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

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obserue his will We nowe knowe not our actes onely but our inwarde thoughtes must euer be holy we now knowe many meanes that leade to offence heerein and that euen the meanes must also be eschewed Nowe then if we liue as in ignorance wee did scorning at counsell cleauing to our pleasures and reiecting the Lorde and his lawe shall we escape He that knoweth his maisters will and doth it not shall hee be vnpunished Marke what I say and pray euer to féele it as the wrath of the king bad heate the furnace seuen times hootter than e●er it was to consume the men that withstoode him to his face for truth so shall the wrath of God that made this lawe cause hell to be hette 70 times 7 times hotter for vs if wilfully after warning and maliciously after knowledge we oppose our life against it That is he shall multiply the paines of hell vppon vs for these pleasures of our fleshe that swéete sinne may haue bitter and sower confusion for euermore Nowe the God of heauen giue vs sense and féeling the Lorde of mercie touch vs with a taste of sinne by the viewing of his lawe For we cannot alwayes liue and thus dally with our owne soules neither standeth it with the nature of our God who is iust finally to forgiue vs though he long forbeare vs vnlesse we amend But he must haue his iudgement and we must haue our torment as sure as we liue Nowe doeth hee wish vs to consider our wayes and to turne our feete into his testimonies his warninges waste and his wrath increaseth if wee settle our selues against him Yet O howe I feare wee will wilfully doe it For it is so swéete and so incident to vs which this lawe forbiddeth that a thousande to one we forsake the Lorde The allurementes I haue named wee will neuer withstande no wee will not heare of it that they cause vs to fall But pleasing this fleshe for the time wee doe vse them wee will neuer espie the paine that will followe them Yet why should I feare since God is of power to pierce anie hart and hath promised to doe it if wee heartily begge it O Lorde I hope thou wilt worke with vs that by this lawe we may sée howe we haue offended thée and what héereafter we must more eschewe the one with sorrowe and true remorse the other with faith and continuall care Then shall thy Christ and our comfort who in our flesh fulfilled the lawe for vs couer with his righteousnesse all our sinnes against it Then shall sinnes past in his bloud be forgiuen and wee by him euer héereafter strengthened Then we shall order our eyes with a carefull heart we shall set a watch before our mouth and keepe the dore of our lippes all false inticementes to forbidden lustes wee shall gladly refraine and so escape the sinne it selfe the better This I say good Lorde we shall doe if thou worke with vs that is thou and thy power and thou and thy mercie shall doe it in vs. Which voutchsafe O father of heauen for thy vnmeasurable vnsearchable goodnesse sake Amen The eight Commaundement Thou shalt not steale Question HOwe can this commaundement possiblie stande with that opinion of communitie Ans Indéede no way for it manifestly ouerthroweth so vile an imagination and sheweth the distinction of dominions propriety in things was and is the ordinance of the Lorde For euerie prohibition sheweth an ordinance before established which should be obserued either in Gods lawes or mans though not alwaies expressely As the forbidding of murther sheweth preseruation of life to be the wil of God and the denyall of adulterie inferreth the liking of chastitie either in mariage or out So the forbidding of stealth which is an alienation of an other mans goods to our selues sheweth that euery thing is not our owne to take at our pleasure but proprietie in possession is the will of the Lorde For if all thinges be common there can be no stealth and so this law friuolous and to no purpose which God forbid we should affirme or thinke Que. Yet many haue bin of this opinion affirming that tyranny not diuinitie maketh this difference amongst men Ans It is verie true Yet I hope you sée how euidētly this law of God which I trow they will account diuinitie doth ouerthrowe them and their folly as do also all other lawes that may héereunto be reduced with many scriptures mo For as there can bee no stealth if all thinges be common and therefore this lawe of God as I saide in vaine giuen so there can be no buying or selling no borowing or lending no letting or leasing or any such thing amongst men if euery man haue like interest to take at his pleasure therfore the Lord God euen in these also greatly ouerséene for that he would troble himselfe to make lawes touching these matters when as no mā hath or ought to haue anie proprietie in anie thing more than an other Againe all the exhortations in the Scripture to almes déedes and to mercie toward the poore is friuolous for they haue as good right to take anie thing they want from anie man as the other haue to giue them But all these you sée are absurde and therefore the opinion and the contrary of it the wil and ordinance of the Lord. Que What is then the verie drift of this commandement Ans The verie end of it is this to bind our loue and care to our neighbors goods as before it hath béene to his life and things déere vnto him as his life For it cannot bee that our heartes shoulde bee right in affections towards our brethren and wee spoylers and wasters or anie way harmers of the commodities which they inioy Loue chéerisheth kéepeth euen euery thing so néere as it can which he accompteth of whome wee loue and especiallie which hee liueth by and maintaineth both himselfe and others by And therefore as I thinke we cannot take a better course to lay before our owne eyes that wants of loue in vs towards the goods of our neighbors and consequently our breaches of this commaundement than diligently to wey some particular dueties specified in the worde wherein the Lord God would haue our loue to show it selfe As for open rapine and plaine stealth no man I thinke wil excuse it or denie it to be sinne and therfore I stand not vpō it your booke hath euident places quoted against it I come rather to those other duties of borowing and lending of hyring and letting of buying and selling and such like Que. First then what is the Lawe of borowing and lending in the worde Ans If a man saith the lawe borow anie thing of his neighbour Exod. 22.14 and it bee hurt or else die the owner of it not being by hee shall surelie make it good If it be an hyred thing he shal not make it good for it came for his hyre In which lawe if wee well wey
and a gréeuous breach of this commaundement Wee should couer in charitie what no bodie knoweth but wee if the partie will be reformed euen as willingly and readily as euer wee would our selues finde fauour for our infirmities But doe we it Is my brothers shame my griefe is his credite déere vnto me as my life Goe I backewarde with a cloke on my backe to cast vpon his offence loth that either others or I my selfe should sée it as good Sem and Iapheth did to their bared father in his drunkennesse Gen. 9.23 No no wee grinne and laugh rather with cursed Cham and blabbe it out to others Good beloued let vs weigh our wantes and neuer make our vices vertues God asketh but our confession in griefe and sorowe and he will heale vs. It is a branch and a breach of this commandement and therefore no thing to be continued in But I dwell too long in this spéech vnto you Many things mo might yet be rehearsed but sée them your selues and let my silence passe them These fewe bewraye our want of perfect obedience to the lawe and so consequently of anie life and safely by the workes of the same And therefore I hope we clearely perceiue that without a Sauiour wee were but lost make what distinctions we can of obedience of iustification or such like Fast cleaueth to vs and cannot bee denied gréeuous guilt against both this lawe and all the former and cursed is he which abideth not in all to doe them sayeth the Lorde Deutro 27 Iam. 2.10 Galat. 3.11 He that is guiltie of one is guiltie of all and by the workes of the lawe can no flesh liuing be iustified For the iust shall liue by faith Wee haue not doone all but wee haue broken much and therfore the conclusion lighteth vpon vs and all the subtilties of all the wittes in the worlde can not remooue it from vs if the Lorde should marke what we haue doone amisse but in this one lawe of his and iudge vs thereunto and by we are not able to abide it wee are cast away Therefore let vs flie from the lawe as fast as euer wee can and take the right vse of it thereby to be led vnto Christ and let this be our firme comfort Galat. 4.4 that When the fulnesse of time was come God sent foorth his sonne made of a woman and made vnder the lawe that he might redeeme vs from the curse thereof and so by him wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes which without him we could neuer attaine to This is sure and this is comfortable to hould by and the Lorde increase this faith in vs euer The tenth Commaundement Thou shalt not couet thy neighbors house thou shalt not couet thy neighbours wife nor his c. Wherein saith your booke the Lorde plainely forbiddeth all inwarde desire of anie thing vnlawfull to be done although we neuer consent vnto it as the rebellion of the flesh all corruption of the olde man all blotte of originall sinne so that by this commaundement most clearely we may see the image of that man that pleaseth God euen such an one in whom nothing is impure neither in will nor nature Question YEt playner I pray you if you can set downe the difference of this commaundement from the other for as I haue heard some haue halfe thought it superfluous seeing as the former did also forbid the inwarde thought aswell as the outwarde act Ans It is as plaine as may be alreadie yet to content you thus ouer againe The former commaundementes did forbid the act and the setled or consenting thought of the heart though the déede were not doone as for example the precept of killing forbiddeth the déede and with all once to thinke in heart to doe such a déede with a resolution verily to accomplish it if I can But nowe this commaundement commeth néerer and condemneth not onely that thought that is setled and lacketh but oportunitie to doe the déede but euen the verie thinking also of any thing contrarie to the loue of God or my neighbour though I doe neuer consent to it but snubbe it mislike it and reiect it For euen that hauing of an euill thought in my minde is a fruite of my corruption such as in innocencie if we had stood we should neuer haue had and therefore naught So there are two degrées of thoughtes the one with consent to accomplish in déede what we do thinke if we can and the other without consent repulsed away when wee awake and sée it The former in the former commandementes was forbidden and the later in this A strange doctrine in shewe no doubt to manie that thinke this their thought is frée But we must not maruell since euen the Apostle Paul himselfe would neuer haue suspected anie danger in concupiscence lustes and desires if the lawe had not sayde Thou shalt not lust or desire Rom. 7.7 Nay it appeareth verie plainely in that place sayth a godly man that he thought maruelous well of himselfe before hee came to this commandement He tooke himselfe before to be liuing and in good liking towardes God and godlinesse but when he had looked vpon this lawe and beheld himselfe a while in this part of the glasse he sawe himselfe plainele to be no bodie but a dead man sould vnto sinne And therefore a thousande times néedefull that the Lorde should adde this lawe to all the rest to humble vs throughly séeing so singular a man was not fully cast downe before he had wrestled with the iustice of God in the same Let vs therfore thinke of this thing that séemeth so litle in our eies For wee heare what the Apostle sayth it is sinne to desire Rom. 7.7 and we may ioyne vnto it the words of the Lorde himselfe affirming plainely that the verie imagination of mans heart is euill euen from his youth Gen. 8.21 God hath made the heart aswell as the bodie to séeke his glorie and therefore good reason the cogitations of the hart should no more straie from their true end than the actions of the bodie Neither may our reiection of such thoughtes in the ende and not consenting vnto them to accomplish them in act bleare our eies with an imagination that we haue not offended in them in going so farre as we went For it is a blemish a want an impietie and a degrée of vnchastitie in a woman to suffer the cogitation of anie forren friende beside her husbande to tickle her with conceite vnlawefull though in the ende she repulse it and abhorre to accomplish it and howe can it then be faultlesse in these hearts of ours the spouse of the Lorde to dallie with such delightes and to pursue in minde by thinking of them the pleasures that such conceites doe pleade before vs though in the conclusion we giue the deniall and do not consent O it is a greater matter to loue the Lorde with all the heart than that it may
kingdome ●●od had numbered and finished weigh●● him in the balaunce and founde him ●●o light and therefore diuided giuen ●●s gouernement awaie to the Meades ●●d Persians At which sight his coun●●naunce chaunged his thoughtes were ●●oubled his loines loosed and his knees ●●ote the one against the other O Lord ●●at wee coulde thinke of this hande ●●d feare the sentence of this writing as ●●t wee eate the corne of the barne or ●●lace our selues with anie maintenance ●hatsoeuer taken of our selues with●ut authoritie from the Temple But ●m too long For mine owne part I ●aue euer contented my selfe with this ●●ason that that which is enioyed with●ut warrant either of Gods lawe or ●ans lawe is vniustlie inioyed and will ●ssuredlie one way or other haue a ●●ourge but such is the fruition of all ecclesiastical liuing not altered frō tha● vse by the magistrate therefore vniustlie inioyed and to our assured punishment Now that it hath neither warrāt of God nor man it appeareth For the scripture you haue heard against it and touching the lawes of men I haue had it also from the learned in them that they condemne it For to begin with the cōmon law of thi● land first therein it is true that an aduouso● in respect of the Patrone is accompted n● Assets to yeld a recōpence because it i● not valuable Secondly the writ of qua●re impedit for the patrone hath these word in it quod permittat presentari ad ecclesian quae vacat ad indubitatam spectat dona●tionē which word donation est libera di●spositio Thirdly this law saith that the patron hath but Ius Donationis and the ordinarie ius admissionis and therefore cō●pelleth the patron to bestowe it in a time or else to loose it by lapse apparantlie therein denying him any leaue to retaine it either in whole or part for euer to himselfe Fourthlie it doth affirme verie pretelie and significantly that the true right simple proprietie of the Church 〈◊〉 neither in patron person nor ordinary ●ither in anie man liuing but that the ●e simple of it is alwayes in suspence 〈◊〉 the verie words of law are in nubibus ●●ording thereby this good reasō against ●●is sinne that it is a great wrong for a ●an to make a commoditie to himselfe 〈◊〉 that which lawe cannot find he hath 〈◊〉 is kept and preserued by law as farre ●●m mans possessing as the cloudes are ●●stant from our handling Fifthly this ●●we saith further that in time of voca●●on both the fee and the freeholde of the ●hurch is in suspence and in nubibus and ●●at then though both patron and ordi●●rie with some consent will by their ●●ant charge the Church with any rent 〈◊〉 pension that yet notwithstanding the ●●me charge is no otherwise of force a●●inst the Incumbent but that hee ●ust perforce hold himselfe contented ●●ee will haue it seeing he cannot haue ●●e benefice otherwise than by the pre●●ntation of the one and admission of the ●●her that is in plaine words it alloweth ●●t the alienation of any profits frō the in●●bent though both of thē cōsent Sixtly when this common lawe thus hating this euill wee speake of was by the corruption of men abused in this point and patrons vsurping vpon the Church be●gan to make gaine by Simonie of thei● aduousons and presentations it was an● is prouided by statutes positiue lawe with a paine and penaltie therin appoin●ted that if anie incumbent come in b● Simonie then ipso facto the Church i● voide and all bils and bands and deed for the performance of anie such pens●●ons be also voyde Much more could the learned yet alleadge euen out of th●● common law against this sin I know i● they were to handle it but this may suf●fice in steede of more where conscienc● is made of offending lawes and the god●lie gouernment of a Realme Nowe fo● the Ecclesiasticall lawes if I shall als● note a litle thence manifest it is true●lie verie worthy marking howe strongl●● they also stande against this vice we speake of For first by the verie name they giue to patrons they ouerthrow i● tearming them aduocatos ecclesiarum v●●cedominos Custodes Gardianos c. a● being names of fidelitie gouernement and carefull preseruation of the Church For the worde Patronatus doth not signifie Dominium in Ecclesia but as one noteth very wel seruitii sollicitudinē It is also called Gratia quòd ex gratia vel gratis conferri debeant beneficia also aduocatia because they shoulde defend and tender the estate of the Churches where of they be Patrons as aduocates doe the causes of their clientes and so for the other names mentioned euen nowe before And hereupon the lawe giueth them all due and possible reuerence euen as masters from their seruauntes and Fathers from their children It giueth them preheminence both in the Church and abroad in sitting standing going and such like It is prouided likewise that if these patrons or their children fall into decay By right of patronage ariseth to the patron Honos Onus and vtilitas write the Canonists What vtilitie you s●● they shal bee moderately maintained at the discretion of the Ordinarie by the Church goods whereof they are patrons and this is the onely profite they are to take of the Church They may lay no seruice nor bondage vppon the Church Tenetur etiam patronus protegere eccclesiam reparare si minitetur ruinam de bono sacerdote prouidere that is the patrone also is bounde to protect the Church and to repaire it if it be like to fall to ruine and carefully to prouide a good minister Marke it Nam tus patronatus c. For the patronage saith the law is suspended if the patron present an vnworthie one yea his right for euer by that law as some thinke passeth to the Bishop and hee shall neuer present more but if not so yet at the lest hee shall bee depriued of that turne if hee present an vnfit man euen by the lawe in this lande in force Furthermore in these lawes there are so manie notable rules and as it were axioms or principles touching the duetie of patrons as might with great profit and pleasure be noted if I had not already too much passed the bondes of a preface in a desire to preuaile something with some in this matter As Patronus non potest presentare seipsum A patron cannot present himselfe as God knoweth now manie doe in effect Againe debet presentare gratis alias est Simonia Hee must present freely or else it is Simonie and no excommunicate person or Simonist shall bee a patron to present Patronus non est vere Dominus Ecclesiae c. The Patron is not the Lorde of the Church but as it were an aduocate and defender neither may hee administer the goods of the Church Ius patronatus nullum ius proprietatis patrono tribuit The right of patronage giueth no proprietie to the patron A notable
care to bee helped It is the trauailing and heauie laden soule that sigheth to be refreshed It is the sinner that thinketh of all sinners he is the chiefest 1. Tim. 1.15 which longeth for pardon And to ende Matth. 9.13 as Christ came not to call the righteous but the sinners to repentance so assuredly it is the sinner I meane he that in déede féeleth the waight of sinne and knoweth his owne miserable estate by reason of it and the punishment due vnto it I say it is that man and that woman that séeketh what way to be discharged and none else Que. And howe doe wee knowe the greatnesse of our sinne and the horrible punishment due to the same Ans We knowe it saieth the booke by the lawe of God rightly vnderstoode the summe whereof is contained in the ten commaundements Rom. 3.20 For by the law commeth the knowledge of sinne saith Saint Paul and reade the 7. Chapter from the 7. verse to the 13. and marke it Fitly then followeth the first part of my diuision of the Catechisme before to wit the lawe Que. What is the first Commaundement Ans Thou shalt haue none other Gods but mée Que. What is the meaning of this Commandement Ans The Lorde straightly chargeth vs in this Commaundement The Booke that wee worship GOD alone Which worship standeth in 4. pointes First that wee loue God aboue all Secondly that wee feare God aboue all Thirdly that wée make our prayers to none but to God Fourthly that wee acknowledge God alone to be the guider and gouernour of all things of whom we receiue all the benefites that we haue and therefore that we trust and stay vpon him alone Que. Can we doe any of these things vnlesse we know God Ans No it is impossible for all these dueties spring of the knowledge of God and the more we knowe him the more we loue him the more wee feare him and euery way serve him Que. And what is the first point of the knowledge of God Ans To knowe that there is a God without which knowledge saith the Apostle no man can come vnto God Hebrues 11. ● Que. What wayes haue we to know that there is a God by Ans First wee knowe by the creatures that there is a God Psal 19. For the heauens declare the glorie of God and the firmament sheweth his handie worke saieth the Prophet To whom agreeth the Apostle also saying that Rom. 1.19 That which is to bee knowen of God is manifest in them For the inuisible things of him as his eternall power and Godhead are seene by the creation of the world c. As by the greatnesse of this worlde and of many particular creatures in it as also by his making all things of nothing wee sée his great power by the varietie and notable order of the creatures we sée his wisedome and by the vse that wee haue of them wee sée his goodnesse c. Que. Howe else knowe we that there is a God Ans By his worde written as our fathers in olde time did knowe him because they heard him speake to them For by his worde he is to vs as by his audible voyce he was to them vnlesse we be Infidels Que. Thirdly howe Ans Thirdly The spirit of GOD knoweth the things that are of God and doeth reueile them saith the Apostle amongst which this is one that there is a God Which the same spirit doeth so ingraue in euerie one that is elected as he that féeleth not himselfe past doubting of it is verie iustly for to feare he belongeth not yet vnto the Lord. Que. Fourthly how prooue you there is a God Ans Euery mans conscience accusing him fearing him when he doeth euill excusing him and comforting him when he doeth well telleth him plainely there is a God which punisheth euil ●nd rewardeth good And their reason ●reuaileth with the most desperate ●hat euer was or is at some time or o●her more or lesse Que. Howe many Gods are there Ans But one onely God And that ●o my heart I prooue First by the scrip●ures There is one Lord one faith one ●aptisme one God and father of all Ephes 4.6 1. Tim. 2. And ●n an other place There is one GOD ●nd one mediator betwixt God man ●uen the man Iesus Christ Secondly by al ●he prayers of the godly in the Church which are directed but to one only God and therefore wee knowe there are no moe Thirdly by this commandement where he saith not Thou shalt haue none other Gods but vs but in the singular number none but me Fourthly ●y the consent of Gods Church which hath euer from time to time condemned them as heretikes which said there were any mo And lastly by reason For God is infinite and there can be but one infinite Therfore but one God c. Que. Howe many persons are there Ans Thrée persons As first I learn● by the third of Matthewe where the father speaketh from heauen and saieth This is my beloued Sonne Matth. 3. heare him The sonne is baptised and the holy Ghost like a Doue descendeth Secondly by the words of Christ Goe teach all nations baptising them In the name of the father of the sonne of the holy Ghost If there had béene any more persons Christ would haue named them and haue commaunded the same to bée done in their names also Or else there is inequalitie in the Godhead therefore we knowe there are but thrée persons and no moe Que. What is God Ans No man is able to define fully what God is in his essence But wée must content our selues to knowe him by his attributes namelie that hee is strong mightie mercifull wise slowe to anger of great goodnesse and so foorth as he is described vnto vs by himselfe in his worde Que. What is nowe the first duetie ●hat springeth of the knowledge of God Ans Of this knowledge of God ariseth first a true loue of him before and aboue all things whatsoeuer Which ●s when my heart euen effectually fée●ing how wonderfully he loued me first ●n electing creating redéeming and iustifying me in Christ Iesus besides infinite benefites else bestowed in bodie and mind vpon me doth euen burne in affection towards him againe submitteth it selfe wholy to him serueth him with chéerefulnesse maketh in trueth more account of him and his will than of all the worlde yea than euen of mine owne saluation if they could come in comparison together Que. Howe prooue you that I am thus bounde to loue God Ans It is prooued by Christ our Sauiours words He that loueth father or mother sister or brother wife or child Matth. 10.37 or any thing more than me is not worthie of me by the practise of the blessed Apostle who when he knew Christ once accounted those things which were vantage vnto him losse for Christ his sake yea euen all things he esteemed losse for the excellent
I further whether with any outwarde thing else whatsoeuer not warraunted by the word I haue thought or sought to serue and please the Lorde being by reason thereof brought asléepe with an imagination of my well doing and so carelesse to séeke or practise the dueties of the word If I haue this also knowe I to be a breach of this commandement Then from things not warraunted I came to things commanded as the hearing of the word prayer conference profitable with my brethren and such like knowing that if euen in these by the Lorde ordayned as thinges wherewith he is honoured and pleased I haue otherwise vsed my selfe than I should in stead of perfourming the Lordes appointment I haue brought before him mine owne inuention walking vnwittingly in mine owne wayes fearfully broken this precept of my God Which when I consider I néede no further shewe of grieuous guilt to cast me down from height of all supposed soundnes in this law Mine eyes do sée my heart acknowledgeth my conscience crieth my sinne is great Stand O soule before the Lord the iust and vpright Iudge whose pearcing eyes discouereth al thy waies set thy selfe more in his sight while mercie may be had whose voyce shall sound thy lasting woe if sight of sinne procure not true remorse And say now soule before the Iudge of trueth hast thou alwayes vsed as hee hath willed thée the hearing of the worde Did neuer desire of worldlie praise prouoke thée to this seruice Neuer diddest thou thinke to day such shall I sée and againe of them be noted if I goe Did neuer feare of worse opinion to be bred of thée in worldlie states by thy absence drawe thée out No fleshlie thought or earthly liking of the speaker hath there béene within thée to pricke thée to his hearing Hath painted pride and newe or straunge attyre neuer saide secretly in thée to daie goe heare the Sermon Lie thou maiest not the Lord being Iudge cleare thy selfe thou canst not O my so●le thy selfe being iudge Therefore that which the Lord appointeth as a seruice to himselfe and for our endlesse comfort by this corruption beginneth a seruice of thine own to thy iust damnation For to heare the Lorde biddeth but not for these ends Thus seruing the Lord in a thing commanded not as he commandeth I serue him with mine owne inuention and guiltie most grieuously I am before him O that I were any better in the duetie of prayer Am I neuer negligent colde and frosen Burneth the fire within me before or whilest I speake with my tongue Shaketh my flesh with the vehemencie of my spirite Neuer straieth my heart from present praier Neuer hast I to an ende or wearilie wishe the voice I heare to cease it is too long Ah wretch howe dare I say it Conscience cryeth and will not be bribed this duetie of prayer thus corruptly perfourmed the Lorde acknowledgeth not as a seruice by him commaunded but as mine own inuention and a breache of this his precept My conference with others in shewe so good in words so faire tasteth it neuer of liking of my selfe or vaine delight to heare mine owne discourse of pride to séeme and to be knowen a man indued with such and so good gifts Tendeth my heart in trueth to the praise of my God and the comfort of my hearers whensoeuer I speake of fruitfull things without all vaine respect and hidden euill whatsoeuer If it doe not then the thing that in it selfe the Lord hath commanded as I perfourme it he vtterly abhorreth and it is wilworshippe of mine owne not prescribed dutie by my God therefore a breache of this commaundement What should I say The more I searche the more I sée and I am not as I thought concerning the kéeping of this Lawe Mo things yet in it are commaunded and moe thinges well by these I sée I haue not perfourmed Thus much serueth to sound damnation to me and witnesse sufficient in dreadfull day shall this my guilt exhibite against me beside a curse vpon my posteritie to many generations But O Lorde thy mercie reacheth vnto the heauens Psal 36.5 and thy faithfulnesse vnto the cloudes Nehem 9.17 Gratious art thou O gratious God and full of compassion slowe to anger and of great goodnesse Were my sinnes as crimsin Esa 1.18 thou canst make them as white as snowe though they be as red as scarlet soone canst thou cause them to be as the wool Deare father haue mercie vpon me and burie in the bottome of the sea that they neuer more appeare before thée all my sinnes and by name my breaches of this commandement O my God as thou hast vouchsafed mee a Sauiour to quit mee from this curse so due vnto me for my disobedience so in that Sauiour of mine thine owne déere sonne looke vpon me He was borne for my sake he liued for my sake he died for my sake then let his birth his life his death good Lord profite mée in winning pardon of thée for my faults and direction of thy spirite for the time to come that better daily I may knowe to serue thée and euen in trueth as thou hast prescribed perfourme the same vnto thée Amen good Lord heare me The third Commaundement Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. Question WHAT is the meaning of this commaundement Your Booke Ans God chargeth vs in this third commaundement these thrée thinges First that we vse with most high reuerence the name of God whensoeuer we either speake or thinke vpon him Secondly that wee neuer blaspheme the name of God by coniuring witchcraft sorcerie or charming or any such like neither hy cursing or banning Thirdly that we neuer sweare by the name of God in our common talke although the matter be neuer so true but only where the glorie of God is sought or the saluation of our brethren or before a Magistrate in witnessing the trueth when we are thereunto lawfully called In which causes we must onely sweare by the name of God But as for Saintes Angels Roode Booke Crosse Masse or anie other thing we ought in no case by them to sweare Que. What is meant by the name of God here Ans Not only anie one word vsuallie giuen to him in scripture as Iehouah or such like Philip. 2 9. but also his maiestie and excellencie with such attributes as declare the same as his wisedome his iustice his prouidence his mercie and so foorth Againe his lawe and commandements or his doctrine and worde are vsuallie signified by it Leuit. 22.31 1. Tim. 61. to make vs more carefull to attende vppon them as things wherupon depend the honour glorie and name of God Que. What is it to take his name in vaine Ans Surelie either to speake or thinke of it without most high reuerence and especiallie to sweare by it otherwise than we ought Also to cast behind vs the diligent care of his commaundementes
of their woe whose paine in pietie they shoulde neuer wish to sée finally euen euerie way to God to Prince to Countrey to friendes their owne soules enemies most daungerous and pernicious The Lorde Iesus Christ open their eyes touche their hearts and conforme their practise of behauiour to his will if it may stand with his good liking Que. I pray you nowe goe forward in recitall of the exercises of this Sabaoth Ans Secondlie beside the diligent hearing of the worde preached on this day and read vnto vs it is our dueties and a godly exercise fit for the day amongest our selues or with our pastor and preacher to conferre and talke of that which hath béene saide and to aske questions howe this and that is to be vnderstoode Such example haue we in the Gospell where it is saide that when Christ was alone Mark 4.10 they that were about him with the twelue asked him of the parable which before he had vttred and he readilie expounded the same vnto them Then vttered he moe and without parables saith the text spake nothing vnto them Verse 34. but he expounded all things apart to his Disciples Thirdly to receiue together the supper of the Lord Luke 22. Acts. 20.7 as we are commanded and the Church euer accustomed to doe To attende vnto Baptisme if occasion so serue duely pondering the promise that is past vs to serue the Lorde and praying faithfully for his guiding grace to be powred vpon our selues that or those infants then presented to the Church that they and we may euer fulfill what we haue vowed before the congregation Fourthlie from a true féeling heart of Gods receiued goodnes to giue him thankes on this day for his many and great mercies vpon bodie and soule at home and abroad vpon our selues and ours knowen and vnknowen bestowed the wéek passed vpon vs to pray for the continuaunce of the same all the next wéeke ensuing euer else with his gratious supplie of all necessaries whatsoeuer without the which either our worldly estate or spiritual obedience to him cannot be sustained Fiftly to consider of the poore which the Lord hath set amongest vs as subiects for our loue to worke vpon to sée what they want how they liue to visit them and prouide for them This hath euer of Gods children béene greatlie regarded and is a part of the discipline of the Church also The Apostle Paul ordained a gathering in the church of Corinth euery Sabaoth day to this vse 1. Cor. 16.1 and that to the example of other reformed Churches Christ visited the cripples and lazers on the Sabaoth day Iohn 5. and healed him that had none to put him in the poole The borne blinde he healed on the Sabaoth day Iohn 9. And from the godlie care of our forefathers touching this matter haue flowen our hospitals and almes-houses with such like This is an exercise of fayth and loue fitte for all times but chiefely on the Sabaoth day to be regarded Thus wee féede Christ when he is hungrie Matth. 25.35 cloath him naked visite him sicke and so foorth and sure sure shall wee bee to finde it at the generall accounting daie of his Lastly to take care and conferre amongest our selues how to mainetaine all meanes that serue to the knowledge of God as the ministers scholers vniuersities schooles and such like To meditate also this day more than other daies of the creatures of God and of his excéeding goodnesse toward vs in them What it is to keepe holy the Sabaoth day is an exercise of the Sabaoth with a number such moe that were nowe too long particularlie to name Therefore to conclude and end this matter easilie may we hereby sée that to kéepe holy the Sabaoth day is nothing else but euen to separate and consecrate the same to all godlie exercises wherein our faith to God and obedience is to be shewed Que. If these then and their like bee commanded to vs on this day to be perfourmed their contraries I take by the same Lawe to be forbidden Ans Truth it is and must néedes be so but I thinke it néedelesse now againe to goe ouer them and shewe their contraries rather wey them your selfe and marke them particularly Onely these I wish by name may more duelie bee thought of that if the sanctification of this day consist greatly in labouring to knowe the Lorde by the preaching of his worde howe shall they safely passe the curse of God for the breache hereof who with benummed soules parched padded senselesse and euery way most hardened hearts either lie and sléepe on the one side idle or tossing the alepot with their neighbours suffer this day to passe without any instruction and like dumbe dogges hold their peace no way discharging the dutie of a true minister and one that tendereth the glory of God his owne his peoples soules What should I say of them that séeing the haruest great and the labourers fewe and féeling within themselues working a secrete power perswading to put their helping hand to this businesse yet doe not but suffer the people to pollute the Sabaoth for want of teaching and stay themselues from this worke of the Lorde vpon causes that as it is to be feared will melt away and not stand to excuse them when GOD shall come vnto iudgement Euery seruaunt to his owne master it is true standeth or falleth yet may one seruant admonish an other to béeware betimes and therefore with my whole heart I wish a due regard hereof Againe if to sanctifie the Sabaoth be to consecrate it to holy vses such as haue béene named is it possible for vs to escape the reuenging hande of the eternall God if he content in mercie with one day in the 7. we denie him that also and dedicate it to drunkennes to feasting and surfetting c. Nowe in the name of the God of heauen and of Iesus Christ his son who shall come to iudge the quick the dead at the latter day I require it of al that euer shall reade these words that as they wil answere me before the face of God all his Aungels at the sounde of the last trump they better wey whether carding dising tabling bowling and cocking stage plaies and summer games whether gadding to this ale or that to this bearebaiting that bulbaiting with a number such be exercises commanded of God for the sabaoth day or no. O hartal frosen void of the féeling of the mercie of thy God that hauing euery day in 6. euery houre in euery day euery minute in euery houre so tasted of the swéet grace of thy God in Christ as that without it thou hadst perished euery minute yet canst not tel howe possibly to passe ouer one day to his praise vnlesse one halfe of it be spent in carding bowling Awake awake in Iesus Christ admonished awake séeing al the wéeke long the Lord of
wée woulde a very horrible thing if we could duely regarde and thinke of it For what is it but to contemne GOD and his wisedome to striue and fight against the Spirite teaching and conuerting men by the ministerie of the worde and euen in effect to say I am as wise and godlie as either hee can make mee or shall make mee I will none of his grace What is it but to giue a grieuous offence to others for the which the liuing God hangeth a woe ouer our heads saying Woe be to him by whom offence commeth it were better for that person to haue a milstone tyed about his neck and to be cast into the bottome of the Sea And againe It were good for that man if he had neuer beene borne What is it but to féede the deuils humor and to doe that thing that most highly pleaseth him Againe to consider howe we haue offended when we were present at Church by negligent and colde performaunce of that thing which time place and duetie required at our handes Haue we neuer come to the hearing of the worde but with reuerence with willing desire preparing our hearts before vnto it by some secrete prayer within our selues to the Lorde that he would blesse the speaker that hee may speake to our heartes and blesse vs that we may attentiuely hearken profitably féele and thankefully taking whatsoeuer is spoken increase in obedience to it Haue wee neuer come to the Sacramentes when we could and neuer without such examination and other circumstances as are straitly required of a Christian Haue we spent the Sabaoth in godly conference meditation powring out thanks from a féeling soule for the Lords goodnes euer to vs namely the wéeke passed Haue we visited or thought vpon the sick sore diseased imprisoned banished or any way suffring for a good cause to our power comforted them Haue we studied how either to procure or continue or increase amongst our selues or our neighbours the meanes of saluatiō as the preaching of the word such like O beloued we haue not we haue not we know it must néeds confesse it if there be any trueth in vs. Too much haue we neglected all these yea euen diuerse of them it is greatly to bee feared haue litle or neuer at all troubled our heads but for their contraries in most ful measure we haue wallowed in them and with gréedinesse euer accomplished thē Where is the minister whose negligence hath not made his people to pollute the Sabaoth Where is the people whose consciences awaked may not iustly condemne them for vngodly gadding on this day to Churchales to weddings to drinkings to bākets to fairs markets to stage plaies to bearebaytings summer games and such like Where is that master that hath had a conscience to restrain his seruants from this impietie or the seruant againe that hath either brideled himselfe for the Lords cause or else wel accepted his master or mistres restraint being made vnto him and which hath not rather burst out into vngodly disobedient spéeches murmuring that because he hath wrought all the wéeke therfore he should haue libertie to do what he list on the Sabaoth not considering that this commandement bindeth not only the master himselfe to honor God on this day but to sée to his family so much as he can that they also do it Nay I would to God the masters in many places were not ringleaders to their owne al other mens people to prophane this Sabaoth of the Lord and that euen such maisters as in respect of their calling office and credite in the countrey should farre otherwise doe When doeth a gentleman to name no higher estates appoint a shooting a bowling a cocking or a drunken swearing ale for the helpe as they say of some poore one but vppon the Sabaoth And if he be at the Church in the forenoone for the after noone it is no matter he hath béene verie liberall to God in giuing him so much What day in the wéeke vsually doeth he giue so euill an example of vnmeasurable sotting in bed as on the Sabaoth But O filthie sauour that ariseth out of this lothsome chanell thus raked vp into the nostrels of the Lorde I spare to speake I shame to sée I rew to knowe what I fully knowe against our soules in this respect Let euerie man and woman more particularly view thēselues and lay open vnto the Lorde their sinne in sorowe for it by this occasion thinke what is commaunded looke what wee haue done the Lorde make our sinfull hearts to sée sigh for so great offence against our God What should I say of the second end of the institution of the Sabaoth namely for the rest of seruant cattell But euen in an word woe to the man whom God shall iudge according to his guiltinesse herein For it is too vsual with al estates to be a meanes to robbe their seruauntes of the blessing due to the kéepers of this law and to pull vppon them the plague for the contrarie by making them ride and run post and away vpon euerie occasion that commeth in their heads when in truth if they would but euen look into it the matter may be done wel without such hast O happie is that man whose heart thinketh howe his seruant is bound to this commandement of kéeping holy the Sabaoth as well as hée hath a soule to loose or saue as well as he to be nourished with the foode of the word as well as he and therefore thereon concludeth he will neither sinne himselfe nor make his seruant sinne in breach of this or any other commandement The third end of the Sabaoth we heard it was that hereby might bee resembled in some sort our spirituall rest in heauen wee ceasing from our owne workes dooing the will of God But are we able to say wee haue this doone O miserable men ten thousand times if in this we should haue our desertes for wherein or howe crucifie we the fleshe more on this day than any other bridle the frowarde desires of the heart restrayne our owne nature and doe the will of God more on this day than any other Alas our owne consciences crie vnto vs we doe nothing lesse wee drinke wée eate wée surfet wee sweare we play we daunce we whore we walke and talke idlely vainely vncleanely and vngodlily these are our workes on the Sabaoth more commonly than any day in the wéeke else and if this bee to resemble a spirituall rest then in déede wee doe it not otherwise Thus stand wee therefore guiltie and gréeuously guiltie of this commaundement So that if we had not a Sauiour who in our flesh had fulfilled this lawe and euerie one for vs and appeased the wrath of God his father iustly conceiued against our sinnes neuer should we haue looked within his kingdome And howe shall we bée better for all which he hath doone but by séeing our passed sinne and
For be he as wise as he will in directing the Magistrate to a lawe to rule vs by we shortly after wil be vp in wit against him to shake in péeces by a shift all his indeuour Truely our heartes be dead our sinne is great the Lorde hath wrath in store if this our dealing with our parentes be not confessed and amended Thus deale we also with our ministers and spirituall fathers begetting vs to the Lorde With most vile vsage we often abuse them and if not yet in heart at least as the refuse of the worlde we estéeme them Let God be iudge or our owne soules what base and scorneful concepts we harbour of them and whether in trueth as parentes they be loued accompted of and delt withall What swelling pride in youth against the aged What vngratefull handes and heartes against our great and gainefull friendes Euerie way euerie way guiltie we are of the breache of this commaundement if wee can sée it Magistrates also and ministers euen asmuch for their great offences in their callings so that if in iustice we be repayed short shall our liues be heere on earth and in the world to come eternall death Who can say he hath doone the duties of a gouernour who can say he hath liued lawefully as an inferiour Alas we are touched all with sinne and robbed by it of all the blessing Yet sinne espied and truely loathed findes euer pardon For this cause Christ died that we should not be damned if we will be taught Thinges past be gone and the Lorde forgiue vs. Some be to come and the Lorde strengthen vs. Whether we be parentes and haue not deserued or we be children and haue not perfourmed the Lorde hath mercie if we doe amende the Lorde hath loue if our liues doe séeke it and iudgement also if perswasion profit not Life doth he promise if we kéepe this lawe and life will he giue vs as hee is GOD and true both heere and euermore The sixt Commaundement Thou shalt doe no murther Question HOw standeth the order of this commandement Ans Great wisedome hath our God shewed euen in the order of euery one and by name of this For hauing in the former established degrées amongest men some to rule and some to obey if he should not also haue set limittes for their authoritie it had bene to arme iniustice and to strengthen oppression and wrong Que. What is the equitie of this lawe Ans It is a verie iust lawe and méete to bee established and made in thrée respectes First in respect of God himselfe who louing all good preseruation of life goods credite c. and hating the contrarie fitly prouideth to worke the same in men whome he would haue holy as he is holie Secondly in respect of man for our brother is our owne flesh and wee come all of one roote and therefore wee shoulde not kill Lastlie forasmuch as the societie and traficke of man with man cannot be vnlesse life may be in safetie therefore euen in respect thereof also méete it was that the Lord should make this lawe that we should not kill Que. Is all killing of anie thing that hath life forbidden in these wordes of the lawe Ans No indéede but if we would vnderstande what notwithstanding these wordes we may doe wee must consider that all liuing things are of thrée sorts either they are plantes hearbes trées and such like or brute beastes or reasonable creatures And al these in time place and for some causes we may kill notwithstanding these wordes For the first we haue our warrants in these wordes I haue giuen you euerie hearbe bearing seede Gen. 1.29 which is vppon all the earth and euerie tree wherein is the fruit of a tree bearing seede that shall be to you for meate For the seconde Euery thing saith God that moueth and liueth shal be meate for you Gen. 9.3 as the greene hearbe I haue giuen you all thinges For the thirde and last sort both the sundrie commandementes of God in sackages of cities to put to sworde man woman and childe prooue it as also many his lawes made to that ende Que. But may anie man shed mans bloud Ans No onely they haue lawefully shedde mans bloud which haue had a calling of the Lorde to the same as the Magistrate Que. And what say you of the warriour Ans Wee must comprehende him vnder the title of a Magistrat for so indéede he is if he be thereunto appointed The calling also Luke 3. Iohn Baptist approoueth in that his spéeche vnto the souldiers whome hee doth not bidde to leaue that life but to vse it rightly which yet he would not haue aduised them if it had béene vngodly Also in the gospell Christ toucheth not the Centurion for his kinde of life Math. 8. neither Peter Cornelius who was a Captaine or yet his messenger Act. 10. which was a Souldier And I come vnto thee sayeth Dauid in the name of the Lorde and blessed be the Lorde which teacheth my hands to warre and my fingers to fight Psalm 143. Que. Is onely the actuall killing of a man forbidden Ans No but euen aswell also the ordinarie forerunners of murther to wit fighting and quarrelling For if a man cause anie blemish in his neighbour Leuit. 24.19 sayth the lawe as he hath done so shall it be doone vnto him Eie for eie tooth for tooth hande for hande foote for foote Exod. 21.24.25 burning for burning wounde for wounde stripe for stripe Whereby wee sée plainely howe the GOD of heauen alloweth that hurting and laming of our brethren in fight which a fleshly man taketh to be so lawefull so glorious and an argument of such valure in him And no doubt but this lawe of God thus executed vpon vs would quickly coole that raging heate within vs which no counsell of our friendes no consideration of necessarie circumstances as of our calling the place where we liue the charge of wife children and such like hanging vpon our safetie the lawe of man no nor the lawe of God it selfe condemning vs for it can staie or aswage Math. 5.39 Againe Resist not euill sayth the Lorde but whosoeuer shal smite thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also That is be so farre from yéelding to the rage of thy affections which prouoke thee to strike againe that euen rather thou be cōtent to take asmuch more than to displease thy God by vngodly and forbidden reuenge And for quarrelling what a swéete and vehement perswasion is it of the Apostle against such bitter words of a boyling and boysterous heart Now therefore sayth he as the elect of God holy and beloued Colos 3.13 put on tender mercie and kindenesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long suffering forbearing one an other and forgiuing one an other if anie man haue a quarrell to an other euen as Christ forgaue you euen so doe yee Hatefull therefore before God are as I
crueltie and hearde dealing with our brethren for euen this the Lorde abhorreth also Deutr. 2● The lawe that was made of fortie stripes to be giuen to an offender and not aboue did euidentlie drawe to some pitifull feeling our cruell raging and fierce affections The ●awe for widowes that they should not be wronged and for the fatherlesse that they should not be forsaken shotte at the same marke So did the forbidding of vsurie to the poore the taking of his rayment to pledge the detayning of his hire such like thinges All were to worke some mercie in vs towardes others and to tell vs plainely that the Lorde abhorreth cruelty towardes anie Que. Thus then if you thinke good let it suffice to haue spoken of these three sortes of murther to wit of the hande the tongue and the heart together with their branches and nowe a litle of the affirmatiue part of this commandement if you will Ans The affirmatiue part of it easily may be knowen by the negatiue For who seeth not that if generally all hurting or taking away of life vnlesse it be by the Magistrate lawefullie be forbidden then generally also is commaunded all care and preseruation of the same Deutr. 19.20 and if in specialitie the bitternesse of the tongue bee forbidden then is the swéetenesse the softnesse and the comfort of the same commaunded If anger be forbidden gentlenesse is commaunded if misliking hatred enuie and ioying at other mens harmes be forbidden then is an heart well thinking and accepting of others commaunded then is loue and a true reioycing at the good happes of our brethren commended and to conclude if all crueltie rigor and extremitie bee forbidden then is all lenitie mercie and pitie commaunded All which are vertues of great praise and afording large perswasions vnto our heartes to loue and like them to embrace and followe after them But so shoulde I dwell too long in this commaundement The blacknesse of their opposite vices I hope doeth make their beautie and brightnesse great before our eyes Onelie I wishe vs to the ende wee may abounde in all mercie that wee would often consider that comfortable spéech of the Lorde by his prophet Esay 58.10 If thou refresh the hungrie and troubled soule then shall thy light spring out of darkenesse the Lorde shall satisfie thy soule in drought and make fatte thy bones and thou shalt be like a spring of water whose water faileth not As also that sentence which at the daie of dayes shall be pronounced vppon it Come come yee blessed of my father and possesse the kingdome prepared for you Math. 25. for when I was hungrie yee fedde me when I was thirstie you gaue me drinke when I was naked yee clothed mee when I was sicke yee visited mee and so foorth Both which places with manie moe to the same ende beeing often thought vpon will soften our heartes in all dealinges with our brethren and make vs profitable to them euer to our powers And yet which I had almost forgotte it is not ynough for vs to doe good to be kinde and to shewe mercie but wee must doe it also spéedily readilie and fitlie that is when the néede of our brethren requireth it obseruing carefullie all occasions For as it is sayde of guiftes that qui cito dat bis dat he that giueth a thing quickly giueth it twise so is it of all thinges we doe to helpe in time is a double helpe and a benefite hauing lost the oportunitie of our brothers néede looseth his welcome Wherefore Iob professeth that he had not caused the eyes of the widowe to faile in long looking for his helpe Iob. 31.16 And Mardocheus requireth of Hester not only helpe but present Hester 4. a singular example for all estates Que. What punishment hadde the breach of this commandement Ans The spirituall punishment of it as of all other sinnes is eternall damnation both of bodie and soule For without shall be dogges Apoc. 22.15 inchaunters whoremungers murtherers c. sayeth S. Iohn the temporall punishment of it was amongest the Iewes by the lawe of God bloud for bloud Gen. 9. Leuit. 24. and before the lawe by expresse wordes vnlesse in such cases as the cities of refuge were ordayned for And euen as it were aboue all other sinnes it is worthie marking howe euer the iudgement of GOD hath not suffered this sinne to lie vnknowen or vnpunished All stories be full of examples Phocas Boniface 7. Alexander 6. Ethelbert Richard 3. and euerie man almost in his owne dayes hath knowen some experience Hotte is the wrath of the Lorde against this sinne and his mercie therefore euer kéepe vs from it The Application WIth what wordes nowe should I wish euerie one to descende into themselues and to take a view of their estate before the Lorde touching this commaundement Manie branches of it haue béene layde before vs and what branch is it which we haue not broken being narrowly sifted by the Lorde The murther of the hande I knowe wil be our instance but alas howe many thinges make men guiltie in this If euer in seruice against the enimie wee haue passed the bounds of a Christian heart in cruelly murdering concerning the maner who yet might haue died respecting the matter we are guiltie and spotted before the Lorde If women and children aged and impotent sicke and diseased that caried no weapon against our cause haue not so farre foorth béene regarded of vs and spared yea defended by vs from our féercer felowes as by right we might our handes haue faulted our loue hath wanted to the life of our brethren If cruellie wee haue wished but in our inwarde heartes any disorderlie and vnmercifull spoyle of our foes in féelde we haue sinned certainly in so doing For euen the spoyle that a Christian souldier maketh of his enimies in the warres should sauour of the mercifull nature so néere as he can of that God whome he professeth If we haue béene euer as you hearde but any occasion of the death of any either present or spéedier than otherwise it wold haue béene or of the shortening of our owne health life and abilitie by intemperancie incontinencie or anie meanes whatsoeuer the iustice of our vndefiled God doth find it out and we haue sinned against him in this thing Where thē is our righteousnes but euē in this branch of actual hand murder for the tong what should I say Doth no mans hart accuse him of vnrighteousnes Haue we neuer passed any spiteful slander to the hurt of thē whom we should haue loued Deniall of it can neuer hide it but confession of it hath mercie promised The name peraduēture of slander is odious to vs we hardly can accuse our selues of so foule a vice Slander Well then let him change his cote but remaine the same mōster stil Haue we neuer reported any vnknowē thing to the harme of our brethren Neuer whispered that
new Testament that were married to begge any pardon for it at Gods hand or to insinuate anie way any impietie of theirs in so doing Which yet assuredly they would haue doone if the opinion of poperie had bin true concerning single life and matrimonie Lib. 10. ca. 26. S. Augustine in his booke of Virginitie hath manie words of the rewardes of matrimonie concludeth thus that eternall life is giuen of the Lord both to married vnmarried indifferently The councell of Gangren thought good to make this canon An. 333. Can. 10. that if any liuing single for the Lord should in arrogancie pride contemne those that were married they should be accursed Wherefore wee conclude this matter say as the Church of God said in that time Virginitie we cōmend Concil Gangren Epiph. tom 1. lib. 2. baeres 48 widowhood we praise the chast bond of godly wedloocke we honour receiue But as for adulterie fornication vncleannes whatsoeuer either of body or mind we abhor it condēne it Thus then I I hope you sée how the opiniō of chastitie to consist only in liuing single sprūg vp euen by the diuell who knew not otherwise how to draw men to vncleannes being robbed of his former means than by making them to abridge themselues of the ordinance of God against the euil You haue séene also how false this is and that in godly matrimonie aswel as in single life there is liked chastitie of the lord You haue séene that neither of these estates haue any preminēcie aboue the other in respect of greater pietie or merit but both of them alike acceptable to God if for the parties they be expedient only in regard of outward incūbrances the one is more frée thā the other Lastly you sée the vertue of this cōmandement opposed to adulterie to be chastitie but how not to liue vnmaried as the papistes dreame but both in mariage out of it to kéepe body soule vnspotted of filthie lust concupiscence The other pointes of mariage it self of second mariages of poligamie of diuorce such like which were in this place to be handled I think good to cut off hauing taried alreadie too ●ong in this cōmandement to reserue ●hem till some other occasion Que. Yet adde some thing concerning the punishmēt of them that breake this commaundement Ans The law of God as we all may ●ée Deutro 22. punished adulterie with present ●eath Fornication with mariage of ●he partie if the parentes would and if ●hey would not with a dowrie to be giuen The Athenians punished it with ●eath This lande of ours in the dayes of Canutus had a lawe to cut off the no●es and eares of adulterous women And for the spirituall punishment of it ●t was euer is 1. Cor. 6. and shall be damnation ●f body and soule in the pit of hell with●ut repentaunce The Application NOwe then consider what hath béene said euen as we desire true fruit of the worde of God vnto our soules let vs weigh our ●wne estate in euerie branch of this commandement The act of vncleannes howe it can accuse vs that God doeth know who hath hell in his hand to cast vs into it if we haue sinned And therfore if either with maried or vnmaried wee haue euer thus offended let his power be thought of let hell be feared and so foule a fault from the verie hear● roote be earnestly lamented Excuse i● not with youth or any circumstaunce cause or occasion in the world these scoffings of the Lord wil not euer be borne in youth we are Gods aswell as in age and in youth we should serue him aswe● as in age if we do not euen youth shall to hell aswell as shall age Sinne séene and sorowed for left and forsaken hath pardon promised but sinne iested at and played withall hath vengeance threatned It is the voice of a Christian to say I haue sinned but it is the voyce of a reprobate to say still I wil sin wtout remorse The best may offende but the best can neuer continue offending And therfore take héede and if act can accuse vs let it neuer héereafter be able to blame vs for souden and feareful is the vengeanc● from heauen that lighteth vpon adulterers From the act let vs come to the ●nwarde thought and as it is more priuie and we all more prone vnto it so let it be more carefullie weighed and searched out euen of vs all Let vs call to minde with a féeling heart how foullie howe fearefully and how euen continually we offende the Lorde by our hidden conceites Howe quickly crée●eth into vs an euill thought and howe swelleth it within whē it once is there It worketh within vs as a thing most strong verie fowly stayneth vs o●ten ●ere we do cōsider it Yea our negligence in this befalse doth condemne vs before the Lord and pronounceth against vs that wee feare more men than God For our outwarde actions we are carefull of so néere as we can to kéepe the blottes of them out of sight but our heartes being thinges hidden from the eies of men we cary litle care ouer them to kéepe them cleane from impure concepts What man may sée we are ashamed that he should sée but which God beholdeth our secret thoughtes we feare not at all to haue them foule filthie and wicked O what a God serue we that being able to set euerie thought wee thinke visible in our foreheads in great letters that euerie one which runneth by might reade them yet most mercifully spareth vs and is content our secret shame should not appeare to men Shall we still prouoke him shall wee still offende and grieue him Surely thē hotte wil be the wrath at last which so long his mercie hath withhoulden Wherefore to conclude this matter euen as we loue the Lord and our owne health let vs sée and weigh how déepely this lawe against impure thoughtes is able to charge vs let vs consider the cause if we can find it out that driueth vs vsually into such hidden sinne and héereafter as men touched with some Christian remorse that so good a God should so still be offended let vs ridde our heartes as we can of the effect by taking away or at least stopping in some measure the course of the cause The meanes and allurementes either to the actuall offence or the thought ●ondemned in this commaundement as we haue heard before are many and diuerse Sometimes the eyes disorderly wander and beeing not checked by a Christian conscience that feareth to giue them libertie too long they become the occasions both of thoughtes and actes wicked and damnable Sometimes behauiour vnchast and vnséemely Someties speeche wanton and light stir the hart vp to conceiue that thing and the wicked fleshe to perfourme it fully which God and nature abhorre as filthie The dalying tattles of these courting dayes the lasciuious songes made by loose mindes and
the wanton gréetinges in euerie place nowe vsed alas what thoughtes procure they neuer liked of the Lorde that I may say no worse Bookes written by vnreformed heartes and continually redde to the gréefe of God are they no occasions to fraile flesh both in thought and déede to offende against this law God knoweth and experience teacheth such soules as ta●t of Christ that verie deadly poyson vnder a false delight doth this way créepe into vs. An vnchast looke make● an vnchast heart and a rouing tongue beyonde the listes of godlinesse ere eue● we well knowe what we doe So subtill is the sinne that this way créepeth into our soules Apparell is next a most fearefull allurement to the breache o● this commaundement both in thought and déede if God once in mercie would open our eyes So are these stage playes and most horrible spectacles so is our dauncing which at this day is vsed so is drunkennesse gluttonie and idlenesse with a number such like as can witnesse eche one in the world that will weigh them Nowe what care we haue had of these things the Lord knoweth and to our profite if we list a litle we may consider it Our eyes O Lorde howe doe they offend through our carelesse bestowing of them to their owne desire Where is the testimonie of truth within vs that we doe restraine them so soone as euer wee perceiue anie tickling motion arise by them Where is the counterpane of that bande we haue taken of them that they shall not cause 〈◊〉 to offende Iob did it and yet wee ●eaker than hee ten thousande times ●hinke it néedelesse Alas our folly Iob. 31.1 alas ●ur security By this meanes our soules ●●rk in their bane yet we care not nor ●ilbe warned The Lord of his mercie ●●ue vs once the grace to desire it with ●auid and verie hartily to beg it Psalm 11● that our ●●es may be euer turned away from be●olding vanitie For the rest which fol●owe consider thē well let neuer Sa●han or selfeloue so stil bewitch vs that ●e cannot be brought to sée our sin In ●ehauiour or spéech haue we neuer offē●ed But euer in them both so vsed our ●elues as that neither we nor they whom ●e delt withall may be charged of more ●ightnesse than became the professors of Christ and his worde Haue wee neuer ●ransgressed in matter or forme of apparel O that we could say it But in truth we can not For the contraries abounding in the eies of al men would giue vs the lie Light behauiour and alluring ●aliance is euerie where accompted comelie bouldnesse Behauiour and good bringing vp Speech discoursing spéeche to a vaine ende we count a quality commendable in vs and the want of it we estéeme simplicitie wheresoeuer we sée it And therefore by bookes to such endes set out we endeuour to attaine vnto it and hauing once polluted our spéech for I will neuer call it polishing we are neuer better than when we haue company to bestowe our tales and gréetinges vppon Our apparell in matter to our power we make sumptuous Apparell and in forme to allure the eye asmuch as wee can If this be true in the name of Christ let vs better thinke of it than we haue done These are allurementes to sinfull lust and this lawe of God forbiddeth not onely both act and thought but euen euerie allurement to either of them What should I speake of stage plaies and dauncing Can we say in trueth before the maiestie of God that we carefullie abstaine from these thinges because they tickle vs vp either more or lesse to the breach of this commanndement Alas we cannot a number of vs. But we runne to the one continually to our cost Playes when we will not be drawen to better exercises that are offered fréely we sucke in the venom of them with great delight and practise the spéeches and conueyances of loue which there we sée and learne Dauncing The other wee vse with especiall pleasure and God being witnesse to many an one they wish the fruite of their dauncing to be this euen the fall of them selues and others into the breache of this lawe What should I say of gluttonie and idlensse Doe they not make vs sinne Good Lorde giue vs eyes to sée Gluttonie and drunkennesse and hearts to weigh the occasions of our fall The spirite of God hath sayde that these pricked vp the flesh of the filthy Sodomites to that height of sinne and yet we can imagine they will cause no sinne at all in vs against this lawe And therefore professing the gospell and integritie of life yet dare we so pamper so stuffe cramme this rebelling flesh as if we were gods that could suffer no temptation we dare gull in wine and hote drinkes continually beeing peraduenture both strong and young and euerie way néeding rather pulling downe than setting vp Idlenesse We dare solace our selues in soft beddes too long for our constitutions and all the day after betake our selues to nothing whereabout the minde might walke and so escape impure conceptes Wee dare differ the meanes which God hath appointed for our helpe to liue vndefiled for euerie trifling cause and féeling the flesh to arise in disobedience against this lawe euen dayly yet neither fast wee nor breake our sléepe nor labour nor marrie nor any way stoppe the course of it But certainely as vnféeling men passe on the time and heape vp wrath against the day of wrath for our boulde offending And yet we hope to be saued and yet we hope to haue a ioyfull resurrection But O déere in the Lorde it will not be so For is not this the lawe of God Thou shalt not committe adulterie Doeth it not forbidde both act and thought as we haue plainely séene and euen euerie allurement to either of them And must not God iudge vs according to his lawe Nowe then should wee liue when we haue witnesse within vs that wee offende his ●aw Bée not deceiued but as we feare the losse of bodie and soule for euermore let vs be warned Can nothing accuse vs that hath béene sayde Did we neuer in act or in thought receiue anie staine contrarie to this commaundement Haue wee euer had care and power to auoide all meanes What mouth dare speake it what heart can thinke it if it be not brasse or stéele and as voyde of féeling Wherefore awake let vs all from our former sléepe let vs stande vp at last from the dead in trespasses and sinnes and Christ our déere Sauiour shall giue vs light Let vs acknowledge what this lawe requireth and what wee should haue doone euerie one of vs. Let vs confesse we haue straied frō it many a time way and are no way able to offer vp our selues righteous cléere innocent to the Lord touching this lawe and for the time to come that we shall yet liue héere O let vs carrie some greater care to
thee or if thou knowe him not 2. then thou shalt bring it vnto thy house and it shall remaine with thee vntill thy brother seeke after it then shalt thou deliuer it to him againe 3. In like maner shalt thou doe with his Asse and so shalt thou doe with his raiment and with all lost thinges of thy brother which hee hath lost if thou hast founde them thou shalt not withdrawe thy selfe from them Sée héere the loue of man to the goods of his brother in what sort the Lorde requireth it Nowe least the name of brother vsed here in this place shoulde deceyue vs to thinke wee are bounde but to our friendes in this duetie it is profitable to note howe in an other place in stéede of brother is put enimie and all these particulars neuerthelesse named If thou meete thine enimies oxe or aff● going astray thou shalt bring him again and so foorth of the rest So that this being a fruite of loue which God requireth in vs all towardes the goods of all men bee they friendes or foes that wee shoulde kéepe them and chéerish them and in safetie restore them if wee finde them lost when once wee knowe the owners of them surely we must néede confesse that to conceile and retaine thinges founde of vs after wee knowe who shoulde haue them is plaine and flatte theft Yea it is a breach of conscience no doubt in this matter to enioy anie thing founde without tru● testimonie in our selues that wee hau● vsed as manie meanes as wee coulde to learne out the looser as by asking by proclayming and such like This wel● considered and waied should a litle mor● awake such as bee Lordes of waife an● straies as we saie that they carie a● eye ouer their baliffes in that behalfe s● néere as they can to sée that they bring not sinne vppon them by making them vniust retainers of other mens goods 〈◊〉 ●omplaint common in most places and 〈◊〉 theft not to be warranted in any place Que. What is our duetie in buying ●elling Ans When thou sellest ought to thy ●eighbour saith the lawe or buiest at ●hy neighbors hand Leuit. 25.14 you shall not op●resse one an other meaning by deceite ●r any otherwise but according to the ●umber of yeares after the Iubile thou ●halt buie of thy neighbour 15. also accor●ing to the number of the yeares of the ●euenewes he shal sell vnto thee 16. Accor●ing to the multitude of yeres thou shalt ●ncrease the price therof according to ●he fewnes of yeres thou shalt abate the ●rice of it for the number of fruits doth he ●●l vnto thee Oppresse not yee therefore ●ny man his neighbour 17. but thou shalt ●eare thy God For I am the Lord thy god ●n which law this I marke that when 〈◊〉 sel or buie I must show euen a loue to ●y brother a tender affection in that ●y dealing with him For so is it ment when it is said you shal not oppresse one ●nother Secondly that then consequently ●y gréedy affection may not set the price but the value of the thing and the benefite which it is likelie to yéelde For howe can I loue him and yet take more of him than I giue him that is more mony than the thing is worth Which things if they be wanting surely then our selling is deceite guile yea it is theft by this commaundement prooued For the verie equitie of this lawe as euerie one may plainlie sée was this that as good shoulde be giuen as taken and taken as giuen Euen that commutatiue iustic● which heathen men could see to be so ne●cessarie in all contractes and bargans as that without it no trading could stande or societie indure Vpon which lawe well considered and sound●● setled in our minds a godly man draw●eth these conclusions let vs thinke 〈◊〉 thē First it condemneth al ouersellin● I meane knowen and wilfull ouerse●●ling of any thing for so say the word● according to the number of yeares sha● thou sel that is if the Iubile be farre o● thou shalt sel dearer by reason the bu●● shal reape longer profite of it but if it 〈◊〉 neere then cheaper for the contrare re●●son So that an equalitie of commodities present is plainely shot at in this law How then can they warrant their dealings to haue required loue in them who in respect either of passed losse or supposed possible in time to come doe inhaunce the price of the thinges they sell aboue the value of the things This dealing if you marke the wordes well could not be allowed amongst the Iewes And as yet I am ignorant of any larger cōmission granted to vs to wrecke our selues vpon our brethren to robbe thē because God in his pleasure hath crossed vs with losse or may do hereafter Secondly it condemneth all vttering of naughty counterfeit coine or wares For first for the seller if he raise his price to the value of good wares then deliuer euill or counterfeit how doth he obserue an equalitie of commodotie And then for the buier if he beat it downe to as low a price as he may til be consent to giue so much for it and then deliuer counterfeit euill coine where is again the equitie of this law on his part who is bound by it to giue asmuch as good as hee taketh so néere as iudgement can any way serue him Thirdly it condemneth all lying in wayt to pray vpon one that must néeds sell for present mony to get his commoditie for halfe the value if I can when as rather I should for pitie giue him equalitie For what loue is this to the goods of my neighbor when I can be content euen to robbe him in his necessitie by taking that for a penie that is worth in mine owne conscience thrée and not to be bought vnder were his néede not so great Nowe sée and note then how commonlie yet fearefully for want of loue conscience to giue as good as we take our buying and selling one with an other is spotted stained with great and gréeuous theft For most assuredly euen as in the time of law if they obserued not a proportiō betwixt the Iubile yeare and their price they offended against the commaundement of theft so nowe the lawe béeing gone if the equitie of it be not obserued to wit equalitie of cōmoditie giuen and taken the same sinne is committed in the day of the Lord we shall find th● burthen of it Que. Thus then how ourloue should shew it selfe in these common duties we may easilie see nowe I pray you goe forwarde with other branches of this lawe Ans Oppression generally al is contrarie to that loue which the Lorde by this lawe séeketh to drawe out of vs therefore no doubt forbidden in the same And if in particulars wee list to lay it out First saith the worde Thou shalt not oppresse an hired seruāt Deut. 24.14 that is
spirituall and therefore his lawes not resting onely in outwarde actions as mens lawes doe Secondly by that spéech concerning adulterie which is true in all the commaundementes Hee that looketh Mark 7.23 and lusteth or coueteth hath sinned And by the testimonie of our Sauiour Christ who reckneth couetousnesse amongst those thinges that procéeding out and not going in difile a man To all which Chrysostome subscribeth and sayeth In Thes homilia 11. Auarus fur latro est A couetous man is a theefe Nowe what couetousnesse is albeit euerie man for the acquaintance that he hath with it may knowe yet doe I thus define it to be a damnable vice of the mind pricking and prouoking vs to followe after filthy lucre Which thing without the name and euen vnder the name is maruelously inueighed against in the scripture Chap. 2.5 The prophet Habacuc cryeth out against the heart that inlargeth his desire as the hell and is as death and cannot be satisfied but gathereth vnto him all nations and heapeth vnto him all people No he that coueteth an euill couetousnesse to his house that he may set his nest on heigh to escape from the power of euill Thou hast consulted shame to thine owne house by destroying many people and hast sinned against thine owne soule The stone shall cry out of the wall and the beame of the timber shall answere it wo to him that buildeth a towne by bloud and erecteth a citie by iniquitie and so foorth It is cryed out against in the gospell called the roote of all euill idolatrie and a thing not to be named amongest Christians Luke 12. 1. Timoth. 6. Ephes 5. Coloss 3. There is no speciall calling amongest men whereunto by name this vice is not forbidden as a venome of all vertue in euerie degrée in Princes in iudges in ministers in all it is forbidden and surely this is no small argument to a Christian man against it Fearefully punished was it in Gehezi the prophets man in Achan and a number mo And to conclude our scriptures Iob the seruant of the Lorde most notablie sheweth Iob. 31. howe hee shunned it Psal 119. and Dauid with all the heat of his heart prayeth against it O Lorde let my heart be neuer inclined to coueteousnesse I might recite the lawes o● God against raking their landes too cleane in the time of haruest Deut. 24.19 against gathering so cleane their grapes in th● time of vintage as that nothing was left for the poore All which directly shoote at the shame of this sinne in 〈◊〉 professour of godlinesse And I migh● also heape vp héereunto a thousand● testimonies of men heathen and Christian vttered in detestation of this foule sinne But whom the word feares not men shall hardly moue Onely a spéech or two I cannot passe ouer which pretily describe the corruption of our nature De breuitate vitae Omma tanquam mortales timemus omnia tanquam immortales concupiscimus sayth Seneca That is Wee stand in feare of diuers things as though we thought we could die but we couet so as though we thought we should neuer die Fortune sayth an other hath giuē too much to many but ynough to none And againe Non solum auarus est quirapit aliena August sed qui cupidè seruat sua He is not onely couetous which greedilie catcheth at more but he also which pinchinglie spareth that which he hath Whereof verie excellentie speaketh both Salomon and Syrac Eccles 6.1 Syrac 14.3 paynting out the filth of this follie to haue the blessinges of GOD and yet to want no thing more through a miserable minde than the blessinges of GOD. But I will followe no further this common place this litle which I haue spoken I haue doone it to giue vs a tast of this subtle sinne which with griefe we may marke those men and women verie gréeuously assaulted withall and fearefully ouercome after their profession made of Gods trueth and his glorious gospell who in the dayes of their vanitie before their calling neuer felt any such temptation So séeketh Sathan to slander the worde and to hinder the credit of the gospell When he cannot longer detaine vs in swearing in excesse of diet or apparell in adulterie and vncleannesse in spoyling and spending wastfully Gods giuen graces and in other fruites of ignorance and of an vnreformed soule then créepeth he in and draweth vs subtlelie ere euer wee espie him to the other extremitie euen greater care to get and nearer séeking howe to saue than can or may stande with the credit of the trueth which we professe or calling often which wee haue in the common wealth This is too true wee sée examples daylie and mens owne heartes being well examined shall confesse it The Lorde then giue vs iudgementes to sée and heartes to abhorre so foule an euill For what a derogation from Gods promises and damnable mistrust is this when wee doe feare God and serue him attende to his worde vse his Sacramentes forbid sinne in others and forbeare it our selues then so to looke at wife and children and other expenses as that we feare to want who liuing before in a farre looser sort neuer doubted yet anie such defect Will God bee worse to men when they followe him than hee was when they forsooke him Surelie an eye must be had vnto this thing and ●erie déere vnto must be the credite of the Gospell that others by vs may be woonne vnto it or at least none deter●ed from it God strengthen vs for satan is subtill and we are soone deceiued And truely better wee had neuer giuen our names to Christ than by any faith●esse gréedinesse or vnséemely hardnes to ouerthrowe all againe and hinder by offence others that are yet without The earth is the Lords and the Lord ●s ours if wee serue him with all that either heauen or earth hath to doe vs good withall Que. And what of the stealth of the eye Ans The eye is saide to steale because it maketh the heart to couet For by our eyes créepe in desires into our heartes both in this behalfe which nowe wee meane and in other also as before hath béene saide By the eye first did Achab steale Nabothes vineyarde 1. King 21. and then by his eye the desire of it créept into his heart And the Prophete saith They couet feeldes meaning no doubte which they sawe to lie commodious for them Wherefore Gods children must stop the verie first beginnings and look● to their eyes Mach. 2.2 and eares that they mak● no flame which God or charitie doth mislike and let vs learne to thinke a● an heathen saide Turpe est non solu● pedes sed oculos in alienas possessione● immittere It is a foule thing not onely t● let our feete but euen our eyes walk● into other mens possessions anie further than becommeth vs as wee ar● Christians Que. What stealth committeth the ●ongue Ans By fraude
couetous hart hath made you often to offende in this duetie Alas wee sée it not wée knowe it not we féele it not to be a sinne to retayne what wee finde or almost to finde before it be lost and so to conceyle it So gapeth ech man after worldlie gayne and so séeke we to haue howe so euer we haue it if it happen into our hands and wee well like of it But sinne will bee sinne when such gotten goods will no where bée séene and the Lorde giue vs féeling of it nowe betimes Next let vs looke of our buying and selling wherein also all loue is to bee showed to our brethren and an equalitie kept so néere as wee can of commoditie giuen and taken But howe manie of vs doe this there is a God that knoweth and a conscience within vs that if it were wakened woulde crie I feare mee lowde we are gréeuouslie guiltie For where is that man or woman of trade almost to bee founde that taking vp a standing in faire or Market doeth once thinke with themselues that there they stande to showe their loue to their brethren as to them selues and so to interchange their commodities with them as that in the testimonie of a good conscience and euen God being witnesse so néere as they can they kéepe an equalitie giuing as good as they take and taking no more than they giue in value and worth No alas it is too well knowen and too much amongst vs daily séene that we thinke wee haue our standing there to praie vppon all that come to vs so much as wee can to deceiue them to spoyle and robbe them in a sort and to get for our wares what possiblie wee may with an vtter neglect and refusall of equalitie And therefore we sel as we may bee safe though wee neuer bee paide aboue halfe wée sell to day with a pinching price wee make accompt God maie sende vs some losse and therefore betimes we wrecke our selues vppon our brethren and so take of them for that which wee doe sell as that if it happen that GOD doe so deale with vs wee may bee reuenged before hande and able to abide it if it bee not great To conclude we are meriest when we haue robbed most and then goe wee singing home when wee haue giuen occasion to the most to crie So dull and deade are our heartes within vs and so hath a gréedie minde to rake vp riches spoyled vs of loue or any thought thereof towards our brethren And as litle conscience there is often in the buyer who if hee might haue for a pennie that is worth a pounde coulde well inough digest it And therefore if one in hys néede come vnto vs for present monie wee will none of his commoditie wée want it not wee estéeme it not wée looke lightlie both of the man and the matter till wee haue brought him to our owne price and God knowes farre farre vnder the value of the thing So that hee which of charitie in his néede shoulde bee helped is of vs commonlie by reason of his néede prayed vppon and most cruellie robbed And yet we be no théeues Ah God be mercifull to vs awake vs and neuer deale with vs according to our iniquities for his Christes sake But passe wee nowe on 〈◊〉 other branches of this commande●ent and so shall we further sée what ●anner of men and women wee are 〈◊〉 obedience to the Lorde Who séeth ●ot who knoweth not Oppression that all oppres●●on of my brother in his goods is con●rarie to that loue that I ought to ●eare to him and his goods And how ●ande wee in this matter Haue wée ●euer detained the poore seruauntes ●ages Of seruantes and wrecked our anger vppon ●im to his harme further than a mercifull heart shoulde haue doone Haue wee not taken euen the flower of ●is youth the strength of his yeares ●nd the verie iuice and sappe of hys ●odie to serue our turnes withall and ●hen either turned him off vnrewarded ●r taken from him or diminished without cause other than our owne co●etousnesse the reward that our aun●estour gaue to his seruice before If ●ee haue doone it alas it is a great ●ppression a great wrong and it stan●eth not with that loue that I am ●harged withall towardes him in this ●ommaundement But a man must first knowe sinne before hee can flie 〈◊〉 and nowe wee knowe it I trust w●● hate it Strangers Haue wee neuer againe dea● vnkindlie with a straunger but eue● so as if GOD shoulde banishe 〈◊〉 from our warme home to fore● coast wée woulde bee glad to fée● our selues at their handes If we haue this is oppression and wee should n●● doe it for anie thing Widowe and fatherlesse Haue wee n●● hurt the desolate Widowe the fatherlesse childe or anie whose might wa●● lesse than ours to beare off the hardne● of our handes Haue we not lift vp ou● force against them when we sawe we● might haue helped them in the gate I● we haue what can we say why we shul● not rot in péeces for it our armes be broken from the bones Iob. 31.22 as Iob wishe● to him in such a case Haue wee neue● respected the person more of one tha● an other in cause of iustice a strong meanes to drawe vs to oppression Haue wee neuer suffered these hande● to féele the weight of a bribers gift to drawe vs to oppression Bribes O spare no● to spie your sinne euen to the full if you ●●ue offended and yet accuse not your ●●ues if you dare boast of innocencie ●●ppie were our countrie and a thou●●●de comfortes were it to euerie one 〈◊〉 vs if the dulnesse of our heartes in ●●ese deadlie sinnes pulled not vppon vs ●●e often offending in them and then ●●ch sinne such wrath againe from hea●en aboue as is most due vnto it Alas ●●e sée not neither euer will bee made 〈◊〉 sée what loue by this lawe wee owe 〈◊〉 all men in their goods but we robbe ●●em we spoyle them and wee take ●●●tes to do it and yet we be no théeues But God is God as hee was euer ●●●ne is sinne though wee will not see 〈◊〉 and a iust day of a iust rewarde to ●uerie man for euerie matter must ●here bee Wee beléeue it we say it in ●ur articles often yet wée deale as if ●ee neuer thought it What shoulde I ●●y of that cloke and couer and cause of ●uch oppression the cloth and liueries ●f Superiours Liueries Am I the giuer or the ●aker If I bee the giuer haue I ne●er boulstred my cognisance out to doe ●he thing that God forbiddeth Haue I harkened about to sée and learne ho● they vse the credit that is giuen the●● God knowes wee haue litle néede to 〈◊〉 charged with other mens sinnes 〈◊〉 no doubt such a maister shall with su●● a mans offences For we shall neuer 〈◊〉 able to beare in our selues the bu●● then of our owne Am
I the take● what then saith my conscience haue 〈◊〉 sought it and sued for it for affectio● and true duetie in my heart to him th●● gaue it Doe I weare it and wishe 〈◊〉 weare it to haue my heart knowen 〈◊〉 him or her the better whom with hea●● and hande bodie and goods power an● might till my death in right I honou● and serue and wishe and will doe eue● Or rather a false faith séeketh a fai●● shewe and a powling hande of man● a séelie weake wretch séeketh a streng●● to establish my wickednesse and a ba●ker to beare out my foule oppression● If it bee so consider betimes how litle loue such a seruaunt deserueth 〈◊〉 hee shall bee founde out and feare lea●● either the wrath of God to thée or lou● to thy maister that is so abused lit●● ●●perteth it cause such a false hypocrite 〈◊〉 a treacherous Ziba come to light 〈◊〉 let vs consider what our heartes 〈◊〉 say concerning idlenesse Idlenesse For it 〈◊〉 béene prooued before that what 〈◊〉 not inioyed by the benefite of some ●●wefull labour is but stolen and we ●●ue no right to it If then my heart ●nswere that I liue all of other mens ●●●ours doing nothing my selfe I nei●●er gouerne with the giftes of minde 〈◊〉 quiet peace of my countrie neither 〈◊〉 with bodilie labour and true faith●●●l seruice séeke to eate the meat● of 〈◊〉 maister whom I serue féele it and 〈◊〉 it hate it and abhorre it For such 〈◊〉 is loosenesse such a liuer is a rob●●r we should not take anie sure com●●●t till we haue chaunged so naugh●●● a course and altered quite soloathe 〈◊〉 ●ife Too full too full is euerie house ●●d towne of such idle bellies Neither ●ere must I onely examine my selfe ●hether by labour I liue but also as ●●rrowlie by what labour I liue and 〈◊〉 it bee such as the word condemneth ●●e lawes of man punisheth and each good man misliketh I sinne I sinne● for such labour is no life But I refe●● you to what I haue saide before Look● wee also euen as wee loue our soules I beséech you at our heartes eyes an● tongues whereby we may steale asw●● as by the hande as before in the co●●maundement hath béene prooued Th● heart by coueting and catching Stealth in heart or b● too néere and nigardlie kéeping tran●●gresseth against this lawe of God T●● eye by looking beyonde his limites a●● sending in worde to the heart with● to make it in loue and set it in longi●● for other mens goods Eie The tongue 〈◊〉 false flatterie and filed forgerie comm●●teth a stealth which is called a gre●● stealth as hath béene showed and pr●●ued before All which or anie where howe they touch vs and stayne vs 〈◊〉 Lord knowes that knowes all and 〈◊〉 with profite may well now thinke 〈◊〉 weigh Doe our heartes and haue 〈◊〉 hearts euer rested vpon Gods promi●● for all necessarie prouision while 〈◊〉 liue for vs and ours not caring 〈◊〉 carking not wishing not willing 〈◊〉 ●●at which the Lorde alloweth and we ●ay iustifie No no we suffer our harts 〈◊〉 goe too farre and for want either of ●nowledge or care to liue according to ●●r knowledge wee boldlie looke of e●●rie mans commodities As we goe ●●d ride wee streight way couet and ●●at which is worse presentlie we de●●e to obtaine our will to the impay●●g of our brothers wealth and the ●●e fearefull breaking of this comman●●ment And woulde God the rage of ●●r lust were not sometime so vehe●●nt as that missing to get what it ●éedelie séeketh it casteth vs downe 〈◊〉 in our bed or causeth vs to hurt 〈◊〉 who hindereth our wishe as wee 〈◊〉 fell out in Achab to Naboth for his ●●eyarde But of this hereafter more ●●ine in the tenth commaundement 〈◊〉 the tongue alas what shoulde I 〈◊〉 By tongues I will neuer bid you enquire whe●●●● you bee guiltie or no. For whi●●● shoulde a man flie in these dayes 〈◊〉 flatterie or where may we liue 〈◊〉 not light of false forgers séeking by 〈◊〉 phrase to bléere the eyes of such as least suspect them Rather looke in wh●● measure you haue or doe sinne in th●● behalfe For I feare not to say you 〈◊〉 offende And if your conscience tel y●● your sinne is great runne not headlo●● into hell without returne Cursed 〈◊〉 that tongue that flattereth anie m●● in his sinne for anie commodity or th● cooleth such heat as Gods spirit ha● wrought to grace good amendeme●● Well may I reape a rewarde wi●● him for féeding his humour but as liue I shall loose my rewarde with G●● for stealing away his honour L●● them ioyne hereunto Lawieres whose calling such a true viewe of the drift and s●●cesse of their pleas whether they ha●● not often indeuored with their tongu● and often also obtayned by their spea● the wrongfull alienation of mens rig●● from them to other men And is 〈◊〉 this a theft Might not he euen asw●● haue robbed him with his handes 〈◊〉 to be a meanes by speach of wrong p●●●swasion that others doe it But al●● what wordes can I vse or anie m●● else this day aliue to make men fée● ●hat neither golden gaine nor any re●arde to be named whatsoeuer shoulde ●ake them speake vntruely against the ●ood estate of their brethren in anie cau●es Surely if this will nothing moue ●hat it is in nature theft which in name ●hey so abhorre I will assay no further The day will come let them well remember that sinne will bee sifted both ●y name and nature and reape for re●arde at a iust iudge such torment as ●hall twitch aboue any conceit which ●an now be had of it and so continue ●or euermore To drawe to an ende of ●his application are we al cleare of that ●heft of theftes committed in conueying ●f the Church liuinges to our owne vse ●rom them that ought to haue them ●nd doe the dutie for them to the disho●our of God the ruine of the Church ●nd the fearefull casting away of manie 〈◊〉 soule into the pitte of hell for want of ●nowledge If we haue these liuinges 〈◊〉 our disposition and are able to make 〈◊〉 good account of the bestowing of them 〈◊〉 our power thrise happie wee in es●hewing so carefully the wrath of God and regarding so tenderly the health of others But if either corruption in taking some or loose negligence in vnworthily bestowing all may iustlie stande and giue to the Lorde a witnesse against vs howe should wee escape for so great a sinne Shall the Lorde so lowdly crie that he will require of euerie watchmans hande the bloud of the soule that dyeth in his sinne without his warning Ezek. 3. and shall that patrone escape scotfrée by whose gréedie hand and cruell heart they haue all béene robbed of one that should haue warned them Shall the Lorde crie woe vppon woe wrath vpon wrath vengeance vppon vengeance to the carelesse shepheardes that féede themselues and not
abide anie light licentious wandring frō the same for anie time For they are opposed to loue the Lorde euer and to thinke euill at anie time to loue the Lorde with all my heart and to thinke nowe and then of vaine follies or flat impieties with my heart And if it be a certaine trueth as we knowe it is which I saide before that if we had stoode in our innocencie firme and immoueable we should neuer haue conceiued in our time any euill thought at all or vaine or foolish conceite for anie moment or point of space but should euer haue béene able to haue iustified our thoughts before God whatsoeuer they were as agréeing with the loue of him and our brother then is this tickling delight that now and then will take vs and possesse vs for a time to inioy our neighbours house his wife his child his man maide or anie thing that he hath otherwise than we should wicked vile and against that rule of right wherein we were created and whereto our regeneration dayly tendeth if we be the Lordes And therefore let this argument conuict vs and this consideration euer assure our soules within that it is vnlawefull for the childe of GOD once to conceiue an ill thought although we neuer consent vnto it And consequently let it stir vs vp to pray with Dauid against our corruption Psalm 51. that the Lorde in mercie woulde vouchsafe to make vs cleane hearts and to renewe a right spirite within vs euermore Let it be still the propertie of a popish spirite to extenuate sinne and exalt flesh and bloud and corruption aboue truth and right saying concupiscence is no sinne Iam. 1.25 but onely bringeth foorth sinne after it hath conceiued But let the childe of God schooled vp in the trueth of the gospell presse flesh bloud and his corrupt nature so farre as gods worde and lawe presseth it and let him knowe that first verie concupiscence in it selfe is a damnable degrée of vice yet not the highest degrée but vpon the conception thereof followeth actual accomplishment of wickednesse before but thought in heart an higher and further steppe of euill in vs which is the meaning of Iames. For if concupiscence were not euill then must it néedes be either good or indifferent But neither of these it can be and therfore it is euill Good it is not for the whole 7 Chapter to the Romans denyeth it And S. Austen pretily against Iulian gathering vppon his wordes that concupiscence remayned in thē that are regenerated though not the guilt of it that therefore is was good answereth Si hoc sentirem Libr. 6. cap. 6. non dicerem eam malam esse sed fuisse Nos autem malam eam dicimus manere tamen in baptizatis That is If I had thought so to wit that it was good then would not I haue saide it is euill but it was euill But we say it is euill and yet remaineth in them that haue beene baptized And when Iulian goeth on and vrgeth his assertion that neuerthelesse the guilt was taken away yea sayth he Reatus quo hominem reum facit non quo ipsa rea est vt homicidij reatus tollitur in aliquo non tamen ideo bonum est That is That guilt is taken away wherewith shee stayneth man not wherewith it is stayned it selfe in it selfe As the guilt and the desert of murther a man may bee quit of and freed from and yet not the wickednesse it selfe in it nature changed for that cause but remaineth euill still Good therefore you sée concupiscence is not And indifferent it is not For the Apostle flatly giueth it an harder name saying Rom. 7.21 That when he would haue doone good hee was so yoked that euill was present with him If the spirite of God call it euill beware we presume not to call it indifferent and beware more howe we play with the pleasure of it and take delight to doe it Againe what conclusion carie all those exhortations to crucifie Crucifie the olde man with all his lusts and that percing plaint of an Apostles mouth O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death I knowe I knowe that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good I say what conclusion carie they all but this that concupiscence is neither good nor indifferent but flatly euill Que. Howe then falleth it out that it condemneth vs not Ans The Apostle answereth in the 25. verse Rom. 7.25 I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lorde and in the next Chapter There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus which walke not after the flesh Cap. 8.1 but after the spirite For the lawe of the spirite of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death So that we sée it is Christ in whom and by whom and for whom wee are not charged with the condemnation due to concupiscence and corruption ingrafted and growning in vs. Que. But is then all desire and affection and all coueting vnlawefull by this commaundement Ans No indéede for God hath created affections and desires in men as mirth ioy hunger thirst c. and they should haue béene in man though he had neuer fallen they should haue loued their children their parentes friends euen standing and abiding in innocencie and therefore these thinges are not euill Nay the want of them maketh a monstrous absurditie in nature and therefore not to be maintained The instrumentes of affections and delight and dolor created by the Lorde prooue them allowed the law of God commandeth them and reprooueth their want Christ our sauiour vntouched by sinne shewed them in great measure they are spurres and prickes vnto vertue in vs and therefore allowed Besides numbers of other reasons that might be alleadged Que. What else doe you obserue in the commandement Ans I doe duely weigh the particulars that God restrayneth our coueting in and I sée them to bee such as most commonly and most without checke men suffer themselues to be caried away withall As the house of my neighbour that is his inheritance landes and possessions which we so gréedily often behoulde and marke wishing and willing them far far otherwise than a Christian heart should We can flatter our selfe with our offering of money for them not remembring that so did Achab for Naboths vineyeard and yet gréeuouslie offended Our neighbours wife or an other wiues husbande God knowes the sinfull thoughtes they cause within vs. For coueting the child against parents liking and intising away the seruant of an other against their good they bee thinges wherein fewe of our heartes haue any féeling And for their cattell with such sinnefull eies we looke vpon them that wee euer thinke our neighbours bullocke hath a fairer yowre than our owne hath as the Poet speaketh and therfore wisely in the naming of these particulars hath the Lorde taught vs wherein commonly
it wee may first sée that if we haue that thing which our neighbour woulde borowe and wee able without our hurt well to spare it him we are bound to do it or els we sinne against this law of God we euen steale from our brother that which in right is his For GOD woulde not euer haue made a lawe for recompence of the lender if his thing lent receyue anie harme vnlesse it had béene a necessarie duetie of loue to lende when wee may Therefore this narownesse of heart and vnkinde disposition to grudge vnto anie that good which by lending wee can possible doe him it is hatefull in the eyes of God and a playne breach of this commandement Secondlie in this lawe as one verie well hath noted Vsurie we may sée a great light giuen to that harde controuersie concerning vsurie of monie For marke I pray you howe he saith in plaine tearmes That if the thing were hired although it perished in vse yet should it not be made good by him which hired it for it came for his hire The monie which vsurers giue out is hired as wee knowe Therefore if 〈◊〉 were a thing that might bee hired yo● sée the sentence of God though it per●●shed Secondlie marke againe how th● lawe saith though a man lend of méer● loue fréely without anie hire yet shal● his recompence bee nothing more tha● good will againe vnlesse it die or b●● hurt which he lendeth Now monie nei●ther dieth neither commonlie is ani● whit hurt but returneth euerie wa● as good as it came Thirdlie conside● howe the lawe will haue an apparan● hurt of the thing lent or else it allowet● no recompence but vsurers will hau● consideration for likely losse For sa● they if I had had my monie possiblie I coulde haue gayned thus much with if yet are they not sure they coulde hau● doone it for God coulde haue crosse● their expectation and being not sur● that they could haue gayned it is no● apparant that they haue béene hindred but this lawe of God prouideth in equitie onelie for apparant harme therefore nothing for them Fourthly the equitie of this lawe is onelie this tha● 〈◊〉 will be no looser and therefore pro●●●●on is made for recompence if the 〈◊〉 lent receyued hurt but vsurers ●●ll haue their goodwill as they call it ●ertaine and an excessiue gayner ●ftlie in this lawe of God the borow●● is respected that hee shoulde haue ●●lpe of his neighbour and not pay for 〈◊〉 vnlesse hee hurt the thing which hee ●●rowed but vsurie regardeth wholie ●●e lender Wherefore it séemeth that this lawe of our God had euer anie ●●uitie this vsurie of monie had euer ●●aine iniurie and that this kinde of ●●nding is voide of loue and therefore ●pparantly a breach of this commaun●ement Thus therefore wee sée what ●●ght the equitie of this lawe of lending ●●ueth to this question of vsurie which ●quitie remaineth and euer shall Que. But I pray you what thinke ●ou of giuing vsurie which manie a good man is constrayned to do Ans Truely for mine owne part I ●m satisfied to thinke it also euill by the wordes of Ieremie who saith he hath neither giuen vsurie nor taken and yet they hated him Insinuating plainly that i● he had doone either he could haue found iust cause in himselfe why he should be euill thought of Que. What is the law of pledges Ans If thou takest thy neighbours raiment to pledge Exod. 22.26 saith the lawe thou shalt restore it to him ere the sunne goe downe For that is his couering only and this is his garment for his skinne wherin shal he sleepe Therefore when he crieth vnto me I wil heare him for I am merciful Deut. 24.6 And in an other place No man shall take the vpper or nether milstone to pledg● for this gage is his liuing 10. And whē thou shalt aske againe of thy neighbour anie thing lent 11. thou shalt not goe into hi● house to fet his pledge but thou shal● stande without and the man which borrowed it of thee shall bring the pledge out of the dores vnto thee 12. Furthermore i● he be a poore body thou shalt not sleep● with his pledge 13. but shalt restore him the pledge when the sunne goeth down tha● he may sleep in his raimēt blesse thee it shal be righteousnes to thee before the Lord thy God The very ende of al● ●hich laws as you sée is nothing but this ●ercy kindenes of man towards man ●●en in this matter of taking paunes ●nd therefore if my dealing herein be ●●arpe hard and cruel laying aside as it ●ere al regard of other mens néedes so my selfe may be safe is it not apparant I faile in loue towardes the wealth ●ood estate of my brother outward and ●●erefore haue broken this commande●ent It must néedes be granted Que. What is the law for things com●itted to our custody Ans If a man deliuer vnto his neigh●our saith the law to keepe asse or oxe Exod. 22.10 〈◊〉 sheepe or any beast and it die or 〈◊〉 hurt or taken away by enimies no ●●an see it 11. an oth of the Lord shal be be●●ixt thē two that he hath not put his hand ●●to his neighbours good the owner 〈◊〉 it shall take the oth he shal not make 〈◊〉 good But if it be stolne from him 12. he ●●all make restitution vnto the owner ●●ereof If it bee torne in peeces he ●●all bring record 13. and shal not make it ●●odwhich is deuored By which lawes ●●us much we may note that notwithstanding for thinges committed to thei● custodie it might fall out that they might be brought before the magistrat● by othe to protest their trueth and ho●nestie which corrupt flesh will lightli● grudge at or else to their cost to make that good the kéeping whereof neuer gained them pennie yet neuerthelesse woulde the Lorde haue man euen here in to showe his loue and in no case fo● either of these respectes or anie other t● denie it Wherefore it followeth the● and both nowe and euer shall followe that whosoeuer shal not willinglie an● readily take into his custodie that thin● which hee may kéepe to the benefite o● his neighbour better than hee that dot● deliuer it him and so taken truly kéepe and faithfullie restore it againe vnt● them that of right shoulde haue it tha● man or woman want in their hearte● affection or loue to their neighbours they withholde the thing which is du● vnto them namelie the fruite of thei● loue in this particular we stande vpon and therefore guiltie they are befor● God of stealth the breach of this com●mandement Que. What is the lawe of finding thinges lost Ans Thou shalt not saith the lawe see thy brothers oxe nor his sheepe goe astray and withdrawe thy selfe from thē Deut. 22.1 but shalt bring thē againe vnto thy brother and if thy brother bee not neere vnto