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A00831 A very fruitfull exposition of the Commaundements by way of questions and answeres for greater plainnesse together with an application of euery one to the soule and conscience of man, profitable for all, and especially for them that (beeing not otherwise furnished) are yet desirous both to see themselues, and to deliuer to others some larger speech of euery point that is but briefly named in the shorter catechismes. By Geruase Babington. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1583 (1583) STC 1095; ESTC S108401 209,221 568

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For be he as wise as he will in directing the Magistrate to a lawe to rule vs by we shortly after wil be vp in wit against him to shake in péeces by a shift all his indeuour Truely our heartes be dead our sinne is great the Lorde hath wrath in store if this our dealing with our parentes be not confessed and amended Thus deale we also with our ministers and spirituall fathers begetting vs to the Lorde With most vile vsage we often abuse them and if not yet in heart at least as the refuse of the worlde we estéeme them Let God be iudge or our owne soules what base and scorneful concepts we harbour of them and whether in trueth as parentes they be loued accompted of and delt withall What swelling pride in youth against the aged What vngratefull handes and heartes against our great and gainefull friendes Euerie way euerie way guiltie we are of the breache of this commaundement if wee can sée it Magistrates also and ministers euen asmuch for their great offences in their callings so that if in iustice we be repayed short shall our liues be heere on earth and in the world to come eternall death Who can say he hath doone the duties of a gouernour who can say he hath liued lawefully as an inferiour Alas we are touched all with sinne and robbed by it of all the blessing Yet sinne espied and truely loathed findes euer pardon For this cause Christ died that we should not be damned if we will be taught Thinges past be gone and the Lorde forgiue vs. Some be to come and the Lorde strengthen vs. Whether we be parentes and haue not deserued or we be children and haue not perfourmed the Lorde hath mercie if we doe amende the Lorde hath loue if our liues doe séeke it and iudgement also if perswasion profit not Life doth he promise if we kéepe this lawe and life will he giue vs as hee is GOD and true both heere and euermore The sixt Commaundement Thou shalt doe no murther Question HOw standeth the order of this commandement Ans Great wisedome hath our God shewed euen in the order of euery one and by name of this For hauing in the former established degrées amongest men some to rule and some to obey if he should not also haue set limittes for their authoritie it had bene to arme iniustice and to strengthen oppression and wrong Que. What is the equitie of this lawe Ans It is a verie iust lawe and méete to bee established and made in thrée respectes First in respect of God himselfe who louing all good preseruation of life goods credite c. and hating the contrarie fitly prouideth to worke the same in men whome he would haue holy as he is holie Secondly in respect of man for our brother is our owne flesh and wee come all of one roote and therefore wee shoulde not kill Lastlie forasmuch as the societie and traficke of man with man cannot be vnlesse life may be in safetie therefore euen in respect thereof also méete it was that the Lord should make this lawe that we should not kill Que. Is all killing of anie thing that hath life forbidden in these wordes of the lawe Ans No indéede but if we would vnderstande what notwithstanding these wordes we may doe wee must consider that all liuing things are of thrée sorts either they are plantes hearbes trées and such like or brute beastes or reasonable creatures And al these in time place and for some causes we may kill notwithstanding these wordes For the first we haue our warrants in these wordes I haue giuen you euerie hearbe bearing seede Gen. 1.29 which is vppon all the earth and euerie tree wherein is the fruit of a tree bearing seede that shall be to you for meate For the seconde Euery thing saith God that moueth and liueth shal be meate for you Gen. 9.3 as the greene hearbe I haue giuen you all thinges For the thirde and last sort both the sundrie commandementes of God in sackages of cities to put to sworde man woman and childe prooue it as also many his lawes made to that ende Que. But may anie man shed mans bloud Ans No onely they haue lawefully shedde mans bloud which haue had a calling of the Lorde to the same as the Magistrate Que. And what say you of the warriour Ans Wee must comprehende him vnder the title of a Magistrat for so indéede he is if he be thereunto appointed The calling also Luke 3. Iohn Baptist approoueth in that his spéeche vnto the souldiers whome hee doth not bidde to leaue that life but to vse it rightly which yet he would not haue aduised them if it had béene vngodly Also in the gospell Christ toucheth not the Centurion for his kinde of life Math. 8. neither Peter Cornelius who was a Captaine or yet his messenger Act. 10. which was a Souldier And I come vnto thee sayeth Dauid in the name of the Lorde and blessed be the Lorde which teacheth my hands to warre and my fingers to fight Psalm 143. Que. Is onely the actuall killing of a man forbidden Ans No but euen aswell also the ordinarie forerunners of murther to wit fighting and quarrelling For if a man cause anie blemish in his neighbour Leuit. 24.19 sayth the lawe as he hath done so shall it be doone vnto him Eie for eie tooth for tooth hande for hande foote for foote Exod. 21.24.25 burning for burning wounde for wounde stripe for stripe Whereby wee sée plainely howe the GOD of heauen alloweth that hurting and laming of our brethren in fight which a fleshly man taketh to be so lawefull so glorious and an argument of such valure in him And no doubt but this lawe of God thus executed vpon vs would quickly coole that raging heate within vs which no counsell of our friendes no consideration of necessarie circumstances as of our calling the place where we liue the charge of wife children and such like hanging vpon our safetie the lawe of man no nor the lawe of God it selfe condemning vs for it can staie or aswage Math. 5.39 Againe Resist not euill sayth the Lorde but whosoeuer shal smite thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also That is be so farre from yéelding to the rage of thy affections which prouoke thee to strike againe that euen rather thou be cōtent to take asmuch more than to displease thy God by vngodly and forbidden reuenge And for quarrelling what a swéete and vehement perswasion is it of the Apostle against such bitter words of a boyling and boysterous heart Now therefore sayth he as the elect of God holy and beloued Colos 3.13 put on tender mercie and kindenesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long suffering forbearing one an other and forgiuing one an other if anie man haue a quarrell to an other euen as Christ forgaue you euen so doe yee Hatefull therefore before God are as I
should we escape and yet God be iust too It is euen the wisedome we extoll in others and that we striue continually to attaine vnto our selues to haue neither ●rue eie true heart nor true tongue but onely to séeme to haue all to euerie one whose worde wealth or authoritie may gaine vs anie thing in this cursed worlde And so man is our strength our pollicie is our GOD flesh is our arme and what Paul so reioyceth in we laugh at as vile and too sily simplicitie Dauid assureth himselfe the Lorde will defende them that are true of heart Psalm 7.11 Psalm 32.11 Psalm 36.10 Psalm 64.10 we verily thinke if we be true of heart wee cannot nor shall not be able to liue in the worlde we must Critisare cum cretensibus that is we must smooth it and sooth it and carie two faces vnder one hoode or else wee are not so wise as we might be Thus sinne we I am sure of it some more and some lesse and the reward of the least sinne is eternall death But it is the Lordes great mercie to moue vs from anie sinne For dull are our heartes to feare any iudgement till it be vpon vs. 1. Iohn 1.7 And therefore to him I commende vs to open our eies that we may euen earnestly sée and consider effectually howe impossible anie feloweshippe is euer to be had for me holowe subtill guilefull hypocriticall and s● foorth with a God all trueth sinceritie simplicitie and open assured faithfulne●● it selfe For the seconde which was telling of tales wee haue heard it before shewed and our owne knowledge doth assure vs it is a branch of the breach of this commandement which shall burne both bodie and soule in the fire of hell And yet sée do we feare it or flie it Alas we knowe I am sure of it we haue béene too too secure in this point and our securitie not séeing and weighing the wickednesse of the vice hath stayned both heart and tongue horriblie Looke about the worlde and veiwe the generall course of all Feareth anie man to discredite his neighbour priuily and to whisper vpon hearesay or his owne imagination what tendeth to the blemish of his name whom he speaketh of Feareth any woman when shee hath mette with her gossippe to tittle tattle to the slander of an other this thing and that thing which yet hath no certaintie and which full both she would haue saide of her selfe vpon like coniectures No ●o we sée to much the cursed course of lawlesse tongues in euerie place though the Lorde in mercie giueth some consciences and a thousande times I begge that we would sée our sinne confesse our sinne and rippe vp our guilt in this respect Why should wee be so dull and without féeling If it be a vertue thus to prittle and prattle of euerie bodie vncertaine tales but most certaine discredites then prooue it so and vse it but if it bee a branch of false witnesse that doth truly witnesse gods wrath to hang ouer vs for it good Lorde shall we still be polluted with it Shall hell haue vs without anie helpe Will not the dread of dolefull day strike such a filthie fault into the waning and by litle and litle cut quite the throte of it and make it bléede to death in vs I hope the best and I wish the best the Lorde in his mercie set a watch before our mouthes and kéepe the dore of our lippes for euer hereafter Next commeth hearing and beléeuing to be considered of faultes in necessitie also if telling false tales hath before béene iustly blamed For there is nothing that so nurceth and nourisheth vp a tale teller as doth the credulous heart and attending willing eare of the hearer And therefore if the one be a vice the other certainely is no vertue Nowe howe guiltie are we in this againe howe stayned howe blotted before our blemishlesse God if he shoulde enter into iudgement with vs For Christ his sake let vs weigh it let vs viewe it and euen earnestly thinke of it and fearing to be damned let vs feare to sléepe soundly in the sinne that ●eadeth to damnation We doe not discountenance the whispering carper we doe not eschewe the reportes of péeuish pratlers but we itch to heare and take pleasure in hearing what true charitie in our heartes towardes our brother ●hould make vs abhorre to heare and wéepe to haue it true And for beléeuing marke and consider if you dwell amongest neighbours whether you haue ●ot gréeuously offended towarde many ●f them in this respect Howe haue you ●uffered a false tongue to fire your ●eartes with beléefe of your neighbour ●hat could neuer yet bee extinguished ●●nce you heard it and yet you doe not ●nowe it Alas is this charitie which who so wanteth wanteth God Is this to loue thy neighbor as thy selfe When full sore it offendeth mee that any man should credite a surmise of me if it be not true O eies O heartes where is their sight and féeling What loue can my neighbour beare me or with what heart can a seruant serue me when he séeth whisperers still about me and findeth my nature so credulous of them as that all his faith and trueth all his traueile and labour all his affection and loue were it neuer so sincere and vpright and euen flowing from the rootes of his heart and the verie bottome of his soule yet is in hazarde euerie houre of vniust condemnation of vnkinde regarde and most vndeserued reproofe Truely as I haue said before it is the verie tried cutthrote of all amitie friendshippe or faithfull louing seruice to haue a listening eare and a credulous heart without maruelous good discretion And I am most assured o● it there is no plague nor infection gréeuous in the worlde comparable to this poyson in estranging alienating and in the end quite driuing awaie from me those heartes that were mine owne with bodie and all worldly abilitie in trueth in honestie in alleadgeance in God in Christ and in all good meaning to the death Who loueth for gaine and serueth for hire he is a slaue to the thing that he gapeth for and to make vp his mouth he will carie any thing but to whome loue is gaine and due regarde of his poore true heart an abundaunt rewarde the deniall of it discourageth his meaning grindeth his soule in sunder and raketh him vp in dust by vntimely death And therefore since it offendeth God hurteth our brother and verie greatly indamageth our selues O that we would sée it consider it and as God by grace shall strengthen our fraile natures scoule vppon the spéeche that practiseth manies harme and couenant with our heartes to knowe before wee credite so would God blesse vs manie report well of vs and true hearts of neighbour friende seruant or whosoeuer neuer leaue vs. Passing then on in this examination further wee may not forgette the publishing of our brethrens priuate offences a displeasing thing vnto the Lorde
like which because it is rare fruite on such trees to some may make it seeme the better but I passe ouer these shewes and outwarde leafes to decke it with it hauing ynough in it selfe to commend it least if I should long speake of this colour and grace I should speake the lesse of him or of the thing it selfe minding not to speake much of either but litle in all And as I passe the stocke from whence this graft was taken so will I not stand to shewe you where it was ingrafted planted in what vniuersitie in what Colledge what roote he toke what sufficient time he grew howe he spred there and with what liking which would make this fruite to many not without cause to realish the better But to come to that which commeth nearer to the bringing forth and producing of this worke when hee was first planted by a fellowshippe in that famous Colledge of the holy and vndiuided Trinitie in Cambridge wholly or most especially consecrated to the studie of him and his knowledge whose name it beareth so straight he toke himselfe to that studie whereby he might be most seruiceable to gods Church and some triall first had of his guiftes as it were aduowed himselfe a man to the Lord to serue in his tabernacle Not long after that betimes he might begin to be profitable be profitable long God touching his heart he toke on him the ministerie so mercifully God dealt with him that with all he placed him in one certaine Charge not far from his Colledge that he might haue where to sowe be still at hande to sowe and knowe both what and how to sowe and to his comfort see the growing vp and fruit of it Nowe hauing there painefully laboured by the space almost of two yeares and seene the effect of that promise with what measure ye mete 4. Mark 24. shall be measured to you againe and vnto them that haue shall more bee giuen that though he cast in with full hande and euer a zelous heart to doe good in a continued course yet God so blessed that the haruest ouer-abounded his labour and exceeded his hope and that litle towne was a candle light set on a candlesticke and a tower vpon the toppe of a hill When God to his comfort had thus encouraged him in his lawe he by great meanes calleth him from this litle towne where he had no pastorall charge to a greater charge and in respect of the change and dignitie of the place whither he was called it was as it were from Tecon to Bethel from preaching in some vplandish and countery towne ●n the wildernesse of Iudea to Herods court or as ●ndeede in many respectes it well may be sayde by a Sergius Paulus vnto his house When he had there continued nowe a whole yeare and more to the good reformation and great benefitte of that most honorable familie it pleased God that his Sergius Paulus leauing as it were Nazareth went and dwelt for a time in Capernaum Math. 4.13.14 which is neare the sea in the borders of Zabulon and Nepthalin beyond Iordan in Gallilie of the Gentilles out of the borders of Palestina I hope I may without offence allude vnto that place in all pointes it so fitly answereth where a while abiding by his meanes God wrought that the people which before in comparison sate in darkenesse sawe great light and to them which sate in the region shadowe of death light was risen vp Of this place and this people he hauing yet further cōpassion they beeing as sheepe without a shepheard wandring in the mountaines and the haruest there great and the labourers fewe the Lorde moued his heart to remaine there and wrought this in the heart of his most honorable Lorde himselfe to forgoe him and leaue him there for the further increase of God his Church and for the tender loue he bare and good he would to this people where what paines hath beene taken good hath beene done it is by more witnessed than 〈◊〉 neede to make relation and this worke and some others of this authors since that time come forth giue open testimony though I hould my tongue I would not haue saide thus much of the man 〈◊〉 the places themselues of which I haue spoke● were not readie to say and set downe more tha● I haue saide and this haue I saide that God in him may be glorified they among whom he liueth fo● ●im thankefull and to admonish him what pro●eedinges these beginninges require The worke 〈◊〉 selfe might manie waies beside be commended ●he matter and principall grounde of it is the ●awe of God brought from the highest heauen giuen by God himselfe to his seruant Moses with ●hunders and lightninges 19. Exod. 16. c. 18. c. and the sounde of the ●rumpe exceeding loude on mount Sinay the mountaine all on smoke the Lorde discending vpon it in fire c. and all the mount trembling exceedingly giuen to all the Israell of God aper●ayning to all men conteining infinite blessinges ●or the hearers and doers of it and innumerable intollerable curses plagues for the breaker ●hereof either by negligence or contempt This principall not laide vpon with any borrowed col●ours to hide the grounde but the workemanship and ingrauing of it is out of the matter it selfe so that still the grounde and marble thereof may appeare and dealt with all in this manner fitlie answering to the subiect matter deliuered as it were in thunder with a spirite as hotte as fire zealous with iudgment setting an edge by receiued strength euen vpon this rasier The place also and persons where and for whome this worke was both made and vttered may adde much grace and strength vnto it In a most honourable familie and for it and with good liking and profitte there and commonly men like that the better which liketh them well and that which profiteth such profiteth manie If it wette the mountaines it will water the vallies and if it bee sweete oyntment for the heade it cannot be but acceptable to the re●● of the partes and to the borders of the garment The dewe from Hermon and the mountaines of Sion trickleth downe sweeteli● vppon the vallies about And if this make i● profitable to others because deliuered heere then must it be most profitable to this family it selfe for which it was made and first for it alone and nowe is by me especially to it commended It is fruite of your owne grounde the voice of your owne sheephearde the sounde of your proper trumpet and therefore you must both knowe it and like it the better and thereby be warned the sooner It is a lesson which alreadie you haue learned and therefore in it may and must be more readie than others It is not nowe first commended to you but againe recommended to your eyes which heeretofore hath beene sent by your eares to your mindes and to your heartes by a great vehemencie
children Mariages another of the daily desires of worldly men This they séeke this they couet this day and night they beat their heads about Yet daily examples be before their faces of sorowe and tormēt not to be expressed growing to parentes by such proude and gréedie attempts beside the continuall griefe that sonne or daughter so bestowed often riseth and goeth to bed withall Therefore I say to goe no further since these vsuall desires of men in this worlde are often not attained vnto to their liking ●hough greatly laboured for and yet if they be attained euen in great measure haue no certaine or sure comfort in them but all the pleasure in them and ●y them quickely fadeth away strongly ●t prooueth that our chiefe care should not be of these things but rather what ●ur case shal be in another world whē al these things shall haue their end which ●s the matter I haue rehearsed thē for An other proofe of the same may this be the reuealed will of God the Lord testifieth he would haue all men saued The second reason to prooue that our chiefe care should be howe to be saued and ●ome to the knowledge of his trueth he would not thē death of a sinner c. therfore unlesse we also set our care to the ●ame ende namely howe we may be ●aued in the day of iudgement we oppose our selues not onely against our ●wne good but euen against the Lords will we striue with our God and wee shall surely reape the reward of such ●s rob him of his creatures Thirdly the horrour of hell and condemnation prooue The third that our care to be saued should be great For what meane those fearefull names of hell of prison chaines of darkenesse the lake burning with fire and brimstone the de●th pitch brimstone weeping and gnashing of teeth the worme that neuer dyeth the fier that neuer goeth out with a number such like I say what meane they or why hath the spirite of GOD set them downe but to strike a terror into vs of damnation and consequently thereupon a true care to be saued The fourth Fourthly the vnspeakeable ioyes of heauen that unmeasurable and endlesse comfort that there shall bee had with all the children o● GOD Patriar●hes Prophetes Apostles Martyrs yea with the Lorde himselfe and all his Angels with Christ our Sauiour and Lambe slaine for vs who shall wipe all teares from our eyes doeth crie vpon vs with shriking sound now while we haue time to vse our time to see mercie and séeke mercie to imbrace it and take it offered to such good vnto vs and neuer in securitie passing our oportunitie to be causes that then we shall heare these words Depart ye wicked into endlesse woe What an honor woulde I thinke it if the Prince passing by among the great multitude should spie mee out call mee to him imbrace me speake kindly to me take mee with him place me by him and so forth Howe would my heart daunce hereat and all men talke of my good hap Now is the passing of a mortall Prince on earth like the comming of Iesus Christ in the cloudes Is the honour they can giue comparable to that the Lorde of Lordes shall giue to his elect O my heart féeleth what my pen cannot write there is no comparison betwixt the persons the places the preferments and therefore if the one so ioy mée that for it I would take any paines thrise dead is my heart within me if to obtaine the other it bée not carefull Lastly The fifth the examples of care continuall and great euer in Gods children how they might serue him and please him that hereafter they might sit with him and neuer part from him ought mightily to perswade vs to be like vnto them in this indeuour their labours their watchings their sufferings all shot but at this ende the glorie of the Lorde and their owne saluation and howe great were they What spéeches of desire euen aboue all treasure to bée saued in the great day haue they vttered And shall we not followe them God forbid Thus therefore prooued vnto vs is the first point of a Christian man and womans care namely that it ought to be this howe they should be saued in the day of iudgement and so come to life euerlasting Que. Howe is the second point prooued vnto vs namely that in the meane time so long as wee liue in this world wee ought to bee carefull to liue according to Gods holy will Ans Surely it is prooued verie strongly vnto vs both by our election creation redemption iustification and vocation if we will marke them For why hath the Lord elected vs to eternal ioy in Christ Iesus That wee might conclude libertie thereon to sinne at our pleasure Our election prooueth it as many wicked spirites reason No no. But let the Apostle bee iudge and tell vs why who saieth Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should bee holy and without blame before him in loue So saieth he of our creation also Our creation prooueth it that wee are the Lordes workemanship created in Christ Iesus to good workes Ephes 2.10 which GOD hath ordained that wee shoulde walke in them And of our redemption Luke plainely speaketh Our redemption prooueth it that we are deliuered out of the hands of our enemies Luke 1. that we should serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Our iustification prooueth it Our iustification hath euer ioyned with it inseparably the grace of ●anctification and they cannot bee parted For howe shall we saieth the Apostle Rom. 6.2 that are dead to sinne liue yet therein and so forth as followeth in the place Lastly of our vocation the Apostle Peter saieth thus As he that hath called is holy so be you holy in all manner of conuersation So that wee sée thereby all these meanes prooued vnto vs that we ought as long as we liue to be carefull of this that we behaue our selues according to the will of the Lord which is the seconde point whereof in your question ye demaunded some confirmation Que. But howe can we knowe we are discharged before Gods iudgement seate Ans Your booke answereth you that wee can neuer knowe howe wee be discharged before the iudgement seate of God vntill such time as we knowe our owne miserable estates by reason of the greatnesse of our sinne and the horrible punishment which we deserue for the same And the proofes your booke vseth are plaine to inferre this conclusion For doeth man séeke to the Phisition that hath no néede of health either to be procured or preserued by his meanes No our owne experience doth approue the speach of Christ to bee true when he saieth Matth. 9.12 The whole haue no neede of the Phisition but the sicke Matth. 11.13 For in déede it is the diseased that take
déede but ●ead blotted out and quite extingui●hed Sée nowe howe guiltie I am e●en of the first thing that is commaun●ed mee in this commaundement The seconde thing is that I should ●eare thée aboue all the thirde is Feare of God ●hat I should pray to none but to thée ●he fourth to acknowledge thee the ●uider and gouernour of all thinges ●f whome I receiue all the benefites ●hat I haue and therefore that I trust ●nd stay vpon thée alone Fiftly that 〈◊〉 should labour to knowe thée out of ●hy worde so fully and perfectly as ●hou hast reuealed thy selfe therein ●ecause of knowledge all these other ●●llowe And lastlie that I should for ●ll benefites giue thankes onely to ●●ee and in such full manner and ●easure of féeling as any way is due to that blessing which I receiue In which points as in other moe which might yet be named O merciful father I here before thée confesse I am no better than in the first I dare not cleare my selfe I cannot I ought not O Lord giue me eyes to sée my wants for I haue feared men and their threates more than I ought I haue feared the losse of their fauour more than I ought I haue feared the losse of worldely commodities more than I ought and haue not as thy blessed Apostle taught me by this example Philipp 3. accounted those thinges that were vantage vnto me losse very doung for the excellent knowledge sake of Iesus Christ my Lorde Sometimes Satan hath rocked this soule of mine in the chayer of securitie that I haue euen slept as it were a dead sléepe and not considered of thy iudgements against sinne as I ought neyther taken the profite by thy extraordinary works in the ayer in the earth in the bodies of men and beasts that I should but passed them ouer with a litle woonder or motion for a short time When my sinnes haue béene touched or appeared vnto me I haue flattered my ●wne soule and put vpon them honest ●ames as clokes to hide them withal The plaine pride of my heart and mere ●anitie I haue iudged clenlinesse or necessary for my estate Miserable coue●ousnesse haue I iudged lawful care for ●hings necessary and so forth a manifest token of a dead heart within and ●oide of tasting any horror in sinne By ●ll which and many more thinges that my minde may easily sée it is apparant ●o me that I haue euen broken this ●oint also of thy Lawe in not fearing ●hee so as I ought Alas Lorde what ●hall I say of the rest of the braunches ●f this commandement named euen nowe Am I any perfecter in them ●han in these No no I haue sinned against thée in them all and that most grieuously so that if there were no mo ●f thy commandements but euen this ●ne the first of al yet doth my conscience ●ell me I am before thée guiltie good Lorde most fearefully to bee touched But there are nine moe spreading out their braunches to all sinceritie and holinesse both in bodie and minde toward God and man with threatened cu●●es to all flesh that shall doe contrarie And therefore when I viewe my cou●se euen at the first to bee so crooked O deare Father what shall I thinke i● 〈◊〉 appeare when I shall bee iudged in them all Shall I boast of merites and kéepe no fyttle of thy commaundementes Shall I challenge saluation for my workes and euerie braunche of thy lawe doeth call mee cursed because I haue so fowlie and often broken the same No good Father no this little viewe of my obedience to thy hestes doeth plainely tell mee I haue no merites or good workes to come before thée withall much lesse am I able to doe workes of supererogation that is more than I neede to doe but of sinnes and euill workes alas I see a number With Dauid may I crie Psal 34. They are more than the haires of my ●eade and my heart hath failed mee I ●ay truely saye with the prodigall Sonne I haue sinned against heauen ●nd against thee and I am not worthie 〈◊〉 bee called thy childe I may say ●ith the Publican God bee mercifull 〈◊〉 mee a sinner and adde thereunto a ●reat and grieuous sinner I may say ●ith Ieremie O Lorde though mine ●●iquities testifie against mee yet deale ●hou with mee according to thy name ●or my rebellions are many And with 〈◊〉 I haue sinned Iob. 7. what shall I doe to ●●ee O thou preseruer of men Yea ●ell may I say I lye downe in my con●●sion and my shame couereth mee ●or I haue sinned against the Lorde my GOD from my youth vp tyll this ●ay and haue not obeyed his voyce ●o conclude I may looke about mee ●nd from a wounded soule crie vnto ●●ose that can giue mée counsell In re●●ect of my sinnes men brethren what ●●all I do And sée how neuer the Lord ●●rsaketh those that want his helpe aide ●oe I not euen nowe remember what he aduiseth me and all sinners in my case to doe Prou. 28. Hee that hideth his sinne saith the Lorde by Salomon shall not prosper but he that confesseth his sinne and forsaketh it shall haue mercie And sée in Dauid the proofe and tryall of it For when I helde my tongue saith hee my bones consumed Psal 32. or when I roared all the day For thy hande is heauie vpon me daie and night and my moysture is turned into the drought of sum●mer Then I acknowledged my sin vn●to thee neither hid I mine iniquitie For I said I wil confesse against my selfe and thou forgauest the punishment o● my sinne Therefore O Lorde I hearken to thy counsell and though I ha●● sinned aboue the number of the sand o● the sea as plainely I sée I haue if I 〈◊〉 charged with euery branch of thy com●maundements how I haue kept them though my transgressions be multipli●ed and are excéeding many so that I am not worthie to beholde the heigh● of heauen for the multitude of m● vnrighteousnesse yea I say thoug●● I haue prouoked thy wrath and doone euill before thee and not kept any ●ot of thy commaundementes so fully as I ought yet knowing Thou desirest ●he death of no sinner but rather that he should repent and be saued and hast ●hewed the trueth thereof in forgiuing Dauid and manie mo confessing truely ●heir sinnes before thee Therefore O good Lorde and sweete refuge full of mercie pitie and compassion I bow the ●nees of my heart with king Manasses ●nd all sorrowfull sinners and begge ●hy mercie I haue sinned O Lord I ●aue sinned and I acknowledge my ●ransgressions but I humbly beseech ●hee forgiue me O Lorde forgiue me ●nd destroy me not as I haue deserued ●e not angrie with me for euer by re●eruing to me euil neither condemne ●e into the lower partes of the earth For thou art the God euen the God of ●ll them that repent and on me thou ●●ilt shewe mercie My sorrowe good
I further whether with any outwarde thing else whatsoeuer not warraunted by the word I haue thought or sought to serue and please the Lorde being by reason thereof brought asléepe with an imagination of my well doing and so carelesse to séeke or practise the dueties of the word If I haue this also knowe I to be a breach of this commandement Then from things not warraunted I came to things commanded as the hearing of the word prayer conference profitable with my brethren and such like knowing that if euen in these by the Lorde ordayned as thinges wherewith he is honoured and pleased I haue otherwise vsed my selfe than I should in stead of perfourming the Lordes appointment I haue brought before him mine owne inuention walking vnwittingly in mine owne wayes fearfully broken this precept of my God Which when I consider I néede no further shewe of grieuous guilt to cast me down from height of all supposed soundnes in this law Mine eyes do sée my heart acknowledgeth my conscience crieth my sinne is great Stand O soule before the Lord the iust and vpright Iudge whose pearcing eyes discouereth al thy waies set thy selfe more in his sight while mercie may be had whose voyce shall sound thy lasting woe if sight of sinne procure not true remorse And say now soule before the Iudge of trueth hast thou alwayes vsed as hee hath willed thée the hearing of the worde Did neuer desire of worldlie praise prouoke thée to this seruice Neuer diddest thou thinke to day such shall I sée and againe of them be noted if I goe Did neuer feare of worse opinion to be bred of thée in worldlie states by thy absence drawe thée out No fleshlie thought or earthly liking of the speaker hath there béene within thée to pricke thée to his hearing Hath painted pride and newe or straunge attyre neuer saide secretly in thée to daie goe heare the Sermon Lie thou maiest not the Lord being Iudge cleare thy selfe thou canst not O my so●le thy selfe being iudge Therefore that which the Lord appointeth as a seruice to himselfe and for our endlesse comfort by this corruption beginneth a seruice of thine own to thy iust damnation For to heare the Lorde biddeth but not for these ends Thus seruing the Lord in a thing commanded not as he commandeth I serue him with mine owne inuention and guiltie most grieuously I am before him O that I were any better in the duetie of prayer Am I neuer negligent colde and frosen Burneth the fire within me before or whilest I speake with my tongue Shaketh my flesh with the vehemencie of my spirite Neuer straieth my heart from present praier Neuer hast I to an ende or wearilie wishe the voice I heare to cease it is too long Ah wretch howe dare I say it Conscience cryeth and will not be bribed this duetie of prayer thus corruptly perfourmed the Lorde acknowledgeth not as a seruice by him commaunded but as mine own inuention and a breache of this his precept My conference with others in shewe so good in words so faire tasteth it neuer of liking of my selfe or vaine delight to heare mine owne discourse of pride to séeme and to be knowen a man indued with such and so good gifts Tendeth my heart in trueth to the praise of my God and the comfort of my hearers whensoeuer I speake of fruitfull things without all vaine respect and hidden euill whatsoeuer If it doe not then the thing that in it selfe the Lord hath commanded as I perfourme it he vtterly abhorreth and it is wilworshippe of mine owne not prescribed dutie by my God therefore a breache of this commaundement What should I say The more I searche the more I sée and I am not as I thought concerning the kéeping of this Lawe Mo things yet in it are commaunded and moe thinges well by these I sée I haue not perfourmed Thus much serueth to sound damnation to me and witnesse sufficient in dreadfull day shall this my guilt exhibite against me beside a curse vpon my posteritie to many generations But O Lorde thy mercie reacheth vnto the heauens Psal 36.5 and thy faithfulnesse vnto the cloudes Nehem 9.17 Gratious art thou O gratious God and full of compassion slowe to anger and of great goodnesse Were my sinnes as crimsin Esa 1.18 thou canst make them as white as snowe though they be as red as scarlet soone canst thou cause them to be as the wool Deare father haue mercie vpon me and burie in the bottome of the sea that they neuer more appeare before thée all my sinnes and by name my breaches of this commandement O my God as thou hast vouchsafed mee a Sauiour to quit mee from this curse so due vnto me for my disobedience so in that Sauiour of mine thine owne déere sonne looke vpon me He was borne for my sake he liued for my sake he died for my sake then let his birth his life his death good Lord profite mée in winning pardon of thée for my faults and direction of thy spirite for the time to come that better daily I may knowe to serue thée and euen in trueth as thou hast prescribed perfourme the same vnto thée Amen good Lord heare me The third Commaundement Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. Question WHAT is the meaning of this commaundement Your Booke Ans God chargeth vs in this third commaundement these thrée thinges First that we vse with most high reuerence the name of God whensoeuer we either speake or thinke vpon him Secondly that wee neuer blaspheme the name of God by coniuring witchcraft sorcerie or charming or any such like neither hy cursing or banning Thirdly that we neuer sweare by the name of God in our common talke although the matter be neuer so true but only where the glorie of God is sought or the saluation of our brethren or before a Magistrate in witnessing the trueth when we are thereunto lawfully called In which causes we must onely sweare by the name of God But as for Saintes Angels Roode Booke Crosse Masse or anie other thing we ought in no case by them to sweare Que. What is meant by the name of God here Ans Not only anie one word vsuallie giuen to him in scripture as Iehouah or such like Philip. 2 9. but also his maiestie and excellencie with such attributes as declare the same as his wisedome his iustice his prouidence his mercie and so foorth Againe his lawe and commandements or his doctrine and worde are vsuallie signified by it Leuit. 22.31 1. Tim. 61. to make vs more carefull to attende vppon them as things wherupon depend the honour glorie and name of God Que. What is it to take his name in vaine Ans Surelie either to speake or thinke of it without most high reuerence and especiallie to sweare by it otherwise than we ought Also to cast behind vs the diligent care of his commaundementes
breach doe you knowe of this commandement beside vngodly swearing Ans Truely Gods name is taken in vaine dishonored Prayer and this commandement broken in praying also aswell as in swearing for if I powre out a sort of wordes without féeling or any burning intire affection if I drawe néere with my lippes and my hart be farre away certainely I abuse the holy name of my God in so calling vpon him and I am guilty of the breach of this law For beside that reason teacheth vs God careth not for lippe labour it is the rule of the holy Ghost that when wee pray Ephes 6.18 we should pray in spirite that is with heart and affection Que. Howe else Ans Againe Gods name is taken in vaine and polluted whensoeuer it is called vpon in coniuring witchcraft Coniuring sorcerie charming and such like For the wordes of the lawe are plaine Let none bee founde amongest you that maketh his sonne and his daughter to goe through the fire Deut. 18.10 c. or that vseth witchcraft or a regarder of times or a marker of the flying of foules or a sorcerer or a charmer or that counselleth with spirits or a soothsayer or that asketh counsell of the dead For all that do such thinges are an abomination vnto the Lorde and because of these abominations the Lorde thy God doeth cast them out before thee And many other notable testimonies hath your booke quoted in the margin Que. Why but in earnest to let the rest passe do you not thinke much good is done and may be done by charming that is by vertue of some wholsome praiers as a pater noster two or three good auees and a creede or such other good words neither english nor latin nor any thing else in signification oftentimes Ans I answere to this questiō in thrée degrées And first I say the question is not onely whether any good as you tearme it be done or may be doone by a charme but whether it be or may bee doone lawefully by the same or no. And you heare the word of God plainely condemning the practise of it Wherfore with what conscience can wee deriue health or anie helpe whatsoeuer either to our selues or ours by that meanes that GOD hath so fearefully threatned vengeance vnto were we neuer so sure to obtaine it by the same Secondly what benefite soeuer we reape by such forbidden meanes I dare assure you all thinges considered wee gette no good but muche harme For what GOD will not haue doone GOD is neuer the author worker and cause of properly and directly but health or anie helpe to our selues or others by charming the Lorde will not haue procured therefore of that health and helpe so gotten assuredly the Lorde is neither author worker nor cause directly If then not the Lorde who but the diuell And if it be he as most assuredly it is he then I pray you let vs all men and women thus reason with ourselues Is the deuill our friende or our foe our welwiller or our enemie Surely we cannot be ignorant of it he is the sworne enemie of mankind the serpent that in burning malice deceiued vs once and ouerthrewe vs quite the roaring lyon that rangeth about without any rest still séeking out whom he may deuour And will euer he that hath euen sworne the woe of vs all and séeketh as Peter saith that is with all diligence and indeuour with might and maine with tooth and naile as we say with his candle in his hande light least by any meanes we should escape him applyeth his whole power to destroy vs and to bring vs to endelesse calamitie wil he I say euer do vs any good thinke we but to the ende to inferre thereby a greater plague vpon vs Certainely he will not for he were not the deuill if he should and we may be as assured of it as we are sure that he hath that name and nature Then I say let vs marke We finde by a charme bodily helpe in our selues or ours But this would neuer Sathan haue done vnlesse he had knowen that the vsing of meanes forbidden by God would sting our bodies soules to eternall death in the worlde to come Then sée still I say and note it Good he doth vs in bodie that a thousande times more euill he may worke both to body and soule in the day of iudgement Temporall ease he is content to bestow vpon vs that endlesse disease miserie and woe he may procure vnto vs. This is most true and nowe what good doth charming if all thinges be considered Shall a Christian man and woman so hunt for helpe of body or goods that they shall for it loose bodie and soule eternally Shall our health and wealth be deerer to vs than the Lordes commandement God forbid and therefore let vs rest perswaded howsoeuer wee thinke such vngodly meanes procure vs good yet in déede all thinges considered it is no good For Sathan being our foe will neuer doe vs good but to the ende to hurt vs more by it and the breache of Gods commaundement will ring our soules a passing peale from face and fauour of the Lorde Last of all which especially I thinke you would heare I denie that by the charme any thing at all is doone whatsoeuer the wordes be For euerie action must haue a fit and conuenient meanes applied vnto the patient to be doone by but bare wordes Pater nosters auees and creedes characters and figures are no meanes appointed of the Lorde to doe any cures by either vppon men or cattle and therefore if any thing be doone assuredly it is not doone by these thinges as the true working meanes but by the deuill himselfe bléering our eies by these shadowes And this vaine opinion verie Aristotle could mocke and disdaine as absurde and foolish Plinie also with diuers others Que. But howe prooue you by scripture that bare wordes being good words be not forcible to this ende Ans Surely me thinke beside others that example in the acts of the Apostles prooueth it wher we sée those vagabund Iewes there spoken of vsed as good wordes as might be but all to no purpose when the deuill listed not dissemble And therefore we may sée it is not the charme that can doe any thing by vertue of the bare wordes And you can not say that vnto the wordes come any faith and good minde of the charmer for faith leaneth vpon promise and promise annexed to a thing maketh it lawefull but charming hath neither promise in the word nor is allowed but by name expressely forbidden and condemned Que. Yet we see manie thinges are done by it and experience daily confirmeth a contrarie assertion to you Ans True it is and I graunt it that by charmes diuers are healed c. But therefore they were the verie wordes that did it It is no consequence For other meanes might doe it and yet nothing apparant to vs but the charme As a witche may
spéeches in the scriptures against it Let all bitternesse and anger and wrath be put away from you Ephes ● 31 and be ye curteous one towardes an other and tender hearted forgiuing one an other euen as God for Christes sake forgaue you saith the Apostle And againe Be slowe to wrath saith an other Iam. 4.19 For the wrath of man doeth not accomplish the righteousnesse of God That is anger and wrath hindreth Gods worke in vs. Vnto which and a number such other perswasions in the worde the prophane writers by the verie light of reason haue agréeed and sought in their sort to giue men a sight of this foule vice Anger haue they saide is the beginning of madnesse anger is the drunkennesse of the minde anger admitteth not anie good counsell anger is the roote of murther and death with a number such spéeches Que. Foule then I see is this vice in all and especially in a Christian and therefore it were good we knewe howe to auoide it Ans We reade that a king of Thracia being presented with a sort of verie fine glasses by and by brake them all in péeces And being asked the reason answered that hee did it to auoyde the wrath that hee was sure would be in him against them that should breake them afterwarde Howe then are we taught by this king though not euerie way to doe as hee did yet with him to bee carefull to preuent our anger by taking away the occasion The occasions of anger in manie men are plaie and gaming curiositie in dealing and medling taking a matter as they thinke they heard it when indéede they heard it not right nipping woordes and gawling spéeches with a number such which if men will not haue anie care to eschewe then in vaine doe they say they are afraide to let murther into their heartes For in truth the effectes will followe if the ordinarie causes doe goe before Que. Why but is all anger forbidden ●o a Christian Ans No indéede it is as lawfull for a man in time place in his office for a iust cause to be angry in a conuenient measure as it is vnlawfull otherwise And it is apparant by the children of God in all ages the Patriarkes Prophetes Apostles and others whose hearts haue burned with misliking of euill and wordes bewrayed asmuch vnto them Wherefore truly was it sayd of the godly father Nolle irasci vbi irascendum est nolle emendare peccatum est That is for a man not to be angrie whē he should be angry is as much as to be vnwilling to amend what is amisse Que. Proceede nowe I pray you to the other branches Ans Anger as was saide begetteth hatred nay becommeth hatred if it be let to settle For Odium est inueterata ira Hatred is nothing else but olde anger And therefore since anger is apparantly forbidden in this commandement hatred by consequence being festred anger must néedes be much more Besides wee haue heard the wordes of the scripture plaine He that hateth his brother is a mansleaer 1. Iohn 5. Therfore I passe it ouer and come to the fellowe that is euer ioyned with it when it méeteth with a fit subiect to wit Enuie a vice compounded of the hatred of an other for vertue Enuie what it is guiftes fauour honour and such like and of selfe loue which maketh vs gréeue to sée our selues in these thinges excelled of him A vice also of the spirite of God by name forbidden Eate not the meate sayth Solomon of him that hath an euill eie Prou. 23.6 neither desire his dainties Let vs not be desirous of vaine glorie sayth the Apostle prouoking one an other Galat. 5.26 enuying one an other But laying aside all maliciousnesse all guile and dissimulation all enuie and euill speaking 1. Pet. 2.1 as newe borne babes let vs desire the sincere milke of the worde of God that wee may growe thereby Vnto which expresse testimonies if w● ioyne the experience of such euill as en●uie hath wrought we shall plainele sé● the foulnes of it Num. 12.10 Aaron and Miriam en●uied Moyses and the Lord with leprosi● plagued her Corah and his companie enuied him also and the Lorde as abhorred made the earth to shrinke and swallowe them vp quicke with all that they possessed Saul had an eie vpon Dauid for the womens singing and it stirred him still to séeke the life of his sonne and seruant Iosephs brethren enuied him and it almost brought them to his bloudshedding Euerie way therfore is enuie in a Christian poyson and apparantly it falteth against this commaundement It is a possession besides that destroyeth the possessour For as the rust the iron and mothes a garmen so eateth vppe enuie the man that enuieth These thinges make enuie loathsome ynough to a godly minde and yet is there more to bee sayde against it For besides all this enuie as it wisheth an other mans fall so doth it reioyce if it happen vnto him Which also is a thing verie horrible in the eyes of God For hee that mocketh the poore sayth Salomon reprocheth him that made him Prou. 17.5 and hee that reioyceth at destruction shall not be vnpunished Againe Bee thou not glad when thine enemie falleth 24.18 and let not thy heart reioyce when hee stumbleth least the Lorde see it and it displease him and he turne his wrath from him to be auenged of thee To the which wordes of Salomon howe consonant was the practise of Iob testified in that most excellent spéeche of his If I reioyced at his destruction that hateth me Iob. 31. sayeth be or was mooued to ioye when euill came vpon him If I suffred my mouth to sinne by wishing a curse vnto his soule c. Meaning that hee neuer did it neither would doe For it is a fearefull sinne Calamitas illius fores pulsat qui aliorum calamitatibus non mouetur That is Miserie knocketh at his dore of right whose heart sorroweth not to see others in aduersitie And neuer obiect his harde happe to any man could the Gréeke Oratour say for fortune is common to all what is to come is not yet séene Therefore euen this companion of enuie maketh it worse as I hope wée sée and of all that woulde please the Lorde more carefullie to bee shunned To reioyce at the sinnes of an other much more must bee gréeuous if his worldlie estate may not be reioyced at that it is euill Besides when by sinne the Lorde is gréeued and my brother wounded to eternall death what a spirite were it to reioyce Againe consider our selues in comparison with them that offende and either we are better like or worse the two later giue no cause of ioy and the former should fill our heart with praise for our grace giuen of God and not our mouthes with mockes at the infirmitie of others Que. What else is forbidden Ans Last of all as the murther of the heart is forbidden all
our thoughtes offende and what most carefully we are to take héede of Also I further consider the maruelous care and strict regard that euerie Christian man and woman ought to haue of their senses séeing all euill thoughtes are forbidden For it is the eie and the eare that sendeth in sinne in store into our hearts and neuer shall we haue the one reformed vnlesse there be a stable couenaunt made with the other Iob. 31.1 The heart will conceiue wickedly if the eies fréely behoulde vanities But checke the one and ye stay the other maruelouslie And no more quench you the fire by withdrawing the wood than assuredly you staie the course of wicked conceites when you watch and warde well ouer your senses Que. But I pray you what shall wee thinke of dreames which seeme to be sinnefull and we cannot amende them Ans We must consider the causes of them and thereby aswell as we can growe to some right conceit of our offending by them and in them The causes are either inwarde or outwarde and of inwarde either the minde it selfe or the bodie For often doth the minde the bodie sléeping and the senses resting remember those thinges which it waking conceiued and either desired or feared Also the diuerse complexion and temperature of the bodie occasioneth diuers kindes of dreames whereby the physition will guesse the nature of the bodie and causes of disease in the sicke Cholericke men will dreame of fires and downefaules Melancholicke men of monstrous and horrible thinges The phlegmatike of waters and dull matters And the sanguine of pleasant and comfortable euentes The outwarde causes are also diuers as the influence of the heauens the circumstance of elementes necessitie and want some hapning chance and such like Thus doe hungry men dreame of meat drunken men of moysture and so foorth Quae vigilantes cogitauimus ea solent postea dormientibus obuersari sayth one That is Such thinges as waking wee earnestly thought of euen such thinges often wee sleeping dreame of Aucupibus volucres aurigae somnia currus The fouler dreames that birdes he takes And carters cart his visions makes Therefore these things thus knowen and weighed if we dreame wickedly to name no particulars let euerie one consider well what occasion in him selfe he can finde of the same and if his owne disorder either in dyet or spéech or meditation or anie way hath done it then néedeth he none to tell him his conscience is a thousande witnesses hee hath offended Thus answered Gregorie byshoppe of Rome when he was writ vnto for his iudgement of this matter and if I can find in my selfe none of all these to procure it in me yet knowe if it be euill it is a frute of corruption and weigh well the lawe of the Lorde in this behalfe laide downe Plutarch saith Leuit. 15. Honest dreames are an argument of vertue in a man and then me thinke in reason a contrarie effect should bewray a contrarie cause The same man saith Peruersorum somnia semper turbata De virt viti Plutarch Euill mens dremes are cōmonly troublesome But I referre you for more of this to others And this onely I say againe the bodie well ordred and the minde well occupied hardly shall our dreames feare vs for euill Que. What nowe then might be the affirmatiue part of this commaundement Ans If thus wee sée all wandring wayes from vpright integritie be they but euen in thought and that also in the least degrée without any consent to be by this lawe condemned as impure what should we sée on the contrary part to be commanded but euen a full perfect and absolute conformitie both of minde will appetite and whatsoeuer is in man to the lawe of God That which Moses in these words describeth Thou shalt loue the Lorde thy God with all thy heart Deutro 6.5 and with all thy soule and with all thy might Luke 10.27 and our Sauiour Christ doth adde vnto it for plainenesse sake with all thy thought That also which S. Paule describeth thus This is the will of God euen your sanctification 1. Thess 4.7 and that yee should abstaine from fornication that euerie one of you shoulde knowe howe to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour and not in the lust of concupiscence and so foorth From which exact perfection looke howe farre our conscience truely awaked doeth tell vs we are wanting euen so farre accursed stande we before the Lorde for not fulfilling all if wee had not a Sauiour Que. Is there anie punishment outwarde appointed to this lawe Ans No and that because man can not iudge the guilt of hidden heart But it suffiseth to feare any man that feareth any thing to consider that the spiritual punishment allotted vnto it as to the rest is eternall death and endlesse torture both of bodie and soule for euermore in flame of lasting fire Onely one storie that I remember there is recorded of some outwarde execution vppon an inward thought and that is of Glaucus King of Sparta Herodotus who for conceiuing but a thought to retaine Milesius his pledge committed to his kéeping yet not dooing it was vtterly destroyed both he and his and so foretolde by the Oracle whereat he asked counsell The Application LEt vs weigh now well what hath béene sayd I beséech you and neuer spare to speake or feare to confesse if not openly before the worlde yet secretly in our heartes vnto the Lorde what due regarde of passed course compared with this lawe shall make vs sée Though we were able which yet neuer any could but Iesus Christ to stande cleare before the Lorde in all the former preceptes either for déede or thought yet are we neuer able to say wee are cleare of this For consider hath there neuer thought but good crept into that heart of yours within at no time since the day that you were first able to thinke a thought till this present houre weigh it well And what though you haue neuer consented to it yet wo wo vnto vs for consent wee sée neuerthelesse by this lawe of God that we are but gone For here is condemned the verie entrance and beeing of anie vile conceit within vs for any time though vpon some better wakening we repell it and abhorre it and thrust it away without his act And who is able to say he neuer thought awry in the least maner or measure that might be Nay what conscience cryeth not if it be a litle rowsed that in verie fearefull manner measure we haue all herein transgressed and offended Call out our houses and chambers wherein and vnder which we haue liued aske the fieldes the gardens the walles and hedges where we haue often walked summon the seates where we haue sit examine the pillowes whereon our heades could take no rest what guilt against our heartes in this behalfe they well can witnesse euery one of them Shall they not speake first one by one and