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

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déede but ●ead blotted out and quite extingui●hed Sée nowe howe guiltie I am e●en of the first thing that is commaun●ed mee in this commaundement The seconde thing is that I should ●eare thée aboue all the thirde is Feare of God ●hat I should pray to none but to thée ●he fourth to acknowledge thee the ●uider and gouernour of all thinges ●f whome I receiue all the benefites ●hat I haue and therefore that I trust ●nd stay vpon thée alone Fiftly that 〈◊〉 should labour to knowe thée out of ●hy worde so fully and perfectly as ●hou hast reuealed thy selfe therein ●ecause of knowledge all these other ●●llowe And lastlie that I should for ●ll benefites giue thankes onely to ●●ee and in such full manner and ●easure of féeling as any way is due to that blessing which I receiue In which points as in other moe which might yet be named O merciful father I here before thée confesse I am no better than in the first I dare not cleare my selfe I cannot I ought not O Lord giue me eyes to sée my wants for I haue feared men and their threates more than I ought I haue feared the losse of their fauour more than I ought I haue feared the losse of worldely commodities more than I ought and haue not as thy blessed Apostle taught me by this example Philipp 3. accounted those thinges that were vantage vnto me losse very doung for the excellent knowledge sake of Iesus Christ my Lorde Sometimes Satan hath rocked this soule of mine in the chayer of securitie that I haue euen slept as it were a dead sléepe and not considered of thy iudgements against sinne as I ought neyther taken the profite by thy extraordinary works in the ayer in the earth in the bodies of men and beasts that I should but passed them ouer with a litle woonder or motion for a short time When my sinnes haue béene touched or appeared vnto me I haue flattered my ●wne soule and put vpon them honest ●ames as clokes to hide them withal The plaine pride of my heart and mere ●anitie I haue iudged clenlinesse or necessary for my estate Miserable coue●ousnesse haue I iudged lawful care for ●hings necessary and so forth a manifest token of a dead heart within and ●oide of tasting any horror in sinne By ●ll which and many more thinges that my minde may easily sée it is apparant ●o me that I haue euen broken this ●oint also of thy Lawe in not fearing ●hee so as I ought Alas Lorde what ●hall I say of the rest of the braunches ●f this commandement named euen nowe Am I any perfecter in them ●han in these No no I haue sinned against thée in them all and that most grieuously so that if there were no mo ●f thy commandements but euen this ●ne the first of al yet doth my conscience ●ell me I am before thée guiltie good Lorde most fearefully to bee touched But there are nine moe spreading out their braunches to all sinceritie and holinesse both in bodie and minde toward God and man with threatened cu●●es to all flesh that shall doe contrarie And therefore when I viewe my cou●se euen at the first to bee so crooked O deare Father what shall I thinke i● 〈◊〉 appeare when I shall bee iudged in them all Shall I boast of merites and kéepe no fyttle of thy commaundementes Shall I challenge saluation for my workes and euerie braunche of thy lawe doeth call mee cursed because I haue so fowlie and often broken the same No good Father no this little viewe of my obedience to thy hestes doeth plainely tell mee I haue no merites or good workes to come before thée withall much lesse am I able to doe workes of supererogation that is more than I neede to doe but of sinnes and euill workes alas I see a number With Dauid may I crie Psal 34. They are more than the haires of my ●eade and my heart hath failed mee I ●ay truely saye with the prodigall Sonne I haue sinned against heauen ●nd against thee and I am not worthie 〈◊〉 bee called thy childe I may say ●ith the Publican God bee mercifull 〈◊〉 mee a sinner and adde thereunto a ●reat and grieuous sinner I may say ●ith Ieremie O Lorde though mine ●●iquities testifie against mee yet deale ●hou with mee according to thy name ●or my rebellions are many And with 〈◊〉 I haue sinned Iob. 7. what shall I doe to ●●ee O thou preseruer of men Yea ●ell may I say I lye downe in my con●●sion and my shame couereth mee ●or I haue sinned against the Lorde my GOD from my youth vp tyll this ●ay and haue not obeyed his voyce ●o conclude I may looke about mee ●nd from a wounded soule crie vnto ●●ose that can giue mée counsell In re●●ect of my sinnes men brethren what ●●all I do And sée how neuer the Lord ●●rsaketh those that want his helpe aide ●oe I not euen nowe remember what he aduiseth me and all sinners in my case to doe Prou. 28. Hee that hideth his sinne saith the Lorde by Salomon shall not prosper but he that confesseth his sinne and forsaketh it shall haue mercie And sée in Dauid the proofe and tryall of it For when I helde my tongue saith hee my bones consumed Psal 32. or when I roared all the day For thy hande is heauie vpon me daie and night and my moysture is turned into the drought of sum●mer Then I acknowledged my sin vn●to thee neither hid I mine iniquitie For I said I wil confesse against my selfe and thou forgauest the punishment o● my sinne Therefore O Lorde I hearken to thy counsell and though I ha●● sinned aboue the number of the sand o● the sea as plainely I sée I haue if I 〈◊〉 charged with euery branch of thy com●maundements how I haue kept them though my transgressions be multipli●ed and are excéeding many so that I am not worthie to beholde the heigh● of heauen for the multitude of m● vnrighteousnesse yea I say thoug●● I haue prouoked thy wrath and doone euill before thee and not kept any ●ot of thy commaundementes so fully as I ought yet knowing Thou desirest ●he death of no sinner but rather that he should repent and be saued and hast ●hewed the trueth thereof in forgiuing Dauid and manie mo confessing truely ●heir sinnes before thee Therefore O good Lorde and sweete refuge full of mercie pitie and compassion I bow the ●nees of my heart with king Manasses ●nd all sorrowfull sinners and begge ●hy mercie I haue sinned O Lord I ●aue sinned and I acknowledge my ●ransgressions but I humbly beseech ●hee forgiue me O Lorde forgiue me ●nd destroy me not as I haue deserued ●e not angrie with me for euer by re●eruing to me euil neither condemne ●e into the lower partes of the earth For thou art the God euen the God of ●ll them that repent and on me thou ●●ilt shewe mercie My sorrowe good
of their woe whose paine in pietie they shoulde neuer wish to sée finally euen euerie way to God to Prince to Countrey to friendes their owne soules enemies most daungerous and pernicious The Lorde Iesus Christ open their eyes touche their hearts and conforme their practise of behauiour to his will if it may stand with his good liking Que. I pray you nowe goe forward in recitall of the exercises of this Sabaoth Ans Secondlie beside the diligent hearing of the worde preached on this day and read vnto vs it is our dueties and a godly exercise fit for the day amongest our selues or with our pastor and preacher to conferre and talke of that which hath béene saide and to aske questions howe this and that is to be vnderstoode Such example haue we in the Gospell where it is saide that when Christ was alone Mark 4.10 they that were about him with the twelue asked him of the parable which before he had vttred and he readilie expounded the same vnto them Then vttered he moe and without parables saith the text spake nothing vnto them Verse 34. but he expounded all things apart to his Disciples Thirdly to receiue together the supper of the Lord Luke 22. Acts. 20.7 as we are commanded and the Church euer accustomed to doe To attende vnto Baptisme if occasion so serue duely pondering the promise that is past vs to serue the Lorde and praying faithfully for his guiding grace to be powred vpon our selues that or those infants then presented to the Church that they and we may euer fulfill what we haue vowed before the congregation Fourthlie from a true féeling heart of Gods receiued goodnes to giue him thankes on this day for his many and great mercies vpon bodie and soule at home and abroad vpon our selues and ours knowen and vnknowen bestowed the wéek passed vpon vs to pray for the continuaunce of the same all the next wéeke ensuing euer else with his gratious supplie of all necessaries whatsoeuer without the which either our worldly estate or spiritual obedience to him cannot be sustained Fiftly to consider of the poore which the Lord hath set amongest vs as subiects for our loue to worke vpon to sée what they want how they liue to visit them and prouide for them This hath euer of Gods children béene greatlie regarded and is a part of the discipline of the Church also The Apostle Paul ordained a gathering in the church of Corinth euery Sabaoth day to this vse 1. Cor. 16.1 and that to the example of other reformed Churches Christ visited the cripples and lazers on the Sabaoth day Iohn 5. and healed him that had none to put him in the poole The borne blinde he healed on the Sabaoth day Iohn 9. And from the godlie care of our forefathers touching this matter haue flowen our hospitals and almes-houses with such like This is an exercise of fayth and loue fitte for all times but chiefely on the Sabaoth day to be regarded Thus wee féede Christ when he is hungrie Matth. 25.35 cloath him naked visite him sicke and so foorth and sure sure shall wee bee to finde it at the generall accounting daie of his Lastly to take care and conferre amongest our selues how to mainetaine all meanes that serue to the knowledge of God as the ministers scholers vniuersities schooles and such like To meditate also this day more than other daies of the creatures of God and of his excéeding goodnesse toward vs in them What it is to keepe holy the Sabaoth day is an exercise of the Sabaoth with a number such moe that were nowe too long particularlie to name Therefore to conclude and end this matter easilie may we hereby sée that to kéepe holy the Sabaoth day is nothing else but euen to separate and consecrate the same to all godlie exercises wherein our faith to God and obedience is to be shewed Que. If these then and their like bee commanded to vs on this day to be perfourmed their contraries I take by the same Lawe to be forbidden Ans Truth it is and must néedes be so but I thinke it néedelesse now againe to goe ouer them and shewe their contraries rather wey them your selfe and marke them particularly Onely these I wish by name may more duelie bee thought of that if the sanctification of this day consist greatly in labouring to knowe the Lorde by the preaching of his worde howe shall they safely passe the curse of God for the breache hereof who with benummed soules parched padded senselesse and euery way most hardened hearts either lie and sléepe on the one side idle or tossing the alepot with their neighbours suffer this day to passe without any instruction and like dumbe dogges hold their peace no way discharging the dutie of a true minister and one that tendereth the glory of God his owne his peoples soules What should I say of them that séeing the haruest great and the labourers fewe and féeling within themselues working a secrete power perswading to put their helping hand to this businesse yet doe not but suffer the people to pollute the Sabaoth for want of teaching and stay themselues from this worke of the Lorde vpon causes that as it is to be feared will melt away and not stand to excuse them when GOD shall come vnto iudgement Euery seruaunt to his owne master it is true standeth or falleth yet may one seruant admonish an other to béeware betimes and therefore with my whole heart I wish a due regard hereof Againe if to sanctifie the Sabaoth be to consecrate it to holy vses such as haue béene named is it possible for vs to escape the reuenging hande of the eternall God if he content in mercie with one day in the 7. we denie him that also and dedicate it to drunkennes to feasting and surfetting c. Nowe in the name of the God of heauen and of Iesus Christ his son who shall come to iudge the quick the dead at the latter day I require it of al that euer shall reade these words that as they wil answere me before the face of God all his Aungels at the sounde of the last trump they better wey whether carding dising tabling bowling and cocking stage plaies and summer games whether gadding to this ale or that to this bearebaiting that bulbaiting with a number such be exercises commanded of God for the sabaoth day or no. O hartal frosen void of the féeling of the mercie of thy God that hauing euery day in 6. euery houre in euery day euery minute in euery houre so tasted of the swéet grace of thy God in Christ as that without it thou hadst perished euery minute yet canst not tel howe possibly to passe ouer one day to his praise vnlesse one halfe of it be spent in carding bowling Awake awake in Iesus Christ admonished awake séeing al the wéeke long the Lord of
the glorie of God so much as of man ought to bee sought for Que. How may the first be prooued The first reason drawen of the vanitie of all things Ans The great vanitie of all earthly things which men so hunt after doth showe that our care shoulde not bee so much of these matters as it is but rather howe to haue our soules saued when all these shall haue their end For consider euē the chiefest desires of men seuerally and sée how in the attaining of them there is no stayed comfort and yet often doe men faile after much indeuour and not attaine to them Que. What chiefe desires of men can you name vnto mee Ans Mirth and ioy a light and a chéerefull heart is greatly wished Mirth and ioy and sought for of all men by Musicke by iesters by sportes and playes by much cost and many meanes as they can and are able neither is this simplie to bee condemned in all yet heare what sentence the spirit of God hath giuen of it by the mouth of his seruaunt who tryed the same and let his experience bee our knowledge I said to my heart saith he goe to nowe Ecclesi 2.1 I will prooue thee with ioy therefore take thou pleasure in pleasant things and beholde this al●o is vanitie I said of laughter thou art mad and of ioy what is this that thou doest And in another place 7.4 Better it is to go into the house of mourning than of feasting because this is the ende of all men and the liuing shall lay it to his heart Anger is better than laughter for by a sad looke the heart is made better The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning but the heart of fooles is in the house of myrth Mille parit luctus mortalibus vna voluptas For euery ioy that man doeth here possesse A thousand woes his minde doe dayly presse Secondly to rake vp riches also in this world and to possesse great wealth Riches it is a thing endeuoured almost of all Happie is he and wise accounted who can fastest attaine vnto it yet heare and note the spéeche of Iames amongst numbers moe to the same end Iames. 5.1 Goe to nowe saith he ye riche men weepe howle for your miseries that shall come vpon you your riches are corrupt and your garments motheaten your golde and siluer is cancred the rust of them shall witnesse against you and shall eate your flesh as it were fier To builde and inhabite great and goodly houses howe many men bewitched with vanitie Buildings delight in it and with much care and cost applie themselues vnto it Yet sée they or may sée the spéeche of Salomon vpon experience saying I haue made my great workes I haue built me houses I haue planted me vineyards I haue made me gardens and orchards and planted in them trees of all fruite and so forth Yea euen whatsoeuer mine eyes desired I withhelde it not from them neyther withdrew I my heart from any ioie then I looked on all my works that my hands had wrought and on the trauell that I had laboured to doe and beholde all is vanitie and vexation of the spirite and there is no profite vnder the Sun When it shal be saide to them as it was to that purposing builder in the Gospell Thou foole this night shall they take away thy soule Luke 12.20 then may it also folow fitly be demanded whose shal these stately houses be Thus eyther may they knowe the vanitie of their dealing but yet wil not or else doe they knowe it but regarde it not Apparell againe is another of the raging desires of many Apparell Euen a worlde it is to sée howe all as dead doe tast no sinne in it but spend and spare not what possiblie may be gotten to bestowe on it yet what beginning had it Was it not then inuented when man had sinned grieuouslie offended his God and cast himselfe away both bodie and soule Séeing then in our integritie it was not vsed but after sinne bestowed on man to hide his shame withall what may it euer beate into vs but our rebellion against the Lorde our sinne and cursed disobedience Howe should the sight of it and vse of it humble vs and not puffe vs vp seeing it plainely telleth vs we are not as we were when no apparell was worne and yet no shame thereby Were it not monstrous pride if a redéemed prisoner conditionally that he should euer weare an halter should waxe prowde of his halter Mans apparell is the badge of a sinner yea of a condemned and cursed sinner therefore the pride of it and delight in it no doubt very monstrous before the Lorde and hatefull If euery silken sute and gorgeous gowne in Englande shrowded vnder it a saued soule and a sanctified bodie in the sight of God O happie then England of all the nations vnder heauē But if vnder such garded garments may and doeth lodge a body and soule abhorred of the Lorde that in the day of wrath shall finde no fauour then is it not apparell that ought to be sought after but in the day of iudgemēt how we may be saued Credite and fauour with the world What should I say of fauor credit with great estates in the worlde of countenance and authoritie O howe doe men desire it and séeke it sewe and serue for it their care both day and night is howe to attaine the fastest to it yet what more tickle than the state hereof if GOD gaue vs hearts to marke it For how soone faded the credite of Dauid with his wauer n● Master Saul 1. Kings 18. Howe sodainely and quickely chaunged the liking of that king into cruel hatred of a faithful seruaunt and sonne in Lawe Haman as it were to day Hester 7. set at the Kings table where none but the King Queene were the next day quite out of fauour and hanged vp full highe What credite had Ioseph with his master Gene. 39. when he committed all thinges to him that euer he had sauing his wife to be at his direction Yet euen in a moment without cause falsely slaundered all credite lost and he clapt close vp in prison Many such examples hath the worde and all histories and therefore truely saide he it whosoeuer saide it as the Counter so is the Courtier for that standeth euen nowe for a thousand poundes and by and by through a litle remooue but for a halfepenie and so he to day in all glorie to morowe in litle or none Yet not more the Courtier than euen euery man in his place and seruice to day trusted to morow suspected to day loued to morowe misliked to day with desire entertayned and made of to morowe as néedelesse cast off contemned Fickle therefore is the worldly fauour and greater good there is for men to séeke after Great matches in maryage for their
knowledge sake of Christ Iesus his Lorde and did iudge them to bee doung that he might win Christ And certainely what heart of man or woman soeuer knoweth God indéede what he is in himselfe and to all men and particularlie to it many thousande wayes as impossible it is it should not loue God againe aboue all and euen grone that it can loue him no more as it is vnpossible fier should want heate or water moysture Que. What braunches hath the loue of God springing out of it Ans Whosoeuer loueth God loueth also his worde Psal 119. vers 103. Luke 10. 1. Thess 5. 1. Iohn 3.17 Psal 15.1 the ministers of the worde the poore and all that feare God for these with such like are the braunches of the loue of God which if they be not in man and woman certainely neither is the other in them it selfe And as these all are commaunded so are the contraries forbidden and condemned ●y this Lawe What the contraries ●re beside that by these they may bée ●nowen they are expressed more fully 〈◊〉 the examination of conscience tou●hing the same annexed at the ende of ●his commaundement Que. What is the second duetie that ●olloweth of the knowledge of God Ans To feare him aboue all Que. What feare is meant here Ans Indéede in the Scripture the ●eare of God doeth vsually signifie all Religion but here it signifieth onely a ●art of the worship we owe vnto God Que. And what is it Ans This feare is a reuerent awe ●f God whereby we are loth to offende ●im both because we loue him and be●ause he is able to punish vs. Que. This seemeth to import some ●ifference of feare Ans Verie true it is For there are ●wo kindes of feare of God one a ser●ile feare dreading punishment ano●her ioyned with loue of God called a ●●nlike feare and this is meant here Que. Howe may we knowe whether this true feare of God be in vs or no Ans Truely as we knowe there is fire by the smoke and that a man liueth by his breathing so we may knowe by the effects that the feare of God doeth bring forth in them in whom it is whether it be in vs or no Que. Why what be the effects Ans As the banke doeth kéepe the water from ouerflowing so doeth the feare of God in man or woman kéepe out sinne that it spred not as otherwise it would We sée it in practise prooued before our eyes For when Pharaoh king of Egypt Exod. 1.17 commaunded them to kill euery male childe that was borne of the Israelites women what kept out this cruell murther both from hand and heart but this banke the feare and awe of God more than man for so saith the text the midwiues feared GOD and therefore did not as the King commanded them The like may we sée in Iob who saith Gods punishment was fearefull to him Iob. 31.32 therefore he oppressed not 〈◊〉 fatherlesse In Ioseph also verie no●●blie whose heart nor bodie filthie a●●lterie with his mistresse could staine Gen. 39. ●●cause this banke of the feare of God ●as so strong and good in him Lastly ●●e scripture prooueth it plainely to vs ●hen in seuerall places it ioyneth to ●●e feare of God a departing from euill 〈◊〉 an inseparable effect thereof Iob. 28. For ●ost assuredly it is so If wee nothing ●●part from our olde sinnes and yet say ●e feare God we lie and there is no ●●ueth in vs. Que. If then in this viewe of the ef●●cts of it we finde that either it is not in 〈◊〉 yet at all or at the most but verie li●● howe may we obtaine it or in●●ease it Ans First a verie good way to bréed 〈◊〉 increase this reuerent awe and ●are of God in our selues Howe the feare of God is gotten is an often ●●d earnest meditation of Gods power 〈◊〉 he is able to deale with vs to pu●●sh vs and plague vs if we doe not ●are him and this we learne by these ●ordes of Christ Feare not them that can kill the bodie Math. 10.16 and then can doe no more but feare him that can cast bodie and soule into eternall fier For they sound vnto me as if Christ had saide thus marke howe farre Gods power excéedeth mans power and howe much more fearefully he is able to punish you than man can and let this great power of the Lorde ouer bodie and soule to ca●● them both into hell for euer make yo● feare the same God aboue all and stan● in awe of his maiestie And assuredl● if we had grace to thinke of his powe● indéede effectually it would maruelou●sly profite our soules to this ende Se●condly another good way and meane● is a due meditation of the great mer●cies of God prooued by the Psalme With thee there is mercie Psal 130. therefore shal● thou be feared And lastlie by diligen● learning the worde of God preached o● read vnto vs. For so we reade in th● Lawe Gather the people together men women and children the straun●ger that is within thy gates that they may heare and learne to feare the Lord Sée howe he saieth by hearing men learne this feare of God and bréede it or increase it Que. When is the feare of God to be learned Ans At all times but especially when oportunitie either of teaching or learning doeth serue vs. For that we ought to take oportunitie of teaching our sauiour Christ himselfe affirmeth saying Yet a litle and the light is with you walk while you haue the light And that we should then learne when we our selues are able and apt to learne the wise man sheweth in these wordes Remember thy creator in the daies of thy youth Ecclesi 12.1 before the euill daies come and thy yeres approche wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Also the often and sodaine losse of hearing and séeing by sundrie occasions doth vehemently admonish vs to take time while time is and learne to feare God while we may For to day we can reade per aduenture our selues if not yet at least heare others but to morow who is sure hee shall eyther haue eies to sée to reade himselfe or sense of hearing to heare others Therefore againe take time when we may Que. What is contrarie to the feare of God Ans Too much to stande in feare of men and their threats so that by them wee are driuen to any vnlawfull things Too much to feare God himselfe and his iudgements as desperate men doe which nourish no hope of his mercie and goodnesse Thirdly securitie and too litle feare of God with many such moe All these are contrarie to that true feare of God which we speake of and are as well forbidden here as the other is commaunded Que. What is the third duetie of this commaundement Ans Thirdly we are here commaunded to make our prayers to none but to God Que. Howe may it bee prooued that onely God
things ●e should giue thanks Euident prac●ise of Gods children as of Dauid Psal 103. cry●ng vpon his soule to praise the Lord ●pon al that is within him to praise his ●oly name of Marie professing that her ●●ule did magnifie the lord Luke 1. and that her ●●irite reioyced in God her Sauiour ●ith manie such like Que. Since then this duetie both is ●ommaunded and hath of Gods childrē●ene euer vpon all occasions so careful●● performed me thinke at our meates ●specially we should remember it Ans Truely you haue named a time ●nd occasion when in déede Christians ●hould neither forget nor shame to look ●p vnto the Lord to praise his name Saying of grace at the Table For euen then haue they his mercies ●efore their eyes to put them in mind Which if they receiue thankfully they ●eceiue rightly if not then verye ●aungerousely both in respecte of ●●e creatures them selues which as the Apostle sayeth are not sanctified otherwise vnto vs 1. Tim. 4. so that we may receiue them with a good conscience then by the word and prayer and also in respect of the breach of Gods commaundementes who expressely willed his people Israel in them euen all others that when they had eaten filled themselues Deutro 8.10 they should blesse the Lord their God for the good lande which he had giuen them Beside which reasons yet euen further we haue the practise of the godly to call vppon vs for this duetie For it is well noted that the same people chosen of the Lorde the Iewes I meane did not sit downe to eate but either the good man of the house or he that was Primarius in mensa that is the chiefe man at the table did take either the bread or the cup in his hand and so holding it prayed vnto the Lorde that he would vouchsafe to blesse them and those his good giftes which then they were about to receiue at his mercifull hand Likewise after meate they gaue him thankes for it Hence commeth the mention of taking the cuppe twise by our Sauiour Christ in Luke Luke 22.17 the former taking was this saying of grace and giuing of thankes which I ●peake of the other was the celebration of his supper Howe euen of purpose also doeth the Euangelist mention this same practise still in Christ Matth. 14.19 Marke 6 41. Mark 14.26 sometimes saying when they had sung 〈◊〉 Psalme sometimes when he had giuen thankes c. all to teache vs that ●uery such precept and practise shall ●ondemne vs if wee doe not the like And truely if men and women would ●ooke into their heartes and not flat●er themselues in daungerous securi●ie and would euen say to themselues why doe I not say grace or cause it to ●e said in that place where I am chiefe ●nd ought to doe it what thinke you would they finde to be the true cause ●ndéede Certainely nothing but shame ●nd bashefulnesse because it hath not ●éene vsed But O fearefull shame ●hat shameth to doe Gods commaundements and consequently maketh vs eate our own damnation the creatures being not sanctified vnto vs. And O damnable following of our wicked custome and leauing the custome of Christ and his children God in mercie awake vs. For assuredlie wee litle knowe what we doe when we pretermit and shame to doe this dutie to the Lorde Que. You haue well satisfied me touching the necessitie of this duetie and nowe I aske you an other question whether we may not also giue thankes to men but whatsoeuer they say or doe to vs yea if they drinke but to vs at the table wee must say I thanke God Ans Truly to be perswaded that any kindnes or good can come to vs by men from men whereof our mercifull God is not the sender and giuer woorking by those instrumēts were verie wicked horrible but for the phrase of spéech my heart knowing GOD to be th● author I may well and lawfully vs● it to the instrument no doubt and say I thanke you at any time or vpon any occasion when I reape the benefite of their loue and by name vpon such occasion as you named And this I take to be warranted by the practise of Paul Rom. 16.3 4. who no doubt in heart knew God to be author of all his good yet are his words directed to the instruments Greet Priscilla and Aquila saith he my fellow helpers in Christ Iesus Which haue for my life laide downe their necke vnto whom not onely I giue thankes but also all the Churches of the Gentiles Que. As you haue said of the other duties so I take it in this also namelie that whatsoeuer is contrarie or against it is as well forbidden vs by this first commandement as this is commaunded Ans It is very true Both the pretermission of thanks for any goodnes vpon ●odie or minde our selues or ours ●emporall or eternall bestowed by the ●orde as also the ascribing of it to ●ur selues ●ur wit our strength poli●ie friends or any thing it is horrible ●nd a breache of this commaundement Thou shalt haue none other Gods but me Que. Thus rest I instructed more than I was touching this commaundement the first of all the ten And now onely I could wish if you might that you would shewe me some way howe profitablie to examine mine owne heart touching this Lawe and howe with my selfe I might meditate vpon it fruitefully and with feeling Ans Indéed your request hath great profite in it and that course or practise ye nowe desire shall any man or woman finde very fruitefull if they doe vse it For euen as in earthly matters our affection and loue cleaueth fastest to them that in greatest extremities haue brought vs helpe and ease and as there is nothing that will blowe vp the coale of that remembraunce more vehemently and make it flame out into open shewe of a thankefull heart more effectually than some true meditation of the greatnesse of daunger and gréeuousnesse of estate that we were in before So in heauenly and spiritual things the same is found as true or rather more that sight of greatest good procureth greatest measure of such fruite as ought to flow thereof For by example what so kindeleth in a man the heate of burning loue and maketh his heart to flame with true affection to his God as doeth 〈◊〉 liuely sight of that fearefull estate vtter extremitie desperate and damnable condition that he was once subiect vn●o without all recouerie by himselfe or any creature either in heauen or earth ●ut onely Iesus Christ the Sonne of God both God and man together with 〈◊〉 sight of certaine safetie from the same Did not this bring that blessed woman ●nd happie Saint of God Marie Mag●alen to such a swéete tast and great ●●ue as that her melting heart mini●●red teares to her wéeping eies Luke 7.38 wherewith she washed the féete of her deare ●auiour wiped them with the
haires 〈◊〉 her head kissed them annointed them ●ith precious ointment and what was 〈◊〉 which that woman thought too much for such a friende True it is therefore that the lesse we sée the goodnesse of our God the lesse we loue him but great is the affection of them to whom many sinnes are forgiuen Knowing this then that remembraunce of hard estate before will stirre the heart vp to him in loue that hath made it happie and that sight of ougly sinne lodging still in mée and cleauing to my soule and flesh will make mee praise his name who yet in mercie imputeth not the same vnto mée Vse indéede often with your selfe and especially when you féele your heart most prone and fit thereunto to viewe your sinnes against euery commaundement howe many and monstrous they are in thought worde and deede sit and thinke with your selfe what is commaunded sometimes in one sometimes in another what woonderfull perfection is required in euerie one what braunches and members euerie one hath what terrible iudgements are due to the breakers therof how far from the full absolute perfourmance of any tittle of any one of them you your selfe are therefore in what case you stand for the same euen sure of eternal destruction both of bodie soule in hel fier Yet notwithstanding how you are released of mercie not of merite that with the preciousest ransom that euer was the heart bloud of Iesus Christ the sonne of God both God man so that heauen earth may perish but you cannot perish Que. The examination of the conscience touching this commaundement Ans As for example I set view this cōmandemēt wherof now we haue spokē Thou shalt haue none other gods but me Considering what things are biddē●r forbidden vnto me in the same And ●s alreadie now hath béene prooued first I sée I am commanded herein to wor●hip the Lord my God and him onely to ●erue not ioyning any fellowes to him ●t all of which worship many points ●here bee but they may bee reduced ●nto a fewe First I sée I am bound to ●oue him aboue all that is in my heart and soule to make more account of him than of all the worlde or any creature in heauen or earth to cleaue faster vnto him and his wil than to any thing to estéeme him and preferre him yea euen aboue mine owne saluation if they could come in comparison together for Hee that loueth father or mother Matth. 10.28 sister or brother wife or childe or any thing more than me is not worthie of me Secondly I am commaunded to feare him aboue all that is with a godly reuerence to stande more in awe of him and his worde than of any thing else whatsoeuer to be more loath not for feare onely but euen for loue to displease him grieue him and offende him than any or all the creatures in heauen or earth beside in respect of that which he is able to lay vpon mee if I forsake him to account nothing of any thing that any man can doe vnto me mindefull euer of this saying Feare not them that can kill the bodie and are not able to kill the soule Matth. 10. but feare him that can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire Thirdly I sée that in this commaundement I am charged to make my prayers to none but to God onely for the reasons aboue in their place alledged Fourthly I sée I am commaunded not to thinke that things goe by fortune and chaunce or that any thing is done which GOD knoweth not of or could not let but that I acknowledge him to be the guider and gouernour of all things and that what good soeuer I receiue I haue it from him and therefore that I trust and stay vpon him alone at all times and in all my matters whatsoeuer And for so much as neither I nor any can either loue him or feare him pray to him or trust in him vnlesse we knowe him therefore I sée also that I am in this commaundement straitely bound ●o long as I liue to labour and trauell by all meanes appointed to knowe the Lorde and his trueth out of his worde and looke howe much I want of knowing any thing that is reueiled in his worde so farre am I guiltie of the breache of this Lawe And if it please the Lorde to blesse me with knowledge of his trueth or any thing else whatsoeuer I sée that in this commandement I am charged to giue thankes to him for it in such full manner and measure of féeling as any way is due to that benefite For if I forget to be thankefull I forget that the Lorde in that thing is my good God And if I ascribe the praise and thankes to any thing else whatsoeuer otherwise than as to the instrument of God I make my selfe another GOD beside the Lorde euen that thing wherevnto I giue the thankes and I breake this commaundement These and many such other things I sée are laide vpon me and al men and women in this first commandement then I thinke or say with my self vnto the Lord O my good God and gratious father O my swéete Lord guide most righteous what doe I sée euen in this but one law of thine against my selfe my soule and bodie why I should neuer come in thy kingdome nor lift vp mine eyes to heauen in hope of any comfort This is but one Lawe of ten and contayneth but a fewe dueties in respect of all that I owe to thée and my brethren yet ah Lorde with wailing woe I speake it so guiltie I sée my selfe so fowle and ouglie before thy face and so full of breaches euerie way euen of this one commandement that I am ashamed and confounded to ●ift vp mine eies vnto thée my God For mine iniquities are increased ouermine ●ead my trespasses are growen vp to ●he heauen to me belongeth nothing but ●hame confusion it is thy mercie that ● am not vtterly destroied yea euē thy ●ercie maruellous that the earth as ●eary of so wicked a burden shrinketh ●ot from vnder my féete and hellish pit 〈◊〉 gulfe of endlesse woe receiueth me ●ot into it For what pleasure is ●ere in that seruaunt that being bid 〈◊〉 his master doe diuers thinges yet ●ot in any one obeyeth or perfourmeth 〈◊〉 maisters will Can hée like him ●ill hee loue him No no full soone euen I my selfe would loath and cast off such a one Ah Lorde then for my selfe what should I say Is there any seruaunt so bound vnto his master as I am bounde to thee Is there any master that can and will so quitte his seruaunts paines as thou in mercie my obedience Or can any mortall man so iustly challenge the obedience of his hireling as thou my God maist challenge the seruice of me thy creature first made of nothing by thy hande and then most dearely bought againe with precious price No no my bodie my life my heart
my soule and whatsoeuer I am within or without of thée I had all and to thée my gratious God I owe them all againe Yet sée ah wretche and wofull plight although thy goodnesse to mee farre passeth all masters their seruaunts and my duetie to thee more due ten thousand times than any mans vnto his master yet is my disobedience greater the sinne of my soule more grieuous and the whole cours● of my wicked life more opposed to thy will than euer was any earthly seruaunts to any hard and euill master For he will doe something that hee is bidden but I haue done nothing as I plainely sée by viewing of my life and as my conscience telleth me being priuie to my pathes For haue I loued thée as I ought Namely euen with all my heart with all my soule with all my strength which is the first thing that is commaunded me in this commaundement If I haue done it then haue I loued thy worde and euery way made that account of it that I ought For Dauid thy déere seruaunt loued ●hée and beholde what he saith Thy worde vnto mee was sweeter than the ●onie and the honie combe Ieremy ●hy Prophet loued thée and sée what ●ollowed Thy wordes were found by ●im and hee did eate them and they were vnto him the ioy and the reioysing of his heart And a number moe such ●xamples haue we whereby we learne ●hat there is no true loue of thée in vs ●nlesse there be ioyned thereunto a syncere and feruent liking of thy worde Now forasmuch as I am guiltie to my selfe that I haue not had that care of thy worde that I ought to reade it to heare it to learne and séeke it and euery way to shewe my loue toward it therefore O deare Father to say I haue loued thée as I ought with all my soule and power alas I dare not alas I cannot For much more occupied might I haue béene in the meditation of thy Lawe than euer I haue béene I confesse it O Lorde I confesse it euen with griefe of heart And therefore if thou werst not a God most mercifull I euen for this one thing were a wretche most miserable The like might I say of that light and little account that I haue made of thy Ministers which béeing another braunche of the loue of thée bewrayeth my want vnto mee But sée yet further howe greatly my heart hath fayled in louing of thée For looking vnto my selfe a litle déeper beholde euen such thinges as flatlie and directly are contrarie to the loue of thée alas I sée them to haue béene and to be at times in mee most horrible To murmure and grudge to repine and be offended with any crosse or griefe whatsoeuer laide vpon mee by thée or not euen willinglie to accept it as the messenger of a gratious friende to seeke any wicked meanes to bee eased of it is contrarie to that loue that wee owe to thée And howe fraile my selfe haue béene herein thou searcher of hearts knowest it well and I wretche most weake with ruing heart beséeche thy pardon Againe to suffer the worlde or any glistering glorie thereof further to creepe into our heartes and to tickle vs with delight and liking than it ought is a thing ●●at contrarie to the loue of thée For so we reade 1. Iohn 2. Loue not this worlde nor any thing that is in the worlde For If any man loue this world the loue of the father is not in him To drawe backe also my helping hand from those that are in néede and not with readie heart and willing minde to comfort their poore estate with whom thou hast dealt more hardely than with mee I knowe it bewrayeth a want of loue to thée 1. Ioh. 3.17 For so I learne Whosoeuer hath this worldes good seeth his brother neede shutteth his compassion from him howe dwelleth the loue of God in him But these O Lord haue taynted somtimes this heart of mine and therefore I haue not loued thée as I ought But what should I say when I viewe in my selfe howe my flesh and my heart runneth backe as it were to hide it selfe when I thinke of any persecution to be abidden for thée and thy trueth and specially when I looke vpon these horrible torments that some of thy Martirs haue suffered oh what want of loue bewrayeth it to me My houshold and familie my children and charge my life and present estate steppe in vnto mee as Peter once did to his master Matth. 16.22 drawe me aside and whisper in mine eare to saue my selfe if that day come and my power fayleth with courage to an●were as then my Sauiour did Come after me Satans your counsell is not good neither sauour you the things that ●re of God so that euery way I sée I ●oue thée not my God as I should Looke ●t my behauiour when I sée or heare ●hy name dishonoured any way and I ●muther it vp I hold my peace I make ●s though I heard it not yea and some●imes I approoue wickednesse with my ●aughter and I breake not out in zeale ●f rebuke No I that hearing as much ●y any worldly friende would readilie ●hallenge the wrong and hotly séeke ●euenge therof in thy cause and for thy ●ake I haue no heate nor courage but ●ither persons place daunger or some ●ircumstance or other quencheth my ●eart tyeth vp my tongue and maketh ●e like a traitour to my Lorde and ●aster What might I say of that se●ret misliking that somtimes wil créepe 〈◊〉 closely into my minde of the poore ●state of Christ in his members here on ●arth Christ liketh me not so well when he lyeth in the stable Luke 2. in the manger when he flyeth into Egypt for his life Matth. 2 13. when he hath not an hole to lay his head in except it be in a colde prison as he doeth when he rideth to the Citie and the people cutting downe bowghes of Palmes strawe them in the way spread their garments and crie O Zanna blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lorde Matth. 21.8 as when they séeke to make him a King and the worlde doeth séeme his friende No my heart will euen slippe sometimes priuilie into this wish O that the Gospell and the worlde might alwayes be friendes and goe hande in hande So that liking not euerie way so well in trueth of Christ in pouertie as in plentie and feeling not my heart so well contented to begge and suffer with him as to rule raigne with him there is not that loue in me towar● him that ought to be Againe mark ho● I faile in publike assemblies to heare 〈◊〉 word to pray such like when I migh● bee present if I would Marke how● negligent I am in publishing the prayses of my GOD and labouring thereby to drawe others to a greater liking of him with a number such like wantes and O loue of GOD in mée no loue in
●orde alas I knowe it is not great y●ough neither answereth it the greatnesse of my sinne but thou canst giue greater if it please thée O deare Father rent my heart and giue mée féeling cleaue it a sunder by thy pearcing spirit that from it may flowe the teares of true repentaunce strike good Lorde this harde rocke of mine that it may gushe out sorowfull water for so fowle offence and what wanteth in mée any wayes supplie in mercie with my Sauiour in whom thou art perfectly pleased Graunt O God vnto mée thy gratious spirit to kill in mée continually more and more the strength and power of sinne and to rayse mée vp in bodie and soule to more obedience towardes thée Let not my wantes stande euer swéete Lorde betwixt thy mercie and mée but giue mee will to wishe it giue me power to doe it giue mée loue to like it and euer strength to continue in it that thou hast appointed for mee to walke in before thée in this worlde Heare mee O Lorde O God O swéete and endlesse comfort of my sinnefull soule for Iesus Christ his sake that liuing heare I may euer serue thee and dooing so I may neuer loose thée Amen Amen The second Commaundement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image nor the likenesse of any thing that is in heauen aboue or in the earth beneath c. FIrst for the order of this Commaundement eyther wee may answere that this first Table contayning the honour and duetie of men to the Lorde as the se●ond doeth their duetie to man and the worshippe of GOD being part●y inwarde partly outwarde ha●ing in the former Commaundement laide downe the former kinde to wit of inward worship fitly now in this the two next folow the outward duties which to the same our gratious God we iustly owe. Or else thus That the Lorde in the first commaundement hauing separated himselfe from al other gods deuised and made by men and commanded all mortall men and women his creatures subiect to his Lawe to worship him onely and none but him here now in this second precept as order required he setteth downe modum rationē iuxta quam coli velit the waie and maner how he wil bee serued Forasmuch as in vaine he should haue doone the first except he had done the second also The way and maner is this euen according to his will and nature Which albeit it may séeme to flesh and bloud not so fitlie done by a negatiue lawe as by an affirmatiue it might yet besides that we are not to teache the Lorde euen in speciall wisedome hath he thus doone it For first our natures are very prone to the breache hereof which by a negatiue is stronglier beat downe than by an affirmatiue and then againe the Gentiles next neighbours to the Iewes were very much giuen to idols and images and therefore by name forbidden to the Iewes least by the Gentiles in that point they should be defiled And yet doth not the Lord here so set downe a negatiue but that he includeth an affirmatiue in it For as he saith Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image and meaneth thereby Thou shalt not worship mee with any deuise of ●hine owne contrary to my wil and na●ure so implieth he herein the affirma●iue namely thou shalt in euery re●pect worship me according to my will ●nd nature Moreouer remember here ●gaine which hath béene touched be●re that both in this commandement 〈◊〉 in all other the Lord setteth downe 〈◊〉 name that thing the doing whereof 〈◊〉 not doing is most decent or horri●●e And therefore in this place for●●●ding all false and fonde worshippe 〈◊〉 his Maiestie hee setteth downe in name that which is most vnséemely and vile to wit Idolatrie For of all wrong worshippe to make him like a man or woman or other worse creature to prostrate our selues thereunto and to thinke wee worship him in so dooing is most horrible What expositions your Booke giueth you may looke and marke adding for more plainnesse thereunto thus much that the very meaning of this commandement in effect is thus much as if the Lorde should haue said although the corrupt nature of man bee such as naturally he desireth my presence in some visible forme and shape foolishly thinking that then he is most neare vnto mee when he hath before his eyes some visible picture of mee yet for as much as this and the worship hereby doone vnto mee is neither agréeable to my will nor nature I therefore commaund thée that thou make to thy selfe no grauen image c. That is that thou goe not about to represent me by any likenesse of any creature whatsoeuer neither to worship mée in or vnder any such showes or after any way than out of my worde thou learnest to bee agréeable both to my will and nature Easilie then may we sée what wee are occasioned here in this commandement to consider of namely 1 The making of Images 2 The worshipping of them 3 The reasons God vseth here Touching the first then vsually vppon this occasion is mooued this question whether simplie it bee vnlawfull and misliked of the Lorde to make any kinde of Image by painting car●ing ingrauing c. And it séemeth yea ●ecause the woordes are so flatte with●ut exception Thou shalt not make any grauen image c. For answere whereunto 3. seuerall ●udgements are founde amongst men ●ome thinke in déede all pictures and ●mages to be vnlawfull aswell in Ci●ill vse as in religious and such are the ●urkes by name if it bee truely writ●n of them Whose money they say hath neuer any image vpon it but certain Arabike letters their other works as carpets couerings quisshins c. vtterly also without any image of man or any liuing creature vpon them and all because they thinke it vnlawful Others thinke it lawful to make any picture at all yea euen of God himselfe so that the same be not worshipped as a bare picture image And they vnderstand this commaundement of images made to this ende to be adored These are our Papists The thirde iudgement and best is of them that thinke it lawful to make pictures of things which we haue séene to a ciuill vse but not to vse them in the Church and for religion Now for the first opinion it is out of all question false and too superstitious For howsoeuer the Turks receiue not such profe yet we that imbrace cleaue to the authoritie of Gods worde know that the Lorde hath not lefte this commaundement neither any other without large and plaine exposition in other places of the scripture and therfore we are to conferre place with place practise with precept and so to sée whether in déede all images be forbidden to be made or no. First then marke the wordes in Leuiticus Leuit. 26.1 Ye shall make you no Idols nor grauen Image neither reare you vp any pillers c. Out of which place thus I
I further whether with any outwarde thing else whatsoeuer not warraunted by the word I haue thought or sought to serue and please the Lorde being by reason thereof brought asléepe with an imagination of my well doing and so carelesse to séeke or practise the dueties of the word If I haue this also knowe I to be a breach of this commandement Then from things not warraunted I came to things commanded as the hearing of the word prayer conference profitable with my brethren and such like knowing that if euen in these by the Lorde ordayned as thinges wherewith he is honoured and pleased I haue otherwise vsed my selfe than I should in stead of perfourming the Lordes appointment I haue brought before him mine owne inuention walking vnwittingly in mine owne wayes fearfully broken this precept of my God Which when I consider I néede no further shewe of grieuous guilt to cast me down from height of all supposed soundnes in this law Mine eyes do sée my heart acknowledgeth my conscience crieth my sinne is great Stand O soule before the Lord the iust and vpright Iudge whose pearcing eyes discouereth al thy waies set thy selfe more in his sight while mercie may be had whose voyce shall sound thy lasting woe if sight of sinne procure not true remorse And say now soule before the Iudge of trueth hast thou alwayes vsed as hee hath willed thée the hearing of the worde Did neuer desire of worldlie praise prouoke thée to this seruice Neuer diddest thou thinke to day such shall I sée and againe of them be noted if I goe Did neuer feare of worse opinion to be bred of thée in worldlie states by thy absence drawe thée out No fleshlie thought or earthly liking of the speaker hath there béene within thée to pricke thée to his hearing Hath painted pride and newe or straunge attyre neuer saide secretly in thée to daie goe heare the Sermon Lie thou maiest not the Lord being Iudge cleare thy selfe thou canst not O my so●le thy selfe being iudge Therefore that which the Lord appointeth as a seruice to himselfe and for our endlesse comfort by this corruption beginneth a seruice of thine own to thy iust damnation For to heare the Lorde biddeth but not for these ends Thus seruing the Lord in a thing commanded not as he commandeth I serue him with mine owne inuention and guiltie most grieuously I am before him O that I were any better in the duetie of prayer Am I neuer negligent colde and frosen Burneth the fire within me before or whilest I speake with my tongue Shaketh my flesh with the vehemencie of my spirite Neuer straieth my heart from present praier Neuer hast I to an ende or wearilie wishe the voice I heare to cease it is too long Ah wretch howe dare I say it Conscience cryeth and will not be bribed this duetie of prayer thus corruptly perfourmed the Lorde acknowledgeth not as a seruice by him commaunded but as mine own inuention and a breache of this his precept My conference with others in shewe so good in words so faire tasteth it neuer of liking of my selfe or vaine delight to heare mine owne discourse of pride to séeme and to be knowen a man indued with such and so good gifts Tendeth my heart in trueth to the praise of my God and the comfort of my hearers whensoeuer I speake of fruitfull things without all vaine respect and hidden euill whatsoeuer If it doe not then the thing that in it selfe the Lord hath commanded as I perfourme it he vtterly abhorreth and it is wilworshippe of mine owne not prescribed dutie by my God therefore a breache of this commaundement What should I say The more I searche the more I sée and I am not as I thought concerning the kéeping of this Lawe Mo things yet in it are commaunded and moe thinges well by these I sée I haue not perfourmed Thus much serueth to sound damnation to me and witnesse sufficient in dreadfull day shall this my guilt exhibite against me beside a curse vpon my posteritie to many generations But O Lorde thy mercie reacheth vnto the heauens Psal 36.5 and thy faithfulnesse vnto the cloudes Nehem 9.17 Gratious art thou O gratious God and full of compassion slowe to anger and of great goodnesse Were my sinnes as crimsin Esa 1.18 thou canst make them as white as snowe though they be as red as scarlet soone canst thou cause them to be as the wool Deare father haue mercie vpon me and burie in the bottome of the sea that they neuer more appeare before thée all my sinnes and by name my breaches of this commandement O my God as thou hast vouchsafed mee a Sauiour to quit mee from this curse so due vnto me for my disobedience so in that Sauiour of mine thine owne déere sonne looke vpon me He was borne for my sake he liued for my sake he died for my sake then let his birth his life his death good Lord profite mée in winning pardon of thée for my faults and direction of thy spirite for the time to come that better daily I may knowe to serue thée and euen in trueth as thou hast prescribed perfourme the same vnto thée Amen good Lord heare me The third Commaundement Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vaine c. Question WHAT is the meaning of this commaundement Your Booke Ans God chargeth vs in this third commaundement these thrée thinges First that we vse with most high reuerence the name of God whensoeuer we either speake or thinke vpon him Secondly that wee neuer blaspheme the name of God by coniuring witchcraft sorcerie or charming or any such like neither hy cursing or banning Thirdly that we neuer sweare by the name of God in our common talke although the matter be neuer so true but only where the glorie of God is sought or the saluation of our brethren or before a Magistrate in witnessing the trueth when we are thereunto lawfully called In which causes we must onely sweare by the name of God But as for Saintes Angels Roode Booke Crosse Masse or anie other thing we ought in no case by them to sweare Que. What is meant by the name of God here Ans Not only anie one word vsuallie giuen to him in scripture as Iehouah or such like Philip. 2 9. but also his maiestie and excellencie with such attributes as declare the same as his wisedome his iustice his prouidence his mercie and so foorth Againe his lawe and commandements or his doctrine and worde are vsuallie signified by it Leuit. 22.31 1. Tim. 61. to make vs more carefull to attende vppon them as things wherupon depend the honour glorie and name of God Que. What is it to take his name in vaine Ans Surelie either to speake or thinke of it without most high reuerence and especiallie to sweare by it otherwise than we ought Also to cast behind vs the diligent care of his commaundementes
breach doe you knowe of this commandement beside vngodly swearing Ans Truely Gods name is taken in vaine dishonored Prayer and this commandement broken in praying also aswell as in swearing for if I powre out a sort of wordes without féeling or any burning intire affection if I drawe néere with my lippes and my hart be farre away certainely I abuse the holy name of my God in so calling vpon him and I am guilty of the breach of this law For beside that reason teacheth vs God careth not for lippe labour it is the rule of the holy Ghost that when wee pray Ephes 6.18 we should pray in spirite that is with heart and affection Que. Howe else Ans Againe Gods name is taken in vaine and polluted whensoeuer it is called vpon in coniuring witchcraft Coniuring sorcerie charming and such like For the wordes of the lawe are plaine Let none bee founde amongest you that maketh his sonne and his daughter to goe through the fire Deut. 18.10 c. or that vseth witchcraft or a regarder of times or a marker of the flying of foules or a sorcerer or a charmer or that counselleth with spirits or a soothsayer or that asketh counsell of the dead For all that do such thinges are an abomination vnto the Lorde and because of these abominations the Lorde thy God doeth cast them out before thee And many other notable testimonies hath your booke quoted in the margin Que. Why but in earnest to let the rest passe do you not thinke much good is done and may be done by charming that is by vertue of some wholsome praiers as a pater noster two or three good auees and a creede or such other good words neither english nor latin nor any thing else in signification oftentimes Ans I answere to this questiō in thrée degrées And first I say the question is not onely whether any good as you tearme it be done or may be doone by a charme but whether it be or may bee doone lawefully by the same or no. And you heare the word of God plainely condemning the practise of it Wherfore with what conscience can wee deriue health or anie helpe whatsoeuer either to our selues or ours by that meanes that GOD hath so fearefully threatned vengeance vnto were we neuer so sure to obtaine it by the same Secondly what benefite soeuer we reape by such forbidden meanes I dare assure you all thinges considered wee gette no good but muche harme For what GOD will not haue doone GOD is neuer the author worker and cause of properly and directly but health or anie helpe to our selues or others by charming the Lorde will not haue procured therefore of that health and helpe so gotten assuredly the Lorde is neither author worker nor cause directly If then not the Lorde who but the diuell And if it be he as most assuredly it is he then I pray you let vs all men and women thus reason with ourselues Is the deuill our friende or our foe our welwiller or our enemie Surely we cannot be ignorant of it he is the sworne enemie of mankind the serpent that in burning malice deceiued vs once and ouerthrewe vs quite the roaring lyon that rangeth about without any rest still séeking out whom he may deuour And will euer he that hath euen sworne the woe of vs all and séeketh as Peter saith that is with all diligence and indeuour with might and maine with tooth and naile as we say with his candle in his hande light least by any meanes we should escape him applyeth his whole power to destroy vs and to bring vs to endelesse calamitie wil he I say euer do vs any good thinke we but to the ende to inferre thereby a greater plague vpon vs Certainely he will not for he were not the deuill if he should and we may be as assured of it as we are sure that he hath that name and nature Then I say let vs marke We finde by a charme bodily helpe in our selues or ours But this would neuer Sathan haue done vnlesse he had knowen that the vsing of meanes forbidden by God would sting our bodies soules to eternall death in the worlde to come Then sée still I say and note it Good he doth vs in bodie that a thousande times more euill he may worke both to body and soule in the day of iudgement Temporall ease he is content to bestow vpon vs that endlesse disease miserie and woe he may procure vnto vs. This is most true and nowe what good doth charming if all thinges be considered Shall a Christian man and woman so hunt for helpe of body or goods that they shall for it loose bodie and soule eternally Shall our health and wealth be deerer to vs than the Lordes commandement God forbid and therefore let vs rest perswaded howsoeuer wee thinke such vngodly meanes procure vs good yet in déede all thinges considered it is no good For Sathan being our foe will neuer doe vs good but to the ende to hurt vs more by it and the breache of Gods commaundement will ring our soules a passing peale from face and fauour of the Lorde Last of all which especially I thinke you would heare I denie that by the charme any thing at all is doone whatsoeuer the wordes be For euerie action must haue a fit and conuenient meanes applied vnto the patient to be doone by but bare wordes Pater nosters auees and creedes characters and figures are no meanes appointed of the Lorde to doe any cures by either vppon men or cattle and therefore if any thing be doone assuredly it is not doone by these thinges as the true working meanes but by the deuill himselfe bléering our eies by these shadowes And this vaine opinion verie Aristotle could mocke and disdaine as absurde and foolish Plinie also with diuers others Que. But howe prooue you by scripture that bare wordes being good words be not forcible to this ende Ans Surely me thinke beside others that example in the acts of the Apostles prooueth it wher we sée those vagabund Iewes there spoken of vsed as good wordes as might be but all to no purpose when the deuill listed not dissemble And therefore we may sée it is not the charme that can doe any thing by vertue of the bare wordes And you can not say that vnto the wordes come any faith and good minde of the charmer for faith leaneth vpon promise and promise annexed to a thing maketh it lawefull but charming hath neither promise in the word nor is allowed but by name expressely forbidden and condemned Que. Yet we see manie thinges are done by it and experience daily confirmeth a contrarie assertion to you Ans True it is and I graunt it that by charmes diuers are healed c. But therefore they were the verie wordes that did it It is no consequence For other meanes might doe it and yet nothing apparant to vs but the charme As a witche may
onely shoulde attende If affection be good attention faileth and if attention stande affection dyeth And therefore séeing that euen reason teacheth mee that to call vppon the name of God not as I ought to do is plainly to abuse his name take it in vaine neither in this point can I cleare my selfe but broken herein also I haue this his commaundement What vaine vowes and promises haue passed from me néedelesse to be made Vowes and fruitlesse to be kept For sorcerie and witchcraft charming and coniuring am I able to say I haue as earnestlie abhorred them as I ought euerie way so absteyned from them as I shoulde Nay hath not rather ease béene sought in paine of mee by these meanes Charming or at least wished if I coulde haue gotten them My selfe and my friends my children and goods haue I loued obedience more than thē Or hath not euer some base creature as swine or such like béene dearer to mee than the Lord séeking by charme to saue the one and not fearing by sinne to loose the other God sift not my guilt euen nowe in this for practise or will for my selfe or for others wil surely accuse me Further and beside al these let it be wel weied of anie Christian heart that feareth God indéede and carefullie séeketh the credite of his name howe often vnreuerentlie in sporting and playing in shooting bowling in dising carding Gaming we vse his name Scripture phrase howe the phrase of scripture wil rowle out of our mouthes in iesting and light conferences howe fearefully we vse him in cursing banning our bretheren Banning and surely he shall sée no smal guilt touching this commādement in euerie one of vs if God in iustice weigh vs in the balance and rewarde vs as he findeth weight of sinne full duelie to deserue Where is that happie man or woman so waking and sléeping so sitting and going so speaking and kéeping silence so liuing and dying as for no sin of theirs for no infirmitie for no slip or fal the name of God truth hath bin euil spoken or thought of Let this man and woman appeare and boast that in great measure they haue kept this commaundement But if none such can bee found whose frailtie hath not fostred in reprobate minds a misliking of good thinges then let all fleshe fall downe before his footestoole and sewe out pardon for that liuing so looselie they haue taken his name in vaine and broken this commandement Last of all if wee cast our eyes about consider a little the manifolde meanes prouided by the Lord to do vs good in bodie and soule and euerie way Meanes not vsed are we able to say wee haue neglected none but euer vsed them as wee ought reuerentlie carefullie and with thankesgiuing Hath neuer an vnprofitable bashfulnesse made vs conceyle our bodilie griefe or refuse the meanes thought méete to doe vs good Hath not carelesse contempt robbed vs of the remedie appointed for our soules And hath not vnthriftie selfewill reiected meanes to increase our wordlie estate If these all or anie be true we haue despised the wisedome of the Lord which appeareth in these things and should be magnified by them and in them we haue polluted his name our selues greatly occasioned others to thinke lightly of good things and grieuouslie guiltie we stand before him for it of the breache of this commandement What should I say of not rebuking others according to our place whom we haue noted to offende in any of these Not rebuking which is a thing as hath béene saide required also in this Lawe and therefore a thing that resting in vs doeth crie for vengeaunce though in all the rest wee were pure and innocent For we were not borne for our selues but also for others and the bodie the soule the goods and estate of our brethrē should be déere vnto vs we not séeing and suffering them by our wils to do the thing that we knowe will hurt them What I say should I speake of this and many other braunches yet remaining Doe we not sée already shame ynough and grieuous sinne in great abundance Where were we nowe then euen for these that haue béene named if the percing eyes of the liuing GOD should prie into vs and with iust rewarde séeke to pay the wants he could espie in vs Could we escape the pit of endlesse paine Speake in the feare of God euen what you sée Are you pure and blamelesse in these all Dare you stande out and make the challenge Come iudge stay not sift me and spare not thy tryall I feare not for all these haue I kept from my youth O sinnefull fleshe espie thy case Thou canst not thou maiest not and I knowe thou darest not vnlesse the dreadfull wrath of God haue sealed vp thy sight And therefore euen in this commaundement also as in the former crie rather vp to heauen with shrillish shrike Wash me O Lord from these my sinnes and cleanse me from my wickednesse Haue mercie vpon me O gratious God and according to the multitude of thy mercies doe away mine offences O sweete Sauiour who may not see what he is without thee Full heauie laden I come vnto thee Christ my deere God as thou hast promised refresh and ease me Amen Amen The fourth Commaundement Remember that thou keepe holie the Sabaoth day Question WHat is the meaning of this commaundement Ans Your booke answereth that the hallowing of the Sabaoth day is to rest from our labours in our calling and in one place to assemble our selues together and with feare and reuerence to heare marke and lay vp in our hearts the worde of GOD preached vnto vs to pray altogether that which we vnderstande with one consent and at the times appointed to vse the Sacramentes in fayth and repentaunce and all our life long to rest from wickednesse that the Lord by his holy spirit may worke in vs his good worke and so begin in this life euerlasting rest Que. Had not the Iewes diuers feasts beside this Sabaoth Ans Yes in déede Some of God immediatly appointed and some by themselues vpon special occasion By the Lord they were tied to thrée solemne feasts in the yere at which he would haue all the males to appeare before him To wit The feast of vnleauened bread that is Easter Leuit. 23. Exod. 23.15 or the passeouer in remēbrance how the Angel passed ouer their houses when in one night he slewe all the first borne in AEgypt both of man and beast The feast of the haruest of the first fruits of their labours which they had sowen in the fields Verse 16. which was Whitsontide or Pentecost in remembrance that the lawe was giuen fiftie daies after their departure out of AEgypt And the feast of gathering fruits in the end of the yeare Verse 16. when they had cleansed the fields This was the feast of Tabernacles putting them in mind that 40.
Christ made of the same god redeemed with the same price subiect to the same hell if they doe not c. Charitie requireth that we should haue a féeling of the paines of our seruants Deutro 5. Chap. 15. Thankfulnesse would acknowlege the mercy of god in making me master him seruāt whē he could haue don otherwise if it had pleased him And to cōclude if this rest we denie either to seruant or cattle we shewe there is no regard of nature in vs no pietie no charitie no thankfulnesse to God for our estate but the contraries of all these I woulde to God men woulde carefully thinke of this who vpon euery occasion can finde in their heart to sende horse and men cart and cariage too and fro on the Lordes day most wickedly Assuredly it will haue a smarting recompence in the end Que. The third and last end of the Sabaoth yet remaineth touching rest and exercises required I pray you what rest are we bound vnto and what special exercises on this day Ans Concerning the former it hath bin said before that there is required of vs this day a resting from our proper labors in our calling as your booke saith so farre as they are hinderances to that sanctifying of the Sabaoth that is required of vs. For in it thou shalt doe no maner of worke c. That is no maner of worke that thou canst not doe and attende also to the exercises commaunded for the Sabaoth as the artificer cannot worke in his shop and goe to Church to pray and heare the countrey man cannot both serue the Lord with his neighbours at home as he ought serue to his chapmen his solde Corne in the wéeke dayes also c. Therfore from these we must abstaine Now for the second thing namely the exercises demaunded at our hands many they are and hard of me or any to be either named or espied so large is the lawe of the Lorde But as I can I will lay before you some of them And first to begin withall forasmuch as without knowledge of God there is no loue of God without loue no faith without faith no saluation by God therefore it is a worke or exercise of the Sabaoth a duetie that we are straitely bound vnto in that day to attend to the knowledge of God by assembling our selues together into one place and there with feare and reuerence to heare marke and lay vp in our hearts the worde of God read or preached vnto vs. Que. How prooue you this Ans Doe you not remember the spéech of the Shunamites husband to her when her child being dead 2. Reg. 4.23 she desired an Asse to be sadled that she might go to the man of God What wilt thou do with him to day saieth he since it is neither newe Moone nor Sabaoth day Whereby you may plainly sée that on those holy daies they carefully resorted to the Prophets to be instructed in the will of the Lord. In the Acts of the Apostles againe thus we reade that The first day of the week Actes 20.7 that is on the Sabaoth day the Disciples being come together to breake breade Paul preached vnto them ready to depart on the morow and continued preaching till midnight In another place Actes 13.16 Reade Luk. 4.16 c. to the 21. verse After the lecture of the law the Prophets the rulers of the synagogue sent vnto them saying ye mē and brethren if ye haue any exhortation for the people say on with a number mo such places Whereby euidētly we sée the manner of kéeping holy the Sabaoth in those dayes Yet is not the going to the Church outward hearing of the word all but they are The good ground that heare the worde and vnderstande it Matth. 13.23 bearing fruite and bringing foorth some an hundred folde some sixtie and some thirtie Que. These places are plaine touching the custome of Gods children in times past and beside these very reason would teach vs that if God hath of set purpose in great wisedome appointed one day generally of all men and women to bee obserued surely he would haue on that day none to lurke at home in an hole withdrawing themselues from GOD from his worde from their brethren and from all commaunded exercises on this day and therefore in my opinion our recusantes as wee call them that is our refusing Papists to come to Church doe greatly offende I pray you what thinke you Ans I settle no sentence of them but what the dreadfull voyce of the eternall Iudge shall pronounce vppon them in his generall day to the horror of bodie and soule euerlastingly in the boyling heate of vnquenchable fire vnlesse they repent sée and amende their intollerable obstinacie against the Lorde For can it bee that the Lorde shoulde pronounce accursed all them that kéepe not euerie tittle of his Lawe Deutr. 27. vlt. and yet not punishe them that prophane his Sabaoth by withholding themselues from the Congregation refusing appointed dueties by GOD himselfe and at home or abroade in this corner and that vnder this hedge and that patter to themselues what God knowes they vnderstande not and therefore consequently what the Lorde detesteth and will assuredly charge them withall as sinne in that day of his Howe can wee heare these examples of Gods children purposely set downe in his woorde to teache vs and our selues perfourming no such duetie yet boldely presume of mercie What the best of them with all their learning coulde say for defence of this their follie haue wee not heard and may wee not reade Too childish and friuolous are their reasons to iustifie so great impietie I referre you to the reading of them your selues together with the answers made vnto them by the godly This onely my selfe I say that if I were a Papist and had to this day refused to come to the Churche to receiue the sacrament c. yet I assure you now séeing the weake grounds of these doctors for mo thā one had their heads about them though one beare the name I should begin to looke better about me and neuer pin my euerlasting estate in paine or blisse vpon so slender vngodly perswasions of peruerse men But what should we speake of reason which truly they haue not of their denial God and many a conscience of theirs knowe full wel that it is not any impietie which they are able to charge our prayer or preachings withall but a secret sworne or promised obedience to the forren Antichristian power of Rome without knowledge what they doe blindly consenting to do as others doe haue done for vaine glory and worldly spéeche amongst a fewe of their owne packe that maketh them obstinate against the Lord despisers of his Sabaoth rebellious against their lawfull and most gracious Prince her lawes vnkind cōtemners of the counsell of their dearest friendes breakers of their heartes whose liues they ought to loue increasers
wée woulde a very horrible thing if we could duely regarde and thinke of it For what is it but to contemne GOD and his wisedome to striue and fight against the Spirite teaching and conuerting men by the ministerie of the worde and euen in effect to say I am as wise and godlie as either hee can make mee or shall make mee I will none of his grace What is it but to giue a grieuous offence to others for the which the liuing God hangeth a woe ouer our heads saying Woe be to him by whom offence commeth it were better for that person to haue a milstone tyed about his neck and to be cast into the bottome of the Sea And againe It were good for that man if he had neuer beene borne What is it but to féede the deuils humor and to doe that thing that most highly pleaseth him Againe to consider howe we haue offended when we were present at Church by negligent and colde performaunce of that thing which time place and duetie required at our handes Haue we neuer come to the hearing of the worde but with reuerence with willing desire preparing our hearts before vnto it by some secrete prayer within our selues to the Lorde that he would blesse the speaker that hee may speake to our heartes and blesse vs that we may attentiuely hearken profitably féele and thankefully taking whatsoeuer is spoken increase in obedience to it Haue wee neuer come to the Sacramentes when we could and neuer without such examination and other circumstances as are straitly required of a Christian Haue we spent the Sabaoth in godly conference meditation powring out thanks from a féeling soule for the Lords goodnes euer to vs namely the wéeke passed Haue we visited or thought vpon the sick sore diseased imprisoned banished or any way suffring for a good cause to our power comforted them Haue we studied how either to procure or continue or increase amongst our selues or our neighbours the meanes of saluatiō as the preaching of the word such like O beloued we haue not we haue not we know it must néeds confesse it if there be any trueth in vs. Too much haue we neglected all these yea euen diuerse of them it is greatly to bee feared haue litle or neuer at all troubled our heads but for their contraries in most ful measure we haue wallowed in them and with gréedinesse euer accomplished thē Where is the minister whose negligence hath not made his people to pollute the Sabaoth Where is the people whose consciences awaked may not iustly condemne them for vngodly gadding on this day to Churchales to weddings to drinkings to bākets to fairs markets to stage plaies to bearebaytings summer games and such like Where is that master that hath had a conscience to restrain his seruants from this impietie or the seruant againe that hath either brideled himselfe for the Lords cause or else wel accepted his master or mistres restraint being made vnto him and which hath not rather burst out into vngodly disobedient spéeches murmuring that because he hath wrought all the wéeke therfore he should haue libertie to do what he list on the Sabaoth not considering that this commandement bindeth not only the master himselfe to honor God on this day but to sée to his family so much as he can that they also do it Nay I would to God the masters in many places were not ringleaders to their owne al other mens people to prophane this Sabaoth of the Lord and that euen such maisters as in respect of their calling office and credite in the countrey should farre otherwise doe When doeth a gentleman to name no higher estates appoint a shooting a bowling a cocking or a drunken swearing ale for the helpe as they say of some poore one but vppon the Sabaoth And if he be at the Church in the forenoone for the after noone it is no matter he hath béene verie liberall to God in giuing him so much What day in the wéeke vsually doeth he giue so euill an example of vnmeasurable sotting in bed as on the Sabaoth But O filthie sauour that ariseth out of this lothsome chanell thus raked vp into the nostrels of the Lorde I spare to speake I shame to sée I rew to knowe what I fully knowe against our soules in this respect Let euerie man and woman more particularly view thēselues and lay open vnto the Lorde their sinne in sorowe for it by this occasion thinke what is commaunded looke what wee haue done the Lorde make our sinfull hearts to sée sigh for so great offence against our God What should I say of the second end of the institution of the Sabaoth namely for the rest of seruant cattell But euen in an word woe to the man whom God shall iudge according to his guiltinesse herein For it is too vsual with al estates to be a meanes to robbe their seruauntes of the blessing due to the kéepers of this law and to pull vppon them the plague for the contrarie by making them ride and run post and away vpon euerie occasion that commeth in their heads when in truth if they would but euen look into it the matter may be done wel without such hast O happie is that man whose heart thinketh howe his seruant is bound to this commandement of kéeping holy the Sabaoth as well as hée hath a soule to loose or saue as well as he to be nourished with the foode of the word as well as he and therefore thereon concludeth he will neither sinne himselfe nor make his seruant sinne in breach of this or any other commandement The third end of the Sabaoth we heard it was that hereby might bee resembled in some sort our spirituall rest in heauen wee ceasing from our owne workes dooing the will of God But are we able to say wee haue this doone O miserable men ten thousand times if in this we should haue our desertes for wherein or howe crucifie we the fleshe more on this day than any other bridle the frowarde desires of the heart restrayne our owne nature and doe the will of God more on this day than any other Alas our owne consciences crie vnto vs we doe nothing lesse wee drinke wée eate wée surfet wee sweare we play we daunce we whore we walke and talke idlely vainely vncleanely and vngodlily these are our workes on the Sabaoth more commonly than any day in the wéeke else and if this bee to resemble a spirituall rest then in déede wee doe it not otherwise Thus stand wee therefore guiltie and gréeuously guiltie of this commaundement So that if we had not a Sauiour who in our flesh had fulfilled this lawe and euerie one for vs and appeased the wrath of God his father iustly conceiued against our sinnes neuer should we haue looked within his kingdome And howe shall we bée better for all which he hath doone but by séeing our passed sinne and
this matter Ans Truth it is but none to the warranting of this sinne For first saith hee what if a woman do it to shunne pollution of her body or after shée is polluted to flie the ignominie following vpon it And he answereth to it that the first is wicked and procéedeth of this error that whatsoeuer is doone in vs the same is also doone by vs which is not so For then were chastitie a vertue of the bodie and not of the mind It is not for a christian to say this will I not suffer but this wil I not do The mind being stained the body is filthie though it neuer did act but not contrariwise for the bodie by violēce abused is neuer able to make guilty that mind which cōsenteth not to it And therfore this excuse saith Austen can not warrant such sin as to kil ourselues For flying of shame which would follow the fact neither yet may it be doone For the shame is not so great as the act and therefore if the déed done vnto her may not warrant her the ignominy following may not do it Si non est impudica quae inuita comprimitur non est illa iustitia qua casta punitur That is If she be not vnchast which vnwilling is oppressed thē is it no iustice whereby the harmeles is punished Sed mulier auida laudis metuit ne quod violenter passa est dum viueret putaretur libenter passa si viueret But saith he a woman that standeth vpon speach and praise reasoneth with her selfe that what she suffered against her wil while she liued she should be thought to suffer with her wil if she liued And therfore she wil kil her selfe Indéede so may a womā reason the regardeth more man thā God but the christian guided with the spirit that Dauid had learneth to say with him O god thou knowest mine innocencie c. And to rest in ioy of spotlesse minde whatsoeuer the worlde speaketh Then goeth hee further and they will aunswere saith hee what can they tell howe they may be tempted to consent by long importunitie or by sight of hard extxemity and therefore they will prouide before hand least they should offend and they wil kill thēselues O saith Austen what a speach is this Iam nunc peccemus ne postea forte peccemus iam nunc perpetremus certum homicidium ne postea incidamus in incertum adulterium That is Let vs nowe sinne least hereafter wee doe sinne let vs now commit certaine murder least wee fall hereafter into vncertayne adulterie Let vs nowe doe that which wee cannot liue to repent least hereafter wee doe what we may repent c. Que. But indeede is it not a vile thing to fall into the handes of mine enemie Ans In déed Cato an heathen with manie other could not abide it neither Saul a cast away coulde suffer it But better is the warrant euer of this ought to be done than of this is doone therefore we must not weygh the latter but the former And we sée neither Patriarches Prophetes nor Apostles euer to haue doone it Nay saith Christ When they persecute you in one Citie flie into an other Where he might haue saide dispatch your selues least your enimies triumph ouer you Nowe if they might not doe it for whom euerlasting mansions in heauen were prouided what care we for a thousande examples of infidels and Paganes Thus then I conclude that neither for these causes alleadged nor anie other whatsoeuer wee may violentlie deale with our selues and ende our life Que What if wee neither kill others nor our selues but yet peraduenture cōsent Ans Euen that consent of heart is horrible murther condemned in this lawe Herodias as guiltie for consenting to the death of Iohn Baptist and séeking it as if shée had hewed off hys heade her selfe Haman as guiltie for Mardocheus as if he had doone it Dauid for Vrias Iesabel for Naboth Pylate for Christ as if they themselues had béene executioners Que. Often also haue I hard men say that sorow and care wil shorten our time Ans Indéed it is not mans speach only but euen the doctrine of the spirit of God Prou. 17.22.12.25 For a ioyfull hart saith Salomon causeth good health a sorowful mind drieth the bones Heauinesse in the heart of man bringeth it downe but a good word reioyceth it yea a ioyfull hart maketh a cheereful countenance 15. v. 13. by the sorow of the hart the mind is heauie This doctrine of god hath man by experience found euer so true that when any of thē in their writings haue spoken of care sorow they haue giuē vnto thē the epithites of biting eating consuming care such like because in déed they haue that worke in those that are too much subiect to them Galen the Prince of Phisitions in his booke of the preseruation of health affirmeth plainly that cares doe pull on and hasten many diseases in vs. Aristotle a Philosopher saith that sorowe drieth wasteth that naturall heat in vs wherein our life consisteth and so as it were giueth a reason of Galens assertiō No doubt the thing is true tryed and found to their harme in thousands And therfore euē in this respect must a christian beware least the Lord haue against him in the day of iudgement that he shortned his owne life by suffering vncomfortable sorowe to lie snubbing chéecking his hart within both day night Alas what is it that euer happen to that man or woman in earth which tast the mercie of God in Christ Iesus towardes them so bitter as that it may not be delaied and comforted euen with this that God is on their side Rom. 8. who or what can be against them Doth not euerie thing yea euen euery thing happen for the best to those that loue God Haue a true hart and meane not falsely and then say in faith as Dauid doth My helpe commeth of God which preserueth them that are true of heart Yea Psal 7.11 let me say to all that euer shall reade this in the name of the Lorde of heauen when cause of humilitie happeneth differre not to be humbled harden not your hearts in the day of affliction but sacrifice them vp brused and troubled to the LORD O Lord helpe Omnes cum valemus c. yet euer so farre yéelde to sorowe as that you constantlie and euen chéerefullie holde that which followeth in the Prophet a broken and contrite heart is neuer despised And therfore whatsoeuer the matter is with Dauid vnto your sad soule in euerie corner crie Psal 42. Why art thou so sad O my soule Psal 27. vlt. and why art thou so disquieted in mee Still trust in God still trust in God for I will yet thanke him hee is the helpe of my countenaunce and my God Thus tarrie ye the Lordes leasure be strong and he shall comfort your heart and put your trust in the
crueltie and hearde dealing with our brethren for euen this the Lorde abhorreth also Deutr. 2● The lawe that was made of fortie stripes to be giuen to an offender and not aboue did euidentlie drawe to some pitifull feeling our cruell raging and fierce affections The ●awe for widowes that they should not be wronged and for the fatherlesse that they should not be forsaken shotte at the same marke So did the forbidding of vsurie to the poore the taking of his rayment to pledge the detayning of his hire such like thinges All were to worke some mercie in vs towardes others and to tell vs plainely that the Lorde abhorreth cruelty towardes anie Que. Thus then if you thinke good let it suffice to haue spoken of these three sortes of murther to wit of the hande the tongue and the heart together with their branches and nowe a litle of the affirmatiue part of this commandement if you will Ans The affirmatiue part of it easily may be knowen by the negatiue For who seeth not that if generally all hurting or taking away of life vnlesse it be by the Magistrate lawefullie be forbidden then generally also is commaunded all care and preseruation of the same Deutr. 19.20 and if in specialitie the bitternesse of the tongue bee forbidden then is the swéetenesse the softnesse and the comfort of the same commaunded If anger be forbidden gentlenesse is commaunded if misliking hatred enuie and ioying at other mens harmes be forbidden then is an heart well thinking and accepting of others commaunded then is loue and a true reioycing at the good happes of our brethren commended and to conclude if all crueltie rigor and extremitie bee forbidden then is all lenitie mercie and pitie commaunded All which are vertues of great praise and afording large perswasions vnto our heartes to loue and like them to embrace and followe after them But so shoulde I dwell too long in this commaundement The blacknesse of their opposite vices I hope doeth make their beautie and brightnesse great before our eyes Onelie I wishe vs to the ende wee may abounde in all mercie that wee would often consider that comfortable spéech of the Lorde by his prophet Esay 58.10 If thou refresh the hungrie and troubled soule then shall thy light spring out of darkenesse the Lorde shall satisfie thy soule in drought and make fatte thy bones and thou shalt be like a spring of water whose water faileth not As also that sentence which at the daie of dayes shall be pronounced vppon it Come come yee blessed of my father and possesse the kingdome prepared for you Math. 25. for when I was hungrie yee fedde me when I was thirstie you gaue me drinke when I was naked yee clothed mee when I was sicke yee visited mee and so foorth Both which places with manie moe to the same ende beeing often thought vpon will soften our heartes in all dealinges with our brethren and make vs profitable to them euer to our powers And yet which I had almost forgotte it is not ynough for vs to doe good to be kinde and to shewe mercie but wee must doe it also spéedily readilie and fitlie that is when the néede of our brethren requireth it obseruing carefullie all occasions For as it is sayde of guiftes that qui cito dat bis dat he that giueth a thing quickly giueth it twise so is it of all thinges we doe to helpe in time is a double helpe and a benefite hauing lost the oportunitie of our brothers néede looseth his welcome Wherefore Iob professeth that he had not caused the eyes of the widowe to faile in long looking for his helpe Iob. 31.16 And Mardocheus requireth of Hester not only helpe but present Hester 4. a singular example for all estates Que. What punishment hadde the breach of this commandement Ans The spirituall punishment of it as of all other sinnes is eternall damnation both of bodie and soule For without shall be dogges Apoc. 22.15 inchaunters whoremungers murtherers c. sayeth S. Iohn the temporall punishment of it was amongest the Iewes by the lawe of God bloud for bloud Gen. 9. Leuit. 24. and before the lawe by expresse wordes vnlesse in such cases as the cities of refuge were ordayned for And euen as it were aboue all other sinnes it is worthie marking howe euer the iudgement of GOD hath not suffered this sinne to lie vnknowen or vnpunished All stories be full of examples Phocas Boniface 7. Alexander 6. Ethelbert Richard 3. and euerie man almost in his owne dayes hath knowen some experience Hotte is the wrath of the Lorde against this sinne and his mercie therefore euer kéepe vs from it The Application WIth what wordes nowe should I wish euerie one to descende into themselues and to take a view of their estate before the Lorde touching this commaundement Manie branches of it haue béene layde before vs and what branch is it which we haue not broken being narrowly sifted by the Lorde The murther of the hande I knowe wil be our instance but alas howe many thinges make men guiltie in this If euer in seruice against the enimie wee haue passed the bounds of a Christian heart in cruelly murdering concerning the maner who yet might haue died respecting the matter we are guiltie and spotted before the Lorde If women and children aged and impotent sicke and diseased that caried no weapon against our cause haue not so farre foorth béene regarded of vs and spared yea defended by vs from our féercer felowes as by right we might our handes haue faulted our loue hath wanted to the life of our brethren If cruellie wee haue wished but in our inwarde heartes any disorderlie and vnmercifull spoyle of our foes in féelde we haue sinned certainly in so doing For euen the spoyle that a Christian souldier maketh of his enimies in the warres should sauour of the mercifull nature so néere as he can of that God whome he professeth If we haue béene euer as you hearde but any occasion of the death of any either present or spéedier than otherwise it wold haue béene or of the shortening of our owne health life and abilitie by intemperancie incontinencie or anie meanes whatsoeuer the iustice of our vndefiled God doth find it out and we haue sinned against him in this thing Where thē is our righteousnes but euē in this branch of actual hand murder for the tong what should I say Doth no mans hart accuse him of vnrighteousnes Haue we neuer passed any spiteful slander to the hurt of thē whom we should haue loued Deniall of it can neuer hide it but confession of it hath mercie promised The name peraduēture of slander is odious to vs we hardly can accuse our selues of so foule a vice Slander Well then let him change his cote but remaine the same mōster stil Haue we neuer reported any vnknowē thing to the harme of our brethren Neuer whispered that
day of the Lorde Iesus Christ Manie such as these are there all which our vner●ring Papistes take and expounde of sin●gle life and will haue them so manie testimonies of the same to excell mari●age But their bould speaking is no● euer sounde proouing and therefore w● stay to beléeue them Que. In other matters indeede we haue good cause to refuse them but in this giue me leaue to speake as I thinke being readie to learne if I erre me● thinke we are not to mislike so much o● their speech For surelie it cannot be denied that the single life is farre aboue the maried The scriptures you knowe haue manie speeches to this ende Ans Well then for your better satis●faction it will not be amisse if we a litl● consider the course of this errour And first I pray you marke that during al● the time of the olde testament they dare not nor do not say that single life passed mariage in excellencie but contrarie to be fruitefull and stored of children was a blessing and to be otherwise was a reproch vnto them Therefore this perfection and excellencie of single life they set it to be but nowe in the time of the gospell Where let vs also beginne and going with them sée whether it be so or no. We consider then and sée that as the Lorde is holy himselfe and pure and therefore hath euer liked and loued all holinesse in his children and by name this cleannesse of bodie and mind which we speake of so on the otherside Sathan being impure and filthy hath euer sought and laboured to worke the like in vs and by name to drawe vs to impuritie of flesh and staine of minde in this behalfe The Lorde hath had euer his meanes to worke the one Sathan hath had his againe to bréede the other The Lorde by his word and spirite and what else it pleased him to vse Sathan by sundrie also verie forcible wayes wrought the contrarie Some hee so mightily hardened and strangely ouercame Want of feeling one meanes of Sathan that euen contemning the Lord and his threates and smoothering what in their owne consciences at anie time they founde contrarie to it gaue themselues ouer as it had béene brute and sauage beastes to all lust and vncleannesse without remorse Of these spake the Apostle to the Ephesians saying Ephes 4.19 That they being past feeling gaue themselues to all wantonnesse to worke vncleannesse euen with greedinesse where the worde hee vseth is verie significant And againe to the Romans he saith that God gaue them vp to their hearts lustes vnto vncleannesse Rom. 26. to defile their owne bodies betwixt themselues yea he gaue them vp to vile affections For the women changed the naturall vse into that which is against nature Then sheweth he the meanes and way whereby all this was wrought in them For a man would thinke that euen reason and natur● should kéepe vs from such pollution They regarded not sayth the Apostle to knowe God Ver. 28. and therefore God deliuered them vp into a reprobate mind to doe those thinges which are not conuenient That is God suffered Satan so to harden their heartes and to depriue them of the vse euen of naturall light as that those thinges séemed but sportes vnto them and matters of small weight which otherwise would haue feared them euen to thinke vpon The prophet Ose séemeth to alledge the very same manner of procéeding of Sathan in those that know God When he saith of Israel Ose 4.11 that whoredome and wine and newe wine tooke away their heartes That is their iudgement and vnderstanding their conscience and féeling whereby they should abhorre so displeasing a life before the Lorde And what meaneth Salomon when he saith that The young man followeth the inticeing harlotte to her house as an oxe to the slaughter but euen this Prou. 7.22 that by the subtill malice of Sathan hee is depriued of sense to decerne whither hee goeth and what his fall will be So then I say one meanes whereby Sathan in times past drewe men from chastitie the vertue of this commaundement to lust and impuritie the breaches of the same was by dulling their heartes in most fearefull manner that they felt not sinne to be sin no not euen verie great and gréeuous sinnes to be anie at all An other meanes was by instilling into their mindes an opinion of indifferencie in these matters Opinion of indifferencie an other meanes and that God so he were serued in spirite of them passed not for their bodies but left them in some sort to themselues to vse to their pleasures This to omit a multitude of heathen histories as also Simon Magus whome Austen noteth a defender of this doctrine may appeare by that decrée of the Apostles that the Gentilles should abstaine from fornication Act. 15. as also most euidently by the epistle of Paule to the Corinthians who thought of this matter as of a méere naturall thing so lawefull for them as either to eate or drinke so they reserued their soules and spirites to worshippe GOD. But the Apostle sheweth it to be farre otherwise and with manie vehement repetitions of the duties of their bodies impugneth so vile a conceite of libertie to vse them vnto lust Hee hath created your bodies saith the Apostle V. 13. 14. aswel as your soules and therefore you must glorifie him aswell in bodie as in soule Hee preserueth also the one aswell as the other the bloude of Christ was shedde aswell for the one as the other to redéeme it from death they are both indifferentlie the Temples of the holie ghost they are both the members of Christ and at the latter day they must both by Christ be raysed the body then to be ioyned to the soule which before liued separated and therefore aswell in bodie as soule God must be glorified and both of them from filthie lust and pollution kept chast Manie moe are the reasons of Paul in that Epistle to driue the Corinthians from this detestable conceipt V. 17. that fornication was a matter indifferent and chastitie required not so much in bodie as in mind But I referre them to the diligent reader himselfe to marke and thus much onelie note to shew the meanes whereby Satan in those dayes preuailed so much to draw men to the breach of this commandement A thirde meanes wee reade of which argueth not a litle the dulnesse of man the boldnesse of satan if once he get any vantage Euen the verie word of god abused to confirme that which neither God nor his worde could euer abide The scriptures wrested an other meanes Chap. 2. In the Apocalips mention is made of the Nicolaitans sinning in this respect most fearfully it is also by learned mē recorded how Nicholas the first father of the filthinesse fel into grosse most fearful sinne Clemens Eusebius say that he did it of méere simplicity to remooue frō him the
the wanton gréetinges in euerie place nowe vsed alas what thoughtes procure they neuer liked of the Lorde that I may say no worse Bookes written by vnreformed heartes and continually redde to the gréefe of God are they no occasions to fraile flesh both in thought and déede to offende against this law God knoweth and experience teacheth such soules as ta●t of Christ that verie deadly poyson vnder a false delight doth this way créepe into vs. An vnchast looke make● an vnchast heart and a rouing tongue beyonde the listes of godlinesse ere eue● we well knowe what we doe So subtill is the sinne that this way créepeth into our soules Apparell is next a most fearefull allurement to the breache o● this commaundement both in thought and déede if God once in mercie would open our eyes So are these stage playes and most horrible spectacles so is our dauncing which at this day is vsed so is drunkennesse gluttonie and idlenesse with a number such like as can witnesse eche one in the world that will weigh them Nowe what care we haue had of these things the Lord knoweth and to our profite if we list a litle we may consider it Our eyes O Lorde howe doe they offend through our carelesse bestowing of them to their owne desire Where is the testimonie of truth within vs that we doe restraine them so soone as euer wee perceiue anie tickling motion arise by them Where is the counterpane of that bande we haue taken of them that they shall not cause 〈◊〉 to offende Iob did it and yet wee ●eaker than hee ten thousande times ●hinke it néedelesse Alas our folly Iob. 31.1 alas ●ur security By this meanes our soules ●●rk in their bane yet we care not nor ●ilbe warned The Lord of his mercie ●●ue vs once the grace to desire it with ●auid and verie hartily to beg it Psalm 11● that our ●●es may be euer turned away from be●olding vanitie For the rest which fol●owe consider thē well let neuer Sa●han or selfeloue so stil bewitch vs that ●e cannot be brought to sée our sin In ●ehauiour or spéech haue we neuer offē●ed But euer in them both so vsed our ●elues as that neither we nor they whom ●e delt withall may be charged of more ●ightnesse than became the professors of Christ and his worde Haue wee neuer ●ransgressed in matter or forme of apparel O that we could say it But in truth we can not For the contraries abounding in the eies of al men would giue vs the lie Light behauiour and alluring ●aliance is euerie where accompted comelie bouldnesse Behauiour and good bringing vp Speech discoursing spéeche to a vaine ende we count a quality commendable in vs and the want of it we estéeme simplicitie wheresoeuer we sée it And therefore by bookes to such endes set out we endeuour to attaine vnto it and hauing once polluted our spéech for I will neuer call it polishing we are neuer better than when we haue company to bestowe our tales and gréetinges vppon Our apparell in matter to our power we make sumptuous Apparell and in forme to allure the eye asmuch as wee can If this be true in the name of Christ let vs better thinke of it than we haue done These are allurementes to sinfull lust and this lawe of God forbiddeth not onely both act and thought but euen euerie allurement to either of them What should I speake of stage plaies and dauncing Can we say in trueth before the maiestie of God that we carefullie abstaine from these thinges because they tickle vs vp either more or lesse to the breach of this commanndement Alas we cannot a number of vs. But we runne to the one continually to our cost Playes when we will not be drawen to better exercises that are offered fréely we sucke in the venom of them with great delight and practise the spéeches and conueyances of loue which there we sée and learne Dauncing The other wee vse with especiall pleasure and God being witnesse to many an one they wish the fruite of their dauncing to be this euen the fall of them selues and others into the breache of this lawe What should I say of gluttonie and idlensse Doe they not make vs sinne Good Lorde giue vs eyes to sée Gluttonie and drunkennesse and hearts to weigh the occasions of our fall The spirite of God hath sayde that these pricked vp the flesh of the filthy Sodomites to that height of sinne and yet we can imagine they will cause no sinne at all in vs against this lawe And therefore professing the gospell and integritie of life yet dare we so pamper so stuffe cramme this rebelling flesh as if we were gods that could suffer no temptation we dare gull in wine and hote drinkes continually beeing peraduenture both strong and young and euerie way néeding rather pulling downe than setting vp Idlenesse We dare solace our selues in soft beddes too long for our constitutions and all the day after betake our selues to nothing whereabout the minde might walke and so escape impure conceptes Wee dare differ the meanes which God hath appointed for our helpe to liue vndefiled for euerie trifling cause and féeling the flesh to arise in disobedience against this lawe euen dayly yet neither fast wee nor breake our sléepe nor labour nor marrie nor any way stoppe the course of it But certainely as vnféeling men passe on the time and heape vp wrath against the day of wrath for our boulde offending And yet we hope to be saued and yet we hope to haue a ioyfull resurrection But O déere in the Lorde it will not be so For is not this the lawe of God Thou shalt not committe adulterie Doeth it not forbidde both act and thought as we haue plainely séene and euen euerie allurement to either of them And must not God iudge vs according to his lawe Nowe then should wee liue when we haue witnesse within vs that wee offende his ●aw Bée not deceiued but as we feare the losse of bodie and soule for euermore let vs be warned Can nothing accuse vs that hath béene sayde Did we neuer in act or in thought receiue anie staine contrarie to this commaundement Haue wee euer had care and power to auoide all meanes What mouth dare speake it what heart can thinke it if it be not brasse or stéele and as voyde of féeling Wherefore awake let vs all from our former sléepe let vs stande vp at last from the dead in trespasses and sinnes and Christ our déere Sauiour shall giue vs light Let vs acknowledge what this lawe requireth and what wee should haue doone euerie one of vs. Let vs confesse we haue straied frō it many a time way and are no way able to offer vp our selues righteous cléere innocent to the Lord touching this lawe and for the time to come that we shall yet liue héere O let vs carrie some greater care to
I the take● what then saith my conscience haue 〈◊〉 sought it and sued for it for affectio● and true duetie in my heart to him th●● gaue it Doe I weare it and wishe 〈◊〉 weare it to haue my heart knowen 〈◊〉 him or her the better whom with hea●● and hande bodie and goods power an● might till my death in right I honou● and serue and wishe and will doe eue● Or rather a false faith séeketh a fai●● shewe and a powling hande of man● a séelie weake wretch séeketh a streng●● to establish my wickednesse and a ba●ker to beare out my foule oppression● If it bee so consider betimes how litle loue such a seruaunt deserueth 〈◊〉 hee shall bee founde out and feare lea●● either the wrath of God to thée or lou● to thy maister that is so abused lit●● ●●perteth it cause such a false hypocrite 〈◊〉 a treacherous Ziba come to light 〈◊〉 let vs consider what our heartes 〈◊〉 say concerning idlenesse Idlenesse For it 〈◊〉 béene prooued before that what 〈◊〉 not inioyed by the benefite of some ●●wefull labour is but stolen and we ●●ue no right to it If then my heart ●nswere that I liue all of other mens ●●●ours doing nothing my selfe I nei●●er gouerne with the giftes of minde 〈◊〉 quiet peace of my countrie neither 〈◊〉 with bodilie labour and true faith●●●l seruice séeke to eate the meat● of 〈◊〉 maister whom I serue féele it and 〈◊〉 it hate it and abhorre it For such 〈◊〉 is loosenesse such a liuer is a rob●●r we should not take anie sure com●●●t till we haue chaunged so naugh●●● a course and altered quite soloathe 〈◊〉 ●ife Too full too full is euerie house ●●d towne of such idle bellies Neither ●ere must I onely examine my selfe ●hether by labour I liue but also as ●●rrowlie by what labour I liue and 〈◊〉 it bee such as the word condemneth ●●e lawes of man punisheth and each good man misliketh I sinne I sinne● for such labour is no life But I refe●● you to what I haue saide before Look● wee also euen as wee loue our soules I beséech you at our heartes eyes an● tongues whereby we may steale asw●● as by the hande as before in the co●●maundement hath béene prooued Th● heart by coueting and catching Stealth in heart or b● too néere and nigardlie kéeping tran●●gresseth against this lawe of God T●● eye by looking beyonde his limites a●● sending in worde to the heart with● to make it in loue and set it in longi●● for other mens goods Eie The tongue 〈◊〉 false flatterie and filed forgerie comm●●teth a stealth which is called a gre●● stealth as hath béene showed and pr●●ued before All which or anie where howe they touch vs and stayne vs 〈◊〉 Lord knowes that knowes all and 〈◊〉 with profite may well now thinke 〈◊〉 weigh Doe our heartes and haue 〈◊〉 hearts euer rested vpon Gods promi●● for all necessarie prouision while 〈◊〉 liue for vs and ours not caring 〈◊〉 carking not wishing not willing 〈◊〉 ●●at which the Lorde alloweth and we ●ay iustifie No no we suffer our harts 〈◊〉 goe too farre and for want either of ●nowledge or care to liue according to ●●r knowledge wee boldlie looke of e●●rie mans commodities As we goe ●●d ride wee streight way couet and ●●at which is worse presentlie we de●●e to obtaine our will to the impay●●g of our brothers wealth and the ●●e fearefull breaking of this comman●●ment And woulde God the rage of ●●r lust were not sometime so vehe●●nt as that missing to get what it ●éedelie séeketh it casteth vs downe 〈◊〉 in our bed or causeth vs to hurt 〈◊〉 who hindereth our wishe as wee 〈◊〉 fell out in Achab to Naboth for his ●●eyarde But of this hereafter more ●●ine in the tenth commaundement 〈◊〉 the tongue alas what shoulde I 〈◊〉 By tongues I will neuer bid you enquire whe●●●● you bee guiltie or no. For whi●●● shoulde a man flie in these dayes 〈◊〉 flatterie or where may we liue 〈◊〉 not light of false forgers séeking by 〈◊〉 phrase to bléere the eyes of such as least suspect them Rather looke in wh●● measure you haue or doe sinne in th●● behalfe For I feare not to say you 〈◊〉 offende And if your conscience tel y●● your sinne is great runne not headlo●● into hell without returne Cursed 〈◊〉 that tongue that flattereth anie m●● in his sinne for anie commodity or th● cooleth such heat as Gods spirit ha● wrought to grace good amendeme●● Well may I reape a rewarde wi●● him for féeding his humour but as liue I shall loose my rewarde with G●● for stealing away his honour L●● them ioyne hereunto Lawieres whose calling such a true viewe of the drift and s●●cesse of their pleas whether they ha●● not often indeuored with their tongu● and often also obtayned by their spea● the wrongfull alienation of mens rig●● from them to other men And is 〈◊〉 this a theft Might not he euen asw●● haue robbed him with his handes 〈◊〉 to be a meanes by speach of wrong p●●●swasion that others doe it But al●● what wordes can I vse or anie m●● else this day aliue to make men fée● ●hat neither golden gaine nor any re●arde to be named whatsoeuer shoulde ●ake them speake vntruely against the ●ood estate of their brethren in anie cau●es Surely if this will nothing moue ●hat it is in nature theft which in name ●hey so abhorre I will assay no further The day will come let them well remember that sinne will bee sifted both ●y name and nature and reape for re●arde at a iust iudge such torment as ●hall twitch aboue any conceit which ●an now be had of it and so continue ●or euermore To drawe to an ende of ●his application are we al cleare of that ●heft of theftes committed in conueying ●f the Church liuinges to our owne vse ●rom them that ought to haue them ●nd doe the dutie for them to the disho●our of God the ruine of the Church ●nd the fearefull casting away of manie 〈◊〉 soule into the pitte of hell for want of ●nowledge If we haue these liuinges 〈◊〉 our disposition and are able to make 〈◊〉 good account of the bestowing of them 〈◊〉 our power thrise happie wee in es●hewing so carefully the wrath of God and regarding so tenderly the health of others But if either corruption in taking some or loose negligence in vnworthily bestowing all may iustlie stande and giue to the Lorde a witnesse against vs howe should wee escape for so great a sinne Shall the Lorde so lowdly crie that he will require of euerie watchmans hande the bloud of the soule that dyeth in his sinne without his warning Ezek. 3. and shall that patrone escape scotfrée by whose gréedie hand and cruell heart they haue all béene robbed of one that should haue warned them Shall the Lorde crie woe vppon woe wrath vpon wrath vengeance vppon vengeance to the carelesse shepheardes that féede themselues and not
nowe adaies of gods iust plagues vpon this sinne But I will not runne ouer them nowe Easilie may they be turned too in our owne Church storie Onely these two I cannot omit First how Hamelton the Scot being brought vnto his death by the false accusation of a false Frier called Campbell when he was in the fire cited and summoned the sayde Frier to appeare before the high God as generall iudge of all men to answere to the innocencie of his death and whether his accusation was iust or not betwixt that and a certaine day of the next moneth which hee there named and ere that day came the Fryer died without any remorse of conscience that he had persecuted the innocent And secondly howe Calice men in the daies of King Henrie the 8. being falsely accused escaped safe from the danger of such witnesses and they themselues a iust plague vppon their iniquitie hanged drawen and quartred ere they went home Therefore let vs euer tremble to prouoke the Lorde by this sinne let vs speake a trueth if we doe speake at all and shame to lie euen of the deuill The daily beggeries discredits shames and deathes strange and fearefull of such as haue made no conscience by false witnesse bearing to pollute their consciences ought mightilie to moue vs and verie effectually to perswade vs neuer to doe it For God to vs as he hath béene to others will most assuredly shew himselfe either at first or at last at one time or other when our sinne is the same and he no changeling in his nature at all And thus much of this commaundement The Application NOwe let vs weigh the guilt or innocencie of our soules if the Lorde should call vs to an account for this his lawe Generallie wee sée the care that should be in vs to preserue the credite and good name of all men and what heart so dull or dead and past all féeling that it doth not espie euen a generall want in it selfe concerning the same Generally all trueth would the Lorde by this lawe haue loued cherished and maintained and the contrarie hated shunned and auoyded but what eie so blinde that cannot sée the course we commonly take and the race wee wholy runne to the maintaynaunce of the vice and rooting out almost of the vertue from amongest vs But consider the particulars one by one and so shall we reape most profit Haue you neuer in all your life testified of your neighbour an vntrueth publikely for fauour or gaine or hatred or any cause whatsoeuer Haue you neuer slipped neither in your owne behalfe nor your friendes nor your towne and liberties nor anie way But haue euer dealt in all the testimonies that euer you gaue as you dare abide gods searching eie to iudge you Consider well the matters that you haue dealt in remember the times past remember the sutes that haue béene made vnto you and peraduenture the rewardes that haue béene offered you also and if you be cleare and no way to be touched though God sift you neuer so narrowly be glad and giue God praise But if you can not if you may not if you dare not cleare your selfe both because a guiltie conscience accuseth you within and because both men and matters may be produced and named for whom and wherein affection hath led you giftes corrupted you malice incensed you sin stayned you then sée it sée it in the feare of God and thinke of it confesse it was naught acknowledge your blemish consider this lawe that so flatly forbiddeth it tremble vnder the hande of the God of heauen that hath euer plagued it either by one way or an other in a mans selfe or his séede in this worlde or the other And so by the grace of God shall sight bréede sorowe and amendment of life hereafter Fie of that affection that damneth our soules wo worth the gaine that getteth vs hell And accursed is that iuror and witnesse that so respecteth his present purpose as that hee casteth away the care of God of life of hell of death of ciuill honestie fame and good name in his countrey and dwelling neuer able after to come in companie where hee may not feare the touch in talke of his ill dealing Certainely certainely if a good name be aboue gould and siluer a false witnesse is the drosse and dregges of the world that the Lorde hateth and euerie honest heart verie perfectly loatheth The next branch that breaketh our obedience and dutie to the Lorde in this lawe is lying Lying the foule filth whereof hath in part before béene displaied and opened And nowe it remaineth but to consider our course and how gréeuously guiltie we are before God of this ougly vice Where is that man that woman that aged or younger that will cleare themselues from all blotte or staine in this behalfe Doth not euerie maister in his man euerie mistres in her maide finde it mislike it hate and abhorre it Doth not euerie estate finde it in other And God in vs all to the iust incensing of his wrath and furie against vs If we can cleare our selues let vs if we can not where is our righteousnesse where is our perfection where are our merites Nay why dread we not the death that is the desert of lying lippes O sift and search the guilt of guilefull tongue couer it not excuse it not remember what I haue sayde of it before mocke not God dallie not with your damnation hate to bee the childe of the foule fiende and with sorowe in trueth for passed securitie flie with perseuerance for euer hereafter so sinfull iniquitie Truth may be blamed but it can neuer be shamed yea euen man in the ende shall like it and God for euer blesse it and crowne it There followe then in the booke as particulars of this generall flattering Flatterie c. and dissembling and telling false tales behinde our neighbours backe Concerning the first what should I say Should I aske whether you haue or doe offende should I make a question of it or bring you into doubt with your selfe whether you haue héerein faulted or no Alas howe want I rather words to moue vs to repentance than proofes of dayly practise to conuict vs of transgression Helpe Lord Psalm 12. helpe may I truly say with Dauid for good and godly men doe perish and decay and faith and trueth from worldly men is parted cleane away Who so doeth with his neighbour talke his talke is all but vaine for euerie man bethinketh how to flatter lie and faine But what followeth Certainely euen that which we shall finde if God by his grace change not our heartes to more sinceritie For we make no conscience to lie to flatter to fawne to halt to ●ogge to glose and dissemble honestie pietie friendshippe and fauour loue and obedience faithfulnesse and trust and whatsoeuer may be profitable to vs euen from morning to night from we rise till wee goe to bed and then howe
abide anie light licentious wandring frō the same for anie time For they are opposed to loue the Lorde euer and to thinke euill at anie time to loue the Lorde with all my heart and to thinke nowe and then of vaine follies or flat impieties with my heart And if it be a certaine trueth as we knowe it is which I saide before that if we had stoode in our innocencie firme and immoueable we should neuer haue conceiued in our time any euill thought at all or vaine or foolish conceite for anie moment or point of space but should euer haue béene able to haue iustified our thoughts before God whatsoeuer they were as agréeing with the loue of him and our brother then is this tickling delight that now and then will take vs and possesse vs for a time to inioy our neighbours house his wife his child his man maide or anie thing that he hath otherwise than we should wicked vile and against that rule of right wherein we were created and whereto our regeneration dayly tendeth if we be the Lordes And therefore let this argument conuict vs and this consideration euer assure our soules within that it is vnlawefull for the childe of GOD once to conceiue an ill thought although we neuer consent vnto it And consequently let it stir vs vp to pray with Dauid against our corruption Psalm 51. that the Lorde in mercie woulde vouchsafe to make vs cleane hearts and to renewe a right spirite within vs euermore Let it be still the propertie of a popish spirite to extenuate sinne and exalt flesh and bloud and corruption aboue truth and right saying concupiscence is no sinne Iam. 1.25 but onely bringeth foorth sinne after it hath conceiued But let the childe of God schooled vp in the trueth of the gospell presse flesh bloud and his corrupt nature so farre as gods worde and lawe presseth it and let him knowe that first verie concupiscence in it selfe is a damnable degrée of vice yet not the highest degrée but vpon the conception thereof followeth actual accomplishment of wickednesse before but thought in heart an higher and further steppe of euill in vs which is the meaning of Iames. For if concupiscence were not euill then must it néedes be either good or indifferent But neither of these it can be and therfore it is euill Good it is not for the whole 7 Chapter to the Romans denyeth it And S. Austen pretily against Iulian gathering vppon his wordes that concupiscence remayned in thē that are regenerated though not the guilt of it that therefore is was good answereth Si hoc sentirem Libr. 6. cap. 6. non dicerem eam malam esse sed fuisse Nos autem malam eam dicimus manere tamen in baptizatis That is If I had thought so to wit that it was good then would not I haue saide it is euill but it was euill But we say it is euill and yet remaineth in them that haue beene baptized And when Iulian goeth on and vrgeth his assertion that neuerthelesse the guilt was taken away yea sayth he Reatus quo hominem reum facit non quo ipsa rea est vt homicidij reatus tollitur in aliquo non tamen ideo bonum est That is That guilt is taken away wherewith shee stayneth man not wherewith it is stayned it selfe in it selfe As the guilt and the desert of murther a man may bee quit of and freed from and yet not the wickednesse it selfe in it nature changed for that cause but remaineth euill still Good therefore you sée concupiscence is not And indifferent it is not For the Apostle flatly giueth it an harder name saying Rom. 7.21 That when he would haue doone good hee was so yoked that euill was present with him If the spirite of God call it euill beware we presume not to call it indifferent and beware more howe we play with the pleasure of it and take delight to doe it Againe what conclusion carie all those exhortations to crucifie Crucifie the olde man with all his lusts and that percing plaint of an Apostles mouth O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death I knowe I knowe that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good I say what conclusion carie they all but this that concupiscence is neither good nor indifferent but flatly euill Que. Howe then falleth it out that it condemneth vs not Ans The Apostle answereth in the 25. verse Rom. 7.25 I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lorde and in the next Chapter There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus which walke not after the flesh Cap. 8.1 but after the spirite For the lawe of the spirite of life which is in Christ Iesus hath freed me from the law of sinne and of death So that we sée it is Christ in whom and by whom and for whom wee are not charged with the condemnation due to concupiscence and corruption ingrafted and growning in vs. Que. But is then all desire and affection and all coueting vnlawefull by this commaundement Ans No indéede for God hath created affections and desires in men as mirth ioy hunger thirst c. and they should haue béene in man though he had neuer fallen they should haue loued their children their parentes friends euen standing and abiding in innocencie and therefore these thinges are not euill Nay the want of them maketh a monstrous absurditie in nature and therefore not to be maintained The instrumentes of affections and delight and dolor created by the Lorde prooue them allowed the law of God commandeth them and reprooueth their want Christ our sauiour vntouched by sinne shewed them in great measure they are spurres and prickes vnto vertue in vs and therefore allowed Besides numbers of other reasons that might be alleadged Que. What else doe you obserue in the commandement Ans I doe duely weigh the particulars that God restrayneth our coueting in and I sée them to bee such as most commonly and most without checke men suffer themselues to be caried away withall As the house of my neighbour that is his inheritance landes and possessions which we so gréedily often behoulde and marke wishing and willing them far far otherwise than a Christian heart should We can flatter our selfe with our offering of money for them not remembring that so did Achab for Naboths vineyeard and yet gréeuouslie offended Our neighbours wife or an other wiues husbande God knowes the sinfull thoughtes they cause within vs. For coueting the child against parents liking and intising away the seruant of an other against their good they bee thinges wherein fewe of our heartes haue any féeling And for their cattell with such sinnefull eies we looke vpon them that wee euer thinke our neighbours bullocke hath a fairer yowre than our owne hath as the Poet speaketh and therfore wisely in the naming of these particulars hath the Lorde taught vs wherein commonly
then all with one consent crie in the eares of the Lord with shriking sounde that houres and daies monthes and yeares haue we spent in tossing and turning in debating and scanning such conceites and thoughtes as we would not for all that we enioy were written in our forheads Fie fie the pleasures that we haue felt in this follie nay in this impietie howe haue they tickled vs within and made vs laugh to our selues rubbe our hands together forgette our meat not heare what was saide about vs and such like Howe haue we longed to be at an ende peraduenture of some businesse that we haue béene about that we might euen fully debate the matter you knowe of and plaie with the conceite thereof to our fuller pleasure Can we excuse our selues beloued doe I depaint out vnknowen dispositions vnto you O I say againe beside greater impieties the follies the toyes the trifles the verie babish fancies that will and doe steale vpon vs will we nill we euen when wee are best occupied and would not be solicited in such sort All which are breaches lesser and greater of this lawe of our God which requireth exact obedience and coniunction of all the motions of our mind to his good will and liking And if we had neuer fallen wee should neuer haue felt them Therefore to sh●t vp this matter for one whom I knowe better than I know anie of you I confesse a guilt a gréeuous guilt against this precept of my God and I acknowledge damnation due if I should be reiected but the Lorde I thanke I feare it not not that I haue not sinned but because my Christ hath not sinned and He is my iustification sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 1. hee is my strength and my stonie rocke both against the curse of this lawe and all the rest He is my defence and my Sauiour Psalm 18.1 my God and my might in whom I do trust my buckler the horne of my health and my refuge And to him in the true sense of my weakenesse and with the knéees of my heart bowed downe to the dust I say for my case as Dauid sayd for his Turne away my heart O Lorde that it may neuer féede vppon the follies of vaine conceites or gréeue the swéete spirite that I sometimes féele by vngodly wandring from his sugred motions Yea set a watch before my soule most gracious father and kéepe the doore of my strengthlesse heart that I may lesse offend and more obey in this behalfe than euer I haue doone héeretofore And now passe wee on to particulars mentioned to our handes by the Lorde himselfe in this his lawe O my beloued how often haue we coueted our neighbours house that is his earthly possession and inheritance if not in whole yet in part How often haue wee tossed our heades from the one ende of the pillowe to the other not able to sléepe for thinking howe to compasse that péece and this péece not weighing howe well he might spare it but howe well it would fitte vs Yea this house must be had and that garden and the other close to the wringing out of teares from the man the wife and al their poore children that part from it to the gréeuing of their heartes and the verie vtter vndooing of them all We stoppe not our eies that they gaze no further vppon our neighbours helpes than a Christian soule may warrant We shut not our eares neither take regarde of the sinne that may insue when we are whispered in the eare that this thing is fitte for vs and that thing and thus and thus may be had No alas we account them the best members about vs whose godlesse counsell shall worke our endlesse woe Whereas a Christian assoone as hee heareth such a motion should by and by thinke in himselfe O Lord thou hast delt mercifully with me euer let not me now deale vnmercifully with any thou hast made me a maister of much this mā a maister but of a litle O Lorde let not my much eate him out of his litle vngodlily let not my power oppresse his weakenesse and so foorth and then talke with the informer be it either a man or mine owne gréedie eie that hath spied it and sée whether what I may get I may well gette and well take into my hands so as I may not be stinged for it an other day before my God nor exclamed vppon iustly in the worlde This doeth your owne conscience tell you you should doe and the other you should not doe yet the other haue you doone and this haue you not doone and are you not guiltie Good beloued goe with me in this tryall of our selues and let vs sée sinne to be sinne The looking eie and the lusting heart further after our neighbours wife than they should would God they accused vs not What should I say of his seruant man or maide You knowe it aswell as my selfe there is almost no conscience any where shewed in this behalfe no feare of God no loue of man but onely of our selues For if wee like an other mans seruant for any qualitie that we desire to be serued with all what intisementes what allurementes dare wee vse to drawe him to vs What offers make we what practises deuise we till we haue them Yet sayth this lawe Thou shalt not couet thy neighbours seruant man or maide And that is as nowe we knowe not once thinke of it although I consent not to it The like is saide of his oxe his asse or any thing that is his And yet wee sée the worlde euer in our eye Vicinum pecus grandius vber habet Our neighbours kowe doeth giue more milke than ours His horse we must haue there is no remedie his hawke his hounde his pleasure or profitte must be ours and that which is worse often without any consideration any way either by fauour or value yea it must be giuen out that we couet our neighbours goods and wee our selues haue twentie pretie indirect and figuratiue kindes of begging and if wee either are not vnderstoode or will not be vnderstoode by him that hath it because he is loth to loose it then wee frette and are offended highly and as our calling might and power is we sitte vppon his skirtes Thus sinne we may déere beloued against this lawe of GOD and yet we sée it not Nowe would God haue vs to open our eyes to incline our eares and to forgette this olde fathers house of our corruption Nowe would the Lorde haue vs reconciled to him by repentaunce and offende no more And therefore I crie vnto you in the name of the Lorde and to this soule within mee Thou shalt not couet If we will heare his voice and yet harden our heartes if we will not restraine our senses the common carriers of conceites into vs if wee will not euen euerie way wee can héereafter séeke to let and lessen our disobedience in this thing against the Lorde the day of our visitation is past and our destruction is at hande The lyon is come vp from his denne Ierem. 4. and the destroyer of the Gentilles is departed and gone foorth from his place to laie our lande waste and our cities shall be destroyed without an inhabitant Yea so néere is our desolation assuredly my beloued that euen as it were presently my soule heareth the sounde of the trumpette and the alarome of the battaill Destruction vpon destruction is cryed euen at our doores if we could heare it and sodenly shall our tentes be destroyed and our curtaines in a moment But I hope what I wish and I wish what shall be our sure safetie if we will be perswaded euen that we would now sée howe farre wee are from abilitie to fulfill these 10 commandementes of our God either all or any one of them deuise what distinction we can horrible sinners and transgressers we are and so we shall be founde and therefore that wee would acknowledge it lament it flie to the propitiation apointed of our gracious God for our sinnes and onely cleaue to him onely trust in him and claspe him in our armes so as all the worlde nor the power of hell can loose our houlde carie him so to his father and there offer him to him for all our misdéedes as the saluation which hee hath prepared before the face of all people and in whom hee is perfectly pleased This wish I this begge I this craue I with all the bowelles of my affection my flesh shaking mine eies watering my soule groning and all the stringes of my heart inlarged as you feare God as you loue your selues as my calling is regarded as my affection estéemed or as hell trēbled at that Iesus Christ may be our onely hould and our owne obedience no hould yet performed as a fruite of faith daily more and more but not with hope of safetie by the fame either in part or in whole and this O my good God graunt vnto vs as thy mercie is vnmeasurable thy goodnesse and louing kindnes vnsearchable what passed is good Lord forgiue and make vs better euer liue Amen Amen Prouer. 19. Heare counsel and receiue correction for they shall make a man wise at the last Deutro 5. O that there were such an heart in this people to feare me and to keepe all my commandements alway that it might go well with them and with their children for euer Psalm 19. Let the wordes of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be alway acceptable in thy sight good Lorde When gracious God by sacred worde vouchsafes to cal from cursed course O happie we ten thousand times if feeling heartes doe yeeld remorse But if contempt of offred grace accuse vs crauing sentence iust Then cursed we ten thousande times for hell remaines whē hence we must Consider this my countrey deere and marke it Cardiff heedily The Lorde nowe speakes then take thy good or looke for vengeance speedily Hwyra dial dial duw Tosta dial dial duw Hugh Poole minister of the worde of God in Cardiff
the play is peraduēture the strangenes of the place lacke of light to guide them causeth errour in their way more than good Christians should in their houses suffer Que. What else Ans Dancing againe is in the number of vaine pastimes and the allurements to vncleannesse as much experience hath too wel proued The scriptures checke it the fathers mislike it the coūcels haue condemned it the proofe of Gods iudgementes vpon it biddeth vs beware Instrumenta luxuriae tympana tripudia sayth one the inticers to lust are pipinges and dancinges Laquei sunt scandala non solū saltatoribus sed spectatoribus They are snares and offences not onely to the actors but also to the beholders Iob. 21.11 Iob noteth it as an olde practise of the deuil to occupy men withall as an ancient exercise of the wicked that they should daunce Vpon which wordes a godly writer sayeth Calu. serm 80. vpon Iob. that from the tabret and the flute which in themselues are not vnlawefull they come to dauncing which is the chiefest mischiefe of all For there is alway sayth he such vnchast behauiour in dauncing that of it selfe and as they abuse it to speake ●he trueth in the worde it is nothing else but an inticement to whoredome In the gospell the spirite of God noteth it in a wicked woman as an immodest thing Math. 14. of a damnable effect in her wicked father Herode to dance And such as interpret the place are not afraide of these words Marlor ex Calu. that it was meretriciae lasci●iae turpis nota nubilis puellae saltatio That is that for her to dance beeing a maide for yeares mariageable was a note of whorish wantonnesse For whosoeuer saith he hath a care of honest grauitie he euer condemneth dancing and especially in a maide Againe hee calleth it spectaculum familiae Regiae probrosum A dishonorable sight in a kings house with manie speaches moe of mislike Sirac a wise man Syrac 9.4 and of great experience biddeth a man not to vse the companie of a woman that is a singer and a dauncer neither to heare her least hee bee taken with her craftinesse The godlie Fathers as I saide mislike it For saltatio ad adulteras Ambros de virgin lib. 3. non ad pudicas pertinet saith one of them Dauncing belongeth to adulterous and not to honest women A sharpe spéeche Yet was this graue father not afraide to speake it Saltatio barathrum diaboli Chryst Math. hom 48. sayth an other dauncing is the deuils hell And we heare spéeche of Iacobs mariage saith he in the scripture in Genes but not a worde of anie dauncing that was at it Theophilact in Mar. 6. Mira collusio sayth an other Saltat diabolus per puellam It is a strange iugling when wee thinke the maide doth daunce and it is not so but the deuill in her or by her The councels haue condemned it as others haue at large shewed And verie Tullie could say an honest man would not dance in an open place for a great patrimonie For the iudgementes of God vpon this vaine pastime it is strange which Pantaleon noteth out of Crantzius that in Colbecke a towne in Germanie certaine light persons hopping and dauncing in the Churchyearde of S. Magnus An. 1505. beeing by the minister admonished to cease and not ceasing did for a long time not able to stay runne rounde about and at last fell all downe dead But because others haue so largelie writ against this vanitie I say no more of it at this time but wish vs to consider that it is an inticement otten to adulterie and therefore in this commaundement forbidden And as for anie dauncing that wee reade of in the scriptures to haue béene vsed of the godly we must vnderstande that their dancing was euer a sober modest motion with some song vsually to Gods praise and men by themselues women by themselues Which nothing will warrant our custome and guise in these daies Que. Are there yet anie moe allurementes Ans There are yet many mo But I may not in this sort stande vpon them Gluttonie drunkennesse Ezek 16. with houses of open whoredome your booke nameth and proofes for them Idlenesse also is an other meanes 1. Cor. 7.39 the vowe of chastitie the deniall of seconde mariages the going of men in womens apparell and women in mans apparell Deut. 22. with a number such This onelie must I say and so conclude this negatiue part of the commaundement For he that will no euill do must nothing doe that longs thereto looke whatsoeuer it is that we can sée to bee anie allurement anie occasion or meanes to vncleannesse all that is condemned in this commaundement as much as the verie act of adulterie which heere onely is expressed Then howe the holie Pope of Rome can warrant by the worde of God the erection and continuaunce of his stewes iudge you although his gaine be neuer so much thereby Nay howe could that monster Sixtus the fourth warrant the erection of a stewes of both kindes In king Edwarde 4. that is both of women and men whereby 20000 and some yeares 40 thousande ducketes came to his coffers Or the whole Church of Rome so like of and so diminish the sinne of fornication Can this their spirite that guideth them be the spirite of GOD when it condemneth not the act whereof God condemneth all occasions and allurementes No no the Lorde giue vs eies and then haue we markes sufficient to bewray them by Que. Thus then may we see what we ●re forbidden in this lawe nowe I pray you adde something of the thinges we are commaunded in the same Ans For this matter your booke answereth well that as wee are forbidden in it all vncleannesse and all inticementes to the same so on the other side we are commaunded to kéepe our bodies and soules chast and pure as temples of the holy ghost or if the guift of chastitie be not giuen vs then to vse the lawefull remedie appointed for vs by God which is mariage Concerning therefore chastity we are to know that verie greatly the scripture layeth downe Gods liking of it and with many wordes exhorteth vs vnto it This is the will of God sayth the Apostle euen your sanctification and that you should abstaine from fornication ●hat euerie one of you should know how to possesse their vessels in honor and ho●inesse not in the lust of cōcupiscence euen as the gentils which know not God And in an other place 2. Cor. 7.1 Seeing sayth he that we haue these promises dearly beloued let vs clense our selues frō al filthines of the flesh and spirite and grow vp vnto all holinesse in the feare of God And againe the same Apostle beseecheth the God of peace to sanctifie them throughout 1. Thes 5.23 that their whole spirit and body soule may be kept blamelesse til the