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A46991 A collection of the works of that holy man and profound divine, Thomas Iackson ... containing his comments upon the Apostles Creed, &c. : with the life of the author and an index annexed.; Selections. 1653 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640.; Oley, Barnabas, 1602-1686.; Vaughan, Edmund. 1653 (1653) Wing J88; Wing J91; ESTC R10327 823,194 586

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England under William Rufus whose conditions were such that whosoever would give enough might have whatsoever lay in his power to grant Their estate in England during other three Kings raign until Richard the first yields little matter of observation this people hate had not as yet broken out against them but was all this time in gathering and after their first planting here they were to have a time to bring forth fruit for others to eat a time to gather wealth for others to spend as Moses had foretold 8 Most miserable in the mean time was their estate throughout the Eastern Empire as one of their own Writers Benjamin Tudelensis who went on Pilgrimage to visit his Country-men wheresoever dispersed throughout the world complaineth of their general hard usage amongst the Graecians instancing in such as were seated about Constantinople within whose wals they might not come but upon occasion of publick commerce or business in which case they were allowed passage onely by Boat having their habitation as it were in an Island Amongst two thousand of this servile Congregation there residing not one permitted to come on horse-back save only Solomon the Emperours Physitian whose exaltation perhaps not fourteen handfuls above ground was held as a publik grace of the whole Nation the chief solace of that miserable and servile usage which all the rest without difference good or bad did sustain dayly beat and scourged in the open streets Yet must we believe this Relator That these Jews were wealthy good and merciful men observant of the Law such as could patiently endure this miserable captivity But Patience perforce according to the Proverb is no Patience If GOD had granted them ability or opportunity they had quickly shewed their Jewish minds by Jewish actions And why he keepeth them continually under unwilling to hear their cry though They cannot we Christians may easily perceive the cause For so his Prophet Samuel had fore-told And ye shall cry out at that day because of your King whom ye have chosen you and the Lord will not hear you at that day Which words as a learned convert Jew rightly observeth were not fulfilled in Samuels time whose opinions may be fortified by these reasons 9 Samuels authority over that people was not so strictly linked with GODS but that they might reject the one for their present Judge still retaining the other for their supream Lord and who can deny that the God of their Fathers did rule over them in Davids Solomons Jehoshaphats and Ezekiahs times Sin no doubt they did in abandoning Gods Priest and Prophet to follow the fashions of other Nations in submitting themselves unto a King And Samuel like a good Physitian forewarneth them of that incurable disease which this new-fangle and intemperate act did even then Prognosticate whose Fatal Crisis notwithstanding did not insue until they overgrown with desperate wilful and intemperate malice had rejected Hint with open mouth who was both Priest and Prophet and their lawful King whose kingdom was not of this world whose Soveraignty was so united with the divine Majesty that in casting him away they could not but cast off God that he should not reign over them 10 Again before that time God alwayes heard their cry and redeemed them from all Forrain Bondage and such as Samuel there describeth was neither general nor perpetual under their own Kings neither did the best of such use any nor the worst all or most part of the natural Israelites in such sort as he there threatneth yet all the miseries there threatned 1 Sam. 8. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17. have been since accomplished in full measure if I may so speak in length breadth and profundity First this Servi●●●y hath been extended over All the Nation without exception Secondly the continuance of it hath been exceeding long and perpetual without interruption and so must continue until they confesse their forefathers rebellion and acknowledge him for their King whom rejecting they rejected God for he that will not so honour the Son cannot Honour the Father as King Lastly those marks of servility set forth by Samuel have been so deeply imprinted in this generation rejected of GOD that his Prophecy compared with Modern Histories concerning them will seem but as Painted Wounded men in a cloth of Arrasse to the bleeding reliques of a scattered vanquished army For neither under any Caesar though they made choice of Caesar for their King nor under any other Kings or States have they lived as Free-denizons capable of publick Office or Honour the best of them are but as slaves prohibited to use the meanest of Christians so The most of them as Samuel fore-told are admitted in Common-wealths for manual services or other handy-crafts imployments Captains I think none of them have been unlesse perhaps in some desperate services many of them in greater Cities are suffered to follow Merchandize that they may serve the State as Spunges alwayes surer to be squeezed for the moysture they have sucked then to be nourished by it Sundry of them are curious Artificers and professe ingenious Trades like silly Silk-worms permitted to exercise their skill in precious stuff to fill Princes Coffers and find their Countries cloathing 11 The possession offields and Vineyards hath not been so usual amongst this people as their spoil amongst such as possessed any so this Jew relateth it as a special prerogative of Calonymus the son of Theodorus both in their life-times chief of the Synagogue in Narbona and lineally descended as he pretendeth from David that he might quietly possesse the fruits of his grounds The Princes it seemeth of that and like places did take other Jews fields and vineyards and best Olive trees and gave them unto their servants rather tything then taking the tenth of their seed and Vineyards for that usually was the Jews part the other nine as Samuel foretold 1 Sam. 8. 14 15 16. fell unto Princes Officers lot 12 But the greater these dispersed sons os Isaac Servility was the more it commendeth the fidelity of Gods word concerning the sons of Rechab who as this Author relateth live united in form of a Kingdom or Nation not subject to any forrain yoak rather able to offend their neighbours then likely to receive harms from them Their estate to this Authors dayes continued such as they themselves acknowledged unto Jeremy Onely experience it seemeth had taught them to build Cities for their better security against the incursion of forrainers which was not against their oath in case of necessity as appeareth from Jeremy 35. 9 10 11 12. Because in other points they have obeyed the commandment of Jonadab their Father and kept his precepts and done according to all that he had commanded them therefore Jonadab hath not wanted a man to stand before him until this day that is their estate hath continued such as their Father left them much better then the estate of Abrahams Sons by Sarah Though
mindes willing enough to save them but durst not venture their bodily presence for their rescue Albeit the manner of the Christians proceeding against them be usually such as none but Jews would justifie yet this is an evident Argument that the Lord of lords and King of kings hath ordained them to suffer wrong whom the greatest powers in such civil States as Germany France and England are cannot right For although the Palsgrave with some others inclining unto them had taken their protection upon them in these last Persecutions yet even this pity whether true or pretended did cause their further wrongs by grievous exactions for maintaining the war begun in their defence So strangely doth the wisdom of God bring that to passe which his servant Moses had foretold Deut. 28. 29. Thou shalt not prosper in thy wayes thou shalt never but be oppressed with wrong and be polled evermore and no man shall succour thee Even ●…r it self by their distempered appetites is turned into Sorrow Though all Christian Kings and States should conspire together for their weal yet as I said before they will conceive mischief and bring forth their own destruction by ●…ing out into such shameful Acts as deserve grievous punishment in sight of God and man So in the year 1410. they go about their wonted practise of crucifying a Christian childe in contumely of our Saviour Christ but their intent being known before they had opportunity of acting it the Marquesse of Misna and Land-grave of Turing find room enough for their coyn in their cossers but leave none for them stript naked of all they had within any part of their dominions Or if they do sometimes that which in it self is good they do it with such malicious mindes that God gives them but the reward of wickednesse So in the year 1421. for furnishing the poor Christians of Bohemia with money munition against their Antichristian persecutors they were generally imprisoned throughout Bevere quite bereft of all their money and coyn and lastly banished all the dominions belonging to Frederick Duke of that Province Nor doth their in bred spight to Christians or their plagues due thereunto wear out in that age For in the year 1497. they were burnt at Stenneberge in the Province of Stargardia for their wonted violence and indignities offered to the blessed Eucharist 15 Thus much of their estate in England France and Germany until the year 1500. Of their estate in Germany since if God permit elsewhere because it yields matter of distinct observation from the former Now briefly to acquaint the Reader with so much of their affairs in Spain as may testifie some other parts of Moses his prophecie in the forementioned place In the year 1482. the measure of their iniquitie was grown so full that this land could not bear it and they themselves become so abominable to Ferdinand and Isabel his Queen that none of this seed must stay within their dominions unlesse they will become Christians as sundrie of larger possessions amongst them in outward Profession did the rest were scattered thence into other Countries most into Portugal welcome for their money to sojourn there a certain time after which as many as were found in Portugal were there to remain as slaves unto the King such as would were to be transported at his cost and charges The King himself unlesse Orosius be partial for him was careful to perform his promise to secure them of peace during their abode and of safe passage at the time appointed But the Marriners having once gotten them aboard did make their ships as so many prisons or houses of torture to wrest wealth out of their hands lengthning the time by circular and unnecessarie turnings back and forth until the Jews had quite spent all their provision afterwards enforced to buy their food and other necessaries of the Marriners at what rate they pleased And not content with spoil of their goods they abuse the bodies of their wives and daughters to their lust not pleasant enough unlesse sauced with other contumelies and indignities practized upon their Fathers and Husbands Finally by these marriners too much thinking that their passengers were Jews and might be used accordingly they forget that they themselves were Christians and stain that sacred profession with all manner of base villany and impietie Partly through this delay in shipping over the first company partly through the abuses done unto them so shameful that the fame thereof was brought unto their fellows ears by the wind which served the Marriners back to Portugal the later sort remaining in expectation of safe passage either could not or would not be transported at the day appointed and so by their staying become captives to John then King of Portugal But Emanuel his successour not long after sets them free using all other fair means to bring them unto Christ until Ferdinand and Isabel his confederates solicit these ill-thriving plants ejection out of Portugal as unfit to settle in any Christian soil After long debatement with his counsellers for their exile or stay the fresh examples of their expulsion by so many other Christian Kings and Princes did move Emanuel to their imitation So that either they must avoid his dominions by a certain day or else remain there either free-men in Christ or slaves and Captives unto him as many of them did against their wils not able to provide themselves of shipping having but one port at last allowed them for their passage whereas at the first promulgation of the Kings Edict against them they had choice of three The greatnesse of their number best appearing by their confluence about the day appointed for their passage moved the good King with compassion to see so many thousand souls should desperately run the wayes of death and seeing no hope of diseasoning the old and withered stocks fit fewel for everlasting flames he was the more desirous to recover some of their young and tender grafts by watering them with the water of grace and for this purpose gives strict commandment that all their children under fourteen years of age should be taken from their Jewish parents and trained up in the School of Christ This sodain and unexpected divorce though intended in compassion of the children brought greater miserie on the Parents then if their own flesh had been torn from their bones There a man so his heart would have served him might have seen silly infants haled from their mothers breasts more willing to embrace death then part with them And yet for pittie lest their hands by holding fast might prove their childrens racks suffering them to be drawn out of their tender Embracements with far more grief and sorrow of heart then they had been brought out of the womb Fathers enclasping their sons and daughters willing to die in their arms had these beat off as hoopes from vessels which they environ from their childrens bodies and either broken or benummed with blowes A
custome before any other businesse discourse or care of Himself were he never so wet or weary to call for a retiring room to pour out his soul unto God who led him safely in his journey And this he did not out of any specious pretence of Holiness to devour a Widows House with more facility Rack their Rents or Enhance their Fines for excepting the constant Revenue to the Founder to whom he was a strict accountant no man ever did more for them or less for himself For thirty years together he used this following Anthem and Collect commanded by the Pious Founder in Honour and Confession of the Holy and Undivided Trinity Salva nos Libera nos Vivifica nos O Beata Trinitas c. Save us Deliver us Quicken us O Blessed Trinity Let us praise God the Father and the Son with the Holy Spirit let us praise and Super-exalt his Name for ever Almighty and everlasting God which hast given unto us thy servants Grace by the Confession of a true Faith to acknowledge the Glory of the Eternal Trinity and in the Power of the Divine Majesty to Worship the Unity We beseech thee that through the stedfastness of this Faith we may evermore be defended from all Adversitie which livest and raignest c. This he did perform not onely as a Sacred Injunction of the Founder upon him and all the Society but he received a great Delight in the performance of it No man ever wrote more highly of the Attributes of God then he and yet he professes that he alwaies took more comfort in admiring then in disputing and in praying to and acknowledgeing the Majesty and Glory of the Blessed Trinite then by too curiously prying into the Mysterie He Composed a Book of Private Devotions which some judicious men having perused the same much Extolled and Admired as being replenished with Holy Raptures and Divine Meditations which if it be not already annexed to this Book I hope the Reader will shortly enjoy in a Portable Volume by it self Thus have many other Famous Scholars and Polemical men in their Elder times betaken themselves to Catechizing and Devotion as Pareus Bishop Andrews Bishop Usher and Bellarmin himself seems to prefer his Book De Ascensione Mentis ad Deum Of the Ascension of the Soul to God before any other part of his Works Books saies he are not to be estimated Ex multitudine foliorum sed ex fructibus By the multitude of the Leaves but the Fruit. My other Books I read onely upon necessity but this I have willingly read over three or four times and resolve to read it more often whether it be saies he that the Love towards it be greater then the Merit because like another Benjamin it was the Son of mine old age He seemed to be very Prophetical of the Ensuing times of trouble as may evidently appear by his Sermons before the King and Appendix about the signs of the Times or Divine Fore-warnings therewith Printed some years before touching the Great Tempest of Wind which fell out upon the Eve of the Fifth of November 1636. He was much astonished at it and what apprehension he had of it appears by his words This mighty Wind was more then a Sign of the Time the very Time it self was a Sign and portends thus much That though we of this Kingdom were in firm League with all Nations yet it is still in Gods Power we may fear in his Purpose to plague this Kingdom by this or like tempests more grievously then he hath done at any time by Famin Sword or Pestilence to bury many living souls as well of Superiour as of Inferiour Rank in the Ruin of their stately Houses or meaner Cottages c. Which was observed by many but signally by the Prefacer to M. Herberts Remains I shall not prevent the Reader or detain him so long from the Original of that Book as to repeat the Elogies which are there conferred upon Him I cannot forbear one passage in that Preface wherein he makes this profession I speak it in the presence of God I have not read so hearty vigorous a Champion against Rome amongst our writers of his rank so convincing and demonstrative as D. Jackson is I bless God for the confirmation which he hath given me in the Christian Religion against the Athean Jew and Socinian and in the Protestant against Rome As he was alwaies a Reconciler of differences in his Private Government so he seriously lamented the Publick Breaches of the Kingdom For the Divisions of Reuben he had great Thoughts of Heart At the first Entrance of the Scots into England he had much compassion for his Countrymen although that were but the beginning of their Sorrows He well knew that War was commonly attended with Ruin and Calamity especially to Church and Church-men and therefore that Prayer was necessary and becoming of them Da pacem Domine in diebus nostris c. Give peace in our time O Lord because there is no other that fighteth for us but onely thou O God One drop of Christian blood though never so cheaply spilt by others like water upon the ground was a deep Corrosive to his tender heart Like Rachel weeping for her children he could not be comforted His body grew weak the chearful hue of his countenance was impaled and discoloured and he walked like a dying Mourner in the streets But God took him from the evil to come It was a sufficient Degree of punishment for him to foresee it it had been more then a thousand Deaths unto him to have beheld it with his Eyes When his Death was now approaching being in the chamber with many others I overheard him with a soft voice repeating to himself these and the like Ejaculations I wait for the Lord my Soul doth wait and in his Word do I hope my Soul waiteth for the Lord more then they that watch for the morning As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness And he ended with this Cygnean Cantion Psal 116. 5. Gracious is the Lord and righteous yea our God is merciful The Lord preserveth the simple I was brought low and he helped me Return unto thy Rest O my Soul for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee And having thus spoken soon after he surrendered up his Spirit to Him that gave it If you shall curiously enquire what this Charitable man left in Legacie at his death I must needs answer that giving all in his Life time as he owed nothing but Love so he left nothing when he Dyed The Poor was his Heir and he was the Administrator of his own Goods or to use his own Expression in one of his last Dedications he had little else to leave his Executors but his Papers onely which the Bishop of Armagh being at his Funerals much desired might be carefully preserved This was that which he left to Posterity in pios usus for
Melody and joy at their Destructions yet we assure our selves and ye might dread Gods further Judgement by the event it was the Cry of their innocent Bloud which fill'd the Court of Heaven and in a just revenge of their Oppression procured Luthers Commission for Germanies Revolt And yet say you Luther was the Cause of Dissention in Christs Church why so Because he burst your former Unity whose only Bond was Hellish Tyrannie Of such a dissention and of the breach of such an Unity we grant he was the Cause and you have no just cause to accuse him of dissention or disobedience for it For all kind of Unity is not to be preferred before all kind of Dissention or Revolt He that will not dissent from any man or society of men upon any Occasion whatsoever must live at perpetual Enmity with his God and War continually against his own Soul For there is an Unity in Rebellion a Brotherhood in Mischief a Society in Murther both of Body and Soul Wherefore unlesse you can prove your Cause or Title for exacting such absolute submission of mens souls and spirits unto your Church or Popes Decrees to be most just and warrantable by Commission from the Highest Power in Heaven Luther and all that followed him did well in preferring a most just most necessary and sacred War before a most unjust and shamefully-execrable Peace A Peace no Peace but a banding in open Rebellion against the Supream Lord of Heaven and Earth and his Sacred Laws given for the perpetual Government of Mankind throughout their generations 4 To presse you a little with your Objections against us and our Doctrine for nourishing dissention Our Church say you hath no Means of taking up Controversies aright If this were true yet God be praised it ministreth no just occasion of any dangerous Quarrel But be ours as it may be hath your Church any better Means for composing Controversies of greatest moment that raign this day throughout the Christian World Or doth it not by this insolent proud tyrannical claim of Soveraigntie and imperial Umpiership over all other Churches in all Controversies give just cause of the greatest dissention and extremest Opposition that can be imagined could be given in the Church of Christ The whole world besides cannot minister any like it Nature and common Reason teach us that a man may with far safer Conscience take arms in defence of his Life and Liberty then in hope to avoid some pettie loss or grievance or to revenge some ordinary cause of private discontent the Quarrel in the one though with resistance unto our Adversaries bloud may be justifiable which in the other albeit within the compasse of lesse danger were detestable But Grace doth teach us this Equitie Skin for Skin all that ever a man hath the whole world and more if he had it is to be spent in the defence of Faith the only seat of our Spiritual Life or for the Libertie of our Conscience You alone teach that all men should submit their Faith to your Decrees without examination of them or appeal from them we usurp no such Authoritie either over yours or any mens Consciences You challenge our Soveraign Lord and all his People to be your ghosily Slaves we only stand in our own defence we exact to such absolute Service or Allegeance either of you or any other the meanest Christian Church no nor our Prince and Clergie of the natural members of our own They only seek would God they sought aright in time to keep them short at home whose long reach might hale over Sea your long-sought Tyrannie over this People of Brittany happily now divided Lord ever continue this happy Division from the Romish world Unlesse your Means of taking up so great Contentions as hence in equitie ought to arise be so superexcellent that it can make amends where all is marred for which I cannot see what Means can be sufficient unlesse you either let your Suit fall or prove your Title to be most just by Arguments most Authentick and strong you evidently impose a necessitie of the greatest Contentions and extremest Opposition that any abuse or wrong losse or danger possibly to befall a Christian man either as a Man or Christian either in things of this life or that other to come either concerning his very Life and Libertie whether Temporal or Spiritual or whatsoever else is more dear unto him can occasion of breed 5 That which ye usually premise to work such a prejudice in credulous and unsetled minds as may make your sleight pretences of Reason or Scripture to be sifted anone seem most firm and solid to ground you Infallibility upon is the supposed Excellency of it for taking up all Controversies in Religion and so of retaining Unitie of Holy Catholick Faith in the Bond of Love If indeed it were so excellent for this purpose you might rest contented with it and heartily thank God for it Yea but because you have this excellent Means which we have not nor any like unto it yours is the true Catholick Church and ours a congregation of Schismaticks What if we would invent the like would that serve to make ours a true Church Or tell us what Warrant have you for inventing or establishing your supposed most excellent Order for taking up Controversies Was it from Heaven or was it from Men If from Heaven we will obey it if from Men we will imitate you in it if we like it But first let us a little further examin it CAP. XXVIII That of two Senses in which the Excellency of the Romish Churches pretended Means for retaining the Unity of Faith can only possibly be defended The one from the former discourse proved apparently False The other ●… self as palpably Ridiculous 1 WHen you affirm the Infallibility of your Church to be so excellent a Means for taking up all Controversies in Religion you have no choice of any other but one of these two Meanings Either you mean It is so excellent a means de facto and doth take up all Controversies or else it would be such as might take up all if all men would subscribe unto It. 2 If you take the former Sense or meaning we can evidently take you as we say with the very manner of Falshood For this claim of such Authoritie as we partly shewed before is the greatest eye-sore to all faithful eyes that can be imagined and makes your Religion more irreconcilable to the Truth And for this Church of England as in it some dissent from you in many Points others in fewer some more in one some more in another so in this of your Churches Infallibility all of us dissent from you most evidently most eagerly without all hope of Reconcilement or agreement unlesse you utterly disclaim the Title in as plain terms as hitherto you have challenged it Your dealing herein is as absurdly impious and impiously insolent as if any Christian Prince or State should
32. 3 Of their Estate from this Accident till three hundred years after nothing memorable hath come unto my reading dishonourable it was in that their name throughout this time seemes quite put out miserable we may presume it in that their wonted curse is not expired but rather increased in ages following in which we have expresse distinct undoubted records 4 About the year one thousand they were so vexed throughout most parts of Europe that as Moses had foretold and my Author little thinking of Moses speeches expresly notes They could find no rest A company of them seated about Orleans out of their Divelish Policy addresse an Embassageto to the Prince of Babylon advertising him that the Christians in these Western parts were joyning forces to assault him hoping hereby to make him invade Christendom by whose broils they expected either better security from wonted dangers or fitter opportunity of fishing for gain in troubled streams But the tenour of their Embassage being either known or suspected by the Christians the Embassadour upon his return was called in question convict and sentenced to the Fagot Nor could the hainousnesse of the Fact be expiated by his death the rest of his Country-men generally presumed to be as treacherous when occasion served were made away without any Formal course of Law by Fire Water Sword or what instrument of death came next to hand This fury of Christians raging against them as far as the fame of their villany was spred which was quickly blazed throughout Europe 5 Ere this time Ismael was come to his full growth and his posterity having prosecuted their old broken title to the Land of Promise through their division had left the possession of it to the Turk and so far is Isaacs seed from all hope of possessing the good things thereof that the very love which Christians the true seed of Abraham bare unto these Lovely dwellings of Jacob breeds his ungratious posterities Wo unto whom the inheritance belonged For no expedition either made or intended by Christians for recovering Jewry from the Turk and Saracens but bringeth one Plague or other upon the Jew so provident is this People to procure their own mischief and as it were to anticipate Gods Judgements upon themselves by such Devices as their former Embassage whose effect was to hasten the Sacred War which in the Age following undertaken upon other occasions more then doubles all their wonted miseries For it being intended against the Turk and Saracen these other Infidels were apprehended as a fit subject for such Souldiers as were indeed bent for Asia and the Holy Land to practise licentious hostile Outrages upon by the way Others again made a shew of setting forward against the Turks or Saracens of Asia intending indeed onely to spoil the Jews of Europe Unto which purpose that worthy Edict of the Claremont Councel ministred this occasion 6 The joynt consent of Bishops and others there assembled testified aloud in these Termes Deus vult Deus vult having found as it seems some lavish commendations as if it had been the Voice of God and not of Man brought forth a Rumor of a voice from heaven calling Europaeans into Asia The report was not so vain as the people of those times credulous For beside such as were appointed or would have been approved by the Councel huge multitudes of all sorts conditions and sexes run like Hounds to the false Hallow some pretending the Holy Ghosts presence in visible shape Amongst the rest one Emicho with a great band of his Country-men gathered from the banks of Rhein having ranged as far as Hungary and there either despairing of his hoped prey in Asia or onely using this expedition generally countenanced by Christian Princes as a fair pretence to catch some Booty nearer home falleth upon the Jews about that Country compelling them either to live Christians or die Besides the spoil of their goods twelve thousand of their persons were slain by Emicho and his complices as the Annals of these Countries do testifie The like had been practised a little before by one Codescalcus a Dutch Priest who had perswaded the King of Hungary that it was a charitable deed to kill these uncharitable Jews until his beastly life did discredit his doctrine and Christians begun to feel the harms of such licentious Pilgrimages after the Jews being exhausted could not satisfie his and his followers greedy appetites 7 About the same Age Petrus Cluniacens●s directeth a Parenetical discourse unto Lewis the French King for furtherance of his intended Expedition against the Saracens shewing him withall a ready means of maintaining his army making the perfidious Jews purchase their lives with losse of their goods But more vehement if not more Jewish was Rodulphus Vilis the German Monk delivering it in Sermons as sound Doctrine throughout both Germanies that for the better supply of the sacred war which Christians he thought were bound in conscience to undertake the Jews being as great enemies to Christianity as the Saracens were might not onely be robbed of all their goods but ought to be put to death by Christians as a good Omen to their future successe against the Saracens And unlesse Saint Bernard with other grave Divines of that Age had sounded a Counter-blast to this Furious Doctrine both by mouth and pen this Monks prescript had been practised generally throughout Germany ready enough to hold on as she had begun to evacuate her self of Jewish bloud alwayes apprehended by that people as the worst humour in their body politick Many such general Massacres have been intended against them in divers Countries but God still raised up one or other to solicit their Cause because he hath an ear continually unto the Psalmists Petition not so much for Theirs as Christians good Slay them not lest my people forget it but scatter them abroad by thy power Psal 59. 11. Unlesse God had given them such trembling hearts and sorrowful minds as Moses had fore-told through Germany France and other Countries they had not been scattered so soon through this Island whither they were first brought from France by him that brought many grievances thence unto this Nation But the evil which he intended hath God turned to our good For Gods Israel planted here until this day may hear and fear his Heavy Judgement manifested upon these Jews in the time of our fore-fathers albeit at their first coming they found some breathing from their wonted persecutions But so prodigious is all appearance of prosperity in such as God hath cursed that these Jews hopes of ease and welfare are an infallible Symptome of great distemper in the publick state wherein they live Twice onely I find in all the Legend of their wandring they had obtained some freedom and hopes of flourishing in the Lands where they were scattered once in France in the time of Theodebert and Theoderick when sacred orders as you heard before were set to sale Once in