, John, d. 1621. 1606 (1606) STC 4666; ESTC S107560 299,642 386

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takes in hand without the wil wisedom power and prouidence of God because things are not placed in the will and abilitle of man but as most meete remaine for euer in the will and power of God who often giueth the same Lot to the foole as he doth to the wise-man of this worlde Next that there is one and the like ende as touching the body and the like conditiō in riches health pouerty sicknes and such aduentures of this life both of the wise and vnwise otherwise the K. hath said it and no man can denie it that there is more vtilitie in wisedom then in folly as the light is more desired then the darkenesse and that the wise-man is preferred before the foole for the wise-mans eyes are in his head but the foole walketh in darknes And yet heere we may note that the King speaketh not of the wisedome of Gods spirit but of that humane wisedome belonging to the reason of man which it in it selfe as now vnder sinne is comparable to the vanitie of a foole Obiect 2 Secondly ye obiected that the King hath compared a man with a beast in the semblable condition but I pray Sir from whence is that gathered It is taken sayd Abiather out of those words which the K. lately vtted viz. I considered in mine heart the state of the children of men Eccles. 3.18.19 that God had purged thē yet to see to their are in thēselves beasts for the condition of the sons of men the condition of beasts are even one condition vnto thē as the one dyeth so dyeth the other so they have all one breath and there is no excellēcie of a mā above the beast for they are al vanitie Now this vrgeth many mens consciences that a man which hath a reasonable soule should be made equall with the beast Ye haue sayd answered zadok yet haue ye not told me nor can tell me indéed Man differeth from a beast when or where the King euer said that a man differeth nothing from a beast It is true that he so compared them as touching the body which is of the earth subiect to corruption mutabilitie misery and death as before it is said for a memorie whereof the Lord God made garments for Adam of the skinnes of beasts Also as touching any foresight or knowledge either of the day of his death or of that which commeth to passe after him she which as said holy Iob who knoweth among the children of men Otherwise the King hath saide that the Spirit of man goeth vpward even to God that gave it but the breath of a beast falleth downe into the earth Againe he hath spoken most profoundly of mans true felicitie and directeth him the way to the same Thirdly Obiect 3 of mans felicitie Eccles 2.4 ye said that the King defined mans felicit in eating drinking and carnall pleasures where is that definition found There quod Aabiather where the King hath saide There is no profit to a man but that he eate and drinke and delight his soule with the profit of his labour And therefore said Zadok doth the king define the felicitie of man in eating drinking sporting c. That is no perfect consequence ye utterly mistake him For contrary to that beastly behauior of carnall and voluptuous persons he sheweth the true vse of the creatures according to the diuine ordinatiō the which yet no man liuing can enioy to profit without his especiall grace blessing beeing all that a mā may expect or look for in his life For this is Gods gift as the K hath often said howsoeuer a mā by his own wisdom wit reason power agility séemeth able either to effect or comprehend the same in time place therefore should be vse and estéemed with thankfulnesse to God 4. Ye said further Obiection 4 The liuing the dead Cap. 4.2.3 that the King seemeth to preferre death before life the dead before the living c. Yea said Abiather for the K. hath plainly said I have praised the dead which nowe are dead above the living which are yet alive and him better then them both which hath not yet beene And this is very absurde for all men know it cannot bee denied the life is better thē death For God hath made life Life death death is the priuation therof gard of sin Yea himself hath said at a another time that a living dogge is better then a dead Lyon in regard of the excellencie of life before death Answere But the king said zadok hath said it not simply or in that he absolutely cōmendeth death or condemneth life but by the way of a comparison namely The dead bee freed of the troubles of this life Iob. 3 13. in respect of the great euils wherewith men are commonly tormented in this life For why they that bee dead are now freed from those intollerable afflictions do rest as quiet and at ease in their bodies alluding to the words of Iob who through the vehemencie of his afflictions and infirmitie of his flesh wished hee had beene dead saying For so should I now have lyen and beene quiet I should have slept then and beene at rest with the Kings and counsellors of the earth which have builded themselves desolate places c. Againe The wicked have there ceassed from their tyrannie and there they that laboured valiantly are at rest The prisoners rest together and heare not the voyce of the oppressour There are small and great and the servant is free from his maister Againe wherefore is the light given to him that is in miserie life to thē that have heavy hearts In this respect speaketh also the king of life and death And he meaneth the life of this world and the death of the body and not the deserts of them that liue nor the sinnes of them that dye and that after the maner of men Otherwise we may not think but that the godly The righteous that be dead are at rest the faithfull and the righteous which bee dead as Noah Abrahā Isaack Iacob Moses Samuel Ioseph and such are in better case then they which yet liue For they bee blessed and no paine can oppresse or touch them Therfore this is the desire of them that here liue in the Lord That they may be dissolved to die and dwell with the Lord in eternall happines In the like sort hath the king spoken touching him which is not yet borne For he saith not absolutely that he which was neuer He that is not yet borne is happier nor he which shall not be borne nor he that is not and shall neuer be is happier them he which liueth and is but that after the iudgement of men in regard of those mightie troubles that ouertake men in the world it seemeth to be better not to be at all then to be made subiect and thrall to those troubles And yet who knoweth not
and yeeld to him alas which is prepared both to arrest him and to carry him captiue to his long home in the which being reposed and laid among the deade Iob. 7.7.8 the eye that saw him before shall see him no more as said Iob neither shall his eye returne to see pleasure in this life nor shall he thenceforth féele the delights of the sonnes of men A description of old age he shall no returne to his house neither shall his place know him any more Against the which time therefore we perceaue in man as the king himselfe hath said that the Sun is darke the light the Moon the stars and the cloudes returne after the raine the kéepers of his house tremble the strong men bow thēselues Eccles 12. the grinders cease because they be few and they which looke out by the windowes waxe darke the gates without be shut by the base sound of the grinding and he riseth vp at the birdes voyce and all the daughters of Musicke are abased Also he dreadeth the high things and feareth in the way the Almond tree florisheth and the Grashoppers are a burthen and concupiscence is extinguished for he goeth to the house of his age the receptacle of all flesh and the mourners go about in the streat The siluer lace is not lengthned the golden yewer is broken the pitcher is cracked at the well the wheele is torne at the cisterne and dust returneth to the earth as it was The consideration of this dolefull alteration in man which yet is not effected but by a strong and forcible meane cannot but terrifie euery man liuing And sure it is A description of death that when a man shall sée grisely death inuading and assaulting him he shall be forthwith agonized quite quailed in conceit and vexed in his soule yea albeit he be not as yet compelled to yeeld vp his spirit for as death is in nature a tyraunt so cruell to all things which haue life so approacheth he as a mighty giant or man of arms with his bent bow and pearcing dart looking most sternelie dealing most rigorously tearing and renting his pray right Lion-like without rescue Moreouer as this is the same which all liuing and sensible creatures both feare and abhorre The anguish of him whom death summoneth so a man once touched with his deadlie dart knowing that now by the force thereof he is compelled to forsake and leaue his father and his mother his wise and his children his friends and his acquaintance his wealth his substance with all the glory pleasures and delights of this world he is grieued he soroweth he weepeth and lamenteth perplexed aswell in minde as in body with this most wofull complaint Time was that I was much pleased and delighted in all these thinges enioying and vsing them with great gladnes ioy but now alas I see him approching invading me which constraineth me to flie to relinquish all those my delightes with weeping eyes sorrowe of heart But yet such as stand in the toppe of this worldes happines as the King beyond all others hath stoode and prospered these many yeeres with heartes desier and soules solace they most of all tremble and be aboue measure troubled euen then when they shall but heare of deaths comming much more when they feele the dint of his dart of the which I haue heard the king himselfe in his wise Parables to speake the which saying for the grauity thereof is coppied out and translated by the learned into many languages Syrac had taken this from Solomons words in Egypt O death how bitter is the remembrāce of thee to that man who seeketh rest and consolation in his substance and riches Vnto that man which hath nothing to vexe or trouble him but that hath prosperitie in all thinges And this griefe is much augmented and aggraued in this that though a man bee neuer so rich honourable and pleasured in this life yet shall he not carry away any of those riches honours or pleasures with him at his death but as he came into the world naked from the womb of his Mother so goeth hee thether againe out of this worlde all naked Moreouer in the graue whereto he tendeth hee shall enioy neither sense feeling vnderstanding nor facultie of working as the King himselfe hath saide no nor yet that possibilitie to praise God nor to giue him thankes in the Hell as David also modulated the same beeing a place both of darkenesse and silence wherein man being defrauded of his hope and expectation the most glorious King is made equall with the poorest beggar the strongest Captaine with the basest captiue the wise with the foole the rich with the poore the happy with the wretched the beautifull with the deformed and the liuing with the deade For there is the same condition vnto them all without difference Therefore hath the king preferred a liuing dogge in hope Eccles. 9.4 before a dead lyon in dispaire * Then answered Abiather Indéede that thing which separateth the soule from the body so altereth mans nature and reduceth euery man of what degree soeuer hee bee into one and the same condition yea into the same confused Chaos or lumpe from whence hee was taken and formed is worthily dreaded of all men But death is the same indéede Therefore may I wel compare him to that fearfull Hiena Death is like the beast Hiena which being an enemy to mankind hath a vipers necke an Elephants back a mans voice the quantitie and qualitye of a Wolfe the haire of an horse and in sexe changeable as somtimes male sometimes female For Death which is an extream aduersary to mans life and seeketh how to destroy him staieth not his expectted time and tide nor waiteth mans leasure whether he be prepared or not prepared but hasteneth and preuenteth it as doth the viper the naturall time of birth comming forth by piercing the wombe of his mother the cause of her presēt death 2. the Elephant is a beast fit for the wars and Death as a man of warre is opposed to al things that hath life in this world and ouercommeth them 3. Death is a deceiuer of mortall men for albeit it is certaine that all men shal dye yet is his hower vncertaine taking them away when they thinke not of him and yer they be ready as the Hiena deceiueth by faining a mans voice 4. Death is a consumer of the liues of all things that liue as the Wolfe is a deuourer of the sheepe without sacietie 5. Death is neither restrained nor hindered in his course as the wild horse being stiffe necked wil not be bowed 6. Death killeth now men then women sparing no sexe no age no degrée of persons as the Hiena which altereth kind Therefore is death worthily dreaded of all men Howbeit we cannot yet learne or perceiue that the king hath either such warning or if he had would hee be much astonished or
wofull For being a man of an excellent spirit he feareth not Death whose day as I haue heard him to say is better in respect then the birth day of a man and that the dead are more happy then the liuing and therefore hath thus counsailed the liuing Be not feareful of death Remēber them that haue gone before thee them that come after thee This is the iudgement of the Lord vpon al flesh why wouldst thou be against the pleasure of the most high whether it be tenne and hundred or a thousand yeeres death neuer asketh how long a man hath liued Againe he hath said that death though a tyrant in nature is yet acceptable and welcome to some sorts of liuing creatures and namely to the man whose strength faileth him to him that is come to his last age and to him that is ful of care and fearefulnes and in miserie in this life Which sentences for th'excellencie thereof are also copied out and notified vnto many other nations which gladly accept and embrace them Moreouer the King hath said that howsoeuer a man be dead and laid senseles in the graue among the dead and dust be returned into dust that yet his Soule which is the best part of man returneth vnto God that gave it that is not to die with the body but to liue and continue for euer with him whose Image it beareth that fréely exonerated off and from all the miserable torments and vexations which assaile men in this transitory life By the which as among some other his words we find as a wise man should not be daunted with the terror of death but rather expect and embrace him so himselfe is nothing moued therewith Feare not death being of all men the wisest His reasons therefare many from the which wee take and gather these which follow First that Death is better then life or the day of the death happier then the birth day We may simply beleeue him therein Mors ita qualis vita For death is the renewing of a mans nature I meane to him that leadeth a godly life for if the life of a man be good his death cannot be euil And as men do alwaies desire that which is good so neither do they feare that which therein they desire Secondly this is that which belongeth to the cōdition of mans nature for he is borne into the worlde not to stay here but to dye and to depart againe therefore as no man can dye which hath not first liued so neither shall any liue which shall not also dye in this world Thirdly this is the decree of the almighty vpon all flesh once to dye to whose will and pleasure therein al men must yeeld obey Gen. 3 as good subiects to their prince in his place and authority And therefore we should neither murmur at nor feare that which he hath ordained knowing withall that he decreeth nothing but that which is good and profitatable for his children Fourthly this is not onely Gods decrée but also his good pleasure by this to glorifie himselfe and to benefite his children To whome euen death which came in through sinne might notwithstanding bee a meane to deliuer men from the same when his iustice therin shal be ioyned with mercy and louing kindnes Fifthly by this messenger men are ridde and discharged of many troubles vexations sorrowes miseries which oppres and grieue them in this yea through faith in the Messias from all sinne and dangers of Soule that follow after and awaite them in this worlde Sixthly a man may be comforted by th'examples of them that haue passed before him and the consideration of such as follow him This hath seised on father mother brother sister and friend This hath fallen on Adam on Abel on Noah on Abraham on Moses Iosuah Samuel and David and it shall not passe ouer them that come after thée Seuenthly this yeeldeth a man rest from his labours yea it yeeldeth the due both to heauen and earth for hereby the soule returneth to God that gaue it and the body to the dust from whence it was taken This the king considereth and feareth not death but as a man that hath trauailed and now wel neare finished a long and perilous voyage is rather glad and ioyfull then sory or wofull when hee seeth himselfe so neare the end thereof and would be vnwilling to begin his voyage againe especially being weary so the king being thus farre proceeded passing through the dangerous surges of the vanities of this life he is rather ioyfull glad and ready to resigne ouer his soule to his maker his body to the earth and his royall dignitie to an other then any way wofull or fearefull of death the end of this voyage Neither is he ignorant of this for he hath the highest knowledge of all men liuing that so long onely a man shoulde desire to liue in this worlde as he may bee well able to glorifie God and to performe his duty in the same which shal be so long How long a man should desire to liue here as the time of his ministry in this life is by the diuine prouidēce appointed to endure no lōger and that when the time of this his seruice is determined he should then desire rather to depart hēce thē to liue any longer assuring himselfe that hee shall neither effect nor performe any thing out of the due time for euery thing and euery worke hath his opportunity and time as the King hath said This time therefore abserued Noah Abraham Isaack Iacob Ioseph Moses Iosuah Samuel David and other our godly forefathers in their liues And this time I am assured the King shall accomplish and therein shall doe and performe that onely which the Lord hath appointed him in his place for his glory and the benefit of his people Thus farre the Princes were contented to heare one another of them and withall to iustifie that which had beene saide for the King Howbeit howsoeuer some of them dissembled the matter there was not yet any one of thē that either declared or reuealed the cause of the Kinges affliction Neither indeede was hee which knew the matter willing to open it because it touched the Kings Maiestie Whereby it was like to bee as daungerous to his person and state as the malady is to that patient the cause of whose griefe is neither reuealed nor wel known to the phisician This the lords cōsidered therfore they yet desisted not to search enquire further vntil they found out the causes of the kings present sicknesse CHAP. XV. Zadoke hath found the causes of the kinges troubled minde and declareth them of Solomons glory ZAdoke the most reuerend Father hauing now a good whiles hearkened to the conference of the Lordes and perceiuing that they would neither bee quieted in heart appeazed in conscience nor surcease to search and examine matter by matter cause by cause vntil they might at length find out
whereas we hoped for some consolatory refrigeration and ease by the mitigation of those extraordinary passions wee see him yet hardly perplexed and vexed out of measure with farre greater and more torments For why the Sunne so brightsome is shadowed the ioyful light is couered the fayre Moone is obscured the shining starres be dazeled Eccle. 12.13 and the palpable cloudes returne after the late raine Neither indeede haue I any hope of the recouery of his former constitution of mind and health of body although I hartily wish it and desire it euery minute of an hower he accustomed to sit often in his kingly Throane most royally amiddes his Princes but now he prostrates himselfe on the most lumpish earth and reposeth him selfe most solitary as one forlorne He was wont to feede on the most daintie delicates but now hee is replete with bitter worme-wood and loathsome gall he sometimes solaced his sweete soule with the chearefull delightes of the happie but now he laments his hard lot with the wringing corasiues of the wretched Whereas for his recreation he vsed Harps Shalms Psalteries Dulcimers and other musicall instruments of pleasing sound now are they all set aside and neglected yea he doth vtterly distaste those and such delights Moreouer whereas he dayly accustomed for the better health of his body which hee was carefull to preserue to exercise himselfe before his meates and to rest himselfe sometimes after towards his better digestion and that in his bed he would first repose himselfe on his right side wherein is the greater heate of nature to further the same with the due obseruation of such and other good phisicall Diets now he is as another man he doeth all contrary he obserueth no diet profitable to health neither can he rest in his bed any while but tossing and turning hither and thither hee declareth his anguishes and powreth out his heart in sorowfull complaints The very remēbrance of his former pleasures grieue his very soul he vtterly abandoneth that he before much affected though a most glorious king in his estate hee yet abaseth himselfe beyond all measure his eyes gush out streames the teares runne downe his cheekes with the which he hath all watred his bed in the night 2. Sam. 12. right semblant therein to Dauid his Father after that the prophet Nathan had brought him a message from the Lord his God yea he séemeth not most wearie of his present life death is wished for being more acceptable to him in these his agonies of soule and semblably his Wordes Sentences sayings vpon whatsoeuer occasion he vttereth them argue a very déepe mortification of the flesh a vehement contempt of the worlde and a plaine condemnation of all the delights of the Sonnes of men Whereby in heauy sighes and groanes hee driues this mestiue myll Vanity of Vanities and all is nothing but meere Vanitie Eccl. 1.1.2 Lo thus fareth the king neither can my great familiarity with his Grace or any word or gesture of mine now preuaile with him as in times past to remoue this dangerous humour from his heart but as soone as I put him in minde of those his pristine delights he crieth out most wofully The person truely repentant is not soon drawne againe to follow his former lusts Io● 27.2.3 Vanity of Vanities as though God had taken away his iudgement and the Almighty troubled his mind But howsoeuer it be I tell you here in Councell that the King is in a very desperate agony of minde then the which nothing can bee more noysome to his health For as the trée cannot prosper whose roote is annoied so neither can that person receiue health which hath a pensiue soule I am very fearefull to thinke whereunto this will come and doubtles the kinges enemies hearing hereof they will clap their hands hissing and wagging their heads vpon him as the base abiects sometimes did on holy Iob with this bitter taunt Is this that man whome all the world admire for wisedome wealth glory and fame But on th' other side the kings people shall haue little cause to eate drinke and to reioyce vnder their vines and figge trées as they haue done in those dayes forepast vnder our Kinges happy Raigne This being spoken and heard with consideration of euery of these Lordes Zadock the high Priest stood forth and with a mighty sigh from the roote of his troubled heart zadock expresseth the wisdōe function and afection of a good Bishop Counsaylor he lifted vp both his eies and handes towardes the heauens vttering these wordes Oh good God helpe vs he said againe The peace prosperity and well-fare of all Israell doth depend next to our God on the peace prosperitie and well-fare of our most gratious King Solomon whom Iehouah his God hath chosen and appointed to represent his own glorious person in our happy Common-wealth in his wisedome his iustice his equity his benignity his fortitude his magnanimity his piety and all other his princely vertues no lesse then the faire and bright Sunne resembleth his Maiestie in the high Heauens to the ioy and comfort of the Creatures or as doth the head on the naturall body to the bewtie life and gouernment of the same or as the wise Gouernour of a Shippe in the Sea to the direction and safety both of it and of all those embarked therein Therefore I say if the Lord of heauen in his displeasure should take away our shadow or abridge our king and his honourable prosperity for transgression and sinne who from thencefoorth shall haue peace who shall fare well who shall prosper how can that body prosper whose head aketh and languisheth with paine and how can those creatures reioice from the which the light comfort and commodity of the Sun is remoued detayned The people ought to pray for the good estate of their Prince Psal 20.1.2 Then worthily are the people occasioned and obliged in their solemne praiers and seruices to lift vp their mindes to the Lord God aboue all other thinges next to the glory of God to pray for the good health comfort wellfare and prosperity of our gratious Soueraigne Lord as my Lord Azariah hath well before aduised and wished it For I know that the king is not onely much agonized in mind and afflicted in heart but that he is much weakened and worne away neither thinke I that without some presēt remedy or mitigatiō of this his griefe can his weake body long retaine his sorowful Soule The good consent of the princes for the safety of their king This beeing said the Princes with one consent answered In truth it is no lesse needfull then it is godly that all the kings maiesties Subiects both in generall and particular should pray vnto God for the life and well-fare of the kings Grace for as this duty of subiects towardes their lawfull Princes is comprised within that honour which children are to yeelde to their parents and taught
variable dispositions in all ages the which to meete with in all points it is for any prince or magistrate impossible the which therefore may be lamented but neuer throughly corrected or amended Howbeit hee thought as he saith that the cure of this malady being beyond mans power and wisedome God would in the due time take on himselfe and separate the righteous from the vngodly and then shall be the time and iudgement of all counsels and workes Hee also much museth how God though he had chosen of the children of men shoulde neuer the lesse permitte them to appeare God suffereth men to appear as the beasts as though they were but Beastes and as somewhat doubtfull of the eternall beeing of mans soule which is that spirituall substance which God hath made afer his owne likenesse and powred into the humane body and ioyned to the body doeth animate guide it but being separated frō the body dieth not The fleshly mans iudgement of the soule but liueth immortall for euer he saith Who is he which knoweth the spirit of man that goeth vpwarde and the breath of a beast that goeth downe to the earth And is not this the iudgement of worldely and carnall men which perceiue not the thinges which are of the holy spirit Indeed being as the beasts in their nature they consider nothing more And albeit the King hath said that it is best for a man to be ioyfull in his labour No man knoweth what will com on him or his posteritie after him which is his portion in this life yet to daunt him againe who saith he will bring him to behold what shal come on him or his posterity after him And truely this may easily discourage any man to prouide for his wife his children his familie and for the times to come when as without hope of future prosperities hee shall trauaile for them in the wind * These and such like passions of minde I haue perceiued in the king The great oppression in the world But yet beyond many others hee complayned of all the wrong that is done vnder the Sunne the which as appeareth by his wordes and lamentation is both vnmesurable and vnspeakable and the more for that the poore oppressed persons haue wept and shed aboundance of teares and yet haue not founde any in place ready to comfort them or to deliuer them from the violence of their oppressors And here as in regard thereof He much commended the dead before the living The dead cōmēded before the living because they are fréed from those miseries yea He commendeth him which is not yet borne to be happier then any of those because he séeth not nor hath had experience of those wretched toyles of men vnder the Sunne * Here he likewise complaineth of the Envy Idlenesse Envy idlenes couetousnes solitarines and covetous minds of men in this world he disliketh singularitie and solitarinesse of life in the which hauing too much presumed he hath béene wonderfully deceiued much annoyed in his life wherein hee soroweth for the abuse of his owne estate to the which inlieu thereof he preferreth the condition of A poore child that is wise A foolish king a poore child * Further in his wisedome he prognosticateth the foolishnes future misery of Rhehoboam his Sonne and heyre apparante and yet he hath both well nurtoured him Rhehoboam vnderstandeth that most men haue their eies fixed on him with great delight and hope of his happy successe and prosperity in time to come and some what the more hee is troubled because that men in regard of his young prince and his succession do somewhat neglect the present care and reuerence they should haue of his maiestie For they looke after the second man And indeede such is mans folly hee looketh alwaies further and affecteth the times persons and thinges either past or future before those which be present Some say the times and persons which haue beene of yore haue beene better then these which be present others say the best are not yet come but we hope for them to be hereafter the whiles they esteeme not yea they loath and contemne the good thinges which they haue and may vse at their pleasure and so in regard thereof do often losse both the commodity of th' one and comfort of th' other to their remedilesse miserie and continuall griefe And this saith he is a vaine thing and vexation of the minde Cap. 4.17 Moreouer the king hath highly reprehended and blamed many of them which enter into the holy house which he hath made for the seruice of God saying that their offerings are the offerings of fooles and they know not what euill they doe therein The which wordes being not well vnderstood will occasion the ignorant eyther to contemne the said house and the seruice of God therein or to forbeare to come into the same to shew their deuotion and religion to God as they are bound to doe CHAP. IV. Zabud speaketh againe reporting some other emphatical speeches of King Solomon SOlomons Lordes hauing thus farre proceeded in order to report what wordes they remembred vttered by the King in his affliction Zabud the Kinges familiar spake againe and said Well remembred my Lords And now besides the former I call to mind what the king hath saide concerning those Rich men of the world The Rich men of the world whome the most part of all men do estéeme happy in this life He saith that there is no man rich vnder the sunne for where much riches appeareth to be there be also many ready to spend and consume the same He that hath much riches cannot rest or sléepe in the night he that hath riches is oftentimes hurt and annoyed therewith and at length those which haue riches depart hence with sore anguish and sorrow of mind for there is no man but at length he must yeeld to death and shall carry away none of these thinges but are constrained to leaue all behind them that so they depart hence One man getteth another spendeth the riches of the world Cap. 6.1 as naked and bare as they came into this worlde notwithstanding their great trauels and long labours for their riches in all their life And this he esteemeth as a mighty misery which is so often seene vnder the Sunne that God giueth a man riches and goodes and honor so that he wanteth nothing of all that his heart can desire Cap. 6.1 and yet God giueth him not leave to enioy them but another man spendeth them The which as it seemeth he applieth to himselfe whome it chiefly concerneth In conclusion he seeth that many thinges encrease vanity and that a man vnder the Sunne findeth nothing else as long as he liueth Cap. 7. Furthermore the king though so wise did complaine that he could not yet get wisedome but that the more hee sought after it Solomon acknowledged his owne imperfection the
if it were possible the very causes of the kinges sorrowe And seeing withall that euery one of them had in their turnes spoken and now againe expected his graue sentence hee stood vp and after a long pause he spake vnto them in these wordes My Lordes all I haue heard you one by one and considered well of all your sayings howbeit I haue not yet heard that any man hath founde out much lesse declared the causes of the kings affliction For I am well assured that there be diuers other reasons and occasions which might iustly moue him as being a mortall man Subiects may not bee quicke censorers of their princes though so wise a man to be sory in his heart But I know well as it hath been said that it becommeth not subiects but in dutifull modesty to sifte or examine much lesse to censure the actions dealings of their princes the which is also a matter no lesse dangerous then presumptious Neuertheles in regard of your present opportunitie so willing and earnest to vrge on mine answere to satisfie your desires but chiefly that thereby the sooner as we be here assembled in councell we may consider consult thereof determine and endeuour not onely to ease the kings grace of his trouble if it may be but to satisfy all others work to preserue the common-wealth which through the kings displeasure may vnhappily be annoyed and brought into danger Therefore I will no longer holde you in suspence There be 7. causes of Solomons trouble but reueile the whole matter to your content I haue found seauen causes of the kings troubled mind The first whereof riseth of the deepe consideration of his owne Supremacie and the present high glory of the kingdome of Israel The second springeth of Hyram the king of Tyrus vpon the view dislike of those citties which the king hath granted him The third groweth of certaine letters of intelligence which the Arabian Queene sent him after that she departed from the court The fourth is from his Mother the Prophet Nathan which are now both departed this life The fifth is of Rhehoboā the kings sonne heire apparant not so well pleasing his fathers heart The sixth commeth from the kings adversaries as namely Hadad Rhesō and Ieroboā which haue lift vp their hands against him The seventh and the greatest of all is the sense of Gods high displeasure and fearful iudgements conceived bent against him and the people for some hamous sinnes and transgressions At this worde The princes the Princes and Lordes were fully astonished all abashed and not able to speake for anguish of mind stoode looking one on another Notwithstanding after a whiles they desired reuerend Zadok to explane that which he had as yet but briefly and obscurely touched and first how it could be that the kings sorrow might rise from the consideration of his most excellent Supremacie and the high glory of the kingdome of Israel wherof both the king and they all with his people had so good an occasion to be glad and to reioice with praises to the Lord God zadoke The great glory of Solomon and his kingdome was a pronostication of a future declination To this replied Zadoke Although that men for the most part neither foresee nor foreshew their owne dangers imminent like as the Sun the Moone the starres the seas the trees the hearbes the beastes the birdes the wormes the Fishes the elementes naturally pretend and foreshew the times the tides the tempests the alteratiō of terrene bodies yet who doubteth of this that the king being wise and prudent foreknoweth things yet to come not onely as such as haue a propheticall spirit but as those which are able and accustomed to gather the effects and euents by the causes and occasions in naturall things which is not the meanest king of Philosophy but a science right excellent no lesse profitable for many purposes in mans life and that which appertaineth to a reasonable creature By this he seeth that those thinges which florish most beautifully often wither most speedily when yet others endure This is first found in the life and constitution of mans body wherein that which is most florishing and glorious is soonest and that lightly altered and turned al about as health into sickenes strength into weakenes beautie into deformitie prosperity into misery life into death And hereof the cunning phisiciās pronosticate the future sickenes and danger of that person whom they see to stand in the highest grade of prosperity and health as when the Sea is at the very highest then it beginneth sodainly to fall againe by the Ebbe when the Moone is at the fullest by and by she waneth Therefore the wise ship-maister knowing how stormes and tempests succéede calmes and tranquillities hee fearing thereof prepareth himselfe to eschew the danger Now the king knowing all this and seeing himselfe placed in the highest grade of his honour and that the kingdome of Israel is no lesse aduanced to the highest grade of worldly felicitie therein farre preferred before all the kings and kingdomes of the earth he also knoweth that now of necessity must ensew and follow an alteration yea a declination of that resplendent glory and that the sooner by the meanes of mans inconstancy wherein he is like a bird in a Cage which will not bee quiet though by his excessiue flittering and striuing he kill himselfe Of this inconuenience feared Iob Iob. 1. in his prosperitie as hee testifieth therefore seeing his children wonderfull merry and in their mirth giuen to al kind of ryot pleasures to delight thēselues he vsed to pray for them euery day howbeit their fulnes was sodenly emptied himselfe though so good a man cast into great aduersitie Moreouer as it is the nature of worldly thinges to be subiect to alterations so man can neither conteyne himselfe in any cōdition be it neuer so excellēt without some desire of change yea in how better place and estate he is set furnished with all thinges so much the sooner will hee abuse the honour grace of the same to his own destruction verifying that saying of the kings father psal 49.12.20 Man being in honour plac'd declares his want of wit And in that honour cannot stay as one for it vnfit Wherefore vnto the beasts that in their death decay Compared he is for in this life this is his common way Therfore the king feareth greatly that these pleasāt things shal not continue and abide long in this sort and that shortly after these pleasures wil ensew paines after peace trouble after ioies sorrowes and after prosperity infelicity at the least then whē it shal please the high God to take him away from raigning over vs. In the time of prosperity thinke on the dayes of aduersitie in this life This shold teach all men liuing in this world not to trust in the great glory of this time nor in the wealth nor in the
rather then we would yeeld to the mischief we should choose to die as Moses Iosuah Gedeon Samson David haue well resolued for the glory of God the wel-fare of the people Neuerthelesse the kings father to confirme the former hath plainely prophisied that the heathen shall furiously rage psal 2.1 and the people shall imagine a vaine thing the kings of the earth shall stand vp the Rulers shall take counsaile together against the Lord and against his Annointed Abiather And not doubt saide Abiather king David hath pointed therein to some great trouble intended to the holy Messiah at his comming of whom we haue gathered the kings father hath beene before ordained a figure whose troubles therefore as wee all know haue not béene small but wonderfull great inforced against him by them whom he neuer iniured nor iustly offended yea and that not by meane persons but by kings Princes Rulers and Potentates of the earth Against the which notwithstanding the Almightie hath defended and deliuered him to the shame and confusion of all his enemies which haue now no cause left them to triumph against him And so I doubt not but howsoeuer the rage and fury of the aduersaries shall be against the Lords holy Messiah he shall for all that bée mightily protected he shall tread downe the head of his enemies and prosper in his deuises But God grant that neither our Princes nor Priests nor Prophets nor people be appointed the actors or executioners of this heynous Tragedie against the holy Messiah then might not the King be sory nor the people bée destroyed in time to come for the committing of so heynous an action CAP. XVII Zadoke speaketh of the fourth cause of King Solomons trouble viz. of Bethsabe and Nathan KIng Solomons Princes being willing to heare what Zadok could yet further say in the causes of the kings trouble vrged on and sayde Wee haue heard what yée haue said touching the Queene of Shaba Now let it please you most reuerend Father to proceede to declare vnto vs the fourth Cause the which as ye sayd did rise of the Kings most noble mother and of Nathan the Prophet Indeed said Zadok there hath no meane sorrow inuaded the kings mind of late occasioned by those two noble persons howbeit not that either of thē hath in thought word or déed hurt or offended him but that by their death bee is depriued of them For as they were such as he wonderfully loued affected and fauoured Naturall affection sorroweth for the departure of friends so they were no lesse profitable and comfortable to his state and honor in their liues Wee see that very nature prouoketh men yea the very wisest and holiest men to bee sadde and to lament the departure of other men especially of their fathers mothers brethren sisters kinsfolkes and friends for in them they see not onely the horrour of death the dissolution of soule and body that the same which was lately liuing is now dead and that which was a man is become a senselesse carkesse and very earth to the terror and horror of all mortall men which are taught therein to know their owne condition and nature but also that they must now depart one from another the father from his sonne the mother from her daughter the brother from his brother the friend from his friend and both man and woman from all his and her acquaintance and familiars of this life Therefore when the king speaketh of death by the which a man is resolued into dust from whence he was taken he saith also Eccles. 12 that The Mourners goe about the streetes Againe that men mourne for the dead seuen dayes Wherefore our father Abraham although he knew right wel that Sarah his wife being dead Gen. 23.1.2 was freed from all the miseries of this life whereto all persons that heere liue are subiect and was assured by his faith that she being a true beleeuer should rise againe to eternall life yet he sorowed he wept mourned for that her departure many daies Gen. 50.1 Also that godly Ioseph the sonne of Israel when he sawe his father to bee dead hee mourned and wept for him 2. Sam. 4.31 13.36 18.33 expressing thereby both his pietie and naturall affection Thus David the kings father wept wofully and bewayled the death of his friend Abner the like he did for Absalon and for Amnon his sonnes And therefore the king though a wise and godly Prince worthely soroweth for his deare mother and for the Prophet Nathan whom the Lorde hath taken away from this world Neuerthelesse Eccles. 4 2● I haue heard him to say and that according to the truth that the deade are happier than they which live and then must that follow that he which is dead and fréed from this world and the troubles thereof is in better case than the highest Emperour king prince or potentate in his life and being so we should séeme to enuie that their happy estate How farre to be sory if we that be yet liuing should celebrate their funerals with excessiue sorow Sorow then we may for that is naturall and sorow for our friends and acquaintances for that is godly but to be sory without measure is neither naturall nor godly but heatheanish and brutish For therein we shall not onely hurt the naturall constitution of our bodily health but declare our selues to want that constancie of faith which our godly fathers haue reteyned the word of the Lord hath taught touching the eternall happinesse of man after this life yea we should be as enemies to them that bee deliuered from the miseries of this world as they which are sory that men being in prison and torments should be deliuered eased and we should be as the envious that is wonderfully greeued to behold and consider the good health and prosperitie of another man Therefore albeit I say the king is for this right wofull and sad as nature and pietie requireth yet I say not that he is ouercome therewith knowing well as he is a wise man how to bridle affections and therein best to behaue himselfe yet as a mortall man * But my Lords besides this naturall sympathie and pietie such was the wisedom the iudgement the grace vertues of his Mother Bethsabe a wise woman right profitable to the king in her life and such a helpe and comfort she was vnto him euery way that as he thought in her life he could not honour her enough so he may not forget her and her vertues after her death As this noble gentle woman instructed and taught the king when he was a child so she neuer desisted to aduise and counsaile him in all godlines being a man and she thought it appertained to her dutie not only to teach and cathecise him with wisedom but also both to admonish him gently and to reprooue him sharpely knowing well that sometimes gentle admonitions and
polluted with any strange Gods when as they came to Bethel to sacrifice vnto Iehovah and should then king Solomon not only permit those horrible Idolatries and loathsome superstitions of Idols but also exhibit them maintenance in the same that follow such thinges so neare the Temple and the holy Cittie of God This thing is not hidden from the Lord who seeth and wil be auenged on the same Howbeit the King most vnhappily doting on those profane women his wiues and concubines which are now reuolted from the Lord and his religion and turned backe vnto their fathers and their Gods hath beene contented to conniue and beare with them in such their abhominations euen before his face and in the open sight of the Lorde people yea and rather then he would diuorce them or deny them or reproue them or correct them or displease them therein as he might haue don and indeede should haue done in this case he hath both appointed and commaunded many great summes of mony and treasure to be paied and giuen forth from his owne treasurie both to the building of certaine houses and places for such their Gods and also for the daily maintenance of their seruices in the same Therof it is before al other things that Iehovah his God is prouoked and waxen angry with him with vs and his people and hath thereon not omitted to threaten him and vs with many mighty plagues and punishments to ensew yea such as neither he we nor our posteritie shal be able to beare thereof as I vnderstand the Lord hath lately spoken by his prophet and messenger vnto the King himselfe saying Forasmuch as this thing is done of thee and thou hast not kept mine appointment and my statutes which I commanded thee 1. King 11.11 I will rent the kingdome from thee and wil giue it to thy Seruant Notwithstanding in thy dayes I will not do it because of David thy Father but I will take it from the hand of thy sonne Howbeit I will not take away all the kingdome but will giue one Tribe to thy Sonne because of David my Seruant and because of Ierusalem which I haue chosen Now here I call to remembrance what the Lorde our God hath resolued in such a case by the consideration of his words once spoken to Eli the Priest in the daies of our iudges 1. Sam. 2.25 I will worship them saith he that worship me but they which despise me shall come to shame Moreouer I remember what the King himselfe hath said in his wise Prouerbs The turning away of the vnwise shall hasten his owne destruction And well I wot therefore that of all the creatures in the world pro. 1.32 the impious and wicked person is most vnhappy that not only in respect of his sinnes and condition of life but in regard of his end and conclusion for as the end of much eating is sicknes the end of pleasure is paine the end of this life is death and corruption so the end of the Sinner is extreame anguish and miserie both in this worlde and after his death For being iustly sequestred from the societie of the Saintes and so shut out from the diuine protection he is euen whiles he liueth molested with an vnquiet conscience an aking heart feareful cogitations and dreames and many afflictions both of body and mind the hand of God being streatched foorth against him from aboue and the instrumentes of wrath tormenting him from beneath Finally this life finished hee broyles and toyles in bitter tormentes for euer more In the which he may be compared to those flying fishes which being in the waters are persecuted by other fishes for their pray springing vp with their finnes into the aire they are followed and deuoured of the cormorants and Sea-meawes or to that bird which being on the ground is hunted by dogs and flying aboue the earth is taken by the vultures for true it is that the man of impietie and sinne hath neither peace nor safety either in this world or in the world to come This thing the kings father well knew and considered of in the depth of his heart therfore when he was remembred of his transgressions and faults by Nathan and by Gad the Lordes prophets and messengers to him in that respect feeling the true sense of Gods angry coūtenance iustly bent against him and his people for the same the perilous estate both of himselfe and his dominions by and by although a chosen magnanimious puissant and valorous minded King comming to answere before the highest God hee sodainly cast himselfe downe to the earth as a base caitiffe hee repented him of his sinnes and in the fearefull agony of his afflicted soule he cried out I have sinned I haue sinned Mercy Lord mercye nor would be leaue off crying and repenting nor any otherwise estéeme of himselfe then a sinfull guilty and condemned wretch vntill he perceiued that the Lord was willing to be appeazed and of his mercie to turne his gratious face towards him as in times past resembling the bird of Paradise which beeing taken in a snare is neuer quiet nor leaueth crying and flittering till time he either dye or be deliuered And thus behoveth it our Lord the King to esteeme of himselfe vnder those his transgressions this to respect and the same to performe which in this desperate and dangerous case is the best counsail we may giue him for remedy and ease For surely surely God being thus prouoked and that iustly he will not be appeazed nor will he surcease to streatch forth his hand of iustice against him so offending vntill that he meekly acknowledge his offences before him repent and seeke him with sorrow and singlenes of heart as we may see in th'examples of our forefathers both in the wildernes vnder the conduct of Moses and Aaron and in this land vnder the gouernment of our wise and valiant Iudges Now my Lords hereof is it that Iehovah our God being most iustly displeased with our Lord the King hee hath in iustice stirred vp and prouoked against him besides the two former enemies which much troubled him that Ieroboam who thirsting for the soueraignity of Israel now especially opposeth himselfe in might and policie against the King Neither may wee thinke but howsoeuer those persons especially Ieroboam are maliciously bent and prouoked against the king and his gouernment The kings enemies are the very instruments of Gods wrath appointed to vex the king and his people and do of themselues little respect or consider the prouidence and working of the most high in this his displeasure that yet they be the very instruments and ministers of Gods iudgements as those other aduersaries of Israel haue beene in the times past against our fathers when as they forgetting God did rebell against him and his holy servants And therefore the onely way to resist them is not the wisedome power policie or arme of man but the grace of our mercifull
and Moses and Aaron And this he did also truely and speedily as soone as he saw the Angell of Gods wrath had drawen forth his sworde against him his people as David did when he saw the angell of God plaguing the people in this point he well resembled that wary bird which seeing the fowlers bow bent and himselfe in danger makes haste to flye away before that the arrow bee sent foorth against him remembring what his father had modulated If when that men offend the Lord they will not turn againe He furbisheth his percing sword in iustice them to paine He bends his bow it prepares with dreadfull darts of death And lethall instrumentes to take from them their vitall breath But alas there be in the world too many cōparable to that foolish bird which maketh no hast to escape frō the snare before he be taken therin Therfore I now remēber not only what he coūsailed Be not slow to turne to the Lord for sodainly shall his wrath burne like fier but what his father aduised psal 95.8 To day if ye his voice will heare Then harden not your faithles heart As ye with grudging many a yeare Provokte me in the wild desert It is meet that men attend him whē he calleth If men offer gold which is yet but transitory there bee which come with speede and the tree being shaken they will gather vp the fruit without long tarrying But when the Lorde proffereth peace to mans soule they come slackly regarde it little which is the cause they often misse the kings thousand But as for our Soueraign L. albeit we had been neither eare-witnesses nor eye-witnesses yet besides the K. gesture and present constitution of body the very words which wee haue heard from him and yet daily heare him to vtter That is his Ecclesiastes and the which being taken and collected into a register may bee called the booke of his repentance shall for euer witnesse and manifest the same thing For therein it doth and may appeare that our L. King Solomon not onely after his full and perfect experience of all the delights of the sonnes of men and the affaires of this life but also after all those his transgressions wherein he had so much vexed and disquietted both his minde and body angred the L. offended the holy ones distained his honor and endangered his soule is neverthelesse by the admirable operation of the diuine spirite brought to the true sense and knowledge of his sinnes and so of the danger of himselfe and his people the which is alwaies the first grade to true repentance from whence hee hath orderly proceeded to the full perfection thereof as hereafter yee shall vnderstand In the meane time my good L let vs think right honourably of the K. and beleeue that Iehovah his God hath not barred him out from the contrition and repentance of the blessed and so neither from the diuine mercy Ye haue well spoken most reuerēd father said the Princes which we haue gladly heard and will both concurre and conclude with you for the King to the honour of our God And truely in this that hee hath acknowledged and confessed his offences hee may not bee either condemned or disliked albeit hee bee the King of Israel no more then such a thing was blamed in David his father but rather to be commended as it was in him as first in regard of the good example wherby others might be instructed next for the more ease of his own heart oppressed with sorrow in the consideration of his sin with the danger ensewing it Thirdly for the better pacifying of the diuine wrath which is vehemēt against obstinat sinners and fouthly for the good of his people who vpon his repentance and remission might hope for peace there be some who when they haue sinned will not easily acknowledge themselues faultie either to God or to man and therfore are hardly perswaded to amend Wherin they bee like those which holden of desperate diseases not feeling themselues sick are hardly recouered for this is a great hinderāce to amēdment of life when men which are offenders will not acknowledge their offences But there bee some though not many of them which offending do by times feele and know their offences and seek to escape the diuine wrath by a faithful recōciliatiō and so are recouered in good time And these be like not only to those wise birds which as ye said eschew the arrowes comming towards them but also to those which being distempered in their bodies soone espy it and seek to preuent inconueniences by the aduise and help of the cunning phisician For as the sense of the sicknes is the commencement of the cure so the acknowledging of a fault is the first step to pardon and so to the amēdment of him that hath faulted But proceed most reuerend father we pray you and desist not vntill ye haue fully declared the order and manner of the K. true repentance for truly howsoeuer it hath beene a griefe and sorow vnto our hearts to hear of those his great transgressions and sins it is and shal be now a ioy and comfort vnto vs to heare of his happy Repentance by the which it may be the L. will also repent him of that euill which he had purposed to doe vnto him and vs and will turne iustice into mercy that we perrish not in this his high displeasure which is as a fearfull fyer to consume thē that wil neither repent them of their sinnes nor seeke him whiles hee may bee found in the singlenesse of heart CAP. XXX Zadok declareth the order and manner of Solomons Repentance THe Princes hauing heard Zadok thus farre acknowledged the equitie of his dealing and withall hauing praysed and commended the King in this point that although he were a King yet he disdained not both is acknowledge himselfe an offendor after the example of his father David they requested Zadoke to proceede who continuing the former argument spake againe to this effect Surely my Lordes as the K. is most wise and his wisedome euer remained with him so perceiuing that he had sinned against God who thereby was prouoked to anger hee did not onely acknowledge the same in his heart but also considered that the iudgements diuine were now ready to be executed against him and his people Yea Solomons Contrition as in Eccl. ca. 1. 2. hee felt the arrowes of God to stick fast in him whereby he was moved to such great contrition of heart and sorrw of minde for his sins that there was no health in his flesh nor rest in his bones he was brought into such an extreame trouble and heauines that hee went mourning all the day long as sometimes I saw his father David to do when his heart was contrite after the knowledge of his sinnes and sense of Gods wrath Secondly Solomons confession of his sinnes the king hath not omitted to vtter foorth the fearefull
which hath wisedome that the King might speake so touching the wicked which nowe liue in the worlde and are appointed to eternall torment and miserie after death For in this respect the poorest wretch that euer lived in the worlde nowe by death translated into Celestiall happinesse is by thousands preferred before the highest Potentate or Lord that liueth on the earth and by his Tyranny oppression and heynous iniquities is by the iust iudgement of GOD ordained for the fyer of Tophet and perpetuall miserie Otherwise I knowe well that the King preferreth not death before life nor the dead before the liuing knowing that GOD hath made life for his glorie and men in this life to set foorth the same Neither is he ignorant of this as hee is most wise that as the righteous which bee departed from this worlde are happyer then they which yet liue and sustaine and féele the miseries of the same so is it much better for them to bee as they are notwithstanding oppressed in this worlde with all the miseries thereof in full hope and assurance of eternall felicitie then that they should not bee at all Finally if the wordes might bee taken without respect or relation to the miserable affayres of men in the kingdome of vanitie who will not beleeue that those holy Patriarches and Fathers which are layd vp in peace are more happy then any of vs which nowe liue and that the holy Messiah whom the King prefigureth not yet borne but to bee borne heereafter is farre to bee preferred and extolled for happinesse and honour before either of both Therefore the Kings wordes truely vnderstood neede not to offend any but rather to instruct and comfort all aswell them which are present as those in posteritie CAP. XXXIX Zadoke answereth to Sixe other obiections for the King 5. Of Iustice wisedome 6. Quietnes 7. Of women 8. Of Gods love 9. Of the Soules being 10. Of the sense of the soule after death ZAdoke procéeding saide againe to Abiather yee haue saide as I well remember that our Lord King Solomon in his words hath discouraged all men from the perfection of wisedom and from the exquisite Iustice. Obiection 5 of the discouraging of men from wisedom and Iustice Out of what wordes of his is this presumed can ye tell me yea said Abiather and of these his speeches lately vttered in your owne hearing Bee thou not iust overmuch neither make thy selfe over wise Eccles. 7.18 Answere wherefore shouldst thou bee desolate If yee gather from hence said Zadok then I may well denie your consequence For yee should haue distinguished of these words Iustice and Wisedome For there is the Iustice and wisedome of God and these is that Iustice and wisedome of men The King in those his words hath not disswaded any man liuing from the inuestigation and searching after the Iustice and Wisedom of God for the which a man should euer hunger and thirst and neuer bee weary or faint to seeke to obtaine the same as most diuine graces and vertues in this life Neither doeth the King desist from this desire and continuall exercise although hee bee passing wise knowing that no man in this world shall yet be able to attaine to the full perfection therof and therfore may yet striue and endeuor euery day to come neerer and so neere as he can with all kinde of studyes and exercises before his death perswading yet that the better hee shall be furnished in these vertues the more hee shall be able to set foorth the praise and glory of God among men and prepare himselfe for the company of the holy Angels But in this saying of the K. is ment the politicall or civile wisedome Not to be over wise nor too iust the like Iustice the which is vsed in the gouerning of a Cōmon-wealth or a familie or the externall life of man And herein he would that men should not séeme to be more wise then the wisedome of God requireth that is that they bee not wise in proper conceit not to bee subtle Sophisters nor craftie disputers nor deceiuers nor circumuentors of others nor wise to the worlde nor such as the Serpent was which tempted and beguiled Hevah but rather that they bee wise to sobrietie Againe hee would that men should not bee ouer iust that is that they be not too quick censors nor hastie accusers of others nor too severe exactor of the extremitie of laws against euery offender either in his own house among his seruants or in the Common-wealth among his citizen But rather Equitie is of request that Equitie should be respected for hee that will be either so euer wise to see all things or so ouer iust to correct punish or controll all things and neither to winke at some things nor to mitigate the rigor of the law in other things shal neuer be able either to rule happily or to liue quietly either in the commonwealth or within the gates of his owne house Nowe I hope yee well vnderstand the King in this point Obiect 6 of quietnes But yee haue obiected againe that the King condemned him that loveth quietnes and flieth from toyle and trouble wherein as yee say hee contraryeth himselfe commending else-where the quiet life Where haue yee found that I vnderstand well the Kings meaning by your wordes in the former saide Abiather and this latter obiection is taken from that where hee sayde The Foole foldeth his handes and eateth vp his owne flesh Eccles. 4.5 and saith that better is one morsell with quietnesse then both the handes full with labour and vexation of the spirit Héere hee calleth him a Foole that resteth him content and quiet and yet hee sayde before in his Prouerbes Pro. 15.16 Better is a little with the feare of GOD then great treasures and trouble there-with To this Zadoke answered The answere denying the consequence for that the King entended another thing in that his Prouerbe then hee doth in those his latter wories For there hee spake of the godly minde which is content with whatsoeuer it shall please God to giue it and esteemeth more of that little with quietnesse in the feare of God which indeed is great riches to the godly minde but here he speaketh of the idle and sluggish person or of him that is wearie or discouraged in the performance of his office or dutie by reason of the common emulations enuies crossings and thwartings of his aduersaries and the afflictions and troubles which are incident to his calling and place Such a one he calleth a foole and that worthily for whereas the Wise-man notwithstanding all these things giueth not ouer nor is faint-hearted but continueth his calling to the ende and is happy therein the other being daunted and yeeldeth which the foolish Maryner to euery contrary winde and so perisheth to his diffame and endles miserie In this saying therefore the King is not to be reproued But in the seuenth place ye said
soule and never eateth with pleasure Neverthelesse they sleepe both a like in the earth and the wormes cover them Thus are they both confounded and worthily combined together Yea here Thersites the deformed Nircus the most beautifull as the very Gréeke Poets say are worthily compared as touching their bodies Next to this such are also the confusions and euents of this life and humaine affairs in this words that in the iudgement of the carnall man there is not discerned any difference at all between the good the euil the iust man and the sinner to either of the which the temporall good thinges of nature fortune and life are often alike Abraham our Father was rich so was Pharao Abimelech and the king of Sodom Againe Cain was an exile from his Fathers house so was Abraham and Iacob and Ioseph Moreouer Sarah was faire and beautifull so were the daughters of Cain Shem was preserued in the Arke with his Father Noah so was Cham also within the same But it may be so that the Lord would therin teach that his children should serue him not inregard of those temporall and worldly things and again that the vngodly which also haue and do abuse the same might be left without all excuse of their vnthankefulnes that the iustice of God might bee acknowledged and his word beleeued which commendeth and promiseth the future iudgement and full retribution of all mens wordes and workes and that the worthines of faith might bee encreased Moreouer it is so that the true vertues of the spirit diuine which are so well knowne of the king do not externally appeare to the carnall minded man Therefore the men of this world esteeme no more of the iust and godly then of the wicked and impious yea they persecute the godly and most vertuous and constraine them by their cruel tyrannies and oppressions to suffer and endure those bitter tormentes and paines which are only one as well deserued to malefactor and transgressours of the law This thing was noted in the death of Habel whom Cain slew in the persecution of our father Iacob by Esau by Laban others wherof he could say to Pharao that his dayes had beene few and euill in the accusation the selling away the imprisonment and afflictiōs of Ioseph in the afflictions of our fathers in Egypt in the contempt of Lot in Sodom in th'xtremity of poore Naomi and Ruth and in the sorrow of Hanna with others Such is the entertainement of the godly and their common estimation in the world and this is the nature of vanities kingdome Now what is that which ye disliked in these the kings words No man hath power over the spirit to keepe still the spirite nor hath any power in the time of death Is it not a true saying Obiection 16 mans power of life Cap. 8.8 For hath any man power either to liue as long as he listeth or to put away his soule from his body at his pleasure Surely it is true as Iob said to this purpose The dayes of man are determined and as the King said The dayes of a man are numbred that is sby the Lord who onely hath power either to giue or to take away mans life at his will and pleasure at all times and that neither this nor that lieth in the will or power of man therefore as he may not cast himselfe rashly into danger so neither should he promise himself long life Though Saul slew himselfe he had not therein power of his life for his dayes were determined and now expired he was shewed the day before 1. Sam. 28.19 that hee should die and in the manner of his death he was by the iustice of God made his owne executioner As he could retaine his life no longer so neither could he forbeare to performe that on himselfe which he was in this iudgement constrayned to performe If worldly men had this power either to retaine life or to put it off when they lifted they would then often renew themselues and old age would not be much dislike yea death which is so bitter to the wealthy men of this life would not be so much feared as it is But now it falleth out otherwise for why neither can the courage and strength of body preserue the strong warrier nor the industry of arte nor the deuises and counsailer of man withstand death when the Lord taketh away life nor can force death on them whom the Lord is willing so preserue in life Thus when Saul in his trouble was slaine of his owne handes for want of another executioner David on the other part was preserued Obiection 17 the yong mans lesson nor could he be slaine by them which were his mortall enemies because the Lord did keepe his life * Finally ye haue said that it is obiected against the King that hee shoulde in his wordes counsaile young men to take their delights of youth and to swmime in their lustes Let mee heare the Kings owne wordes as he spake them and vpon what occasion Hee said quod Abiather Though a man live many yeeres in them all reioice Cap. 11.8.9 yet he should remember the dayes of darkenes because they are many all that commeth is vanitie Then thereupon he said againe Reioyce O yong man in thy youth walke in the waies of thine heart in the sight of thine eyes Then he added indéed But know that for all these thinges God will bring thee to iudgement therefore take away griefe out of thine heart cause evill to depart from thy flesh for childhood youth are vanitie Then answered Zadok how haue they here considered one word with another Answere the beginning with the end the exordium with the conclusion Yong-men are counsailed to beware For they also haue their Iudgment appointed and how is the māner of the kings speech marked When the king had aduised men in the highest grade of their proserity to thinke vpon affliction trouble and aduersitie and to endeuor to eschew it he commeth to behold the guise and condition of yong men yea of such as did sway in wordly and fleshly lustes and wantonnes without regarde of the iudgementes of God which is wont to ouertake such persons in the time appointed and he derideth their folly speaking by the figure Ironia in the which the contrary is euer intended as who should say Go too go too thou yong man if thou wilt not bee aduised nor restrained nor reclaimed by these instructions and lessons take thine own mind follow thine own will walk in thine own waies if thou thinke it good But he leaueth him not without a commination or threatning And thinkest thou that there is none account to be made for these thinges and will not God bring thee into iudgement thou art deceiued thou foolish yong man for there is a iudgement which a waiteth but the time appointed wherein thou must enter not onely at the last when al men shal
stand before the Lord to be tryed after their desertes but also in this life if death preuent it not which yet may bee thy particular iudgement here and then will the Lord recompence thy sinnes with scourges and thine iniquities with rods Now thou art willing that the lust passe through euery pleasant fielde Sap. 5. Eccles. 12. and that thou solace thy selfe with the delights of the children of men But then shall God speake to thee in his wrath and thou shalt say what good hath those pleasures lusts brought me Alas these daies are evill they do nothing delight me Loe doth not this explane the former words against the lusts of fond youth men that abuse the creatures in their prosperity To vse things so as we forget not the reckoning we must make for them in the end yes doubtles and withall doth schoole and aduise men that they neither contemne nor abuse the creatures which are appointed for mās vse in this life but vse them so as they neuer forget what account they are to giue either for the vse or for the abuse of them in time to come Thus ye haue heard what I haue answered to all your obiections haue yee any thing els wherewith to charge either the king or his wordes If ye haue let vs heare Abiather Alhough I am sory said Abiather that men should be so foolish and ignorant of the kings true meaning and purpose in the premisses yet am I glad of this occasion for thereby the sooner not onely the King and his wordes are cleared of this suspition but also both my Lordes that bee present and my selfe with all others may bee fully satisfied in those points before so doubtfull Therefore I will obiect no further but put mine hand on my mouth and bee silent yea rather shall my tongue cleaue to the roofe of my mouth then that I will with the same either blaspheme my Lord the King or derogate from his Wordes the deserued authoritie and worthy estimation The princes Then saide the Princes with one mouth and consent Surely whatsoruer haths beene saide and hearde wee conclude with reuerende zadoke for the defence of the king and his wordes against all maligne mouthes and sclanderous tongues Neither indeede can wee but well commend that which wee well vnderstand of those his Sermons and wordes nor thinke wee but that the holy Ghost will both bring to our remembrance whatsoeuer thereof shall bee most profitable and conuenient for the Church of God and will teach vs also the true vnderstanding and meaning thereof zadok Very well saide and resolued my Lords saide zadok therefore the sooner vpon this occasion I will tell you what I thinke generally of those wordes of the King which wee now minde to collect and so conclude our present conference Summa verborum Eccles 2. pointes thinking the time too long ere I be with his Grace The whole drift of the Kinges wordes may bee digested into two generall points the first whereof is that the worlde is to bee contemned the other is that the chiefe Good is to be pursued In which two pointes consisteth both wisedome and vnderstanding as God said to man in Iob. Iob. 28.28 Behold the feare of the Lord is wisdome to depart from evill is vnderstanding Iob. 1.1 This hee peformed when he feared God and eschewed evill For in the world which hee maeneth by the place vnder the Sunne The world and whereas hee placeth vanities kingdome he descrieth vanities of the which collecting many The chiefe Good he frameth a certaine catalogue therby sheweth his perfect vnderstāding In the chief good he findeth mans highest felicitie exempted from all vanities and miseries to the which he directeth men by diuers good prescriptions and rules whereby hee displayeth perfect wisedome The two tables of the law And in these two partes hee singularly alludeth to those two tables of the law wherein is commanded and set foorth what the thinges are which men ought to flye and againe what they be which they ought to do and performe aswell for their owne health as for the glory of God What he findeth in vanities kingdome to be abandoned In vanities kingdome he displaieth the vanitie of man in his deuises studies counsailes policies delights labours sinnes imperfections and infirmities next hee displaieth his misery in this world wherein hee hath a condition toilsom and laborious a troubled spirit an aking heart a grieved conscience an hell of sorrowes and an yeelding perforce to death Thirdly he telleth what the things are which most commonly encrease mans misery and so his vanity as namely that wisedome which is earthly sensuall and diuelish the pleasures lusts and delights of the children of men which are beastly and deuoide of reason The honour of the worlde and vaine glory of man wherewith hee is puffed vp forgetful of himselfe the greedy desire of riches auarice couetousnes which drowne men in sinne and perdition The vice of curiositie inconstancie rebellion disobedience to magistrates intemperancie oppression of the poore and iniurious dealing of man against man Iniustice of magistrates vnreuerent talking of Princes lawes especially of God and of his actions slothfulnesse and idlenesse wrath and enuy want onnesse of youth vnprofitable pastimes that consume the time of mans life hope of long life and such like All which thinges beeing by him descryed and displayed to sway and swell within the kingdome of vanitie he thought good to make thereof a Catalogue as I said and there withall hath in the same here and there prescribed and appointed soueraigne salues and remedies against those noisome maladies Remedies against those noysome maladies that thereby the sooner those great euills beeing auoided or abandoned there might a ready way be made and prepared for al them that are willing to tend towardes the chiefe Good and so to the highest felicitie And these remedies are contained generally either in Corasives or Comfortatives The former consisteth of reprehensions confutations derisions comminations whereby be condemneth and contemneth those vanities with their inconveniences The other consisteth of doctrins confirmations counsels exhortations commendations Caueats aduises and admonitions wherby be halleweth men away from those vanities and perswadeth and allureth them to vertues the highest felicitie And in these pointes Solomon as a cunning phisician the king as a good Phisician hath not omitted any one thing that the wise and cunning Phisicians haue accustomed to practise and vse in the cure of mans body for here are prescriptions of Sweates of vomits of diets of ointmentes of minutions of cauterizings of clysters of slepes of exercises and of portions whereof if time would permit I could speake more amply but here I onely point to the thinges which I might speake touching the wisedome and cunning of our King in and about the cure of those great maladies Howbeit as euery medicine helpes not euery nature nor
cureth euery patient seeing against the strength of death there is no phisicke auaileable the king coulde not as himselfe confessed cure all thinges for many thinges remaine imperfect defectiue and incureable in vanities kingdome All thinges cannot be cured in this world neither howsoeuer the medicines are compounded and applied may any man imagin that they can be salued and recured But this fault is not long of the phisician and his medicines but of the euill constitution and nature of the patient and his griefes * In the second generall parte the King proposeth the chiefe end of mans life in this worlde The chiefe good to be pursued which is The feare of God the keeping of his commandementes and is indeede the dutie of every man and that which by the law of Gods is required of all men as I saide before And as in the former hee shewed what things most encrease mans vanity and miscry so here he teacheth what they are which further him towardes his felicitie And they are certain vertues which he opposeth to those former vices Certain vertues commended which further men towards happines As namely the wisdome of God spirit prudence whereby a common wealth is gouerned Iustice obedience to laws and magistrates modesty temperance industry diligēce charity patience in troubles sobriety humilitie fidelitie truth praier liberalitie iudgement and to bee short pietie and the right seruice of God And because all those thinges are required of a man in the opportune time at the least within the compasse of his humane life The benefit of time therefore he is carefull to counsel and aduise him to take the benefit of the time and not to defer or put off from day to day to do perform that which is required of him lest he bee sodainely taken away and perish nor can at any time thencefoorth finde the like opportunitie to worke and effect that which hee shoulde haue done and now at length though all too late hee is most willing to doe if hee might haue a graunt of that libertie and time againe Therefore hee hath saide and saith it often to them that stand before him to heare his wisedome Whatsoever thou takest in hand Cap. 9 9. do it with all thy power For in the grave wherevnto thou goest there is neither worke counsell knowledge nor wisedome As if hee said there is no time allotted for men to worke and do the workes of their vocations after this life They therefore that bee willing to serue GOD in their seuerall functions as they ought must bee right diligent therein and obserue their times in this life at the least and not deferre it to the life to com Againe hee saith Remember now thy maker in the daies of thy youth whiles the evill daies come not nor the yeeres approach Cap. 2.1 wherein thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And to the end he might not onely teach the great vanitie of mans life in this worlde but also take away from him all delaies which commonly followe the hope of long life hee setteth foorth mans Olde age and from thence defineth his death and lastly teacheth the immortality of mans Soule the consideration whereof beeing set before mans eies doth often containe him within the boundes of his duty as wise to God wary of the world and carefull for himselfe And this the King hauing said and strongly proued his former generall proposition he concludeth with the same thus The conclusion of the book Vanity of vanities all is meere vanity Lo thus hath the king spoken such is his purpose in those his words which some would so perversly constre against him and his good meaning crowne and dignity And of this sort is euen his ordinary talke and such are his sentences sayings and words which he dayly vttereth In the which as they are right consonant and agreable in all thinges to the sacred veritie and holy scriptures whosoeuer heareth and considereth aright shall find here and there applied such and so many excellent doctrins resolutions sentences The excellencie of Solomons wordes contayned in the Ecclesiastes proverbes parables examples counsels consolations exhortatiōs admonitions comminations reasons arguments and conclusions with such change and varietie of times though as yet on one instrument and on one ground to draw from vices and to perswade to vertues that they which read heare or vnderstand the same if they be not enchanted with some erronious spirite shall therein and thereof very easily finde out the heauenly wisdom with no small comfort of heart reape no little cōtentation of Soule when thereby the sooner the holy spirit assisting them they shal be enabled to contemne the deceiueable vanities and lusts of the world they shal be encouraged to vse the creatures of God thankfully to walke in their vocations wisely to liue in this world honestly to behaue themselues worthily to beare afflictions patiently and to passe in the same victoriously through the bottomlesse profundity of the horrible confusions of this wretched life towardes that Best Good and highest felicitie CAP. XLII The Princes having examined and approved Solomons wordes for veritie agree to collect the same into a booke to the which they prefixe a fit title and declare the reasons thereof ZAdoke hauing thus answered to all the former exceptions and obiections taken and opposed to the king and his wordes the Princes Lordes which were thus assembled in counsell and hitherto listned to the disputatiō and conference between Zadok Abiather answered said to Zadok Ye haue both learnedly and right godly answered and resolued all those doubts most reuerend Father whereby the sooner as both we al others are and shal be moved to esteeme worthily of the K. as of a Sainct of the L. no lesse of those his Sermons and wordes so consonant to Gods truth and profitable to instruct and teach all men so now let vs consent in one mind to collect those Sermons and wordes as wee may best call them into memory Ye haue wel said my L. saide Zadok it shal be good and profitable both for our selues and for many others that we do as ye haue saide But first it may please you that we agree on some fit Title to be prefixed and the Helioreph Ahiah the kings scribes or one of them woulde write the same With a very good-will saide the Scribes and what shall wee write Write thus said Zadok Eccl. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words of that Koheleth or the preacher the son of David K. in Ierusalem The title of Solomons last wordes And thus haue we written said the scribes But my L. said zadok how like ye this title we like it very wel answered the Princes May it please you also it be examined that the reasons thereof being declared all others may likewise bee satisfied with vs Yea said zadok it pleaseth me right well howbeit with conuenient