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A06660 A brief and compendiouse table, in a maner of a concordaunce openyng the waye to the principall histories of the whole Bible, and the moste co[m]mon articles grounded and comprehended in the newe Testament and olde, in maner as amply as doeth the great concordau[n]ce of the Bible. Gathered and set furth by Henry Bollynger, Leo Iude, Conrade Pellicane, and by the other ministers of the church of Tygurie. And nowe first imprinted in Englyshe. D.M.L. [sic] The third boke of the Machabees a booke of the Bible also prynted vnto this boke which was neuer before translated or prynted in any Englyshe Bible. The contents of this booke are conteyned in the next leafe. Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575.; Juda, Leo, 1482-1542. aut; Pellicanus, Konrad, 1478-1556. aut; Lynne, Walter. 1550 (1550) STC 17117; ESTC S102763 104,729 292

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xxv a xxxi a xxxvij c. lxxi a Roman ix d v.a. c. chapter 1 Zurich part A Dan. xi b. WHen Philopater had vnderstande by thoos that were comen agayne that Antiochus had taken frō hym suche holdes as he had he raysed all hys army aswell fote men as horsemen and taking with him his sister Arsinoe he ranne out euen affare as the countries of Raphia that were borderynge vpon hym where Antiochus host camped And one Theodotus thynkynge to brynge the matter to passe by craftye traines when he hadde taken the strongest men of armys that were put vnto hym by Ptolomeus in the night he gat him to Ptolomeus tent to kyll hym vnwares and so make an end of the battel But Dositheus called the sonne of Drimilius a Iewe borne and afterwardes forsakyng the Lawe and tourned from hys fathers ordinaūces whiche was hired for the purpose put in hys steede in the tente an other poore man which chaunsed to be slayn for him And as they fought fearcely together But Antiochus moare Arsinoe went diligently about her men wering pitifully her heare about her shuldars and desyred them that they would healpe her valiauntly promisinge to gy●… vnto euery of there wiues and children yf the had the vyctory two poundes of golde Thys is chaunsed that there enemies were ouer thrownen and many taken Then whan he hadde thus dysapointed there traines he went about the cities that were next and thought to cōfort them wyth wordes whiche when he had done he gaue * 3. Macha h. gyftes vnto ther churches and conforted the subiectes hartes part B And when the Iewes had sent the elders of there counsailours to Philopater to salute hym berynge gyftes and to shewe there for the thyngs that he hadde done it fortuned that he hadd a greater desyre to go to theym assone as might be So he came to Ierusalem and dyd sacrifice to the moste myghtye God and whē he had done he dyd to the place as was conuenient * Mathe. xxiiij.a. Luk. xxi a. Mar. xii a. And after when he was come in he wondred to see the costly worcke and meruelynge at the fine buyldynge of the temple he desyred to go also into the innar tabernacle that was holiest of all But when they denyed hym sayenge it was not leafull no not to eny that were borne there to go in not so much as for the priestes them selues saue only for the cheaffe byshop * Exo. xxx b. Leui. xvi g. Heb. ix a that but onse in the yere onlye yet woulde he not betourned one wyth And when they reade vnto him the law yet would he not cease but said he mult nedes go in And al though this honor was denied vnto thē yet the it ought not to be so vnto him axed thē why no mā yet stopped him frō going in to eny tēples And whē one had made answere vnaduisedlye that they did well because they did not but this quoth he shall be done let the cause what so eny the lyst he would in whither they would or not part C Zurich part B * ij Mach iij. c And when the pryestes hadde fallen with there faces vpō the ground and were in all there vestimentes and prayed vnto the highest god to helpe them in there moste nede and that he woulde put awaye his strenght that threatened to hurt them had filled the temple with cryeng and weapinge the rest that were in the cytye beyng greatly amased not knowyng what hadde happened came out as fast as they could Virgens that were in the chaumbers women in child bed ran forth casting dust vpon there heddes and filling the streat with morning and lamentacion And the banners that they had a lytle before prepared to go meat hym forgettynge the maner that be came them they bare them about the cytye and forsakynge the young infantes bothe mothers merses ran wanderinge about the streates some one waye some another into the hyghe temple and beynge gathered together striued diuersly agaynste those thynges whyche he wyckedly wente aboute part D Besides this the cityzens moued wyth bouldnes woulde not suffer hym to rushe in and accomplesh hys purpose but toke them to there weapons and wyth great cryes redy to suffer death they styrred vp a great busynes in that place but yet remoued back by the priestes and seniores they came agayne to earth part B * ij Par vi a. vij c hast chosē this city and hast halowed thys place to honor the in all though that thou hast nede of nothing and haste made it goodly to be sene to thyne owne prayse glory of thy great and riall name For the loue also of the house of Israell thou haste promysed that when we haue arred wherby troubles shoulde come vpon vs yf we come in to thys place to praie that thou wilt heare our praiers And verely thou art faythfull and full of trouth And by cause thou hast often holpen our forfathers * Read Iudicum the whole boke ouer whē they haue byne oppressed wyth trouble And hast delyuered them out of great perels now also beholde O holy kinge that we for our many great sinnes be pressed and in our enemies subiectiō faule doune in or misery for lack of strenght and that thys stouberne and vnclene person goeth aboute to defyle thy holy place whych is dedicat here in the earth to thy holy name for other wyse thy house is in heauen a place that nomā can come vnto I saye bethou cause of thyne awne good wyll that hast gyuen thys glory to thy people in dedicatynge thys place vnto the laye not to our charg the vnclenlinesse of thees men nor correct vs for the vnhalowing of that thees wicked persons may not bost in there mindes and a vaunce with there tounges that they haue destroied our holy tēple as they do treade vnder foot all other temples that thou hatest put out our sinnes strypke awaie our fawtes and nowe shewe thy mercye Lett vs haue thy mercye shortelye and make the monthes of them that be fallen and broken prayse the and geue vs peace Then he that seeth all thynges and God of al the most holiest hearing there lawful prayer driuynge hym hether and thether whyche was puffed vp by vyolence and great stoubernes euen as the wynd doth the read dyd so scourge hym that now he laie vpon the ground meate for nothynge losed in all the partes of the body and iustly wrapped in punyshemente was not able to speake one worde Wherfore hys frendes and gard that kept hys body beholdynge hys sodeyn punyshemente where wyth he was oppressed fearynge also least he woulde dye Sryken wyth great feare they droue hym out And after when he was come again to him selfe al though he was punyshed yet repented he nothinge but went hys wayes and treatened them sore so when he was comē agayne in to Egypt as we by hys owne encrease