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A03620 Certeine comfortable expositions of the constant martyr of Christ, M. Iohn Hooper, Bishop of Glocester and Worcester written in the time of his tribulation and imprisonment, vpon the XXIII. LXII. LXXIII. and LXXVII. Psalmes of the prophet Dauid. Hooper, John, d. 1555.; Bull, Henry, d. 1575?; A. F., fl. 1580.; Hooper, John, d. 1555. Exposition upon the. 23. psalme of David. 1580 (1580) STC 13743; ESTC S104196 167,330 255

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the Gentiles Yet saith he The foolishnesse of God is wiser then men and the weakenesse of God is stronger then men And that had king Dauid good experience of when he said The Lord ruleth me and I lacke nothing hee putteth mee in a sweete pasture and leadeth mee by the riuers side hee turneth my soule and conducteth mee into the way and pathe of iustice for his names sake and for his mercies sake He sawe the diuel the world his flesh and sinne all conquered by the power of God and for his names sake brought both to liue also vertuously to liue to his honour that gaue the life and to his owne saluation that receiued the life All our teaching a great many of yeares and also your whole labours haue béene chiefly to knowe the miserie of man and the mercie of Almightie God Wherefore it shal not néed long to tarrie in opening of this place of the Psalme for ye be riche in God in these 2. points God giue you grace wel to vse them Yet in any case we must remember that our soules be turned from sinne we accepted as the people of euerlasting life only for Gods mercies sake So doth king Dauid wonderfully open vnto vs in the 32. Psalme where he saith Blessed be they whose sinnes are forgiuen and whose transgressions be couered blessed is the man to whome the Lord imputeth not his sinne Of the which wordes we learne that the godly king called those happie and blessed not that be cleane and pure without sinne for there is no such man in this life but those be blessed whose sinnes the mercie of God forgiueth and they be onely such as vnfeignedly acknowledge their sinne and stedfastly from their heartes beleeue that the death and passion of Iesus Christ is the onely expiation and purging thereof as S. Paule wonderfully expoundeth Dauids woordes in his Epistle to the Romanes As the Prophete by these wordes For his names sake declareth that there is nothing in him nor in any other man wherefore God should turne the soule of man from death to life from errour to trueth from the hatred of God to Gods loue from wandring a stray to a stablished continuance in the veritie of Gods word but only Gods mercie so doth he in other of his Psalmes always when he intreateth of Gods mercie of mans sinne set foorth man so naked and vile as a thing most destitute of all health and saluation and sheweth that none of these giftes remission of sinne acceptation into Gods loue and fauour pasturing of them with his most blessed word can happen vnto any other sauing vnto such as do knowe and earnestly confesse that they be sinners and infected with many contagious daungerous infirmities And therfore he sayth in the 2. verse of y e psalme aboue mentioned Blessed is he to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne in whose spirite there is no guile For there is no greater guile nor more danger in man then to think himself to be somwhat when he is nothing in déede or else to thinke him selfe to be of such puritie of minde as though he néeded not this frée remission and fauour of God And as there is nothing more proude and arrogant then such a minde so there is nothing in man more detestable and miserable Of the contrarie part they be blessed that hunger and thirst for iustice for God filleth the hungrie with good thinges but the proud he sendeth away emptie And that knewe this holie Prophete right well that it was humilitie and the casting downe of him selfe that was most acceptable vnto God and the séeking of health and saluation onely for his names sake that is to say for his mercie promised in the death and passion of his onely sonne our Sauiour Christe In the end of the .xxxij. psalme king Dauid that had thus humbled himselfe bringeth in God that speaketh vnto him whiles he is thus making his complaint of his corrupt nature and sinneful life saying in this manner Intellectum tibi dabo c. that is to say I will giue thee vnderstanding instruct thee in the way thou shalt goe and will haue mine eyes euer vppon thee Wherein he declareth that suche humbled men and lowly persons as knowe their iniquitie shall haue vnderstanding of God and shall not swarue from the right wayes not for their déedes and their deseruinges but for his mercie that vouchsafeth to instruct teach them And so likewise doeth this godlie king shew in this Psalme The Lorde ruleth me and I lacke nothing he feedeth me in sweet pastures and leadeth me by the riuers side he turneth my soule and bringeth me into the pathes of righteousnesse and all for his names sake When he hath opened the saluation of man and also the cause thereof and wherein it consisteth he procéedeth to the fifte parte of his oration and holie Hymne ¶ The fifte parte of the Psalme What trouble may happen to such as God giueth life and saluation vnto THE FOVRTH VERSE Although I walke thorough the vallie and shadowe of death I will feare no euill for thou art with me thy rodde and thy staffe comfort me SEing I haue suche a guide and defender there is no difficultie of perill nor feare of death that I will passe of For what harme can death do to him that hath God the authour of all life with him Or what can the tyrannie of man do where as God is the defender In this fifte part King Dauid sheweth howe the Lord God doeth exercise his shéepe whom he féedeth with his blessed worde in daungers and troubles also how he will defende them in the middest of their troubles what so euer they be In the first wordes of the fift part of this sacred and holy Hymne the prophet declareth that the life of Gods shéepe and people in this worlde can not be without daungers and troubles Therefore Christ sayeth that He came to put fire in the worlde and that the same fire should burne meaning that he came to preache suche a doctrine as shoulde moue dissention and discorde betwéene friend and friend the father and the sonne and sette them at debate Not that his worde is a learning or doctrine of dissention and discorde of it selfe but that by the malice of men that can not abide to be rebuked by the worde of God they will be alwayes at discorde and variaunce with the worde of God and with any friende or foe that teacheth it And the same doeth Christ our heauenly shéepeheard shewe vs both in his doctrine and in his life who was hated and troubled more then any man before or sithens his time and assureth all his to haue troubles in this world yea and death also But it forceth not for he sayth I haue ouercome the worlde And whatsoeuer the dangers bée and howe horrible soeuer they séeme Christe being with vs we néede not to
lament neuer so sore yet he despaireth not but in aduersitie he hath hope and is not confounded as in prosperitie he hath faith and yet presumeth not The desperate man féeleth all troubles and no consolation is wholy ouercome with mistrust ful of incredulitie and cleane voyd of hope as Saule Iudas and others The contemner of admonition hath hope in prosperitie with al presumption as Cain and Pharao and in aduersitie desperation with all mistrust diffidence The Christian afflicted calleth in faith and hope vppon the Lorde and is heard the wicked afflicted calleth not vppon the Lord but is cleane reiected and comfortlesse by Gods most iust iudgement The Christian afflicted séeth all his sinns lesse then the least mercies of God the wicked afflicted séeth the least of his sinnes greater then the greatest mercies of God The one in trouble by faith glorifieth the Lord and by mercie findeth saluation the other in trouble by mistrust dishonoureth the Lord and by iustice findeth damnation The one by troubles thoroughe faith in Christ is made like vnto the sonne of God and cannot be separated from him in eternall life the other by troubles through desperation of Christe is made like vnto Sathan and cannot be separated from him in eternall death The one in eternall life findeth euerlasting ioyes the other in euerlasting death findeth endlesse paines Almightie GOD therefore graunt vs grace in all our troubles and afflictions penitently and faithfully to call vppon him and to finde him merciful vnto vs his wretched creatures Amen The third thing to be noted in this second part is that Gods nature and mans differ much one from the other For man for the most part is no more seruiceable vnto God nor longer friendly vnto man then Gods condition vppon the earth is fortunate and quiet with the world For if stornies arise for Gods cause and troubles happen where quietnesse erst had place the men of the world alter their loue seruice and reuerence and will neither make nor medle with God nor his cause no althoughe tenne thousand idols be brought in for one God as Englishe men haue séene in former time As long as Christ had a king in this realme to hold of his part and that great liuings gaines friendship and loue of y e world rose for Gods sake they dissembled towards his worde and so long as faire wordes could please God he lacked none but now euen such as God did most for doe knowe neither God nor his word but had rather heare tenne times spoken of the falsest tradition that euer man brought into the Churche then once of Christes most holy Gospel so that now mens natures for aduersities sake be cleane turned from God How long the loue of man continueth towardes men daily experience sheweth within one moneth If a man fall into trouble for the most iust cause he that was his friend will not onely alter his loue from him but also all the notes and tokens of the same whereas in prosperitie he was assured both of friendly words and friendly workes in aduersitie he shal find neither words nor workes except words and works of displeasure In prosperitie faire lookes and amiable countenances were as common as the cart way in aduersitie there shall neither looke nor countenaunce be shewed except it be frowning and bending of browes yea and moreouer aduersitie taketh from the dissembling friend all knowledge that euer he had of his friend afflicted that if the poore afflicted although he be euen vnder the nose of his feigned friend with courtesie and all obeisance cannot be knowne Oh God blessed be thy name that withdrawest neither thy knowledge loue nor yet thy helpe from the poore afflicted but hearest them and grauntest them their godly and honest requestes as here this Prophete most godly comfortably writeth of thée For he saith The Lord shall hearken vnto me when I seeke him in the time of my trouble And also the Lord abhorreth not to be present with the afflicted be his troubles neuer so great For I am saith the Lord with him in trouble I will deliuer him and set him in honour c. Of this doctrine we learne two things The one that God hateth not the troubled man for his trouble but for his sinnes Men doe cleane contrarie for the most part For they hate the man for trouble and not for sinne For let the wickedest man aliue haue prosperitie and all wicked men will loue him for his prosperities sake God turneth not his fauour from man for trouble but for sinne The world for troubles sake will not knowe the most deare and honest friend but let the most wicked that liueth by breath haue prosperitie and wicked people will not faile to know him with beck and du-gard if he come into companie Yea rather then faile the most wickedest man aliue shall be narrowly sought out that wicked men may haue acquaintance of him But he that hath God to his friend is sure of a Sauiour as well in aduersitie as in prosperitie as the Prophet here declareth which can in troubles send ease and in quietnes continue ioyes for euer To him therefore be all laude and praise worldes without end Amen The fourth thing to be noted in this second part is the continuance of the faithfull afflicted in prayer vnto God For the Prophet saith that He lifted vp his hands all night and waxed not wearie Of this continuance in prayer we learne two thinges The one perseuerance in prayer and the other patient expectation and willing sufferance vntill God sende redresse and ease To the first the Scripture exhorteth vs that we pray both heartily and continually vnto God not because he is ignorant of our troubles but because we should throughly be brought to vnderstand that there is none can helpe vs out of trouble but hée and also that by continuance in prayer we may the better knowe and more earnestly repent our sinns that be the cause of our troubles thirdly that by often remembrance and diuers rehearsalls of our iniquitie vnto GOD we may the sooner bring both our soules and bodyes into the seruice and homage of Almightie God whome we haue by sinne most gréeuously displeased The second vertue patient expectation in troubles declareth that we be much bound vnto God that chasteneth vs in this life and deferreth not our punishment to the eternall paines in the world to come Also it maketh the minde of man to vnderstand the wisedome of GOD and also the foolishnesse of man that many times for lacke of patient expectation and thankfull sufferance waxeth wearie of his crosse and punishment and also murmureth against God bicause he helpeth not when mans wisedome iudgeth most méete to be holpen But patient expectation prescribeth God no time when to helpe nor yet meanes how to helpe but saith Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen
wonderfully sett foorth in the Psalme next before this sauing one where it is said There is a cuppe in the Lordes hand full of redd wine and hee powreth out of it but the wicked shall drinke the dregges thereof and the vngodly of the earth shall receiue the bottom of it The cuppe in the Scripture is taken many times for aduersitie whereof God filleth a quantitie and a certeine measure vnto all his electe and chosen seruauntes but the wicked shall drinke the bottome and all and neuer come to rest nor ease Out of this temptation we may learne how foolish and how impatient we be When God sendeth troubles we thinke such to be best at ease that want them whereas the Lords booke declareth that it is necessarie and also very expedient that we should haue them Againe there is to be noted how that the Prophet in the cogitations of his minde maketh no mention of the griefe of the bodie whereof he spake before at the beginning of his troubles For in the second and fourth verse he declareth how he held vp his handes all night cryed with his voyce vntill he was speachlesse and lay waking could not sléepe Of the which sorrowes now he maketh no rehearsall but saith his spirite was searching and inquisitiue Whether God would absent himselfe for euer with diuers like interrogatories of Gods nature as followe in the Psalme Whereof we learne the vilenesse of our owne nature and also the treason and subtiltie of the diuel For as long as we sinne we haue such delight and pleasure therin as though it were but a play to transgresse and breake Gods holy commaundementes But when sickenesse and trouble haue layed the wicked the bodie abedd and made it weake and féeble our conscience is waked by the Lawe of GOD and we put in such terrour and feare that nothing can quiet vs. Also as long as we doe sinne the diuel beareth vs in hande that God is so mercifull doe what we will that hée will not be angrie but when sicknesse or death inuadeth then turneth the diuel his tale and persuadeth with vs that GOD is onely extreme iust and nothing at all mercifull And this griefe of the minde is so sore and vehement that all the paines of the bodie séeme nothing in comparison thereof as we sée in this place by the holy Prophete Asaph that was very sore vnquieted in his bodie yet did his spirite make no accompt of it but still hée stayed and staggered trembling and quaking at the heauinesse and sorrowe of the spirite that could not féele for the time of his trouble any certeintie or cōsolation in the promises of God Of this we be admonished that whatsoeuer we haue if Gods fauour lacke we haue nothing able to reioyce vs. And of the other side if we lacke all thinges and haue assuredly Gods fauour there is nothing able to make vs heauie and sorowfull As we see king Saule hauing a noble kingdome and lacking the fauour of God was alwayes vnquieted Poore Dauid hauing the grace and fauour of God was quiet and contented with all thinges saying If God will he may restore mee if he will not his will be done The assurance of Gods promises made Paule glad to die and the mistrust desperation of Gods promises made Iudas wearie to liue The certeintie of Gods trueth made Saint Stéeuen quietly to die in the assurance of eternall life the vncerteintie and doubtfulnesse of Gods mercie caused Saule to die in the feare of eternall death Riches of this world be treasures muche estéemed and made of friendes and louers much sought for and warily kept and health of bodie highly regarded and preserued with much care yet if the soule be destitute of the assurance of Gods grace the rest séeme to be of no valure at all As we sée Saule in his kingdome with riches strength and friendship yet his minde vexed still an euill spirite and Gods spirite departed his sorrowes were incomparable So that we learne that not onely the goodes apperteyning to the body be nothing worthe whereas the spirite wanteth the grace of God but also whereas the spirite is troubled the goodes of the bodie be little felt and nothing passed of as we sée by this Prophet in this Psalme The other part of his cogitations in the time of his sicknesse was this Will hee be no more intreated This gréeuous temptation whether GOD would be intreated to forgiue sinne any more may haue two vnderstandings The one generally and the other particularly Generally in this sort whether God once offended will be mercifull and forgiue or not Particularly whether God whose nature is mercifull will forgiue the priuate man that séeketh by saith mercie as he hath in time past forgiuen al men that asked it with repentance in faith The first sense and taking of the text generally is meruellous wicked and blasphemous to thinke that God once offended with any man will neuer for giue againe Of this opinion was Caine when he said his sinnes were greater then they might be forgiuen and he thought God would be no more intreated because he iudged his fault greater then the mercie of God that forgiueth faultes And wheresoeuer this iudgement of the spirite is this sentence is verified God will be intreated no more And as euery man that is priuatly thus minded that his owne sinnes be greater then can be forgiuen euen so hath he the like minde and iudgement also of all other mens sinnes that be like vnto his thinking them to be greater then they may be forgiuen For he that despaireth of his owne faultes cannot thinke well that other mens faults as great as his owne be remissible As Iudas that hanged himselfe for betraying of Christe could not thinke well of Peter that denied Christ but rather iudged of Peter as he did of him selfe saying God will be intreated no more Of this wicked iudgment of Gods mercie Whether he will be intreated any more of a sinner after that he hath sinned I wil speake no more But they that lust to read how horrible a thing it is may haue many Psalmes that do declare it namely Psalme 10. and 73. In the one of them it is said by the wicked that God hath forgotten the earth and careth neither for the godly life of the godly and vertuous nor the vngodly life of the vngodly and wicked And in the other Psalme they make a doubt Whether there be any knowledge in God of man and of his life or not But these sortes of people be too horrible and blasphemous and not to be rehearsed or muche spoken of The other sense of this place that is more particular is the better sense for the argument and meaning of the Psalme that is to aske whether God will be intreated no more as touching the remission of his owne sinne or els whether God will be
faith hope and charitie as they be qualities in vs we should surely perish Therefor this place of the Prophete Asaph where he demaundeth this question Whether Gods mercy be gone for euer doth teach vs that of all thinges we should be most assured of this that onely mercy is the help of mans troubles and damnation But as I saide before there were two maner of clarities and brightnesse in the word of God so nowe I say there is two manner of mercies of God mentioned in the scripture The outwarde mercy is in the letter which men reade and sing euery day and speake and talke of but the other is inward When that men can not féele Gods mercy in their conscience as they heare it spoken of and as they reade it in the booke they be troubled and full of anguish and paine and as long as they be in this case without Gods mercy they can do nothing that pleseth GOD or content them selues But as soone as the spirite is assured and féeleth that GOD for his mercy doth forgiue and forget the iniquitie that the spirite and body haue committed and done against God it reioyceth and is so glad that it will doe nothing but that which pleseth and is acceptable vnto God and in Christ shall content and quiet his owne conscience As for example Adam before he inwardly felt the mercy of God promised in Christe to forgiue and remit his sinne and offence in what heauinesse was the poore man He hid him selfe and could not abide the voyce of the liuing God for he felt that his doings pleased neyther GOD nor him selfe But when grace had assured him of Gods mercy he fell in the spirit to quietnesse For where the spirite of God testifieth and beareth record with the spirite of man that he is the childe of God there is ioy and consolation with this ioyfull song and melodie Abba pater Father father So that where so euer this song is felt in the spirite there are suche ioyes as no toung can expresse as all the booke of Solomons ballads meruellously doe declare And wheras the mercy of God is not there is eyther abhomination of sinne and continuance therein without any feare or grudge of conscience at all or else such heauinesse of spirite that desperation vtterly quaileth and oppresseth the spirite for euer Yet shal the spirite soule of man féele this for a time while God hideth his mercifull face Is his mercy cleane gone for euer Which cogitations of the minde be full bitter and sorrowfull as all men of GOD doe knowe that haue felt them and as the Prophete declareth in the processe of his Psalme in this sorte And is his promise come vtterly to an end for euermore Hath God forgotten to be gratious And wil he shut vp his louing kindnes in displeasure These demaundes and questions of his owne minde and spirite that was troubled be no more in effect then troubles that he named before But in this that he calleth the trouble by so many names it declareth that his spirite was for the time so disquieted that the paines in maner could not well be named and expressed As it is to be séene always when the minde of man is brought into an excellencie and profoundnesse of mirth or sorrowe then it is so rauished with the vehemencie of them both that the toung is not able to expresse the inward ioy nor the inwarde sorrowe as it is to be séene as well in prophane writers as in the holy word of God Reade ye the 18. Psalme of king Dauid which he soung to the Lorde when he was quit and deliuered from all his enimies ye shall sée what shift and copie of wordes he vsed to name God to expresse what he thought of God in his heart and with what Metaphors he expresseth the strength of God that ouercame al his enimies the Psalme is to be read and marked Againe reade ye these Psalmes 42. 43. where ye shall perceiue the prayer of Dauid wherein is described a vehement agonie and most bitter battel betwéene faith and desperation and there mark what words he hath found out to expresse the sorrowes of his heart that was so sore put in doubt by desperation and weaknesse of faith The Harte saith he being wounded was neuer more desirous to come to the water then my soul desireth to come to thee ô God And at length when he can finde no more wordes to vtter the pensiuenesse of his heart he turneth his wordes inward to his owne soule and asketh why she is so heauie and sad Ye may sée also the very same ioyfull and sorrowfull spirites in the ballads of Solomon and in the lamentations of Ieremie the Prophete In the one it séemeth that the soule annexed vnto Christ is in such ioy as the tong can not expresse it and in the other for sinne the soule is afflicted in such sort that it can not tell how to expresse the heauinesse thereof There is to be considered also in these demaunds of the Prophete that he made to him selfe in his spirite as the text saith he reuolued the matter with his owne spirite this doctrine howe easie a thing it is to teach and comfort other men and howe hard a thing it is for a man to teach and comfort him selfe in the promises of God S. Paule found fault therewithall and saide to the Iewe Thou teachest an other man teachest not thy selfe And Iudas went foorth with the eleuen other of his fellowes to teach Gods mercy in Christ vnto the lost shéep of the house of Israel but he neither followed his own doctrine nor yet tooke any comfort of remission of sinnes in the promises of God but hanged himselfe desperately Wherefore it is very expedient for eueryman and woman that hath learned and doth knowe the truth of God to pray that they them selues may folowe the truth and for such as knowe and teach others the consolations of the scriptures of God that they may with knowledge of them féele them in déede and with speaking of them to others for their learning they may speake them to them selues for their owne edifying But doubtlesse it is an easie matter for a man to speake of comfort and consolation to others but a hard thing to féele it him selfe Vertue is soone spoken of to other mens instructions but the putting thereof in practise and vre is very hard yea not only in the scholer that is taught but also in the maister that instructeth Beware of despaire can euery man say but to eschue despaire in great conflictes of the minde is an harde matter Reade the booke of the Psalmes well and ye shall sée the experience thereof to be most certeine and true In the 62. Psalme ye shall haue this commaundement to all men Trust ye alwayes in him ye people yet when it came to the triall in him selfe ye may sée with what heauines and great trouble of
the first parte is to marke and sée that in the verie electes of God and most excellent personages amongest holie men there is sometime quiet patient and thankfull sufferance of aduersitie strongly that it séemeth in the soule of him that is troubled there is so constant and strong faith that it maketh all sorrowes and troubles rather pleasaunt and swéete then heauie burdenous or painefull At another time troubles séeme vnto them so heynous and grieuous that the burden of them is as great a paine as death not onely vnquieting the bodie but also verie sore vexing of the spirite with these and like cogitations God hath cast me out of his sight God will haue mercie vppon me no more My soule is heauie and troubled And this diuersitie of increase and decrease of faith and hope of holie men and women before our time teacheth vs great wisedome and consolation wisdome in that we sée faith and hope be not naturall qualities in man although he be neuer so vertuous or neuer so gratiously elected by God to eternal saluation but they be the mercifull giftes of God giuen vnto man for Christes sake and wrought by the holie Ghost aboue mans deseruings We learne also that the giftes of God faith hope and charitie patience and sufferance with such like vertues be not at all times of like condition and strength in man but at sometime so strong that nothing can feare vs and at another time so weake that all thinges do make vs dismayed and fearefull Now and then it is so doubtfull that we cannot tell whether it were best to suffer for the trueth or else to be released consenting vnto falshoode Thus God vseth his giftes in vs not alwayes after one sorte partely for our sinnes and partely to proue vs and to bring vs to a certeine knowledge of our infirmitie and weakenesse From Saule Iudas and Caine he tooke his spirite cleane to punishe their iniquitie and wickednesse And from Iob to attempte his patience and to make his féele that of him selfe he coulde beare nothing We learne consolation out of this texte in this that in our troubles the Lord forsaketh vs not but comforteth vs. And the more our troubles and aduersities be the more is his grace and fauour towardes vs. As the Prophet sayth in another of his Psalmes As aduersities oppressed my heart so thy consolations Lorde reioyced me In the whiche Psalme ye may sée what consolation the afflicted conscience taketh in aduersities The Psalme is made against the wicked oppressoures and persequutors of the poore Wherein they say As the tyrannie of the wicked troubleth vs so thy consolations good Lorde do reioyce and comfort vs. and the same sayth Saint Paule to the Corinthians As the afflictions of Christe doe abounde in vs euen so by Christe aboundeth our consolation There is also to be noted in that the prophete sayeth His soule wayteth vpon the Lorde Many men can dissemble iniuries wrongs and oppressions outwardely Some times when they be not able to reuenge and some tunes when they dare not reuenge for lacke of opportunitie and occasion lest more harme mighte insue of that their enterprise As the Iewes durst not kill Christ a great while for feare of the people yet were they murderers in their hearts before God the fact outwardly not then being don Some againe reuenge not bicause they thinke dissembled patience will gaine worldly commodites riches Howbeit this quietnesse refraining from reuenging is nothing worth before God But when the hart soul waiteth vpon God is contented to be as God maketh it y t wayting seruice of the soul the Lord delighteth in and is pleased withall This is a godlie doctrine much to be desired to haue the minde contented with such things as be troublesome and painefull to the bodie outwardly And where the minde wayteth not patiently vpon the Lorde in trouble it will appeare diuers wayes Sometime many yeres after the displeasure is done the man that suffered the displeasure reuengeth it wrongfully and cruelly as the Phariseis and the highe priestes deferred the bloudie fact in the killing of Christ vntil they had gotten time and opportunitie for their purpose Sometime the impatience and vnquietnesse of the minde appeareth with checkes and taunting aunsweres vnto God as when God asked Caine Where his brother Abel was he asked God againe Whether he were his brothers kéeper or no The same wayes appeared Pharaoes vnquietnesse When God would haue had him to dismisse his people he asked What God he was vnto whome he should doe such homage and seruice Somtime it appeareth by desperate weighing the greatenesse of trouble not considering the mercie of God that is greater then sinne As Caines vnquieted soule for the killing of Abel brought his tongue to blaspheme the mercie of God saying that His iniquitie was greater then the mercie of God could forgiue So did the wicked soule of Iudas that betrayed Christ make his tongue confesse before the Pharisées his treason and wickednesse and neuer to call vpon Christe for remission thereof Sometime the impatience of the mind is knowen outwardly by finding fault with Gods workes As when Adams minde was vnquieted for the eating of the apple he said vnto God that his wife the woman that he gaue vnto him deceiued him Achab the wicked king being impatient with the scourges that God sent vpon his Realme for his owne sinnes and the peoples picked a quarell with the good prophete Elias saide that he troubled all his Realme So saide the Iewes against Paule This is he that troubleth all the worlde This is daily séene when so euer the minde and the soule is vnquieted the fault is laide vpon Gods worke As if the higher powers hang a true man and saue a théefe deliuer Barabbas hang Christ streight way the tongue walketh that He is set in authoritie by God In déede so he is but yet to punishe the euill and to mainteine the good and not to molest the good and mainteine the euill as commonly now a dayes is séene Simon Magus shalbe at libertie and Simon Peter in chaines Annas and Caiphas shall rule like Lordes Christe and Saint Paule shalbe ruled and suffer death althoughe not personally in their owne bodies yet in their members and disciples Let the minde of the théefe be touched for thefte streightway pouertie the worke of GOD beareth the blame Let whoredome vexe the whoremongers minde immediately the tongue complayneth vpon Gods worke youth strength and such other Let the minde be troubled with couetousnesse by and by Gods worke wife children be alledged for excuse For they must be prouided for saith the couetous man when he hath enoughe for himselfe and tenne times as many moe children as God hath sent him if it were thankfully vsed towardes God and liberally towardes the worlde So that if any man be touched
giueth God the strength able to helpe but is of it selfe in God and with God so is there none that can giue God a wil to helpe but he of himselfe is inclined to haue mercie vppon the afflicted and his mercie is most prone and readie to helpe the poore and miserable Hereof learneth the afflicted Christian that none inclineth God to be mercifull but his owne gentle and pitifull nature So that the sinners may boldely in Christ resort vnto him firste because he is mercie it selfe and not to goe astray to séeke firste mercie at dead Saintes handes and by their meanes at laste finde God mercifull and readie to helpe him And when the afflicted perceiueth by the word of God that he commandeth him to call vpon him and vppon none other he may take a courage and audacitie to be bolde to come vnto him be his sinnes neuer so many horrible or filthie yea if in number they excéeded the grauell of the sea yet be they fewer alwayes then his mercie If they be as redde as scarlet yet shall they be made as white as snowe The booke of wisedome sayth euen so Although we haue sinned Lord we be thine knowing thy greatnesse And whereas these doctrines be grounded sée what followeth In all the depth of anguishe and sorrowe this followeth as this Psalme sayth Of him commeth my saluation He is my strength my saluation and my defence c. The same may we sée also in the Dialogue betwéen the Christian soule or Christes Churche and Christe in the booke of Solomons Ballads were she neuer so blacke and burned with the sunne were she neuer so troubled with the vanities of the worlde she cried out and saide boldely vnto Christe Drawe me we will runne after thee And although the poore wretched soule be enuironed and compassed about with sinne troubles and aduersities as the faire Lillie is hedged about with thornes yet she trusteth in her husband that he will helpe her And in déede most comfortably her spouse Christ comforteth her with these maruelous words Arise haste thee my spouse my faire one and come Nowe Winter is past the rayne is gone and ceassed That Booke of Solomon is to be read to sée how mercifully God comforteth a troubled and deformed soule by sinne and yet God layeth it not to the soules charge that hath Christe to her husband Also there is to be séene that the soule is bolde to séeke and call for help of God her husband and goeth to no strange God for ayde or succour althoughe she be burned with the sunne and a miserable sinner The like is to be séene in the Prodigall sonne Although he was neuer so beggerly miserable sinful wretched and vnkinde to his father yet he said Euen as I am with my miseries I will go to my father and tel him that I haue offended against him and against Heauen The father when he sawe him spatte not at him reuiled him not asked no accomptes of the goods he had viciously spent laide not to his charge his filthie conuersation with whores and harlots neither did he cast into his téethe howe he had dishonoured him and his familie but when he sawe him a farre off hee was moued with compassion towardes him ranne to méete him tooke him about the necke and kissed him The sonne confessed his fault and the father minding more the comforte of his lowsie and beggerly sonne then the repetition of his transgressions commaunded his seruantes spéedily to fetche him robes and to clothe him gaue him a ring vpon his finger and shooes to his féete killed his fat calfe and made merrie and reioyced with his loste sonne that he was found againe Here is the state and condition of a soule that wayteth as Asaph saith for a time vpon the Lorde in trouble and heauinesse meruellously sett foorth Sée this wretched man spoyled of al his goods destitute of all friendes shutte out of all honest cōmpanie of a Gentleman become a swineheard of one that had once men to waite vppon him become now a waiter vpon pigges once he gaue others meate and nowe all men refuse to féede him erst a man that scarse delicate dishes coulde contente his appetite nowe his stomache yrketh till it be filled with swines foode yet more ouer then that he sawe nothing behinde him nor before him but miserie and wretchednesse Behind him he left al his goods spent riottously his estimation parentage such frends as he had when mony was plentie lost also as farre as reason could sée his fathers vtter displeasure and the reproch ignominie of his alliaunce and kinsefolke purchased for euer Before him he saw hunger and scarsitie a sorte of filthie swine and the best meate draffe chaffe for the sustenance and maintenaunce of his piggishe life in case he might haue béene so mainteyned yet in the middest of these sorrowes attending in his spirite vpon the mercie of his father meruelously in the filthe of a pigges slie and in the paines and anguishe of miserie hearke what a wonderfull doctrine he bloweth out Oh what abundance of bred is there in my fathers house and I starue here for hunger I will arise and gette me to him and confesse my fault c. He saieth not Oh what abundaunce of bread hath my brother and my kinsefolke but What abundance of bread is there in my fathers house He said not I will make my complaint to my brother but said To my father Whereof is learned that all penitent Christian sinners doe know that the heauenlie father hath the bread of mercie to satisfie their hungrie desire and that he is to be resorted vnto in such sinnefull and troublesome state and not any other in heauen but he alone through Iesus Christe who was killed to redéeme and saue the penitent faithfull sinners of the worlde Sée now how this Prodigall outragious sonne knew why he should séeke helpe of his father in the time of his vile miserie and wretchednesse First he knewe his fathers power and therefore saide Oh how great plentie of bread is there in my fathers house beléeuing that his father was able to giue him meate sufficient Next he was assured that his father was mercifull and would giue him suche thinges as he lacked being thus persuaded boldly he returned vnto his father and to him he vttered al his griefe who was a great deale more prest readie to helpe then his sonne was readie to aske helpe Of the same minde was the woman of Canaan For although she founde little comfort at the firste yet she argued so from the nature of man to the nature of Christ that Christe cried out vpon her and sayde Oh woman greate is thy faith be it vnto thee as thou desirest For when she saide the dogges did eate of the crumbes that fell from their maisters table she knewe that she her selfe and all men in respect
of God were no more nor yet so much as dogs in the respect of man And when she perceiued that man could be contented to spare his crumbes to the dogges she knewe right well that man was not so mercifull and liberall vnto dogges as God vnto sinners Wherefore she stoode stil with Christ constantly and least not calling vntill Christe gaue her to witte that she was in déede a verie well persuaded woman both of his power able to helpe and of his good will readie to helpe For in déede although she was a Cananite she knewe that if a man shut not out dogges from his table Christe woulde not shut from his mercie a sinnefull Cananite The same persuasion made Marie Magdalene créepe vnder the boorde to his féete with teares there to receiue and eate of his mercie to quenche the hunger and smarte of her sinnes These examples do declare why the troubled may put their trust in God Because he is omnipotent and can doe all thinges and he is mercifull and will help all penitent and faithfull sinners And so sayd this Prophete Asaph Of him commeth my saluatiō And he sheweth the cause why For he is my rocke my saluation and my defence These thrée woordes declare meruellousty the nature of God that alone helpeth and also the faith of him that calleth for helpe As for God whome the Prophet calleth first his Rocke by this worde he openeth meruellously how strong firme and sure and howe inuincible he is against all troubles aduersities and tempestes as well of the bodie as of the soule In Saint Matthewe the man that buildeth his house vppon the rocke or stone is called wise and the cause is that what windes soeuer blowe and what tempestes so euer arise they cannot cast downe the house nor ouerthrow the building for it is grounded vpon the stone The stone is God and his worde the builder is the Christian man and the building is the religion that he hath learned of God by his worde And although we sée God our rocke and sure stone is not assaulted with stormie and tempestuous shoures rayne yet the builder and the building that is to say the Christian man and his religion be blowen at and suche shoures of trouble fall vpon them that were not the rocke firme and sure all the building and the builder also for mans parte would surely fall and come to vtter ruine The experience of the same windes and floudes we may sée in the Actes of the Apostles For when Peter the rest builded the house of God that is to say taught men their saluation by the merites and passion of Christ there arose such winds and flouds that the builders were put into prison and the building in great danger When S. Stéeuen builded the congregation with Gods word in Christ whiles he was building such windes and floudes of malice assaulted him y t his braines were knocked out Whē Ananias and the rest planted builded the house of God y t is to say conuerted the infidels vnto the faith of Christ at Damascus there arose such windes and tempests at Hierusalem that Saul came frō thence towards Damascus with commission from the high priestes to kill the builders to ouerthrow all they had builded Let vs leaue off the examples of holie men sée what hapned to the head chiefe capteine al Saints good builders our sauiour Iesus Christ. When he called the worlde from ignorance to knowledge from death to life and from damnation to saluation there arose such winds and storms that had he not béene the rocke it selfe of strength and inuincible power he had béene ouerthrowen cleane and his buildings turned vpside downe For before he was of age to be borne in his mothers bellie y e diuel went about to slaunder him as a bastard and woulde haue persuaded the same to the godlie man Ioseph spoused in marriage to the blessed virgin Marie He had no sooner put his head out of his mothers bellie but streight way Herodes sworde was whette and bent to kill him Within a little while after the diuell stirred vp his owne kinse-folke countriemen to cast him downe from a hill toppe and to breake his necke and at length killed him indéede But what was the outgoing of this builder Forsoothe Father into thy handes I commend my spirite And what was the assuraunce of his building that is to say in what suretie stoode his disciples and folowers in the middest of these winds great stormes Doubtles Christ commended them to the custodie and protection of his heauenly father the rocke sure stone of all saluation from whome windes floudes temptations persequution death sinne nor the diuell himselfe with all his companie of wicked spirites be able to remoue the simplest of all Christes flocke In the Reuelations of Saint Iohn there is a meruellous doctrine what windes and floudes shall blowe and ouerflowe this rocke in the bulding and builders for the time of this life There is a woman that had broughte foorth a man childe and by and by there was a foule greate red dragon with seuen heads and seuen hornes that would haue deuoured this childe before he had come to his inheritaunce and kingdome appointed vnto him And when he saw he could not preuaile against the childe he caste out of his mouth water as it had bene a greate streame after the Mother but there was giuen her winges to escape For the rocke that she was builded vppon was sure that what soeuer windes or waters that is to say what troubles soeuer should happen nothing could ouerthrowe her And so sayeth Asaph here God being my rocke and sure fortresse my soule nor my bodie shal neuer be confounded As he declareth more openly by the two words that followe He is my strength and my saluation also sayth the Prophet As though he had sayd I do not onely knowe God to be sure strong inuincible but also I know this his might strength and surenesse is my wealth and my saluation For many men knowe that GOD is the rocke and strength of all powers but none doeth knowe that this power and strength is saluation for him selfe but such as be Gods in déede Therefore séeing this faith that beléeueth God particularly to saue a priuate person is onely Gods gifte and commeth not of man let vs pray that when we sée howe God hath bene the rocke of saluation to others that he will be so vnto vs likewise For it is a singular gifte of God to say boldely stedfastly and merrily from the bottome of the heart vnto him Thou Lorde art my rocke my saluation and my comfort And he that féeleth in him selfe for him selfe GOD to be his saluation hath suche a treasure that all treasures besides it are nothing to be estéemed and he will not passe of goodes landes nor life
fourth part repeateth more at large the declaration of the first and the second part THE fiue and sixe verses be worde for worde as the first the second were Onely there is left out in these two verses this word greatly for before he saide He should not greatly fall The which worde may be taken two wayes very comfortable of the reader and hearer if it be well marked and beléeued The first way is that the Prophet meaneth not that the people of God shal not fal for that is against the Scripture for The iust man falleth seuen times in the day Againe If we say we haue no sinne in vs we deceiue our selues and the trueth is not in vs. Nowe whereas sinne inseparably dwelleth as it doeth in all men whilest they liue vppon the earth there be faultes and falles before God of the mans part in whome this sinne dwelleth yet God of his mercy for the bloud and death of Christe doeth not account these inseparable sinnes to be falles but loueth the person preserueth him and will not impute nor lay any of those falles or faults vnto his charge but in Christe estéeme him iustified and cleane as though he were of him selfe so in déede And thus the Prophete saith that of Gods part and by our acceptation into his fauour through Christ the faithfull falleth not That is to say his sinne is not accounted damnable nor laide to his charge for Christes sake As Saint Paule writeth to the Romanes An other way it may be taken That a Christian hath testimonie in his spirit by the spirit of God that he is so elected chosen and ordeined of God to eternall saluation that what so euer the world the flesh the diuell or sinne shall doe yet standeth he assured of Gods election grace strength and fidelitie that he shall neuer fall to damnation but arise againe and be called from his falls what so euer they be And yet this most sure comfortable knowledge will not giue him licence nor libertie to sinne but rather kéep him in a feare and loue of the strong and mightie God in whose handes he is and kept from the great fall of eternall damnation from the which he was deliuered from the beginning with God So that ye may learne of this place what perseuerance is in the meditation contemplation of Gods most holy word and promises At the first they séeme vnto the fleshe things impossible as we may sée by Nichodemus who was as ignoraunt as could be at the beginning when he came first to schoole to Christ. But when a man hath bene exercised a while in it he féeleth more swéetnesse in the promises of God as we sée by this Prophete For after he had borne the crosse of affliction a little while and learned the nature of God howe mercifull he is to sinners he saide Although I fall yet it shall not be greatly But when he had tarried in the schoole of Christe and learned in déede what he was and howe that he was able to perfourme his mercy he saide plainly Whatsoeuer sinne the diuell the world the fleshe hell heauen or the earth would say against him he should not fall These two interpretations are to be noted For which so euer we vse we may finde comfort and vnspeakable consolation Now when he hath declared that he shal not fall into Gods eternal ire displeasure he sheweth how this certeintie of eternall saluation came vnto him and why God so mercifully and strongly hath warded and fenced him against all temptations and perilles of damnation It is saith he bicause God is his health That is to say One that hath not onely taken him from the sicknesse and daunger of sinne the tyrannie of the diuell and damnation of the lawe but also preserueth him in the same state that he fall not againe into the sicknesse and perill that he was deliuered from Whereof we learne that it is not mans labours nor mans workes that helpeth a sinner and saueth a damnable soule but it is the frée worke and vndeserued mercy of almightie God Wherfore we be taught that There is no health but in God alone Then saith the Prophete also that in God is his glorie Of the which worde he noteth two thinges The one touching God alone and the other touching God and him selfe The glorie that toucheth God alone is that this troubled Prophete pondered in the heauinesse and anguishe of his minde the number and strength of his enimies the diuel the flesh sinne the world and the bitter accusation of Gods lawes that truely accused and painfully grieued his conscience for sinne Of the other side in faith he considered howe the scripture declared that God was merciful euen vnto the greatest sinners of the worlde And he learned also by the word of God that GOD had made promise vnto sinners to be mercifull He considered further that god had many times vsed and practised his mercy towardes sinners And he founde likewise by the scripture that God to perfourme his mercy would not spare his owne dearely beloued sonne to redéeme man from his sinne with his own precious bloud and painfull death Thus weighing the strength of the diuell and sinne in the one part to damne and the strength of Gods mercy in Christe Iesus on the other part to saue and perceiuing the riches aboundance and strength of Gods mercy to be more auaylable to saue then all the power and strength of the diuell and sinne to damne for the great victory that God taketh ouer such strong enimies the Prophete triumpheth in the glorie of God ioyfully and thankefully extolling him for his mercy and power that hath broken the serpentes head and spoyled him of his prisoners So we vse to doe when any man by valiauntnesse defendeth vs from our enimies we extoll and magnifie him for his victorie and conquest This glorie gaue the Prophete Asaphe in this Psalme of God when by faith he sawe God conquering of hell sinne the diuell the accusation of the lawe desperation the fleshe and the world And the same glory giueth euery faithful creature vnto God at the end of the Lordes prayer when he saith For thine is the kingdome the power and the glorie By the which wordes we knowe that howe so euer the diuell and wicked people take vppon them to vsurpe by violence warre and tyrannie and liue neuer so princely in pompe and pride they be but vsurpers if they come to it wrongfully for the kingdome apperteineth vnto GOD. And howe so euer they extend their power in Gods sight they be no stronger then a brused réede or broken staffe for the power is Gods And what glorie so euer they seigne and flatter them selues to haue it is but withered haye and vile dust in the sight of God But nowe the Prophete by the eye of faith séeing this glorious triumphe strength and power
in God saith that In this glorious almightie and triumphant God is his glory and desireth to haue part of that victorie and of that meruellous maiestie And as the Psalme saith He calleth and nameth the God of glorie his glorie Oh meruellous and vnspeakable boldnesse and constancie of faith A man nothing but sinne by nature in the sight of God nothing but earth and ashes replenished with all miserie and wretchednesse by nature corrupt the very enimie of GOD a vessell prepared vnto all dishonour ignominie shame and perdition contemned through sinne and shamed before all creatures and yet nowe with all these dishonours by faith saith The king of glorie is his glorie and the conquerour of all dishonour is his shield and buckler Of the other part who can thinke or speake any thing thankfull to suche a king of glory and most mightie conquerour that abhorreth not of mercy to be the honour and glory of so vile sinfull and wretched a thing as man is Whose eyes abhorre no filthe of sinne in penitent sinners whose presence refuseth not the companie of the sicke and miserable whose strength comforteth the weake whose mercy reioyceth the comfortles whose life expelleth death whose health banisheth sicknesse whose loue vanquisheth hatred whose immortalitie giueth euerlasting life and who crowneth vs with endlesse pitie and compassion in ioyes perpetuall Thus the Prophete after he had espied the almightie God in him selfe gloriously to be voyd of all troubles dolours and other aduersities and that he had also conquered gloriously the capteines of al aduersities hell death satan and sinne he challenged by faith and craued by Gods promise to be partaker of Gods glory in this point And doubtlesse he that can féele in his heart that GOD is his glory he shall take no dishonour nor shame by all the workes of the diuell sinner or the worlde Therefore many times in reading or thinking of the Psalmes or other parte of the holy scripture it is expedient to meditate and pray that the word we speake or pray may be vnto vs as much saluation comfort and glory as we perceiue GOD hath appointed in it for vs. And when we say with our mouth to God Thou art my saluation my glorie my rocke and my trust Let vs cry Lorde increase our faith helpe vs for thy name sake constantly to beleeue thee to be vnto vs in deed in spirit as we speake of thee outwardly with our mouth For in case the heart vnderstande not nor beléeue the wordes we speake with our mouthe we honour God in vaine as the scripture saith Let vs therefore praye as Saint Paule teacheth vs saying I will pray with the spirite and I will pray with the minde also When the Prophete hath by faith assured him selfe of Gods fauour he exhorteth all the Christian congregation to doe the same saying O put your trust in him alwayes ye people c. Here the Prophete teacheth what the Minister of the Church Bishop and others should doe when they vnderstand the scripture and learne by it feare and faith loue and hope in GOD they be bound to teache the congregation the same Scriptures for her saluation Whereby is condemned the vse of the Scripture in an vnknowne toung which is directly against Gods worde And here be Kings and Rulers also taught to sée their subiectes tenaunts and seruaunts to vnderstand the worde of God likewise the Father and the Mother the Maister and the Maistresse who be bound to knowe for their saluation the worde of GOD and to teache it vnto others vnder their gouernaunce Therefore in the end of the verse is put Selah As though he had saide Happie be those that put their trust in the Lorde and teach other to doe the same And curssed be those that trust not in the Lord and teach others to do the like THE FIFT PART 9 As for the children of men they are but vaine the children of men are deceitfull vpon the weights They are altogether lighter then vanitie it selfe 10 O trust not in wrong and robberie giue not your selues to vanitie if riches increase set not your heart vpon them The fift part sheweth howe mans power is not to be trusted vnto THE Prophete by no meanes would haue men to put their trust in fleshe and bloud in case they doe they must néedes perishe For when miserable man shall trust in vaine vanitie whiche is man he can be no lesse then vanitie it selfe in whome he hath trusted And this is one miserie and wretchednesse a man to be deceiued of helpe and succour whereas he most trusted to haue bene holpen and succoured Thus must it néedes happen to them that trust in men For men of most excellencie and greatest authoritie riches and power in the world be but vanitie as the Prophete saith Nowe as they be so is their helpe And as their helpe is so is the comfort and consolation of such as seeke help at their handes Those that be trusted vnto be but flesh and bloud the best of flesh and bloud is but vanitie the consolation and helpe of vanitie is miserie and wretchednesse wherefore the Prophete exhorteth all men to beware they séeke not ayde and comfort of man for he is but vaine The Israelites vsed for their helpe against their enimies the Egyptians but the more flesh conspired together the worsse successe had all the battels they fought Nowe as we sée men that haue their trust in men suffer muche trouble and miserie in the world bicause their helpe they trust in is of inferiour strength and power to the troubles and aduersities that they be combred withall So doeth the word of God declare that such men as trust in vanitie haue not onely worldly aduersities against them but also for their so doing trusting in fleshe they be accurssed of God as the scriptures say Curssed be he that trusteth in man So that we sée meruelous and vnspeakable harmes come of the trust in man First miseries of y e world and next the enimitie and cursse of God For he that putteth his trust in man with the same one fact and doing doeth two horrible euils The one he deceiueth him selfe for the vanitie that he trusteth in can not saue him And the other he dishonoureth God that onely can saue in putting his trust in mortall man that can not saue and so maketh of man God to Gods high displeasure and dishonour Euery Christian man therefore should forsake fleshe and bloud and trust in the Lorde Almightie maker of heauen and earth as the Prophet Asaphe did a little before when he saide In God was his glory who could defend him from all hurts present past and to come what so euer they were The like may we sée in Saint Paule that saide God forbid that I should glory in any thing sauing in the crosse of our Lord Iesus Christ by whome the world
haue his desire and cogitations in the law of God both day and right And to preserue the people from this horrible impediment of ignorance God spake by his prophet Esaie these wordes My spirite which is in thee and my woordes which I put in thy mouth shall not depart from thy mouth and from the mouth of thy seede saith the Lord from henceforth for euermore And in the same Prophesie Christ prayeth the heauenly father to seale his word in his disciples wherby the daungerous impediment of mans saluation which is ignorance might be eschewed auoyded The same remedie against ignorance commandeth Almightie God also by Moses in Deut. and by S. Paul to the Ephesians whereas the fathers and the mothers be not bound themselues alone to knowe the lawe of God but also bound to teach it to their children that by ignorance they offend not God Of the second impediment whiche is feare and dred of Gods iustice commeth trembling and terror of the conscience and many times also the extremest euil of all euils very desperation that neuer looketh who can helpe neither yet trusteth to find any helpe But of these fruites of terror and feare and also of their remedies how they may be cured and holpen it shalbe shewed hereafter in the Psalme as it followeth whereas both terror of conscience and tranquillitie of the same be meruellously and diuinely set foorth Onely vntill I come to those pointes I doe note that this feare and terror of conscience in the faithfull be the very hunger and thirst that Christ saith shalbe quenched and they that féele them shalbe replenished with grace and consolation as the blessed Virgin the mother of Christ saith and they that féele them not shall departe emptie without grace And the cause of this terror and feare is the spirite of God that worketh the knowledge of our sinne by preaching reading or thinking of Gods Lawe that openeth and detecteth how wretched and sinnefull we be by nature in the sight of God But of this matter is better occasion ministred afterwardes in the Psalme then in this place ¶ The second part ¶ How a man should vse himselfe towards him in whome he putteth his trust in the time of trouble 2 In the time of my trouble I sought the Lord my hand I held vppe all night and it was not wearie my soule refused comfort IN this part is taught vs both by doctrine and by example howe we should vse our selues in the time of trouble When we know there is no helpe nor helper but God alone it is not ynough for a man to know that God can helpe but also we must beléeue constantly that he hath as prompt a will to helpe as a sufficient power able to helpe and then béeing assured that he both can and will helpe we must call vppon him for helpe according to his commaundement vnto vs Call vppon mee in the dayes of trouble c. But of this place we may marke and learne what an intollerable burthen and vnspeakeable sorrowe the terrour and feare of sinne is and how gréeuous a thing the sight and contemplation of Gods displeasure and iust iudgement is against euery sinner for his sinne and transgression of Gods most holy Law The text saith That the Prophete when he felt the displeasure of God against sinne cryed out with a lowde voyce vnto the Lord. Whereby we learne that the conscience of man admonished by the word of God of the filthinesse and abhomination of sinne bringeth all the bodie into a trembling and feare lest God should vse rather iustice and iustly punishe sinne then mercie and mercifully forgiue sinne And thus béeing made afrayde thoroughly of sinne the mind is occupied with sorrowfull and heauie cogitations and the tongue by vehemencie of the spirite brought into clamours and cryes As we may sée commonly by examples left vnto vs in the word of God that where sinne is throughly felt in the conscience the feeling sinner is not onely troubled within in spirite but also outwardly in all the members and partes of his bodie as it is to be séene most manifestly in king Dauid In what a sea of heauines was king Dauid in his conscience when he spake to his owne soule Why art thou so heauie and sorrowfull ô my soule and why dost thou thus trouble mee Againe How long wilt thou forget mee ô Lord for euer And in other Psalmes we may sée into what trembling and feare outwardly he was brought by the knowledge and féeling of his sinne In one place he saith The feare of his sinnes did not onely ouerlay his conscience but also crushed and in maner all to broke his bones And in another place His visage was all defaced with wéeping teares and so abundantly they gushed out of his eyes that he watered or rather ouerflowed his bed with them where he lay Into what horrible cryes and waylings many times he fell for feare of sinne this Psalme and many other doe declare The like horrour and feare also of the sight and féeling of sinne we sée to haue béene in Saint Paule when he cryed out vppon him selfe Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie subiect vnto death And Marie Nagdalene with the sight and féeling of Gods displeasure against her sinne made teares and wéepings enowe to washe the founteine of mercies féete Iesus Christ. But blessed is that conscience feared by the Lawe whose feare by the swéete promises of the Gospel is turned into mirth and blessed be those teares and wéepings that end in consolation and happie is that troubled bodie whose end is immortalitie in the resurrection of the iust Further as we sée here king Dauid a sinner for feare of Gods iudgement breake out into lowd cryes for helpe and preseruation the same anguish and trouble of minde and of bodie for feare of Gods punishment for sinne towardes man was likewise in Christ without sinne which said My soule is heauie vnto death and in such an agonie was his bodie that he burst out and swett both water and bloud So that of this second part first we learne that such as be truely vnseignedly brought to a knowledge féeling and repentance of their sinnes haue it with great heauines of minde terrour of conscience and trouble also of the bodie many times that no sicknesse nor troubles may be compared to the trouble of the conscience for feare of due and condigne punishment for the sinne perpetrated and committed against Gods lawes The second doctrine that we be taught out of this second part is to declare what difference there is betwéene the penitent Christian in aduersitie and the desperate person that looketh for no helpe or els the presumptuous person that contemneth helpe The penitent afflicted calleth vnto the Lord and although he finde his burden neuer so intollerable doe wéepe and
himselfe for euer This may be vnderstood two maner of wayes For this English word euer hath two meanings in the Hebrue tonge Sometime it is taken for continuance and time euerlasting sometime for certeine yeres and the life of men If it be taken in this place for time euerlasting the sorrowes of the Prophete were the greater when he reuelued with his spirite that God iustly for sinne might cast him into euerlasting paines the remembraunce whereof is greater paine then the mortall death of the bodie If this word euer be taken for a certeine time and the life of man then meaneth the Prophet thus Will God as long as I liue absent himselfe And thus continue me in heauines of spirite and sorrowes as long as I liue Which sense soeuer be taken there be profitable thinges to be learned of it But I suppose the latter sense to be the better for diuers causes First in this that the Psalme conteineth the complaint and prayer of the Prophet a man of God that cannot be brought to this desperation that he should be cast away for euer from the fauour of God vnto eternall paines And the text that saith It is mine owne infirmitie and the right hand of the Lord can chaunge this doth beare with this latter sense and explanation For the words be of great weight and of meruellous wisedome and consolation and do declare that although the Prophete felt the iudgement of God against sinne and was in a meruellous terror feare with the horror and sight of his sinns yet the spirite of God did testifie with his spirit that he was the child of God and that it was a paine and punishment of the soule and body and not a desperation and thorough casting away and absenting of Gods mercie For the very electes of God be chosen so ordeined so preserued and kept that nothing is able to take them out of Gods hand For the godly men in the Scripture did reioyce with the assurance of Gods certein promise and did not presume to do euill as S. Paule in sundrie places doth giue testimonie Once to the Romanes where as he felt and perceiued the filthines of sinne the iust iudgement of God against the same as it appeareth by his wofull crie and complaint Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from this body subiect vnto death He felt as we may perceiue the heauie burden and weight of Gods displeasure and yet in the midst of terror and feare he stayed assuredly in the mercie of God through Christ. And the same he writeth also to the Corinthians to his disciple Timothie that his death was at hand that he knew although his quarell were neuer so good that he of himselfe was a sinner and by sinne worthie reiection casting away from God yet he said that Christ had in kéeping for him a crowne of iustice whiche he should assuredly receiue at the day of his death God is contented that his chosen people shall suffer and beare the burden and heauinesse of temptation and feare of euerlasting paine as Adam did first in Paradise Dauid many times Iob and others yea Christ himselfe that said his soule was heauie euen vnto death which made him sweat both water and bloud But these temptations and terrors shall neuer ouercome and cast away the person that hath his faith in Christ for none is able to take his shéepe out of his hand Yet God withdraweth his hand many times and suffereth his to be tempted and to be comfortlesse and as it were cleane ouerthrowen not that in déede their election can be altered or they themselues left comfortlesse vntill the end of their liues but for a time as ye may sée by Iob who spake as horrible words and as desperatly as might be Yet sée in the end of his booke and marke what a ioyfull outgoing his gréeuous temptations had What pitifull cryes were these of Christ our Sauiour vppon the crosse My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Yet the end was Father into thy handes I commend my spirite It is written that we must enter into heauen by many troubles Now of all troubles the trouble of the minde and of the spirite is the greatest Who then can enter into heauen without such troubles Doubtlesse no man For the iudgement of God must begin at his house as Saint Pater saith That is to say None shall in this life more féele Gods displeasure for sinne in the spirite nor suffer more aduersitie in the bodie then such as be of Gods owne houshold and very electes Wherefore we be admonished in the troubles and sorrowes that this Prophete Asaph susteined in his soule that could not rest and in his bodie that could not sléepe nor speake that good men be not frée from aduersitie and that aduersities be they neuer so great shall not separate men from God for euer but for a time he punisheth sinne and hideth the consolation of God from vs As the scripture saith For a time a little while I haue forsaken thee but I will gather thee together in wonderfull mercies In a short time of my wrath I hidd my face a while from thee but I will haue mercie vppon thee for euer saith the Lord thy redeemer All men that shall profitably knowe and féele the certeintie of Gods promises in this life and enioy them in the life to come shall be troubled with some paine of doubtfulnes of them before he come to perfection For as by sinne death entered into the flesh and also the flesh is subiect vnto sicknesse and aduersitie so is there entered into the soule and powers thereof by reason of sinne great imperfection As the minde of all men is burdened with ignorance the heart with contumacie and the will with frowardnesse so that as they be before regeneration and knowledge of God in all godly matters starke blind very obstinate and naturally altogether froward euen so after regeneration and the knowledge of God they continually resist and fight against the spirite not onely of man in whome these powers dwell but also against the spirite of God that teacheth and leadeth the spirite of man to eternall saluation So that it is not man that is able to ouercome the wickednesse of his owne soule And therefore séeing life through grace dwelt in a bodie naturally full of sinne Saint Paule said I doe liue yet not I but Christ liueth in mee So this Prophete Asaphe séemeth in wordes to be starke dead from grace but it was not for euer for he felt the spirite of God that told him that such heauie and vngodly thoughtes of his spirit came of his owne infirmitie and that Gods right hand could alter and chaunge them And this is the difference betwéene the affliction of the godly and vngodly as it is
no more mercifull to helpe him out of trouble that specially and particularly suffereth the trouble And this question so asked is very common and familiar to the Christians and putteth them to great trouble and heauinesse As we may sée that this Prophet Asaphe considered the yeares before him and what God did to his elders and found that they receiued remission of their sinnes and great benefites in this world at Gods hand So do a great number of men in hearing and reading the Scripture of God sée and perceiue the remission of many mens sinns and how mercifully God delt with them yet when they féele their owne sinne and suffer their owne crosse and trouble they haue much a doe and with great difficultie doe they beléeue that God will be as good vnto them being priuate sinners and priuately afflicted as he was vnto the great number of those of whom they read in the Scripture that God forgaue them their sinnes and preserued them in most horrible and daungerous troubles Therefore this is a common wisedome and daily experimented sentence Omnes cùm valemus bonum consilium aegrotis damus When other men be sicke we can giue good counsell patiently to beare it When other men be afflicted and troubled we can speake of many meanes to quiet them When they be in any mistrust of Gods promises we can comfort them with many arguments of faith but most commonly if we be sicke our selues troubled or in mistrust of Gods promises we can ease or comfort our selues very little And good cause why for God that giueth of his owne gist and only frée liberalitie wisedome knowledge learning and consolation giueth also the grace that the saide vertues may worke their operation and expell the infirmities and diseases wherefore these wisedomes and vertues were ordeined As it is meruellously noted of Saint Paule I haue planted Apollo hath watered but God gaue the increase The word of God is a meanes to teach truth and to condemne falshood to place vertue and to remoue vice to giue consolation and to banishe and put away diffidence and mistrust but God giueth and worketh the effect thereof Meate is made to preserue the body but if God giueth not strength it misseth the purpose The horse and man be means to ouercome but in battell God giueth the victory The preacher preacheth Gods word but God openeth and teacheth the mysterie therof Man heareth but God giueth the vnderstanding Asaph remembred Gods workes and had in minde his own godly Psalmes but God must giue the consolatiō He sawe the trueth and knewe that God was faithful but the ioy and profite thereof lay in the distribution and gift of God as we may wel perceiue by this sorrowfull interrogatorie Will he be intreated no more Of this part we learne howe we ought when we reade or heare Gods promises for our saluation to pray and howe necessarie a thing this prayer is that godly men made in the scripture Lord help my incredulitie Lord increase our faith The poore man that heard and sawe Christes mercy and liberalitie in healing of others desired also helth for his owne childe Christe saide if he beléeued all things were possible the poore man sayd I beleeue Lorde helpe mine vnbeleefe The Apostles when they heard Christe speake of forgiuenesse of one to the other they sayde Increase our faith good Lord. As though they had sayd Except thou giue vs strength to beléeue and credite thy godly lessons we shal take no commoditie nor profite by them Therefore let the preacher of God the reader of Gods worde the hearer of Gods worde the thinker vpon the same many times before also whilest they be speaking thinking reading or hearing of Gods word pray in their spirits that y e word of God may work in them the thing wherfore the word was instituted and appointed of God or else we shall be as Saint Paule saith alwayes learners and yet neuer come to the knowledge of the truth And I do verily thinke and am truly persuaded that for lacke of earnest and continuall prayer with lifting vp of my heart vnto God whilest I preached his most holy word vnto the people God iudgeth me not worthy to sée such fruites of my labours as I hoped for And for this that the people did not heartily pray to vnderstand Gods pleasure by his word preached they be accounted vnworthy of such saluation as GOD did offer them by his worde and the true preaching of his mysteries Let all men therefore pray to God in Christ that they may be the better for the hearing recording remembring or reading of Gods word For notwithstanding they haue amongest them the booke of God yet shall they be troubled without Gods singular grace with one of these two euils either to mocke and scorne at the scripture caring not whether they learne it or no or else when they haue learned it to dout whether it be true or no. And then followeth these questions Will God absent him selfe for euer And Will God be no more intreated with such other doubtes as do followe in this Psalme with much heauinesse vnto the spirite where such demaundes rest haue place Then followeth the third demaunde by this troubled Prophete Is his mercy cleane gone for euer Here in this demaund first be two things to be noted The one declaring a fault in the Prophetes faith and the other expressing a veritie in the Prophetes knowledge The fault in his faith was to doubt or to stande in a mamering of Gods mercy which is most sure and endureth for euer and euer and to aske this question Whether his mercy were cleane gone for euer The veritie of his knowledge was to iudge and say that It was his mercy that forgaue sinnes and not his or any other mens merites that could deserue the pardoning of sinne As ye may sée how sinneful Saule for his sinne thought to haue appeased God with sacrifice and the proude Pharisée with his pretenced good workes But here in this knowledge that the Prophet complained of the departure of Gods mercy is set foorth that only mercy appeaseth Gods ire in Christ for the sinne of man And what works so euer be done except Gods mercy pardon the sinne they all can neyther please God nor quiet the conscience and troubled spirite of him that doth the workes As it may be séene in the example of Sainte Peter and the rest of the Apostles When that Saint Peter walked vpon the sea comming towardes Christ and felt the wind strong and tempestuous he beganne to feare and when he beganne to sincke he cryed Lord saue me And the Lord put foorth his hande and tooke him sayd vnto him Thou of little faith why doubtest thou Here we sée if GOD did helpe vs no more of his mercy then our owne merites deserued or else no more then the gifts of God
mind he came to y e trust in the Lord. Ye may learne by these Psalmes indited by king Dauid that easily he taught Gods religion and how men should put their trust in the Lord and yet how hard it was to do and practise the thing himselfe that he taught vnto others Asaph also declareth the same For in the 73. Psalme he teacheth what men should thinke and iudge in aduersitie that God would be good vnto Israel But in this Psalme he himselfe being vnder the rod and persequution of God is come to questioning and demaunding Will God absent him selfe for euer Will he be no more intreated Is his mercy cleane gone for euer with many other demaundes declaring vnspeakable troubles and difficulties of the minde before it be brought to a perfect consent and full agréement vnto the promises of God So that we sée the excellent Prophetes and most vertuous organes and instruments amongest sinfull men knewe it was an easie matter to speake of faith vertue and yet a very hard thing to practise true faith and to exercise vertuous liuing Saint Paule sheweth the same to the Romanes to be in him selfe For he had more adoe in Christ to get the victorie of sinne in him selfe then to speake of the victorie vnto others by mouth and more adoe to mortifie and kill the fleshe and to bring it in subiection to the spirite then to practise the death of the flesh in him selfe and to followe the spirit He spake and vttered with his mouth most godly doctrine to the destruction of sinne but with what prayers teares and clamours to God he did the same in him selfe read 2. Corinth 12. The olde saying is Knowledge is no burthen and in déede it is a thing easie to be borne but to put knowledge in experience the body and the soule shal finde paine and trouble And yet Christes wordes where he saith My yoke is light my burden easie be most true to such as haue wrestled with sinn and in Christ got the vpper hand To them I say the precepts of vertuous liuing be easie and swéete as long as the spirite of God beareth the ouer hande in them But when faith waxeth faint and the flesh strong then can not the spirit of God command nor desire any thing but both body and soule be muche offended with the hearing therof and more gréeued with the doing of it S. Peter likewise maketh mention of the same For when Christ bade him followe him meaning that he should dy also for the testimonie of his word he liked not that but asked Christe what Iohn should do being doutlesse in great perplexitie when Christ tolde him that he should suffer the paines of death But here are to be noted two things The one that as long as affliction is talked of generally other mens paines spoken of so long can euery man and woman heare of affliction yea and commend the persons that suffered affliction as we sée at this day All men be contented to heare of y e death of Christ of y e martyrdome of his Saints and of the affliction and imprisonment of his godly members but when the same or like should be experimented and practised by our selues we wil none of it we refuse it and we abhorre it yea so much that where Christ and those Saints whose names be most common and vsual in our mouths suffered the vilest death that could be deuised we will not suffer as much as the losse of a frend or the deceiueable goods of this vnstable and transitorie world so that in the generalitie we be very godly and can cōmend al godly martyrs and sufferers for Gods sake but alas in the particularitie we be very vngodly and will followe no martyr nor suffer at al. Also as long as we be without danger for Christes sake we can speake of great daungers and say that we will suffer all extremitie and crueltie but when it commeth to passe that an enimie to God and his worde shall say in déede Forsake thy religion or else thou shalt dy as Christ said vnto Peter When thou art old an other shall girde thée and leade thée whether thou wouldest not then a litle threatening of an other man stark quayleth this man that said he wold suffer al troubles as Peter said If he shuld loose his life he would not refuse his maister but when an other yea a poore maide but asked him Whether he were one of Christes seruants and made no mentiō at al of losse of life or goods he would not hazard him selfe to beare so much as the name of Christes disciple Thus we sée the vilenesse frailtie of our owne nature how weake we be to suffer in déede when of necessitie we must beare the crosse and can by no means auoyd it How troublesome also it is both to body and soule this Psalme place of the scripture declareth and therfore in the end of these temptations is put Sela. A worde that maketh as it were an outcry against the corrupt nature of man for sin As S. Paule said I know that there dwelleth in my flesh no good thing To admonishe therefore man thereof in déede and to shewe him his owne damnation the word is put there to cause the reader or hearer of the place to marke and bewaile the wretchednesse thereof As the Prophete him selfe doth in the next verse ¶ The fourth part Howe a man taketh consolation in the time of his trouble 10 And I said This is my infirmitie but these things the right hand of God can chaunge HEre is life and death and the occasions of both meruellously set foorth He said that it was his infirmitie that caused him to question doubt of Gods mercy Wherein he hath disburdened God and charged him selfe with sinne and doubtfulnesse And so much al men sée and find in them selues that damnation is of our selues and saluation onely of God There is also to be noted in thi● infirmitie y t it occupieth not only the body but also the soul. For he saith These cogitations and questions as touching the doubtfulnesse of Gods mercy were the deuises and actes of his mind so that both his body and soule were comfortlesse And good cause why for in both of them were sinne and abhomination against God And of these two partes of man the body the spirit came these dubitations of God and of his promises The which fruites of corruption ingender except sinne be forgiuen eternall death And here is the wisedome of the fleshe séene to be very enimitie vnto God working continually the breach of Gods commaundements and the destruction of mans saluation as much as lyeth in it But in the second part of the verse is life the occasion thereof which is a sure trust that God can remoue despaire put in place therof faith hope sure confidence And the
occasion of this helpe is not mans merites but the right hand of God y t is to say Gods power inclined to saue man by mercy Of this doctrine be certeine things to be marked of euery reader hearer of this Psalme First in this verse is declared how man taketh consolation in time of his trouble which is y e 4. part of the Psalme in the same part the Psalme endeth He saith It was his infirmitie that made him to question demaund in his spirit so doubtfull things of God and of his promises Whereof we learne that consolation beginneth where sorrowe and heauinesse is first felt for the spirit can take no solace by Gods promises vntill suche time as it féeleth by Gods lawe how sinnefull it is for the transgression thereof Therfore Solomon saith The iust man is the first accuser of him selfe And so doth the Prophet Asaph in this place confesse that these cogitations and profound thoughts against God came of his owne infirmitie and sinne And the knowlege of a mans owne wickednesse from the bottome of the heart although it be a shame to speake or remember the vilenesse of sinne wherewith sinner hath most gréeuously transgressed Gods commaundementes yet is this knowledge and confession of our sinne and iniquitie very necessarie and is as it were an induction to the remission thereof as it is to be séene in this Prophet and in the Prophet Dauid For here is first confessed that all sinnes in him came of his owne infirmitie and all consolation against sinne came of Gods right hand And the Prophet Dauid sayth whē he was in like trouble for sinne I determined saith he to confesse against my selfe mine owne iniquitie and thou Lord forgauest the wickednesse of my sinne But here is to be noted in this that the confession of sinne is as it were an induction and beginning of consolation that confession of sinne is not the beginning of consolation except he that maketh the confession be assured in his heart of Gods promises in Christe that of mercy in Christes death his sinnes be forgiuen as ye may sée in these two Prophetes The one said It is mine infirmitie the worketh this doutfulnes in my soule And the other saide I determined to condemne my selfe of sinne Thus farre it is death and an increase of diffidence in Gods promises and an induction to desperation to féele sinne to bewayle sinne to speake of sinne and to remember sinne But whereas knowledge and confession hath a certeintie and assurance of Gods forgiuenesse annexed vnto it there is confession and knowledge of sinne partly a beginning of consolation against sinne I call it partly or as an occasion bycause first of all God by his word or by his punishments through the operation of the holy Ghoste openeth the soule of the sinner to sée and know his sinne also to tremble and quake at sinne rather then to hate and abhorre sinne And from these principles and originalls commeth the humble and lowly confession of sinne not to man but vnto God except it be such an open sinne done against man as man knoweth of that the sinne is committed against Then must the offender of man also reconcile him selfe to man that is offended according to the commaundement of God Therefore we must marke what confession and acknowledging of our owne infirmities is For euery confession is not acceptable before God nor the beginning of consolation as these examples declare Iudas saide openly in the face of the court where Christe our Sauiour was arraigned that he had offended in betraying innocent bloud but there followed no faith nor hope of forgiuenesse So that for lacke of faith in Christes bloud desperation and hanging of him selfe ensued his confession Whereby it is euident that confession of sinne without faith is nothing worth but a testimonie of a desperate mans damnation King Saule after long impulsion by the Prophet Samuel was brought to confesse that he had offended in preseruing aliue Agag king of y e Amalekites and the fattest of his cattell I haue offended sayth Saule for I haue broken and transgressed the commaundement of God But what followed Gods right hand can remedie my sinne as this Prophete Asaph saith or God hath forgiuen the iniquitie of my sinne as Dauid sayde er else God be merciful vnto me a sinner as the Publicane sayd No but this ensueth I Pray thee sayth Saule to Samuel beare thou my sinne In this mans confession of sin was not the beginning of consolation but of more sorrowes for his heauinesse from that day more and more increased with his sinnes vntill he was slaine And the cause thereof was this He would that Samuel being but a man should haue pardoned his sinne whereas none can doe it but God as it is notably to be séene in king Dauid For when he sayde he had offended the Lord Nathan the Prophete sayde And God hath taken away thy sinnes Wherein is declared that the minister can but pronounce to the sinner that God in Christe forgiueth sinne So that we sée Iudas confession of sinne was nothing worth bycause he found no fayth nor trust for the remission thereof and Saules confession was of no valure bicause he trusted and desired consolation at mans hand and not at Gods Yet in Saules confession was some thing good in that he confessed although it were long first and in manner wrested out of his mouth by the Prophete Samuel his fault to God and in that point he did as Dauid did who sayde I haue offended the Lord. And this is to be noted bycause nowe adayes men be taught to confesse their sinnes to the Saints departed that knowe not what the outward works of men be vpon the earth much lesse the inward sinfull cogitation of the heart So that in this part the Papists confession is worse then Saules and in the other part it is like For as Saule trusted to the merites of Samuel and would haue him to beare his sinne so do the people trust that the Priestes hand vpon their head the penaunce inioyned them by the Priestes shall be a cleane remission and full satisfaction for all their sinne but before God their sinnes be as much forgiuen them as Saules were that is to say nothing at all But wheras sinne is knowne and confessed from the very hart vnto God although it be a bitter thing and also a shamefull thing to féele and beare Gods displeasure for sin the burden wherof is very death and more gréeuous then death it selfe yet whereas confidence and trust in the mercy of God is annexed with it there followeth great consolation and comfort As it is to be séene in this Prophet that spake with a strong faith boldly The righthand of God cā chaunge these things So that the latter part of this verse hath
more comfort then the first part hath discomfort And it is a plaine doctrine that although y e sinnes of man be many horrible yet be they fewer and lesse in estimation many thousande foldes then Gods mercies Death is declared in the first part of the verse in this that mans infirmitie is not onely sinful in body soule but also doutful of Gods mercy holy promises Yet in the second part by grace is set foorth life and cleane deliuerance from the tyrannie of the diuel the seruitude of sinne the accusation of the lawe and the infirmitie of nature by the strong and mightie power of God whose mercy in Christ is alwayes ready to helpe poore afflicted and troubled sinners After this confession of sinne and the great confidence that the prophet had in God for his mightie power and mercies sake that was both able by power and redy with will to help and remedie this troubled spirite and great aduersities of the Prophet he goeth foorth in the consolation taketh yet more and more of Gods benefites vsed in times towardes such as were afflicted after this sort 11 I will remember the workes of the Lord and call to my minde thy wonders of olde time 12 I will thinke also of thy workes and my talking shall be of thy doings 13 Thy way ô God is holy who is so great a God as our God 14 Thou art the God that doth wonders and hast declared thy power amongest people 15 Thou hast mightily deliuered thy people euen the sonnes of Iacob and Ioseph Sela. 16 The waters saw thee ô God the waters saw thee and were afraid the deapthes also were troubled 17 The cloudes powred out water the ayre thundered and thine arrowes went abroad 18 The voyce of thy thunder was heard round about the lightenings shone vpon the gound the earth was moued and shooke withall 19 Thy way is in the sea and thy pathes in the great waters and thy footsteps are not knowne 20 Thou leadest thy people like shepe by the hand of Moses and Aaron Of these meanes howe men take consolation in aduersitie that the Prophet nowe maketh mention of first we learne what difference is betwéene the consideration of Gods works aduisedly by faith the consideration of Gods workes rashly without faith The which diuersitie is to be séen in this Prophet For the one part as touching the remembring of Gods workes out of faith and in faith he spake before in the second verse and in the fourth verse how that he considered the workes and old doings of the Lord when he was troubled But as ye haue heard because his spirite was in a doubtfulnesse and mamering vppon the certeintie of Gods doinges he felt no consolation thereof but much heauinesse and anguish of minde For those demaundes Will God absent himselfe for euer Will he be no more mercifull and such like heauie and doubtfull complaintes could neuer procéed but from a sorrowful and much troubled conscience But now after that Gods spirit hath wrought in his spirit this assurance and iudgment that God can in him chaunge the conditions of his miseries as ye may sée he maketh no more complaint of doubtfulnesse neither remembreth any more the fearefulnesse of his conscience but goeth foorth with repetition and rehearsall of all thinges comfortably how that God in time past holpe troubled spirites and afflicted personages that put their trust in him So that of this we learne that whosoeuer hath a sure faith in God taketh consolation of Gods word and workes And such as haue not first true faith in God cannot in the spirite receiue comfort of Gods word or workes Outwardly men may meruel at God and his worker but inwardly it easeth not the heauinesse nor yet quieteth the grudge of conscience Wherefore it behoueth vs all that we pray earnestly vnto GOD to giue vs faith to beléeue his word and workes when we heare read or sée them For the word and workes of God do nothing comfort the vnfaithfull as we may sée by the Scripture where God saith He stretched foorth his hand al day long to a people that beléeued not for such as haue eares heare not eyes sée not be rather the worse for Gods word workes then the better Ye shal sée where the spirite of Dauid was replenished with faith he was in assured and ascerteined of Gods present helpe that he said he would not feare although a thousand men inuironed and compassed him round about No he would not feare thoughe he should walk in the shadow of death At another time when faith quailed and waxed faint he was trembling in his spirite and fearefull in his bodie as we may sée when he felt his spirite waxe faint he said My soule is troubled very sore and my bones be weakened And in other of his Psalmes he sheweth that his soule was very heauie and comfortlesse and could take no consolation Also when the spirite is assured of Gods grace then the eyes cannot looke vppon any worke of God but the mind taketh by the contemplation and sight thereof vnspeakeable consolation As Dauid declareth in his Psalmes and saith He would sée the heauens the workes of Gods fingers and would marke how one day was an induction to an other and how the heauens praised the Lord. At an other time when the consolation and life of the spirit was ouer whelmed with troubles he could not sée at all with his eyes but cryed and complained that he was starke blinde And also in that meruellous Psalme in number 88. whereas prayer is made to be deliuered from the horrour and féeling of sinne the Prophet saith that his eyes waxed dimme and blinde The same is to be séene likewise in the crosses and afflictions that God sendeth As long as true faith and confidence remaineth in the heart all troubles be wellcome and thankfully taken as we read When Iob had newes that his goods and chidren were taken from him in manner soudeinly he most patiently said God gaue them and God hath taken them away as God would so it is done But when faith quailed and the spirite was troubled then followed these impatient wordes I would my sinne were layed in one balance and my paine in an other As though God had layed more vppon him then he had deserued When the spirit was quieted for all his pouertie and nakednesse he reioyced and was contented with his birth and comming into the world and also with the state in the world appointed vnto him by God saying Naked I came out of my mothers bellie and naked I shall depart hence againe But when faith fainted then came out these woordes The day the night and the time be cursed wherein I was borne With many more horrible wordes as the text declareth So that we sée whereas Gods spirite wanteth there is no learning nor consolation to be
the prophet remember the works of the Lord and that of olde time or from the beginning The second I wil think also of al the works of the Lord c. In this that the Prophet sayeth He will remember the workes of the Lorde of olde time or from the beginning we learne that it is expedient to know or at the least way not to be ignorant of any booke in the scripture For where as we finde not consolation in the one we may finde it in the other And where he sayth He wil remember all y e works of the Lord meaning as many as the scripture maketh mention of we be instructed that we cannot sée these works for our erudition neither yet giue y e almightie God thanks except we learne them from one of his bookes to the other And here is to be noted that séeing we be bounde to knowe and to be thankefull for all the workes of God conteined in the scripture we be muche in daunger as well for ignorance as vnthankefulnesse that we knowe not the principall workes of our owne creation or redemption We be therefore admonished to haue bookes to read the works of God and to be diligent to ask better learned then we be what Gods works doe meane As the children by Gods law vs bound to aske the parents the parents bound by the same to teach them then shall both fathers and children finde comfort and consolation against all temptations in the time of trouble and heauinesse As we sée this mans remedie by y e spirite of God riseth from recording meditating and speaking of Gods word and workes Here hath this Prophete meruellously opened howe a man in trouble commeth to consolation and comfort First that the spirite and heart of man must haue such strong fayth as may credite Gods power and also his good will and beléeue that God both can and will for his truethes sake helpe the troubled conscience Therefore Solomon giueth a godlie and necessarie commaundement Keepe thy heart with all circumspection for of it proceedeth life So did Dauid when the Prophet Nathan had made him afraide for the murder of Vrias and the adulterie with Bersaba his cōscience was in great anguishe and feare and among other thinges that he prayed for to God he desired that God would create and make him a newe heart that is to witte to giue him such a stedfast and burning fayth that in Christe his sinnefull heart might be purged And secondarily he prayeth to haue so right and sure a spirite that shoulde not doubt of Gods sauour towardes him Thirdly that God woulde alwayes preserue his holy spirite with the heart regenerated that from time to time the heart might be ruled in obedience towardes God Fourthly he prayeth to be lead with a willing spirite that quietly and patiently he may obey God in aduersities without impatience or grudge against God And where as this knowledge and féeling of the favour of God is in the spirite there followeth recording and remembrance of Gods works meditating and thinking vpon heauenly thinges and the tongue readie also to speake foorth the glory of God to Gods honour and praise and to the edifying of Gods people and congregation after this sorte 13 Thy way oh God is in holinesse who is so great a God as God euen our God Here is a consolation much worthie to be learned and receiued of all troubled men and it is this To vnderstande and perceiue that all the doinges and factes of Almightie God be righteous although many times the fleshe iudgeth and the tongue speaketh the contrarie that God should be too seuere and punishe too extremely As though he did it rather of a desire to punishe then to correct or amend the person punished As we sée by Iobs words that wished his sinnes layed in one balance and his punishment in another balance as though God punished more extreamely then iustly The same it séemeth king Dauid also felte when he sayde Howe long Lorde wilt thou forget me for euer With like bitter speaches in the scripture complayning of Gods iustice iudgement and seueritie The same we reade of Ieremie the Prophete He spake Gods word truely and yet there happened vnto him wonderfull great aduersities the terrour whereof made him curse the day that he was borne in And doubtlesse when he sayde Why haste thou deceiued mee Lorde he thought God was rather too extreame then iust in his punishment to afflicte him in aduersitie and to suffer Passur the high Priest and his enimie to be in quiet and tranquillitie This prophet Asaph was before in great trouble as ye heard and especially of the minde that self not a sure trust and confidence in Gods mercie and thought of al extremities that to be as it is in déed the greatest a minde desperate and doubtfull of Gods mercie yet nowe he saith God is holie in his way and all that he doeth is right and iust We learne hereby that the potte can not say to the Potter Why hast thou made me after this sorte Neither may the mortall man in whom is nothing but sinne quarel with the Lord and say What layest thou vpon me But thinke that although he had made vs both blinde lame and as deformed as monsters yet had he made vs better then euer we deserued And in case he layd all the troubles of the world vppon one man yet are they lesse then one sinne of man doeth deserue Thus hath the Prophet learned nowe and felt and sayth The doinges of God be holie and right and there is none to be compared vnto him and sheweth the cause why none is to be compared vnto God In the declaration whereof he continueth seuen verses and so maketh an ende of the Psalme The first cause why he sayeth none is to be compared vnto God is this 14 Thou art the Lord that doth wonders and hast declared thy power amongest people Firste he noteth generally that God is the doer of wonders and miracles and afterwardes he sheweth wherein God hath wrought these miracles Of this we learne thrée doctrines The one that some men knowe generally that God worketh all thinges meruellously The second that other some knowe that God worketh in some men meruellously The third that other also knowe that God worketh in themselues meruellously Of the first sort be such as know by Gods works generally that God hath and doth dispose all things vpon the earth and nothing hath his beginning nor being but of God of whome Saint Paule speaketh to the Romanes that by Gods workes they knewe God and yet glorified him not Of the seconde sorte be suche as more particularly knowe and speake of Gods miracles as suche be that reade how God of his singular fauour preserued Noah his familie and drowned all the world besides how he brought the children of Israel out of Egypt and deliuered the people from
them with greate ioy and consolation what God had done generally to all men after that what he had done to some particular men and priuat nations naming Iacob Ioseph whose ofspring and succession he brought out of the lande of Egypt as it followeth in the Psalme 15 Thou hast mightily deliuered thy people euen the sonnes of Iacob and Ioseph Sela. Of this verse we learne two consolations The one that euerie Christian troubled may sée his elders and also his betters troubled not that it is a comforte to a man that is afflicted to sée another in trouble but to marke that God loued none so well but in this world he sent trouble vnto and excepted not his déere sonne Wherefore it is a consolation to the afflicted to be made like vnto the godly fathers that were before his time by tribulation and to remember that although all Christian men be not brought vnder the captiuitie of Pharao in Egypt nor vnder Nabuchodonozer in Babylon yet there is an Egypt and a Babylon for euery Christian member that is to say the captiuitie of sinne the bondage of the fleshe the seueritie of the lawe the daunger of the worlde the enimitie of Infidels the treason of dissembling friends the wickednesse of ciuil diuellishe ordinaunces the dissimulation of hypocrites the periurie of incōstant persons the breach of faithfull promises the inconstancie of the weake y e crueltie of Papistes the loue of man the hatred of God with many others as y e ignorance of Gods lawes rebellion of the heart against it frowardnesse of the will to consent vnto it diffidence mistrust of Gods mercie boldnesse to sinne in the time of health faintnesse and mistrust of the remission thereof in sickenes loue of vice and sinne hatred of vertue and godlinesse souden falling from grace slowe rising vnto it againe lothsomnesse to die mortally readinesse to liue wickedly sorrowfulnesse to forsake this world great delight to vse it euill whiles we haue it lothe to séeke heauenly thinges glad to séeke earthly thinges nothing féeling the pouertie and trouble of the soul alwayes grudging at the pouertie and trouble of the body with innumerable other captiuities that euery Christian is intangled withall as euery man may iudge by his owne life The next consolation is to sée the trueth of Gods helpe promised to all men when they be troubled to haue béene declared opened and verified in others in time past For this is the greatest consolation that can be to any man in trouble or in sicknesse when he is assured of such help and such medicines as neuer were vsed but did helpe the afflicted and heale the sick Now against all the troubles of man and also against all the sickness of man God hath promised his present and helping mercie the which medicine and helpe neuer failed but did helpe as many as put their trust therein Therefore doth this Prophet Asaphe establish and assure himselfe of Gods helpe against his gréeuous temptations and troubles that he suffered by recording that his greefes were no greater nor his troubles more daungerous then Iacobs Iosephes and their posterities nor yet so gréeuous In so much that séeing the mercie of God could helpe the greater troubles in his predecessors he could helpe and ease the lesse in him that was presently troubled And béeing so assured of Gods helpe he spake at the end of this verse Sela as though he had said It is most true that God can help and comfort me as he holpe and comforted my forefathers And for the better consolation and more firme assurance he sheweth how meruellously he did helpe the posterite of Iacob Ioseph after this sort 16 The waters sawe thee oh God the waters saw thee and were afraid the depthes also were troubled In this that he saith The waters were afraide when they sawe God First the maner of speach in the Scripture is to be noted that attributeth vnto insensible things sensible qualities as in this place is attributed vnto the water sight and feare whereas in déede properly the water cannot sée nor feare But when the Scripture vseth any such phrase or speache there is to be marked diuers doctrines of edifying First of GOD then insensible creatures and thirdly of man for whose sake the Scripture sometime speaketh vnto insensible creatures as though they were sensible and worketh miracles in them for the instruction and amendement of sensible and reasonable man The learning touching God is that he worketh his will and vseth his creatures as it séemeth vnto his wisedome inscrutable most méete and conuenient as here he troubleth and altereth the condition of the seas and waters These waters were appointed by God in the third day of the creation to be in one place and was called The Sea a pleasaunt element and a beautifull thing to sée and God said It was good as the effect thereof sheweth in déede for it nourisheth the earth with necessarie moysture by priuie veines and secrete passages secretely passing through the earth And when the floudes that doe moysture the earth haue done their office they returne into their old lodging the Sea againe from whence riseth the matter of showres and raine to moisture from aboue that flouds beneath cannot be conueyed vnto And it serueth for transporting the necessaries of one realme to the other quietly suffering the ships of passe with great gaine pleasure These and many more commodities God worketh by this insensible creature when it is calme and nauigable but when he moueth it with his winds and tempestes it is so horrible in it selfe that no man may without perill and death trauell within it so raging and feareful is that pleasaunt element of tho water when God moueth it It hath by Gods appointment his time of calme and time of storme time to profite men and time to vndoe men time to be a refuge for men in the dayes of peril and time to be a graue and sepulchre for men time to conioyne strange nations together and time to separate them againe as it pleaseth the creator Almightie God to appoint and direct it The doctrine that toucheth the insensible creature it selfe is that it can be no longer calme nor any longer troubled then it pleaseth the heauenly gouernour to dispose it And here is to be noted against such men as attribute stormes and calmes to Fortune whereas onely the voice of the Lord moueth tempestes and sendeth faire weather It is also a doctrine against all men that do thinke the waters and seas may be moued and ceasse at their owne pleasure which is contrarie to this Prophets doctrine that saith The waters sawe the Lord were afraide So that their trouble riseth from the commaundement of the Lord and they cannot do what they lust but what God biddeth them to doe It is godly set foorth afterwardes in another Psalme wherein the passage of
pastures of Gods word 19. B. 4 Wherefore man is brought to life and saluation 23. B. 5 What trouble may happen to such as God giueth life and saluation vnto 25. B. 6 Whereby the troubles of Gods elect be ouercome 31. A. 7 What the end of Gods troubled people shall be 41. B. ❧ The Argument of the 62 Psalme 43. A. ¶ Of this Psalme there are two generall partes and sixe particular ibid. A. B. ¶ The first generall part conteyning foure particular partes 1 How that the fauour of God and his helpe is able to remedie all aduersities 43. A. ¶ The second generall part conteyning two particular partes 2 How that the fauour of man and his helpe is able to redresse no aduersities 43. A. ¶ A breefe paraphrase vppon the whole Psalme 44. B. ¶ The sixe particular partes as they followe in their order and place 1 What is to be done by the Christian man that is afflicted 45. A. 2 Why the troubled person seeketh health of God 51. A. 3 How the persequuters of the innocent shall soudenly perishe 58. A. 4 Why trouble is patiently to be borne and faithfully to be beleeued that God can and will remedie it 63. B. 5 How mans power is not to be trusted vnto 66. B. 6 How that God hath promised to helpe the afflicted 69. A. ❧ The Argument of the 73. Psalme 70. A. ¶ A Paraphrase vppon the whole Psalme Fol. 70. 71. 72. 73. ¶ Of this Psalme there are eight partes 74. 1 That God loueth the good although he punisheth them 75. A. 2 How weake and fraile a thing the nature of man is 77. B 3 Wherein the felicitie of wicked men consisteth c. 80. A 4 How fraile brittle and weake a thing man is c. 84. B 5 How some men repeat their well doings c. 85 A 6 How greate a daunger it is temerously to iudge of God c. 85. B 7 That mans reason is but ignorant and beastlie in considering of Gods workes c. 86. A 8 The multitude number of Gods consolations c. 86. B ❧ The Argument of the 77. Psalme 87 A. ¶ Of this Psalme there are foure partes 87. A B. 1 In whome a man shoulde put his trust and to whome he should resorte in the dayes of sickenesse troubles and aduersities 87. B. 2 How a man should vse him selfe towardes him in whome he putteth his trust in the time of trouble 89. B 3 What great and perillous daungers the man that is troubled shall suffer for the time of his trouble 93. A 4 How a man taketh consolation in the time of his trouble 113. B ¶ Other pointes of Christian doctrine are referred to the consideration of the reader FINIS Constancie continuance required in the professours of the trueth An abridgment of Bishoppe Hoopers life and death trulie gathered in circūstances Bishop Hooper in estimation with King Edward y e sixt Stephen Gardiner Bishop of Winchester Bishop Hoopers professed enimie If Christe the heade haue bene persecuted euen to the death the members must needes bee subiect to affliction 2. Cor. 5. The laying down of his life for the Gospels sake deserueth be liefe and reuerence Or The Lorde is my shepheard as saith the common and the Geneua translation Esaie 40. 11. Ezech. 34. Iere. 31. Iohn 10. Ezech. 34. Iohn 10. Ioh. 10. 4. 6 Psal. 119. Esaie 53. Matth. 9. 1. Pet. 2. 2. 3. Reg 22. Esaie 28. Esaie 29 2. Thes. 2. Iohn 4. 6. 3. Rom. 1. Esaie 30. Iohn 7. What is to bee noted out of this part of the psalme Rom. 19. Psal. 91. The assuraunce of Gods defence and comfort in troubles must bee lerned out of Gods word Psal. 25. Psal. 144. Psalm 25. 128. The inwarde and spirituall comforte treasurie and riches which this doctrine bringeth 1. Peter 4. Matth. 10. Iohn 20. Actes 20. Ieremi 3. Ezech. 34. 2. Reg. 57. Mich. 5. Iohn 10. Psalm 74. 79. 95. Ieremi 3. ●● Ezech. 34. Ioel. 1. Matth. 4. Psalme 60. 73. 7. Apoc. 7. Esaie 55. Ioan. 4. Matth. 4. We can no more liue in GOD without GODS word then in the worlde without worldly foode Iohn 6. Psalm 119. Luke 11. Iohn 5. And yet our blinde guids say that ignoraunce is the mother of godlines Amos. 8. Iohn 10. Ephes. 2. Heb. 1. Matth. 28. 2. Pet. 1. Iames. 1. Iohn 5. Actes 16. Iohn 8. Matth. 23. 1. Cor. 2. Iohn 6. Iohn 15. Iohn 3. Mark whithe preachers of God are contemned of the world Psal. 35. Iohn 15. Iohn 15. Esaie 59. What thinges we receiue by feeding vppon Gods promises in this life Matth. 4. Psal. 19. 119 2. Tim. 3. Heb. 1. 1. Pet. 1. Gala. 1. Iohn 6. Esaie 54. Iohn 15. Iohn 16. The consciēce that feeleth the sting of death by sinn thirsteth for life Luke 15. Psalme 24. Psalme 1. Matth. 5. Woefull are these dayes whē in so cleare lighte of the trueth the professours therof are so faithlesse and fruitlesse Esaie 65. Rom. 10. Luke 12. GOD requireth not only a compt of that hath beene receiued but of that might haue bene receiued Matth. 11. Luke 12 1. Cor 4. 1. Cor. 1. Psalm 32. Rom. 4. Psalme 32. Matth. 5. Luke 1. Psal. 32. The wicked make the Gospel of peace an occasion of discord Luke 12. Iohn 7. 8. 9. 10. 16. The crosse is the sure badge of Gods children Iohn 16. Zachar. 11. Matth. 16. Iohn 18. Matth. 27 Marke 15 Luke 23. Iohn 19. Matth. 27. A doctrine of Gods prouidēce most comfortable to all his afflicted Psalme 2. Psalme 29 The cause why there be so fewe sincere and true professours of the Gospel Psal. 37. Psal. 53. Here is thy cōfort thou broken harted and afflicted of the Lord. Rom. 10. What it is to beleeue vnto righteousnes Faith sealed once in the heart with the assurance of Gods mercy can bee no more with out the fruite of wel doing then fire without heate 1. Cor. 11. Whē right knowlege assured sense of Gods mercie are ioyned together note what they worke Knowlege and talke without the feling of Gods fruitfull working spirit is not of God Matth. 7. Psal. 121. Gene. 22. The state of Gods children beaten downwith the sense horrour of sin and dread of gods iudgments The comfort of the afflicted euen when God seemeth to haue forsaken them Psal. 6. Psal. 6. Psal. 42. 43 Ephes. 6. 1. Pet. 5. 1. Iohn 5. Matth. 10. Psal. 120. Matth. 26. 2. Reg. 7. Prou. 10. Prou. 12. Psal. 119. Psal. 2. Apoc. 12. 4. Reg. 18. Esai 10. 14 28. 39 Ezech. 29. The frendship and familiaritie of God the heuenly shepheard towardes his sheepe 2. Reg. 9. Gen. 27. Luke 10 Luke 7. Psal. 45. Psal. 89. The work of the holi Ghoste in the hearts of the saith full 1. Pet. 2. Matth. 26. Psal. 16. What sinn bringeth a man vnto Iohn 17. It is not expedient that we be without troubles least we seeke our selues and forget god Psal. 120.
Psal. 129. 2. Thes. 3. Gala. 1. Ezech. 34. Actes 20. Antoninus histor tit 13. 3. 23. 13. Distinct. 99. nullus Antoninus tit 12. cap. 3. De gestis Longobard lib. 3. cap. 12. In Leon. 2. Platina in Bonifac. 3. Paulus Diaconus de gestis Long. lib. 4. cap. 11. De simplicitate clericorum To be called Pope was at the first generall to all bishops Histor. lib. 2. cap. 27. Gal. 2. Con. Nicen cap. 6. Hee meaneth here authoritie to electe bishops to haue power of bothe swords Alberus Crantzius ecclesiast histor li. 6. Abbas Vspergensis in suo chronico Platina in Alex. 3. Psalm 16. 2 Cor. 13. Rom. 8. When doth the soule of man waite vpon the Lorde in the dayes of trouble or els hath silence Iob. 1. Iob. 3. Psalm 31. Iob. 13. 17. Psalm 23. What it is to haue the soule to waite vpon the Lorde in the time of trouble Psalm 31. 42. 43. 77. Increase and decrease of faith in the faythfull Wisdome to be learned of the premisses faith hope charitie c. be not at al times of like strength Consolation The Lord forsaketh not his people in trouble Psalme 44. 2. Corin. 1. Mat. 10. 26 Iohn 11. 18 Luke 19 Note The impatience of the minde is many ways knowen Caine. Gene 4. Pharao Exod. 5. Gene. 4. Abel Iudas Matth. 27. Adam Gene. 3. Achab. 3. Reg. 18. Iewes Act. 21. 23. Simon Magus Theefe Whoremongers Couetous men Gene. 1. Prou. 18. The godly feeling the rod of God doe accuse thēselues acknowledging their offences to haue merited the same Mich. 7. Psal. 137. Note Why sate the people by the riuer side of Babilon A iust cause of lamentation Peter Matth. 27. Marie Magdalen Luke 7. Io. Chrysost in Epist ad Rom. c 1. 2. Psal. 73. What is the gretest losse that a Christian cōsidereth The prodigall son Luke 15. Canti 5. Note Note diligently What dangers a christian shall fall in and his duetie in seeking Christ prescribed A notable example The soule that hath a feruent loue to Christ the troubles she susteineth in seking him greeueth her not but the not finding of her spouse is the onely cause of her sorrowe The woman of Canaan Matth. 15. Patient expectation of redresse taketh all scourges and troubles in good part Three doctrines to be noted God is omnipotent Gene. 17. Gene. 43. Exod. 6. Pharao Exod. 15. As God is able so is he willing to saue Psalm 26. Psalme 34. Psalme 36 Psalm 56. Esaie 49. and 59. Iere. 15. 23. Ezech. 34. Daniel 12. Ose. 1. Sophon 3. Zachar. 8. 9. 10. Matth. 18. Luke 9. Iohn 3. 1. Tim 2. As God can will helpe so doth hee command vs to call vnto him for helpe Esaie 55. Matth. 11. Psalm 50. Matt. 7. 18. Marke 11. Luke 11. Ioan. 14. 15 16. 1. Ioh. 5. God alone is able to saue and none but he Esaie 45. No helpe to be soght at dead saincts c. but onely of God God is inclined of himselfe to haue mercie The afflicted by the commandement of God taketh and acitie to approch to his mercie Esaie 1. Sapient 15. Psalm 62. Cantic 1. Consolation Read the booke of Solomons Ballads Prodigall sonne Luke 15. Let vs not bee ashamed to go to our heauenly father and confesse our sinnes be they neuer so horrible for when soeuer we return from our wickednes he remēbreth no more our transgressions but embraceth vs as his deare children The heauenly father is to be resorted vnto in the dayes of necessitie hunger for he only hath the breade of mercy to seede his children What caused the prodigal sonn to resort vnto his father in the time of miserie The woman of Canaan They that come vnto christ must debase thē selues with humilitie Marie Magdelen God is both omnipotent and mercifull Rocke Matth. 7. He that buildeth vpon the rocke is wise What is the rocke If the rock were not sure the builder building woulde come to ruine To builde the house of God is to teache saluation in Christe Act. 5. Act. 7. Act. 9. If Christe had not bene the rocke of strength it selfe he had bene cast down Christ was slandered before he was borne Matth. 1. 2 Christ per sequuted as soone as he was borne Christes own kinse folke were raised against him Luke 4. Christe slaine Luke 23. Christe commended his disciples to the protection of his Father Iohn 17. Math. 16. Apoc. 12. Hee that hath God for his rock is assured of a sauiour Application of gods strength by faith to his owne defence Faith is the gift of God Hee that feeleth in himselfe God to be his saluation hath the greatest treasure of all The abuse of Gods word prouoketh this vengeance Gods word in an vnknowne tongue amongest the people to be lamented Defence Two doctrines Note Nothing can hurt him that is in Christ Iesu. The faith full beleeueth that as God is able to saue generally so is he to saue particularly Defence of God towards his people in this life Iohn 17. They that wil liue in Christe must suffer persequution Iohn 16. Matth. 10. Cant. 2. Matt. 13. 7 The faithfull congregation is likened to a shipp a house a woman trauelling with child c. Apoc. 12. Iohn 17. Who doe suffer in this world greatest troubles Prouerb 3. Hebr. 12. Apocal. 3. 1. Peter 4. Rom. 8. Consolation Cantic 2. They whō God calleth of mercie out of this life be voyd of all troubles Apoc. 21. The description of the heauenly ioyes The defence of God towards his in the life to come Esaie 66. The fauour of God towardes his in this world is annexed with troubles Trouble shall not ouercome Gods children Desperation God leaueth only to his enimies Note the difference betweene Gods children and such as be not his The wicked persequuters be as a tottering wall soudeinly ouerthrowen in their most prosperitie Zenecharib Beuedab 3. Reg. 20. 4. Reg. 8. 18. 19. Exod. 14. Hester 7. Iudith 13. Holofernes The presence of Gods fauour towards his is the destruction of the wicked God doth so strike the heartes of the wicked with feare that one man in a good cause is able to withstand tenne Note Deut. 28. Daniel 5. A hand writing in the wall feared the Emperour of the Caldees in his most iollitie Iohn 18. Christ asking his murderers whome thei soght they fell vppon the ground Luke 23. Note diligently Iacob Genesis 43 Ioseph The children of Israel Exod. 23. They that persequute Christes flocke at this present haue no assurance but flesh and bloud Stephen Gardener Edmund Boner A booke De vera obedientia Read Tunstals sermon against the bishop of Rome the treason of Cardinal Pole Why shal the persequuters of the godly perish By what meanes do the wicked put downe the people of God Caine. Abel Genesis 4. 1. Reg. 8. 1. Reg. 18. 3. Reg. 15. Gene. 6. 7. Ierem. 20. Matth. 3. 17. 28. Iohn 5. 1. Cor. 1. What shal become of the controllers of