Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n john_n lord_n seal_n 3,116 5 8.9038 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A13272 Sermons vpon solemne occasions preached in severall auditories. By Humphrey Sydenham, rector of Pokington in Somerset. Sydenham, Humphrey, 1591-1650? 1637 (1637) STC 23573; ESTC S118116 163,580 323

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

SERMONS VPON Solemne Occasions PREACHED IN Severall Auditories BY HVMPHREY SYDENHAM Rector of Pokington in SOMERSET D. Aug. Serm. 46. de Tempore Multa sunt ora ministeriorum Sermonis gerentium sed unum est os ministros implentis LONDON Printed by IOHN BEALE for Humphrey Robinson and are to be sold at the Signe of the Three Pigeons in PAULS Church-yard M.DC.XXXVII TO THE MOST REVEREND FATHER IN GOD MY VERY GOOD LORD VVILLIAM Lord Arch-Bishop of CANTERBURY his Grace Primate of all ENGLAND and Metropolitane and Chancelour of the Vniversity of OXFORD MOST REVEREND IN matters of Bounty or Benefit received He that speaks thanks Sigratum dixeris omnia dixcris Sen. lib. de Ben. 2. commonly Speakes all The Divine not so His profession requires aswell Devotion as Gratitude and what is onely Acknowledgement in others should be Prayer in him These have made way for this Ambition of mine for so it will be censur'd in seeking your Grace's Patronage to which by your former great Favours and Incouragements I have met with a double staire The one in my first admission to spirituall preferment The other in setling it when it was disturb'd Both these here bound up by a thankfull and zealous obligation in this Tender of my poore Endeavours which though I feare will scarce hold waight in the Scale of your stricter Iudgement yet in that of your Charity They may passe perhaps with a Graine or two as oftentimes light peeces doe and so vindicate me from the imputation of that loose and lazie Ignorance which the very Spirit of Ignorance would put upon me where Vociferation is cried-up for Industrie and Faction for Holinesse and a bitter and unbridled Zeale for sound knowledge But notwithstanding the foaming of those muddie waters Springs may runne cleare and I doubt not but Mine shall if they finde a Current in your Graces Protection with whom though in the most Criticall and envious Eye All things are cleare and pure without the least taint or tincture of corruption like waters in their own Source and Fountaine yet the Waters of Marah have been round about you and no doubt but your Grace hath had a taste no lesse than others of that Hierarchy of their Gall of Bitternesse Witnes their divine Tragedies and impudent Appeales their late Curranto's Acts 8.23 and Legends of Ipswich and since I know not by what poore Haberdasher of smal wares Their Looking glasse for Lordly Prelates In which they have not so much wounded the particular Honours of eminent and learned men as strucke through the sides of Religion it selfe in blemishing the outward face of the Church not onely by obtruding to her her former Spots and Moles as what Church was ever yet without them but over-spreading it with a kinde of Leprosie And so insteed of being blacke Cant. 1.5 like the Tents of Kedar They would make her uglie like the Tent of Korah thereby exposing her to the scornefull eyes of her enemies abroad and if possibly of her owne Sonnes at home Now if bold men dare thus play with the very Beard of Aaron Psal 133.2 what will they doe to the Skirts of his Rayment If the goodly Oake and the Cedar be thus beaten on with their Tempests what shall become of the slender Firre Tree and the poore Shrub of the valley If Schismaticall hands be catching at the Mytre and the Rotchet how will they rend the contemptible Hood and Surplesse Certainely if the maine Pillars and Buttresses of the Church be once shaken the weather-beaten Tiles and Rafters will be tumbling about their eares However in despight of the envious Basiliske Psalm 57.4 this poyson of the Aspe and Gall of the viper the speares and arrowes and sharpe Swords of these holy Libellers O blessed for ever be the God of Heaven and under him here His God of earth Ezra 7.6 a most Gratious Soveraigne Ezra is in high Favour and The King hath granted him all his requests according to the hand of the Lord his God upon him So that your Grace is still above danger and shot-free of their Power though not of their Envie which no doubt is curst enough but that her hornes are short and if they were not I might appositely enough bring home That to your fatherly Care of the Church here a word onely or two exchang'd which in the like case S. Ierom did to the learned Bishop of Hippo the great Repairer of the primitive Faith In orbe celebraris Canonici Te Epist 57. D. Aug. circa sinem Conditorem antiquae rursum Fidei venerantur quod signum majoris eft gloriae omnes Schismatici detestantur Tuos pari persequuntur odio ut quos Gladio nequeunt voto intersiciant Pardon this Digression most Reverend Father Obscure men may without offence deplore the miseries they cannot redresse Those that are more eminent may doe both A Generall Harmony aswell in Doctrine as in Discipline is yet wanting in the publike practice of our Church though not in the Principles thereof which is the maine Anvile most of my Sermons hammer on where though you shall meete belike with much dust and rubbish yet there is a way begunne to a richer Myne which more elaborate and higher wits may dig after if they please And as in publike Vineyards there are tàm Vvae quàm Labruscae here a wilde Grape there a Greene one yonder a Third in its full bloud more ripened for your Palate So it is in this mixture of my labours according to the disposition of their severall Dedications where though every peece may finde an Incourager None a Vindicator justly but in a religious and learned Metropolitan to whose Gracious hands are in all obedience offered These and all the Powers of Your Graces most obliged Honourer and Servant HVM SYDENHAM THE WEL-TVNED CYMBALL OR A Vindication of the moderne Harmony and Ornaments in our Churches AGAINST The Murmurings of their discontented OPPOSERS A SERMON Occasionally preached at the Dedication of an ORGAN lately set up at Bruton in Sommerset By Humphrey Sydenham PSAL. 150. v. 4 5. Laudate Dominum in Chordis Organo laudate eum in Cymbalis Iubilationis LONDON Printed by IOHN BEALE for Humphrey Robinson at the Signe of the Three Pigeons in PAULS Church-yard 1637. TO MY HONOURABLE Friend JOHN COVENTRY Esquire Sonne to the Right Honorable THOMAS Lord COVENTRY Baron of Alesborough and Lord Keeper of the Great SEALE of England SIR I Presume a musicall Discourse can neither bee improper nor unseasonable for him that hath so much harmony in himselfe that holds such a consonancy with the practice of the Church he lives in And this is both your happinesse and your ayme Too many there are which imploy their wit and greatnesse a contrary way and delight altogether in the jarring of the string as if there were no Melody but in Discords but such are not within your fingering nor indeed your fancie knowing that a Song