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

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soule and never eateth with pleasure Neverthelesse they sleepe both a like in the earth and the wormes cover them Thus are they both confounded and worthily combined together Yea here Thersites the deformed Nircus the most beautifull as the very Gréeke Poets say are worthily compared as touching their bodies Next to this such are also the confusions and euents of this life and humaine affairs in this words that in the iudgement of the carnall man there is not discerned any difference at all between the good the euil the iust man and the sinner to either of the which the temporall good thinges of nature fortune and life are often alike Abraham our Father was rich so was Pharao Abimelech and the king of Sodom Againe Cain was an exile from his Fathers house so was Abraham and Iacob and Ioseph Moreouer Sarah was faire and beautifull so were the daughters of Cain Shem was preserued in the Arke with his Father Noah so was Cham also within the same But it may be so that the Lord would therin teach that his children should serue him not inregard of those temporall and worldly things and again that the vngodly which also haue and do abuse the same might be left without all excuse of their vnthankefulnes that the iustice of God might bee acknowledged and his word beleeued which commendeth and promiseth the future iudgement and full retribution of all mens wordes and workes and that the worthines of faith might bee encreased Moreouer it is so that the true vertues of the spirit diuine which are so well knowne of the king do not externally appeare to the carnall minded man Therefore the men of this world esteeme no more of the iust and godly then of the wicked and impious yea they persecute the godly and most vertuous and constraine them by their cruel tyrannies and oppressions to suffer and endure those bitter tormentes and paines which are only one as well deserued to malefactor and transgressours of the law This thing was noted in the death of Habel whom Cain slew in the persecution of our father Iacob by Esau by Laban others wherof he could say to Pharao that his dayes had beene few and euill in the accusation the selling away the imprisonment and afflictiōs of Ioseph in the afflictions of our fathers in Egypt in the contempt of Lot in Sodom in th'xtremity of poore Naomi and Ruth and in the sorrow of Hanna with others Such is the entertainement of the godly and their common estimation in the world and this is the nature of vanities kingdome Now what is that which ye disliked in these the kings words No man hath power over the spirit to keepe still the spirite nor hath any power in the time of death Is it not a true saying Obiection 16 mans power of life Cap. 8.8 For hath any man power either to liue as long as he listeth or to put away his soule from his body at his pleasure Surely it is true as Iob said to this purpose The dayes of man are determined and as the King said The dayes of a man are numbred that is sby the Lord who onely hath power either to giue or to take away mans life at his will and pleasure at all times and that neither this nor that lieth in the will or power of man therefore as he may not cast himselfe rashly into danger so neither should he promise himself long life Though Saul slew himselfe he had not therein power of his life for his dayes were determined and now expired he was shewed the day before 1. Sam. 28.19 that hee should die and in the manner of his death he was by the iustice of God made his owne executioner As he could retaine his life no longer so neither could he forbeare to performe that on himselfe which he was in this iudgement constrayned to performe If worldly men had this power either to retaine life or to put it off when they lifted they would then often renew themselues and old age would not be much dislike yea death which is so bitter to the wealthy men of this life would not be so much feared as it is But now it falleth out otherwise for why neither can the courage and strength of body preserue the strong warrier nor the industry of arte nor the deuises and counsailer of man withstand death when the Lord taketh away life nor can force death on them whom the Lord is willing so preserue in life Thus when Saul in his trouble was slaine of his owne handes for want of another executioner David on the other part was preserued Obiection 17 the yong mans lesson nor could he be slaine by them which were his mortall enemies because the Lord did keepe his life * Finally ye haue said that it is obiected against the King that hee shoulde in his wordes counsaile young men to take their delights of youth and to swmime in their lustes Let mee heare the Kings owne wordes as he spake them and vpon what occasion Hee said quod Abiather Though a man live many yeeres in them all reioice Cap. 11.8.9 yet he should remember the dayes of darkenes because they are many all that commeth is vanitie Then thereupon he said againe Reioyce O yong man in thy youth walke in the waies of thine heart in the sight of thine eyes Then he added indéed But know that for all these thinges God will bring thee to iudgement therefore take away griefe out of thine heart cause evill to depart from thy flesh for childhood youth are vanitie Then answered Zadok how haue they here considered one word with another Answere the beginning with the end the exordium with the conclusion Yong-men are counsailed to beware For they also haue their Iudgment appointed and how is the māner of the kings speech marked When the king had aduised men in the highest grade of their proserity to thinke vpon affliction trouble and aduersitie and to endeuor to eschew it he commeth to behold the guise and condition of yong men yea of such as did sway in wordly and fleshly lustes and wantonnes without regarde of the iudgementes of God which is wont to ouertake such persons in the time appointed and he derideth their folly speaking by the figure Ironia in the which the contrary is euer intended as who should say Go too go too thou yong man if thou wilt not bee aduised nor restrained nor reclaimed by these instructions and lessons take thine own mind follow thine own will walk in thine own waies if thou thinke it good But he leaueth him not without a commination or threatning And thinkest thou that there is none account to be made for these thinges and will not God bring thee into iudgement thou art deceiued thou foolish yong man for there is a iudgement which a waiteth but the time appointed wherein thou must enter not onely at the last when al men shal
or endeuour to finde out wee shoulde reuerently admire and in all things iustifie them for it is true that Moses sayde Deut. 3 2.4 Perfect is the worke of the most mightie GOD for all his wayes are Iudgement Hee is a GOD of trueth without wickednesse righteous and iust is hee Deut. 29.29 Those secret things belong to GOD aboue and they are not for a man to knowe or finde out nor shall hee bee able in any other sorte then hee is able to finde out the circle of a Ring Iob. 28.7 This is that way whereof Iob spake the which the birdes haue not knowne the Vultures eye neuer sawe wherin the Lyons whelps walke not and into the which no Lyon euer came It is farre easier to knowe the way of an Eagle in the Ayre of a Serpent vpon a stoane of a shippe in the Sea and of a man with a yong-woman which yet passed the kings vnderstanding then to finde out the reasons and causes of the Lordes secret iudgements and hidden wayes Therefore when the wisest men in the worlde haue presumed this enterprise they haue beene compared to the hungry man which dreameth that hee is eating and beeing awaked out of his sléepe findeth himselfe emptie Thus are they fedde with winde in steede of woordes they take the shadowe for the bodie they finde wandering cloudes whiles they seeke for rayne and for substances they take holde of accidentes onely The causes of Gods secret iudgements are not to be found out But the better to suppresse the curiositie of mans minde let vs consider certaine examples of the workes and wayes of God the causes and reasons whereof we could neuer as yet finde out In the dayes of Iosuah the Captaine of the Lordes Hoaste wee finde that one Achan sinned against the Lorde Achan Ios 7.25 in that hee had contrary to the commandement taken among the spoyles a certaine Babilonish garment and two hundred sickles of siluer and a tongue of golde and conveyed and hidde them away for the which the whole Hoaste was troubled and fledde before the enemie and afterwarde not onely Achan but also his Familie and all the hee had was destroyed Nowe if Achan onely sinned why did the people flye and fall Againe why were his sonnes and Familie punished and what had his children and cattle deserued that they all perished with him was it not commanded before Deut. 24.16 The fathers shall not bee put to death for the children nor the children for the fathers Chorah Num. 16.13 but euery man shall bee put to death for his owne sin Also in the rebellion of Corah Dathan and Abiram why were the people plagued for these mens offences and wherefore dyed their Wiues and children and seruantes Abraham and Sarah Gen. 18. and cattle together with them * Also we finde that Abraham being fore-folde that hee should haue a sonne of Sarah his wife laughed aswel as did Sarah and yet Sarah was reprooued and not Abraham We may imagine that the one laughed for ioy and the other in scorne but wee haue no such cause deliuered vnto vs for they both beleeued God Moreover Adam Gen. 3. why did God permit Adam to fall and Hevah to be tempted Why was Abraham our Father made a soiorner in a strange land Abraham Iacob Pharao Why was Iacob vexed and afflicted with so many euils in his dayes why did God harden the hart of Pharaoh Why did the Lord plague thréescore and ten thousand of Davids people for his sin In all these things David let vs as I said wonder and iustifie the Lord knowing Iob. Gen. 18. that as no kinde of iniquitie dwelleth in the most high so beeing the Iudge of all the world he iudgeth according to right as Abraham saith and would that men should content their minds only with that which it pleaseth him to reueale vtter vnto them The generall cause of all But thus wee may say that in all those things the Lord hath respected his owne glorie and the benefite of his children and that as his will is in all things performed it was his will that among others the King should fall and shew his imperfections and that as I can gather besides the former for these foure causes Certain particular causes of Solomons sin First that the people which beheld his wonderfull wisedome wealth prosperitie and glory wherein hee hath as by way of symbole expressed the spirituall and heauenly vertues and glory of Messiah might not estéeme or thinke of him more then it is conuenient For indéed they haue for the most part taken him rather for God then for man and others haue taken him for the promised Messiah and not for the Figure of the same wherein they began to derogate from the Lorde and his Annoynted by giuing of his glory to a mortall man And surely for this cause hath the Lord often suffred the right worthy vessels of his grace to fall and to be noted in the holy Scriptures with their imperfections and imfirmities as were Adam Noah Abraham Lot David and such like Next the king hath in this sort fallen that as in his wisedome and diuine vertues he did prefigurate the holy Messiah so by those his slidings and the sinnes of his wiues and strange women imputed also vnto him in that he both affected maintained them notwithstanding their blemishes in religion hee might foreshew the burthen of mans sinnes layd and imputed to the holy one on whose héele therefore the Serpent was to treade in the regard whereof hee shall bee both reputed and esteemed vile and of no reputation among the children of men and shall be punished for their transgressions as David hath prophesied thereof Besides that in this declination of the Kings honor is noted the renting and finall dissipation of our Nation and gouernment in time to come Thirdly the Lorde God will that this example of the Kings fall should bee a terrour and document to all others in posteritie how prosperous or glorious soeuer they shall bee in this worlde full of Vanitie that they beware how they presumne on any ornament either of body or minde or any thing else of this present life and that they promise not to themselues the assurance and continuall vse of that which is but lent them and not their owne to retaine or dispose for if God hath suffered the king who enioyed all these things at his full pleasure to fall yea and to worke wickednes against his owne honor for these his sinnes hath laden him with a measure of his iudgements why should any other man assure himselfe the continuall possession of the like which yet come farre behinde the King in all things Lastly by this the Lord would schole and teach the king as wise as he is that hee presume not to enter into iudgement with him which is most iust and will not acquite a sinner in his sinnes nor to iustifie himselfe
SCHELOMONOCHAM OR King SOLOMON his Solace Containing among many thinges of right worthy request King Solomon his Politie his true Repentance and finally his Salvation First Presented to the Kinges most excellent Maiestie and afterward published 1 King 10.6 It was a true word which I heard in mine owne Land of thy sayinges and of thy wisedome Ecclesi 12.10 The Preacher was yet more wise and taught the people knowledge LONDON Imprinted by Iohn Windet 1606. THE Price and estimation OF Solomons Solace He that commeth to buy will peradventure say to him which would sell it It is naught It is naught Howbeit when he hath bought it and brought it home then he boasteth of his good peny-worth as Pro. 20.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salva Deo Regis sit magno vita IACOBI Vt servet charos divino iure Britannos Vincenti Maximo De Rege nostro Serenissimo eiusque pro genie clarissima poema 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A A great red Dragon with 7. heads 10. hornd power D Design'd of late a soveraign Queene quite to deuour I Intending eke that Son to strike for whom she gron'd A Affright whereat to her good God she timely mon'd C Conspecting then Iehovah this his handmaides greefe O Omitted not with readie hand to grant reliefe B But first her sweet Soule he convaighd as seem'd him best V Vnto his princely pallace there in peace to rest M Moreover then he Michael with army stout M Maugre the foe sent forth in field cast him out A And so that when the tragedie should be effected G God it withstood those complots in time detected N Now sith the Dragon saw his purpose thus prevented A And quaild himselfe he might have coucht so repēted E Expecting pardon but no lesse he erst reviv'd B Bruite stratagems and quaint designes by him cōtriv'd R Recounting that loud lowing Buls might pierce deep lorne I In roiall Lyons heart and princely Vnicorne T That so the seede right soveraigne amongst the rest A And all the flowers of this field should bee supprest N Not by the lore of sacred lawes or iustice right N Nor with the dinte of valiant sword or open fight I In manly wise but savadgely with stygian flame A And hellish hounds attempted how to forge the same E Enlarging so his beastly bent God him there staid R Restraining him vnto the snare himselfe had laide E Establishing for aie the scepters dignitie G Giuen rightfully to Iames and his posteritie E Enrich therfore with peace power worship renown M Most mighty God his grace his progeny and crown 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 TO THE MOST MIGHtie most gracious and most Christian Prince IAMES by the divine Grace King of great Brittaine France and Ireland defendour of the faith c. Most mightie and most gratious Soveraigne Lorde IT is certaine that neither King Solomon so passing wise and famous nor anie his wordes recorded in Canonicall Scripture so prudent pithie and full of pietie need the helpe of humane hand much lesse of my poore penne for the defence of th' one or the authoritie of th' other having so long sithence by the best iudgement purchased that credit and approbation which neither the serpents envy nor mās malignity hath or shal be able to anihilate or empeach Howbeit seing that some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 partly of malice partly of ignorance blush not to obiect except against either condemning the one as profane and damned and contemning th' other as polluted and perilous Wherat many remaine suspensive of both others with my selfe woful for both as that so soveraigne a tree should be blasted her wholsome fruit reiected I thought it good and my dutie aswell for the stopping of those mouthes as for the better resolution of the doubtfull the solace of the pensive the instruction of the ignorant the honour of the worthie and the glory of the Almighty to advēture the framing of this Apologetical Dialogue or conferēce entituled Schelomonocham or K. Solomons solace and the same vnder the divine feare and your Graces pardon to dedicate to your sacred Maiestie Howbeit this my rash enterprise most gracious Soveraigne first in attemting a worke so waightie then in addressing it to a personage so mightie convinceth me in some censures of audacious arrogancie when being farre poorer then Gedeon much slower tongued then Moses without comparison I should with the former have acknowledged my great impotence and with the latter have distrusted my small eloquence but with neither of them both have presumed on your Maiesticall presence At the least I should have followed that counsaile of Aesope to Solon approaching before Craesus King of Lydia to speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those conceites indeede might have daunted mee had I not found strong reasons to perswade mee For first beeing a Minister of Gods truth which as I reverence I shoulde also defend to my power and hearing those and other like obloquies divulged not onely in common conferences but in publike Sermones I should with them have consented and so sinned had I longer pawzed expecting from others the miraculous birth of those great bellied Mountaines Secondly having accomplished the worke and perpending as the vsuall manner is to whose worthinesse it should of right be commended I remembred that saying of King Alexander when a little before his death beeing asked to whome the Empire should remaine after him hee answered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the worthiest yea I gladly recorded that ready resolution of our late right Christian Queene of blessed memorie concerning the successe of this most famous Monarchie which she said should in right descend and come to King Iames then of Scotland her naturall and lawfull successour and the most worthie Wherein I also resolved and presumed knowing well that as your princely power is best able to protect so your royall person is most meete to enioy King Solomons Solace for that not only after the philosophers rule and your Kingly advise in that learned Arist lib. Mor. 8. Plato de Leg. 8. godly and sententious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but after the Axiomes of divinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as is the person so should be the present the Argument so properly fits the same having for the principall subiect that most wise most divine most maiesticall and most famous King Solomon the sonne of King David the same whome Iehovah his God had both promised nominated and appointed to the kingdome of Israel before that he was conceived and borne made most prudent royall and glorious in his throne and set foorth in all thinges as a meete figure of the
Israel if all things had answered ad amussim to his request and dayly endevor but also by many heauenly doctrines learned Orations wise sentences parables and arguments to display and set foorth the manifolde vanities of wordly-men and there-withall as the wise Preacher to studie and endevor on the one side to disswade and hallow them from the same beeing replenished with so many miseries and on the other side to allure and draw them on towardes the chiefe good and highest felicitie where onely is found the true sacietie and best solace after all the confused troubles of this life Truely this is the very Argument Summe or chiefe matter of his Booke entituled the Ecclesiastes or the Preacher from whence as from the head-spring of many both pleasant and profitable streames this present Solace is chiefly derived In the which besides the viewe of Solomons Common-wealth and many other matters of right worthy request is contained his true Repentance and Pardon after his sinnes displayed in a certaine Dialogue or conference of his Princes and chiefe Lordes A worke both godly pleasant and profitable aswell for Princes and noble personages as for all others which have any desire to walke in this life towardes the highest obiect of our hope But heere I thought it good to admonish thee gentle Reader that as the worke chiefely regardeth those matters of Antiquitie and namely such as were either heard of scene vnderstood or in action within the compasse of that time wherein that most famous King both raigned and lived and of the which his Princes Lordes and servantes coulde as auriti or oculati testes both take and giue true testimonies or the which they could readily cite gather obserue remember consider and reason of in and among themselues so haue I therein for the most part taken applyed and vsed those testimonies examples and Arguments the which either that time or the times then fore-past could happily affoord mee for those persons from whose wordes reportes and disputations this Dialogue is deduced could not possibly deliver vnto vs the things which as yet were neither in action or motion among men seeing themselues knew not as they were men what shoulde followe or come to passe after them vnder the Sunne Eccle. 3.22 but as they might conclude effects from the causes in naturall things Therefore I haue beene carefull that there-with I might intermixe any of those which succeeded in the ages times and persons following the which neuerthelesse being extant may be neither reiected nor abandoned but rather as they stand to bee taken and collected in and from the wordes writings and workes of others which though farre latter have yet beene both godly faithfull well learned and of no lesse credite and authoritie in the Church Howbeit because I would not that any thing which is either worthie thy knowledge or heere in request with any of them that stand in doubt of the holynesse of King Solomon the authoritie of his wordes and Bookes shoulde bee cowched in silence or buried in obscuritie I purpose and God will though very briefly to supply even here that which might seeme to bee wanting there that so the latter compared with the former and one thing considered rightly with another they may from either gather a meete harmony and consent to conclude both for the holynesse of th' one for the sufficiency of th' other But here I finde them that demaund how the knowledge of this disputation and conference should be brought vnto mine vnderstanding from whence this princely dialogue could be either gathered or presumed To whome I might answere that howsoever it be that either this or the semblable matter may bee hidden from the knowledge and vnderstanding of the simple and ignoraunt or how hardly it may bee conceived of some wise and learned persons yea and howsoever this present dialogue shal be censured and esteemed in a great part as prosopopoicall or imagined yet it is true and sure enough as it is hereafter declared and proved that those godly wise well learned and noble personages which were and lived in the time of Solomon heard of his wisedome and saw his glorie never doubted of his holinesse and true repentance and so neither of his remission and salvation with the Lorde And as in those thinges they were not doubtfull so were they neither so negligent nor carelesse of the Kinges health and prosperity and of the Common-good of the Lordes people but that they as most noble Princes and wise and grave Counsailors entered into a deepe consideration of the royal estate and of the common wealth of Israel reasoned and argued the case in and betweene themselves concerning the causes of the kinges great heavines and sorrow and therein did not onely thinke honourably and constre charitably and reverently of the kinges dealinges and wordes as it well became them but also endevoured by their wisedom counsel authority to remove away all the causes that the vnhappy effectes thereof might cease and to withstand the remedilesse inconveniences of such desperate mischiefs in time convenient that in such sort in effect as it is reported in this Solace And to the end that no man might either make question of the holinesse of their soveraigne Lord or doubt of his remission and salvation they argue for him and above all the rest of that most honourable society the most reverend father in God namely Zadok the Lordes high priest to whose grave and learned iudgement they all most gladly condiscended spake and proved first that king Solomon was by the providence of the highest provided and made a lively figure of the most holy Messiah whom they faithfully expected to come into the world and that it was necessary that the figure should answere to the thing figured Therefore the Messiah beeing most holy it must follow that King Solomon should bee also holy alluding to those equall proportions in the law between the Seed of the Woman and the types shadows and figures of the same * Next to that they argue his Pardon partly from Gods owne promise of mercy to him and the continuance of his divine Graces 2. Sam. 7.15 partly from his Repentance the which besides other places is worthily gathered of his Ecclesiastes or Preacher beeing as the Hebrewes say the booke of his repentance * Thirdly they argue his Salvation with the Lorde from the consideration of his pardon as that which necessarily followeth the same after this and like Testimonies and examples Blessed is that man whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sinnes are covered blessed is he to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne And as they never doubted of the holinesse pardon and salvation of the person so neither called they into questiō any his books proverbs words songs sētences but honoured reverenced and esteemed them as wise and grave sayings divine prophesies and matters right holy and profitable for the Lordes congregation and for the instruction of his people Therfore they
to God who gaue it All these and many other such like are the ordinary wordes and speeches of the king the which are intermixed with many deepe motions of the Spirite and diuine doctrines to draw men from the vanities of the world and to perswade them to the feare of God and the obseruation of his lawes Surely I haue much mused thereof in my mind yea I haue many times examined mine owne conscience and wayes whether there rested or appeared any thing in mee whereof the king might take any offence for I haue verily thought that eyther the whole cause or at the least some part of the cause of the kinges sorrow and trouble hath risen or beene taken from some of vs that haue beene and are daylie so neare and about his royall person Therefore it shall not be amisse in my iudgement that wee first examine our owne wordes workes and dealinges and with an vpright conscience trie and iudge our selues secretly with our selues and finding with vs any part of the cause or th' occasion of this displeasure that we endeuoure spéedily and séeke how to recure or mitigate the same lest whiles we delay the king be so ouercome in those his perilous passions that hee may be hardly recouered After that those forenamed Lordes had thus spoken euery of them in his turne zadock Zadock the Priest opened his mouth againe and with great grauity vttered these wordes in effect And my selfe also my Lordes haue with these mine eares heard those and others the like words to bée spoken by our most Soueraigne Lord But yet as I haue conceiued thereof duely pondered the King in such his wordes by you before remembred and recorded hath not spoken of vanitie Solomon hath not vsed any vaine talke that is hee hath not vttered any vaine or idle thing nor hath his tongue talked of deceit but hee hath wel refrained that and will doe as he hath protested with patient Iob as long as his breath is in his body for as the King is of al other the wisest so hath he had especially sithens the time that those passions afflicted him a due regard both of his place and calling And truely in my iudgement he hath made and yet dayly maketh and augmenteth A Catologue of mans vanities vnder the Sunne right worthy to be lamented and abandoned And by this he would that men should learne to contemne the wicked world with the pompe and vanities thereof The deceit vanitie of the world for why he hath found and yet perceiueth the world to be very deceitfull the euent horrible and the paine thereof intollerable wherein not to feare not to lament not to be afflicted not to bee in perill not to bee tormented it is most impossible Surely as the King could not finde so neither can I report any good or profitable thing of the World Therefore O ye louers of the world for whose sake yee striue and make warres your hope can bee no greater then that yee shall be made the friendes of the worlde and what gaine ye by that surely yee shall finde therein that the flesh will infect you Sathan will deceiue you and the worlde herselfe will daunt you besides that the world passeth away with her lusts and if yee loue those thinges that be hers yee shall passe away with her and her lustes and through many perils ye shall fall at length into eternall torments Therfore would our king that yee should leaue and contemne all those vaine things of the world which perish as that wherof ye can gather no profite at all in the end but paine and sorrowes vnspeakable And surely neither hath the king spoken or done this without the argumentes of many godly and diuine motions of minde from whence as from the treasure-house of a godly wise man he hath brought foorth many heauenly Oracles and sweet Sermons tending to the highest honour of the euerlasting God and the chiefe felicity of man being worthily esteemed the two principall endes of mans election and creation the which is to be inquired sought after and effected in the feare of God and the obseruation and performance of his commaundementes according to that saying of the Lord which David the Kings father receiued from his spirite and committed vnto Asaph that excellent singer psal 50.23 He doth me glorifie indeed that prayses yeeldes to me And he that leades a godly life my saving health shall see I thinke vndoubtedly that this sodaine Metamorphosis of the king The former good counsell approued by zadock is not occasioned by any of vs here present Neuerthelesse I dislike not your aduise right noble Zabud that euery one of vs should enter into himselfe and duely examine and trie his wordes and actions especially those which in any sorte may touch our Lord the King and endeuour with speede to redresse and amend that whatsoeuer wee shall finde or at the least suspect to bee faulty or amisse Nor may this bee disliked of any man liuing nay rather it is to bee highly cōmended in euerie man It is profitable for men to examine their owne wayes as a vertue whereby hee may the better know himselfe of the which whiles many men though otherwise wise in this world haue remained ignorant or at the least forgetful they haue not onely neglected the duties of their vocations but missed the right scope of their life and so the highest happinesse But would to God that the king were now as he was sometimes in those monethes past Iob 29.2 and in the dayes when God prospered him when his light shined vpon his head when he went forth after the same light and shining euen through the darkenes as it stoode with him when hee was young when God prospered his house and when the Almighty was yet with him and when hee had ioy and gladnesse in that his prosperity amongst vs and his people Then should not sorrow oppresse his heart nor dread of future dangers daunt our hope But let the Lord be true as hee is and euery man a lyer that so hee may worthily bee extolled in his iudgements and praysed in his mercies which doubtlesse is not the least cause that God in his wisedome hath suffered many of his Saintes which haue been and may stand for singular examples of pietie and godly vertues vnto vs not onely to shew forth their humaine imperfection and infirmitie by some certaine slidinges and blemishes but also to taste of afflictions cuppe aswell for a correction of their faults as for an exercise of their spirites no lesse necessary vnto man then his daily foode in this wretched worlde CAP. V. Solomons Lordes examining themselves and their dealinges one by one are in their owne consciences cleared of any cause of his affliction Zabud and Azariah are iustified AS the sodaine alteration of King Solomon after that hee came to himselfe again vpon the sense of his sinne was very maruailous and his words aunswerable to
locks are curled blacke His eyes are like the Doues vpon the water streames Which are all waste with milke byde full vessels by His cheekes be like spice bedds as the sweetest flowers His lippes are Lillies like that drop the purest mirrhe His hands as ringes of gold with Chrisolite beset His belly yuory white with Saphires garnisht brave His legges as marble pillers on golden sockets set His looke as Libanon as Cedars excellent His mouth as sweetned thinges lovely all is hee Howsoeuer this was spoken as aiming mistically far beyond the Kings person It hath doubtles been applied to our Soueraign without adulation in whom their appeareth some especial grace yea the very image of the diuine nature beyond that hath been perceiued in any other man But were it that he had felt or vnderstood some defects in these external things yet see I not how he might be offended knowing well that he is but a mortall man that whatsoeuer is wanting in the body may bee supplied that to the vttermost by the graces of the minde the which the Lorde more respecteth then the beautie of the body as he said to Samuel when he sent him to annoint David for king moreouer he hath well tryed it and therof hath said it in iudgement that fauour is deceitfull and that beauty is a thing vaine therfore hath not béene of the mind to set his felicitie therein * To this also assented the Princes extolling and praising to the cloudes the most angelicall forme and beautie of the King Benaiah And forth with Benaiah beckning with his and proffered his speach and saide Neither indeed may the kinges education Solomon his eductaion or the manner thereof offend him as Ahishar hath saide for neuer any in this world hath beene better taught and brought vp as towching the feare of God and all princely and heroicall vertues For to this end king David had prouided him most wise and godlie teachers as namelie Nathan Gad Asaph and such other the Lordes prophets and wise men whom he had diuinelie inspired and sent forth yea king David himselfe being a man after Gods owne mind for his heauenlie songes and melody called the sweete Singer of Israel and the Lordes annointed and also his mother Quéene Beth-saba a most prudent and virtuous Ladie as it is before said and either of them haue very carefully taught and scholed him in the feare of the Lord and the right princelie virtues At whose knees he stood and was glad and ready to receaue both instruction and correction And thus himselfe acknowledgeth saying When I was my fathers deare sonne and tenderlie beloued of my mother he taught me also and saide vnto me pro. 4.3 let thine eare receiue my words kepe my commaundements and thou shalt liue Get thee wisdome and get thee vnderstanding forget not the wordes of my mouth and shrinke not from them c. Againe in his latter time ready to depart he left with him this direction 1 king 2.2 Be thou strong and shew thy selfe a man kepe thou the watch of the Lord thy God that thou walke in his waies kepe his statuts his precepts his iudgements and his testimonies as it is written in the law of Moses that thou maist prosper in all that thou doest and in every thing that thou medlest withall c. And this was his mothers lesson when shee taught and nourtured him pro. 31.1 What my sonne what the sonne af my body and what O my dearely beloued sonne Giue not over thy strength thy waies vnto womē which are the destructiō of kings O Laemuel it is not for kinges it is not I say for kinges to drinke wine nor princes strong drinke lest they by drinking forget the law and pervert the iudgement of all poore mens children Againe be thou an advocate for the dumbe to speake in the cause of all such as be succourlesse in this transitorie world open thy mouth defend the thing that is lawfull and right and the cause of the poore and helpelesse Lo such lessons hath his mother taught him so well beseeming I say not a child but a prince and excellent well fitting so beautifull a body from the which virtues are wont to shine as those pretious stoanes which are placed in goodlie Kinges of Gould But beyond all this the Lord his God which loued him and vouchsafed to call him his Sonne did extend vnto him the effect of a fathers office aboue that which earthly fathers are able to do or performe towards their children for he nurtured him by his spirit not onelie in the day time but by the nightes also And in this he acknowledged the great loue and mercie of God towards him as in his wise Prouerbs it is to be learned Lo thus was king Solomon educated and instructed in his tender yeares of the which he yet sauoureth euen in these his elder dayes to his double honour and the consolation of Israel * Therefore I see not that the king should be hereof offended except onely in this that he hath not in his owne cōceit answered in some pointes to this his education and instruction but let that alone to be considered of hereafter To this the Princes did also accord and then rose vp Adomiram and spake as followeth Adoniram Neither wanteth the king the excellencie of wisedome Solomon his wisedome by the which he goeth out and in before the people to iudge and gouerne this great multitude to teach all others the true wisdome This is that which being prized no man can tell the worthinesse thereof as Iob hath said thereof neither is it found in the land of the liuing it cannot be bought for gould nor may the price thereof be obtained with siluer No gold of Ophir no pretious Onyx stoans nor Saphyres may be valued with it for this is the highest Treasure of a king yea and the same without the which a king is vnfurnished of that he ought to haue and so méere vnfit for the place of gouernmēt but hauing this one iewell in possession he is sufficientlie armed not onely to do iustice and to defend them which are at home but also to withstand and subdue the enemies which Eccles 7.9 are abroad for Wisdome is much better then weapons of warre and giueth courage vnto thē that imbrace hir This the king by Gods good grace considered in his yong yeares 1 King 3.9 4.29 and therefore this was that only thing which he desired of the Lord whē he was willed to aske whatsoeuer hee would haue hee should haue it and therefore the Lord being well pleased with his desire gaue him wisdome and a large heart even as the sand that is by the sea shoare without number or measure By the which the king was most wise and therein is preferred before all those famouse men of the East Country which haue so farre excelled other men both in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
or willingnes he had to obey the kinges commandement as those men of Belial which forbeare to sinne openly more for feare of the rod of Iustice then for any loue or reuerence of godly vertues Moreouer Shemei might haue considered as hee was subtle and craftie enough that men suspected are euer obserued and therefore such should be very heedfull not onely of committing the fact but of all pretence and shew of that which is euill Howbeit as he that is euill by nature doth euer presume in his euill without the reuerent feare of either God or man How Shemei was brought into the snare in his time as one garded secured in the foolish conceit of his own humor so Shemei either forgetting or little regarding any of those thinges premised passed foorth of Ierusalem the place wherein he was commanded to stay and went to Geth to Achis pretending to seeke for and to fetch home two of his Seruantes which were some little time before that runne away from him In the which presumption he could not escape a vehement suspicion of practising some lewd matters with the Philistines against the peace and gouernment of the king whome hee euer envied and closely assaied to reduce the kingdome from the house of David which the Lord God had chosen vnto the posterity of Saul whom the Lord had reiected But behold whiles Shemei went forth in his greedy ambition to finde and fetch home his seruants he lost and ouerthrew himselfe For thus by the diuine preuidence which holdeth them not guiltlesse that either touch his annointed or curse and maligne their father mother howsoeuer the seruants of Shemei faulted in their going from him and he had a iust pretence to reclaime them an occasion was rightly ministred in this time of his iudgement to cast him as guiltie into the kinges danger as whereby the king might euen in this though vpon a fresh occasion perform the word of his father David administer true iudgement and yeeld that deserued recompence to that rebellious beast Now my Lords it is apparant as ye see that Shemei though a person of great place could neither be iustified nor defended in such his impieties for why to recapitulate his crimes he was most proud and malitious a rayler seditious perfidious an infringer of oath a lyar and a couetous wretch for hauing wealth beyond his worthines he was thereof puffed vp both against God and his Soueraign enuying the regimēt of David and his prosperitie he cursed the Lords annointed with a most horrible curse against the law and the equitie of the kings cause he moved the people to rebellion against David and his house from whome hee assaide to translate the Scepter he was vntrustie and treacherous to his Lorde whome with all faithfulnesse hee shoulde haue serued in discharge of his duetie Hee had broken his oathe which hee had made to God and the King departing most presumptuouslye from the Cittie of Ierusalem wherein hee had vowed to contain himselfe Hee had scandalized the Lordes annointed most egregiouslye and more hee regarded his owne priuate lucre and gaine in fetching home his Seruantes which were departed and drawing thinges vnlawfully to himselfe then the kings manifest and expresse commandement and therfore in respect of th' one he too boldly transgressed the other Wherefore the king sitting in the seate of the Lord gaue vpon him most iustly the sentence of death and withall commanded me the captaine of his gard to execute the same accordingly whereof the king in my iudgement or any other his true subiects neede not to be sory or displeased To this the Princes answered with one mouth And truly in our iudgements as the king being most wise hath done iust iudgemēt therein so shold he not only be iustified but also commended for the same of as many as either heare or consider thereof Thus indeed hath K. Solomon rightly recompenced his dangerous enemies by the prouidence help of the power diuine For doubtles this is the Lords doing who loueth righteousnes and hateth iniquity as the kings father did sing therfore as he defendeth the iust that feare him in their iustice Psal 45. so he ouertaketh the vngodly that dishonour his high maiestie in their mischieuous deuises and casteth them downe Thus the cankred old serpent whiles he purposed and had subtly plotted not only to deceiue but to destroy that noble mankind in Paradise was by Gods vpright iudgement worthily condemned to the deepest hell and so the blessed Seede of the Woman whom hee had beguiled and thought to kill did in the end confounde both him and his kingdome To this might we adde the tragecall examples of enuious Cain whō the Lord God execrated exiled from the earth for his savage villany against his brother being a righteous man Also of that proud and tyrannous Codorlaomor and those other profane princes which had captiued iust Lot which princes therefore our Father Abraham worthily smote and discomfited of hard hearted Pharao and those cruel Aegyptians who were ouerwhelmed in the red-sea when they verily presumed to haue subdued and vtterly rooted out our fathers Of those cursed Chananites whom the Lord prostrated to the powerfull hand of his seruant Iosuah of the peruerse and hateful Philistines whom Sampson the Nazarite plagued in the spirit of Iehovah of the mōstrous Goliah the Gyant of Geth whom the kinegs father being yet but a yong man and tender slew cut off his head with his own sword of vnnaturall Absolō the kings elder brother who had practised to supplant his father being lawful king who by the iust vengeance from the highest was hanged on a trée by the hair of his head as he rode throgh the woods and beyond some others th' example of that trecherous and rebellious Achitophel a chiefe Counsailor of Absolon is yet fresh in memory who seeing that his crafty and impious counsell was not affected to his desier strangled himselfe with his owne handes Many more fearefull spectacles of the semblable iudgements wee find extant not onely with vs within those his highnes dominions but els where among the Gentiles and euery where to the terror and astonishment of the Sonnes of men but yet to the consolation and vnspeakable ioy of the righteous Wherein is verified that which the kings father hath modulated in his holy songes The wicked haue I seene most strong and plac'd in high degree In wealth and stoare faire florishing much like the lawrell tree But sodainly he past him hence and prisoned was in hell Nor could I find within a whiles the place where he did dwell But as for iust and perfect men the Lord them doth encrease Who have from him them to content great ioy with rest and peace Againe the Lord protects the iust his wealth his life his lot When wicked men are dawnted with the shaftes themselves had shot Oh blessed therefore Godly men preseru'd by God your King But woe yee wicked in your
behaued himselfe after that hee was anointed and proclamed King in the place of his Father David and thus hee shoulde haue worthily continued and retained the honour of his place especially in his elder yeares wherein is required sobrietie grauitie holinesse wisedome zeale and perfection This the king knewe well-enough for hee wanted no wisedome no knowledge no vnderstanding no iudgement But that notwithstanding hee abused both his calling place and age whereof it is that as they which come out of hote bathes doe sodainely coole more vehemently and as that water which hath beene once heate seemeth to bee more colde then any other and as they most deadly hate one another which haue beene sometimes friendes when they fall at variance so turning himselfe from the Lorde his God and from the vse of those princely and heroicall vertues wherein hee was first exercised hee is esteemed execrable wicked in the eyes of wisemen Therefore There bee among them which doe not onely call into question his election and remission but also doe iudge him a person prophane reprobate and damnable and so not meete to bee a King much lesse to bee the King of Israel For as the iudgement of the tree is taken from the consideration of the fruite and of the fountaines by the taste or vse of the waters so gather they this censure from the consideration of the kings life and demeanour for whiles a man continueth wallowing in sinne without true repentance he declareth no pardon and he whose sinnes are not pardoned hath none hope of health Againe he that repenteth not of his sinnes when he hath sinned is a prophane person he that obtaineth not mercy is a reprobate and he that is shut out from saluation is damned Howbeit the Lord forbidde that this thing should bee found or iustly proued in our Lorde the King of Israel Herence also they obiect against the sermons wordes Exceptions to Solomons doctrine and words and doctrines of King Solomon as of fruites vnwholesome growing of such an euill tree For neither could his vnderstanding as they say henceforth be perfit to this purpose for as they which sodainly turne themselues to the shadow which haue seene the Sunne haue their eyes dazeled and cannot as yet see cleerely so it cannot be that be which hath turned away his minde from spirituall contemplations to the obscure lusts of the flesh should so soone afterwarde bee of perfite vnderstanding in those heauenly mysteries and diuine doctrines And heere it is remembred what the King himselfe hath sometimes saide That wisedome entreth not into a wicked soule nor dwelleth in a bodie that is subiect to sinne Therefore they from hence argue Solomon hath not presumed to vse the name Iehovah of late The booke of the Ecclesiastes not well vnderstood of many wherof it was that so many evill opinions haue bin fathered thereon that the King in this time is not replenished with the perfite wisedome and so can neither vtter nor teach wisedome vnto others by any deedes or wordes of his * But yet they are more bolde on these their assertions because the King hath not of late vsed the most holy Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iehovah which is proper to the Almightie either in his priuate talke or in those his Wordes which hee hath lately vttered before his Princes or in that Booke of his called the Song of Songs which they holde and will esteeme a cause sufficient that both those his Wordes and Bookes shoulde bee not onely suspected but also reiected as prophane and vnprofitable for the Church of God Yea they say morouer that from hence as from a bitter roote will issue foorth sundry monstrous opinions and dangerous doctrines by the which the most prophane persons shall strengthen their prophanites the vngodly their impieties the superstitious their superstitions the sinners their sinnes Therefore as we are of Israel and ought not to be polluted with the manners of the heaten so shoulde wee before all others abandon those and such like works and words which corrupt good manners and that kinde of learning which confounds the good constitution of a mans health and hasteneth his destruction as for the conseruation of bodily health the Phisicians doe aduise men to eschew those daintie meates which prouoke them to eate when they are not hungry and those delicate drinkes which tempt them to drinke being not thirstie And of this kinde they obiect that the king hath much spoken in this his olde age But howsoeuer it bee we may bee sure of this that as the best wine looseth his verdit and grace when it is infused into fowle and filthy vessels So the words of the king be they neuer so good and profitable in right estimation shall by this his vngodly life and polluted behauiour loose both their right grace and commendation in the iudgement of all men I am right sory I was occasioned to say thus much of my Lorde the King and of his Sermons and last Words Azariah for the king and his words Then answered Azariah in the behalfe of all the other Princes Indeed as yee haue saide there may bee many things obiected by such as being not onely ignorant and neither able to discerne betweene things holy and prophane so perceiue not that the fault lyeth rather in their own synister interpretations of the Kings workes and wordes then in the workes and wordes themselues but also by such as regarde not to yeelde honour to them to whome honour belongeth and little care whome they wound with their tongues or whose wordes or workes they depraue and sclander as my Lorde Zadok hath before well noted Giue not sentence before the matter bee heard But let vs aduise all them that come after vs that they giue not sentence in a matter before they heare it with discretion lest it turne to their folly and shame pro. 18. A Caveat especially in these matters of God and the king and that they beware that they bee not seduced and led away by the sophistrie and guilfull practizes of such deriders from the true vse of this the kings Solace and so consequently from the way that leadeth to the highest felicitie and best good Gen. ● The spirite of God is euer wont to reproue them that bee vniust in iudgement and thereof that cursed and reprobated Serpent is already condemned But heere wee heartily request you most reuerend Zadok which are adorned and beautified with that right * Vrim and Thumim That is knowledge perfection to speake in the defence of king Solomon our Soueraigne Lord and of his words and say whatsoeuer the Lorde shall put in your mouth to be spoken without feare or partialitie and wee will not onely giue eare vnto you but also be right thankefull We doubt not but that after your answeres to all those and such like obiections heard and waighed with deliberation Note well what wil be in the end resolued of Solomon and
his words if they be weighed in an equall ballance many more shall not onely suppresse their rashe iudgements concerning the king and his words but acknowledge and confesse with vs That all things are not so damned nor so daungerous nor so doubtfull as they haue imagined them to be Nay the Accusers themselues shall grant rather that Solomō our king is neither a damned nor reprobated nor a prophane person but that hee is an excellent Saint of the Lord a true penitent person that hath obtained mercie and forgivenesse after his sinne and henceforth expecteth the ioyes of his Lord in everlasting happinesse through faith in the most holy Messiah whom hee did most worthily prefigure and set foorth in the world according to the foreknowledge and good pleasure of the everlasting God CHAP. XXV Zadok proueth by many arguments and reasons that Solomon was not a prophane or damned person But a Saint of the Lord and a right excellent member of the Church THen Zadok as one most willing to defend the honour of his most Soueraigne Lorde King Solomon answered againe and sayde I most heartily thanke you my Lords all that yee haue vouchsaued mee this honour For I esteeme it an honour to my selfe to bee thought worthy by your wisedomes to speake and to haue your audience in the defence of my Lorde the King and his cause Neither doe I thinke but that in conscience and dutie I am holden so to doe for it in not meete that I shoulde heare my good Lorde and his wordes to bee sclandered or euill reported and to passe it ouer in silence yea I shall be thought therein to giue consent to those sinister reports And first as touching the king The king is not to be iustified in his sins nor excused it cannot bee denyed but that hee hath indeede wonderfully doated on his strange wiues and hath hearkened too much to them which euer retaining that euill opinion and custome would neuer receiue nor admit that counsell which the wisest of all men liuing gaue them and hath beene by them allured seduced and led away from Iehovah his God against whole Maiestie by their instigation hee hath wrought wickednesse And therefore howsoeuer some might allegorize of the transgressions and sinnes of our Lord the king yet will not I nor may I in equitie iustifie him or excuse him therein no more then I may either iustifie or excuse the sinne of Adam in his fall howsoeuer there bee which call it an happy fall or the sinne of Iacob in his two wiues howsoeuer the priuiledge thereof came in with the promise of the multiplication of the holy seede or of Noah in his drunkennesse or of Lot in his incest or of Iudah in his whoredome or of the kings father in his murther pride and adultrey wherein it is certaine that they both displeased God and deciphered their humane imperefctions and infirmities Nor was it the wil of God that such their sins albeit they were his own children should be concealed or couered but rather hee woulde that for some good causes they should bee reuealed and reproued He ●hat iustifieth the sinner is abhominable before God For as sinne is that which onely prouoketh and displeaseth the Lord and therefore is no lesse odious vnto him then a most ougly and venemous Serpent vnto a man so he that either iustifieth or excuseth the sinner in his sinne shall not bee holden guiltlesse before Gods iudgement seate Neuerthelesse as godly wisedome and holy loue haue both taught and perswaded a reuerend opinion and like construction of those men A reuerent opinion of the repentent sinners their actions and words in whom godlinesse and the right worthy vertues in habit could not be vtterly ouerthrown with one or a fewe contrary actions whiles the mercie of God remayning with them they held fast the foundatiōs of their holy hope so is it not meete nor conuenient that wee should rashly cast into dangerous suspence either the holines of our Lorde The holinesse repentance remission and salvatiō of Solomon proved king Solomon or his repentance after his sinne or his remission after his repentance or the hope of his eternall salvation the which depending on the euerlasting loue and sweete grace of God in the merit of the holy Messiah may not onely bee presumed but also rightly gathered and sufficiently proued as by your patience you shall heare Satans subtilty Indeed Satan the great enimy of mankind hath assayed to deale with the king as the Eagle dealeth with the Goate for when the Eagle comes to hurt the Goate to whome shee hath a mortall enemitie shee first assayeth to take away his sight by pulling out his eyes and then afterwarde shee killeth him against whom the Goate defendeth himselfe with his hornes So this Enemie hauing a deadly enuie to the King and his glory though to dispoyle him of his knowledge and wisedome but hee neuerthelesse by his faith and hope in the Lorde as with two strong hornes hath resisted him so farre that though hee were much wounded in his body hee hath yet preserued and kept safe his yes Solomons eies For as I haue heard him say and doe finde it by experience his wisedome remained with him Neither was hee drawen from the foundation of his hope For as the trees which are strong deepe rooted and haue sufficient sappe in themselues cannot easily be ouercome by either the violent heate or noysome colde when such as haue neither rootes nor strength nor sappe doe wither and decay so they which are rooted and grounded on the sure foundation of their hope and haue in them the habite of diuine vertues cannot vtterly bee quayled or ouerthrowne by either the heate or colde of afflictions or the vehemency of Sathans assaults or the alluring lustes of the flesh or the concupiscence of Nature for they bee holden by the right hande of Gods spirite and stand like the tree planted by the waters side psal 1. whereof David the Kings father coulde so diuinely modulate and sing Therefore I will first proue that our Lord king Solomon is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a prophane or damned person Chadesch Chadosch but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a person holy dedicated to God and a member of the holy Congregation For in this Antithesis or contrarietie that which is the one cannot bee the other and that the Lorde hath not taken his Spirite vtterly from him howsoeuer his Graces were shadowed in him when hee sinned as hee is not willing to cast them away whome hee knewe before or elected howsoeuer hee seeme to hide his face from them in his displeasure and they onely are fore-knowen and elected which are his Saintes and holy ones howsoeuer they appeare or are esteemed before the face of worldly men Howbeit although there bee many notable things externally to be seene in the Kings person which yet are not to bee neglected nor forgotten but well considered remembred and applyed
the princes with one accord expressed by signes both their gratefull minde and ready will to yeeld to the performance of this dutie knowing so well not only that the reasons alleaged were of sufficient probabilitie merited allowances but also that those the Kings Wordes were perfite veritie profitable for the Church in posteritie and therefore would that they should bee committed to writing and preserued accordingly CAP. XXXII Zadok answereth to certaine Obiections and expoundeth those wordes Vanitie of Vanities Abiather THen Abiather the Priest who had before obiected against the king and his wordes rose vp againe and saide But yet my Lords before we collect and record those the kings words that our labour therein may not be in vaine beseech you let vs further heare what my Lorde Zadok will answere to those particular Exceptions which are taken and may be vrged hereafter for some presumption against the Kings Words especially against this his ordinary talke towards the ratification of diuers erronious opinions that so all things being made plaine by vs by whom those the Kings Words must be gathered recorded commended to the church there may hereafter no iust aduantages bee taken nor any exceptions be admitted against any thing in the same The princes And we are well pleased said the Princes if it shall please my Lorde Zadok to vouchsafe vs his learned iudgement patience therein zadok And I also said Zadok shall not be vnwilling to answere Abiather in these things as the Lord shall enable me for the better setting foorth of his glorie and the truth of the Kings wisedome vttered in those his words What is the first Exception The first exception Eccles. 1.2 tell me Abiather The first Exception said Abiather is taken against those words of the king where hee saide and yet dayly saith Vanitie of vanities and all is most plaine vanitie There is not any of you all but haue heard him vtter these words aswell as myselfe wherein howsoeuer the king entendeth it there be which thinke that the king therein condemneth all the Creatures of God in the worlde with all those functions which in the law of God we are commanded to vse and to exercise our selues in to his high glorie the good of his Church and the benefite of the common-wealth And this he would prooue by many Arguments and in the ende so concludeth againe Vanitie of vanities Ye haue said quod zadok Eccles. 12.9 The answere but by your leaue Abiather and by your patience my Lordes all Séeing it is your good pleasure I shall answere I am the more willing as I said and ready to speake for my Lord the Kings Wordes It is true that the King hath saide and dayly ruminateth this proposition Vanitie of vanities Vanitie of vanities and all is but vanitie as the ground or conclusion of those his Words But doth that conclude a contempt of the Creatures and of the holy functions and gifts of God which in their natures are good Nothing lesse Nor indéed hath the king spoken therein of those Creatures or of the true vse of them in their kinde nor of those lawfull functions either in the Church or in the Common wealth But the wordes hauing a large scope doe neuerthelesse include in them all those things which are placed vnder the Sunne onely that is to say within the kingdome of vanitie Vanities kingdome Wherein is found to reigne much malice and little wisedome wherin all things be vicious all things be loathsome al things are full of obscuritie and snares wherein soules bee endangered bodyes be afflicted wherein all things be vanitie and affliction of the spirite and within the which are not comprehended any of those workes or wayes of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The labour of man vnder the sunne And this the king hath sometime noted by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or labour of man vnder the Sun which word as ye well know noteth rather the affliction of the minde then a worke of the body or any other labor But to make this yet more plaine let vs consider first what the King meaneth by this word Vanitie and then what the things are which he comprehendeth vnder the same For why should men contende about that whereof they knowe neither the meaning nor the reason Therefore yee shall vnderstand that this worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vanitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vanitie which the king vseth singularly and absolutely signifieth a very light thing that which soone vanisheth away as the smoke or as a bubble of the water and as touching any profite is worth nothing psal 144 The vanitie of Adams sonnes as saide the Psalmist Thus Adam and Hevah reposing all their hope of the promised seede in Cain their first borne whom they called a man of the Lord they thought of the next Sonne but as of a meere trifle or transitorie thing in respect of him and therefore they named him Habel Gen. 4.1.2 vanitie But the King here speaketh of an exceeding great vanitie the which to declare hee duplicateth the worde and saith Vanitie of vanities that is beholde a notable and wonderfull great vanitie what things he comprehendeth vnder vanitie Secondly What things are comprehended by him within this vanitie the next worde plainely sheweth vs for in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Haccol where it is to bee noted I will speake it rather to teach others then any of you to whom the Phrases of our tongue are so well knowne that this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col put absolutely without He 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a signe vniuersall whereby the totall summe of things is signified and is so much to say as All or Altogether Haccol but hauing He prefixed as Haccol the same is abridged and restrained to some speciall or particular summe of things as not All generally or vniuersally but All that that whole that all which is either spoken of before or comprehended within such a predicament place or time Neither may any man thinke but that the particle in this place is referred to some particular or speciall summe of things or to some notable person as when pointing to such persons or such matters wee vse to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That singuler or speciciall Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That worde or that singuler or notable worde Ille sermo That word or matter So saide the Gréekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So by this wee may not say that the King hath included all things vnder vanitie but onely a particular summe of things Séeing therfore that all things are not drawne vnder this vanity but some things what things are excluded from vanitie and what not we may consider first what the things are which are excluded and stand without the compasse of this All then what those things are which are comprehended within the same both the which are to be gathered and
takes in hand without the wil wisedom power and prouidence of God because things are not placed in the will and abilitle of man but as most meete remaine for euer in the will and power of God who often giueth the same Lot to the foole as he doth to the wise-man of this worlde Next that there is one and the like ende as touching the body and the like conditiō in riches health pouerty sicknes and such aduentures of this life both of the wise and vnwise otherwise the K. hath said it and no man can denie it that there is more vtilitie in wisedom then in folly as the light is more desired then the darkenesse and that the wise-man is preferred before the foole for the wise-mans eyes are in his head but the foole walketh in darknes And yet heere we may note that the King speaketh not of the wisedome of Gods spirit but of that humane wisedome belonging to the reason of man which it in it selfe as now vnder sinne is comparable to the vanitie of a foole Obiect 2 Secondly ye obiected that the King hath compared a man with a beast in the semblable condition but I pray Sir from whence is that gathered It is taken sayd Abiather out of those words which the K. lately vtted viz. I considered in mine heart the state of the children of men Eccles. 3.18.19 that God had purged thē yet to see to their are in thēselves beasts for the condition of the sons of men the condition of beasts are even one condition vnto thē as the one dyeth so dyeth the other so they have all one breath and there is no excellēcie of a mā above the beast for they are al vanitie Now this vrgeth many mens consciences that a man which hath a reasonable soule should be made equall with the beast Ye haue sayd answered zadok yet haue ye not told me nor can tell me indéed Man differeth from a beast when or where the King euer said that a man differeth nothing from a beast It is true that he so compared them as touching the body which is of the earth subiect to corruption mutabilitie misery and death as before it is said for a memorie whereof the Lord God made garments for Adam of the skinnes of beasts Also as touching any foresight or knowledge either of the day of his death or of that which commeth to passe after him she which as said holy Iob who knoweth among the children of men Otherwise the King hath saide that the Spirit of man goeth vpward even to God that gave it but the breath of a beast falleth downe into the earth Againe he hath spoken most profoundly of mans true felicitie and directeth him the way to the same Thirdly Obiect 3 of mans felicitie Eccles 2.4 ye said that the King defined mans felicit in eating drinking and carnall pleasures where is that definition found There quod Aabiather where the King hath saide There is no profit to a man but that he eate and drinke and delight his soule with the profit of his labour And therefore said Zadok doth the king define the felicitie of man in eating drinking sporting c. That is no perfect consequence ye utterly mistake him For contrary to that beastly behauior of carnall and voluptuous persons he sheweth the true vse of the creatures according to the diuine ordinatiō the which yet no man liuing can enioy to profit without his especiall grace blessing beeing all that a mā may expect or look for in his life For this is Gods gift as the K hath often said howsoeuer a mā by his own wisdom wit reason power agility séemeth able either to effect or comprehend the same in time place therefore should be vse and estéemed with thankfulnesse to God 4. Ye said further Obiection 4 The liuing the dead Cap. 4.2.3 that the King seemeth to preferre death before life the dead before the living c. Yea said Abiather for the K. hath plainly said I have praised the dead which nowe are dead above the living which are yet alive and him better then them both which hath not yet beene And this is very absurde for all men know it cannot bee denied the life is better thē death For God hath made life Life death death is the priuation therof gard of sin Yea himself hath said at a another time that a living dogge is better then a dead Lyon in regard of the excellencie of life before death Answere But the king said zadok hath said it not simply or in that he absolutely cōmendeth death or condemneth life but by the way of a comparison namely The dead bee freed of the troubles of this life Iob. 3 13. in respect of the great euils wherewith men are commonly tormented in this life For why they that bee dead are now freed from those intollerable afflictions do rest as quiet and at ease in their bodies alluding to the words of Iob who through the vehemencie of his afflictions and infirmitie of his flesh wished hee had beene dead saying For so should I now have lyen and beene quiet I should have slept then and beene at rest with the Kings and counsellors of the earth which have builded themselves desolate places c. Againe The wicked have there ceassed from their tyrannie and there they that laboured valiantly are at rest The prisoners rest together and heare not the voyce of the oppressour There are small and great and the servant is free from his maister Againe wherefore is the light given to him that is in miserie life to thē that have heavy hearts In this respect speaketh also the king of life and death And he meaneth the life of this world and the death of the body and not the deserts of them that liue nor the sinnes of them that dye and that after the maner of men Otherwise we may not think but that the godly The righteous that be dead are at rest the faithfull and the righteous which bee dead as Noah Abrahā Isaack Iacob Moses Samuel Ioseph and such are in better case then they which yet liue For they bee blessed and no paine can oppresse or touch them Therfore this is the desire of them that here liue in the Lord That they may be dissolved to die and dwell with the Lord in eternall happines In the like sort hath the king spoken touching him which is not yet borne For he saith not absolutely that he which was neuer He that is not yet borne is happier nor he which shall not be borne nor he that is not and shall neuer be is happier them he which liueth and is but that after the iudgement of men in regard of those mightie troubles that ouertake men in the world it seemeth to be better not to be at all then to be made subiect and thrall to those troubles And yet who knoweth not
Obiection 7 of women Ca. 7.29 that the King was thought to condemne womens Sexe May I also heare from whence this surmise is taken from that said Abiather where he said This have I found seeking one by one to finde the count and yet my soule seeketh but I finde it not I haue found one man of a thousand but a woman among them all have I not found Answere And will they heereof conclude said Zadok that a woman therefore is not found among the Saintes He condemneth not womans sexe or that womans Sexe is prophane an euill thing I deny the consequence for yee wander farre from the kings meaning therin It is very plaine that howsoeuer the K. knoweth that he hath bin deceiued and polluted with wicked women and himselfe hath spoken against the vngodly and strange women and their vices yet did he neuer condemne the sexe or kinde of women He speaketh by comparison nor the godly woman and her vertues But he hath spoken by way of comparison as thus If of men there be found as fewe as one man of a thousand which vnderstandeth and considereth of the course of mans affayres and of his vanities vnder the Sunne and of the cariage of things in this world according to the will and prouidence of God surely of women there is not found one within that number for if men haue not that wisedō how should those weaker vessels I mean womē Howbeit we may not for all that think that by this number certain which he taketh for a number vncertaine by this hyperbolicall speach hee vtterly excludeth all women from the life of the saints number of the wise Thē might he bee found indeed to condemne Sarah the wife of Abraham and Rebecca the wife of Isaack and Hanna the mother of Samuel and the wife of Manoah the mother of Sāpson Ruth the Moabitesse and Rahab of Ierico and Abigael and Bethsabee the kings mother others of the generation of the iust which are so much commended in the holy write But the King in his wisedome knowing the excellencie of such women hath worthily praysed them and their vertues saying Pro. 31. The woman that feareth the Lord shal be cōmended give her of the fruit of her hands and let her owne works praise her openly And he said againe that such a woman shall be given by the Lord for a good portion to such a man as feareth him * 8. Obiection 8 of the doubtfulnes of Gods loue mercie Chap. 9.1 Answere Ye haue said said that the King hath taught a doubtfulnes of the Love mercy of God But let me heare of what words ye haue taken that The king hath oftē said quod Abiather that No man knoweth either love or hatred of all that is before them And both this sayde zadoke teach vs a doubtfulnes of the loue and mercy of God towardes his children in this life No truely for by this he speaketh of an other thing as first that considering the manifold confusions of mans affayres in this world no man in the view thereof or of any other external thing can take censure of matters diuine nor truely discerne No man can iudge of divine things by these externall things what things he ought either to choose or refuse in this world For the Lord sendeth both prosperitie and aduersitie aswell to the wicked as to the godly Next the King knoweth that albeit the soules of the righteous bee in the hand of GOD so that none euill may touch them yet such is the corrupt iudgement of flesh and blood ignorant of GOD and of his wayes Men consider not whō God either loueth or hateth that he neuer somuch as considereth what kinde of men the yare which God loueth and what kinde of men they are which God hateth and therefore are they no more louing nor thankfull vnto the godly whom the Lorde loueth howsoeuer they haue well deserued then they are vnto the vngodly 9. Oiection of the soule Cha. 3.21 which neither feare God nor endeuor to benefite his Church * Yee further obiected that the King hath cast into doubt the being of the Soule I pray what hath he sayde to occasion this conceite of him he hath sayd quod Abiather Who knoweth whether the soule of man ascendeth vpward and the spirite of the beast descendeth downward to the earth As who should vehemētly affirme that no man knoweth the life or being of the soule Ergo he doubteth thereof Mans iudgement of the soule of a man I deny that said Zadoke for albeit the naturall man neither knoweth nor vnderstandeth this by his reason yet the godly man by his faith beleeueth and comprehendeth it The purpose of the King therefore in these words is to set foorth the imagination of the children of men which cannot conceiue by any wisedome or reason of man that the soule of man is immortall and ascendeth vp into heauen after his dissolution no more then doth the breath of a beast Ye haue said also that the K. doubteth of the life sense of the humane soule 10. Obeiction of the sense of the soule Chap. 9 5.9.10 Yea said Abiather for he saith Whosoever is ioyned to the living there is hope for it is better to a living dog thē to a dead Lyon for the living know that they shal die but the dead know nothing at all Neither have they any more a reward for their remēbrance is forgottē Also their love their hatred and their envy is now perished they have no more portiō for ever in al that is done vnder the sun Answere To this answered Zadok I meruaile what should moue any man to think by these words that the king doubteth of the life and sense of the soule after his departure as therein to giue aime to the opinion of them that thinke the soules doe either die or sléepe vntill the iudgement which is to come so contrary to the holy Scriptures and beliefe of our Fathers for Solomon hath no such aime nor meaning All men are admonished to vse the time of their life in the works of their vocation But hee speaketh of the dead and not of the soules which liue for euer and wisheth all men to vse the time of their life and present opportunitie for the exercising and performing of the woorkes of their vocation for the benefite of the Church the good of the Common-wealth the discharge of duties and the glorie of GOD. For that by death which dayly draweth on them all men are depriued of all sense worke and labour of this life to doe thencefoorth therein either good or euill For they haue finished their course played their partes and cannot returne either to perfect their defectes or to supply their wants in the performāce of that dutie wherunto they were both created and called but must from hence-foorth let all alone for euer that so the tree might lie wheras
he sawe that those good things by how much the more they were imparted and made common to others by so much they appeared the better in all iust estimation * Moreouer to the ende that his wisedom and knowledge so imparted might be heard with the more delight The best wayes and meanes to instruct teach and edifie others the better conceiued the deeper imprinted in the mindes and memorie of the hearers by thē the more exquisitely discussed he hath inuented and doth dayly inuent compose and set foorth many rare and excellent Riddles Prouerbs and similitudes taken from the very nature and truth of things yea he seeketh and frameth such words Sermons and Sentences which hee knoweth to be most profitable and fit for the purpose he layeth euer before him those Bookes and Monuments of the wise and godly men of yore as it is before said whom hee knewe were illuminated and taught of GOD and the things which they spake and left to the Church were indited by the finger of the holy spirit For hee knoweth and hath so taught and tolde vs often The vse of the Bookes of holy scriptures that the Bookes wordes and writings of those antient holy men are right profitable in the Church to stirre vp and prouoke men to pietie and to walke in the way that leadeth towards the highest good and chief felicitie and also to confirme any doctrine or opinion that shall be either taught or deliuered to the Church for Gods glorie and the profite of the same For therein is to be séene and gathered the same veritie which it hath pleased God by the inspiration of his spirite to exhibite vnto his Prophets and seruants whom he hath made in this respect the Maisters and Authors of those holy Bookes and godly collections worthily entituled the Word of God Psal 1. These be the things which the King wonderfully affecteth and is neuer wearied in the holy meditation thereof Heere is that doctrine and learning vnto the which he would that all men should listen and giue attentiue heed All men must take heed of strange doctrines and opinions and that in regard thereof they should eschew and abandon all other doctrines and opinions whatsoeuer which sound or any way sauor contrary or not like vnto this For it is certaine that as the eie is not satisfied with séeing nor the eare with hearing and mans curiositie being vnmeasurable the doctrines and opinions of men doe exceed in multitude and diuersitie so both the inuenting of those doctrines and opinions and in the making of those Bookes which are neither agreable nor any way comparable to this one doctrine so giuen and approoued by the chiefe Pastor and Teacher and also in the reading studying learning and exercises thereof are nothing els but a labour of the flesh and a vexing of the minde And so much the more for that therein among other things this is holden and plausibly accepted that the chiefe felicitie of man did consist either of honors or riches Men haue placed their chief felicitie in those things of the world or of pleasures and mens delights and such like the which therefore most men studyed to attaine in the reading hearing and obseruing the precepts and rules of the same Wherein neverthelesse whiles men are busied they resemble those foolish people which being diseased do seeke for remedies of the things which are brought from India Aethiopia and the furthest parts of the world happily not so well fitting the constitution of their natures when the whiles they contemne or neglect the good things which grow in their owne gardens * But as for that doctrine and those words which are indited and giuen by that chief pastor approued by those graue maisters of authoritie and collected taken and taught by the King aswell in this as in other his Bookes and so wee finde them to shoote harmonically to this chiefe scope or marke The ende of the holy scriptures Eccles. 12.13 1 Gods glory 2. Mans happinesse Psal 50.23 Exod. 20. namely that men might thereby learne and bee perswaded to Feare God and to keepe his Commandements In the which are respected those two things namely the glory of God and the highest happinesse To the former whereof is required the praise and thankefulnesse vnto GOD for his benefites a dutie enioyned to man in the first Table of the Lawe In the latter is required a godly life and holy conuersation or dutie enioyned vs in the second Table of the same Lawe For in the first thereof is prescribed our dutie to GOD In the second our dutie to man In the former wee learne Dutie to God Dutie to man what GOD requireth and what hee abandoneth as iouching his owne honour and seruice In the latter what hee requireth and what hee condemneth in our behauiour one towardes another For there is not any one singular Precept but respecteth both what is to bee done Note this in the ten Commandements Exod. 20. and what is not to bee done And this wee must obserue therein that where any vertue is commaunded in the same Precept that vice which is her contrary is forbidden and so there where any vice is forbidden that vertue which is his contrarie is commanded Eccles. 12. This is that feare of God and the obseruation of his commandements which is required of man and to this ought euery man by those holy doctrines to frame and apply himselfe Besides these all the studies God hath prepared a iudgement for these things Psal 50 1.3 labours deuises and endeuors of man are vaine and nothing els but labors and vexations of minde drawing men from good vnto euill from God to the diuell from heauen to hell Neither may wee thinke but that for either of these wayes a man shalll bee called into iudgement to make his reckoning and to cast his account howe hee hath either vsed or abused them Yea men shall haue not onely their particular iudgements heere in this worlde wherein happie is hee that shall finde mercie and forgiuenesse but also in the end they shall stande before the tribunall Seate of Messiah when hee shall come and sit to pronounce a iust sentence against all men whether they be good or euill Then all things shall bee reuealed yea euen those which haue beene concealed psal 2.5 and in a great part left vnpunished since the beginning of the Creatures Then for euery idle word there shall bee made a reckoning euery idle deed shall bee discerned and euery secret thought of the heart shall bee made manifest Then shall Gods chosen hee cleared and called into glory with the holy Messiah and his angels and then shall the prophane reprobates be thrust out into vtter darknes to toyle and moyle with the serpent and wicked Feendes for euermore All these things in effect and many more with singular wisedome and great grauitie hath our Lorde the King vttered and taught as we must acknowledge
that they glorifie him in the vse of them doe good therewith one to another and discharge their proper duties in their places A cooling carde for worldly men who seke felicity of these things Lastly the King hauing learned the lesson of true consideration did in the end confesse that in al those things he could find no contentation so neither felicitie but that indeed he found great vanitie and vexation of his spirite Alas then what shoulde other men hope to finde Might not this stoppe the mouths of them who say that then they shoulde bee happy had they the wealth the riches the power the honors and the pleasures of glorious king Solomon as if forsooth that in those terrene and transitorie thinges the true happines of man consisted But truly as they bewray their corrupt iudgement and error in and about this chiefe principle so if by the will and pleasure of God they had therein their desire it is not only possible but most certain that they woulde transgresse and offend farre beyond the transgressions and offences of King Solomon and wanting that wisedome which he had to guide and direct them they would quickly declare themselues the greatest fooles in the worlde For man beeing in honor without vnderstanding is compared to the Beasts which perish as King David said when he beheld both the vprising and downe falling of many such persons as hauing the things of this worlde at will could neither vse the same to their own good nor with the same defend and preserue themselues from euill albeit estéeming the same aboue God and all goodnesse they placed therein their highest and chiefe felicitie In regarde whereof the pleasures honors glory and prosperity of this world are compared to a shining candle which for the time it burneth giueth a glorious light but the substance whereof it is maintained beeing consumed the same commeth all to smoke and stinche for the time will come when thou shalt grant and confesse with the King that all these thinges are vanitie and vexation of the soule that not so much in regarde of the thinges themselues as of thine owne abuse and erronious thoughts in and concerning the same CAP. XXXVIII Abiather produceth 17. obiections against other the words and doctrines of the preacher to 4. of the which Zadoke answereth in this chapter THen Zabud the Kings friend zabud a man that very much tendered both his honor and prosperity hauing thus farre listned to the former disputation and conference stoode foorth and spake to this effect Howsoeuer I am right sorrowfull for the Kinges fall and affliction yet am I glad the rather for the Kinges sake which hath euer beene and yet continueth so good a Lord vnto me that my Lord zadok hath not only answered in this presēce for his maiestie but also hath cleared him and those his wordes of all the thinges so hardly conceited and strongly obiected against either of them And we may thereby the sooner perswade What the malitious gaineth in the end that whosoeuer hencefoorth shall cast forth his venemous darts against either the King or his words shall rather hurt and annoy himselfe by the rebound of the same as those do which shoote against the hard rocks then any way discredit the one or disgrace the other This is that they often purchase to themselues which take pleasure to maligne and slander others chiefly their superiors betters according to that which the Kinges father said the vngodly be entrapped in their owne devises and taken in those snares which they had laide for others And this we see verified on the old serpent not only in the case of Adam but in that of Iob wherein his owne deuises to confound them was cast on himselfe But hath Abiather heard any thing els obiected that he is willing to vnfold and lay foorth here be-before vs Abiather princes offences are not rashly to bee spoken of Yea said Abiather I haue heard many other things of the which to heare I haue bin very sorrowfull in minde neither knew I vntil this time how I might find a fit occasion to reueale it or to whome for as the causes of Princes are not to bee hearde or debated as are the causes of other men so neither may the subiects be so bolde as to talke or reason thereof without feare especially in the court so neare the kings presence And here yee shall vnderstand my good Lordes that they which obiect do not so much respect and of those his gestures words and sayings which he either declared or expressed in his prosperous dayes and time of his dignity then when he well pleased and blessed the Lorde for those doe all men yea euen the kings enemies approue and commend nor those dare they to maligne or disgrace nor call they into present question any of those his wordes or gestures which hee either vttered or deliuered to and among his strange wiues in the time of his trespasse when nothing els besides vanitie after his owne confession might be expected to come from a person so vaine for neither those we esteeme nor regard to collect but they are the same which are and haue beene in action and question after euer since the time of his contrition and sorrowful affliction ordinarily vttered and declared in his common and dayly gesture talke and conference esteemed among his wise sermons and which as holy oracles diuine sayings yee haue entēded with ful purpose to collect to cōmit leaue vnto the church in posterity I thinke not otherwise but that they are meere vniustly conceited most hardly construed against his excellent maiesty his true meaning For whiles as a King he speaketh in right courtly phrases the rude country people scarcely vnderstād him in any thing Solomon in his words was Courte-like briefe in that to eschew tediousnes which is loathsome to the learned he is very briefe he séemeth in many thinges the more obscure especially to the simple and ignorant which commonly do not onely much mistake the thinges they vnderstand not but also soone ouerthrow the right sense and true meaning therof vnaduisedly But it were to bee wished that not onely those but all others when they come to consider of the Wordes and affayres of Princes but chiefly when they beginne to scanne the thinges which are holy and appertaine to GOD and his Church woulde followe that counsell and aduise of the King Eccles. 5.1 where he saith When thou commest into the house of GOD keepe thy foote and drawe nigh that GOD which is at hande may heare that thou give not the offering of fooles for they knowe not when they doe evill Bee not hastie with thy mouth and let not thine heart speake any thing rashly before God for God is in heaven and thou on earth therfore let thy words be few For surely in those things which are either doubtfull or vnknowne vnto vs wee should rather modestly
stay suspend our iudgement then rashly giue censure or opinion without aduise But that neither our selues nor any others may happely mistake or misconstre the kings words it shal be néedfull that those things be both wel reconciled expoūded otherwise there be which thinke that they hardly deserue to be gathered cōserued placed in the holy Canon among the diuine writings and so nether to be committed to the Church for the instruction of Gods people Many things zadok saide Zadoke Alas I am right sorry to heare that Abiather shoulde say so It grieueth me not a litle that Words so wisely conceiued so princely vttered so agreable to the veritie so well applyed should be vnderstood so fondly cōceited so mailtiously considered of so ignorantly wrested so iniuriously Let vs heare Abiather what those matters are which are obiected Note that the things hereafter spoken of are but as briefely touched in respect of what may bee said of them But * I pray you to be briefe I wil promise the like in my resolutions answeres for we haue bin here a great whiles I feare mee the K. hath yer this asked often for some of vs we are foūd wanting faulty therin for it is not méet we should forget our dutifull attendance And for mine own part as I haue beene euer willing and ready to attend and serue my Lord the K. and the rather because his most noble grace hath been well pleased to accept of my poore seruice so would I not willingly absent my selfe from his presence too long for my whole desire and endeuor is as in dutie I am bound that which my best counsell and ready attendance I may next to the Lord gratifie and pleasure my Soueraigne and comfort him in this his estate Say on therefore Abiather But why stagger ye as though ye were fearfull feare not at all for there is not any of vs I dare say that doth so much as imagine that any of those obiections or hard censures against the king and his words hath or may procéed from your owne head Ye affect the King and his words better than so we fully persuade An Author and reporter in sort and ye are herein rather the reporter of other mens opinions and speeches then the Author of any such thing which may either hurt the Kings person or empeach the authoritie of his words And surely wee may in this rather commend then dislike you or your wordes though all words of all persons especially of kings and Princes howe true soeuer they be are not to bee vttered or spoken before all persons in all places at all times without difference wise consideration or due regard For by this wee shall not onely know what is conceited and spoken abroad of the king and his words but also consider of thē consult how to withstand those inconueniences which may grow follow and ensue thereof in posteritie And this shall be the sooner performed by the true vnderstanding of the Kings meaning and the right exposition of his words Abiather first clereth himself and then obiecteth Then answered Abiather my Lords all I hope yee iudge of mee as of a true subiect to my Lord King Solomon and I aduenture to stand for the perfect triall of my dutifull alleageāce fidelity in this respect against al mē wherin I know howsoeuer it be imagined I may not be resembled to that Abiather the Priest whom the King worthily deposed and put from his place for his infidelitie But now hearken my Lords It is obiected besides all the premised First that the King hath combined the wise-man together with thee foole without difference in the same condition and estimation 2 Hée conioyneth man in the like condition with the beast 3 Hée séemeth to define mans felicitie in eating drinking and fleshly pleasures 4 Hée preferreth as it appeareth death before life and the dead before the liuing yea and him who is yet vnborne before them both 5 Hée is noted to discourage men from the perfection of wisedome and Iustice which are two most excellent vertues in men 6 Hee condemneth the man that loueth quietnes and peace better then trouble and vexation and therein contrarieth his owne words else where deliuered 7 Hee is supposed to condemne and abandon womans Sexe the which the Lord hath framed and made meete and profitable for the man 8 Hee hath taught Ambiguitie and despaire of the diuine loue and mercie to the horrible anguish of conscience euen in the wisest and holy men 9 Hee seemeth to cast into suspense the substance and being of the soule of man 10 He denieth plainely the life and sense of mans soule after death 11 Hee iudgeth a man so deuoyde of reason and iudgement that hee knoweth not what is good for himselfe in this life 12 The King himselfe being a transgressour deemeth the like of all men condemning them of sinne and vnrighteousnesse 13 Hee ascribeth all that to Time and chance the which we iustly attribute to the diuine Prouidence 14 Hee encourageth men to a prodigall wasting out of their prouision wealth and substance 15 Hee hath set no difference betweene the righteous and the wicked the holy and profane as touching their conclusion ends and reward 16 Hee holdeth that a man hath no power of his owne life when yet it is seene thay many men hauing power murther themselues as Saul did 17 Hee hath intised yong men to take their delights of youth and to follow after their owne lustes Loe these and such like thinges are obiected And is it indeed so saide Zadok Howbeit zadoke answ to all the former obiections 1. Touching the combination of the wise man with the foole Eccles. 2.14 9.2 I nothing doubt howe to resolue those doubts and answere those obiections to your content viz. First it is obiected as yee saide that the King hath combined the wiseman with the foole in the same condition estimation Of what wordes of the King should that be gathered as yee suppose Of these saide Abiather that speaking both of the wiseman and of the foole said by and by I know that the same condition falleth to them all and thereupon he resolued It befalleth vnto me as it befalleth vnto the foole wherefore then labour I to bee more wise Is this answered Zadok the ground of that obiection and will yee so conclude of the Kings graue words Alas the grosse ignorance of vaine men and yet how hastie are they to iudge of that they neither know nor are able to apprehend Thus the blind-man is said to iudge of colours Howbeit ye shall consider with me that the king hath not said it absolutely or simply that the wise-man is no better then the foole but in this sense meaning First as we vse to say that Fooles haue fortune meaning that a wise-man by his proper wisedom studie and power can effect nothing more then doth a foole of any thing he