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

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variable dispositions in all ages the which to meete with in all points it is for any prince or magistrate impossible the which therefore may be lamented but neuer throughly corrected or amended Howbeit hee thought as he saith that the cure of this malady being beyond mans power and wisedome God would in the due time take on himselfe and separate the righteous from the vngodly and then shall be the time and iudgement of all counsels and workes Hee also much museth how God though he had chosen of the children of men shoulde neuer the lesse permitte them to appeare God suffereth men to appear as the beasts as though they were but Beastes and as somewhat doubtfull of the eternall beeing of mans soule which is that spirituall substance which God hath made afer his owne likenesse and powred into the humane body and ioyned to the body doeth animate guide it but being separated frō the body dieth not The fleshly mans iudgement of the soule but liueth immortall for euer he saith Who is he which knoweth the spirit of man that goeth vpwarde and the breath of a beast that goeth downe to the earth And is not this the iudgement of worldely and carnall men which perceiue not the thinges which are of the holy spirit Indeed being as the beasts in their nature they consider nothing more And albeit the King hath said that it is best for a man to be ioyfull in his labour No man knoweth what will com on him or his posteritie after him which is his portion in this life yet to daunt him againe who saith he will bring him to behold what shal come on him or his posterity after him And truely this may easily discourage any man to prouide for his wife his children his familie and for the times to come when as without hope of future prosperities hee shall trauaile for them in the wind * These and such like passions of minde I haue perceiued in the king The great oppression in the world But yet beyond many others hee complayned of all the wrong that is done vnder the Sunne the which as appeareth by his wordes and lamentation is both vnmesurable and vnspeakable and the more for that the poore oppressed persons haue wept and shed aboundance of teares and yet haue not founde any in place ready to comfort them or to deliuer them from the violence of their oppressors And here as in regard thereof He much commended the dead before the living The dead cōmēded before the living because they are fréed from those miseries yea He commendeth him which is not yet borne to be happier then any of those because he séeth not nor hath had experience of those wretched toyles of men vnder the Sunne * Here he likewise complaineth of the Envy Idlenesse Envy idlenes couetousnes solitarines and covetous minds of men in this world he disliketh singularitie and solitarinesse of life in the which hauing too much presumed he hath béene wonderfully deceiued much annoyed in his life wherein hee soroweth for the abuse of his owne estate to the which inlieu thereof he preferreth the condition of A poore child that is wise A foolish king a poore child * Further in his wisedome he prognosticateth the foolishnes future misery of Rhehoboam his Sonne and heyre apparante and yet he hath both well nurtoured him Rhehoboam vnderstandeth that most men haue their eies fixed on him with great delight and hope of his happy successe and prosperity in time to come and some what the more hee is troubled because that men in regard of his young prince and his succession do somewhat neglect the present care and reuerence they should haue of his maiestie For they looke after the second man And indeede such is mans folly hee looketh alwaies further and affecteth the times persons and thinges either past or future before those which be present Some say the times and persons which haue beene of yore haue beene better then these which be present others say the best are not yet come but we hope for them to be hereafter the whiles they esteeme not yea they loath and contemne the good thinges which they haue and may vse at their pleasure and so in regard thereof do often losse both the commodity of th' one and comfort of th' other to their remedilesse miserie and continuall griefe And this saith he is a vaine thing and vexation of the minde Cap. 4.17 Moreouer the king hath highly reprehended and blamed many of them which enter into the holy house which he hath made for the seruice of God saying that their offerings are the offerings of fooles and they know not what euill they doe therein The which wordes being not well vnderstood will occasion the ignorant eyther to contemne the said house and the seruice of God therein or to forbeare to come into the same to shew their deuotion and religion to God as they are bound to doe CHAP. IV. Zabud speaketh againe reporting some other emphatical speeches of King Solomon SOlomons Lordes hauing thus farre proceeded in order to report what wordes they remembred vttered by the King in his affliction Zabud the Kinges familiar spake againe and said Well remembred my Lords And now besides the former I call to mind what the king hath saide concerning those Rich men of the world The Rich men of the world whome the most part of all men do estéeme happy in this life He saith that there is no man rich vnder the sunne for where much riches appeareth to be there be also many ready to spend and consume the same He that hath much riches cannot rest or sléepe in the night he that hath riches is oftentimes hurt and annoyed therewith and at length those which haue riches depart hence with sore anguish and sorrow of mind for there is no man but at length he must yeeld to death and shall carry away none of these thinges but are constrained to leaue all behind them that so they depart hence One man getteth another spendeth the riches of the world Cap. 6.1 as naked and bare as they came into this worlde notwithstanding their great trauels and long labours for their riches in all their life And this he esteemeth as a mighty misery which is so often seene vnder the Sunne that God giueth a man riches and goodes and honor so that he wanteth nothing of all that his heart can desire Cap. 6.1 and yet God giueth him not leave to enioy them but another man spendeth them The which as it seemeth he applieth to himselfe whome it chiefly concerneth In conclusion he seeth that many thinges encrease vanity and that a man vnder the Sunne findeth nothing else as long as he liueth Cap. 7. Furthermore the king though so wise did complaine that he could not yet get wisedome but that the more hee sought after it Solomon acknowledged his owne imperfection the
and Moses and Aaron And this he did also truely and speedily as soone as he saw the Angell of Gods wrath had drawen forth his sworde against him his people as David did when he saw the angell of God plaguing the people in this point he well resembled that wary bird which seeing the fowlers bow bent and himselfe in danger makes haste to flye away before that the arrow bee sent foorth against him remembring what his father had modulated If when that men offend the Lord they will not turn againe He furbisheth his percing sword in iustice them to paine He bends his bow it prepares with dreadfull darts of death And lethall instrumentes to take from them their vitall breath But alas there be in the world too many cōparable to that foolish bird which maketh no hast to escape frō the snare before he be taken therin Therfore I now remēber not only what he coūsailed Be not slow to turne to the Lord for sodainly shall his wrath burne like fier but what his father aduised psal 95.8 To day if ye his voice will heare Then harden not your faithles heart As ye with grudging many a yeare Provokte me in the wild desert It is meet that men attend him whē he calleth If men offer gold which is yet but transitory there bee which come with speede and the tree being shaken they will gather vp the fruit without long tarrying But when the Lorde proffereth peace to mans soule they come slackly regarde it little which is the cause they often misse the kings thousand But as for our Soueraign L. albeit we had been neither eare-witnesses nor eye-witnesses yet besides the K. gesture and present constitution of body the very words which wee haue heard from him and yet daily heare him to vtter That is his Ecclesiastes and the which being taken and collected into a register may bee called the booke of his repentance shall for euer witnesse and manifest the same thing For therein it doth and may appeare that our L. King Solomon not onely after his full and perfect experience of all the delights of the sonnes of men and the affaires of this life but also after all those his transgressions wherein he had so much vexed and disquietted both his minde and body angred the L. offended the holy ones distained his honor and endangered his soule is neverthelesse by the admirable operation of the diuine spirite brought to the true sense and knowledge of his sinnes and so of the danger of himselfe and his people the which is alwaies the first grade to true repentance from whence hee hath orderly proceeded to the full perfection thereof as hereafter yee shall vnderstand In the meane time my good L let vs think right honourably of the K. and beleeue that Iehovah his God hath not barred him out from the contrition and repentance of the blessed and so neither from the diuine mercy Ye haue well spoken most reuerēd father said the Princes which we haue gladly heard and will both concurre and conclude with you for the King to the honour of our God And truely in this that hee hath acknowledged and confessed his offences hee may not bee either condemned or disliked albeit hee bee the King of Israel no more then such a thing was blamed in David his father but rather to be commended as it was in him as first in regard of the good example wherby others might be instructed next for the more ease of his own heart oppressed with sorrow in the consideration of his sin with the danger ensewing it Thirdly for the better pacifying of the diuine wrath which is vehemēt against obstinat sinners and fouthly for the good of his people who vpon his repentance and remission might hope for peace there be some who when they haue sinned will not easily acknowledge themselues faultie either to God or to man and therfore are hardly perswaded to amend Wherin they bee like those which holden of desperate diseases not feeling themselues sick are hardly recouered for this is a great hinderāce to amēdment of life when men which are offenders will not acknowledge their offences But there bee some though not many of them which offending do by times feele and know their offences and seek to escape the diuine wrath by a faithful recōciliatiō and so are recouered in good time And these be like not only to those wise birds which as ye said eschew the arrowes comming towards them but also to those which being distempered in their bodies soone espy it and seek to preuent inconueniences by the aduise and help of the cunning phisician For as the sense of the sicknes is the commencement of the cure so the acknowledging of a fault is the first step to pardon and so to the amēdment of him that hath faulted But proceed most reuerend father we pray you and desist not vntill ye haue fully declared the order and manner of the K. true repentance for truly howsoeuer it hath beene a griefe and sorow vnto our hearts to hear of those his great transgressions and sins it is and shal be now a ioy and comfort vnto vs to heare of his happy Repentance by the which it may be the L. will also repent him of that euill which he had purposed to doe vnto him and vs and will turne iustice into mercy that we perrish not in this his high displeasure which is as a fearfull fyer to consume thē that wil neither repent them of their sinnes nor seeke him whiles hee may bee found in the singlenesse of heart CAP. XXX Zadok declareth the order and manner of Solomons Repentance THe Princes hauing heard Zadok thus farre acknowledged the equitie of his dealing and withall hauing praysed and commended the King in this point that although he were a King yet he disdained not both is acknowledge himselfe an offendor after the example of his father David they requested Zadoke to proceede who continuing the former argument spake againe to this effect Surely my Lordes as the K. is most wise and his wisedome euer remained with him so perceiuing that he had sinned against God who thereby was prouoked to anger hee did not onely acknowledge the same in his heart but also considered that the iudgements diuine were now ready to be executed against him and his people Yea Solomons Contrition as in Eccl. ca. 1. 2. hee felt the arrowes of God to stick fast in him whereby he was moved to such great contrition of heart and sorrw of minde for his sins that there was no health in his flesh nor rest in his bones he was brought into such an extreame trouble and heauines that hee went mourning all the day long as sometimes I saw his father David to do when his heart was contrite after the knowledge of his sinnes and sense of Gods wrath Secondly Solomons confession of his sinnes the king hath not omitted to vtter foorth the fearefull
wherof Good counsell for them that liue in this world men should not so much marvaile at the sodaine chaunges of others and at the inconstancy of these worldly things as they should endeuour to learne to beware that they depend not on the deceaveable vanities of this life and to take héede that they waxe not proud nor forgetfull of their maker and of their owne estate and condition in the fond abuse of the things which are not their owne but as lent vnto them to be vsed to the honor of God their owne necessities Lastly séeing that these things be so vncertaine they should in time prouide to lay vp for themselues those treasures which are permanent and many stéede them to their highest content in the feare and loue of him that blesseth and prospereth all them that neuer turne their faith from him The second Chapter King Solomons Lordes perceiuing the strange alteration of their Soueraigne waxe very sorowfull they enquire for the cause and endeuour to preuent the future inconveniences WHilest all those thinges were in action apparent euen before Strangers talked of openly and laid in the common ballance to be peazed and censured of euery man King Solomons noble Princes and chiefe Lords were assembled in the Councell Chamber there partly to conferre of the affaires of the kingdome for the high glory of Iehouah their God the benefite of the common-wealth and the right honour of their Soueraigne Lord partly to inuestigate and search for the causes of this the kings sorrow and sodaine alteration the which they wold assay to remoue or mitigate according to their wisdom knowledge and best habilitie Wherein they manifested themselues dutifull to their God profitable to the weale-publique and regardfull of their kings health and prosperity The duty of noble Counsailors to their King which are the principall things that noble Counsaylors and the worthy seruants of such Soueraignes should in their supreame places respect with all fidelitie Now vpon a sodaine Zabud the priest the sonne of Nathan and the kings familiar friend who had béene with his highnes for his better comfort in affliction all that night before issued forth of his priuy Chamber entred the assemblie of those Lords and although with an heauie heart mestiue mind and sadde countenance by reason of the Kinges great perplexitie and troubles he saluted them in these words Iehovah our God saue you my Lords all both Honourable and Reuerend the right happy princes of king Solomon To whome they all as with one mouth resaluting him answered the same Power blesse prosper and preserue you Reuerend Zabud the right trustie Secretarie and familiar good friend of our Soueraigne Lord King Solomon And whence come ye now my Lord an what is the cause if it please you that ye be so pensive and heavy to day Is all thing well To his Zabud replied My Lords all I am presently come forth of the Kings privie Chamber where I haue béene all this last night watching and attending on his most royall person the Lord God saue keep his grace howbeit there haue I found little or no comfort as God knoweth for much griefe and sorrowe hath betided the king which encreaseth yet more and more without mitigation and the like acreweth towardes vs and the whole kingdome as farre as I can gather by that which I haue both heard with mine ears and seene with mine eyes of and in him Vpon this saying in this manner deliuered before them such a strange terror and dread assayled the hearts of those Lords that being throughly astonished they neither were able to answer him The trouble of the King is a griefe to his Subiects nor wist they what to say For there can be no greater grief and discomfort to true hearted subiects especially to the faithfull Counsaylors of happy kings then when they shall either see or heare of the hurt sorrow or discontent of their Soueraigne Lord at the alteration of whose prosperous estate both Nobles and the Commons are sodainly moued much disquieted as that body which féeleth the distemperature of his proper head fearing the ensewing of such plagues troubles and vexations as are wont to follow and succeed the sodaine losse and departure of such heroicall persons by whose good gouernment and valour their Realmes and Common-weales haue bin right happily maintained in peace and tranquillitie Neither at the least should either the Nobles or the common people be merry or pleased in the sadnesse trouble or vexation of their Soueraigne Lord knowing well that natures of that grade and apprehension will not shew themselues heavie hearted and mestive for any light or meane causes At the length after long expectation silence pawzes and eagre looking one on another of them with deppe sighes pitifull groanes and cheekes watred with weeping eyes a principall Lord Azariah sheweth the good opinion loue and affection of a good Subiect whose name was Azariah though scarcely able for sorrow of mind to vtter with his trembling tongue his hearts conceit spake thus in effect Alas alas and how fareth then his most royall person how doth our good Lord king Solomon the most famoust most wise and most glorious King in all the world The God of heauen graunt his most princely grace both along life and a wished prosperity to liue raigne ouer vs and this people For I assure you my Lords as ye will know and must in equitie confesse that next and immediately vnto Iehouah our God hee is the approved stay of our house the lightsome eie of our body the resplendent glory of our kingdome the happy peace of our people the comfortable ioy of our heartes the glad solace of our soules the right guide of our gouernment the diuine wisedome of our nation the manifest maiestie of our God and the blessed preservation of Israel But how fareth the Kinges most sacred person In all this and other his speeches and gestures did this noble Azariah expresse the good opinion conceiued the right loue the godly zeale the faithfull mind the true affection and right worthy nature of a wise faythfull and obedient Subiect to his most gratious Soueraigne I will now tell you my good Lords saide Zabud how the king fareth I am well assured zabud sheweth the Kings alteration and present estate as ayming to his Repentance there is not any one of you all but hath plainely perceiued that his Grace is most strangely and sodainely altered of late from both his wonted constitution of mind and his common order of life and that his wordes also sauour now much other wise then they haue sometimes heretofore savored to our audience and vnderstanding For behold whereas he vsed to be gladsome and merily conceited now is he rauished with heavie dumpes and oppressed with lad●es wheras heretofore he accustomed to talke with a right lovely and lively voice now we heare nothing besides a voice of lamentation from him tending to mortification and
whereas we hoped for some consolatory refrigeration and ease by the mitigation of those extraordinary passions wee see him yet hardly perplexed and vexed out of measure with farre greater and more torments For why the Sunne so brightsome is shadowed the ioyful light is couered the fayre Moone is obscured the shining starres be dazeled Eccle. 12.13 and the palpable cloudes returne after the late raine Neither indeede haue I any hope of the recouery of his former constitution of mind and health of body although I hartily wish it and desire it euery minute of an hower he accustomed to sit often in his kingly Throane most royally amiddes his Princes but now he prostrates himselfe on the most lumpish earth and reposeth him selfe most solitary as one forlorne He was wont to feede on the most daintie delicates but now hee is replete with bitter worme-wood and loathsome gall he sometimes solaced his sweete soule with the chearefull delightes of the happie but now he laments his hard lot with the wringing corasiues of the wretched Whereas for his recreation he vsed Harps Shalms Psalteries Dulcimers and other musicall instruments of pleasing sound now are they all set aside and neglected yea he doth vtterly distaste those and such delights Moreouer whereas he dayly accustomed for the better health of his body which hee was carefull to preserue to exercise himselfe before his meates and to rest himselfe sometimes after towards his better digestion and that in his bed he would first repose himselfe on his right side wherein is the greater heate of nature to further the same with the due obseruation of such and other good phisicall Diets now he is as another man he doeth all contrary he obserueth no diet profitable to health neither can he rest in his bed any while but tossing and turning hither and thither hee declareth his anguishes and powreth out his heart in sorowfull complaints The very remēbrance of his former pleasures grieue his very soul he vtterly abandoneth that he before much affected though a most glorious king in his estate hee yet abaseth himselfe beyond all measure his eyes gush out streames the teares runne downe his cheekes with the which he hath all watred his bed in the night 2. Sam. 12. right semblant therein to Dauid his Father after that the prophet Nathan had brought him a message from the Lord his God yea he séemeth not most wearie of his present life death is wished for being more acceptable to him in these his agonies of soule and semblably his Wordes Sentences sayings vpon whatsoeuer occasion he vttereth them argue a very déepe mortification of the flesh a vehement contempt of the worlde and a plaine condemnation of all the delights of the Sonnes of men Whereby in heauy sighes and groanes hee driues this mestiue myll Vanity of Vanities and all is nothing but meere Vanitie Eccl. 1.1.2 Lo thus fareth the king neither can my great familiarity with his Grace or any word or gesture of mine now preuaile with him as in times past to remoue this dangerous humour from his heart but as soone as I put him in minde of those his pristine delights he crieth out most wofully The person truely repentant is not soon drawne againe to follow his former lusts Io● 27.2.3 Vanity of Vanities as though God had taken away his iudgement and the Almighty troubled his mind But howsoeuer it be I tell you here in Councell that the King is in a very desperate agony of minde then the which nothing can bee more noysome to his health For as the trée cannot prosper whose roote is annoied so neither can that person receiue health which hath a pensiue soule I am very fearefull to thinke whereunto this will come and doubtles the kinges enemies hearing hereof they will clap their hands hissing and wagging their heads vpon him as the base abiects sometimes did on holy Iob with this bitter taunt Is this that man whome all the world admire for wisedome wealth glory and fame But on th' other side the kings people shall haue little cause to eate drinke and to reioyce vnder their vines and figge trées as they haue done in those dayes forepast vnder our Kinges happy Raigne This being spoken and heard with consideration of euery of these Lordes Zadock the high Priest stood forth and with a mighty sigh from the roote of his troubled heart zadock expresseth the wisdōe function and afection of a good Bishop Counsaylor he lifted vp both his eies and handes towardes the heauens vttering these wordes Oh good God helpe vs he said againe The peace prosperity and well-fare of all Israell doth depend next to our God on the peace prosperitie and well-fare of our most gratious King Solomon whom Iehouah his God hath chosen and appointed to represent his own glorious person in our happy Common-wealth in his wisedome his iustice his equity his benignity his fortitude his magnanimity his piety and all other his princely vertues no lesse then the faire and bright Sunne resembleth his Maiestie in the high Heauens to the ioy and comfort of the Creatures or as doth the head on the naturall body to the bewtie life and gouernment of the same or as the wise Gouernour of a Shippe in the Sea to the direction and safety both of it and of all those embarked therein Therefore I say if the Lord of heauen in his displeasure should take away our shadow or abridge our king and his honourable prosperity for transgression and sinne who from thencefoorth shall haue peace who shall fare well who shall prosper how can that body prosper whose head aketh and languisheth with paine and how can those creatures reioice from the which the light comfort and commodity of the Sun is remoued detayned The people ought to pray for the good estate of their Prince Psal 20.1.2 Then worthily are the people occasioned and obliged in their solemne praiers and seruices to lift vp their mindes to the Lord God aboue all other thinges next to the glory of God to pray for the good health comfort wellfare and prosperity of our gratious Soueraigne Lord as my Lord Azariah hath well before aduised and wished it For I know that the king is not onely much agonized in mind and afflicted in heart but that he is much weakened and worne away neither thinke I that without some presēt remedy or mitigatiō of this his griefe can his weake body long retaine his sorowful Soule The good consent of the princes for the safety of their king This beeing said the Princes with one consent answered In truth it is no lesse needfull then it is godly that all the kings maiesties Subiects both in generall and particular should pray vnto God for the life and well-fare of the kings Grace for as this duty of subiects towardes their lawfull Princes is comprised within that honour which children are to yeelde to their parents and taught
or recording of that which is false or should raze or blot out that which is true This is a sinne agaynst God an offence to the King the perishing of a good conscience the decay of a good name the subuerting of mens rites the cause of contentions and an occasion of greate inconueniences euen in those matters and causes which concerne man and man how much more then are such vngodly practizes both heinous and hurtfull in the thinges which concerne the Lord of heauen and his truth to the which to add any thing or from the which to take away deserueth an extirpation and losse both of body and soule The consideration hereof my Lords and the daunger not forgotten will make a man héedie and carefull that in this office he neither erre nor doe amisse amisse much more that he offend not of set purpose But to speake for my selfe I haue aduētured to record nothing besides the truth that also which is not onely lawfull and honest but right worthie the kings Annales and very profitable to be remembred in the posteritie as such whereof the kings father spake saying This shall be written and recorded for them that come after The truth of the thing mine owne conscience shall alwaies testifie for me both before God man the one is strong preuaileth the other is to me as a thousand witnesses either to acquite me of guilt or to iustifie my doings in this case Moreouer ye shall find my Lord if it please you to turne ouer peruse and consider the Records that there is nothing contained therein recorded or confirmed by me besides that which hath beene well considered of and weighed with deliberation iudgement in this place and societie and by the consent of your honors decreed to be committed to my Record I fit be found otherwise the fault proued to rest in me especially if any such fault be wilinglie done let me beare the blame thereof yea let me as well worthie be depriued of the honour of my place let me be punished as a periured and faithlesse wretch and let me vtterly be discreited made ashamed to the terror and example of all others But I trust in God that howsoeuer some haue taken offences before they be giuen who therein resemble children of variable affectiōs the Kings Grace being most wise is not offended at me seeing I haue not offered him any abuse or iust cause or occasion of any such matter And that those thinges which haue beene recorded by mee in the kinges Annales cheifely such as concerne God and the king shall be belieued as the most certaine truth shall be receiued into the holie church and esteemed and canonized for authority with them that come after vs Helioreph and Ahiah the Secretaries excuse and iustifie thēselues euen vnto the end of daies This being spoken the two Secretaries stood forth namely Helioreph and Ahiah And we also said Helioreph haue beene much troubled with the like feare whether his excellent Maiestie hath holden either of vs or our dealings suspensiue as towching either the reueling of any his secrets committed to either of vs or cōcerning any commandemētes Precepts Patents warrants or letters that haue been written and set foorth by vs or either of vs in His highnes Name without his expresse commandement will or knowledge first had and obtained therein But truely as this were a note of much malepartnesse in vs and is indeede a dangerous kinde of Treason so should we thereby occasion the kinges people and subiects not onely to murmure against vs our dealings but to condemne the king of great simplicitie and weakenes permitting or neglecting such our bold presumption yea and they may thereon much dread what we may peraduenture do and execute against them in the kings name contrary to the lawes and the good pleasure of the king who being as they know most wise prudent and filled with diuine graces neither willeth nor executeth willingly any thing in the gouernment of his people but that which standeth with righteousnes and equitie and therein sheweth great magnanimitie kingly vertues towards them all whether they be poore or rich Num. 32.23 Neither I thinke but that as they which sinne against the Lord of heauen are found out of their owne sinnes 1. Sam. 22.5 when hee goeth about to iudge and punish them as Moses said nor shal there be found a dayse-man betweene God thē as in matters of trespas betwixt mā man as father Eli the high Priest in his time said so such as vsurp presume and sinne aganst the kings honor shal neither be hidden notwithstanding their great hypocrisy dissimulation nor be holden guiltles in the day when hee shal come to visit them in his fierce wrath But cōcerning any such matter doubted of me I here testifie from my cleare consciēce that if such a question were proposed I would gladly and that safely sweare take the liuing God to recorde for me that as I haue been euer secret to his grace in matters of secrecie to me cōmitted with al fidelity so hath there not any thing so passed mine handes to bee sent forth to his subiects touching any the kinges affaires without his graces will or prescript cōmādement or at the least without his certaine knowledge that I haue to the vttermost of my skill habilitie behaued my selfe faithfully in this respect both towards my Lord the king his liege people * And the same may be said also for me said the other secretary in al points as I likewise here protest for myself with integritie of minde Neyther besides the danger that of such a fault might ensew I promise you faithfully I durst not aduenture to attempt that which I knowe woulde much empaire and hurt that credit and good name pro. 12.1 the which as the King hath saide is better then the sweete smelling ointment and worth the preferring before Siluer Gold and pretious stones It is true that the sweete sauoure of filthie lucre both disswadeth and perswadeth many a thing The couetous mind of officers and the most part of all persons care very little how or by what meanes they come by wealth when as wealthie they would bee and therefore oftentimes such as be preferred to offices by his royall grace estéeming their priuate gaine and honour for the right end of their functions and callings deale therein I say not with great partialitie but with deepe iniquitie whiles seruing rather Mammon then the true God they say in their hearte if not with their mouth what will ye giue me What shall I haue What reward will ye bestowe and so fill their cofers with the treasures of vngodlines and sinne which doe yet but waite the opportune time wherein they may be called forth not onely to testifie but also cry and call for vengeance against them And then they shall confesse and saye we haue indeed wearied our selues in the
conscience which aggrauated by his owne sting or pricke doeth euer accuse condemne and wring mans heart If publique fame neither condemne nor accuse nor suspect yet the guiltie conscience within a mans selfe forceth the same to the vttermost neither can it be that he which liueth faultie shall escape the torment and terror thereof nor therfore can hee be happy in his life be he neuer so rich The comfort of a good conscience so honourable so strong so mightye so glorious in the worlde but blessed is the man that feareth God and walketh in his waies as David the Kinges Father hath modulated For this is that which in the lawe is required of him as the King hath saide This man concludeth to himselfe Ioy and gladnes Iob. 23.3.4.5.6.7 when that which hee hath done shal be well approued by the lawe This cheared Iob in the middest of his afflictions notwithstanding that his wife and his thrée friendes hardly charged him with folly So was Ioseph holde in Aegypt when his integritie cleared him So Moses and Aaron were not discouraged Gen. 40.41 Exod. 10. notwithstanding the threates and hard dealinges of Pharao and thus the Kinges father with a cleare consciēce protested before King Saul Behold this daye thine eyes have seene 1 Sam. 24.10 how that the Lord hath delivered thee this daye into m●ne hand in the caue and some bad mee to kill thee but I had compassion on thee and saide I will not lay mine handes on my Maister for he is the Lords annoynted c. And this to expresse the innocencie of his heart hee feared not to protest before the Lord in his prayer O Lord my God If I haue done any such thing Psal 7.3.4 or if there bee any wickednes in mine handes If I haue rewarded euill vnto him that dealte srowardly with mee yea I haue deliuered him that without any cause is mine enemy then let mine enemy persecute my soule and take mee Yea let him treade my life downe vpon the earth and lay mine honour in the dust Lastly I cannot but remember that worthie example of Samuel the Lords Prophet who was occasioned through the disobedience of the people before King Saul and them to pleade for himselfe to defende his integritie 1. Sam. 12.3 And thus hee saide with a good conscience and boldnes of Spirit Beholde here I am Beare record of mee before the Lorde and before his Annointed Whose Oxe haue I taken Or whose Asse haue I taken Whome haue I done wrong to Whome haue I hurt or of whose hand haue I receiued any bribe to blinde mine eyes therewith and I will restore it you They said their own conscience prouoking them thou hast done vs no wrong nor hurte neither hast thou takē ought of any mās hand Lo my lords here is ioy gladnes the greatest cōfort in this life for the good Conscience hath with it a thousand witnesses and as many pleaders to testifie for his owners integritie and to defend the same before the throne of Iustice This therefore is the swéetest and most wholsome rest of mans soule the title of Religion the spirituall Temple the blessed field the pleasant gardin the golden peace the Angelicall ioy the holy Arke the Kings treasure the house of the spirit and the glasse wherein a man both séeth ordereth and confirmeth himselfe to the liuely image of his maker Though the flesh oppresse vs the world allure vs the Diuel terrifie vs yet is this treasure safe and sure within vs from all daunger of euill Therefore I hold that in this life there is nothing more pleasant more swéet more profitable and more to be desired and reteyned then a good conscience both towards God and man Wherefore my Lords as ye haue very well done in that ye haue submitted your selues to this present examination and tryal so are ye happy in this that ye are iustified in conscience for hereof ye haue and shall find the highest comfort and gladnesse And now I beséech you to permit me to do as ye haue done The high priest is willing to ease himselfe in shewing forth his integritie with the rest that thereby I may not onely expresse mine owne integritie so cleare my selfe of all offence and suspicion of the same but also reioyce together with you though in the middest of mine affliction for the kinges trouble And that the sooner because whiles I stand an hearer and a iudge of other men in their examination and triall I might not séeme to disdaine mine owne 1. Kings 2.35 Abiather was before this time high priest howbeit his cause and dealing concerning both God and the king came into question before the king and his princes and being found guilty against either in his triall he was worthelie deposed and the priestshood translated Then why should I imagin my selfe frée from censures the rather in respect of my place and why should I not abide the hammering of that which should be obiected against me and my māner of procéeding towards God the king and his people And if I shall be found guiltie as Abiather was why should not I be remoued as he was another man put in my place more worthy And now my Lords although I may not say whether in my person or in my ministerie and behauiour wherin I am to prefigure the holy Messiah in his priesthood or whether in that Abiather the priest attended sometimes for me in the kings presence any contempt or abuse hath béene taken or suspected to his highnesse offence yet I know well that for mine owne part I here safelie protest from my conscience before the Lord of heauen and earth and before you all that according to that trust which the kinges father reposed in me when I was to annoint and proclame my Lord King ouer Israel and after that good opinion which the king himselfe conceiued of me in the day when he tooke me to him to be the Lords high priest in the place of Abiather whom he put away I haue performed the first and expressed the second whithout any deceit in the one or iust offence in the other and that after my state and dignitie so farre forth as a mortall man could possibly extend himselfe therein And of this as of my calling I hope ye doubt not Neuerthelesse let me be heard I beséech you a few words concerning both this and that seing that the Priesthood was ordayned to foreshew and signifie the office and dignitie of that highest Priest which is to come as vnto whō all the types and shadowes of the law do point it hath beene both prouided and commaunded by the Lord himselfe that the Priest might haue his lawfull calling and therewith not onely in bodie but in habites and ornamentes should be pure holy and glorious in all pointes To the which it was aduised how he should be consecrated what he should doe how he he should liue what wife he
and yeeld to him alas which is prepared both to arrest him and to carry him captiue to his long home in the which being reposed and laid among the deade Iob. 7.7.8 the eye that saw him before shall see him no more as said Iob neither shall his eye returne to see pleasure in this life nor shall he thenceforth féele the delights of the sonnes of men A description of old age he shall no returne to his house neither shall his place know him any more Against the which time therefore we perceaue in man as the king himselfe hath said that the Sun is darke the light the Moon the stars and the cloudes returne after the raine the kéepers of his house tremble the strong men bow thēselues Eccles 12. the grinders cease because they be few and they which looke out by the windowes waxe darke the gates without be shut by the base sound of the grinding and he riseth vp at the birdes voyce and all the daughters of Musicke are abased Also he dreadeth the high things and feareth in the way the Almond tree florisheth and the Grashoppers are a burthen and concupiscence is extinguished for he goeth to the house of his age the receptacle of all flesh and the mourners go about in the streat The siluer lace is not lengthned the golden yewer is broken the pitcher is cracked at the well the wheele is torne at the cisterne and dust returneth to the earth as it was The consideration of this dolefull alteration in man which yet is not effected but by a strong and forcible meane cannot but terrifie euery man liuing And sure it is A description of death that when a man shall sée grisely death inuading and assaulting him he shall be forthwith agonized quite quailed in conceit and vexed in his soule yea albeit he be not as yet compelled to yeeld vp his spirit for as death is in nature a tyraunt so cruell to all things which haue life so approacheth he as a mighty giant or man of arms with his bent bow and pearcing dart looking most sternelie dealing most rigorously tearing and renting his pray right Lion-like without rescue Moreouer as this is the same which all liuing and sensible creatures both feare and abhorre The anguish of him whom death summoneth so a man once touched with his deadlie dart knowing that now by the force thereof he is compelled to forsake and leaue his father and his mother his wise and his children his friends and his acquaintance his wealth his substance with all the glory pleasures and delights of this world he is grieued he soroweth he weepeth and lamenteth perplexed aswell in minde as in body with this most wofull complaint Time was that I was much pleased and delighted in all these thinges enioying and vsing them with great gladnes ioy but now alas I see him approching invading me which constraineth me to flie to relinquish all those my delightes with weeping eyes sorrowe of heart But yet such as stand in the toppe of this worldes happines as the King beyond all others hath stoode and prospered these many yeeres with heartes desier and soules solace they most of all tremble and be aboue measure troubled euen then when they shall but heare of deaths comming much more when they feele the dint of his dart of the which I haue heard the king himselfe in his wise Parables to speake the which saying for the grauity thereof is coppied out and translated by the learned into many languages Syrac had taken this from Solomons words in Egypt O death how bitter is the remembrāce of thee to that man who seeketh rest and consolation in his substance and riches Vnto that man which hath nothing to vexe or trouble him but that hath prosperitie in all thinges And this griefe is much augmented and aggraued in this that though a man bee neuer so rich honourable and pleasured in this life yet shall he not carry away any of those riches honours or pleasures with him at his death but as he came into the world naked from the womb of his Mother so goeth hee thether againe out of this worlde all naked Moreouer in the graue whereto he tendeth hee shall enioy neither sense feeling vnderstanding nor facultie of working as the King himselfe hath saide no nor yet that possibilitie to praise God nor to giue him thankes in the Hell as David also modulated the same beeing a place both of darkenesse and silence wherein man being defrauded of his hope and expectation the most glorious King is made equall with the poorest beggar the strongest Captaine with the basest captiue the wise with the foole the rich with the poore the happy with the wretched the beautifull with the deformed and the liuing with the deade For there is the same condition vnto them all without difference Therefore hath the king preferred a liuing dogge in hope Eccles. 9.4 before a dead lyon in dispaire * Then answered Abiather Indéede that thing which separateth the soule from the body so altereth mans nature and reduceth euery man of what degree soeuer hee bee into one and the same condition yea into the same confused Chaos or lumpe from whence hee was taken and formed is worthily dreaded of all men But death is the same indéede Therefore may I wel compare him to that fearfull Hiena Death is like the beast Hiena which being an enemy to mankind hath a vipers necke an Elephants back a mans voice the quantitie and qualitye of a Wolfe the haire of an horse and in sexe changeable as somtimes male sometimes female For Death which is an extream aduersary to mans life and seeketh how to destroy him staieth not his expectted time and tide nor waiteth mans leasure whether he be prepared or not prepared but hasteneth and preuenteth it as doth the viper the naturall time of birth comming forth by piercing the wombe of his mother the cause of her presēt death 2. the Elephant is a beast fit for the wars and Death as a man of warre is opposed to al things that hath life in this world and ouercommeth them 3. Death is a deceiuer of mortall men for albeit it is certaine that all men shal dye yet is his hower vncertaine taking them away when they thinke not of him and yer they be ready as the Hiena deceiueth by faining a mans voice 4. Death is a consumer of the liues of all things that liue as the Wolfe is a deuourer of the sheepe without sacietie 5. Death is neither restrained nor hindered in his course as the wild horse being stiffe necked wil not be bowed 6. Death killeth now men then women sparing no sexe no age no degrée of persons as the Hiena which altereth kind Therefore is death worthily dreaded of all men Howbeit we cannot yet learne or perceiue that the king hath either such warning or if he had would hee be much astonished or
whereby being like to the beasts they runne into many mischiefes and sinne more and more against God and their owne soules Gen. 6.5 Thus those olde sinners were alienated from the Lord for as their thoughts were by nature euill they were the sooner by this furthered and blinded in their malice for why the spirit of God which sanctifieth and garnisheth men with graces did not onely depart from them but also repented that euer they were in respect of their filthy abhominations Neither is it possible that hee can liue spiritually to God which is dedicated to the flesh for between the spirit and the flesh there is euer contrarietie Lastly as this withstandeth the graces of the diuine spirit heere by the which men should passe to the life of glory as by vertues men attaine to honor so indeede it shutteth vp vnto them the gate of the kingdom of God into the which neither fornicators Gen. 3.24 nor leachers nor vncleane persons shalenter no more then Adam could enter Paradize after that he had polluted himself with sin Lo what an enemy is the luxurious man to his owne life whether natural political spirituall or eternall And by this we see the dangerous condition of our L.K. Solomon yea by this we may behold consider what is the fraile nature of mā in this life A man being in honor and puffed vp in prosperitie hath none vnderstanding as king David sayde and therefore may bee compared to the beasts which perish for he forgetteth himself he remembreth not the Lord hee waxeth proude insolent hautie high minded prone to pleasures and ingratefull to God In this hee well resembleth the Siphny stone which though of it owne nature soft yet boyled in oyle waxeth wonderfull hard But after this their follow on him an hell of mischiefes huge torments for who can prosper in his deuises or endeuors which forgetting God walketh his owne wayes in the lewdnes of carnall lust Gen. 19. Exod. 32. Numb 25. Iudg. 19. Homer To passe ouer these examples of the Sodomites of the Israelites offending with the women of the Moabites Madianites of those men of Beliall that rauished the poore Levites wife in the time of our Iudges of Paris the Troiane of whō we haue heared let vs not forget the example of David the kings father 2. Sam. 11. After that God had both aduanced him and giuen him rest and prosperitie in his honor hee too soone forgate himselfe and burned in lust in whome the loue of the flesh was so naturall to the flesh that albeit reason as reason would put the desire to flight in him yet the flesh yéelded herselfe a captiue thrall to those desires by the which he was more fiercely assaulted then with the greatest enemies that euer he had For there be no foes so deadly and importunate as those which a man findeth and fostereth against himselfe within himselfe 2. Sam. 12.14 David had fought with the huge Goliah and cast him to the ground hee had killed a Lyon and a Beare which came to deuour his shéepe he vexed and spoyled the Philistines and other the enemies of Israel and euer returned home a victor and triumpher in the name of his God whereof they could sing to his praise David hath slayne his tenne thousand Howbeit this noble Prince in his rest and prosperitie as I said suffered lust in him to subdue reason gaue the raynes at large to carnall appetite and therein inflamed and agonized he vnlawfully desired abused Vriahs wife and yet not so contented he caused Vriah to bee vniustly murthered whereby he distained his honor he quenched out the spirituall graces and endangered his soule to the high displeasure of God who doth neither loue nor permit such delights in the children of men much lesse in his owne the seruants of grace And thus be it here spoken in counsayle hath our Lorde the king forgotten himselfe and both abused and dishonoured his honor Thus men set in honour are soone ouertaken therein for temporall felicitie is a most vnquiet thing neither can mans nature bee contained whithin his bounds and dutie of life in worldly prosperitie Worthily therefore David thanked the Lord for that he had beaten him with aduersitie which as he confessed hee found to be best for him It is good for mee sayd he that I have beene troubled But if wise men and godly men can scarcely and very seldome measure themselues in the vse of this flattring enemie how then should the ignorant and sinners doe when the Lorde sulleth them in this easie cradle Besides this here wee see What man is when he is given ouer to his owne will how foolishly the wisest of all men behaueth and demeaneth himselfe and into what inconveniences he runneth when it pleaseth God for his tryall to loose vnto him the raines of youthfull libertie and to commit him to the guide of his owne counsailes Surely hee may well be compared to the pondrous yron that of it owne nature sinketh to the bottome of the streame except it bee sustained or holden vp by some other thing This should mooue vs to pray vnto God that as hee would vouchsafe to succour and defend vs so he would not giue vs to our owne willes but that his will might be fulfilled in vs. For if we should but haue the guide of our selues and not be susteined and defended by the power and will of God it cannot bee otherwise but that we shall not only fall but fall away and perish from him and from our owne saluation euery houre in euery day of this our life Therefore that I may be briefe howsoeuer this euill custome of the pluralitie of Wiues came in or howseuer this kinde of pleasure hath beene vsed and delighted in among worldly men yea howsoeuer many wise men haue beene séene to solace themselues therein it is doubtlesse in the king a great fault and the more because hee is the king and should be a guide of holinesse and good example of life vnto others especially because the Lorde hath so blessed him with wisedome and diuine graces before all the kings of the earth Thus haue I explained the first of those thrée faultes which prouoked the Lord to displeasure the consideration whereof now moueth the king to this heauines of minde But yet the second fault excéedeth this in degree to aggrauate the sorrow and paine him to the heart These words being spoken and in such sort as Zadok could deliuer them prouoked the Princes to wéep with him wéeping to condole together the kings hard lot Howbeit they requested him to say somewhat more of that second sin which was as he said more heynouse and dangerous and so pauzed and expected what Zadok would say CHAP. XXI Of Solomons second sinne and third sinne viz. of his strange wiues and his turning away with the diuine Commination for the same THe second sinne of Solomon as I before sayd quod Zadok is
indeede a degree higher then the former albeit the former was abhominable and dangerous to his body life fame soule and glorie And that is the king hath combined himselfe with strange women for hee hath taken the daughter of Pharaoh Strange women and the women of the Moabites Ammonites Edomites Sydonites and Hethites whereas yet concerning those Nations the Lorde sayde vnto our Fathers zabud obiected Goe yee not into them nor let them come into you els will they turne your hearts after their gods To this obiected Zabud for the king But yet it hath beene permitted in the Lawe that such women might neuerthelesse bee taken accepted and vsed of our Nation with certaine prouisoes and conditions For the Lorde saith by the hand of Moses Deut. 21.11 If thou seest among the captives taken in warre a beautifull woman and hast a desire vnto her that thou wouldest have her to thy wife thou shalt bring her home to thine owne house she shall shaue her head and pare her nailes and put her rayment that she was taken in from her and let her remaine in thine house and bewayle her father and her mother a moneth long and after that thou shalt goe in vnto her and mary her and she shall be thy wife In this sort David the kings Father tooke one of his wiues namely the mother of Thamar whom he had captiued in his warres And thus did our king take and accept Pharaohs daughter of whom his father spake in the Psalme Hearken O daughter and consider encline thine eare forget also thine owne people thy fathers house so shall the king have pleasure in thy beautie for he is thy Lord God and thou must worship him And truely howsoeuer the Quéene did dissemble her owne former Religion and made shewe of loue vnto that which we loue and imbrace the king so accepted her and thought nothing lesse then of any hypocrisie in her And therefore in his integritie he imbraced her and tooke her as his owne All this I grant sayd Zadok And I will not denie zadoke answereth the obiection that the king did obserue the like according to the Lawe in all other his wiues and Concubines But why should not such as are receiued on conditions be retained on the same conditions and not otherwise for the meaning of the Lawe is that if such a woman albeit she be Pharaohs daughter or the daughter of any other Prince or person shall not hold and obserue the conditions touching the Religion and peace of Israel but apostate and turne away from the Lord and daily endeuor and study to pollute the honour of our king and contemne the religion of our God that thereupon she be abandoned reiected sent away from the Common-wealth of Israel much sooner from the kings societie yea rather then that societie should he continued to the danger of those inconueniencies Exod. 34.16 Deut 7.3 the parties should bee reduced and committed to the censure of the generall Lawe as when the league is infringed by the breach of the conditions the parties stand as in their former estate any thing to the contrary thereof notwithstanding And this is the Lawe to the children of Israel touching the abandoning of this kinde of societie with any of those seuen execrable Nations as the Hethites the Hevites the Gergesites the Amorites the Chananites the Pherezites and the Iebusites Thou shalt make no marriages with them neither shalt thou give thy daughter vnto his sonne nor take his daughter vnto thy son The reason is added whereunto this prouiso or condition hath respect For they will deceive thy sonne that hee should not follow the Lord and they shall serve strange gods and then will the wrath of the Lord waxe hote against thee and destroy thee This thing Abraham our father both considered and respected long before the Law giuen by Moses for hee had seene the inconuenience of such coniunctions in the old time when by the same the sonnes of God were polluted and the whole earth destroyed in the dayes of Noah Gen. 24.3 therefore hee gaue his seruant a speciall charge for the match of his sonne Isaak with a mate of a faithfull Family The like also Isaak respected when hee disliked the mariage of his sonne Esau with the Hethites and charged his sonne Iacob not to take him a wife of the daughters of Chanaan Gen. 26. 27. but that hee should repayre to his Vncle Laban and take from thence of his daughters But howsoeuer such coniunctions might be tolerated or winked at vpon occasions in some others what needed Solomon the sonne of David to haue lusted after the women of a strange Natition Are not the daughters of Zion faire and beautifull and wise and vertuous yea are they not preferred in honour to all the women in the worlde And did Solomon feare of any heathen Potentate that hee would in this sort be lincked vnto him in amitie for the retayning of peace Yea is hee not stronger and more wise and politicke then any of them all And doe they not more dread and admire him then hee hath neede to doubt what they are able to doe against his Maiestie But alas lust is blinde and many wise men as I said before bee led blindfolded into the pitte of preuarication and woe by such women as being of an euill opinion and like Religion will receiue no kinde of Counsaile which withstandeth or hindereth their fonde lustes and vanities And thereof it is that the King so prudent wise and famous hath beene bewitched enchaunted and besotted so farre that in the lightnesse of voluptuousnesse he hath altered his single minde and distained his honour * These be great faults my Lords but yet hee is much more blameable and guiltie of iudgement no lesse of punishment The third sin of Solomon though hee bee a king because that in his lustes hee hath turned away his heart from the Lorde his God which hath appeared to him at two sundry times For beholde the king hearkening vnto those his strange Wiues which had nowe at length apostated and turned backe againe to the Religion of their Fathers and Countrey hee hath followed after Asteroth the God of the Sydonians and after Melcome the abhomination of the Ammonites and he hath built an high place for Chamos the abomination of Moab euen in the hill that is before Hierusalem and vnto Moloch the abhomination of the children of Ammon and the like hath hee done for other his outlandish Women which burnt incense and offered diuers sacrifices to their sundry Gods Neither seemed the king then touched with any remorse of conscience but cleane contrary to the Lawe of God the charge which his father gaue him the lessons his mother taught him and that which his owne wisedome should perswade in him he hath fowly prostituted himselfe to their lewdnesse and disgraced his Nobilitie Yea all this hath the king done even in his elder years
in that time of his age Solomon offended God in his elder daies when he should rather haue abandoned fleshly lustes the delights of the sonnes of men and all the vanities of the worlde and haue offered vp himselfe both body and soule a sweete and holy Sacrifice acceptable to the Lorde his God in that holy Temple which hee both built and dedicated to his Name Alas what a blemish is this to his Grace and that his gray haires shoulde bee polluted with youthfull lustes This is one of the things which I haue heard him saye that his very soule abhorred But when vnto those lustes shall ioyne that transgression of the Lawes and abhominable sinnes against the true seruice and honor of God and that in olde men oh God howe great and daungerous is this kinde of abhomination A great deale more loathsome and daungerous is the fire in an olde house then in a newe and no lesse dangerous and loathsome is sinne in an old person beyond those which bée in the yonger sort Olde men should bee to the yonger examples of a chaste life holinesse godly behauiour Religion and vertues they should be profitable to the common-wealth by their wisedome reuerend before all men for their age and well prepared for the place of eternitie vnto whose gate they are or should be ready to enter with holy hearts and cleane bodies they in whom the contrary is found especially among the Princes Nobles Magistrates and persons of name and account are rightly likened vnto those olde Cockes that bring forth certaine blacke and blewish Egges Similitude which being couered by some venemous beast as a Toade or serpent in the canicular dayes there is hatched a Basiliscus or Cockatrice of that venom which infecteth and killeth men with his piercing sight By the Egge is vnderstood the euill worke or action of the faultie olde man by the venemous beast is meant the suggestor or flatterer of him in his faults by the Cockatrice is noted the wicked example and by the persons killed the seers and imitators thereof For those elder persons and namely Princes and Magistrates which haue beene estéemed and honoured in their places now sinning against God and the honor of their functions and their sinnes fostered and nourished by the pestiferous and wicked suggestion giueth a most pestilent example the which being seene of the Subiects yonger and inferiour persons infecteth and corrupteth them and as much as lyeth in him he killeth him And thus hath the king done Howbeit now at length he perceiueth that the iust iudgements of God threatned in this case and wont to ensue on them that breake and contemne his holy ordinance and Lawe is now prepared against him and this whole Nation yea more fiercer than it was in Davids time when seuenty thousand dyed in the pestilence Neither hath he found as yet by his wisedome how to excuse himselfe in this matter nor how to defend his innocencie for behold it is neither the king though so wise and royal nor things in heauen nor them on the earth nor any other power or might whatsoeuer that is able either to dispence with this diuine Lawe or to beare the effects of that celestiall wrath Woulde God that King Solomons example could be remembred of all thē that shall come after him An admonition for princes to remember Solomons example and learn to feare the diuine iudgements to be placed vpon his throne that in the middest of all their prosperity they wold thinke of aduersity as Iob did with that reuerence and feare that they presume not so farre to tempt the Lorde in the lust of their eyes the lust of their flesh and in the trust of their proper wisedome worldly policies and high places for howsoeuer they be preferred and aduanced and do stand yet shoulde they know themselues to be but men yea miserable and fraile men in this life subiect to whatsoeuer misery betideth other men Wherein the King is no freer then the beggar though preferred in his estate royall and the lustie yong man is no more respected then the olde man to whom crooked age is a continuall sickenesse such is mans condition for this cause men be well likened to the grasse in the field and all their glory honour wealth wisedome beauty and whatsoeuer els wherby a man is adorned in this world and in the which hee delighteth as that which is mans or incident to his pleasures in this life is rightly likened to the flowers of the grasse in the fielde the which are by diuers occasions either withered or altered in a very short time neither is any one herbe or flower in the fielde more free from those blastings burnings annoies and perrils then any other in the same notwithstanding that one beyonde the other is in higher estimation and price among men But as for the Lord our God he is most mighty euer the same without alteration or changes alwaies sufficiēt a reuenger of them that dishonour him and a very consuming fier to deuoure the ongodly as the stuble from the face of the earth hee is in his iudgements most iust in his workes most perfect in his wisedome infinite and in all thinges good for his saints and glorious in himselfe This is he that ouerthroweth man in offences and compasseth him about with a net wherein if sinfull man should complaine of violence done vnto him Iob. 19.7 he shall not be heard and if he cry for helpe there is no sentence to bee giuen for him he must abide his lot and beare the iustice of the Iudge without hope of change or alteration of the decree vntill it bee his pleasure vpon mans true repepentance to turne Iustice into mercy and paine into peace * All this answered the Lords being true can neither be denied nor dissembled but we wil witnes the same though to our sorrow because it toucheth our Lord the King Howbeit we haue not found that the holy religion hath beene altered but that the seruices of Iehovah our God and al his holy sacrifices are continued in that house which the king had dedicated to that vse howsoeuer those strāge women haue in their apostacie turned to their Idols againe affected the superstitions of their seuerall nations and obtained by the kings fauour permissiō to vse their own religions within these his territories and dominions I grant said Zadoke that our holy religion is yet preserued in vre howbeit not without a manifest contempt zadoke tels that religion is much blemished by those sins of Solomon 1. Sam. 5.2.3.4 Iudg. 6.31 when such as deride and disdaine the same shal be both permitted and maintained in the open face of the king and his people Could Dagon stand before the arke of God Would Gedeon permit in his daies that any man shold pleade Baals cause did our father Iacob suffer that his wife Rachel should retaine with her Labans Images or that any of his sonnes or family should be
the princes with one accord expressed by signes both their gratefull minde and ready will to yeeld to the performance of this dutie knowing so well not only that the reasons alleaged were of sufficient probabilitie merited allowances but also that those the Kings Wordes were perfite veritie profitable for the Church in posteritie and therefore would that they should bee committed to writing and preserued accordingly CAP. XXXII Zadok answereth to certaine Obiections and expoundeth those wordes Vanitie of Vanities Abiather THen Abiather the Priest who had before obiected against the king and his wordes rose vp againe and saide But yet my Lords before we collect and record those the kings words that our labour therein may not be in vaine beseech you let vs further heare what my Lorde Zadok will answere to those particular Exceptions which are taken and may be vrged hereafter for some presumption against the Kings Words especially against this his ordinary talke towards the ratification of diuers erronious opinions that so all things being made plaine by vs by whom those the Kings Words must be gathered recorded commended to the church there may hereafter no iust aduantages bee taken nor any exceptions be admitted against any thing in the same The princes And we are well pleased said the Princes if it shall please my Lorde Zadok to vouchsafe vs his learned iudgement patience therein zadok And I also said Zadok shall not be vnwilling to answere Abiather in these things as the Lord shall enable me for the better setting foorth of his glorie and the truth of the Kings wisedome vttered in those his words What is the first Exception The first exception Eccles. 1.2 tell me Abiather The first Exception said Abiather is taken against those words of the king where hee saide and yet dayly saith Vanitie of vanities and all is most plaine vanitie There is not any of you all but haue heard him vtter these words aswell as myselfe wherein howsoeuer the king entendeth it there be which thinke that the king therein condemneth all the Creatures of God in the worlde with all those functions which in the law of God we are commanded to vse and to exercise our selues in to his high glorie the good of his Church and the benefite of the common-wealth And this he would prooue by many Arguments and in the ende so concludeth againe Vanitie of vanities Ye haue said quod zadok Eccles. 12.9 The answere but by your leaue Abiather and by your patience my Lordes all Séeing it is your good pleasure I shall answere I am the more willing as I said and ready to speake for my Lord the Kings Wordes It is true that the King hath saide and dayly ruminateth this proposition Vanitie of vanities Vanitie of vanities and all is but vanitie as the ground or conclusion of those his Words But doth that conclude a contempt of the Creatures and of the holy functions and gifts of God which in their natures are good Nothing lesse Nor indéed hath the king spoken therein of those Creatures or of the true vse of them in their kinde nor of those lawfull functions either in the Church or in the Common wealth But the wordes hauing a large scope doe neuerthelesse include in them all those things which are placed vnder the Sunne onely that is to say within the kingdome of vanitie Vanities kingdome Wherein is found to reigne much malice and little wisedome wherin all things be vicious all things be loathsome al things are full of obscuritie and snares wherein soules bee endangered bodyes be afflicted wherein all things be vanitie and affliction of the spirite and within the which are not comprehended any of those workes or wayes of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The labour of man vnder the sunne And this the king hath sometime noted by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or labour of man vnder the Sun which word as ye well know noteth rather the affliction of the minde then a worke of the body or any other labor But to make this yet more plaine let vs consider first what the King meaneth by this word Vanitie and then what the things are which he comprehendeth vnder the same For why should men contende about that whereof they knowe neither the meaning nor the reason Therefore yee shall vnderstand that this worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vanitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vanitie which the king vseth singularly and absolutely signifieth a very light thing that which soone vanisheth away as the smoke or as a bubble of the water and as touching any profite is worth nothing psal 144 The vanitie of Adams sonnes as saide the Psalmist Thus Adam and Hevah reposing all their hope of the promised seede in Cain their first borne whom they called a man of the Lord they thought of the next Sonne but as of a meere trifle or transitorie thing in respect of him and therefore they named him Habel Gen. 4.1.2 vanitie But the King here speaketh of an exceeding great vanitie the which to declare hee duplicateth the worde and saith Vanitie of vanities that is beholde a notable and wonderfull great vanitie what things he comprehendeth vnder vanitie Secondly What things are comprehended by him within this vanitie the next worde plainely sheweth vs for in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Haccol where it is to bee noted I will speake it rather to teach others then any of you to whom the Phrases of our tongue are so well knowne that this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col put absolutely without He 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a signe vniuersall whereby the totall summe of things is signified and is so much to say as All or Altogether Haccol but hauing He prefixed as Haccol the same is abridged and restrained to some speciall or particular summe of things as not All generally or vniuersally but All that that whole that all which is either spoken of before or comprehended within such a predicament place or time Neither may any man thinke but that the particle in this place is referred to some particular or speciall summe of things or to some notable person as when pointing to such persons or such matters wee vse to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That singuler or speciciall Prophet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That worde or that singuler or notable worde Ille sermo That word or matter So saide the Gréekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So by this wee may not say that the King hath included all things vnder vanitie but onely a particular summe of things Séeing therfore that all things are not drawne vnder this vanity but some things what things are excluded from vanitie and what not we may consider first what the things are which are excluded and stand without the compasse of this All then what those things are which are comprehended within the same both the which are to be gathered and
Obiection 7 of women Ca. 7.29 that the King was thought to condemne womens Sexe May I also heare from whence this surmise is taken from that said Abiather where he said This have I found seeking one by one to finde the count and yet my soule seeketh but I finde it not I haue found one man of a thousand but a woman among them all have I not found Answere And will they heereof conclude said Zadok that a woman therefore is not found among the Saintes He condemneth not womans sexe or that womans Sexe is prophane an euill thing I deny the consequence for yee wander farre from the kings meaning therin It is very plaine that howsoeuer the K. knoweth that he hath bin deceiued and polluted with wicked women and himselfe hath spoken against the vngodly and strange women and their vices yet did he neuer condemne the sexe or kinde of women He speaketh by comparison nor the godly woman and her vertues But he hath spoken by way of comparison as thus If of men there be found as fewe as one man of a thousand which vnderstandeth and considereth of the course of mans affayres and of his vanities vnder the Sunne and of the cariage of things in this world according to the will and prouidence of God surely of women there is not found one within that number for if men haue not that wisedō how should those weaker vessels I mean womē Howbeit we may not for all that think that by this number certain which he taketh for a number vncertaine by this hyperbolicall speach hee vtterly excludeth all women from the life of the saints number of the wise Thē might he bee found indeed to condemne Sarah the wife of Abraham and Rebecca the wife of Isaack and Hanna the mother of Samuel and the wife of Manoah the mother of Sāpson Ruth the Moabitesse and Rahab of Ierico and Abigael and Bethsabee the kings mother others of the generation of the iust which are so much commended in the holy write But the King in his wisedome knowing the excellencie of such women hath worthily praysed them and their vertues saying Pro. 31. The woman that feareth the Lord shal be cōmended give her of the fruit of her hands and let her owne works praise her openly And he said againe that such a woman shall be given by the Lord for a good portion to such a man as feareth him * 8. Obiection 8 of the doubtfulnes of Gods loue mercie Chap. 9.1 Answere Ye haue said said that the King hath taught a doubtfulnes of the Love mercy of God But let me heare of what words ye haue taken that The king hath oftē said quod Abiather that No man knoweth either love or hatred of all that is before them And both this sayde zadoke teach vs a doubtfulnes of the loue and mercy of God towardes his children in this life No truely for by this he speaketh of an other thing as first that considering the manifold confusions of mans affayres in this world no man in the view thereof or of any other external thing can take censure of matters diuine nor truely discerne No man can iudge of divine things by these externall things what things he ought either to choose or refuse in this world For the Lord sendeth both prosperitie and aduersitie aswell to the wicked as to the godly Next the King knoweth that albeit the soules of the righteous bee in the hand of GOD so that none euill may touch them yet such is the corrupt iudgement of flesh and blood ignorant of GOD and of his wayes Men consider not whō God either loueth or hateth that he neuer somuch as considereth what kinde of men the yare which God loueth and what kinde of men they are which God hateth and therefore are they no more louing nor thankfull vnto the godly whom the Lorde loueth howsoeuer they haue well deserued then they are vnto the vngodly 9. Oiection of the soule Cha. 3.21 which neither feare God nor endeuor to benefite his Church * Yee further obiected that the King hath cast into doubt the being of the Soule I pray what hath he sayde to occasion this conceite of him he hath sayd quod Abiather Who knoweth whether the soule of man ascendeth vpward and the spirite of the beast descendeth downward to the earth As who should vehemētly affirme that no man knoweth the life or being of the soule Ergo he doubteth thereof Mans iudgement of the soule of a man I deny that said Zadoke for albeit the naturall man neither knoweth nor vnderstandeth this by his reason yet the godly man by his faith beleeueth and comprehendeth it The purpose of the King therefore in these words is to set foorth the imagination of the children of men which cannot conceiue by any wisedome or reason of man that the soule of man is immortall and ascendeth vp into heauen after his dissolution no more then doth the breath of a beast Ye haue said also that the K. doubteth of the life sense of the humane soule 10. Obeiction of the sense of the soule Chap. 9 5.9.10 Yea said Abiather for he saith Whosoever is ioyned to the living there is hope for it is better to a living dog thē to a dead Lyon for the living know that they shal die but the dead know nothing at all Neither have they any more a reward for their remēbrance is forgottē Also their love their hatred and their envy is now perished they have no more portiō for ever in al that is done vnder the sun Answere To this answered Zadok I meruaile what should moue any man to think by these words that the king doubteth of the life and sense of the soule after his departure as therein to giue aime to the opinion of them that thinke the soules doe either die or sléepe vntill the iudgement which is to come so contrary to the holy Scriptures and beliefe of our Fathers for Solomon hath no such aime nor meaning All men are admonished to vse the time of their life in the works of their vocation But hee speaketh of the dead and not of the soules which liue for euer and wisheth all men to vse the time of their life and present opportunitie for the exercising and performing of the woorkes of their vocation for the benefite of the Church the good of the Common-wealth the discharge of duties and the glorie of GOD. For that by death which dayly draweth on them all men are depriued of all sense worke and labour of this life to doe thencefoorth therein either good or euill For they haue finished their course played their partes and cannot returne either to perfect their defectes or to supply their wants in the performāce of that dutie wherunto they were both created and called but must from hence-foorth let all alone for euer that so the tree might lie wheras
cureth euery patient seeing against the strength of death there is no phisicke auaileable the king coulde not as himselfe confessed cure all thinges for many thinges remaine imperfect defectiue and incureable in vanities kingdome All thinges cannot be cured in this world neither howsoeuer the medicines are compounded and applied may any man imagin that they can be salued and recured But this fault is not long of the phisician and his medicines but of the euill constitution and nature of the patient and his griefes * In the second generall parte the King proposeth the chiefe end of mans life in this worlde The chiefe good to be pursued which is The feare of God the keeping of his commandementes and is indeede the dutie of every man and that which by the law of Gods is required of all men as I saide before And as in the former hee shewed what things most encrease mans vanity and miscry so here he teacheth what they are which further him towardes his felicitie And they are certain vertues which he opposeth to those former vices Certain vertues commended which further men towards happines As namely the wisdome of God spirit prudence whereby a common wealth is gouerned Iustice obedience to laws and magistrates modesty temperance industry diligēce charity patience in troubles sobriety humilitie fidelitie truth praier liberalitie iudgement and to bee short pietie and the right seruice of God And because all those thinges are required of a man in the opportune time at the least within the compasse of his humane life The benefit of time therefore he is carefull to counsel and aduise him to take the benefit of the time and not to defer or put off from day to day to do perform that which is required of him lest he bee sodainely taken away and perish nor can at any time thencefoorth finde the like opportunitie to worke and effect that which hee shoulde haue done and now at length though all too late hee is most willing to doe if hee might haue a graunt of that libertie and time againe Therefore hee hath saide and saith it often to them that stand before him to heare his wisedome Whatsoever thou takest in hand Cap. 9 9. do it with all thy power For in the grave wherevnto thou goest there is neither worke counsell knowledge nor wisedome As if hee said there is no time allotted for men to worke and do the workes of their vocations after this life They therefore that bee willing to serue GOD in their seuerall functions as they ought must bee right diligent therein and obserue their times in this life at the least and not deferre it to the life to com Againe hee saith Remember now thy maker in the daies of thy youth whiles the evill daies come not nor the yeeres approach Cap. 2.1 wherein thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them And to the end he might not onely teach the great vanitie of mans life in this worlde but also take away from him all delaies which commonly followe the hope of long life hee setteth foorth mans Olde age and from thence defineth his death and lastly teacheth the immortality of mans Soule the consideration whereof beeing set before mans eies doth often containe him within the boundes of his duty as wise to God wary of the world and carefull for himselfe And this the King hauing said and strongly proued his former generall proposition he concludeth with the same thus The conclusion of the book Vanity of vanities all is meere vanity Lo thus hath the king spoken such is his purpose in those his words which some would so perversly constre against him and his good meaning crowne and dignity And of this sort is euen his ordinary talke and such are his sentences sayings and words which he dayly vttereth In the which as they are right consonant and agreable in all thinges to the sacred veritie and holy scriptures whosoeuer heareth and considereth aright shall find here and there applied such and so many excellent doctrins resolutions sentences The excellencie of Solomons wordes contayned in the Ecclesiastes proverbes parables examples counsels consolations exhortatiōs admonitions comminations reasons arguments and conclusions with such change and varietie of times though as yet on one instrument and on one ground to draw from vices and to perswade to vertues that they which read heare or vnderstand the same if they be not enchanted with some erronious spirite shall therein and thereof very easily finde out the heauenly wisdom with no small comfort of heart reape no little cōtentation of Soule when thereby the sooner the holy spirit assisting them they shal be enabled to contemne the deceiueable vanities and lusts of the world they shal be encouraged to vse the creatures of God thankfully to walke in their vocations wisely to liue in this world honestly to behaue themselues worthily to beare afflictions patiently and to passe in the same victoriously through the bottomlesse profundity of the horrible confusions of this wretched life towardes that Best Good and highest felicitie CAP. XLII The Princes having examined and approved Solomons wordes for veritie agree to collect the same into a booke to the which they prefixe a fit title and declare the reasons thereof ZAdoke hauing thus answered to all the former exceptions and obiections taken and opposed to the king and his wordes the Princes Lordes which were thus assembled in counsell and hitherto listned to the disputatiō and conference between Zadok Abiather answered said to Zadok Ye haue both learnedly and right godly answered and resolued all those doubts most reuerend Father whereby the sooner as both we al others are and shal be moved to esteeme worthily of the K. as of a Sainct of the L. no lesse of those his Sermons and wordes so consonant to Gods truth and profitable to instruct and teach all men so now let vs consent in one mind to collect those Sermons and wordes as wee may best call them into memory Ye haue wel said my L. saide Zadok it shal be good and profitable both for our selues and for many others that we do as ye haue saide But first it may please you that we agree on some fit Title to be prefixed and the Helioreph Ahiah the kings scribes or one of them woulde write the same With a very good-will saide the Scribes and what shall wee write Write thus said Zadok Eccl. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words of that Koheleth or the preacher the son of David K. in Ierusalem The title of Solomons last wordes And thus haue we written said the scribes But my L. said zadok how like ye this title we like it very wel answered the Princes May it please you also it be examined that the reasons thereof being declared all others may likewise bee satisfied with vs Yea said zadok it pleaseth me right well howbeit with conuenient
rash with thy mouth nor let thine heart be hasty to vtter a thing bofore God c Cap. 6.1 There is an euill which I saw vnder the Sunne and it is much among men c Cap. 7.1 Surely there be many things that encrease vanitie and what availeth it man c Cap. 8. Who is as the wise man who knoweth the interpretation of a thing c. Cap. 9.1 I have surely given mine heart to all this and to declare all this c Cap. 10.1 Dead flyes cause to stincke and putrifie the best oyntment of the Apothecary c Chap. 11.1 Cast thy bread vpon the waters and after many dayes thou shalt find it c Cap. 12.1 Remember nowe thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth c Verse 8. Vanitie of vanities saith the Preacher and all is Vanitie CAP. XLIII The Conclusion of the Booke contayning the declaration of the Princes and Collectors concerning their approbation of Solomon and his words with their Affixe to the same THe Secretaries hauing written the Words of King Solomon according to the former collection they said vnto zadok and the Princes Behold my Lords all these words haue wee written with diligence Is there any thing else that ye would we should also write Solomon spake much more then is here remembred Truely saide the Princes the King hath spoken in our hearing many other things right worthy both the remembrance and the writing yea and so many as wee neither could beare away nor can now report and the Kings wisedome and diligence hath yet farre passed and exceeded It is most true in very truth said Zadoke And although the Lord his God hath wonderfully blessed him with wisedom knoweldge vnderstanding and many rare graces farre beyonde that any other man now living doth enioy yet he omitteth not Solomon yet studieth and searcheth for more wisedom nor neglecteth his daily study and diligence to search for and to obtaine and get more wisedom more knowledge more vnderstanding and more graces and hee yet learneth and ruminateth that both night and day which hee mindeth to produce and teach vnto the people Neither doth hee aduenture to speake or vtter any thing before that hee hath with wisedom conceiued it and with a perfect iudgement digeasted it in his heart For hée knoweth that as in the ordinary course of nature the conception goeth before the birth so learning ought to goe before teaching in him which is the teacher First therefore he hath learned yea and yet he continueth a learner that thereby he might the better know all things and frame himselfe a Teacher And to that end he hath béene a diligent searcher of all Antiquities and the worthiest monuments of the ancient Fathers hearkening therein to the counsaile of Moses Deut. 32.7 where hee faith Remember the dayes of the world that is past consider the yeeres of so many generations Aske thy father he will shew thee thine Elders and they will tell thee Genesis Exodus Levit. Num. Duet And therefore he hath commonly in his hands the Bookes of Moses as namely Bereschith Velleschemoth Vaichrah Vaiedabber Ellehaddebarim Also the Booke of Iob the Booke of Iosuah the Bookes of Shemuel the writtings of Nathan of Gad of Asaph and of his father David with the volumes of other Prophets wise men neither abandoneth he the writtings of Homer other learned monuments of the Gentiles From and out of the which he hath gathered and yet gathereth of learning knowledge and wisedome more and more euery day Nor is the King ignorant of this that as the herbe Moly which is so good and soueraigne for medicine beyonde many others is very hardly digged or drawen vp from the earth so those things which are excellent indéed and of speciall choice come not to men without exquisite studie wisedō is Gods guift yet must men study labour for it and great and hard trauels and that albeit the excellencie of wisedome knowledge and iudgement is not atchiued or gotten by any the wit wisedome power policie or agilitie of man but commeth from the Lordes goodnesse and mercy yet doth not the Lord ordinarily giue or bestow any of those things without the lawfull exercises of reason studies and diligence but he is right willing to helpe and further the true labourers to instruct them which reade aduisedly and to further them which haue a desire to procéede faithfully in the way of his commandments to and for the which he maketh his word a Lanterne vnto their fecte and a light vnto their pathes To this purpose he giueth them Séers wisemen Prophets Priests and goodly Princes and he powreth foorth of his diuine spirite whereby they be made apt and capable of those singular graces Whereof wee haue many worthy examples as namely in Noah in Lot in Abraham in Iacob in Ioseph in Moses in Samuel in the Kings father and lastly in the King himselfe who in his youth as the Lorde by his spirit had disposed him prayed vnto the Lord for wisedome exercised himselfe in the things which thereunto appertained hearkened to David to Bethsabe to Nathan to Gad to Asaph and to his noble Counsailors and vsed the reason and wisedom which God gaue him as a talent encreasing So God yet more and more prospered him from day to day hee taught him he aduised him he blessed him and wisdome was found of him that sought for her And thus vseth the Lorde in his mercie and loue to admonish such as thinke of his goodnes and to comfort them which early enquire for him he teacheth them that desire to learne hee heareth them that pray vnto him he lighteneth them that dispute of knowledge hée openeth to them that knocke and he giueth to them that aske that in things that be profitable holy and appertaining to the glory of his Name to the good of his Church to the benefite of his people This the King as hee is most wise knoweth right well And hauing thus gotten and attained the excellencie of wisedome he burieth not those his Talents in the earth The vse of talents and gifts which God bestoweth on men but employeth and occupieth the same not like vnto that niggard who for feare of loosing his wealth would hide it though without all vse nor like the enuious which would not that other men should be partakers of knowledge but as the right libeberall and charitable man he laboureth endeuoreth to make all other men partakers of his wisdome and diuine graces and hideth her riches from no man For he séeth that as wisedome is an infinite measure vnto men so shall his diligence and studie be acceptable not only to them but to the Lorde Sap. 13.14 who hath filled his soule with diuine treasures mooued him to speake what his minde hath conceiued and to vse his graces to the edification of his pepole Therefore hath hee spoken according to the fulnes of his spirit the sooner because
farther it went from him yea and so far that he might not reatch vnto her In this sort whiles hee would expresse the profoundnes of wisedome hee abased himselfe beyond all mens expectation for there is no man which knoweth the king but esteemeth him most wise I haue also lately heard him to speake much against Women so farre that whiles hee found the wisemen to be so rare Scarcitie of wisemen and wise women as one to a thousand in comparison He found not so much as one woman among them al. Further he speaketh much of this that euery thing wil haue an oportunitie and iudgement Euery thing will haue his iudgement which causeth mee to dread what he thereby entendeth towardes any of vs and the sooner because he added That one man hath lordship or rule ouer another man to his owne hurt which seemeth to touch vs and others which are placed in authority There be which iustifie the vngodly which are dead before any of them which are yet liuing and the more because he saith that some are contented to commend them which are deade and gone before them which be yet liuing Yea they praise such as were in their liues distained with vngodlinesse and sin for the which they were worthily condemned and executed accordingly being such as iustifie Adoniah and his cause Shemei and his cause and Ioab and his cause against the king notwithstanding that euery one of them were both execrable wicked and their workes abhominable before the Lord his holy annointed for the which they were iustly brought into iudgement and died without honour * But after that Zabud had a little paused and none of the rest had interrupted him he procéeded and shewed that the King declared the occasion of such rash Censores and the boldnes of malepert persons Because that euil workes are not speedily punished the heart of man giueth over himselfe vnto wickednes And yet it cannot be denied but that there bee some iust to whome it befalleth as vnto the wicked in this life The confusion of worldly thinges in the which many thinges be carried confusedly to mans vnderstanding for hee cannot comprehend eyther the thinges themselues or the causes and occasions of them by any his wit wisedome study or endeuours and therefore by any thing which is done vnder the Sunne and so in the kingdome of vanity No man knoweth whether he be beloued or hated of God for it often happeneth to one man as it doth vnto another yea to the good as to the euill to the righteous as to the vngodly to the cleane as to the polluted to him that offereth as to him that offereth not to the vertuous as to the sinner to the periured as to him that is afraid of an oath whereof there ariseth great enuy of one against another that the heartes of men are ful of wickednes and madde foolishnes as long as they liue vntill they die I haue heard him also to say that it helpeth not to the swift in running nor to the strong in battell Thinges happen to men by chance as touching their foreknowledge or forecast therefore men should be euer prouident and prepared Mans ingratitude Cap. 10. Ignorance of princes nor to the wise in feeding nor to the vnderstanding man in enriching nor in finding fauour to be cunning but that all lieth in time and fortune And that a man knoweth not his time but he is taken in the perilous season as the fishes are taken with the angle the birdes in the snare But he complaineth much and that daily of the great ingratitude of worldly men which doe not onely not care to requite but also do forget the greatest benefites of their bountifull benefactors Yea they cease not malitiously to slaunder and defame them that haue worthily merited honour in their liues hee greatly lamenteth the palpable ignorance of Princes which before all others should bee wise learned and well nurtured thereby the better able to perform their duties in their places he yerneth in his bowels to behold how seruants ride on horses and Princes goe on their feete princes abased seruants exalted as it were servants And that whoseeuer assaieth to redresse this monstrous abuse of the worlde is hurted and annoyed by them that striue to maintaine such abuses hee hath vttered and dayly vttereth many parabolicall sayinges and darke sentences and I haue much pondered of the sense thereof Cast forth thy bread saith he on the face of the running waters Cap 11. Geue a part seuen dayes when the cloudes be full they powre down raine where the tree falleth there it lyeth he that regardeth the winde soweth not he that respecteth the cloudes reapeth not Theis and many such other thinges haue I heard the kinges Grace to vtter in this time of his contrition and sorrow Cap. 12. Aboue all he hath exhorted men to remember God in the dayes of their youth before the times of affliction ouertake them and therin hath made a right excellent description of mans Old age with all mans infirmities being as preambles to his natural death Here hee telleth of the (a) A description of mans old age miseries and death dayes of aduersitie of the yeares of displeasure of the darkening of the sunne the moone and the starres of the turning againe of the cloudes after the raine of the (b) Hands and armes trembling of the house-keepers of the bowing of the (c) The legs strong men of the standing still of the (d) The teeth grinders (e) The eyes of the dimnesse of the windowes of the shutting of the (f) The mouth street dores of the silence of the (g) The great chaw teeth Milner of the waking vp at the (h) Watchfulnes in old men Cocke-crowing of the abasing of the (i) The cleare voice or throat the hearing Musicall daughters of the dread of high (k) Fearing to climb or stooping as if they feare climbing of the flourishing of the (l) gray haires Almond tree of the Grashoppers (m) Sharpe shoulders in age vnable to beare loading of the passing away of (n) The heate or the strength of nature Concupiscence of mans trauaile towardes his (o) The pit or graue long home of the (p) Lamentatiō ouer the dead Mourners which goe about the streetes of the taking away of the (q) The marrow of the backe bone or vitall spirite siluer lace of the breaking of the (r) The braine enclosed in a yellow skinne golden Ewer of the breaking of the (s) the veines pitcher at the (t) the liuer well of the renting of the (v) Heade wheele vpon the (w) Heart Cisterne of the turning of (x) the naturall death dust into dust from whence it came and of the (y) the immortality of the soule Euery man in such cases should first examine himselfe and his owne waies Ascension of the Soule
to God who gaue it All these and many other such like are the ordinary wordes and speeches of the king the which are intermixed with many deepe motions of the Spirite and diuine doctrines to draw men from the vanities of the world and to perswade them to the feare of God and the obseruation of his lawes Surely I haue much mused thereof in my mind yea I haue many times examined mine owne conscience and wayes whether there rested or appeared any thing in mee whereof the king might take any offence for I haue verily thought that eyther the whole cause or at the least some part of the cause of the kinges sorrow and trouble hath risen or beene taken from some of vs that haue beene and are daylie so neare and about his royall person Therefore it shall not be amisse in my iudgement that wee first examine our owne wordes workes and dealinges and with an vpright conscience trie and iudge our selues secretly with our selues and finding with vs any part of the cause or th' occasion of this displeasure that we endeuoure spéedily and séeke how to recure or mitigate the same lest whiles we delay the king be so ouercome in those his perilous passions that hee may be hardly recouered After that those forenamed Lordes had thus spoken euery of them in his turne zadock Zadock the Priest opened his mouth againe and with great grauity vttered these wordes in effect And my selfe also my Lordes haue with these mine eares heard those and others the like words to bée spoken by our most Soueraigne Lord But yet as I haue conceiued thereof duely pondered the King in such his wordes by you before remembred and recorded hath not spoken of vanitie Solomon hath not vsed any vaine talke that is hee hath not vttered any vaine or idle thing nor hath his tongue talked of deceit but hee hath wel refrained that and will doe as he hath protested with patient Iob as long as his breath is in his body for as the King is of al other the wisest so hath he had especially sithens the time that those passions afflicted him a due regard both of his place and calling And truely in my iudgement he hath made and yet dayly maketh and augmenteth A Catologue of mans vanities vnder the Sunne right worthy to be lamented and abandoned And by this he would that men should learne to contemne the wicked world with the pompe and vanities thereof The deceit vanitie of the world for why he hath found and yet perceiueth the world to be very deceitfull the euent horrible and the paine thereof intollerable wherein not to feare not to lament not to be afflicted not to bee in perill not to bee tormented it is most impossible Surely as the King could not finde so neither can I report any good or profitable thing of the World Therefore O ye louers of the world for whose sake yee striue and make warres your hope can bee no greater then that yee shall be made the friendes of the worlde and what gaine ye by that surely yee shall finde therein that the flesh will infect you Sathan will deceiue you and the worlde herselfe will daunt you besides that the world passeth away with her lusts and if yee loue those thinges that be hers yee shall passe away with her and her lustes and through many perils ye shall fall at length into eternall torments Therfore would our king that yee should leaue and contemne all those vaine things of the world which perish as that wherof ye can gather no profite at all in the end but paine and sorrowes vnspeakable And surely neither hath the king spoken or done this without the argumentes of many godly and diuine motions of minde from whence as from the treasure-house of a godly wise man he hath brought foorth many heauenly Oracles and sweet Sermons tending to the highest honour of the euerlasting God and the chiefe felicity of man being worthily esteemed the two principall endes of mans election and creation the which is to be inquired sought after and effected in the feare of God and the obseruation and performance of his commaundementes according to that saying of the Lord which David the Kings father receiued from his spirite and committed vnto Asaph that excellent singer psal 50.23 He doth me glorifie indeed that prayses yeeldes to me And he that leades a godly life my saving health shall see I thinke vndoubtedly that this sodaine Metamorphosis of the king The former good counsell approued by zadock is not occasioned by any of vs here present Neuerthelesse I dislike not your aduise right noble Zabud that euery one of vs should enter into himselfe and duely examine and trie his wordes and actions especially those which in any sorte may touch our Lord the King and endeuour with speede to redresse and amend that whatsoeuer wee shall finde or at the least suspect to bee faulty or amisse Nor may this bee disliked of any man liuing nay rather it is to bee highly cōmended in euerie man It is profitable for men to examine their owne wayes as a vertue whereby hee may the better know himselfe of the which whiles many men though otherwise wise in this world haue remained ignorant or at the least forgetful they haue not onely neglected the duties of their vocations but missed the right scope of their life and so the highest happinesse But would to God that the king were now as he was sometimes in those monethes past Iob 29.2 and in the dayes when God prospered him when his light shined vpon his head when he went forth after the same light and shining euen through the darkenes as it stoode with him when hee was young when God prospered his house and when the Almighty was yet with him and when hee had ioy and gladnesse in that his prosperity amongst vs and his people Then should not sorrow oppresse his heart nor dread of future dangers daunt our hope But let the Lord be true as hee is and euery man a lyer that so hee may worthily bee extolled in his iudgements and praysed in his mercies which doubtlesse is not the least cause that God in his wisedome hath suffered many of his Saintes which haue been and may stand for singular examples of pietie and godly vertues vnto vs not onely to shew forth their humaine imperfection and infirmitie by some certaine slidinges and blemishes but also to taste of afflictions cuppe aswell for a correction of their faults as for an exercise of their spirites no lesse necessary vnto man then his daily foode in this wretched worlde CAP. V. Solomons Lordes examining themselves and their dealinges one by one are in their owne consciences cleared of any cause of his affliction Zabud and Azariah are iustified AS the sodaine alteration of King Solomon after that hee came to himselfe again vpon the sense of his sinne was very maruailous and his words aunswerable to
wiues Ada and Zella And to let passe others David the kings father a man so well beloued of God had diuers wiues of whome he begate sonnes and daughters Therefore why might not the king do the like zadok answereth to the pluralitie of wiues To this answered Zadok It is true howbeit wee should not liue by examples of men but according to the Lawe of the Lorde All men be sinners and offend in many things therefore what they doe we may not respect nor presume to follow but regard what the Lorde hath instituted and commanded And surely this pluralitie of wiues hath beene a fault euen in those fathers Gen. 3.15 16.3 howsoeuer they aymed thereby to the multiplying of their séede whereof they hoped the Messiah should be borne according to the promise Neither should they haue staggered in faith touching the Messiah to imagine that Gods promise could not haue beene performed without their owne wisedome and meanes Abraham seeing his wife aged thought that the promise of God should haue holden on the venter of Hagar howbeit God being faithfull effected his promise in Sarah though beyond the course of nature and mans expectation And this to prooue we reade that at the beginning when God created man he made them Male and Female and therein not three or foure or more but only two in one flesh namely one man and one woman Gen. 2.24 And there-vpon this Law was ordained that for this cause a man should leave his father and mother and should cleave to his wife not Wiues This was the first Institution of Matrimonie and thus it was obserued by Adam by Seth by Enos by Kenan by Mehalaleel by Jared by Henoch by Methusalah by Lamech and Noah and his three sonnes who as we read brought into the Arke with them euery of them one wife for they were but eight persons in all that is to say foure men and so many women being their wiues gen 4.19 The breach of this Institution was first found in that other Lamech which descended from Cayn and afterward as it is deliuered to vs killed Cayn with a dart From whom it was drawen to others continued for a custome in the posteritie though so contrary to the Law and ordinance of the Lord. But leauing the errors of those we are to obserue that first ordinance with those holy fathers of that first Age if we will be free from blame in that respect and not presume the transgression thereof howsoeuer some others bee they kings or potentates of the earth haue followed or faulted and beene tollerated in the abuse of the same But after this there is a speciall Law prouided by the Lord and giuen by Moses Deut. 17. vnto kings and princes before all others that none of them should multiply wiues to himselfe And this the kings mother doubtlesse considered when schooling him she thus charged him saying Pro. 31.2 O my deerely beloved sonne Laemuel give not over thy strength and wayes vnto Women which are the destruction even of kings It may bee shee called to minde Homer II. Vliss A tragicall History written before this time gen 6. what is written in that Heathen Storie of the destruction that fellon so many Kings and Princes in and about Troy touching the rauishing of Helena It may be she remembred what betyded the olde world for the euill coniunction of the sonnes of God with the daughters of men And the king himselfe sometimes in the remembrance of this Lesson could aduise others from this destruction Saying Pro. 5.18.19 Let thy wel be blessed and be glad with the wife of thy youth let her be as the louing Hynde and pleasant Roe let her breasts alwayes satisfie thee and hold thee ever content with her love Hee speaketh of a wife not wiues neuertheles howsoeuer it hath beene occasioned the king hath offended yea he hath wonderfully exceeded therein for he hath not contented his lust with one wife according to the Law nor with a fewe wiues after the example of those godly Fathers Abraham and Iacob but he hath taken vnto himself 700. wiues which were Quéens 300. Concubines in the whole a 1000. as the like was neuer heard off before this time And by these women hee hath béene drawen into an inordinate lust and bin ouercome in affection to the stayning of his honor blemishing of his holy profession the which is in him an heynous fault For although the heathē which know not God and are as brute beastes without vnderstanding doe neigh as the stoned horses after euery woman that hath a faire face and séeke to satisfie their fleshly lusts in these kinds of pleasure yet should not king Solomon endowed with so excellent a spirit and wisedome haue sought to satisfie his desire therein and that the rather because as the constancie of the chaste helpeth to the prolonging of life The inconveniences of fleshly lust as appeareth in the Vultures which being chaste and sober that way liue as it is said by nature an hundred yeeres so they which delight in fleshly lust and be so ordinarily inflamed and ouercome with the same are of a very short life as wée may see in those Sparrowes which of other birdes are full of Lecherie And it is a sure axiome that they which engender much liue the lesse while The king therefore in this hath abreuiated empared wounded and endangered his life His naturall life is shortened his ciuill life is distained his spirituall life is perced and his life eternall is endangered For in the first there is an euacuation of that naturall heate and moistnesse by the which mans life is conserued and the strength of body sustained Yea Luxurie is such an immoderate wantonnesse of the flesh which as a sweete poison an importunate plague and a pernitious potion doth both weaken mans naturall body and effeminateth his minde O extréeme filthinesse of lust all other sinnes are without the body but hee that giueth himselfe ouer to this sin offendeth against his owne body Before this goeth euer heate and petulancy with it in company is stinch and vncleannesse and after it followeth sorrowe and repentance These bee the leaders the fellowes and the followers of luxurious persons Secondly this sinne taketh from a man all his credite good name and glory and bringeth to him distrust an euill fame and ignomy What vice is more dishonest what more damnable what more hurtfull to mans ciuill life and estimation for behold how vertues are decayed how victories languish how glory is swallowed vp of infamie how the vertues of minde and body are infringed Surely a man can scarcely discerne whether it be better or worse to be captiued either of this vice or of his mortall foes * Thirdly the spirituall life is in them wounded for all such as giue themselues ouer to the lust of bodie doe grieue the spirite of God in themselues and suppresse all the good motions of mind