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A11777 The holie Bible faithfully translated into English, out of the authentical Latin. Diligently conferred with the Hebrew, Greeke, and other editions in diuers languages. With arguments of the bookes, and chapters: annotations. tables: and other helpes ... By the English College of Doway; Bible. O.T. English. Douai. Martin, Gregory, d. 1582. 1609-1610 (1610) STC 2207; ESTC S101944 2,522,627 2,280

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after this it happened that Manasses an Apostata highpriest by intercession of Sanaballar whose daughter he had vnlawfully maried obtayned licence to build a temple in Garizim which the Samaritanes afterwards pretended to be more ancient then the temple of Ierusalem against which our Sauiour gaue sentence loan 4. v. 22. It was also decided by king Ptolomeus in Alexandria as Iosephus witnesseth li. 13 c. 6. by way of arbitrament finding that the temple of Ierusalem and the Highpriestes therof had a perpetual succession from Salomons time and that their pretence of Iacobs adoring in Garizim was not to the purpose seing there was no succession that temple being lately built Neuertheles the same Ptolomeus to gratifie Onias an other Apostata sonne of good Onias Highpriest and Martyr 2. Macab 4. v. 34. gaue leaue to build an other temple in Aegypt which stood likewise in schisme against the true temple of Ierusalem wresting to their purpose the prophecie of Isaie ch 19. v. 19. In that day there shal be an altar of our Lord in the middes of Aegypt Which S. Ierom sheweth to be vnderstood of the Church of Christ. Before this last schismatical temple and after the former were the Seuentie two Interpreters or Translators of the Hebrew Bible into Greke of whom S. Ierom and al ancient Fathers speake much esteme of very great Canonical auctoritie In the time of the Grecians Monarchie prophane lerning florished more then before and Philosophers abunded but differed excedingly amongst themselues and al erred in the principles both of Natural Moral knowledge For wheras in dede God omnipotent was the only maker of the whole world and al thinges therein al these Philosophers supposed and taught that some material thing was coeternal with God and so they put the same thing to haue bene the beginning of al other thinges Which some say was the water some the Ayre some the Earth some the Fyre some al these foure Elements some the Atomos or indiuisible smal bodies some one thing some an other Wherof S. Epiphanius writeth in compendio contra h●reses And the like absurde conceiptes they had of the chiefe Good or Summum bonum Which the Pithagorians thought to be nothing els but a certayne immortalitie of the soule and so as it may stil be in a bodie And therfore seing both men and beastes do dye they held opinion that when a soule parteth out of one bodie it goeth into an other Yea and maketh transmigration from one species or kind to an other As from a mans bodie into the bodie of a horse or an oxe and contrariwise from a brute beast into a man againe and from one beast into an other The Stoikes put the chiefe good in vertues but could reach no further then to a certayne contentment of ioy in their minde not knowing the reward of vertues to consist in seeing God Platonikes or Achademikes conceiued more of God and pure spirites but thought both corporal and spiritual creatures were coeternal with God The Peripatetikes placed the chiefe good or felicitie in the aggregation of best spiritual corporal and worldlie thinges together The Epicures esteemed carnal and bodilie pleasures aboue al. And al these and their folowers iudged so diuersly of the right true felicitie contradicting and condemning ech others opinions that they were multiplied into innumerable Sectes As S. Augustin declareth out of Marcus Varro and opposeth against them al the one assured fayth and iudgement of Gods Church in his 19. booke de ciuit Dei c. 4. And concludeth with the Royal Prophet and S. Paul that their cogitations are vaine which wil haue happines to be in anie other thing but in seing God or to be obtained by anie other meanes without Gods grace And not only before since but also in the same times the auctors of The Bookes of wisdom Ecclesiasticus taught right doctrine against those erronious Philosophers For profession also of true fayth and religion the Machabees both suffered and labored most notably When king Antiochus Epiphanes 1. Mach. 1. v. 43. wrote to al his kingdom that al the people should be one and euerie one should leaue his owne law And whosoeuer should not doe according to the word of Antiochus they should dye Against which most wicked decree and cruel execution therof Gods grace so abunded that v. 65. manie of the people of Israel determined with themselues that they would not eate the vncleane thinges and they chose rather to dye then to be defiled with vncleane meates and that they would not breake the holy law of God so were murthered As is more particularly recorded 2. Mach. 5. v. 14. how there were in the space of three dayes fourescore thousand slayne fourtie thousand in prisoned no lesse sold After this with more pretence of iustice but with more malice endeuoring to terrifie others to draw them to yelde or make shew of conformitie to wicked lawes ch 6. v. 10. Two wemen were accused to haue circumcised their sonnes whom when they had led about through the citie with the infants hanging at their breastes they threw downe headlong by the walles And v. 11. other people were burnt with fire for secretly keping the day of the Sabbath Thirdly v. 18. Eleazarus being vrged to eate swines flesh and intreated by his familiar freindes to make shew of conformitie would neither eate nor feyne to ●a●e it but dyed most constantly leauing an example of vertue fortitude Fourthly seuen bretheren and their mother 2 Mach. 7. yelded also their liues in most glorious Martyrdom because they would not yelde conformitie to wicked lawes After which heroical constancie in suffering it was also Gods prouidence that others should shew their fortitude in deliuering his Church from these calamities and dangers For Matthathias of the tribe of Leui and stocke of Aaron Priest and after the apostasie of Iason li. 2. c. 4. v. 10. High-priest lamenting the pitiful state of Gods people with resolute mind and inuinoible corege resisting wicked Antiochus 1. Mach. 2. of iust zele with his owne handes slew one who for feare of death was readie to offer sacrifice to idols withal killed the kings commissioner who came to compel men to committe idolatrie and then gathered troupes to defend so hohie a cause Against whom the enimies fighting on the sabbath dayes killed manie which of scruple would not resist But vpon further consideration the rest resolued to defend themselues also on the sabbath day if they were assaulted Next to him succeded his sonne Iudas Machabeus in both the offices of Highpriest General captaine who as good order required first pursued the wicked towitte amongst his owne subiectes inquiring them out and such as trubled his people them he burned with fire 1. Mach. 3. v. 5. and his enimies were repelled for feare of him al the workers of
vvombe of the Catholique Church l Moreouer as a strong archer striketh deepe with his arrovves so they that patiently suffer much in this vvorld m do multiplie good vvorkes n Such shal be very happie o very easily ansvver al that can be obiected against them p in the day of Iudgement Feare of God the vvay to happines the 7. key a If such seruants of God be maried they shal ordinarily haue issue and succession in their fa 〈…〉 but especially the soules of such shal bring forth manie meritorious vvorkes b in the b●●ome of the Catholique Church vvhich vvas founded in Christs side c Children also signifie good workes d Revvard in heauen for good vvorkes in earth The Church stil firme in persecution the 6. key a Israel vvhich is the Church of God reioycing saith that enimies haue often b euen from the beginning of the world persecuted me as when Cain persecuted Abel other wicked persecuted Seth Enoch Noe the Chalders persecuted Abraham the Aegyptians persecuted the Israelites and so in other generations c But they haue neuer ouercome me So the Psalmist testifieth for al times past prophecieth the same for times to come d Persecuters not being able to ouerthrow or suppresse the Church haue laide great weightie burdens of tribulations vpon her backe which she hath patiently and strongly borne e they haue stil persisted one sorte after an other but with long animitie the Church hath stood fast and constantly passed through al distresses In moral sense sinners build iniquitie vpon the back of the Church yea and vpon Gods back when they presume to sinne trusting in the end to be absolued by vertue of holie Sacraments leift in the Church Likewise when they excuse their sinnes imputing the cause to other creatures of God vvherby they are allured vvhich is in effect saith S. Augustin to accuse God and to build iniquities on Gods back vvho made those creatures f God therfore who is iust vvil at last cast such presumptuous sinners from his back and breake their stiffe neckes g then shal they be confounded h separated eternally from God become like fruitles and vvithered grasse cast avvay despised yea cursed of al and blessed by none as the Prophet denounceth in the next verses The sixth penitential Psalme the 7. key a This prayer agreeth to al true penitents crying to God for helpe being ●● her in depth of sorovv for sinne and so it is one of the Penitential Psalmes or the depth of feruent desire to ascend tovvards perfection in vertue and from this vaile of miserie into heauen and so it is a Gradual Psalme or in the depth of temporal paines and so it is a special prayer for soules in Purgatorie offered by the Church in their behalfe b None is able to abide the rigour of Gods iustice c But al must relie vpon his mercie d For thy promises made in the law that thou wilt remitte sinnes to the penitent geue more grace to them that seeke it and mitigate also the paines due for sinnes e The hope of penitents is like to the watches of the day time from morning vntil night vvhich are more comfortable then vvatches of the night f The greatest comforth is in Christ our Redemer vvhose plentiful Redemption bringeth more abundance of grace g Christs Redemption being sufficient for al the vvorld is effectual only to true liuing members of the Catholique Church Confidence of innocencie the 7. key a Dauid by Gods special grace hauing a sincere minde tovvards al men euen tovvards his enimies and an humble hart not desiring anie thing ambiciously but al to the honour of God proposeth his ovvne example for others to imitate that they may vvith him offer the sacrifice of humilitie and innocencie vnto God from vvhom al good thinges procede b Al this vvith a thankful mind to God vvho gaue this grace c As children after they are vveaned come stil vvillingly to their mother so doth the childe of God relie vpon Gods helpe though he alvvayes feele not the same svvetnes d according to his demaneur herein he expecteth revvard e King Dauid or anie other being for his vertue aduanced and revvarded by God is a good example to moue others to do the like so shal they receiue like revvard Christs coming to restore man the 5. key a It is an vsual thing that Dauid Moyses other Prophetes speake of themselues in the third person b King Dauid desiring and so farre as lay in him promising to build a Temple to God vvith great instance prayed that he might persorme the same But God disposing othervvise that not he but his sonne should build it he neuertheles prepared the matter vvorkemen and money shevved the forme and disposed the Leuites hovv to serue therin c Moreouer by vovv depriued himself of entering into his ovvne house or taking his ordinarie rest til he might if it so pleased God knovv the place vvhere it should be built d It vvas reueled to Dauid that the Temple should be built in that part of Ierusalem vvhich looketh tovvards Bethleem othervvise called Ephrata vvhere our Sauiour vvas borne e VVithin Ierusalem vvhich is compassed vvith vvoodes In this vision also the vvhole forme of the Temple vvas reueled vnto him as he testifieth 1. Par. 28. v. 19. Al thinges quoth he came vvritten vvith the hand of our Lord vnto me that I might vnderstand al the vvorkes of the paterne f Holie Dauid moued vvith exceding deuotion repared to the place vvhere Gods Temple should be built g adored God vvhere the Propitiatorie as a footstoole representing Gods presence should stand VVhat meruel then if deuotion moue Christians to visite the holie places vvhere our Sauiour God and Man vvas Incarnare vvas borne suffered death vvas buried ascended into heauen or anie other place vvhere his feete stood h O God leauing Silo Gabaon and the like places come into thy holie Temple i VVith the Arke of couenant vvhere thou sanctifiest thy people And here againe the Prophet illuminated vvith a higher Mysterie and inflamed vvith more deuotion prayeth for Christes coming into the vvorld and that after his Passion he vvil rise not only in glorie of soule but also of bodie prefigured by the Arke of testimonie vvhich vvas in the tabernacle and after in the Temple k Grant therfore that thy Priestes vvhich must offer sacrifice in this sacred place be indued vvith vertues and good life vvorthie of their degree l and the Leuites vvho are ordained to serue there be likevvise made fitte for their diuers functions both in the old and nevv Testament m And seing thou hast geuen such meeknes deuotion zele sinceritie and other vertues making him a man according to thyne ovvne hart and therupon promised to establish his sede n differ not to send thy promised Messias Christ our Redemer o Henceforth to the end of this Psalme the Prophet relateth Gods reuelation to him That he hath truly
is the Sabbath of our Lord therfore it shal not be found † And the seuenth day came and some of the people going forth to gather found not † And our Lord said to Moyses How long wil you not keepe my commandementes and my law † See that our Lord hath geuen you a Sabbath and for this cause on the sixt day he geueth you duble portions let each man tarie with himselfe and let none goe forth out of his place the seuenth day † And the people kept the Sabbath on the seuenth day † And the house of Israel called the name therof Manna which was as it were coriander seede white and the taist therof like to flowre with honie † And Moyses sayd This is the word which our Lord hath commanded Fil a gomor of it and let it be kept vnto the generations to come hereafter that they may know the bread wherwith I fed you in the wildernes when you were brought forth out of the Land of Aehypt † And Moyses sayd to Aaron Take one vessel and put Manna into it so much as a gomor can hold and lay it vp before our Lord to keepe vnto your generations † as our Lord commanded Moyses And Aaron put it in the tabernacle to be reserued † And the children of Israel did ●a●e Manna fourtie yeares til they came into the habitable land with this meate were they fed vntil they touched the borders of the land of Chanaan † And a gomor is the tenth part of an ephi ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XVI 15. Man hu vvhat is this VVhen the people of Israel in the desert had spent their prouision of meate brought from Aegypt and according to Gods promise had receiued store of quailes going forth in the morning they sawe a strange thing lye vpon the ground like to hoare frost wherat merueling they said one to an other VVhat is this in their language Man hu VVherupon saith Theodoret q. 30. in Exod their demand vvas turned into the name and it vvas called Manna VVhich as the same and other ancient Doctors gather by the holie Scriptures was a wonderful and miraculous meate and withal a figure of a more excellent thing long after promised and geuen by our B. Sauiour in the holie Sacrament of the Eucharist As witnesse S. Gregorie Nys●en ●nar vit● Moysi ●ir●a m●dium S. Ambrose li. de ijs qui Myst. in●●●ant cap. 8. S. Cyril Alexandrinus S Chry●ostom S. Augustin Theophilact and others vpon the sixt of S. Iohn VVhere also the text of our Sauiours long discourse with the Capharnaites sheweth euidently that he promised to geue a farre better meate then Manna to those that beleued in him Iam saieth our Lord the bread of life vvhich desended from heauen your fathers did eate Manna in the desert and died The bread vvhich I vvil geue is my flesh for the life of the vvorld My flesh 〈◊〉 meate in deede and my bloud is drinck● indeede c. S. Paul likewise teacheth 1. Cor 10 that this Manna and the vvater issuing out of the rocke were figures of the same B Sacrament as is noted in those places Here only we commend to the Christian readers remēbrance that the thing figured doth euer excede the figure according to S Pauls doctrin Collos 2. wishing him therfore to consider that in Manna were at least twelue clere miracles Fir●● it was made by Angels wherof it is called the bread of Angels Secondly it was not produced from the earth nor water as ordinarie meates are but came from the ayre Thirdly how fast or slowly soeuer anie man did gather it in the end ech one had the same measure ful called a gomor and no more nor lesse Fourthly the sixth day which was next before the Sabbath that which they gathered was found to be duble portions to other dayes that is two gomors for euerie one Fiftly there fel none at al on the Sabbath day Sixtly if in the rest of the weke anie part was left al night it putrified and was corrupt in the morning but the night before the Sabbath day it remained sound and good Seuently notwithstanding diuersitie of stomakes in so great a multitude the same measure was sufficient and no more to euerie one young and old and of middle age Eightly the heate of the sunne melted and consumed that which remained in the field though otherwise it indu●ed heate of the fire seething in water grinding in milles and beating in motters Ninthly it tasted to euerie one what they desired Tenthly it seemed neuerthelesse to the euil minded loathsome and light meate but pleasant to the good Eleuently part of it was kept in the Arke by Gods commandment and was not corrupted in manie hundreth peares Twelftly this strange and extraordinarie prouision continued fourtie yeares that is til the children of Israel came to the promised land and then ceased You see then so miraculous a figure farre excelled Zuinglius or Caluins communion bread which containeth no miracle at al only signifying Christs bodie But as our Sauiours owne wordes importe and ancient fathers teach vs by Manna was prefigured Christs verie bodie and bloud with his soule and Diuinitie vnder the forme of bread For this indeede infinitly excelleth Manna containing al the foresaid or rather much more eminent miracles For first it was consecrated by the maruelous power of Christs word and euer since the same is done by the like power communicated to Priests 2 in his Church militant 3 one and the verie same and not manie in innumerable places and in euerie les●e or greater forme yea in the least particle of the accidents that may be Christ is whole and entire 4 It geueth abundance of grace in this life signified by the day before the Sabbath for the glorie of the next li●e in eternal ●est 5 where is no more vse of Sacraments but euerlasting fruition of glorie 6 VVhoso euer therfore would make temporal commoditie of this heauenlie foode as it were reseruing Manna for other dayes of the weke it perisheth to him and turneth to his ignominie but being reserued in the faithful soule for the life to come which is the true Sabbath it remaineth an heauenlie treasure 7 And so it auaileth to euerie one as their soule which is the spiritual stomake of supernatural meate is lesse or more disposed 8 Though heate of persecution and other aduerse power take away this Sacrament and Sacrifice abrode in the field of this world yet no power extinguisheth it within the Church where it is in due maner prepared and ministred to the children of God 9 where it yeldeth al comfort strength and contentment to good spiritual desires 10 but to the incredulous Capharnaitessemeth vnpossible and to carnal conceipts loathsome 11 Being worthely receiued into our mortal bodies our arke or temporal tabernacle it remaineth in incorruptible effect wherby the bodie
tried by the losse of al his goodes children and was proued to be very patient He was then most greuously tormented in bodie being left without comforth albeit he lamentably bewa led so great extremitie wishing such dayes had bene preuented yet he neither spoke against God nor good man nor his owne soule according to truth auouched defended his owne innocencie And at last by Gods inspiration and swete consolation he re●re●e●ded himself of former imperfections vttered in some wordes and with ful resignation to Gods wil susteyned al his losses and paynes not only with contentment but also with ioy THE END OF THE FIRST TOME TO THE CVRTEOVS READER We haue already found some faultes escaped in printing but fearing there be more and the whole volume being ouerlong to be examined agayne we pray the curteous reader to pardon al and amend them as they occurre Two Tables one of the times of the old Testament an other of the principal matters in the Annotations therof shalfolow God willing with the other Tome which we desire and hope to send you shortly In the meane time the gentle reader may please to supplie the want therof as he may by the Recapitulations of the Historie and pointes of Religion in the fiue first ages already conteyned in this Volume in their proper places in the pages 29. 47 196. 701. and 934. You may please to amend the more especial errors happened in printing by reading thus Page 57. line 29. SALEM Pa. 305. in the margent much more in the Church of Christ Page 846 lin 39. reioyce that Pege 1064 line 39 line 40. how they escape many miseries which are neuer borne birth Page 1069 line 1. nor I gainsay If our selues or others shal finde more we wil gladly correct them THE SECOND TOME OF THE HOLIE BIBLE FAITHFVLLY TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH OVT OF THE AVTHENTICAL LATIN Diligently conferred with the Hebrew Greeke and other Editions in diuers languages With ARGVMENTS of the Bookes and Chapters ANNOTATIONS TABLES and other helpes for better vnderstanding of the text for discouerie of CORRVPTIONS in some late translations and for clearing CONTROVERSIES in Religion BY THE ENGLISH COLLEGE OF DOWAY Spiritu Sancto inspirati locuti sunt sancti Dei hemines 2. Pet. 1. The holie men of God spake inspired with the Holie Ghost Printed at Doway by LAVRENCE KELLAM at the signe of the holie Lambe M. DC X. APPROBATIO NOs infrascripti in alma Duacensi vniuersitate Sacrae Theologiae Doctores Professores hanc Anglicanam Veteris Testamenti translationem quam tres diuersieius nationis eruditissimi Theologi non solum fidelem sed propter diuersa quae ei sunt adiuncta valde vtilem fidei Catholicae propagandae ac tuendae bonis moribus promouendis sunt testati quorum testimonia ipsorum syngraphis munita vidimus Cuius item Translationis Annotationum Auctores nobis de fidei integtitate eruditionis praestantia probè sunt noti his rebus adducti nixi fructuose euulgari posse censuimus Duaci 8. Nouembris 1609. GVILIELMVS ESTIVS Sacrae Theologiae Doctor in Academia Duacensi Professor BARTHOLOMAEVS PETRVS Sacrae Theologiae Doctor in Vniuersitate Duacensi Professor GEORGIVS COLVENERIVS S. Theologiae Doctor eiusdem in Academia Duacena Professor PROEMIAL ANNOTATIONS vpon the Booke of Psalmes THE authoritie of this Booke was euer authentical and certaine as the assured word of God and Canonical Scripture But concerning the author there be diuers opinions For although it be manifest by the testimonie of Philo and Iosephus that in their time and alwaies before only King Dauid was by al Hebrew Doctors holden for Author of al the Psalmes yet after that lerned Origen and other Christian Doctors expounded manie Psalmes of Christ the Iewes being pressed therwith begane to denie that al were Dauids alleaging for their new opinion the titles of diuers Psalmes and some other difficulties ministring occasion of much needles dispute stil acknowledging the whole booke to be Canonical Wherupon S. Ierom and S. Augustin sometimes admitted those as authores of certaine Psalmes whose names are in the titles thereof S. Cyprian S. Cyril S. Athanasius and others agree in general that Dauid writte not al but differ much in particular touching other supposed authores In so much that Melchisedech Moyses Asaph Eman Idithun The sonnes of Core Salomon Ieremie Ezechiel Esdras Aggaeus and Zacharias are al with more or lesse probabilitie reputed authores of seueral Psalmes Neuertheles it semeth that S. Ierom rather related other mens iudgement then shewed his owne as we shal note by and by And S. Augustin li. 17. c. 14. de ciuit maturely discussing this doubt saith plainly that their Iudgement semed to him more credible vvho attribute al the hundred fiftie Psalmes to Dauid alone Further explicating that wheras some Psalmes haue Dauids owne name in their titles some haue other mens names some none at al this diuersitie importeth not diuers authores but signifieth other thinges either perteyning to the same persons or by interpretation of their names belonging to the present matter as our Lord inspired him Likewise S. Chrysostome resolutely iudgeth that only King Dauid was author of this whole Booke Moued especially by this argument for that Christ and the Apostles alleaging the Psalmes do oftentimes name Dauid as author and neuer anie other Also Origen S. Basil S. Ambrose S. Hilarie Theodoretus Cassiodorus Beda Eutimius and most part of ancient and late writers with the most common voice of Christians cal this booke the Psalmes of Dauid and the General Councels of Carthage Florence and Trent in the Cathologue of Canonical Scriptures recite this booke by the name of Dauids Psalter Moreouer it is clere Act. 2. that the second Psalme though it want his name is Dauids And other Scriptures 2. Paral. 7. v. 6. and 1. Esd 3. v. 10. say plainly that Dauid made the Psalmes 104. 105. 106. 117. 135. beginning Confesse to our Lord because he is good because his mercie is for euer VVhich he appointed the Leuites to sing or play on instruments 1 Paral. 15. 16. and yet they haue not his name in their titles Againe 2. Reg. 23. Dauid is only intitled the egregious or excellent Psalmist of Israel Neither were Asaph Eman and Idithun anie where called Prophetes as are al the writers of holie Scriptures but only masters of musike 1. Paral. 25. And the sonnes of Core were only porters 1. Paral. 26. Finally S. Ierom whose iudgement the whole Church singularly estemeth in al questions belonging to holie Scriptures semeth as much inclined that only the Royal Prophet Dauid was author of this whole booke as to the contrarie For in his Epistle to Paulinus prefixed before the Latin Bible comprehending the principal arguments of seueral bookes when he cometh to the Psalmes without mention of other authors saith Dauid our Simonides Pindarus and Alceus Flaccus also
Vnderstanding Praise of Canticle Alleluia Gradual Canticle Secondly in the titles of some Psalmes are the names of certaine persons which by S. Augustins iudgement cited in the Proemial Annotations and others proueth not the same persons to be authores of those Psalmes but signifieth some other thing Thirdly in some titles the time is signified when the Psalme was made or song Fourtly the matter conteyned in the Psalme or vpon what occasion it was made is expressed in some titles Fiftly diuers other termes are often vsed in the titles of sundrie Psalmes as To the end For the Octaue For presses and the like al which we shal briefly explicate where they first occurre First therfore this third Psalme is called the Psalme of Dauid not because he is author therof for he is also author of the former where his name is not expressed as is euident by the testimonie of al the Apostles Act. 4. v. 25. but because it treateth particularly and literally of him 1. VVhen he ●●ed from the face of Absalon Here the time is signified when this Psalme was made to wi●e immediatly after the ouerthrow of his rebellious sonne Absalom mentioned 2. Reg. 18. before his returne to lerusalem For al beit of humaine natural and fatherlie affection he greatly lamented the death of his sonne yet he rendered thankes and praises to God as reason and dutie bond him 6. I haue slept and haue benne at rest and haue risen vp King Dauid by his sleeping in persecution and by his resting and deliuerie from his persecuters prefigured Christs Death Burial Resurrection As appeareth Ioan. 2. v. 22. VVhere the Euangelist ●aith that after Christs Resurrection his disciples beleued the scripture to witte this and other like prophecies For otherwise the old Testament doth not so expresly declare such Mysteries as the Gospel doth but one thing in the proper and grammatical signification of he wordes and an other thing in shadowes and figures and hoth literal VVhereupon S. Gregory teacheth li. 20. c. 1. Moral that holie Scripture amongst other incomparable excellences surpasseth al other doctrines in the verie maner of speaking because by one and the same speach it reporteth a thing donne and proclameth a Mysterie so relating thinges past that with the verie same wordes it foresheweth thinges to come PSALME IIII. The holie prophet teacheth by his owne example to flee to God in al tribulation 3. that other refugies are insufficient 9. and Gods helpe most assured Vnto “ the end in songues the Psalme of Dauid WHEN I inuocated the God of my iustice heard me in tribulation thou hast enlarged to me Haue mercie on me and heare my prayer † Ye sonnes of men how long are you of heauie hart why loue you vanitie and seeke lying † And know ye that our Lord hath made his holie one meruelous our Lord wil heare me when I shal crie to him † Be ye angrie and sinne not the thinges that you say in your hartes in your chambers be ye sorie for † Sacrifice ye the “ sacrifice of iustice and hope in our Lord. Manie say Who sheweth vs good thinges † The light of thy countenance ô Lord is signed vpon vs thou hast geuen gladnesse in my hart † By the fruite of their corne and wine and oile they are multiplied † In peace in the selfe same I wil sleepe and rest † Because thou Lord hast singularly setled me in hope ANNOTATIONS PSALME IIII. 1. Vnto the end The Hebrew word Lamnatsea signifieth to him that ●uercometh And so the Hebrewes interprete that the Psalmes which haue this word in their titles were directed either to him that excelled others in skil of musike or had authoritie ouer other musitians or to him whose office was to sing victories and triumphes But the Latin according to the Greeke hath In finem Vnto the end which most commonly signifying perpetuitie or continuance vnto the end of anie thing in the titles of the Psalmes rather signifieth that the matter conteyned in the Psalme perteineth to future times or persons especially to the new Testament And so S. Augustin expoūdeth it here of Christ who is the end or perfection of the lavv Not that the principal contentes belong to Christ in his owne Person but to his mystical bodie the Church and faithful people whom the Prophete here teacheth to haue confidence in God moderation in their affections patience in tribulation which is the seuenth key proposing his owne example prophetically Christs The same wherto Christ exhorteth saying Ioan. 16. v. vlt. Haue considence I haue ouercome the vvorld Signifying that his seruantes through his grace may also ouercome it 6. Sacrifice of Iustice Not only external Sacrifice of diuers kindes were necessarie in the law of nature and of Moyses and one most excellent and complement of al in the new Testament but also spiritual sacrifice was euer and is required and that of three sortes First Sacrifice of sorow and contrition for sinnes Psal 50. An afflicted spirite is a sacrifice to God The second is sacrifice of Iustice here mentioned The third is Sacrifice of praise Psal 49. Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise Concerning the second proposed in this place He offereth sacrifice of Iustice that rendereth to euery one that is due First to God as our Creator a resignation of our selues euen our liues at his diuine pleasure as to our Master we must render faith and beleefe in al that he proposeth as to our Father hope confidence reuerential seare as to our Lord and King payment of tribute that is obseruation of his law and commandments as to our Captaine the trauel of warfare in this life as to our Phisitian patience and toleration when he cureth our woundes by chasticement for sinnes as to our Spouse chastity of body and mind fleeing al carnal and spiritual fornication as to our Freind frequent conuersation in al actes of deuotion VVe owe to our selues that seing we consist of soule and bodie we keepe due subordination that the soule and reason command the bodie and inferiour appetite obey as the seruant must obey his master and the handmaide her mistris VVe owe to our neighbour loue from the hart inctruction also from the mouth and assistance by our helpe according to his necessitie and our abilitie yea though our neighbour be our enemie But to other enimies contrary thinges are due To the world contempt because the goodes of this world are smal few shorte vncertaine deceiptful not satisfying the mind and mixed with manie euils and dangers To the flesh we owe chasticement and daylie care so to seede it that it serue the soule rebel not To the diuel we must render the shame that cometh by sinne acknowledging our faults
that vttereth contumelie is vnwise † In much talke there shal not want sinne but he that moderateth his lippes is most wise † The tongue of the iust is chosen siluer but the hart of the impious is nothing worth † The lippes of the iust teach verie many but they that are vntaught shal die in the penurie of witte † The blessing of our Lord maketh men rich neither shal affliction be ioyned to them † A foole worketh mischeefe as it were by laughter but wisdom is prudence to a man † That which the impious feareth shal come vpon him to the iust their desire shal be geuen † As a tempest passing the impious shal not be but the iust as an euerlasting fundation † As vinegre to the teeth and smoke to the eies so a sluggard to them that sent him † The feare of our Lord shal adde dayes and the yeares of the impious shal be shortened † The expectation of the iust is ioy but the hope of the impious shal perish † The strength of the simple the way of our Lord and feare is to them that worke euil † The iust for euer shal not be moued but the impious shal not dwel on the earth † The mouth of the iust shal bring forth wisdom the tongue of the froward shal perish † The lippes of the iust consider grateful thinges and the mouth of the impious peruerse thinges CHAP. XI A deceitful balance is abomination before God and an equal weight is his wil. † Where pride shal be there shal be contumelie also but where humilitie there also wisdom † The simplicitie of the iust shal direct them and the supplanting of the peruers shal waste them † Riches shal not profit in the day of reuenge but iustice shal deliuer from death † The iustice of the simple shal direct his way and the impious shal fal in his impietie † The iustice of the righteous shal deliuer them and the vniust shal be caught in their deceitful practises † The impious man being dead there shal be no hope any more and the expectation of the careful shal perish † The iust is deliuered from distresse and the impious shal be geuen for him † The dissembler with his mouth deceiueth his freind but the iust shal be deliuered by knowlege † In the good thinges of the iust the citie shal reioyce and in the destruction of the impious there shal be prayse † With the benediction of the iust the citie shal be exalted and by the mouth of the impious it shal be subuerted † He that despiseth his freind lacketh hart but the wise man wil hold his peace † He that walketh fraudulently reueleth secretes but he that is faithful concealeth the thing comitted of his freind † Where there is no gouernour the people shal fal but there is health where is much counsel † He shal be afflicted with euil that is suretie for a stranger but he that is ware of the snares shal be secure † A gracious woman shal finde glorie and the strong shal haue riches † A merciful man doth good to his kinred also † The impious maketh an vnstable worke but to him that soweth iustice is a faythful reward † Clemencie prepareth life the pursewing of euil thinges death † A peruers hart is abominable to our Lord and his wil is in them that walke simply † Hand in hand the euil man shal not be innocent but the seede of the iust shal be saued † A ring of gold in a swines snoute a fayre woman a foole † The desire of the iust is al good the expectation of the impious furie † Some diuide their owne goodes and are made richer others take violently not their owne and are alwayes in pouertie † The soule which blesseth shal be made fatte and he that inebriateth himself shal also be inebriated † He that hydeth corne shal be cursed among the peoples but blessing vpon the head of them that sel † Wel riseth he early who seeketh good thinges but he that is a searcher after euil thinges shal be oppressed of them † He that trusteth in his riches shal fal but the iust shal spring as a greene leafe † He that trubleth his house shal possesse the windes and he that is a foole shal serue the wise † The fruite of the iust man a tree of life and he that gaineth soules is wise † If the iust man receiue in the earth how much more the impious and sinner CHAP. XII HE that loueth discipline loueth knowlege but he that hateth reprehensions is vnwise † He that is good shal draw grace from our Lord but he that trusteth in his owne cogitation doth impiously † Man shal not be strengthened by impietie and the roote of the iust shal not be moued † A diligent woman is a crowne to her husband and putrefaction in his bones she that doth thinges worthie of confusion † The cogitations of the iust are iudgements the counsels of the impious are fraudulent † The wordes of the impious lie in wayte for bloud the mouth of the iust shal deliuer them † Turne the impious and they shal not be but the house of the iust shal be permanent † A man shal be knowen by his doctrine but he that is vaine and foolish shallye open to contempt † Better is the poore and sufficient to himself then he that is glorious and wanteth bread † The iust knoweth the liues of his beastes but the bowels of the impious are cruel † He that tilleth his land shal be filled with breads but he that purseweth idlenes is a verie foole He that is delighted in much quaffing of wine leaueth contumelie in his munitions † The desire of the impious is the muniment of the most wicked but the roote of the iust shal prosper † For the sinnes of the lippes ruine approcheth to the euil man but the iust escapeth out of distresse † Of the fruite of his owne mouth shal euerie man be replenisded with good thinges and according to the workes of his handes it shal be repayed him † The way of a foole is right in his eies but he that is wise heareth counsels † A foole by by she weth his anger but he that dissembleth iniuries is wise † He that speaketh that which he knoweth is an v●rerer of iustice but he that lyeth is a fraudulent witnesse † There is that promiseth and is pricked as it were with the sword of conscience but the tongue of the wise is health † The lippe of truth shal be stable for euer but he that is an hastie witnesse frameth a tongue of lying † Guile is
length he may punish vs. † For which cause he neuer certes remoueth away his mercie from vs but chastening his people by aduersitie he forsaketh them not † But let these thinges be sayd of vs in few wordes for an admonition of the readers And now we must come to the storie † Therfore Eleazarus one of the chief of the Scribes a man striken in age and comely of countenance with open mouth gaping was compelled to eate swines flesh † But he embracing rather a most glorious death then an hateful life went before voluntarily to the punishment † And considering how he ought to come patiently susteyning he determined not to committe vnalwful thinges for loue of life † But they that stood by moued with vnlawful pitie for the old frendshipe of the man taking him in secrete desired that flesh might be brought which it was lawful for him to eate that he might feyne to haue eaten as the king had commanded of the flesh of the sacrifice † that by this fact he might be deliuered from death and for the old freindshipe of the man they did him this courtesie † But he begane to thinke vpon the worthie preeminence of his age and ancientnes and the houre heares of natural nobilitie his doinges from a childe of very good conuersation and according to the ordinances and the holie law made of God he answered quickly saying that he would rather be sent vnto hel † For it is not meete quoth he for our age to feyne that manie young men thinking that Eleazarus of foure score yeare tenne is passed to the life of Aliens † they also through my dissimulation and for a litle time of corruptible life may be deceiued and hereby I may purchase a stayne and a curse to mine old age † For although at this present time I be deliuered from the punishments of men yet neither aliue nor dead shal I escape the hand of the Almightie † Wherfore in departing manfully out of this life I shal appeare worthie of mine old age † and to yong men I shal leaue a constant example if with readie mind and stoutly I suffer an honest death for the most graue and most holie lawes These thinges being spoken forthwith he was drawen to execution † And they that led him and had bene a litle before more milde were turned into wrath for the wordes spoken of him which they thought were vttered through arrogancie † But when he was now in killing with the strokes he groned and sayd O Lord which hast the holie knowlege thou knowest manifestly that wheras I might be deliuered from death I doe susteyne sore paines of the bodie but according to the soule for thy feare I doe willingly suffer these thinges † And this man certes in this maner departed this life leauing not only to yong men but also to the whole nation the memorie of his death for an example of vertue and fortitude CHAP. VII The noble Martyrdome of seuen refusing to eate swines flesh and boldly admonishing king Antiochus of his damnable state 41. Lastly the mother hauing encoreged her sonnes likewise dyeth gloriously AND it came to passe that seuen brethren together with their mother being apprehended to be compelled by the king to eate against the law swines flesh were tormented with whippes and scourges † But one of them which was the first sayd thus What seekest thou and what wilt thou lerne of vs we are readie to dye rather then to transgresse the lawes of God coming from our fathers † The king therfore being wrath commanded frying pannes and brasen pottes to be heated † the which forth with being heated he commanded his tongue that had spoken first to be cut out and the skinne of his head being drawen of the endes also of his handes and feete to be chopped of the rest of his bretheren and his mother looking on † And when he was now made in al partes vnprofitable he commanded fire to be put vnto him and that breathing as yet he should be fried in the frying panne wherin when he was long tormented the rest together with the mother exhorted one an other to dye manfully † saying Our Lord God wil behold the truth and wil take pleasure in vs as Moyses declared in the profession of the Canticle And in his seruants he wil take pleasure † That first therfore being dead in this maner they brought the next to make him a mocking stocke the skinne of his head with the heares being drawen of they asked if he would eare before that he were punished throughout the whole bodie in euerie member † But he answering in his countrie speach said I wil not doe it Wherfore this also in the next place receiued the torments of the first † and being at the verie last gaspe thus he said Thou in dede ô most wicked man in this present life destroyest vs but the king of the world wil raise vs vp which dye for his lawes in the resurrection of eternal life † After him the third is had in derision and being demanded his tongue he quickly put it forth and constantly stretched out his handes † and with confidence he said From heauen doe I possesse these but for the lawes of God now doe I contemne these selfe same because I hope that I shal receiue them againe of him † So that the king and they that were with him merueled at the yong mans courege because he estemed the torments as nothing † And this being thus dead the fourth they vexed in like maner tormenting him † And when he was now euen to dye thus he said It is better for them that are put to death by men to exspect hope of God that they shal be raysed vp againe by him For to thee there shal not be resurrection vnto life † And when they had brought the fifth they tormented him But he looking vpon him † sayd Thou hauing power among men wheras thou art corruptible doest what thou wilt but thinke not that our stock is forsaken of God † And doe thou patiently abide and thou shalt see his great power in what sort he wil torment thee and thy seede † After him they brought the sixth and he beginning to dye sayd thus Be not deceiued vainely for we suffer this for our owne sakes sinning against our God and thinges worthie of admiration are done in vs † but doe not thinke that thou shalt escape vnpunished for that thou hast attempted to fight against God † But the mother aboue measure meruelous and worthie of good mens memorie which beholding her seuen sonnes perishing in one dayes space bare it with a good hart for the hope that she had in God † exhorted euerie one of them in their countrie language manfully being replenished with wisedome and ioyning a mans hart to a womans cogitation † she sayd to them I know not how you appeared in my wombe for neither did I
Gods commandments ●os ● f To him that vseth Gods grace wel more grace is continually geuen ●●●e 17. g Through such grace he shal perseuer h al thinges worke to the good of them that loue God sincerely i The wicked are carried with euery light tentation k Al rysing at the last day the wicked shal not rise with hope nor comforth but in desolation l the happie congregation of the blessed m approueth rewardeth n in eternal damnation They are happie in hope that decline from euil Iustice consisteth in fleing euil and doing good Of Christ the 5. key Also of his Church the 6. key a Both gētiles b and Iewes striue invaine against Christ Act. 4. c Pilate and Herod d Annas and Caiphas e The voice of wicked men f especially libertines striuing to shake of al discipline g God for al this wil turne the haries of manie h seuerly reprehend i and iustly punish the obstinate k Christ shal reigne in his kingdome the Church l God the Father speaketh to m God the Sonne Act. 13. Heb. 1. 5. n Christ as man hath the Church for his inheritance o Spred through the whole world p Gods in●●exwi● powre Apoc. 2. 19. q A prophecie that kinges shal be conuerted and submit themselues to Christs discipline r None is secure before death ſ Some fal from the way of saluation t God wil iudge iustly in the end of this short life both the euil and good So this Psalme concludeth with the ninth key Persecution cannot hinder the glorie of Christ The Church neuer faileth in h●ne Psal Custome in sinne more hardly cured Kinges conuerted to Christianitie Defend Catholiques and punish heretikes Apostataes fauoure heretikes and schismatikes because they hate al Christians Ad Petil li. 2. c. 92. Ad Gaud li. 2. c. 26. Ioy and feare Dauid persecuted by his sonne The 8. key a O God let me know how greuiously I haue sinned b that al Israel 1. Reg. 15. v. 13. with al their hart foloweth Absolom So against Christ the Priestes the People Gentiles al conspired Ioan ●● c my life d he can not escape e But I auouch that God alwaies defendeth me f geuing me victorie g cōfirming my kingdom h heauen i I lay downe k and rested in expectation of thy helpe l And am deliuered Christ dyed was buried rose againe m I know thou wilt help me and so I besech thee to do n The strēgth and furie o health and saftie cōmeth from God p Abundance of grace promised to Gods seruantes Titles of the Psalmes added by ●●●●as and the Septuagint ●iue thinges to be noted ●● the titles Psal 4. 6. 8. 15. 16. c. VVhy this is called the Psalme of Dauid The time and occasion of making this Psalme King Dauid prefigured Christ The same Scripture hath diuers literal senses Confidence in God necessary The 7. key a In an instrument apt for verses b This Psalme perteyneth to the beloued signified by the word Dauid S. Aug. li. 17. c. 14. ciuit S. Beda in Psal c VVhen Saul vniustly persecuted iust Dauid God heard his prayers d being straictly beseeged 1. Reg. 23. 26. e Likewise helpe me when soeuer I shal nede f Why do you stil harden your hartes g honour and transitorie glorie h false and deceiptful riches Ephos 4. i Euery godly soule k Rich with vertues l Euerie iust soule hath confidence in God that he wil heare his crie m Iust anger is good necessarie agaīst sinne n but then is most nede to beware not to excede in passion haue therfore a continual purpose neuer to sinne o Euil cogitations p bewaile repent before you sleepe q Not only external but most especially internal sacrifice of iustice and obseruation of Gods commandments is most necessarie r The solide rewardes promised by God ſ reason and grace are freely geuen to man wherby he may know that God wil reward the iust Heb. II. v. 6. t VVherin a iust man inwardly reioyceth v For example and in figure of heauenlie rewardes God gaue temporal wealth in the old testament w For example and in figure of heauenlie rewardes God gaue temporal wealth in the old testament x For example and in figure of heauenlie rewardes God gaue temporal wealth in the old testament y In this confidēce the iust may rest contented z God so promiseth euerie iust person in particular The signification of this phrase To the end in t● etitles of Psalmes 1. Par. 15. Rom. 10. Three spiritual sacrifices necessarie Of penance Iustice Praise VVhat is due to God To our selues To our neighbour To our enemies The world The flesh The diuel To sinne Light of reason sheweth there is a God that rewardeth The general iudgement The 9. key a The faithful iust soule that ouer cōmeth her enimies by vertue b eternal glorie c The praier of the whole Church or of anie faithful euer beloued soule d Gods helpe is presently granted of his part though it be sometimes differred for the more good of his seruantes e Before al other affayres we must pray to God S. Ciprian in fine orat Dominicae f The wicked and wickednes haue noe conuersation with God g in the day of iudgement h by final sentence of eternal dānation i Not in mans powre but in Gods mercie must the iust man trust k In the Church of God l with reuerential feare as in Gods presence m No true nor solide goodnes in the wicked n They thinke nothing but vanitie and mischiefe o yelding lothsome stin●h bitternes and rancor p yet they flatter with feaned good wordes Psal 13. Rom. 3. q Albeit the iust desire the conuersion of the wicked yet if they wil not repēt then the iust conforme their desires to Gods iust iudgement which shal be manifested in the end of the world r The iust shal receiue sentence of eternal glorie God is not author nor cause of sinne A pathetical praier of a sinner the first penitential P●alme the 7. key a This Psalme perteyneth also to penitentes in the new testament b condemneme not eternally c Spare me also for part of the temporal paine which I deserue Psal 37. d Geue me the medicine of grace e My sorow hath inwardly pearced me euen to the bones f with feare of thyiust wrath g leauest thou me in this calamitie h Shew againe thy fauorable contenance i from this fearful affliction k Though my sinnes haue deserued the contrary yet shew thy mercy l This life is the time of repentance after death no cenuersion m In hel nothing but blasphemie n I haue in part lamēted o I wil adde more sorow penance p I wil persist in my penance til I be throughly watered with thy grace q myn eyes are dimme with weeping for feare of thy iust iudgement r my heares are gray with sorrow ſ
secure True testimonie Liberalitie Industrious trauel Solide doctrine True testimonie VVise fitte magistrates Pa 〈…〉 ce ●● teachers ●oy●ltie to kinges and Pr●n●es Don estical peace A good wife is Gods gift Diligence Obedience Almes dedes Moderate chast●●me●t Patience Folow good counsel Trust in God Good wil to helpe the poore Feare of God Diligent trauel Iust correction Honour of parents Desire to lerne True testimonie Feare of eternal punishment Sobrietie Obedience to Princes Concord Industrie Profound counsel Fidelitie Sinceritie Execution of Iustice Nece●sitie of grace ●●quitie Good toward ●●●es Right vse of senses Diligent trauel Prudence Knowlege is 〈…〉 ewel Secu 〈…〉 in ●●e●●snipe Truth Counsel in warre Consult with the faithful Honour of parents Law ful gaine Meeknes Equitie Trust in Gods prouidence Performance of vowes Publique iustice Puritie of minde Three kinglie vertues Prudence with fortitude Punishment of sinnes Gods prouidence ch 14. v. 12. 16 v. 2. Mercie and iudgement Humilitie Fortitude Truth Equitie Right in hart Domestical peace Commiseration Chastisment of sinne Charitie Almes dedes Almes in secrete Iust punishment Obseruation of orders Temperance pa●cimonie Pietie Domestical peace Frugalitie Iustice and mercie Fortitude Guard of the tongue Modestie Diligent trauel Liberalitie Sinceritie in religion True testimonie and found doctrine Amendment of faultes Conformitie to Gods wil. Gods grace necessarie Honest fame Contentment with out state Prudence Pouertie of spirite Care of the soules health Good custome in vertues Diligent trauel Equitie Almes dedes Better to geue then to take Expel the incorrigible Cleanes of hart The godlie prosper Fortitude Care of chastitie Chatisment Compassion :: Rules of wisdom are necessarie profitable and vpon practise found pleasant rightly directing al our thougtes wordes and dedes Care of the poore because they are deare to God Flee from euil companie which may corrupt thee Auoide suretishipe le●t thou fal into distresse Kepe ancient traditions Diligent trauel Modestie and discretion at the table of great persons Mediocritie of riches and contentment with meane state Eate not with a niggard lest he be secretly greued ou●wardly dissembling and thyself repent it Aduise not the vncapable Hurt not orphanes for they are deare to God Diligent studie of wisdom Moderate chatisment profiteth youth Vertues of children are ioyful to the parentes Contentment with Gods wil. Hope of reward Lerne and practise vvisdom Sobrietie and Temperance Honour of parents VVisdom most precious See v. 15. and 16. Bodelie and spiritual puritie So brietie alvvayes necessarie Detest drunkennes Drunkennes is deceiptful dangerous beastlie hurtful to others senselesse and vnsatiable Flee euil companie lest thou be alured to vice VVisdom and vertues not wickednes do prosper temporally and spiritually Counsel in warres and other great affayres Good purposes Report wel of others Fortitude VVorkes of mercie according to our ha biliue VVisdom is swete and geueth hope Toleration of others imperfections * Oftentimes S. Aug. li. 11. c. 31. ciust VVith out which none liueth Charitie towards enemies Haue peace with al so much as may be Loial●ie to God king Equitie in iudgement condemning the guiltie deliuering the innocent is very gratful to al. Order in al affaires Discretion in bearing witnes Reuenge not Diligent labour and vigilance to prouide necessa●ies and to auoide beggerie A iust man falling into venial sinnes is not therby vniust nor Gods enimie Al sinnes are not mortal The 2. part More Parables of Salomon gathered by others Gods workes are not al reueled Kinges haue some secretes Publique iustice and punishment of sinne Modestie and Humilitie Care of others fame Compose controuersies secretly rather then contend in publique court Speake in due time Prudent admonition Diligence in publique affaires Performance of promised industrie Meeknes * 〈…〉 ●eare Temperance Modestie True testimonie Trust not a dissembler * A consuming 〈◊〉 hard earth Striue not with the incorrigible Alacritie Charitie towards enimies Rom. 12. Heare not detraction Domestical peace Ioy of wel doing Profession of truth Humilitie in knowlege Gouernment of the tongue Aduance not the vicious Patience in false sclander Chastisment Answer a foole wisely detecting his follie Place fitte men in office VVise men in authoritie Vertuous in honour and Lerned to teach Make fooles to kepe silence Returne not to sormer sinnes Humble opinion of thy self Fortitude Profitable laboures At least some good worke Loue not idlenes 2. Pet. 2. Intermedle not in brawles Vnfained friendshipe especially in familiar acquantance Punish batemakers Pacific the wrathful Heare not whisperers of euil reportes Flee from hypocrites VVhose flaterie and soft speach are suspicious they wil fal at last into their owne trappes truth preuailing Trust not to future vncertainties Praise not thyself Beware of a fooles wrath for it hath no mercie Loue freindlie seueritie not enemies flaterie Temperance in meate Iust care of thy familie Esteme freindlie counsel Old friendes are better surer then a kinsman Be wise euen for thy fathers sake Foresee and preuent dangers Trust not enimies Suspect extraordinarie curtesie Tolerate incorrigible brawlers with patience lest they become worse by thy striuing to amend them Conserue that is good Conscience is best witnes Contentment with our state Humilitie desireth not praise Right of hart Strine not to teach a foole Discharge thy dutie VVhiles thou art in this life Be content with thinges necessarie and they shal be geuen to thee Mat 6. v. 33. Innocencie is without feare General pietie of the people procureth Gods fauour Neighbourlie compassion Zele of iustice Remember the day of iudgement Honestie and pouertie No want nor waste Just gaine in traffike Obedience to magistrates Geue counsel sincerely Humilitie in authoritie Place the godlie in office Acknowlege thy faultes Feare to offend Clemencie in princes and prudent liberalitie Reuenge bloudshed Harmles life Diligent labour Iust dealing Iust iudgement Moderate gaine Freindlie correption To robbe parents is a greuous crime ●●alt not thyself Trust not thyne owne iudgement Almes dedes Godlie magistrates Loue to ●●e corrrected Choose godlie magistrates Loue wisdom Iust and liberal magistrates Sincere amitie Iust joy of the wickeds fal Compassion of the poore Care of common good Contend not with a foole Defend the iust Discretion in iust anger Derestation of lying Contentment in state of life Equitie in iudgement Chastisment of youth God neuer permitteth al to be euil Instruct children Pray to haue good Pastors Compel the froward to obey Consideration in speaking Subdue the flesh to the spirite Meeknes Humilitie Participate not with sinne Feare not men in Gods cause remembring that God is Iudge of al. Hate al wickednes Obey spiritual and temporal parents The fourth part Other singular precepts with prayse of a prudent woman :: The wisest man best knoweth that he wanteth much of perfect wisdom yet in his humilitie supposeth that others haue attained some what more then himself :: Christ the Sonne of God is wisdom it self and as the Sonne of man hath perfect wisdom :: Bondslades are to be
Mystically the Gentiles were iudged by Salomon better then the Iewes S. Ierom. :: Base vicions me● mixt with the good corrups the whole companie much more a mortal sinne in a mans soule destroyeth al the vertues that were there before :: Euil men aduanced seme to prosper :: But they fal into their owne trappes :: Such as seke by sense and reason to obtaine true knowlege enter not into the citie the Church They labour in vaine and are afflicted in studie of Scriptures when they walke in the desert and can not finde the citie S. Ierom. This text and manie others haue two senses 1. In kinges and al superiors are required mature age diligent care of the cōmon good 2. Antiquitie in matter of faith and religion is to be folowed not noueltie Iya. 8. Dan 7. Apoc. 1. Iere. 1. Also mortification and labour is required in Pastors not delicacie nor ease The B. Virgin Marie more free from sinne then the Patriarches Cant. 2. The 3. part An exhortation to beginne quickly and perseuere in Gods seruice a Of al vertues the workes of mercie corporal and spiritual most auaile for obtaining eternal felicitie Mat. 25. b So the same be grounded in true faith beleuing al that is written in the old and new testament signified by seuen eight c After de●th none ca 〈…〉 either ●●erite or demerite d Both in youth and old age do good workes :: An admonition to al in general to liue wel in this world remembring the day of general iudgement before which such signes shal come as are described here and by our Sauiour Mat. 24. And likewise euerie one is admonished in particular to serue God diligently whiles he hath time before death come when al his senses former helpes shal faile * The preachet :: This is the brife summe of al proficable doctrine Feare God kepe his commandments * Hidden or obscure thing Proem in Eccle. King Salomon according to his three names writte and intitled his three bookes Salomon Pacifier king of Israel Ecclesiastes Preacher king of Ierusalem Idida Beloued This Canticle doth excel other Canticles Al are not mete to read it Heb. 5. Best methode in lerning is to beginne with doctrine of good life then studie to know natural thinges and finally contemplate diuine mysteries A sacred dialogue or Enterlude * Forma dramatis God Christ the Spous or Bridgrome Three spouses The General The special and Singular Ephes 5. Origen S. Ierom. S. Aug. lib. 8. de Gen. adli S. Greg. S. Beda S. Tho. A●bor Geneb Del Rio. The particular contents are sette in the margent of euerie chapter a The Church of the old testament desireth Christs coming in flesh and the Christian Church prayeth for his coming in glorie b The Church outwardly afflicted is inwardly fayre c Christ encorageth his spouse the Church d She meditateth of his Passion and Resurrection e Christ praiseth his spouse f She againe praiseth him g VVith thankes for her repose and present consolation a Christ professeth himself the floure of mankinde yea Lord of al creatures b The Church excelleth al other societies In the Church the godlie excel sinners Among the innocent and holie the virgin Marie surpasseth al. c The Church praising Christ resteth secure vnder his protectiō d He for the weakes sake permitteth her not to be molested til she be prepared to suffer vvith patience e She feeling Christs assistance confesseth preacheth boldly his Gospel truth against al Paganes and Heretikes f VVho though he shew not himself visibly g yet encorageth her to approch vnto him h commandeth his pastors to destroy heresies i And so she reposeth in him a The Church finding Christ not in darke ignorance nor in philosophie but by his reue●ling him selfe to her holdeth him for euer b euen til the lewes shal at last also find him c Christ speaketh as before ch 2. v. 7 d The Church of Christ admireth her owne conuersion from Gentilitie e now ful of good workes f She also professeth that the ascending to eternal rest is by fighting manfully in obseruing the ten commandments in the six dayes of this life g euen to bloud if ned● be h which is the highest degree of charitie i And inuiteth al others to come vnto Christ k who in the flesh which he tooke of his mother was crowned in heauen after his Passion a Christ againe prai●eth the beautie of his Church b Sincere and simple intention c Al her temporal occupations directed to Gods glorie d Pastors who like nurces geue bread of good doctrine to litle ones e Faith and good workes f Preaching Christs passion g And not ashamed to professe Christ Crucified h Administration of Sacraments wherby the Church Christs mystical bodie is ioyned to him her head i which is an inexpugnable fortresse k Both Iewes and Gentiles are fed with the principles of Christian doctrin l Christ dwelleth in mortified and deuout mindes m The Church triumphant is without spotte and euerie particular soule entring into heauen the B virgin mother was also in this life alwayes immaculate n Al tentations whether they be in manifest crueltie or in flatering sureltie make constant soules more gratful to God a The spouse condescending to Gods vvil is vvel content to suffer persecution b Christ again● shevveth his good liking in his spouses patience c and vvilleth the glorious Sainctes to congratulate vvith the patient d The spouse desireth to rest in meditation e but is called vpon to helpe others f and vrged by Christs owne example working for al mankind g And so she imployeth herself also in actiue life h Stil conseruing a desire to returne vnto contemplation i The deuout confer together describing the excellencies of Christ k And resolue to seke him whersoeuer he be a The Church teacheth her children that Christ is delighted with the godlie desires and fructful vvorkes of the faithful b Christ g●●●●e commendeth his Church wel composed of distinct orders some gouerning some retired in clo●sters from this world the rest also exercising vvorkes of mercie in the trubles of this life al together making a complete armie terrible to al enimies c The more anie contemplate Gods Maiestie the better they perceiue that he is incomprensensible d Manie true pastores e more hyrelinges that also preach truth but for temporal commoditie f And innumerable faithful soules in the Church g Al vvhich are but one bodie in vnitie of ●aith h The voice of the old synagogue admiring the beautie of Christs Church i The Church of Christ exhorteth the Synagogue of the Ievves to returne to Christ a Christ interposeth his commendation of the Ievves vvho at last shal returne to him vvith great seruoure of faith and deuotion b And so iointly praiseth his Church consisting of both peoples c The Church as it vvere taking the vvoid out of Christs mouth vvhiles he
no light of vertue in himself like the moone butsometimes semeth to haue more light sometimes lesse sometimes none at al. S. Bernard Prou. 10. :: He that expresly doth iniurie to an other is iuitly punished also in this vvorld :: Hovv secretly soeuer anie hutteth an other he vvoundeth his ovvne conscience and can not escape Gods iudgement Prou. 26. Eccle. 10. :: He that seeketh reuenge contrarie to the course of iustice or of euil intention or of rancor of mind sinneth greuously ●ut 6. R●m 11. Charitie requireth that we remitte iniuries with three conditions if the offender be truly penitent if the remission of punishment be not against iustice nor against necessarie discipline 〈◊〉 ●● :: Vndiscrete reporte to one what an other hath saide is often cause of much discontentment and of dissention :: To heare detraction is as bad as to speake it :: Lending is a worke of mercie a kinde of almes To repay that is borowed is a worke of iustice wittingly not to restore is as bad as theft Exo. 22. Deut. 14. T●b 4. :: Great fruite of workes of mercie :: Prudence requireth that by helping an other thou doest not ouerthrovv thyself Pr●● 1● 2● Deut. 6. :: The eldest sonne being heire to his father is to haue ●pecial case of the other children euen to the aduenturing of his owne hurt for their liues :: Teeth on edge o● g●ashing of teeth is a part of hel paines ●●● 8. 1● sometimes beginneth in this life :: 〈…〉 is aboue al riche● and honour Deut. 14. :: Suffer not vnnecessarie pensiuenes to afflict thy mind through pusillanimitie Prau 12. 15. 17. :: ●●ut relie wholly ●●●● God 's ●●l and prouidence resigning thy wil ●●to his :: They that imploy al their studie to getre vertues shal be more free from tentations of the flesh :: And from drawsines of mind whereupon S Ierom admonisheth Loue the studies of holie Scriptures and thou vvilt not loue the vices of the fresh Epist ad Rusticum Monach :: It is in mans freewil to transgresse therfore they are happie that through Gods grace do not breake his commandments Prou. ●● Prou. 22. :: As bread is the chiefe sustenāce of the bodie so doctrine is of the minde which being good nourisheth if it be bad corrupteth them that receiue it Psa 103. Prou 31. :: Humilitie is necessarie in al but most especially in men of auctoritie The greatest art in this life is to contemne vaine glorie in height of auctoritie S Greg. de cura pastorali Eccle. 3. :: God di●ecteth mens resolutions and actions when they vse the meanes of consultation as he hath appointed for vvhen two or three are gathered in his name he is in middes of them Mat. 18. :: Do not against thy cōference :: Men ledde with passions runne from one vice into an other without ceasing Especially heretikes runne into manie errors Against which S Paul prescribeth this rule It is best that the hart be established with grace Heb. 13. v. 9. Rom. ● :: Vaine dreames are not to be regarded but some are good from God Gen 37. 40. 41. Dan. 2. 4. Mat. 1. :: Vvhatsoeuer is written in holy Scripture is vndoubtedly true and no ●ote of the law shal perish :: God also prouideth that alwayes there be some which truly explicate his lavv Psa 32. Prou. 21. v. 27. Prou. 15. v. 8. Leuit. 19. :: He that destroyeth that an other buildeth bringeth tvvo mens labours to nothing :: R●cidiuation into sinne maketh the ●o●●er repentāce frustrate Mat. 18. v. 33. :: Sacrifices of penance Psal ●● of iustice Psal ● and of praise ●●a 4● 〈…〉 then 〈…〉 1. Reg. 15 v. 22. Iere. 7. :: Neuertheles 〈…〉 is also necessarie Exo. ●● 〈◊〉 ●4 D●●●●● 2 Cor. ● ●●●● :: Often times so much A● Prou. 24. Seuen times shal the iust fal shal ●●● againe Leuit. 22. Deut. 1● 2 P●●●● 19. Rom. 2. Act. 10. :: This prayer implieth also a prophecie of the conuersion of the Gentiles as the like very often in the Psalmes 58. 6● 65. c. Exo. 4. Num. 6. :: As there i● difference of meates 〈◊〉 so there ought to be discret on in wordes in choosing a wi●e in al actions and desires :: In concord smal thinges increase by discord al thinges goe to hauocke :: As freindshippe is a most necessarie thing in humane life so fained frēdshippe is most dangerous :: Man is bond to vse al pru●lentendeuour withal most especially to pray for Gods direction :: The dayes of the Blessed in heauen who see God are eternal :: The same which S. Paul admonisheth 1. Cor 11. let euerie one proue him self by examining rectifying his conscience 1. Cor. 6. :: Mans bodie naturally needeth sustenāce sometimes phisike and so doth his soule which as it is more excellent so it ought to be more regarded Exo. 25. Isa 38. Spiritual infirmitie requireth spiritual phisike :: To auoide euil speach shew that thou art truly sorie for the death of thy freind But moderate thy sorow lest it hurt thy self Prou. ●5 17. 2. Reg. 12 :: VVhen pastores haue ley sure from preaching they may then profite others by writing So S. Paul not only preached but also writte So likewise the Doctors of the Church and other holie fathers :: Besides actiue life commended in the former chap. it is necessarie that vertuous men vse also meditation cōtemplation Vnto which foure dispositions are requisite described in this chapt 1. True knowlege of holie My●●eries without the which meditation wil be erronious 2. :: Puritie of soule free frō greuous sinnes and endowed vvith vertues :: Humilitie is especially required in contemplatiue persons 3. Gen. 1. Exo. 1. :: Hope of eternal reward comforteth encoregeth the seruants of God 4. Gen. ● :: In the meane time God geueth necessaries for this life VVhich the good vse rightly to their merite the wicked vse euil to their damnation :: Diuels were created in state of grace and of their owne wil fel from God consequently are eternally punished :: The penalties which al men euen new borne infants suffer do shew that al in general are guiltie of original sinne for if they were not guiltie then punishment were not iust That Christ also would be subiect to the same penalties was for the sinnes of others And though his ● mother vvas preserued from this sinne yet she vvas not exempted from the general penaltie of al mankinde Gen. 7. Eccle. 1. :: The societie of Christs Church florishing in al vertues excelleth the benefites of the old Testament :: Euerie one is bound to labour that he want not necessaries :: It is to no purpose after death to accuse the shortnes or length of life pretending the same to haue bene cause of sinne For God doth al iustly yea and for the best if men would so vse his benefites :: It behoueth children and scholars to
same S. Bernard sheweth this blessed Virgin in singular sorte bruised the serpents head in that she quite vanquished al maner suggestions of the wicked serpēt neuer yelding to not taking delight in anie euil moued by him 19. Dust thou art By these wordes Adam was admonished to humble him selfe considering the matter wherof his bodie was made and into which he should be resolued againe wherupon it came to be a ceremonie amongst penitents to cast ashes on their heads As appeareth in holie Scriptures for which cause the Church now also vseth this ceremonie the first day of Lent putting ashes on her childrens heades willing them to remember that dust they are and to dust they shal returne to moue vs by this meditation to more serious penance 22. ●●st perhaps Notwithstanding Gods eternal decree in disposing al thinges and his omnipotencie which nothing can resist yet he produceth good and either auoideth or disposeth of euil which he suffereth by ordinarie meanes as appeareth Act. 27 v. 31. and that because man hath free wil with which God concurreth destroyeth not nor forceth as S. Augustin teacheth 24. Placed Cherubins Man being cast out of paradise the same is defended with duble gard with Angels that are watchful wise and potent and with fire and sword most terrible armoure to man wherby againe we see that God vseth ordinarie meanes in his prouidence as the ministrie of Angels humane terror and would neither destroy the tree nor depriue it of the vertue to prolong life nor bereue man of freewil by which he might desire to returne but conseruing nature in al creatures preuenteth inconueniences otherwise These Angels also hinder the diuel that he can not enter paradise lest he should take of the fruite of the tree and geue it to men to prolong their liues and therby draw them to his seruice CHAP. IIII. VVicked Cain killeth holie Abel 9. vvhose bloud cryeth for reuenge 11. Cain a cursed vacabond 17. hath much issue 25 Adam also hath Seth and Seth Enos AND Adam knewe Eue his wife who conceiued and brought forth Cain saying I haue gotten a man through God † And againe she brought forth his brother Abel And Abel was a shepehard Cain a husbandman † And it befel after manie dayes that Cain “ offred of the fruites of the earth giftes to our Lord. † Abel also offred of the first begotten of his flocke and of their fat and our Lord “ had respect to Abel to his giftes † But to Cain and to his giftes he had not respect Cain was exceeding angrie and his countenance abated † And our Lord said to him Why art thou angrie and why is thy countinance fallen † If thou doe wel “ shalt thou not receiue againe but if thou doest il shal not thy sinne forth with be present at the dore but the lust therof shal be “ vnder thee and thou shalt haue dominion ouer it † And Caine said to Abel his brother Let vs goe forth abroad And when they were in the filde Caine rose vp against his brother Abel and slewe him † And our Lord said to Cain Where is Abel thy brother Who answered I know not am I my brothers keper † And he said to him What hast thou done the voice of thy brothers bloud crieth to me out of the earth † Now therfore cursed shalt thou be vpon the earth which hath opened her mouth receiued the bloud of thy brother at thy hand † When thou shalt til it it shal not yeld to thee her fruite a roag and vagabound shalt thou be vpon the earth † And Cain said to our Lord Myne iniquitie is greater then that I may deserue pardon † Loe thou doest cast me out this day from the face of the earth and from thy face shal I be hid and I shal be a vagabound fugitiue on the earth euerie one therfore that findeth me shal kil me † And our Lord said to him No it shal not so be but whosoeuer shal kil Cain shal be punished seauen fould And our Lord put a marke on Cain that whosoeuer found him should not kil him † And “ Cain went forth from the face of our Lord and dwelt as a fugitiue on the earth at the east side of Eden † And Cain knewe his wife who conceiued and brought forth Enoch And he built a citie called the name therof by the name of his sonne Enoch † Moreouer Enoch be gat Irad and Irad begat Mauiael and Mauiael begat Mathusael and Mathusael begat Lamech † Who tooke two wiues the name of the one was Ada and the name of the other Sella † And Ada brought forth Iabel who was the father of them that dwel in tents and of heardsmen † And his brothers name was Iubal he was the father of them that sing on harpe organes † Sella also brought forth Tubalcain who was a hammerer worker in al worke of brasse iron And the sister of Tubalcain was Noema † And Lamech said to his wiues Ada and Sella Heare my voice ye wiues of Lamech harken to my talke for I haue slaine a mā to the wounding of my selfe and a stripeling to mine owne drie blowe brewsing † Seuenfould vengeance shal be taken of Cain but of Lamech seuentie times seuen fould † Adam also knewe his wife again and she brought forth a sonne and called his name Seth saying God hath giuen me other seede for Abel whom Cain slewe † But to Seth also was borne a sonne whom he called Enos this man began to inuocate the name of our Lord. ANNOTATIONS CHAP. IIII 3. Offered giftes Either God him selfe taught Adam and he his children or els they knew by instinct of nature that Sacrifice must be offered to God to acknowledge therby his supreme dominion ouer man and mans due subiection to his diuine Maiestie And that not only in internal affection which as S. Augustin and al Catholique Doctors teach is principally required but also in external things because we consist of bodie and not only of soule and haue by Gods goodnes the vse of corporal things As here we see example in the law of nature and the same was ordained by written precept in the law of Moyses the Prophetes also foretold that external Sacrifice should be offered in the law of grace and new Testament to wit the same which Christ instituted and left in his Church to continew to the end of the world Moreouer this homage of offering Sacrifice is so peculiar to God only that albeit manie other exterior rites and seruices are vsed both to God men as to be bare head to be we to kneele the li●e before them either of great hum●liti● saith S. Augustin or of pestiferous ●latterie to such as are homines colendi venerandi si autem eis multum additur adorandi men to be vvorshipped reuerenced and
that the earth was corrupted for al flesh had corrupted his way vpon the earth † he said to Noe The end of al flesh is come before me the earth is replenished with iniquitie from the face of them I wil destroy them with the earth † Make thee an arke of timber planke cabinets shalt thou make in the arke and shalt pitch it within and without with bitume † And thus shalt thou make it The length of the Arke shal be three hundred cubitts fiftie cubitts the breadth and thirtie cubitts the height of it † Thou shalt make a windowe in the arke and in a cubit finish the toppe of it and the dore of the arke thou shalt set at the side belowe middle chambers and third loftes shalt thou make in it † Behold I wil bring the waters of a great floud vpon the earth that I may destroy al flesh wherin there is breath of life vnder heauen Al thinges that are in the earth shal be consumed † and I wil establish my couenant with thee and thou shalt enter into the arke thou and thy sonnes and thy wife and the wiues of thy sonnes with thee † And of al liuing creatures of al flesh thou shalt bring payres into the arke that they may liue with thee of the male sexe and the female † Of foules according to their kind and of beastes in their kind of al that creepeth on the earth according to their kind payres of al sortes shal enter in with thee that they may liue † Thou shalt take therfore with thee of al meates that may be eaten and thou shalt lay them vp with thee and they shal be meate for thee and them † Noe therfore did al thinges which God commanded him ANNOTATIONS CHAP. VI. 2. Sonnes of God The progenie of Seth professing true faith Religion were called the sonnes of God and those of Cains issue and congregation folowing erronious and wicked opinions were called the sonnes of men VVhich were then the distinctiue termes of true and false Religion as afterwardes were the termes of Iewes and Gentiles after Christ Christians and Paganes and lastly true and false Christians are distinguished by the names of Catholiques and Heretikes As S. Augustin teacheth in his questions vpon Genesis other places VVhich is confirmed by the like iugement of S. Ciril Alexandrinus li. 9. aduers Iulianum S. Ambrose li. de Noe arca c. 4. S. Pacianus epist ad Symphorianum Theodoret. manie others vpon this place 3 An hundred and tvventie yeares Mans life was not here shortned to an hundred and twentie yeares as some haue misunderstood this place For after this diuers liued much longer as appeareth in the genealogie of Sem to Abram in the 11. chapter of Genesis And Abraham liued 175. yeares c. 25. Isaac 180. c. 35. Iacob 147. c. 47. and Ioiadas borne 1500. yeares after liued 130. yeares 2. Par. 24. But 120. yeares were granted before the floud for that generation to repent in as the Chaldee Edition expresseth more plainely Terminus dabitur ei centum viginti annorum si sorte conuertatur The tearme of an hundred and twentie yeares shal be geuen them if perhaps they may conuert And so S. Chrisostom S. Hierom. and S. Augustin expound this Scripture Yet whether God cut of 20. of these yeares and brought the floud after a 100 for Noe had his sonnes when he was 500. yeares old the floud came in the 600. yeare of his age or that this warning was geuen twentie yeares before anie of his sōnes were borne is not so easely decided by the holie Doctors How easie soeuer Protestants say al Scriptures are Though vnder correction of better iudgement it semeth more probable that Moyses by anticipation ioyneth the birth of Noes sonnes when he was 500. yeares old to the rest of the geneologie of the first Patriarkes in the former chapter and then telleth of this admonition geuen 20. yeares before their birth And so God expected the peoples repentance the whole time of 120. yeares prescribed 4. Grants vvere vpon the earth Some haue thought that these giantes were not men nor begotten by men but that either diuels which fel at first from heauen or other Angels allured with concupiscence begate them of the daughters of Cain Philo Iudeus in his booke de Gigantibus writeth that those whom Moyses here called Augels the Philosophers called Genios Qui sunt animalia aë●ea vvhich are liuing creatures vvith ayrie bodies Iosephus li. 1. Antiq. saith that Angels begate these giants Tertullian also li. de habitu muliebri holdeth the same error and diuers more otherwise good authors But S. Ciril of Alexandria li. 9. aduer Iulian S. Chrisostom homil 22. in Gen S. Ambrose de Noe arca c. 4. S. Augustin li. 15. c. 23. de ciuit S. Hierom Tradit Hebraic and other most principal Doctors teach it to be vntrue yea vnpossible that these giants should haue bene begotten by anie other creatures then by men For that Angels and diuels are mere spirits without al natural bodies And if they had ayrie bodies as they haue not yet they could not haue such generation For the powre or force to engender belongeth to the vegatatiue soule whose proper operations are to tuine nutriment into the substance of the subiect wherin it is and to engender new issue or ofspring from the same as Aristotle sheweth li. 2. de anima textu 24. And in what bodies soeuer there is vegetatiue soule it must needes be that the same was engendred and must some times decay and die and so diuels should be mortal Moreouer if they could haue generation togeather with mankind then such issue should be a distinct species both from man and diuel as a mule differeth both from horse and asse Againe if spirits had abused wemen in assumpted bodies and shape of men yet they did not take them to wiues as the Scripture saith they did who begate these giants Finally the holie Scripture here expresly calleth the giants men These be the mightie ones famous men The modestie of Scripture terming them famous whom our common phrase would cal infamous being more monstrous in wickednes of mind then in hugenes of bodie For they were most insolent lasciuious couetous cruel and in al kinde of vices most impious 5. Al the coigtation bent to euel Luther in his 21. article condemned by Leo the tenth would proue by these wordes and the like folowing Al siesh had corrupted his vvay vpon earth that al workes of men are sinnes For saith he seeing the hartes of al men are bent alwaies to euil and al humane actions proceede from the hart it must needes be that the hart as the fountaine being corrupt the streames also issuing from the same must be corrupted Againe al flesh hauing corrupted his way vpon earth there is not any iust man saith he nor any man without sinne and
a ribbe of his side to be his mate and vnseparable companion as man and wife ioyned in Mariage with Gods blessing for increase and multiplication As appeareth in the two first chapters of this booke But God hauing made man right he intangled him selfe ●● holie Scripture speaketh with infinite questions For the diuel enuying mans felicitie in●●gled our mother E●e with questions and lies and then by her first seduced and deceiued allured also Adam to the transgression of Gods commandment And so they lost original iustice which Adam had receiued for him selfe and al mankind and al proceeding from them by natural propagation are borne the children of wrath in original sinne contracted from Adam slaues of the diuel not only subiect to temporal death but also are excluded for euer from heauenly blisse and glorie except by Christs redemption particularly applied they be restored to grace iustice in this life And touching Adam and Eue whose sinne was not original but actual directly committed by them selues Gods mercie so reclamed them by new grace that they despared not as Cain and some orhers did afterwards but with hope of remission were sorie and penitent and accordingly receiued penance and redemption For God brought Adam from his sinne as holie writte testifieth and the same is collected of Eue God shewing the like signes of his prouident mercie towards them both of which we shal by and by note some for example Now let vs see the more principal points of faith and Religion professed and obserued by the Church of God before Noes floud First they beleeued in one Eternal and Omnipotent God who made the whole world and al things therin of nothing which is easely confessed of al that are not plaine Atheists and may be proued against them by reason And therfore Adam and other Patriarches could not erre in this Article nor others be ignorant therof except they were very wicked The Mysterie also of the Blessed Trinitie three Diuine Persons in one God though farre aboue the reach of mans reason yet was beleued more expresly by som● more implied by others and conserued from age to age by tradition at least amongst the chiefe heades and leaders wherupon Moyses afterwardes insinuated the same great Mysterie by diuers wordes and phrase● writing of God and his workes The two wordes God created if they be rightly considered importe so much For the word Elohim God in the plural number signifyeth pluralitie of Persons for manie Gods it can not signifie seeing there is but one God and the verbe bara created in the singular number signifyeth one God in nature and substance albeit three Persons For whatsoeuer God doth in creatures is the worke of the whole Trinitie though holie Scriptures do oftentimes appropriate some worke to one Diuine Person some to another which also proueth distinction of Persons in God So the wordes God created heauen and earth signifie the Father to whom powre is attributed In the beginning signifie the Sonne to whom wisdome is appropriated and the words The Sprite of God moued ouer the waters signifie the Holie Ghost by whose bountiful goodnes the waters were made fruictful Likewise Gods owne wordes Let vs make man signifie the pluralitie of Persons and Image and likenes in the singular number signifie one God Men also knew by faith manie things perteyning to them selues As that the bodie was made of the slime of the earth the soule not produced of anie thing formerly existing but created immediatly of nothing and naturally immortal that the soule of Adam was indued with grace and iustice that he fel from that happie state by yelding to tentation and breaking Gods commandment of abstinence that for the same sinne Adam and Eue were cast forth of Paradise and al mankind subiect to death and other calamities For remedie against sinne restauration to grace they beleeued in Christ promised to be borne of the womans seede who by his death should conquer the wicked serpent deliuer man from captiuitie and restore him to spiritual life And this is the cause of the perpetual enmitie betwen the woman especially the most blessed Virgin Mother of whom Christ tooke flesh and the serpent and betwen her seede the spiritual children of Christ and the serpents seede the whole companie of the wicked Of this battle and conquest Targhum Hierosolimitanum thus speaketh There shal be remedie and health to the children of wemen but to thee o serpent there shal be no medicine yea they shal tread thee vnder their feete in the latter dayes by the powre of Christ their King Likewise Gods familiar conuersation with diuers men in mans shape Gen. 2. 3. 4. 6. and 7. was a signe of Christs incarnation And The Sacrifices immolated did prefigurate his death in respect wherof it is said in the Apocalips The Lamb● was slaine from the beginniing of the world But more expresly S. Paul testifieth that Abel Enoch and Noe beleeued in Christ naming them for example of the first age and others of other times and in the end concludeth that manie more being approued by the same faith receiued not the promise to wit in their life time God prouiding that they without others of the new Law should not be consummate that is not admitted into heauenlie ioyes fruition of God vntil the way of eternal glorie were opened by our Lords Passion and As●ension Neither did the true seruants of God in those first dayes only beleeue in hart but they also professed their saith Religion by external Rites namely in offering of Sacrifice the most special homage seruice to God which is clerly testified cha 4. as wel bloudie in figure of Christs Passion as vnbloudie in figure of the holie Eucharist Also the accepting of the one rightly offered by Abel reiecting the other not donne sincerly by Cair was declared by external signes which Cain disdayning and enuying his brothers good worke knowing his owne to be naught of mere malice killed his brother Besides Sacrifice they had also other Rites in publique Assemblies praying and inuocating the name of our Lord in more solemne maner from Enos time and so forvvard according to that is recorded of him in the end of the fourth chapter for douteles Adam Abel and Seth did also pray and call vpon God and therfore it was some addition or increase of solemnitie in the seruice of God which is referred to Enos They had moreouer other ceremonies of the seuenth day particularly blessed and sanctified by God kept holie by Adam and other Patriarches as Abben Ezra witnesseth in his commentaries vpon the tenne commandements Of abstayning from meates for it semeth the more godlie sorte did eate no flesh before the floud which was after permitted Obseruation of cleane and vncleane beastes for Sacrifice Of peculiar places dedicated to religious vses where people mette together to pray Likwise diuers
death of his Saincts Hence also is proued that seeing in this life the good are afflicted and the bad oftentimes prosper temporally there must nedes be an other Court of exact Iustice and an other Reaconing day wherin euerie one shal receiue according as they haue donne good or euil which was sufficiently intimated by Gods discussing and manifesting Abels and Cains deserts which were hidden before and in part rewarding them accordingly yet reseruing the ful reward of the one and punishment of the other to the next world Of the Iudge and his sentence Enoch alleadged by S. Iude the Apostle proficied clerly saying Behold our Lord cometh in his holie thousands to doe iudgement aganst al and to reproue al the impions of al the workes of their impietie wherby they haue donne impiously and of al the hard things which impious sinners haue spoken against him Thus holie Enoch preached touching the wicked which thought there was no Iudgement to come nor Iudge to be feared At this Iudgement al shal appeare in bodie and soule returning to life For that Al men shal rise from death is proued by the immortalitie of mans soule which God did not make nor produce of corruptible matter but immediatly Breathed into his face the breath of life and man became a liuing soule so the soule being immortal and hauing a natural inclination to the bodie mans natural perfection requireth the coniunction of bodie and soule for neither soule nor bodie separated is a man but both ioyned in one subsistence are a man in so much that mankind should perish except the bodies shal rise againe and liue with the soules And then shal the bodies be qualified according to the state of the soules happie or miserable for euer Of Eternal life the translation of Enoch is a figure For seeing God preserueth his corruptible bodie so long from death and infirmitie it is a token and manifest signe that by the same powre of God the bodies of men shal at last day after that al men are once dead rise againe and remaine with the soules for euer The good in Eternal ioy the wicked in Eternal paine Both signified by the custodie of the gate of Paradise by Angels who for euer kepe out these that are stil defiled with sinne and so they depart into fire euerlasting and admit the innocent and iust into the kingdome of heauen which is euerlasting ioy and perfect felicitie Thus we see the face and briefe summe of Religion in the beginning of the world til the floud and the state of the Church which was alwayes Visible consisting of men good and bad with a continual Succession of Rulers as wel spiritual as temporal For the first borne were both Priestes and Princes in euerie familie And amongst the same one euer chief of al. From which ranke Cain was excluded or rather excluded him selfe by Going forth from the face of our Lord. Wherupon holie Moyses r●●teth this Monarchical succession of one chiefe and Supreme Head from Adam by the line of Seth Enos Cainan Malaleel Iared Enoch Mathusala Lamech and Noe. Neuertheles he setteth downe also the progenie of Cain the first beginner of a worldlie schismatical and heretical conuenticle opposite to the Citie of God He denied Gods prouidence as Thargum Hierosolomitanum testifieth protesting to Abel That there was no Iustice nor Iudge nor other world then this no reward for vertue nor punishment for sinne and so desperatly he killed Abel of these negatiue principles proceeded other like detestable opinions and most wicked life sauage and barbarous crueltie and al kind of impietie And in processe of time albeit manie remained in true faith and vnitie of the Church yet by conuersation with such miscreantes especially by occasion of Mariages betwen the faithful and infidels almost the whole world was corrupted in maners But Noe was iust and perfect In punishment therefore of so great and enormious sinnes God sent the general floud wherby al Cains progenie and al other infidels were wholly destroyed and extinguished and the true Church notably purged onlie iust Noe and his familie reserued By whom the same true Church was continued and the world againe replenished with men CHAP. VIII The waters diminishing by litle and litle 6. Noe sendeth forth a crow 8. after him a doue thrise 18. lastly goeth forth with al that were with him in the arke 20. erecteth an Altar and offereth Sacrifice AND God remembred Noe and al the beasts and al the cattle which were with him in the arke and brought a winde vpon the earth and the waters decreased † And the sountaines of the depth and the floud gates of heauen were shut vp and the rayne from heauen was stayd † And the waters returned from the earth going comming and they begane to decrease after a hundred fiftie dayes † And the arke rested the seauenth moneth the seauen twentith day of the moneth vpon the mountaines of Armenia † But the waters for al that were going and decreasing vntil the tenth moneth for in the tenth moneth the first day of the moneth the topps of the mountaines appeared † And after that fourtie dayes were passed Noe opening the windowe of the arke which he had made let forth a crowe † which went forth and did not returne til the waters were dried vpon the earth † He sent forth also a doue after him to see if the waters were ceased yet vpon the face of the earth † Which finding not where her foote might rest returned to him into the arke for the waters were vpon the whole earth and he stretched forth his hand and caught her and brought her into the arke † And hauing expected yet seauen moe dayes againe he let forth a doue out of the arke † But she came to him at euentide carrying a bough of an oliue tree that had greene leaues in her mouth Noe therfore vnderstood that the waters were ceased vpon the earth † And he expected yet neuertheles other seauen dayes and he sent forth a doue which returned not any more vnto him † Therfore in the sixt hundred and one yeare the first moneth the first day of the moneth the waters were cleane diminished vpon the earth and Noe opening the roofe of the arke looked and sawe that the face of the earth was dried † In the second moneth the seuen twentyth day of the moneth the earth was dried † And God spake to Noe saying † Goe forth of the arke thou thy wife thy sonnes and the wiues of thy sonnes with thee † Al cattle that are with thee of al flesh as wel in soules as in beastes al creepers that creepe vpon the earth bring out with thee goe yee vpon the earth increase and multiplie vpon it † Noe therfore went forth and his sonnes his wife and the wiues of his sonnes with him
excedingly and I wil make thee into nations and kinges shal come forth of thee † And I wil establish my couenant betwen me and thee and betwen thy seede after thee in their generations by a perpetual couenant to be thy God and thy sedes after thee † And I wil geue to thee and to thy seed the land of thy peregrination al the land of Chanaan for a perpetual possession and I wil be their God † Againe God said to Abraham And thou therfore shalt keepe my couenant and thy seed after thee in their generations † This is my couenant which you shal obserue betwen me and you and thy seede after thee Al the malekind of you shal be circumcised † and you shal circumcise the flesh of your prepuce that it may be for a signe of the couenant betwen me and you † An infant of eight daies shal be circumcised among you al malekind in your generations aswel the homebred shal be circumcised as the bought seruant of whosoeuer he is not of your stocke † and my couenant shal be in your flesh for a perpetual couenant † The male whose flesh of his prepuce shal not be circumcised that soule shal be destroied out of his people because he hath broken my couenant † God said also to Abraham Sarai thy wife thou shalt not cal Sarai but Sara † And I wil blesse her and of her I wil giue thee a sonne whom I wil blesse and he shal be into nations and kings of peoples shal spring of him † Abraham fel vpon his face laughed saying in his hart Shal trowest thou to him that is an hundred yeare old a sonne be borne and Sara that is nyntie yeares old shal she beare † And he said to God I would that Ismael may liue before thee † And God said to Abraham Sara thy wife shal beare thee a sonne and thou shalt cal his name Isaac and I wil establish my couenant to him for a perpetual couenant and to his seed after him † Concerning Ismael also I haue heard thee behold I wil blesse him and encrease and multiplie him exceadingly twelue dukes shal he beget and I wil make him into a great nation † But my couenant I wil establish with Isaac whom Sara shal bring forth to thee at this time an other yeare † And when he had leaft of speaking with him God ascended from Abraham † And Abraham tooke Ismael his sonne and al the homebred of his house and al whom he had bought al the males of al the men of his house and he circumcised the flesh of their prepuce forth with the very same day as God had commanded him † Abraham was nyntie and nyne yeares old when he circumcised the flesh of his prepuce † And Ismael his sonne was ful thirtene yeares old at the time of his circumcision † The selfsame day was Abraham circumcised and Ismael his sonne † And al the men of his house as wel the home bred as the bought seruantes and strangers were circumcised togeather ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XVII 5. Manie nations Abram signifying Hiegh or Noble father changed into Abraham which signifieth Father of manie nations and Sarai signifying My Princes changed into Sara which absolutly signifieth Princesse importe great Mysteries intended by God For by this changing of names was declared and confirmed that Abraham by the issue that he should haue of Sara should be the father of manie nations which S. Paul expresly applieth to his spiritual children those especially that should beleue in Christ of the Gentiles prefigured by Isaac borne of the freevvoman by the promise as the Iewes were prefigured by Ismael borne of the bondvvoman according to the flesh concluding with the prophet Esai that Manie are the children of the desolate that before vvas barren For albeit Abraham was natural father of foure nations The Ismaelites Madianites Idumeans and the Israelites yet he was spiritual father of manie more to wit of al nations that beleue in Christ from his owne time to the ●d of the world of which some are Iewes but the greatest part Gentiles as the same Apostle sheweth Rom. 4. Gal. 4. Ephes 3. Collos 1. and in other places wherby is clere that the Church of Christ doth alwayes consist of manie nations not as Donatistes and Protestants absurdly say sometimes of few inuisible or vnknowen persons for so Abraham should sometimes be father of few or no nations which d●rogateth either from Gods omnipotencie if he could not or from his fidelitie if he should not maintaine his promise made to Abraham for euer 10. shal be circumscised The Sacrament of Circumcision here first instituted about 400. yeares before the Law of Moyses is a perfect figure of Baptisme resembling it in foure things First by both these Sacraments the faithful are distinguished from infidels Secondly proffession of faith is made in them both either by those that receiue the same if they be of discretion or by others for them if they be infants Thirdly by both these Sacraments entrance is made into the Church and to the participation of other Sacraments and spiritual rites Fourrhly both these Sacraments induce subiection to the iurisdiction and lawes of the Church But Baptisme doth farie excel Circumcision in that it is more easie or lesse painful more vniuersal for it pertaineth to al nations and both sexes and especially in vertue and efficacie for Baptisme as an instrumental cause remitteth sinne and iustifieth Circumcision was only a signe that grace was geuen sinne remitted Againe Baptisme imprinteth a character in the soule the other leaueth a marck only in the flesh Finally Baptisme openeth the gate of heauen in vertue of Christs passion now past which circumcision could not before Christ suffered death Of which both resemblance and difference S. Augustin treateth in manie places especially li. 3. de doct christ c. 9. Epist 118. and Ianuarium li 19. c. 13. cont Faust in Psal 73. where he also maketh like comparison betwen other Sacraments of the old and new Testament 14. Shal be destroyed Here occurre two difficulties about the true sense of this hard place First whether this punishment belonged to them only by whose fault circumcision was omitted or to infants also that should be circumcised and were not Secondly whether temporal punishment or eternal was here threatned sor transgression of this precept Touching the first doubt it semeth probable that this punishment pertained only to those by whose negligence themselues or others of their charge were not circumcised for that the reason why such a one is punished is aleaged Because he hath broken Gods couenant VVhich is only in their powre to kepe or breake that are of discretion and not in the powre of infants The indifferencie also of the Hebrew and Greeke text fauoreth this sense for where according to the Latin we read The male vvhose flesh of prepuce is not circumcised The
the gaine and increase that riseth therof c. For whatsoeuer you bestow vpon Gods priests he accounteth it as bestowed on himself And he that so bestoweth shal not only receiue like retrbution but manifold greater our merciful God alwayes of the abundance of his mercie exceeding the things which are done by vs. Let vs not therfore be worse then infidels who for the error of idols gaue so much to their seruants for how much error and truth do differ so much difference is there betwen theirs and Gods Priests Thus much and something more writeth S. Chrisostom vpon this place 22. Priests The Hebrew word Cohenim is here vniuersally translated Priests in al languages and Editions which chap. 40. v. 45. some translate Prince and more probably 2. Reg. 8. v. vlt. where Dauids sonnes are called Cohenim who were in dede Princes and not properly Priests But in this present place it signifieth those to whom Pharao alowed particular prouision in the time of dearth which al vnderstand of Priests and not of Princes 30. I vvil sleepe vvith my fathers Albeit neither the lack of burial nor anie crueltie nor contumelie vsed against dead bodies can annoy the iust for those that kil mens bodies can aftervvards doe them noe more harme yet it is both a lawful natural desire and a spiritual comfort and profit to be buried in special places where their owne frends or holie persons are buried or where God is more specialy serued Sacrifice and other prayers offered And so both Iaeob and Ioseph desired to rest in the land of Chanaan where their parents were buried and where Christ should be borne and redeeme mākind But wordlie pompe and honour of funerals are rather the cōfort of the liuing then the reliefe of the departed as S. Augustin teacheth in Psal 115. For in the sight of men the troupe of seruants saith the same S. Augustin lib. 1. c. 13. de ciuit made solemne and glorious exequies to the rich glutton that was cloathed in silk and fared delicately in his life but in the sight of God the Angels ministerie made far more excellent to poore Lazarus though they caried not his bodie into a marble tombe but his soule into Abrahams bosome 31. To the beds head S. Paul alleaging this place saith Iacob adored the top of Ioseph his rod folowing the Septuagint who for the same Hebrew word being without points that is without vowels in this place say rod and in the next chapter v. 2. interpret bed For Matteh signifieth a rod and Mittah a bed The Latin rherfore translating bed as the Hebrew is pointed and the Septuagint and S. Paule reading rod both are true and both together expresse the whole action that Iacob taking Iosephs rod into his hand and turning to the beds head leaned on the top of the rod and adored not only God the Lord and geuer of al good but also his sonne Ioseph now the chiefe ruler and Prince of Aegypt as S. Augustin expoundeth q 162. in Gen. And herein saith S. Chrisostom ho 66 Iosephs dreame was fulfilled that the sunne and moone should adore him The like saith Theodoret q. 108 in Gen And Procopius addeth that Iacob adoring Iosephs rod adored also Christs kingdome prefigured by the same rod. But how adoration of creatures redoundeth to the honour of God more is noted vpon the said place of S. Paul Heb. 11. CHAP. XLVIII Ioseph visiteth his father being sick 5. Who adopteth his two sonnes Manasses and Ephraim 13. and blesseth them preferring the younger before the elder contrarie to Iosephs mind 22. And geueth a portion of land to Ioseph aboue his brethren THESE things beīng so done it was told Ioseph that his father was sicke who taking his two sonnes Manasses and Ephraim went forward † And it was told the old man Behold thy sonne Ioseph cometh to thee Who being strengthned sate on his bed † And Ioseph being entred in to him he said God almightie appeared to me in Luza which is in the Land of Chanaan and he blessed me † and sayd I wil increase and multiplie thee and make thee into multitudes of peoples and I wil geue thee this land and to thy sede after thee for an euerlasting possession † Thy two sonnes therfore which were borne to thee in the Land of Aegypt before I came hither to thee shal be myne Ephraim and Manasses as Ruben and Simeon shal be reputed to me † But the rest begotten of thee after them shal be thyne and shal be called by the name of their brethren in their possessions † For vnto me when I came out of Mesopotamia Rachel dyed in the land of Chanaan in the very iourney and it was spring time and I entered into Ephrata and buried her by the way side to Ephrata which by an other name is called Bethleem † And seeing his sonnes he said to him Who are theise † He answered They are my sonnes whom God hath geuen me in this place Bring them quoth he to me that I may blesse them † For Israels eyes were dymme by reason of very great age and he could not see clearly And when they were set beside him kissing and embracing them † he said to his sonne I am not defrauded of thy sight moreouer God hath shewed me thy sede † And when Ioseph had taken them from his fathers lappe he adored prostrate vnto the ground † And he set Ephraim on his right hand that is on the left hand of Israel but Manasses on his owne left hand to wit on his fathers right hand and put them nere to him † Who “ stretching forth his right hand put it vpon the head of Ephraim the younger brother and the left vpon the head of Manasses that was the elder “ changing handes † And Iacob blessed the sonnes of Ioseph and said God in whose sight my fathers Abraham and Isaac haue walked God that feedeth me from my youth vntil this present day † “ The Angel that deliuereth me from al euils blesse these children and be my name called vpon them the names also of my fathers Abraham and Isaac and grow they into a multitude vpon the earth † And Ioseph seing that his father had put his right hand vpon the head of Ephraim tooke it heauily and taking his fathers hand he went about to lift it from Ephraims head and to remoue it vpon the head of Manasses † And he said to his father It is not conuenient father so to be because this is the first begotten put thy right hand vpon his head † Who refusing said I know my sonne I know and this same in dede shal be into peoples and shal be multiplied but his younger brother shal be greater then he and his sede shal growe into nations † And he blessed them at that time saying In thee shal Israel be blessed and it shal be said God do vnto thee as vnto Ephraim and as vnto Manasses And
he sette Ephraim before Manasses † And he said to Ioseph his sonne Behold I dye and God wil be with you and wil bring you backe into the land of your fathers † I doe geue thee one portion aboue thy brethren which I tooke out of the hand of the Amorrhean with my sword and bowe ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XLVIII 14. Streatching forth his right hand As nature hath made the right hand readier to moue stronger to worke and resist and apter to frame and fashion anie thing so generally we vse it more then the left And when we vse both handes at once we ordinarily applie the right hand to the greater and more excellent effect both in spiritual and corporal things As in confirmation of fidelitie or freindship in blessing writing fieghting playing and in most others things we vse the right hand either only or chiefly So the Patriarch Iacob laide his right hand vpon Ephraim knowing by prophetical spirite that he should be preferred before his elder brother Manasses Literally fulfilled in Iosue Ieroboam and other chief Princes of Ephraims issue And mystically in the Gentils being later called of God and yet preferred before the Iewes S. Cypri li. 1. c. 21. aduer Iudeos S. Amb. li. de Benedict Patriarch c. 1. S. Aug. li. 16. c. 42. de ciuit c. 14. Changing handes The mysterie of the Gentils excelling the Iewes in time of grace often prefigured by preferring the younger brother before the elder Abel before Cain Abraham before Nachor Isaac before Ismael Iacob himself before Esau and now Ephraim before Manasses is here further represented by Iacobs forming of a crosse with his armes laied one ouer the other when he blessed his two nephewes who otherwise might haue laied his right hand first vpon one and then vpon the other or haue caused them to change places but he wittingly crossed his armes and changed his handes or according to the Hebrew made his handes vnderstand that is by his handes made it to be vnderstood not only that the younger should be in place of the elder Ephraim before Manasses and much more the Gentiles before the Iewes but also that this greater Mysterie should be effected by Christ dying on a Crosse For what els could the verie crossing of his armes so wittingly and purposly done signifie but the forme and figure of Christs Crosse As els where the wood which young Isaac caried on his back vnto the mountaine prefigured the mattet or substance of the same Crosse Al accomplished when Christ was crucified wherby the Iewes were scandalized and the Gentiles called and saued Our Sauiour himselfe for telling that he being exalted to wit vpon the Crosse vvould dravv al vnto himself And S. Paul teaching that Christ sastned the hand vvriting that vvas against vs vpon the Crosse 16. The Angel that deliuereth me It is euident by this plaine text that Iacob was deliuered from euiles by an Angel and that he inuocated the same Angel to blesse his nephewes S. Basil li. 3. cont Eunom in initio sheweth by this place amongst others that an Angel is present with euerie one as a pedagogue and pastour directing his life S. Chrysostom also ho. 7. in land S. Pauli citeth this place in testimonie that proper Angels are deputed to protect men Yet Protestants say that this Angel must be vnderstood of Christ remitting their glosse to the. 31. ca. v. 13. and 32. v. 1. of Genesis where it can not be proued But the ancient Fathers teach the patronage Iuuocation of Angels grounded in holie Scripture Namely in this place and manie other places in the old Testament Also Mat 18. Act. 12. 1. Cor. 11. the like For example S. Iustinus Martyr in explic qq necess q. 30. affirming it for a knowen truth declareth that those Angels which receiue the charge of guardīg men cōtinew the same office either to both soule and bodie or to the soule after it is parted from the bodie S. Cyril of Alexandria lib. 4. cont Iulian. prope init shewing how God vseth the ministerie of holie Angels for mens saluation saith Hi noxias a nobis abigunt feras c. These Angels driue away noysome wildbeasts from vs and reskew those that are caught from their crueltie and teach what soeuer is laudable to make our passage free and not pestered when with vs they glorifie one soueraigne God S. Chrysostom ho. 60 in Math 18 S. Hierome vpon the same place S. Ambrose in Psal 38. S. Augustin li. 83. qq q. 79. li. Soliloq c 27. S Gregorie li. 4. c. 31. in 3 Iob S. Bernard ser 5. Dedicat. Eccles ser 12. in Psal 90. others so vniuersally teach the same that Caluin li. Instit c. 14. sect 38. dare not denie it and yet wil nedes doubt of it 16. Be my name called vpon them This place hath two good literal senses For first it importeth that Ephraim and Manasses were made participant among the Tribes of the blessings of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Secondly that God would blesse them for Abraham Isaac and Iacobs sake so Moyses praying for the whole people Exodi 32. besought God to remember Abraham Isaac and Israel and God was therwith pacified CHAP. XLIX Iacob replenished with the spirite of prophecie a litle before his death fortelleth his sonnes manie things that shal happen to their posteritie Chargeth some of them with faultes past blesseth euerie one 29. Appointeth where to burie him 32. and dyeth AND Iacob called his sonnes and said to them Come together that I may shew you the things that shal come to you in the last dayes † Come together and heare you sonnes of Iacob heare ye Israel your father † Ruben my first begotten thou art my strength and the begining of my sorow former in giftes greater in empyre † Thou art poured out as water encrease thou not “ because thou diddest ascend thy fathers bed and diddest defile his coutch † Simeon and Leui brethren “ vessels of iniquitie warring † Into their counsel come not my soule and in their congregation be not my glorie because in their furie they slew a man and in their wilfulnes they vndermined a wall † Cursed be their furie because it is stubborne and their indignation because it is hard I wil diuide them in Iacob and wil disperse them in Israel † Iudas thee thy brethren shal praise thy hand shal be in the neck of thyne enemies thy fathers children shal adore thee † A lions whelp Iudas to the pray my sonne thou didst ascend taking thy rest thou didst lye as a lion and as it were a lyonesse who shal raise him vp † “ The scepter shal not BE TAKEN away from Iudas and a duke out of his thigh til he doe come that is to be sent and the same shal be the expectation of the gentiles † Tying to the vineyard his colt and to the vine o my sonne his ●he asse “ He shal
Gods wil and ordinance who so transposed Isaacs blessing from Esau to Iacob VVhich Isaac at length vnderstanding conformed him self therto and confirmed the same v. 33. ch 28. giuing Esau such contentment as he could of temporal blessings Ioseph is renowmed for al vertues euen from his youth to his death Gen. 37. 39. 50. Iob Was simple and right fearing God and departing from euil a iust and innocent man both before and in his tribulations not sinning with his lippes neither spake he anie foolish thing against God ch 1. yea more afflicted retained innocencie ch 2. and finally God receiued his prayer for others and restored al his losses duble ch 42. Moyses a most special selected Prophet the meekest man on the earth of singular Zeale seuerly punished sinne but withal most charitably prayed God to forgiue the people and conserue his Church God of his mere mercie electeth al those whom he wil iustifie and saue offering al sufficient grace iustly leaueth some obstinate sinners in state of damnation Gen. 25. Exo. 7. His predestination foreknowledge and promise do not exclude but include the meanes wherby his wil is done in the iust Gen. 25. 37. 45 50. Neither is Gods reprobation the cause of anie mans damnation but mans owne sinne the proper cause both of reprobation damnation For example Pharao his people enuying vainly fearing and for their religion hating and persecuting the children of Israel by oppressing them with vnsupportable laboures by commanding secretly to kil their infants and that not succeding by a new decree to drowne them Exo. 1. were mercifully after long conniuence admonished by Gods legates in his name quietly to permit his people to serue him but they wilfully contemned this gentle admonition Pharao proudly and insolently answering Who is the Lord that I should heare his voice and dismisse Israel I know not the Lord and Israel I wil not dismisse Exo. 5. So they hardned their owne hartes and more greuously afflicted the faithful God permitting the wicked to liue and prosper for a time in this world not punishing them so much as they deserued nor mollifying their hartes not illuminating their vnderstanding vnto effectual conuersion but iustly permitting them to persist in obstinacie Ex. 7. 8. 9. 10. c. Protection of Angels inuocation is proued Gen. 24. 32. 48. Patriarches names also inuocated c. 48. v. 16. Isaac was blessed prospered for Abrahams sak● because Abraham obeyed Gods voice kept his precepts cōmandements obserued his ceremonies his lawes Gen. 26. Iosephs rodde adored by Iacob Gen. 47. Moyses commanded to put of his shooes because the place was holie Exod. 3. Swearing by creatures lawful and some times more conuenient then immediatly by God him selfe Gen. 42. Likewise Ominous speach Gen. 24. and Dreames Gen 37. 40 41 are sometimes lawfully obserued and are from God Idols alwaies vnlawful but not al Images Gen. 31. 35. Reliques to be reuerently vsed as Iosephs bodie conserued in a coffin in Aegypt Gen vlt. translated by Moyses Exo. 13. and so brought into Chanaan and layed with other Patriarches in Sichem Going bare foote to holie places an act of religious reuerence and deuotion Ex. 3. The signe of the crosse vsed by Iacob Gen 48. a figure of Christs crosse The wood cast by Moyses into the bitter water and making it sweete Exo. 15. an other figure therof Funeral obsequies were obserued by Abraham for his wife Sara Gen. 23. with mourning and weeping for her according to the qualitie of so holie a person who it is like needed not other satisfactorie workes as Saul and Ionathas and others slaine in battel for whom Dauid and his court did not only mourne and weepe but also fasted til euen He also bought a field with a duble caue where he buried her dedicating it for this peculiar vse and both himself and Isaac Iacob Rebecca and Lia were there buried Gen. 49. v. 31. Ioseph with al his brethren mourned for their father Iacob first fourtie dayes in Aegypt then carying him into Chanaan celebrated the exequies other seuen dayes Gen. 50. His particular digging of his owne graue v. 5. and both his and Iosephs special charge to be buried amongst their ancesters and the translation of al the twelue sonnes of Iacob into Sichem confirme the desire of burial in one place rather then in an other to be agreable to nature and holie Scriptures Touching the soules departed euen the most perfect went into the lower partes generally called Hel. But some were in rest others in paines according to their desertes none in heauen before Christ As S. Hierom comment in Osee 13. et Eccles 3. proueth by Iacobs vvordes Gen. 37. I wil descend vnto my sonne into hel by Iobs lamentation ch 7. et 17. that al good and bad were retained in hel saying If I shal expect hel is my house and in darknes I haue made my bed VVhich place or receptacle of such Saintes as Iacob and Iob vvas doubtles farre distant from hel of the damned for betvven Lazarus in Abrahams bosome and the glutton intorments is a great chaos or large space and yet the highest of these places is called hel In respect of Resurrection the same Iacob called his life in this vvorld a pilgrimage Gen. 47. and Iob ch 7. a warfare vpon earth professing expressly ch 19. In the last day I shal rise out of the earth And I shal be compassed againe with my skinne and in my flesh I shal see God Our B. Sauiour also proueth the Resurrection because the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob Exo. 3. is God of them not as they are dead but as they are liuing and to returne againe to life in bodie and soule together Of general Iudgement Iob saieth ch 31. What shal I doe when God shal rise to iudge and when he shal aske what shal I answere him And Eliu ch 34. saieth The omnipotent wil render a man his worke and according to the waies of euerie one he wil reeompence them Sodom and Gomorra Gen. 19. were example saith S. Peter and S. Iude of eternal punishment in hel fire Of eternal life Iacob professed his hope Gen. 49. saying I wil expect thy saluation ô Lord. And Moyses as S. Paul testifieth denied him selfe to be the sonne of Pharaoes daughter esteming the reproch of Christ greater riches then the treasure of the Aegyptians For he looked vnto the reward Thus much touching particular pointes of Religion It resteth to see the visible knowen members of the Church with the heades and gouernors therof succeding without interruption in the same age notwithstanding some brake and departed from them and other innumerable Sectes of Infidels stil multiplied in the world To beginne therfore with Abraham before the former age was ended at which time he was 75. yeares old holie Scriptures stil speake of
that the people of God should offer sacrifice though for special purposes certaine particular sacrifices were some times appointed but this dutie obligation presupposed our Lord first admonishing to offer the best and perfectest things in euerie kind prescribeth with what rites and ceremonies it shal be done As in offering an holocaust of the heard it must be a male vvithout spotte and be offered at the dore of the tabernacle the offerer putting his handes vpon the head of the hoste the priests must offer the bloud povvring it in the circuite of the altar plucke of the skinne cut the ioyntes in peeces lay them in order the entrales and feete being vvashed burne al vpon the Altar And the like in other sacrifices al for iust and reasonable causes without which the wisdome of God doth nothing Sap. 7. Psal 103. v 24. 3. An holocaust In respect of diuers things offered the diuers maner and causes of offering there were manie sortes of Sacrifices but al are reduced to three kindes The first was Holocaust in which al was burned in the honour of God and resolued into vapour which ascendeth vpwards in signe that al we haue is of God The second was Sacrifice for sinne that of diuers sortes for the varietie of sinnes and persons and part of this sacrifice was burned the other part belonged to the Priests The third was Pacifique sacrifice wherof one part was burnt an other pertayned to the Priests and an other to them that gaue the oblation And of this kinde there were two sortes one of thanksgeuing for benefites receiued the other to procure fauoure in anie good enterprise or desire Al the which did prefigure and forshew one only Sacrifice of Chtists bodie and bloud offered by him in two maners bloudie on the Crosse once for euer wherof S. Paul expressy speaketh Heb. 9. vnbloudie in formes of bread and wine wherof the same S. Paul speaketh Heb. 13. v. 10. shewing that Christians haue an Altar and consequently a Sacrifice farre excelling those of the Tabernacle and our Sauiour him selfe Math. 26. v. 25. speaking of the contents in the chalice said it was his bloud of the nevv Testament which he then instituted and dedicated as is there noted And the ancient Fathers by Caluins confession in Heb. 9. generally vse this distinction of the same Sacrifice offered in bloudie in vnbloudie maner They likewise teach that al lawful Sacrifices of the Law of nature and of Moyses did end and were complete in this one which is our daylie Sacrifice our immaculate l●m●e our manna our libament our holocaust our Sacrifice for sinne our Pacifique Sacrifice for al purposes and in steede of al old Sacrifices So S. Augustin lib 8. c. 27. lib. 17. c. 20. de ciuit lib. 3 de Bapis c. 19. lib. 1. cont a●u●rs l●g ptophet c. 18. 20. S. Chrysost in Psal 95. S. Leo. ser 8. de Pass and other fathers teach 9. Svvetesauour Not that the sauour of corporal things though it were sweter then of burnt flesh and bones delighteth Gods most pure substance but for that mans frailtie in some good sorte performing his dutie is very acceptable to his diuine goodnes For otherwise he required not these Sacrifices nor other external Rites for him felf but he would haue his people for their owne good to be exercised therein especially for three causes First to kepe them from Idolatrie wherto they were very prone as appeareth by their often falling notwithstanding continual admonitions to the contrarie For being as it were burdened with manie ceremonies pertaining to Gods true seruice they might haue lesse mind leysure and occasion to serue Idols Secondly for so much as man consisteth of soule and bodie as the soule must interiorly vvorship God in spirite and veritie so the bodie must also honour him exteriorly seruing iustice vnto sanctification that is by external good workes to increase iustice and sanctitie when by them the mind is instructed and inuited to know and honoure God For otherwise saieth S Dionyse c. 1. ●alest Hi●rer vnles mans vnderstanding vse the helpe of corporal things diuine veritie can not be attained And S. Augustin lib. 10. c. 5 ciuit teacheth that God commanded external Sacrifices thereby to lead his seruants vnto mortified spirites contrite and humbled harts to mercie and compassion towards others In briefe c. 3. Enchir to the true and perfect seruing of his Diuine powre by faith hope and charitie Thirdly that these external Sacrifices and Rites might prefigure and signifie greater more excellent and more effectual Mysteries of the new Testament For as S. Paul speaketh Heb. 10. the lavv of Moyses hauing a shadovv of good things to come not the verie image of the things brought not to perfection nor tooke avvay sinnes by the bloud of oxen or goa●es but being asis●●id a shadovv rather shaded then perfectly shewed the great benefites which the new law as a perfect image liuely representeth especially Christs passion which is the verie fountaine of grace and mercie And wheras the old law could not iustifie Gal. 3. the law of Christ doth in dede iustifie as the Gospel witnesseth saying Ioan 1 v. 17. The lavv vvas geuen by Moyses grace and veritie vva● made by Iesus Christ CHAP. II. How to offer flovvre 4. loaues wafers with oile and incense without leauen or honie 12. also first fruictes 13. And salt in euerie oblation VVHEN a soule shal offer an oblation of sacrifice to our Lord fine flowre shal be his oblation and he shal poure oyle vpon it and put franckincense † and shal carie it to the sonnes of Aaron the priests of whom one shal take a handful of the flowre and the oile and al the franckincense and shal put it a memorial vpon the Altar for a most sweete sauour to our Lord. † And that which shal be left of the sacrifice shal be Aarons and his sonnes Holie of holies among the oblations of our Lord. † But when thou offerest a sacrifice baked in the ouen of flowre to wit loaues without leauen tempered with oyle and wafers vnleauened layd ouer with oyle † If thine oblation be of the frying panne of flowre tempered with oyle and without leuen † thou shalt diuide it in litle peeces and shalt poure oyle vpon it † And if the sacrifice be from the gridiron in like maner the flowre shal be tempered with oyle † which offering to our Lord thou shalt deliuer to the handes of the priest † Who hauing offered it shal take a memorie of the sacrifice and burne vpon the altar for a swete sauour to our Lord † and whatsoeuer is left shal be Aarons and his sonnes Holie of holies among the oblations of our Lord. † Euerie oblation that is offered to our Lord shal be made without leauen neyther shal any leauen and honie be burned in the sacrifice of our Lord. † The first fruites only of them and
when they heard that Zambri had rebelled and slayne the king al Israel made Amri their king who was General of the warfare ouer Israel that day in the campe † Amri therfore went vp and al Israel with him from Gebbethon and they besieged Thersa † And Zambri seing that the citie should be taken he went into the palace and burnt him self with the kinges house and he died † in his sinnes which he had sinned doing euil before our Lord and walking in the way of Ieroboam and in his sinne wherwith he made Israel to sinne † But the rest of the wordes of Zambri and of his treason and tyrannie are not these thinges writen in the Booke of the wordes of the dayes of the kinges of Israel † Then was the people of Israel diuided into two partes the halfe part of the people folowed Thebni the sonne of Gineth to make him king and the halfe part Amri † But the people that was with Amri preuayled ouer the people that folowed Thebni the sonne of Gineth and Thebni died and Amri reigned † In the one and thirteth yeare of Asa the king of Iuda Amri reigned ouer Israel twelue yeares in Thersa he reigned six yeares † And he bought the mount of Samaria of Somer for two talentes of siluer and he built it and he called the citie which he had built by the name of Semer the lord of the mount of Samaria † And Amri did euil in the sight of our Lord and wrought wickedly aboue al that were before him † And he walked in al the way of Ieroboam the sonne of Nabat and in his sinnes wherwith he made Israel to sinne that they might anger our Lord the God of Israel in their vanities † But the rest of the wordes of Amri and the battels he made are not these thinges writen in the Booke of the battels that he made are not these thinges written in the Booke of the wordes of the daies of the kinges of Israel † And Amri slept with his fathers and was buried in Samaria and Achab his sonne reigned for him † But Achab the sonne of Amri reigned ouer Israel the eight and thirteth yeare of Asa the king of Iuda And Achab the sonne of Amri reigned ouer Israel in Samiaria two and twentie yeares † And Achab the sonne of Amri did euil in the sight of our Lord aboue al that were before him † Neither did it suffice him that he walked in the sinnes of Ieroboam the sonne of Nabat besides he tooke to wife Iezabel the daughter of Ethbaul the king of the Sidonians And he went and serued Baal and adored him † And he sette an altar to Baal in the temple of Baal which he had built in Samaria † and he planted a groue and Achab added in his worke prouoking our Lord the God of Israel aboue al the kinges of Israel that were before him † In his daies Hiel of Bethel built Iericho in Abiram his first borne he founded it and in Segub his last he sette vp the gates therof according to the word of our Lord which he spake in the hand of Iosue the sonne of Nun. CHAP. XVII Elias by his prayer ●hutteth the heauen from raining 2. Is fed by a crovv 8 and by a vvidovv of Sareptha 13. vvhose potte of meale and barrel of oyle diminisheth not 17. Her sonne dieth and is raysed to life AND Elias the Thesbite of the inhabiters of Galaad said to Achab Our Lord liueth the God of Israel in whose sight I stand if there shal be these yearer dew and rayne but according to the wordes of my mouth † And the word of our Lord came to him saying † Depart from hence and goe agaynst the East and be hidde in the Torrent carith which is agaynst Iordan † and there thou shalt drinke of the torrent and I haue commanded the rauens that they feede thee there † He therfore went and did according to the word of our Lord and when he was gone he sate in the Torrent carith which is against Iordan † The rauens also brought him bread and flesh in the morning in like maner bread and flesh in the euening and he dranke of the torrent † But after certayne daies the torrent was dried for it bad not rayned vpon the earth † Therfore the word of our Lord came to him saying † Arise and goe into Sareptha of the Sidonians and thou shalt tarie there for I haue commanded a wydow woman there to feede thee † He arose and went into Sareptha And when he was come to the gate of the citie the wydow woman appeared to him gathering stickes and he called her and sayd to her Geue me a litle water in a vessel that I may drinke † And when she went to fetch it he cried after her saying Bring me also I beseche thee a morsel of bread in thy hand † Who answered Our Lord thy God liueth I haue no bread but so much meale in a potte as a hand can hold and a litle oile in a vessel behold I gather two stickes that I may goe in and dresse it for me and my sonne that we may eate and die † To whom Elias sayd feare not but goe and doe as thou hast sayd but first make for me of the same meale a litle harth cake and bring it to me and for thy self and thy sonne thou shalt make afterward † For thus sayth our Lord the God of Israel The potte of meale shal not fayle nor the vessel of oile be diminished vntil the day wherin our Lord wil geue rayne vpon the face of the earth † Who went and did according to the word of Elias and he did eate and she and her house and from that day † the pot of meale fayled not and the vessel of oyle was not diminished according to the word of our Lord which he spake in the hand of Elias † And it came to passe after these thinges the sonne of the woman the goodwife of the house fel sicke and the sickenesse was verie vehement so that there remayned no breath in him † She therfore sayd to Elias What is to me and thee thou man of God comest thou vnto me that myne iniquities might be remembred and thou mightest kil my sonne † And Elias sayd to her Geue me thy sonne And he tooke him from her bosome and caried him into the vpper chamber where him self abode and layd him vpon his bed † And he cried to our Lord and sayd O Lord my God what the widow also with whom I am after a sort susteyned hast thou afflicted that thou wouldest kil her sonne † And he stretched forth measured him selfe vpon the childe three tymes he cried to our Lord and sayd O. Lord my God let the soule of this childe I beseche thee returne into his bodie † And our Lord heard the voice of Elias and the soule of the child returned into him and he reuiued
children and multitude called him king of Israel Ioan 12. At which time as also before he exercised temporal Iurisdiction in correcting abuses in the Temple Mat. 21. Ioan. 2. And when Pilate demanded of him if he were a king Ioan. 18. v. 37. he answered Thou saist that I am a king For this I was borne and for this came I into the world that I should geue testimonie to the truth And though he answered withal that his kingdom to witte the possession and vse therof was not of this world yet Pilate by Gods prouidence writte the title and would not alter it IESVS of Nazareth King of the Iewes But Christs chief inheritance and reward of his merites is God himself as here he professeth by his prophet Dauid which is also the only true perfect inheritance of al Christs seruates vvherfore Clergy men more particularly professe the same when they first enter into their spiritual state addicting and dedicating them selues to serue God in Ecclefiastical sunct on not for temporal inheritance but for a better lotte God himself who is al Good and most perfect goodnes true riches and eternal inheritance In which election of state to liue and serue God in euerie Clergie man sayth Our Lord is the portion of myn inheritance and of my cuppe Thou art he that vvil restore myn inheritance vnto me Man calleth it his inheritance because he was created to serue God and for his feruice to inherite God which reward though he lost by sinne yet euerie one returning to Gods seruice and perseuering therin recouereth by Christ new right and title to the same inheritance performing their duties in their seueral vocations Some traueling in the world but not louing it others sequestered from secular affayres duly administring sacred offices more peculiarly called Diuine seruice ● Net leaue my 〈◊〉 in hel How Caluin and Beza sometimes corrupt this text alwayes pernert the sense and most absurdly oppose them selues against al ancient holie Farhets concerning the Article of Christs descending in soule denving that into that part of hel called Limbus patr● is largely noted Gen. 37. Act. 2. 1. pet 3 Only here we may not omitte to aduertise the reader that some Protestants Bibles permitting the word hel to remaine in the text a latter Edition for hel putteth graue with this only note in the former place that thus is chiesly meant of Christ by whose Resurrection al his members haue immortality And Act. 2. they repete their new text by this paraphrasis Thou shlat not leaue me in the graue VV resting that which perteineth to the bodie rising from the graue to the soule which was not at al in the graue al the time the bodie lay there PSALME XVI Aiust mans prayer in tribulation 10. describing his enemies cruelty 13. by way of imprecation foresheweth their destruction 15. and declareth that the iust shal be satisfied in glorie † The “ prayer of Dauid HEARE ô Lord my iustice attend my petition With thine eares heare my prayer not in deceitful lippes † From thy countenanee let my iudgement procede let thine eies see equities † Thou hast proued my hart and visited it by night by fire thou hast examined me and there is no iniquitie found in me † That my mouth speake not the workes of men for the wordes of thy lippes I haue kept the hard wayes † Perfite my pases in thy pathes that my steppes be not moued I haue cried because thou hast heard me ● God incline thyne eare to me and heare my wordes † Make thy mercies meruelous which sauest them that hope in thee † From them that resist thy right hand keepe me as the apple of the eie † Vnder the shadowe of thy winges protect me † from the face of the impious that haue afflicted me Mine enemies haue compassed my soule † they haue shut vp their fatte their mouth hath spoken pride † Casting me forth now haue they compassed me they haue sette their eies to bend them vnto the earth † They haue taken me as a lion readie to the pray and as a lions whelpe dwelling in hid places † Arise Lord preuent him and supplant him deliuer my soule from the impious thy sword † from the enemies of thy hand Lord from a few out of the land diuide them in their life their bellie is filled of thy secretes They are filled with children and they haue leaft their remnantes to their litle ones † But I in iustice shal appeare to thy sight I shal be filled when thy glorie shal appeare ANNOTATIONS PSALME XVI 1. The prayer of Dauid This Psalme of the matter conteyned is called a prayer VVhich holie Dauid so composed as was both conuenient for himselfe being molested with vniust afflictions by the wicked and for anie other iust person or the whole Church in persecution seruing as a spiritual sword to strike the enimies and as a shield to beare of with patience and fortitude al their forces PSALME XVII King Dauids thankes to God for his often deliuerie from great dangers first in general 9. then more particularly describeth Gods terrible maner of fighting for him 18. against his cruel and otherwise potent enimie● 22. attributing the same to Gods good pleasure and iustice of his cause 31. praiseth God 33. his only protector 41. and depresser of his enemies † Vnto the end to the seruant of our Lord Dauid who spake to our Lord the wordes of this canticle in the day that our Lord deliuered him out of the hand of al his enemies and out of the hand of Saul and he said 2. Reg. 22. I wil loue thee ô Lord my strength † Our Lord is my firmament and my refuge and my deliuere My God is my helper and I wil hope in him My protectour and the horne of my saluation and my receiuer † Praysing I wil inuocate our Lord and I shal be saued from mine enemies † The sorrowes of death haue compassed me and torrentes of iniquitie haue trubled me The sorrowes of hel haue compassed me the snares of death haue preuented me † In my tribulation I haue inuocated our Lord and haue cried to my God And he hath heard my voice from his holie temple and my crie in his sight hath entered into his eares † The earth was shaken trembled the fundations of mountaines were trubled and were moued because he was wrath with them † Smoke arose in his wrath and fire flamed vp from his face coles were kindled from him † He bowed the heauens and descended and darkenesse vnder his feete † And he ascended vpon the cherubs and flew he flew vpon the wings of windes † And he put darkenesse his couert his tabernacle is round about
“ 60 nor personally be present with them in the exercise of their false pretended religions PSALME XXVI Dauid being in great distresse through persecution and hauing assured confidence in God describeth the great securitie of Gods protection 7. sheweth the same experienced in him self 12. prayeth for continuance therof 13. and incorageth his owne soule in hope of life euerlasting to perseuer in vertue † The Psalme of Dauid before he was annoynted OVR Lord is my illumination and my saluation whom shal I feare Our Lord is the protectour of my life of whom shal I be afrayd † Whiles the harmeful approch vpon me to eate my flesh Mine enemies that truble me them selues are weakened and are fallen † If campes stand together against me my hart shal not feare If battel rise vp against me in this wil I hope † One thing I haue asked of our Lord this wil I seeke for that I may dwel in the house of our Lord al the dayes of my life That I may see the pleasentnes of our Lord and visite his temple † Because he hath hid me in his tabernacle in the day of euils he hath protected me ●in the secrete of his tabernacle † In a rocke he hath exalted me and now he hath exalted my head ouer mine enemies I haue gone round about and haue immolated in his tabernacle an host of iubilation I wil sing and say a Psalme to our Lord. † Heare ô Lord my voice wherwith I haue cried to thee haue mercie on me and heare me † My hart hath sayd to thee my face hath sought thee out thy face ô Lord I wil seeke † Turne not away thy face from me decline not in wrath from thy seruant Be thou my helper forsake me not neither despise me ô God my Sauiour Because my father and my mother haue forsaken me but our Lord hath taken me † Geue me a law ô Lord in thy way and direct me in the right path because of mine enemies † Deliuer me not into the soules of them that truble me because vniust witnesses haue risen vp against me and iniquity hath lyed to it selfe † I beleue to see the good things of our Lord in the land of the liuing † Expect our Lord doe manfully and let thy hart take courage and expect thou our Lord. PSALME XXVII Dauid prayeth to be defended from the eternal destruction of the wicked which by way of imprecation or conformitie to Gods iustice he prophecieth 6. Feeling by inspiration that his prayer is heard rendereth thankes to God 9. and prayeth for al the people A Psalme to Dauid him selfe TO THEE ô Lord wil crie my God keepe not silence from me lest at any time thou hold thy peace from me and I shal be like to them that goe downe into the lake † Heare ô Lord the voice of my petition whiles I pray to thee whiles I lift vp my handes to thy holie temple † Draw me not together with sinners and with them that worke iniquitie destroy me not Which speake peace with their neighbour but euils in their hartes † Geue them according to their workes and according to the wickednesse of their inuentions According to the workes of their handes geue vnto them render them their retribution † Because they haue not vnderstood the workes of our Lord and in the workes of his handes thou shalt destroy them and not build them vp † Blessed be our Lord because he hath heard the voice of my petition † Our Lord is my helper and my protectour in him my hart hath hoped and I was holpen And my flesh florished againe and with my wil I wil confesse to him † Our Lord is the strength of his people and he is the protector of the saluations of his annoynted † Saue thy people ô Lord and blesse thine inheritance and rule them and extol them for euer PSALME XXVIII The royal prophet seing in spirite the most sacred Mysteries brought by Christ into this world inuiteth al to offer their best thinges euen themselues wholly as sacrifice of thankes for so excellent benefites preached with magnificence 5. VVherby innumerable are gethered into his Church here replenished with grace and in heauen with glorie † The Psalme of Dauid “ in the consummation of the tabernacle ANNOTATIONS 1. In consummation of the tabernacle The seuentie Interpreters testifie by adding this title that king Dauid made this Psalme as he did also some others when the Arke of God was brought into the tabernacle which he had pitched for it in Sion 2 Reg. 6. 1. Paral. 16. VVherin he saw by prophetical spirite and here vttereth other farre greater mysteries more excellent benefites brought into the world by Christ and preached by him and his Apostles then agreed to the Arke or the time of the old Testament but are verified in the admirable fruite of innumerable people of al nations and of manie great Potentates conuerted to Christianitie BRING to our Lord ye children of God bring to our Lord the sonnes of rammes † Bring to our Lord glorie and honour bring to our Lord glorie vnto his name adore ye our Lord in his holie court The voice of our Lord vpon waters the God of maiestie hath thundered Our Lord vpon manie waters † The voice of our Lord in powre the voice of our Lord in magnificence † The voice of our Lord breaking ceders and our Lord shal breake the ceders of Libanus † And he shal breake them in peeces as a calfe of Libanus and the heloued as the sonne of vnicornes The voice of our Lord diuiding the flame of fire † The voice of our Lord shaking the desert and our Lord shal moue t the desert of Cades The voice of our Lord v preparing hartes and he shal discouer thicke woodes and in x in his temple al shal say glorie † Our Lord maketh y to inhabite the floud and our Lord z shal sit king for euer Our Lord a wil geue strength to his people our Lord b wil blesse his people in peace PSALME XXIX King Dauid by voice and instrument rendereth thankes to God for his peaceable state in the kingdom 5. inuiteth others to reioyce in Gods benefites teaching by his owne example that God sometimes geueth more conforth sometimes sheweth his wrath but al for our good † A Psalme of Canticle in the dedication of Dauids house I WIL exalt thee ô Lord because thou hast receiued me neither hast e delighted myne enemies ouer me † O Lord my God I haue cried to thee and thou hast healed me † Lord thou hast brought forth my soule out of hel thou hast saued
sanctuarie on the earth † Thou hast destroyed al the hedges therof thou hast made the firmament therof feare † Al that passe by the way haue spoiled him he is become a reproch to his neighbours † Thou hast exalted the righthand of them that oppresse him thou hast made al his enimies ioyful † Thou hast turned away the helpe of his sword and hast not holpen him in battel † Thou hast destroied him from emundation and his seat thou hast broken downe to the ground † Thou hast lessened the daies of his time thou hast ouerwhelmed him with consusion † How long ô Lord doest thou turne away for euer shal thy wrath burne as a fire † Remember what my substance is for hast thou made al the children of men in vaine † who is the man that shalliue and shal not see death shal deliuer his soule from the hand of hel † Where are thyne old mercies ô Lord as thou swarest to Dauid in thy truth † Be mindeful ô Lord of the acproch of thy seruantes which I haue held in my bosome of manie nations † Which thine enimies haue reproched ô Lord which they haue reproched the commutation of thy Christ † Blessed be our Lord for euer Be it be it ANNOTIONS PSALME LXXXVIII 34 My mercie I vvil not take avvay from him Although Christians signified by the childrē or successors of Dauid sinne most grieuously yea suppose they wil sinne with desperation saith S. Augustin and obstinatly persist in sinne that they offend the eyes of their Father deserue to be disenherited c. Yet for these Christ shal not remaine without inheritance the corne shal not also perish for the chafe some fishes shal be geathered out of the nette into vessels notwithstanding the euil fishes are cast away And a litle after the same Doctor discoursing of eternal glorie both in bodie and soule of those that dye in Gods fauour sayth These thinges are promised concerning Christ very certaine very firme very plaine and vndoubted For albeit some thinges are couered in mysteries yet some thinges are so manifest that by them the obscure thinges may most easily be cleared 39. But thou hast repelled c. Againe S. Augustin addeth vpon the next verses folowing God performed not these promises in Dauid that when thou seest they were not fulfilled in Dauid which necessarily must be fulfilled thou maist seke an other in whom it may be shewed that they were fulfilled God promised some thing a kingdom for euer of Dauids seede and Salomon was borne and became of so great wisdom and so great prudence that Gods promise concerning Dauids ●eede seemed to be fulfilled in him But Salomon fell and gaue place of expecting Christ that because God neither can be deceiued nor deceive he put not his promise in him whom he knew would fall but thou shouldest relie vpon God and exact his promise A litle after Thou seekest the kingdom of the lewes it is not thou seekest the altar of the Iewes it is not thou seekest the sacrifice of the Iewes it is not thou seckest the priesthood of the ●evves it is not VVherupon he concludeth Al these defectes came to the ●evves yet vvas not Christ taken from them but differred Some ●evves beleued in him and manie Gentiles As the Psalmist prophecieth from the 47. verse to the end of this Psalme PSALME LXXXIX Under the forme of prayer the psalmist describeth the shortnes of mans life and other calamites 7. Gods strict iudgement 13. but first his comfortable mercie 16. and perpetual regard of his owne worke † A prayer of Moyses the man of God Lord thou art made a refuge for vs from generation vnto generation † Before the mountaines were made or the earth and the world formed from euerlasting euen vnto euerlasting thou art God † Turne not away man into humiliation thou saidst Be conuerted ye children of men † Because a thousand years before thine eies are as yesterday that is past And as a watch in the night † thinges that are counted nothing shal their years be † In the morning as an herbe he shal passe in the morning he shal florish and passe in the euening he shal fal be hardened and withered † Because we haue faynted in thy wrath and in thy furie we are trubled † Thou hast put our iniquities in thy sight our age in the light of thy countinance † Because al our daies haue failed and in thy wrath we haue failed Our yeares shal be considered as a spyder † the daies of our yeares in them are seuentie yeares And if in strong ones eightie years and the more of them labour and sorrow Because mildnes is come vpon vs and we shal be chastised † Who knoweth the powre of thy wrath and for feare † to number thy wrath So make thy righthand knowne and men learned in hart in wisedome † Turne ô Lord how long and be intreated for thy seruants † We are replenished in the morning with thy mercie and we haue reioyced and are delighted al our daies † We haue reioyced for the daies wherin thou hast humbled vs the yeares wherin we haue seene euils † Looke vpon thy seruants and vpon thy workes and direct their children † And let the brightnes of our Lord God be vpon vs and direct thou the workes of our handes ouer vs and the worke of our handes doe thou direct PSALME XC Whosoeuer faithfully and firmly trusteth in Gods prouidence is secure from al dangers of secrete sutle and open enimies 7. his aduersaries shal come to ruine 11. Angels shal defend him 13. no kind of serpent nor beast shal hurt him 14. God himself assureth him of his protection and of eternal saluation Prayse of a Canticle to Dauid HE that dwelleth in the helpe of the Highest shal abide in the protection of the God of heauen † He shal say to our Lord Thou art my protectour and my refuge my God I wil hope in him † Because he hath deliuered me from the snare of the hunters and from the sharpe word † With his shoulders shal he ouershadowe thee and vnder his winges thou shalt hope † With shilde shal his truth compasse thee “ thou shalt not be afrayed of the feare in the night † Of the arrow flying in the day of busines walking in darkenes of inuasion and the midday diuel † A thousand shal fal on thy syde ten thousand on thy righthand but to thee it shal not approch † But thou shalt consider with thine eies and shalt see the retribution of sinners † Because thou ô Lord art my hope thou hast made the Highest thy refuge † There shal no euil come to thee and scourge shal not approch to thy tabernacle † Because he hath
day soeuer I am in tribulation incline thine eare to me In what day soeuer I shal inuocate thee heare me speedely † Because my dayes haue vanished as smoke and my bones are withered as a drie burnt firebrand † I am striken as grasse and my hart is withered because I haue forgotten to eate my bread † For the voyce of my groning my bone hath cleaued to my flesh † I am become like a pellicane of the wildernes I am become as a nightcrow in the house † I haue watched and am become as a sparow solitarie in the housetoppe † Al the day did mine enemies vpbrayde me and they that praysed me sware against me † Because I did eate ashes as bread mingled my drinke with weeping † At the face of thy wrath and indignation because lifting me vp thou hast throwne me downe † My daies haue declined as a shadow and I am withered as grasse † But thou ô Lord endurest for euer and thy memorial in generation and generation † Thou rysing vp shal haue mercie on Sion because it is time to haue mercie on it because the time cometh † Because the stones therof haue pleased thy seruantes and they shal haue pittie on the earth therof † And the Gentiles shal feare thy name ô Lord and al the kinges of the earth thy glorie † Because our Lord hath built Sion and he shal be seene in his glorie † He hath had respect to the prayer of the humble and he hath not despised their petition † Let these thinges be written vnto an other generation and the people that shal be created shal praise our Lord. † Because he hath looked forth from his high holie place our Lord from heauen hath looked vpon the earth † That he might heare the gronings of the fettered that he might loose the children of them that are slayne † That they may shewforth the name of our Lord in Sion and his praise in Ierusalem † In the assembling of the people together in one and kinges to serue our Lord. † He answered him in the way of his strength Shew me the fewnes of my daies † Cal me not backe in the halfe of my daies thy yeares are vnto generation and generation † In the beginning ô Lord thou didst found the earth and the heauens are the workes of thy hands † They shal perish but thou art permanent and they shal al waxe old as a garment And as a vesture thou shalt change them and they shal be changed † but thou art the selfe same and thy yeares shal not faile † The children of thy seruantes shal inhabite and their seede shal be directed for euer PSALME CII Thankes to God for priuate 6. and publike benefites 17. His mercie iustice and other proprieties are immutable 20. Angels and al other creatures are inuited to praise him † To Dauid himself MY soule blesse thou our Lord and al thinges that are within me his holie name † My soule blesse thou our Lord and forget not al his retributions † Who is propitious to al thine iniquities who healeth al thine infirmities † Who redemeth thy life from deadly falling who crowneth thee in mercie and commiserations † Who replenisheth thy desire in good thinges “ thy youth shal be rewed as the eagles † Our Lord doth mercies and iudgement to al that suffer wrong † He made his waies knowne to Moyses his willes to the children of Israel † Our Lord is pitieful and merciful long suffering and very merciful † He wil not be angrie alwayes neither wil he threaten for euer † He hath not done to vs according to our sinnes neither according to our iniquities hath he rewarded vs. † For according to the height of heauen from the earth hath he strengthned his mercie vpon them that feare him † As far as the East is distant from the West hath he made our iniquities far from vs. † As a father hath compassion of his children so hath our † Lord compassion on them that feare him † because he hath knowen our making He remembred that we are dust † man his daies are as grasse as the floure of the filde so shal he florish † Because the spirit shal passe in him and he shal not stand and he shal know his place no more † But the mercie of our Lord from euerlasting and vnto euerlasting vpon them that feare him And his iustice is vpon the childrens children to them that keepe his testament † And are mindful of his commandmentes to doe them † Our Lord hath prepared his seate in heauen and his kindom shal haue dominion ouer al. † Blesse our Lord al ye his Angels mightie in powre doing his word that feare the voice of his wordes † Blesse our Lord al ye his hoastes you his ministers that doe his wil. † Blesse ye our Lord al his workes in euerie place of his dominion my soule blesse thou our Lord. ANNOTATIONS PSALME CII 5 Thy youth shal be renevved as the Eagles Aristotel and Plinie write that an Eagle decayeth not nor euer dieth by old age but the vpper part of her beake st l growing at last h●ndereth her from eating and so she dieth of fam●ne Saadias and other Hebrew Rabbins reporte that an Eagle euerie tenne yeares washeth herselfe ●n the sea as in a ba●h then flying very hiegh burneth her fethers in the elemental fire new fethers growing she becometh fresh as in her first youth t●l at last about an huadred yeares old she is not able to rise from the water and so is drowned S. Augustin more probably affirmeth that in long time her ●e●ke growing long and stopping her mouth that she can not eate she breaketh the vpper hooked part therof against a stone and so receiueth meate and recouereth strength as in her youth But whatsoeuer is the natural propert e of this kinglie birde the Royal Prophet here instructeth vs by the s●nilitude of her long life or by the renouation of her streingth that iust men Gods seruantes are spiritually renouated in Christ the principal rocke on who● the Church al the faithful are built either by receiuing new streingth by his grace in their soules after they are weakened by sinne as S. Ierom and Eu hymius expound this place or by restauration of their bodies glorified in the resurrection as S. Augustin teacheth or by both as most Catholique Doctors vnderstand it For one sense of holie Scripture excludeth not an other Especially when one is subordinate to the other As here these two senses do very wel concurre seing the state of the bodie after the resurrection dependeth vpon the state of the soule at
about † Before he be broken the hart of a man is exalted and before he be glorified it is humbled † He that answereth before he heare sheweth him self to be a foole and worthie of confusion † The spirit of a man vpholdeth his imbecilitie but a spirit that is casie to be angrie who can susteyne † A wise hart shal possesse knowlege and the eare of the wise seeketh doctrine † The gift of a man enlargeth his way maketh him roome before princes † The iust is first accuser of himself his frend commeth and shal search him † Lotte suppresseth contradictions and betwen the mightie also it determineth † Brother that is holpen of brother is as a strong citie and iudgements are as the barres of cities † Of the fruite of mans mouth his bellie shal be filled and the ofsprings of his lippes shal fil him † Death and life in the hand of the tongue they that loue it shal eate the fruites therof † He that hath found a good wife hath found a good thing and hath receiued a pleasure of our Lord. † The poore speaketh with supplications and the rich wil speake roughly † A man amiable to societie shal be more frendlie then a brother CHAP. XIX BEtter is a poore man that walketh in his simplicitie then a rich writhing his lippes and vnwise † Where is no knowlege of the soule is not good and he that is hastie with his feete shal stumble † The follie of a man supplanteth his steppes and he boileth in his minde against God † Riches adde manie frendes but from the poore they also which he had are separated † A false witnes shal not be vnpunished he that speaketh lies shal not escape † Manie worshipe the person of the mightie and are frendes of him that geueth giftes † The brethren of the poore man hate him more ouer also his frendes haue departed far from him † He that purse weth wordes only shal haue nothing but he that is possessour of the minde loueth his soule and the keper of prudence shal finde good thinges † A false witnesse shal not be vnpunished and he that speaketh lies shal perish † Delicacies become not a foole not a seruant to rule ouer princes † The doctrine of man is knowen by patience and his glorie is to ouerpasse vniust thinges † As the roaring of a lion so also the anger of a king and as dew vpon grasse so also his cherefulnes † The sorow of the father a foolish sonne and roofes continually dropping through a woman ful of brawling † House and riches are geuen of the parents but of our Lord properly a prudent wife † Slothfulnesse bringeth drousinesse and a dissolute soule shal be an hungred † He that kepeth the commandement kepeth his soule but he that neglecteth his way shal die † He lendeth our Lord that hath mercie on the poore and he wil repay him the like † Nurter thy sonne despayre not but to the killing of him set not thy soule † He that is impatient shal susteyne damage and when he shal take away violently he shal adde an other thing † Heare counsel and receiue discipline that thou mayst be wise in thy later endes † Manie cogitations in the hart of a man but the wil of our Lord shal be permanent † A needie man is merciful and better is the poore then the lying man † The feare of our Lord vnto life and in fulnes he shal abide without the visitation most noysome † The slothful hideth his hand vnder the armehole neither doth he put it to his mouth † The pestilent man being whipped the foole shal be wiser but if thou rebuke a wiseman he wil vnderstand discipline † He that afflicteth his father and fleeth from his mother is ignominious and vnhappie † Cease not ô sonne to heare doctrine neither be ignorant of the wordes of knowlege † An vniust witnes scorneth iudgement and the mouth of the impious deuoureth iniquitie † Iudgements are prepared for scorners hammers striking for the bodies of fooles CHAP. XX. VVIne is a luxurious thing drunkenes tumultuous whosoeuer is delighted therwith shal not be wise † As the roaring of a lyon so also the terrour of a king he that prouoketh him sinneth also against his owne soule † It is honour to a man that separateth himself from contentions but al fooles medle with contumelies † Because of cold the slothful would not plowe he shal begge therfore in the summer and it shal not be geuen him † As deepe water so counsel in the hart of a man but a wise man shal draw it out † Manie men are called merciful but a faithful man who shal fynd † The iust that walketh in his simplicitie shal leaue blessed children † The king that sitteth in the throne of iudgement dissipateth al euil with his looke † Who can say My hart is cleane I am pure from sinne † Weight and weight measure and measure both are abominable before God † By his conuersation a child is perceiued if his workes be cleane and right † The eare hearing and the eie seing our Lord made both † Loue not sleepe lest pouertie oppresse thee open thyne eies and be filled with breades † It is naught it is naught sayth euerie byer and when he is departed he wil boast † There is gold and multitude of pearles but a precious vessel the lippes of knowlege † Take his garment that was the suretie of a stranger and for strangers take a pledge from him † The bread of lying is swete to a man and afterward his mouth shal be filled with the grauelstone † Cogirations are strengthened by counsels and battels are to be handled by gouernmentes † Medle not with him that reuealeth mysteries and walketh fraudulently and dilateth his lippes † He that curseth his father and mother his lampe shal be extinquished in the middes of darkenes † The inheritance wherunto haste is made in the beginning in the later end shal lacke blessing † Say not I wil requit euil expect our Lord and he wil deliuer thee † Weight and weight are abomination with our Lord a deceitful balance is not good † The steppes of man are directed of our Lord but who of men can vnderstand his owne way † It is ruine to a man to deuoure saintes and afterward to retracte the vowes † A wise king dissipateth the impious and bendeth ouer them a triumphant arch † The lampe of our Lord the breath of a man which searcheth al the secretes of the bellie † Mercie truth kepe the king and his throne is strengthened by clemencie † The ioy of
yongmen their strength and the dignitie of oldmen a gray head † The blewnesse of the wound shal wipe away euils and stripes in the more secrete place of the bellie CHAP. XXI AS diuisions of waters so the hart of the king is in the hand of our Lord whither soeuer he wil he shal incline it † Euerie way of a man semeth to himself right but our Lord weigheth the hartes † To doe mercie and iudgement doth more please our Lord then victimes † Exaltation of the eies is the dilatation of the hart the lampe of the impious sinne † The cogitations of the strong are alwayes in abundance but euerie sluggard is alwayes in pouertie † He that gathereth treasures with a lying tongue is vaine and witles and shal stumble at the snares of death † The robberies of the impious shal draw them downe because they would not doe iudgement † The peruerse way of a man is strange but he that is cleane his worke is right † It is better to sitte in a corner of the house toppe then with a brawling woman and in a common house † The soule of the impious desireth euil he wil not haue pitie on his neighbour † The pestilent man being punished the litle one wil be wiser and if he folow the wiseman he wil take knowlege † The iust deuiseth concerning the house of the impious that he may draw the impious from euil † He that stoppeth his eare at the crie of the poore himself also shal crie and shal not be heard † A gift hid quencketh angers and a gift in the bosome the greatest indignation † It is a ioy to the iust to doe iudgement and dread to them that worke iniquitie † A man that shal erre from the way of doctrine shal abyde in the assemblie of giantes † He that loueth good cheere shal be in pouertie he that loueth wine and fatte thinges shal not be rich † The impious shal be geuen for the iust and the vniust for the righteous † It is better to dwel in a desert land then with a brawling and angrie woman † Treasure to be desired and oyle in the habitation of the iust and the vnwise man shal dissipate it † He that foloweth iustice and mercie shal finde life iustice and glorie † The wise hath scaled the citie of the strong and hath destroyed the confidence therof † He that kepeth his mouth and his tongue kepeth his soule from distresses † The proude and arrogant is called vnlerned which in anger worketh pride † Desires kil the slothful for his handes would not worke any thing † al the day he longeth and desireth but he that is iust wil geue and wil not cease † The hostes of the impious abominable because they are offered of wickednes † A lying witnes shal perish an obedient man shal speake victorie † The impious man malepertly hardeneth his countenauce but he that is righteous correcteth his way † There is no wisdom there is no prudence there is no counsel against our Lord. † The horse is prepared to the day of battel but our Lord geueth saluation CHAP. XXII BEtter is a good name then much riches aboue siluer and gold good grace † The rich and poore haue mette one an other our Lord is the maker of both † The subtel saw euil and hyd himself the innocent passed by and was afflicted with damage † The end of modestie the feare of our Lord riches and glorie and life † Armour and swordes in the way of the peruerse but the keper of his owne soule departeth far from them † It is a prouerbe A yongman according to his way when he is old wil not depart from it † The richman ruleth ouer the poore and he that boroweth is the seruant of him that lendeth † He that soweth iniquitie shal reape euils and with the rod of his wrath he shal be consumed † He that is prone to mercie shal be blessed for of his breades he hath geuen to the poore He that geueth giftes shal purchase victorie and honour but he that receiueth taketh away the soule of the geuer † Cast out the scorner and brawling shal goe forth with him and cause shal cease and contumelies † He that loueth cleanes of hart for the grace of his lippes shal haue the king his frend † The eies of our Lord keepe knowlege and the wordes of the iust are supplanted † The slothful sayth A lyon is without in the middes of the streates I am to be slayne † A deepe pitte the mouth of a strange woman he with whom our Lord is angrie shal fal into it † Follie is tyed together in the hart of a childe and the rod of discipline shal driue it away † He that doth calumniate the poore to increase his riches himself shal geue to a richer and shal be in neede † Incline thine eare and heare the wordes of wisemen and set thy hart to my doctrine † which shal be beautiful for thee when thou shalt kepe it in thy bellie and it shal flow in thy lippes † That thy confidence may be in our Lord wherfore I haue shewed also it to thee this day † Behold I haue described it to thee three maner of wayes in cogitations and knowledge † that I might shew thee the stabilitie and the wordes of truth out of these to answer them that sent thee † Doe not violence to the poore because he is poore neither oppresse the needie in the gate † because our Lord wil iudge his cause and wil pearse them that haue pearsed his soule † Be not frend to an angrie man nor walke with a furious man † lest perhaps thou lerne his pathes and take scandal to thy soule † Be not with them that sticke downe their handes and that offer themselues sureties for debts † for if thou haue not wherewith to restore what cause is there that he should take the couering from thy bed † Trangresse not the ancient boundes which thy fathers haue put † Hast thou sene a man quicke in his worke he shal stand before kinges neither shal be before the vnnoble CHAP. XXIII VVHEN thou shalt sitte to eate with a prince attend diligently what thinges are set before thy face † and set a knife in thy throte if notwithstanding thou haue thy soule in thine owne power † Desire not his meates in which is the bread of lying † Labour not to be rich but set a meane to thy prudence † Lift not vp thine eies to the riches which thou canst not haue because they shal make to themselues winges as of an eagle and shal flie into heauen † Eate not with an enuious man and desire
exercised to the discerning of good and euil With what moderation therfore and humilitie this Canticle of Gods perfect spouse may be read the discrete wil consider and not presume aboue their reach but be wise with sobrietie For here be very high and hidden Mysteries as Origen teacheth in his lerned Commentaries which S. Ierom translated into Latin and singularly commendeth and so much harder to be rightly vnderstood for that the feruent spiritual loue of the inward man reformed in soule and perfected in spirite is here vttered in the same vsual wordes and termes wherwith natural worldlie yea and carnal loue of the outward man old Adam corrupted by sinne is commonly expressed and are so much more dangerous to be mistaken as we are more addicted to proper wil priuate iudgement or subiect to carnal or passionate motions Wherfore it semeth most mete to kepe the same order in reading these three bookes which the auctor wise Salomon obserued in writing them And which Philosophers also folow in their forme of discipline For they first lerne and teach Moral Philosophie then Natural lastly Metaphisikes which is their Diuinitie As Salomon had geuen them example first teaching precepts of good life and maners in his Prouerbes after discoursing of natural thinges in Ecclesiastes deduced thence a conclusion which prophane Philosophers wel vnderstood not to contemne this world and finally cometh to high mystical Diuinitie in this supereminent Canticle written in an other stile in verse and in forme of a sacred Dialogue betwen Christ and his spouse or as Origen calleth it in forme of an Enterlude in respect of diuers speakers actors of diuers persons to whom the speaches are directed and of whom they are vttered For by the Spous or Bridgrome is not only vnderstood Christ as Man but also as God and the whole Blessed Trinitie to whom manie prayers praises and thankes are offered vp and by whom manie benefites are geuen praises returned promises made to his spouse Likewise by the Spouse or Bride the ancient fathers vnderstand three sortes of spouses al espoused to Christ and to God towitt his General Spouse the whole Church of the old and new Testaments of al that are and shal be perfect making one mystical bodie free from sinne without spotte or wrinkle sanctified in Christ Also his special spouse which is euerie particular holie soule And his singular spouse his most blessed most immaculate Virgin Mother This being the general summe of this excellent Canticle remitting the reader for explication therof to the lerned deuout Commenters both of ancient and late writers we shal also endeuour together the same contents more particularly not before the chapters because we can not there so conueniently distinguish the same by verses but in the margent Where we shal especially note the speakers as semeth more probable of euerie parcel according to the first sense not hauing rowme for more perteyning to the General spouse the Catholique Church which is the great and euerlasting holie Citie of God the eternal King SALAMONS CANTICLE OF CANTICLES WHICH IN HEBREW IS CALLED SIR HASIRIM CHAP. I. LET him kisse me with the kisse of his mouth because thy brestes are better then wine † smelling fragrantly of the best ointments Oile powred out is thy name therfore haue yongmaydes loued thee † Draw me we wil runne after thee in the odour of thine ointments The king hath brought me into his cellars we wil reioyce be glad in thee mindful of thy brests aboue wine the righteous loue thee † I am blacke but beutiful ô ye daughters of Ierusalem as the tabernacles of Cedar as the skinnes of Salomon † Doe not consider me that I am browne because the sunne hath altered my colour the sonnes of my mother haue fought against me they haue made me a keeper in the vinyards my vinyard I haue not kept † Shew me ô thou whom my soule loueth where thou feedest where thou lyest in the midday lest I beginne to wander after the flockes of thy companyons † If thou know not thyselfe ô most fayrest among wemen goeforth and folow after the steppes of the flockes and feede thy kiddes byside the tabernacles of the pastours † To my companie of horsemen in the chariotes of Pharao haue I likened thee ô my loue † Thy cheekes are beautiful as the turteldoues thy necke as iewels † We wil make thee cheynes of gold enamoled with siluer † Whiles the king was at his repose my spikenard gaue the odour thereof † A bundle of myrrhe my beloued is to me he shal abide betwen my brestes † A clustre of cypre my loue is to me in the vineyardes of Engaddi † Behold thou art fayre ô my loue behold thou art fayre thyne eyes are as of doues † Behold thou art fayre my beloued comlie our litle bed is florishing † The beames of our houses are of cedar our rafters of cypresse trees CHAP. II. I AM the flower of the filde and the lilie of the valley † As the lilie among the thornes so is my loue among the daughters † As the apletree among trees of the woddes so is my beloued among the sonnes Vnder his shadow whom I desired I sate and his fruite was sweete vnto my throte † He brought me into the wineceller he hath ordered in me charitie † Stay me vp with flowers compasse me about with apples because I languish with loue † His lefthand vnder my head and his righthand shal embrace me † I adiure you ô daughters of Ierusalem by the roes and the hartes of the fildes that you rayse not nor make the beloued to awake vntil herselfe wil. † The voice of my beloued behold he cometh leaping in the mountaines leaping ouer the little hilles † my beloued is like vnto a roe and to a fawne of hartes Behold he standeth behind our walle looking through the windowes looking forth by the grates † Behold my beloued speaketh to me Arise make hast my loue my doue beautiful one and come † For winter is now past the rayne is gone and departed † The flowers haue appeared in our land the time of pruning is come the voice of the turtledoue is heard in our land † the figgerree hath brought forth her greene figges the florishing vineyards haue geuen their sauour Arise my loue my beautiful one come † My doue in the holes of the rocke in the holow places of the wal shew me thy face let thy voice sound in mine eares for thy voice is sweete and thy face comely † Catch vs the litle foxes that destroy the vineyards for our vineyard hath florished † i My beloued to me and I to him who feedeth among the lilies † til the day breake and the shadowes decline Returne be like my beloued to a roe and to the fawne of hartes
bring her to me to liue together knowing that she wil communicate vnto me of good thinges and wil be a comfort of my cogitation tediousnes † I shal haue for her sake glorie with the multitudes and honour with the ancient being yong † and I sh●● be ●●●nd sharpe in iudgement and in the sight of the mightie I shal be meruelous and the faces of princes wil meruel at me † Holding my peace they shal expect me and whiles I speake manie wordes they shallay their hands on their mouth † Moreouer by her I shal haue immortalitie and I shal leaue an eternal memorie to them that shal be after me † I shal dispose peoples and nations shal be subiect to me † Horrible kings hearing shal feare me in the multitude I shal seme good and in battel strong † Entring into my house I shal rest with her for her conuersation hath no bitternes nor her companie tediousnes but ioy and gladnesse † Thinking these thinges with myselfe and recording in my hart that immortalitie is in the kindred of wisedom † and good delectation in her frendship and in the workes of her handes honestie without defect and wisdom in the disputation of her talke and glorie in the communication of her wordes I went about seeking that I might take her to me † And I was a wittie childe and had gotten a good soule † And wheras I was more good I came to a bodie vndefield † And as I knew that I could not otherwise be continent vnlesse God gaue it this verie thing also was wisdom to know whose this gift was I went to our Lord and besought him and said from my whole hart CHAP. IX A prayer made by Salomon for wisdom 9. wherby Superiors are able to gouerne 13. Which by only humane wisdom they can not rightly performe GOD of my fathers and Lord of mercie which madest al thinges with thy word † and by thy wisdom didst appoint man that he should haue dominion of the creature that was made by thee † that he should dispose the round-world in equitie and iustice and execute iudgement in direction of hart † geue me wisdom the assistant of thy seates and repel me not from thy children † because I am thy seruant and the sonne of thy handmaide a weake man and of smal time and lesse to the vnderstanding of iudgement and lawes † And if one be perfect among the children of men and thy wisdom be absent from him he shal be counted for nothing † Thou hast chosen me king to thy people and iudge of thy sonnes and daughters † and badst me build a temple in thy holie mount and an altar in the citie of thy habitation a similitude of thy holie tabernacle which thou didst prepare from the beginning † and thy wisdom with thee which knew thy workes which then also was present when thou madest the roundworld and knew what was pleasing to thyne eyes and what was direct in thy precepts † Send her from thy holy heauens and from the seate of thy greatnes that she may be with me and may labour with me that I may know what is acceptable with thee † for she knoweth al thinges vnderstandeth and shal conduct me in my workes soberly shal keepe me with her might † And my workes shal be acceptable and I shal gouerne thy people iustly and shal be worthie of the seates of my father † For who of men is able to know the counsel of God or who can thinke what God wil † For the cogitations of mortal men be fearful and our prouidences vncertaine † For the bodie that is corrupted burdeneth the soule and the earthlie habitation presseth downe the vnderstanding that thinketh manie thinges † And we doe hardly coniecture the thinges that are in the earth and the thinges that are in sight we finde with labour But the thinges that are in the heauens who shal search out † And thy sense who shal know vnles thou geue wisdom and send thy holie spirit from on high † and so the pathes of them that are on the earth may be corrected and men lerne the thinges that please thee † For by wisdom they were healed whoseouer haue pleased thee ô Lord from the begynning CHAP. X. The benefites of wisdom are declared by examples in Adam 4. Noe 5. Abraham 6. Lot 10. Iacob 13. Ioseph 15. And the people of Israel SHE kept him that was first made of God father of the world when he was created alone † and she brought him out of his sinne and gaue him powre to conteyne al thinges † After the vniust departed in his anger from her by the furie of brothers man slaughter perished † For whose cause when water destroyed the earth wisdom healed it againe gouerning the iust by contemptible wood † She euen in the consent of wickednes when the nations had confederated themselues knewe the iust and preserued him without blame to God and in his sonnes mercie kept the strong † She deliuered the iust fleing from the impious that perished when the fyre came downe vpon Pentapolis † to whom for a witnes of their wickednes the desert land standeth smoking and trees hauing fruites at vncertain season and the memorie of an incredulous soule a standing piller of salt † For pretermitting wisdom they did not only slippe in this that they were ignorant of good thinges but they left also vnto men a memorie of their foolishnes that in those thinges in which they sinned in they could not be hid neither † But wisdom hath deliuered them that obserue her from sorowes † And the iust fleing his brothers wrath she conducted by the right wayes and shewed him the kingdom of God and gaue him the knowlege of the holie did honest him in labours and accomplised his labours † In the fraude of the circumuenters of him she was present with him and made him honorable † She kept him from the enemies and from seducers she defended him and from seducers she defended him and gaue him a strong fight thas he might ouercome and know that wisdom is mightier then al. † She forsooke not the iust being sold but deliuered him from sinners and she went downe with him into the pitte † and in bands leaft him not til she brought him the scepter of a kingdome and might against them that oppressed him and shewed them to be lyers that spotted him and gaue him eternal glorie † The iust people and seede without blame she deliuered from the nations that oppressed them † She entered into the soule of the seruant of God and stood against dreadful kinges in wonders and signes † And she rendred to the iust the hope of their labours and conducted them in a meruelous way and she was vnto them for a couerr in the day and for the
bynding † Thou shalt put on her a stole of glorie and as a crowne of gratulation thou shalt set her vpon thee † Sonne if thou attend to me thou shal● learne and if thou wilt applie thy minde thou shalt be wise † If thou wilt incline thine eare thou shalt receiue doctrine and if thou loue to heare thou shalt be wise † Stand in the multitude of wise ancients and be ioyned to their wisdom from thy hart that thou maist heare al the narration of God and the prayse may not escape thee † And if thou see a wise man watch after him and let thy soote weare the steppes of his doores † Haue thy cogitation in the precepts of God and in his commandements most of al be dayly conuersant and he wil geue thee hart and the desire of wisdom shal be geuen thee CHAP. VII Flie from al euil thinges 4. as ambition presumption scandal pusillanimitie lying and babling 16. Husbandrie of the ground 21. a good wife and good seruantes are to be cherised 25. kepe children in discipline 29. Honour parents and elders 36. pittie the poore 40. Memorie of the last thinges preserueth from sinne DOE not euils and they shal nor apprehend thee † Depart from the wicked euil shal fayle from thee † Sonne sow not euils in the furrowes of iustice thou shalt not reape them seuenfold † Seeke not of the lord chiefe principalitie nor of the king the chayre of honour † Iustifie not thyself before God because he is the knower of the hart and before the king desire not to seme wise † Seeke not to be made a iudge vnles thou be able by power to breake iniquities lest perhaps thou feare the face of the mightie and put a scandal in thyne equitie † Sinne not against the multitude of a citie neither thrust thyself into the people † nor binde together duble sinnes for neither in one shalt thou be free from punishment † Be not fayntharted in thy minde † despise not to pray and to geue almes † Say not In the multitude of my giftes God wil haue respect and when I offer to God most high he wil receiue my giftes † Laugh not a man to scorne in the bitternes of his soule for there is that humbleth and exalteth God the ouerseer of al. † Plowe not a lie agaynst thy brother neither doe thou likewise agaynst thy frend † Be not willing to make any lie for the custome therof is not good † Be not ful of wordes in a multitude of ancients and iterate not a word in thy speach † Hate not laborious workes and husbandrie created of the Highest † Counte not thy selfe in the multitude of men without discipline † Be mindeful of wrath because it wil not slacke † Humble thy spirit very much because the vengeance of the flesh of the impious is fyre and the worme † Doe not preuaricate against thy frend differring money nor despise thy dearest brother for gold † Depart not from a wise and good woman which thou hast gotten in the feare of our Lord for the grace of her bashfulnes is aboue gold † Hurt not the seruant that worketh in truth nor the hyred man that geueth his soule † Let a wise seruant be beloued of thee as thy soule defraude him not of libertie nor leaue him needie † Hast thou cattel looke wel to them and if they be profitable let them continew with thee † Hast thou children instruct them bowe them from their childehood † Hast thou daughters keepe their bodie and shew not thy countenance merrie towards them † Bestow thy daughter and thou shalt doe a great worke and geue her to a wise man † If thou haue a wife according to thy soule cast her not of and to her that is hateful commit not thyself With thy whole hart † honour thy father and forget not the gronings of thy mother † remember that thou hadst not bene borne but by them and recompence them as they also thee † In al thy soule feare our Lord and sanctifie his priestes † With al thy strength loue him that made thee forsake not his ministers † Honour God with al thy soule and honour the priestes and purge thyself with the armes † Geue them the portion as it is commanded thee of the first fruites and purgation and of thy negligence purge thy self with few † The gift of thyne armes and the sacrifice of sanctification thou shalt offer to our Lord and the first of holie thinges † and to the poore stretch out thyne hand that thy propitiation may be perfected and thy blessing † The grace of a gift is in the sight of al the liuing and from the dead stay nor grace † Want not in consolation to them that weepe and walke with them that moorne † Be not loth to visite the sicke for by these thinges thou shalt be confirmed in loue † In al thy workes remember thy later ends and thou wilt not sinne for euer CHAP. VIII Contend not with a man of powre rich ful of tongue or very ignorant 6. Despise not the penitent nor old folke 8. Reioyce not at an enemies death 9. Lerne of the elder 13. Obserue discretion in admonishing lending and in being suertie 17. Reproue not Iudges 18. Conuerse not with the furious foolish nor with strangers STRIVE not with a mightie man lest perhaps thou fal into his handes † Contend not with a rich man lest perhaps he make an action against thee † For gold and siluer hath destroyed manie and hath reached euen to the hart of kinges and hath turned them † Striue not with a man ful of tongue and thou shalt not heape stickes vpon his fyre † Communicate not with the ignorant man lest he speake il of thy progenie † Despise not a man that turneth himself from sinne nor vpbrayde him therwith remember that we are al in state to be blamed † Despise not a man in his old age for we also shal become old † Reioyce not of thine enemie dead knowing that we doe al die and would not that others should ioy therat † Despise not the narration of wise ancients and in their prouerbes be thou conuersant † For of them thou shalt lerne wisdom and doctrine of vnderstanding and to serue great men without blame † Let not the narration of the ancients escape thee for they lerned of their fathers † because of them thou shalt lerne vnderstanding and in time of necessitie to geue answer † Kindle not the coles of sinners rebuking them and be not kindled with the flame of the fire of their sinnes † Stand not against the face of a contumelious person lest he sitte as a spie in wayte for thy mouth † Lend not to a man mightier then thyself and if thou doest lend count it as lost † Be not suretie aboue thy power and if thou be surerie
his life † Who is proued therin perfect shal haue eternal glorie He that could transgress●e and hath not transgressed and doe euils and hath not done † therfore are his good thinges stablished in our Lord al the church of saintes shal declare his almes † Art thou set at a great table open not thy iawe therevpon first † Say not this There be manie thinges which are vpon it † Remember that a naughtie eie is euil † What is created worse then the eie therefore shal it weepe at euerie face When it shal see † stretch not out thy hand first and so contaminated with enuie thou be ashamed † Be not oppressed in a feast † Vnderstand by thyself what thy neighbours thinges are † Vse as a frugal man those thinges that are set before thee lest thou be hated when thou eatest much † Leaue of first for maners sake and exceede not lest thou perhaps offend † And if thou be set in the middes of manie stretch not forth thy hand before them neither doe thou first aske to drinke † How sufficient is a little wine for a man wel taught and in sleeping thou shalt not be pained with it and thou shalt feele no griefe † Watching choler torment to an vnsatiable man † sleepe of health is in a man of spare diet he shal sleepe vntil morning and his soule with him shal be deligted † And if thou hast bene forced with eating much rise from the middes and vomite and it shal refresh thee and thou shalt not bring infirmitie to thy bodie † Heare me my sonne and despise me not and in the end thou shalt finde my wordes † In al thy workes be quicke and al infirmitie shal not chance vnto thee † The lippes of manie shal blesse him that is magnifical in breads and the testimonie of his truth is faithful † In naughtie bread the cittie wil murmur and the testimonie of the naughtines thereof is true † Prouoke not them that loue wine for wine hath destroyed very manie † Fire tryeth hard yron so wine dronken in drunkennes shal rebuke the hartes of the proud † Equal life to al men wine in sobrietie if thou drinke it moderatly thou shalt be sober † What is the life that is diminished with wine † What defraudeth life death † Wine was created for ioyfulnes and not for drunkēnes from the beginning † Wine drunken moderately is the ioy of the soule and the hart † Sober drinking is health to soule and bodie † Much wine drunken maketh prouocation wrath manie ruines † Much wine drunken is bitternes of the soule † The couragiousnes of drunkennes is offence of the vnwise lessening the strength and making woundes † In a banquet of wine rebuke not thy neighbour and despise him not in his mirth † Speake not to him wordes of repoch and presse him not in demanding againe CHAP. XXXII Superiors must rule with mekenes 4. teaching those wisdom that are capable thereof 7. Be moderate in musike and in wine 9. Let yongmen be diligent to heare and sparing to speake 13. especially before their betters 1● Be alwayes wel occupied 17. Serue and feare God 21. admitte correction 24. do nothing without counsel HAVE they made thee Ruler be not extolled be among them as one of them † Haue care of them and so sitte thou stil and al thy care being dispatched repose † That thou maist reioyce for their sakes receiue a crowne as an ornament of grace and obteyne the dignitie of the contribution † Speake thou that art elder for it becometh thee † the first word to him that loueth with knowlege hinder not musike † Where there is no hearing power not out speache and extol not thyself out of time in thy wisdom † A litle pearle of the carbuncle in an ornament of gold and the comparison of musicians in a banket of wine † As a signet of the emerauld is in the working of gold so the melodie of musike in ioyful and moderate wine † Heare holding thy peace for thy reuerence good grace shal come to thee † Yong man speake in thine owne cause scarsely † If thou be asked twise let thyne answer hauean head † In manie thinges be as it were ignorant and heare holding thy peace and withal asking † In the middes of greate men presume not and where ancients are speake not much † Before haile there shal goe lightning grace shal goe before shamfastnes for thy reuerence good grace shal come to thee † And at the houre of rysing slacke not thyself but runne before first into thy house and there withdraw thyself and there play † and doe thy conceites and not in sinnes and proud word † And aboue al these thinges blesse our Lord that made thee that doth replenish thee with al his goodes † He that feareth our Lord shal receiue his doctrine and they that wil watch after him shal finde blessing † He that seeketh the law shal be replenished with it and he that doth deceitfully shal be scandalized by it † They that feare our Lord shal finde iust iudgement and shal kindle iustices as light † A sinful man wil flee reprehension and according to his wil wil finde excuse † A man of counsel wil not destroy vnderstanding an aliene and proud man wil not dread feare † Yea after he hath done with feare without counsel he shal be controwled euen by his owne pursuites † Sonne doe nothing without counsel and after the fact thou shalt not repent † Goe not in the way of ruine and thou shalt not stumble at stones commite not thyself to a laborious way lest thou set a scandal to thy soule † And beware of thy children and take heede of them of thy household † In al thy worke beleue thy soule by faith for this is the keeping of the commandmentes † He that beleueth God attendeth to the commandmentes and he that trusteth in him shal not be lessened CHAP. XXXIII Feare of God defendeth from al aduersaries 5. Follie is vnconstant 8. God disposeth al to the best 13. Man is in Gods hand as clay in the po●ters 20. Superiors must keepe their auctoritie and their subiectes in discipline TO him that feareth our Lord euils shal not happen but in tentation God wil keepe him and deliuer him from euils † A wise man hateth not the commandments and iustices and he shal not be shaken as a shippe in a storme † A man of vnderstanding beleueth the law of God and the law is sure to him † He that repeteth an interrogation shal better prepare his answer and so shal be heard and shal keepe discipline † The hart of a foole is as a wheele of a carte his cogitation as a turning axeltree † A stalion horse neyeth vnder euerie one that sitteth vpon him so a freind that is a scorner † Why doth one day
suffer molestation for these thinges which haue bene done by ignorance † And we haue sent also Menelaus to speake to you † Fare ye wel In the yeare an hundred fortie eight of the moneth Xanthicus the fiftenth day † And the Romans also sent an epistle which is thus QVINTVS Memmius and Titus Manilius legats of the Romans to the people of the Iewes health † Concerning these thinges which Lysias the kings cosin hath granted you we also haue granted † But touching the thinges which he thought good to be referred to the king send ye forthwith some bodie conferring diligently among your selues that we may decree as is conuenient for you for we goe to Antioch † And therfore make hast to write agayne that we also may know of what minde you are † Fate ye wel In the yeare an hundred fourtie eight the fiftenth day of the moneth Xanthicus CHAP. XII VVhiles the Iewes haue peace with the king others stil persecute them 5. which Iudas reuengeth 13. and in Casp●n maketh great slaughter and reposeth in Chara●a 19. Tenne thousand of Timothees men are slayne 20. whom Iudas pursuing killeth manie in Carnion 34. taketh him but releaseth him againe 27. the like in Ephron 32. Some Iewes are slaine in battel against Gorgias 38. Iudas and his men are purified and gathering the dead bodies finde that some had taken vnlawful spoiles 42. For whose soules he prayeth and causeth sacrifice to be offered THESE couenants being made Lysias went foreward to the king and the Iewes gaue themselues to husbandrie † But they that stayed there Timothie Appollonius the sonne of Gennaius also Ierom Demophon besides these also Nicanor the gouerner of Cyprus did not suffer them to liue in rest and quietnes † And the Ioppites committed a certaine flagicious fact which was this They desired the Iewes with whom they dwelt to goe into the botes which they had prepared with their wiues children as though no secret emnities were between them † Therefore according to the common decree of the citie they agreeing therto because of the peace suspecting nothing when they were gone forward into the depth they drowned no lesse then two hundred † Which crueltie Iudas as he vnderstood to be done vpon the men of his nation commanded the men that were with him and inuocating God the iust iudge † he came against the murderers of his brethren the hauen he set on fire in the night the botes he burnt them that were fled from the fire he flew with the sword † And when he had thus done these thinges he departed as to returne againe and to roote out al the Ioppites † But when he vnderstood that they also which were at Iamnia would doe in like maner to the Iewes dwelling with them † he came vpon the Iamnites also by night and set the hauen on fyre with the shippes so that the light of the fire appeared at Ierusalem two hundred fourtie furlongs of † When they were now departed thence nine furlongs and made their iourney towards Timothee the Arabians fiue thousand men and fiue hundred horsemen ioyned battel with them † And when there was a mightie battel and by the helpe of God it had succeded prosperously the rest of the Arabians that were ouercome besought Iudas that the right hand might be geuen them promising that they would geue pastures and profite them in other thinges † And Iudas thinking in very deede that they might be profitable in manie thinges promised peace and right handes being taken they departed to their tabernacles † And he set also vpon a certaine citie strong with bridges and enuironed with walles which was inhabited with multitudes of heathen of al sortes the name wherof is Caspin † But they that were within trusting in the firmenes of the walles the prouision of victuals dealt the more stackly with reuiling wordes prouoking Iudas and blaspheming and speaking such thinges as is not lawful to speake † But Machabeus inuocating the great prince of the world who without rammes and engines in Iesus time threwe downe Ierico fiercely assaulted the walles † And the citie being taken by the wil of our Lord he made innumerable slaughters so that the poole adioyning of two furlongs in bredth semed to runne died with bloud † From thence they departed seuen hundred fiftie furlongs and they came to Characa to those Iewes that are called Tubianeians † and in those places they tooke not Timothee and nothing being done he went backe hauing left in a certaine place a very strong garrison † But Dositheus and Sosipater who were captayns with Machabeus slewe them that were left of Timothee in the hold ten thousand men † And Machabeus ordayning about him six thousand and placing them by bandes went forth against Timothee who had with him an hundred twenty thousand footemen of horsemen two thousand fiue hundred † And the coming of Iudas being knowen Timothee sent the wemen and children and the other baggage before into the fortresse that is called Catnion for it was inuincible and hard to come by by reason of the straites of the places † And when the first band of Iudas had appeared seare was stroken into the enemies by the presence of God who seeth al thinges and they were put to flight one of an other so that they were rather ouerthrowen of their owne companie and were weakened with the strokes of their owne swordes † But Iudas was exceding earnest punishnig the prophane men and he ouerthrewe of them thirtie thousand men † And Timothee him selfe fel into the handes of Dositheus and Sisipaters partes and with manie prayers he besought that he might be let go aliue because he had parents brethren of manie of the Iewes whom it might happen by his death to be deceiued † And when he had geuen his faith that he would restore them according to the appointmēt they let him goe without harme for the safetie of their brethren † And Iudas came backe from Carnion hauing slayne twentie fiue thousand † After the flight and slaughter of these he moued his armie to Ephron a strong citie wherin a multitude dwelt of diuerse nations strong young men standing before the walles resisted manfully in this were manie engins and prouision of dartes † But when they had inuocated the Almightie who with his power breaketh the forces of the enemies they tooke the citie and of them that were within they ouerthrew twentie fiue thousand † From thence they departed to a citie of the Scythians which was distant from Ierusalem six hundred furlongs † But those Iewes that were with the Scythopolitans testifying that they were vsed curteously of them euen in the times of miserie that they dealt modestly with them † geuing them thankes and exhorting them also thence forward to be fauourable toward their stock they came to Ierusalem the solemne day of the weekes approching † And after Pentecost they
to obserue the predictions of the most excellent and perfect Sacrifice of the new Testament Malachie 1. v. 11. From the rising of the sunne sayth God by this Prophet euen to the going downe there is sacrificing and there is offered in my name a cleane oblation In the old testament they offered cattel birdes by powring out their bloud about the altar and drawing forth their bowels For purging and clensing wherof there was much washing and labour but now in the Church of Christ is the cleane Sacrifice of our Lords bodie and bloud in formes of bread and wine It is also in itself so pure that it can not be polluted as the old sacricrifices were v. 12. by vnworthie Priestes but is alwayes auaylable to some or other ex opere operato According to that the same Prophet testifieth ch 3. v. 4. The Sacrifice of Iuda and Ierusalem shal please our Lord. which is necessarily vnderstood of the Christian sacrifice for els this place were contrarie to that which God sayd to the Iewish priestes ch 1. v. 10. I haue no wil in you and I wil not receiue gift at your hand Daniel also prophecieth ch 9● v. 27. that in the half of the weke the hoste and the sacrifice shal fayle Ch. 12. v. 11. The continual sacrifice shal be taken away therby signifying that not only after the figure the Sacrifice prefigured should succede for els there should be no daylie Sacrifice at al in the new Testament which Malachie s●yth plainly there shal be not in one or in fewe places but from the rising of the sunne euen to the going downe c. but also that both the old and new sacrifices should be taken away in their seueral times For so our Sauiour Mat. 24. v. 15. applieth the next wordes of this prophecie and abomination of desolation shal be set vp not only as a signe before the destruction of Ierusalem but also of the end of the world Verified in part as in the figure when the temple was destroyed diuers prophanations made in the same place but more especially shal be fulfilled by Antichrist abolishing the holie Sacrifice of Christs bodie and bloud so much as he shal be suffered as S. Hyppolitus writeth lib. de Antichristo in oratione de consummatione mundi Agreable to S. Ireneus li. 4. c. 32. li. 5. in ●ine S. Ierom. in Dan. 12. Theodoretus in eund●m locum and S. Chrisostom in opere imperfecto Yea some Hebrew Rabbins acknowlege Transsubstantion in the Eucharist as R. Dauid Kimhi witnesseth vpon these wordes of Osee 1● v. 8. They shal liue with wheate and shal spring as a vine Manie of our Doctores sayth he expound this that there shal be mutation of nature in wheate in the times of our Redemer Christ This Rabbi Dauid also and the Chaldee Paraphrasis expound Ezechiels prophecie ch 36. v. 25. I wil powre out vpon you cleane water of the remission of sinne though they signifie not by what particular meanes Which Christian Doctors vndoubtedly explicate of the Sacrament of Baptisme And like wise his other prophecie ch 47. v. 1. waters issued forth vnder the threshold of the house towards the East can not be vnderstood of anie other waters then of Baptisme The purifications oblations and other workes of penance practised by the people after their returne from captiuitie written 2. Esd 9. 10. 13. testifie their obseruation of the law in this point by which the Sacrament of penance in the new testament was prefigured In like sorte the continuance of Priesthood and priestlie functions is manifest in the bookes of Esdras and of other Prophetes which prefigured the Sacrament of holie Orders in the Church of Christ In these times also the feastes instituted by the law were obserued with more or lesse solemnitie as time place and other opportunities serued As Esdras testifieth li. 1. c. 3. v. 2. Iosue the highpriest and Zorobabel the duke after their returne from captiuitie built an altar notwithstanding the threates of infidels and offered vpon it holocaust to our Lord morning and euening And they made the solemnitie of tabernacles and other feastes as wel in the Calendes as in al the solemnities of our Lord though the temple was not yet built againe v. 6. And afterwards upon new occasion Iudas Machabeus 1. Mach. 4. 2. Mach. 10. instituted a new feast which our sauiour obserued Ioan. 10. v. 12. The like obseruation was kept of fastes For amongst the feastes which were al duly performed 1. Esd 3. v. 5. one was of Expiation which consisted in fasting from euen to euen Leuit. 23. Num. 29. And besides the ordinarie Esdras appointed a peculiar fast for special purposes 1. Esd 8. v. 21. And I proclamed sayth he a fast beside the riuer Ahaua that we might be afflicted before the Lord our God and might desire of him a right way for vs and our children And v. 23. we fasted and besought our God hereby and it fel our prosperously vnto vs. Againe 2. Esd 9. v. 1. The children of Israel came together in fasting and sackclothes and earth vpon them see more of fasting Iudith 4. 9. Esther 5. 14. Zachar. 8. And of abstinence from certayne meates according to the la● Daniel ● 9. Iudith 10. 12.2 Mach. 6. 7. More generally the whole forme of good life is excellently prescribed in the bookes of wisdom and Ecclesiasticus Where vnder the general vertues of wisdom and Iustice al are admonished to seeke diligently to know God and to serue him As much as to say to haue fayth and good workes the two feete and legges on which the godlie walke vnto life euerlasting Let one shorte sentence here serue for example wishing al men to reade more in the bookes themselues Sap. 6. v. 18. 19. 20. is this gradation The beginning of wisdom is the true desire of discipline the care of discipline is loue loue is the keeping of her lawes and the keping of the lawes is the consummation of incorruption incorruption maketh to be next to God These are the steppes from earth to heauen from this vale of miseries to eternal happines first A true and sincere desire of discipline or of Gods true seruice 2. This desire or care of discipline bredeth loue of God 3. loue is the keping of lawes the commandments of God for he that sayth he ●oueth God and kepeth not his commandments is a liar 4. keping the lawes is the consummation of incorruption making the soule perfect in vertues and free from corruption of sinnes 5. and this incorruption maketh to be next to God ioyning man with God which is the perfect beatitude of eternal life And so he concludeth v. 22. Therfore from first to last by degrees desire of wisdom leadeth to the euerlasting kingdom Yet must we vnderstand that neither the first steppe of good
waters be found and al frendes shal ouerthrow one an other and then shal witte be hid and vnderstanding shal be separated into his cellar † and it shal be sought of manie and shal not be found and iniustice shal be multiplied and incontinencie vpon the earth † And one countrie shal aske her neighbour and shal say Hath iustice doing iust passed through thee and she shal denie it † And it shal be in that time men shal hope and shal not obtaine they shal labour and their wayes shal not haue successe † These signes I am permitted to tel thee and if thou pray againe and weepe as also now and fast seuen dayes thou shalt heare againe greater thinges then these † And I awaked and my bodie did shiuer excedingly and my soule laboured that it fainted † and the Angel that came that spake in me held me and strengthened me and sette me vpon my feete † And it came to passe in the second night and Salathiel the prince of the people came to me and sayd to me Where wast thou and why is thy countenance heauie † Konwest thou not that Israel is committed to thee in the countrie of their transmigration † Rise vp therfore and taste bread and forsake vs not as the pastour his flocke in the hand of wicked wolues † And I sayd to him Goe from me approch not vnto me And he heard as I sayd and he departed from me † And I fasted seuen dayes howling weeping as Vriel the Angel commanded me † And it came to passe after seuen dayes and againe cogitations of my hart molested me very much † and my soule resumed the spirit of vnderstanding agayne I began to speake wordes before the Highest † and I sayd Lord Dominatour of euerie wood of the earth al the trees therof thou hast chosen one vineyard † of euerie land of the world thou hast chosen thee one ditch of al the flowers of the world thou hast chosen thee one lilie † and of al depthes of the sea thou hast filled thee one riuer and of al the builded cities thou hast sanctified vnto theyself Sion † and of al created soules thou hast named thee one doue and of al beastes that were made thou hast prouided thee one shepe † and of al multiplied peoples thou hast purchased thee one people and a law approued of al thou hast geuen to this people whom thou didst desire † And now Lord why hast thou deliuered one vnto manie And thou hast prepared vpon one roote others and hast dispersed thy onlie one in manie † and they haue troden vpon it which gainesayd thy couenants and which beleued not thy testamentes † And if hating thou hatest thy people it ought to be chastised with thy handes † And it came to passe when I had spoken the wordes and the Angel was sent to me that came to me before the night past † and he sayd to me Heare me and I wil instruct thee and harken to me and I wil adde before thee † And I sayd Speake my Lord. And he sayd to me Thou art become excedingly in excesse of minde for Israel hast thou loued it more then him that made it † And I sayd to him No Lord but for sorow I haue spoken for my veynes torment me euerie houre to apprehend the pathe of the Highest and to search part of his iudgement † And he sayd to me Thou canst not And I sayd Why Lord To what was I borne or why was not my mothers wombe my graue that I might not see the labour of Iacob the wearines of the stocke of Israel † And he sayd to me Number me the thinges that are not yet come and gather me the dispersed droppes and make me the withered flowers grene againe † and open me the shut cellars bring me forth the blastes inclosed in them shew me the image of a voice and then wil I shew thee the labour that thou desirest to see † And I sayd Lord Dominatour for who is there that can know these thinges but he that hath not his habitation with men † And I am vnwise and how can I speake of these thinges which thou hast asked me † And he sayd to me As thou canst not doe one of these thinges which haue bene sayd so canst thou not finde my iudgement or in the end the charitie which I haue promised to the people † And I sayd But behold Lord thou art nigh to them that are nere the end and what shal they doe that haue bene before me or we or they after vs † And he sayd to me I wil resemble my iudgement to a crowne As there shal not be slacknes of the last so neither swiftnes of the former † And I answered and sayd Couldst thou not make them that haue bene and that are and that shal be at once that thou mayst shew thy iudgement the quicker † And he answered me and sayd The creature can not hasten aboue the Creatour nor the world sustayne them that are to be created in it at once † And I sayd As thou didst say to thy seruant that quickening thou didst quicken the creature created by thee at once and the creature susteined it it may now also beare them present at once † And he sayd to me Aske the matrice of a woman thou shalt say to it And if thou bring forth children why by times Aske it therfore that it geue ten at once † And I sayd it can not verily but according to time † And he sayd to me And I haue geuen a matrice to the earth for them that are sowen vpon it by time † For as the infant bringeth not forth the thinges that perteyne to the aged so haue I disposed the world created of me † And I asked and sayd Wheras thou hast now geuen me a way I wil speake before thee for our mother of whom thou toldest me yet she is yong now draweth nigh to old age † And he answered me and sayd Aske her that beareth children and she wil tel thee † For thou shalt say to her Why are not they whom thou hast brought forth now like to them that were before thee but lesse of stature † And she also wil say vnto thee They that are borne in the youth of streingth are of one sort and they of an other that are borne about the time of old age when the matrice fayleth † Consider therfore thou also that you are of lesse stature then they that were before you † and they that are after you of lesser then you as it were creatures now waxing old and past the strength of youth † And I sayd I besech thee Lord if I haue found grace before thine eyes shew vnto thy seruant by whom thou doest visite thy creature CHAP. VI. God knowing al thinges before they were made created them 54. for man and considereth the endes of al. AND he sayd to me In the beginning
called Iechonias reigning but three monethes was caried into Aegypt where afterwards he dyed 4. Reg. 23. v. 34. and Eliakim otherwise called Ioakim his brother was made king Who in the third yeare of his reigne was caried into Babylon 4. Reg. 23. v. 34. 2. Par. 36. v. 4. 5. and with him Daniel and the other three children Dan. 1.   Daniel begane to prophecie also verie young in Babylon and continued after   Zaraias   Shortly after which time happened the historie of Susanna Dan. 13.   the relaxation from captiuitie       And the same Ioakim after his reigne of three yeares liued other eight yeares in captiuitie 4. Reg. 24. v. 1. 2. Par. 36. v. 4. 5. A certaine captaine picking a quarel apprehended Ieremie and by consent of principal men cast him into a dungeon the king not knowing therof 4. Reg. 25. Iere. 37. 38. Ezechiel prophecied also in the captiuitie in the countrie nere to Babylon a 3383.   Ioachin otherwise Iechonias a Ioachin called also Iechonias sonne of the former Iechonias or Ioachaz reigned but three monethes was caried into Babylon with him Ezechiel the Prophet and others And his vncle Matthanias otherwise named Sedecias was made king who reigned eleuen yeares 4. Reg. 24. 2. Paral. 36. Ismael killed Godolias the gouernour and others 4. Reg. 25. Iere. 41.   b 3394. Iosedech   b In the eleuenth yeare of Sedecias when king Iechonias the younger was prisoner in Babylon Ierusalem was taken the Temple destroyed and the people caried captiue into Babylon 4 Reg. 25. 2. Paral. 36. In the meane time Daniel was in singular great estimatiō both with the faithful people and Paganes and was aduanced to auctoritie as also by his meanes the other children for which they were enuied and persecuted but were miraculously protected Dan. 1. ad 7. 13. 14. Manie Iewes fled into Aegypt and fel to idolatrie resisting contemning Ieremies admonitions to the contrarie Iere. 42. 43. 44.   THE END OF THE FIFTH AGE THE BEGINNING OF THE SIXTH AGE Anni mūdi High-priests The line of Dauid The sacred historie Schismes and infidelitie Scriptures c 3418. Iesus sonne of Iosedech From the captiuitie the Iewes had no kinges but the line of Dauid continued in these persons from Iechonias to Christ c In the captiuitie by diligence of the prophetes manie Iewes had great zele in true religion And about the 24. yeare of the captiuitie Assuerus otherwise called Astiages made Esther Quene and wicked Aman seeking to destroy al the Iewes in those partes was himself hanged on the gallowes which he had prepared for Mardocheus Esther 7. c. When the Monarchie came to the Chaldees by the powre of Nabuchodo nosor king of Babylon there was greatest confusion of manie goddes and of al kindes of idolatrie The historie of Esther Mardocheus and Aman written in the booke of Esther in the captiuitie d3420   Salathiel d Euilmerodach deliuered Iechonias or Ioachin from prison and enterteyned him as a prince 4. Reg. 25. v. 27.     e3464     e Baltazar being slaine Darius king of Medes Persians possessed Babylon Cyrus succeding Darius released the Iewes from captiuitie and gaue licence to Zorobabel Iesus to reduce the people into Iurie         Zorobabel 2. Paral. 36. v. 22. 1. Esd 1. And great dissention among the more lerned Grecians For the Pithagorians put their chief happines or Summum bonum in the immortalitie of the soule The Stoiks in moral vertues The Achademikes cōceiued much of pure spirites as Angels but could affirme nothing The Peripatetikes placed the consummation of al in the aggregation of spiritual corporal and worldlie prosperitie   f3465     f The Iewes being returned into Ierusalem sette vp an altar and offered sacrifice 1. Esd 3. v. 2.   Esdras write the relaxation of the Iewes from captiuitie And Nehemias the reparation of Ierusalem g3466     g The next yeare they begane to build the temple 1. Esd 3. v. 8.     h3469 Ioachin   h Attaxerxes otherwise called Cambyses also Assuerus forbade to perfect the temple And Iesus the Highpriest returned into Babylon 1. Esd 4. v. 7.         Abiud       i3470     i Daniel vnderstood by vision that Christ should come within seuentie wekes which make 490. yeares from the perfecting of the temple the walles of Ierusalem Dan. 9. v. 25. The schismatical Samaritanes opposed against the building of the temple 1. Esd 4.   k3490 Eliasib   k Aggeus Zacharias the prophets exhorted to build the temple 1. Esd 5. The Saduces acknowleging only the fiue bookes of Moyses reiected al other Scriptures and denied the resurrection Aggeus Zacharias l3500     l Iudith killed Holofernes either about this time or in the dayes of Manasses before the captiuitie Praefat. Iudith The Scribes expounded holie Scriptures sophistically Iudith either here or before the captiuitie m3502   Eliacim m The temple being perfected Malachias who is supposed to be Esdras exhorted to offer sacrifice with sinceritie Mal. 1. 2. The Pharises were precise in the letter corrupting the sense making large hemmes of their garments often washing themselues and the like Malachias n3508     n And Nehemias brought the kings Edict for the reparation of Ierusalem 2. Esd 2.     o3509     o Esdras Nehemlas and others labored in repayring Ierusalem but were often interrupted 2. Esd 3.     p3530   Azor. p About this time the citie was wel repayred with three walles 2. Esd 3. 7. And so by the iudgemēt of some expositers the count of seuentie wekes begane according to the prophecie of Daniel ch 9. v. 26.       Ioiada         q 3504. Ionathan   q Nehemias returning from Persia or Chaldea into Iurie found thicke water for the fire which Ieremie had hid in a deepe caue 2. Mach. 1. v. 20. 23.       Iaddus Sadoc r Alexander the great honored Iaddus the Highpriest Ioseph li. 11. c. 8. Antiq.     r 3644.     s Onias a most zelous godlie Highpriest 2. Mach. 4. was persecuted by Simon a church warden slaine by Andronicus a courtly minion v. 34. And after his death prayed for al the people ch 15. v. 12.     s 3689. Onias Achim t Iesus the sonne of Sirach writte the booke of Ecclesiasticus in the time of this Simon Highpriest as semeth ch 50. v. 24. 25.       Simon Priscus   v The seuentie two Interpreters being sent by Eleazarus Highpriest to Ptolomeus Philadelphus king of Aegypt translated the Hebrew Scriptures into Greke Sanaballat a Grecian obtayned licence for his sonnein law Manasses the Apostata high-priest to build a temple in Garizim Ioseph li. 11. c. 8. Antiq.   t 3700.     w An other Iesus Nephew of the former translated Ecclesiasticus into Greke Prolog Eccli Ananias an other false
ment only of those that persist impenitent and obstinate The fourt part The prayses of Iudith who with al the people praise God :: Iudith was a special figure of the B. Virgine Marie to whom these praises perteyne in more eminent sorte then to anic other creature S. 〈◊〉 bert●s Carnete●sis :: S. Ephre●● ser de 2. A ●●ontu citeth this place as holie scripture so testifying this booke to be canonica● :: Such giantes as were before Noes floud Gen. 6. :: Nor such as were after Num. 1● Deut. ● :: Euerlasting torments of fire wormes perteyne to the damned bodies S. Aug. li. 21. c. 4. ets ●●uit and greater paines to the damned soules especially the losse of Gods vision :: In the Greke ● 11. Manie de●red her to mariage :: Liuing in al 105. yeares she was widow about sixtie nine for when she slew Holofernes she was about fourtie yeares old ch 10. v. 18 and her husband was then dead three yeares and a halfe before ●h 8. v. 4. Iudith an example of holie widowhood Manie incitementes concurring to the contrarie made her widowhood more excellent Deu. 25. v 5. Ruth 3. v. 12. widowhood an Euangelical counsell Melite S. Atha S. Greg. Nazian Origen apud Euseb lib 6. c. 25. hist This whole booke is canonical The contentes VVritten by Mardocheus Diuided into ●●ure partes This booke is read at mattins the last weeke of September The first part beginneth in the 11. ch A B :: Modestie and temperance amongst heathen people condemneth Christianes that vrge men to drinke immoderatly and so cause them to be drunke S. Au. Ser. 231. ●32 de tempore The end of immoderate feasting is commonly browling Here the king became furious and the queene was diuorsed from him :: Brentius approueth the sentence of this parasice but Iosephus li. 11 c 6. Macrobius li 7. c. 1. Saturn S. Ierom ad Rustic and S. Ambrose l. de ●●h● c. 14 iudge the queenes refusal lawful and agreable to the Persians lawes which prohibited maried we●● to come in sight of other men in great assemblies neither had the king iust cause to break that law for pleasing his phansie in his drunken humour v. 10. Luther also wresteth this example in fanoure of adulterie par 2. de diuortio folio 177. Editionis ●●itenber 〈◊〉 1553. 4 Reg. 24. :: Deut. ● v. 3. Israelites are forbid to marie with Gentiles yet when there was no danger to be peruerted and great hope of good Esther by Mardocheus counsel consented to marie king Assuerus though otherwise she detested the bed of the incircumcised and of euerie stranger ●h 14. v. 15. K. Dauid also maried the kings daughter of Gessu● 2. Reg. 3. v. 3. :: Mardocheus hearing suspicious wordes and obseruing their actions sawe that they intended euel and informed the King wherby their ●●eson was disouered Rab. ●alom Iosep * C ch 12. v. 1. D :: Aman exacted such honour as heathen people gaue to their lesse goddes which was also idolatrie for Mardocheus was willing to giue him ciui● honour euen to kisse the steppes of his feete but feared and refused ●o geue Godlie honour to him ch 13. v. 13. 14. S. Th● 2. 2. q. 84. a. 1. :: Such is the preposterous ●nrie of rancour to appoint the day of executing his malice before he had got the kings decree The second part The Iewes danger to be massacred * E ch 13. v. 1. :: The letter at large is in the seuen first verses of the 13 ch of which this is the summe F The third part The deliuerie of the Iewes from danger :: The first and best remedie in distresse is to do workes of penance for sinnes cōmitted 1. Cor. 11. 〈…〉 :: Great confidence in Gods helpe when mans helpe fayleth and in dede this meanes by mouing the kings ha●t to grant Esthers petition was Gods special worke * G ch 1. v. 1. H * I ch 15. v. 4. K :: This prudence in delaying to propose her petition increased the kings desire to know it moued him to promise more assuredly so bond him the more to accomplish it :: Gods eye which neuer slepeth saw whath Aman intended and for execution of his owne diuiue iustice vsed this meanes b●y subtracting slepe that time from the king and inspiring his mind to heare the histories read and to reward good seruice donne Ioseph :: Ambicious men are most b●●nde in conceite of their owne deserts and fortunes :: Either they had read Gods promise to the Iewes Gen 13 15. c. or coniectured this by humaine prudence :: After three-dayes fast of al the Iewes with prayers and other workes of penance Esther asked and obtained the saftie of the whole people more precious to her then halfe of the kingdom :: Horrour of a guiltie conscience is commonly the first torment of a sinner S. Chrissocons 4. de Lagaro :: VVhat litle trust in false freindshipe when bad men once fal into disgrace :: Such honour is due to kinges yea though they be Infideles because they haue terrestrial maiestie and authoritie from God And the contrarie opinion and behauiour of heretikes vvhich despice Dominion and blaspheme Maiestie is condemned by S. Iude in his Epistle v. 8. * Lch. 16. v. 1. M :: VVhere no more danger remaineth remission of iniuries is more commendable then reuenge but where malice continueth and new danger may probably ensue iustice is necessarie and afterwards peace may be made more securely S. Bernad ser 2. d● verb. Apost :: In the ●i●a slaughter Amans tenne sonnes were slayne and afterwards also hanged v. 14. The fourth parth Other thinges folowing their deliuerie from danger :: The Iewes in Susan kept the fiftenth day holie v. 18 those that dwelt in other places kept the fourtenth day :: A feast instituted by Mardocheus was accepted and obserued by al the Iewes as a constitution agreable and not contratie to the law Deut. 4. v. 2 12. v. 32. Psal 76. Great and maruelous changes by the power of God D. Tho. prologo in Epist Canonic Esther a figure of our B ladie And of the Church :: S. Ierome here aduertiseth the reader that he found al hitherto in the Hebrew And the parcels which folow only in the Septuaginta Greke Edition which either they translated out of the Hebrew or added by inspiration of the Holie Ghost * The Greke of the 72. Interpreters A :: Except the 72. The first part The presage and occasion of Esthers aduancement and Amans persecuting the Iewes :: Mardocheus had this dreame before Amans aduancement or his owne and the peoples danger 4. Reg. 24. :: Mardocheus was a good dragon and Aman a bad one :: Esther by her fountaine of teares and humble supplication quenched a great flame of Gentiles against the Iewes ch 10. * B chap. 1. v. 1. C :: Here it appeareth that Aman was a fauourer of traitors of perhaps of the same conspiracie * D ch 3.
reproches v God semed to be wel pleased with Christ as with his owne Sonne if it be so let him deliuer him from these afflictions say these blasphemers w diuine powre without man formed me in the wombe of my mother a virgin x As I haue no father but thee O God so without intermission from myn incarnation to this time I haue had thee my protector y leaue me not now without comforte seing I must dye as thou hast determined and I freely consented yet leaue me not in death but raise me againe to life Psal 15. v. 9. 10. z Almost al are become myn enemies and those few that would can not helpe me a Delicate lasciuious yougmen b and the scribes Pharises and elders of the people haue al conspired against me c condemning me and perswading the people to crie Crucifie crucifie him d So weakned with paines of torments as fluide water not able to consist e My bones and strongest partes of my bodie are weakned verified when our Sauiour fel downe vnder his crosse f the part that first and last liueth is weakened as soft waxe by heat of the fire and ready to faile g al my powres and radical humiditie is dried vp as a potters vessel is baked in the furnace h Through exceding great drught which our Sauiour professed on the crosse saying I thirst i thus thou O God hast suffered me to come to the last breath of life next to death Yet finally ou● Seuiour gaue vp his spirite before he should haue died v. 21. k Agane this royal Prophet recounteth by whom and how our B. Sauiour should suffer euen as clere as tho Euangelistes afterwards haue written the historie ●●● 19. l Our Sauiours body was so racked on the crosse that his bones might be seene and counted m The persecuters vvittingly determined al ti●● crueltie beheld it vvith their eyes and vvithout al compassion persisted in malice reioyced and blasphemed n the souldiars that crucified our Sauiour taking his garments for their praye o yet in mysterie of his Church diuided not his coate p He prophecieth Christs speedy resurrection q Christs saul vvas not seperated from his bodie by force of the torments but he preuenting death freely yelded vp his spirite Ioan. 10. v. 9. 10. r the most pure and sanctified soule of vvhose fulnes al other iust soules are sanctified ſ that it stay not in hel vvhich deuoured al other soules in the old Testament t The propagation of the Church of Christ in al nations v not the carnal but spiritual children of Iacob Isaac and Abraham Rom. 9. v. 8. w the Church gethered both of Ievves and Gentiles is very great and vniuersal x Our Sauiour promised to geue his ovvne bodie the bread of life Ioan. 6 and performed the same at his last supper y those that be faithful humble and poore in spirit participat the sruict of this most excellent Sacrament z The effect of this B. Sacrament is the resurrection in glorie and life euerlasting a Gentiles which haue bene idolaters shal recollect themselues when they heare Christ preached and shal turne to true Religion b Although men can neither deserue to be conuerted nor to perseuere in iustice yet Christ meriteth to haue a continual kingdom which is the perpetual visible Catholique Church c Not only the poore sorte but also the mightie ones of the world shal be conuerted to Christ participate his B. Bodie in the Sacrament d and religiously adore the same e Al that adore God shad adore him in this Sacraments f Death being once ouercome it shal haue no more powre g Againe the prophet inculcateth the continuance of the Catholique Church h Apostles and other preachers of Christ Christs Resurrection The Passion of Christ according to Dauid Christs conditional prayer was not heard His absolute prayers were alwaies heard Christs suffered for our example ● Pet. 2. The Hebrew text corrupted by the Iewes This Psalme is of Christ Prophecie of the visible and vniuersal Church in hu●● Psal S. Agustin proueth the Church to be alwaies visible and great by this Psalme The Eucharist prophecied in this place Real presence of Christ in the Eucharist Thāksgeuing for Gods protection The 7. key a Christ the good pastor gouerneth protecteth Isa 40. Iere. 23. Ezech. 34. Ioan. 10. 1. Pet. 2. 5. b and feedeth his faithful flocke c Baptisme of regeneration d which is the first iustification e Gods precepts which the baptised must obserue Mat. 28. v. 20. f Saluation is in the name and powre of Christ not in mans owne merites g in great dangers of tentations to mortal sinne h yet by Gods grace we may resist i Gods direction and law is streight k and strong l Christ hath prepared for our spiritual foode the B. Sacrament of the Eucharist S. Cyprian Epist 63. Eutim in hunc Psal m against al spiritual enemies the world the flesh and the diuel n Christian soules are also streingthned by the Sacraments of Confirmation Penance holie-Orders Matrimonie and Extreme Vnction o The B. Sacrament and Sacrifice of Christs bodie and bloud p continual and final peseuerance is by Gods special grace q in eternal life Christ Lord of al the world The 5. key a Christ rising from death the first day of the weeke had al powre geuen him in heauen and in earth Mat. 28. b Not only the soile it selfe but al the fruict and al that dwel therin are Gods c Though Christ created and redeemed al yet only the iust shal inherite heauen d not occupied himselfe in vaine and vnprofitable thinges but in commendable workes e Gods mercy goeth before iustifications iust workes folow and so glorie is the reward of al. f This sorte of people thus seruing God shal receiue euerlasting blisse g The prophet contemplating in spirite Christs Ascension inuiteth Angels to receiue him and by prosopopeia speaketh also to the gates of heauen by which he is to enter h Angels answer admiring demanding as in a dialogue how Christ is become so glorious i The Prophet answereth that Christ by his powre hath ouercome al enemies in battel k Againe he willeth Angels to open the gates and biddeth the gates to enlarge them selues l the Angels demand as before m the prophet answereth that Christ is Lord also of Angels and al heauenlie powres vnder God A prayer of the faithful The 7. key a This Psalme perteyneth more properly to the new testament And is artificially composed the verses beginnīg with distinct letters in order of the Hebrew Alphabet to the last verse b my min● to be attētiue c not be frustrate of my petition d that patiently expect the time when God wil assist e This maner of praying is frequent in the Psalmes signifying as a prophecie that so it wil come to passe and the conformitie of the iust to Gods iustice f in true faith and religion g al our
him in that solemnitie But this voice of our Lord vpon vvaters is rather verified of our Blessed Sauiours owne preaching with g maiestie h thundering by his Apostles vpon i manie vvaters manie nations k in povvre of miracles l in magnificence preaching as hauing in dede powre not as the S●r●hes and Pharises Mat. 7. v. 29. m breaking cedars among innumerable others conuerting highest Potentates n of Libanus Emperoures kinges and greatest Princes of the world o as a calfe of Libanas so meekly submitting them selues to Christs yoke and spiritual obedience of his Church p Al which is done by Christ our Lord the beloved of God q as the sonne of vnicornes is most tenderly beloued by the parentes r This voice of our Lord diuiding the flame of fire the Holie Ghost proceding from the Father and the Sonne came vpon the Apostles as in diuided tongues of fire ſ wherwith the d●●●rt the Gentiles of the wide and wild world vvere shaken and moued t the desert of Cades some of the Iewes also compunct in hart with remorse of conscience hearing the voice of S. Peter and other Apostles v The same voice of our Lord preparing hartes inspiring the mindes of men with spede like hyndes and does to ascend the high hilles of free and perfect life in contemplatiue vertues vv So our Sauiour shal discouer the thicke vvoodes reueile the hidden Mysteries of the old Law by preaching Christian doctrine and vse of Christian Religion x in his holie Temple the Catholique Church wherin al true Christians shal glorifie God y making the great abundance of people who are like the sea vvhen it ouerflovveth the land to dwel in the same Church z Christ our Lord sitting ruling king ouer al foreuer a by his grace geuing streingth to his people to passe through the tentations of this life b and blesse the iust vvith eternal peace in heauen 〈…〉 Dauid rendereth thankes for his establishment in his kingdome The 8. key a The general name of Psalme common to this whole booke conteyning in al 150. is more particularelie appropriated to some which more specially were playde vpon musical instruments as on the Psalter Harpe c. Others are called Canticles which were most vsuallie songue with humaine voices So this called a Psalme of Canticle signifieth that voyces begane the musike and instruments were adioyned As contrariwise others are called Canticles of Psalmes where instruments begane and voices folowed b After manie great tribulations King Dauid prospering built an excellent house or palace 2. Reg. 5. v. 11. Paralip 14. v. 1. And at his first dwelling therein made this Psalme beginning himselfe to sing the same with voice other musitians ioyned with him in the praises of God and thankesgeuing for his benefites c Though God in himselfe is most high and neither nedeth nor can be exalted by men yet the royal prophet knew it vvas his dutie to sing thankes and praises to him d for his deliuerie from manie trubles and dangers e not suffering his enemies to be delighted in his ruine f conserued my bodie in health amōgst innumerable dangers g Preserued my soule from greater dāgers of sinnes and so from hel h Ye that are iust and holie praise God for it from vvhom it cometh and not from your selues i confesse his mere goodnes vvithout your desertes k vvhen he is angrie l yet he meaneth vvel vnto vs. m The state of a iust mans life is often changed from sorovv to comforte and from comforte to sorovv n Though vve suppose our selues firmly established o yet God of his good vvil tovvardes vs sometimes geueth strength and corege p sometimes suffereth vs to our ovvne vveakenes q therfore we must stil crie and pray for Gods helpe r in manner here expressed of the like ſ finally in this my good state t I shal alvvayes confesse and praise thee How to pray in affliction The 7. key a Perteyning to the new Testament b especially to the iust trubled and almost distracted in mind in great affliction See v. 23. c How greuously soeuer I am afflicted yet I trust in thee d therfore I pray thus 〈◊〉 70. e I offer and resigne my selfe to thee f The first preceptis to lerne of our elders ●●● 23. g not suffered me to be shut vp h al my partes external and internal body and mind are trubled i My freindes dare not conuerse with me lest they incurre displeasure for my sake k Make thy ●●●ht so ●hine in my soule that I may vnderstand that is right l and through thy mercie deliuer me from the force of myne aduersaries m 〈…〉 ly ●●hauing themselues ●● if they had no superior neither in earth nor in heauen to whom they shal at last render account n and abusing their present powre and authoritie which they haue of God o As yet in this present life the reward of the iust is hidde p but shal be made manifest in sight of al men q In the meane time the iust is in great estimation in the secrete knowledge of God r title of honoure as we speake to a king your maiestie or to a noble man your Lord●hippe ſ in myn extreme affliction being almost distracted in my mind I said that in reason I would not haue sayd Holie Iob spake some thinges in such state of affliction ch 3. 42. t the prophet or other iust person exhorteth al the seruants of God v to constancie vv long animitie x and final perseuerance to the end The second poe●●tential Psalme The 7. key a This Psalme sheweth how Dauid was brought to vnderstand his sinnes to confesse bewayle and obtaine remission of them b The first blessing of a sinner is the forgeuenes of his sinnes ●om 4. ● P●● 4. c by charitie which couereth themultitude of sinnes 1. Pet. 4. d Satisfaction be●●g made e VVhen sinners repent sincerly without guile then God forgeueth without which cooperation non● is iustified f because I acknowledged not my greuous sinnes I was stil sore afflicted “ Waxed as if they vvere old g though otherwise I ceased notto pray but without any fruict or good effect h thy diuine prouidence reducing me i by remorse of myn owne conscience which telleth me that I deserue al this affliction k therfore I do no longer dissēble with men nor am silent to thee but expresly acknowlege my sinnes l As I do now recal my selfe being stricken with Gods heauie hand so must euerie one that wil be purged from his sinnes and sanctified pray to thee when he is afflicted m Though calamities be meruelous great like to a diluge n yet they shal not opresse him that relieth vpon God o God speaketh promising by these tribulations to geue his seruants vnder standing and instruction p with perpetual protection q Be not therfore careles like to brute beastes but consideratiue of your actions r The Prophet or anie iust soul besecheth God to held this
spirite the perfections which he wisheth in Christ in maner of congratulating describeth his fortitude fighting against the diuel for the Church n purposing o prosecuting p and perfecting the conquest and so establishing thy spiritual kingdome q Not vvith warlike armour of this world but by assaulting the aduersarie with truth r defending thyse●fe and thy souldiers with the shield of mildnes ſ and striking the enemie with the sword of iustice VVhich right force of spiritual fight hath meruelous good successe t Preaching of Christs Gospel his grace mouing the hartes of the hearers is liuelie and forcible more pearcing then anie two edged sword v The example of people conuerted shal moue the hartes of the aduersaries to come also vnto the truth w Christs kingdom shal haue no end Luc 1. v. 33. x Thou defendest and rewardest the good finally forsakest and punishest the wicked y more peculiarly the God of Christ by hypostatical vnion z Diuers kinges as Dauid him selfe Iosaphat Ezechias and Iosias were as godlie as Salomon and perseuered good to the end which is doubted Salomon did not but Christ incomparably was annointed indued with al graces aboue al kinges a Mortification which conserueth from putrifying b humilitie aswaging pride c being smal in the first spring grovveth great d humanitie assumpted and sanctified persons in vvhom Christ dwelleth as in cleane shining odoriferous houses e sincere faithful soules more deare to their spouse Christ then daughters of temporal kinges f The Catholique Church in faith purified as gold g vvith varietie of states as Clergie Laity and diuers sortes of religious Orders and other professions al vnited in the same faith hope and charitie h carifully al that Christ thy spouse speaketh to thee by his Spirite i diligently put the same in practise k vvith al obedience and readines and returne not to former infidelitie no● to corrupt life l Christ loueth the Church adoined with his giftes m and mutually his true children loue and serue him n Manie of al nations submitle themselues and al that they haue to Christ o Internal vertues are most especial ornaments p exterior are required to edifie others in diuers sortes of vertues q By this meanes manie more are conuerted to christianitie r and one countrie inuiteth and draweth another ſ As Apostles came in place of Patriarches and Prophetes so stil Bishops and Priestes succede in the Church pastors and gouernours therof t These pastores shal stil teach the true Christian doctrin v and stil there shal be Christian people that wil folow and professe the same Caluin expoundeth this Psalme contratie to S. ●aul No saluation out of the Church Perpetual succession of Byshops in place of the Apostles The Church prospereth also in persecution The 6. key a Belonging to the Church of Christ b As wel the cause vvhy God suffereth his Church to be persecuted at his assured protection in difficulties are hidden secretes to the world c Al refuge is not secure for one man is not able alwayes to defend an other but God is a sure and strong refuge d euer able and in conuenient time vvilling to helpe e This whole vvorld is ful of tribulations but the Church suffered the greatest in the first persecutions shal suffer as great in the time of Antichrist English Catholiques suffer most of al nations in this age and can not be suppressed but stil increase in number and fortitude f Therfore al Catholiques may assuredly know that the whole Church can not faile g though very manie as now in England h and very eminent persons as some noblemen and some Priestes haue reuolted yet al vvil not i Such bad examples make the good to recollect themselues more diligently and to rei●yc● in Gods grace by which they stand fast k before the heate of persecution shal inuade al for the elect the dayes of tribulation are shortned l Sometimes one nation or kingdome rebelleth against the Church but can not destroy it m by the spirite of Christ Antichrist and al his members shal be destroyed n The Church sometimes hath great peace and tranquilitie o God himselfe restrayneth the wicked suddainly abating their furie or cutting of their forces Vocation of Gentiles The 6. key a For Christians that leaue the sinnes of their fathers and reioyce in Christ crucified See Annotation Psal 41. b True ioy of the hart sheweth it sel●e both in voice of exultation and also in gesture of body by clapping of handes dancing as king Dauid did before the Arke 2 Reg ● likevvise vvith instruments c To al the wicked d not only of one or few kingdoms but of al the earth e VVhen kinges and countries become Christians they are made subiectes to the Church that vvas before not heades and rulers therfore f Christ God man after his Passion rose from death and ascended g not leauing his Church desolate but making her ioyful by an other comforter the Holie Ghost h The same Christ is our God by his Diuinitie i and our king by his Humanitie k Doe your endeuour to vnderstand vvhat you sing read or heare in Gods word At least to know the principal Mysteries and pointes of Christian doctrin euerie one according to their capacitie and state or profession l The faithful of the old and nevv Testament are vnited in the seruice of one and the same eternal God m In respect of the Blessed Trinitie holie Scripture here and in manie places vseth names of the plural number as Eloim Goddes not diuiding Gods substance vvhich is one but insinuating distinction of Diuine Persons The Father the Sonne and the Holie Ghost VVhich Mysterie is more expresly mentioned in Baptisme and professed by Christian gentils then it was by the people of the Ievves The Church founded and protected by God The 6. key a Voices beginning the musike instruments prosecuted b especially for the second day of the weke the day after the sabbath which is our Sunday called Dominica our Lords day c Ierusalem and mount Sion were most obliged to praise God for greatest benefites receiued so the Catholique Church therby prefigured and hauing receiued farre greatter is most of al bonden to be gratful d This can not be affirmed of Sion or Ierusalem but is only verified of the Catholique Christian Church e whose coastes do extend to the North and to al quarters of the round earth f The same one God one Christ one Faith and one Religion in al particular Churches of the vvhole militant Church g And this Vniuersalitie and Vnitie shal be after that Christ taking mans nature shal be ascended and shal send the Holie Ghost to found beginne this Church h For the assured certaintie of that is foreshewed the Prophet speaketh in the prete●●ence as if it vvere already done in his time which he then savv in spirite i Nothing more moueth he hart affecteth al the bodie and soule
al other nations to erre for their sinnes in their fond phantesies of false goddes reserued the Israelites for his Church e establishing the principalitie therof in Sion f For obtaining and conseruing of Sion from wicked Infidels God ouerthrewe al sortes of contrarie forces g God not only gaue his people temporal victories ouer their enimies but also illuminated their mindes with knowlege of true religion h others are often trubled in mind hearing the truth but are not conuerted through their obstinate follie i VVorldlie men in supine carlesnes as in a sleepe passe ouer this life and afterwards find themselues excluded from heauen for lacke of merites and good workes with the foolish virgins k God vndertaking the defence of his people and threatning the aduerse part l they failed in courage as men ouercome with drowsines of sleepe m Euen from the first notice of thy wil the aduersaries were deiected fearing thy po●e●● wrath n Terrible signes from the firmament appearing before the day of iudgement :: The Prophetes ●● often speake in the pretertence for the assurance of the thinges to come o persecuters and others being terrified shal be astonied and silent p God vvil come to iudge the vvorld more especially for the iusts sake q Men that shal seriously thinke and meditate vpon these thinges vvil praise and thanke God for them r and the effect and svvere repast of such meditation shal make as it vvere a great festiual day in the deuout soule spiritually ioyned vvith God ſ The soule thus inflamed with Gods loue is then apt of gratitude for his goodnes tovvardes man to make vovves of thinges vvherto vve are not obliged t but most necessarie it is to be maturely aduised and not rashly nor lightly to vovv for being once vovved vve are strictly bound to vvhatsoeuer vve haue lavvfully promised And it is great sinne to v●vv vndiscretly v Remembring that for vovves and al other vvorkes vve must ansvver to God vvho is a terrible iudge readie to punish in bodie and soule sparing none for their greatnes not princes nor kinges nor vulgar sorte for al are to him alike Gods special protection of the Ievves the. 4. key a For Idithun to sing or to make tune for it b For the faithful congregation to consider Gods benefites c Hauing heretofore prayed Psal 14● d I haue obtayned e Especially being in tribulation and praying vvith hart and handes lifted vp as vvel in the night as day f I vvas not frustrate of my prayer g I vvas sometimes in such anguish that nothing semed comfortable h but I 〈…〉 d vpon God so firmly i that my spirite came in●o an ex●asie o●●●aunce k I arose early before the ordinarie time of avvay king l my hart being attentiue invvardly I vttered nothing vvith my tongue m I diligently examined my conscience n Assuredly God vvil not reiect for euer but he vvil be pleased with his Church o VVhiles I thus thought I erred greatly novv I see and confesse that God suffereth al calamities for the good of his seruantes p and this I knevv not by my selfe but by the inspiration of God making this change in me by his gracious hand q The progenie of Iacob receiued and nourished in Aegypt for Iosephs sake as his adopted children r The read sea and Iordan felt thy diuine powre and obeyed thy wil. ſ Noise of vvaters meeting after the Israelites vvere passed thunders and lightninges also hapened to the terror of the persecutors though not mentioned in Exodus Ex● 14 By the ministerie of Moyses and Aaron Gods great Benefites bestovved vpon the levves and their ingratitude the 4 key a Commended to Asaph a chiefe musitian that the people might vnderstand and consider Gods benefites b Neither the lavv not the people vvas Dauids but presenting Gods perso n he speaketh in his name or authoritie vvith vvhose inspitation he vvas replenished S. Greg. Prefat in Iob. c. 2. Mat. ●● 5. 35. c Albeit the prophet reciteth historically thinges donne yet the same vvere parables similitudes and figures of other thinges d yea of secret hidden Mysteries obscurly signified in the old Testament and reueled in the nevv e which partly we know by written holie Sriptures f partly by Traditions g God of his mercie without precedent merite raised vp a peculiar people of Abraham Isaac and Iacob h and gaue them a particular law first of Circuncision more largely by Moyses i So Abraham instructed his children and his house after him Gen. 18. k in like sorte others taught their children l For three causes God gaue his law that his people may haue confidence in him he shewing his care to instruct and gouerne them m that they remember his benefites n and kepe his commandmentes o The Iewish nation very often and in great numbers murmured rebelled and committed other great sinnes and therfore Dauid exhorted the people of his time not to do the like And this exhortation perteyneth more especially to Charistianes as S. Paul teacheth 1. Cor. 10. p They first trusting in their owne strength without Gods commandment Num. 14. went forth to batle and were ouerthrowne 1. Par 7 v. 21 ● Par. 7. ●●● q Tanis the principal citie in Aegypt nere the riuer Nilus where Moyses wrought his great miracles 〈◊〉 14. This cloude shadowed them from the heate of the sunne in the day and the fire shined in the night al the time that they were in the desert ſ In mount Horeb and there was continual water in al the campe which occupied nere foure miles in length and breadth t Which naturally wanted water but by miracle had abundance v Not content with Manna they demanded to haue flesh vv Stil incredulous not beleuing Gods omnipotencie they thought that albeit he had geuen them manna and water yet he could not geue them flesh x By bread in general is vnderstood al competent meate vsual for a table y For this incredulitie murmuring and other sinnes God kept the children of Israel fourtie yares in the desert t●l al hat were of age when they came from Aegypt were dead except only Iosue and Caleb z In the meane time amongst other punishments manie mutmurers wo●c burn●●o death with strange fire Num. 11. a Manna made by Angels b God so changed the wind that it brought abundance of quailes and other birdes into their campe Exo. 16. Nu. 11. c Immediately after a moneth for so long they had abundance of these birdes ibid. v. 20. they were striken with a plague and manie died for their concupiscence d The most fresh strong men died and so were hindered from possessing the promised land of Chana an e In fourtie yeares aboue six hundred thousand died f They offered morning sacrifice g But were not sincere in their hartes h Howsoeuer multitudes of people committe great sinnes and are seuerely punished yet Gods mercie preferueth some by his effectual grace and neuer suffereth the
of the Israelites t from the mediterranean sea of Palestin v to the riuer Euphrates Exo. 23. v. 31. Beut 11. v. 24. vv eruel enimies more like to most cruel beastes then to men x yea so cruel as none els in the world are like vnto them y The Prophet now prayeth for the coming of Christ which he saw in spirite z The Church of the old testament in her best state wanted the perfection which the Church of Christ hath a Christ our Messias most commonly calleth by this title The Sonne of man b So thy vinyard can not indure if it be stil afflicted and trodden downe c Christ working by Gods powre redresseth almiseries d The same is the 8. and the 15. verse with litle alteration and here repeted the third time In which we also pray for three thinges first to be purged and conuerted from sinne second to be illuminated by Christ the Image of God Thirdly to be sanctified and saued in eternal glorie to haue the fruition of the most blessed Trinitie Inuitation to celebrate festiual dayes deuoutly the 7. key a This Psalme perteyneth not only to the old testament but also to the new b Gods seruants oppressed with tribulations c to be songue by Asaph a chief master of musike d Make readie al these musical instruments e In the Calendes or first day of euerie moneth in remembrance of Gods prouidence and perpetual gouernment of al creatures :: The feast of Neomenia f and most especial solemnitie in the first day of the seuenth moneth in memorie of Isaac conserued from death in whom God promised Abraham to multiplie his seede and to blesle al nations Gen. 17 v. 21. c 21. v 12. c 22. v. 18. :: Feast of trumpetes g The people of Israel signified by Ioseph as Psal 79. v. 2. :: In memorie of this benefite Pasch was instituted h God deliuered the same people from their vntolerable bondage of carying burdens in baskettes from geathering straw making brickes and other seruitude Exo 1. v. 14 c. 5. v. 7. i The admonition of God to the people k yet after so great benefites thou didst murmure and contradict me Exo. 17. Num. 20. l Seriously admonish thee m Man by free wil may choose whether he wil obey or no. :: The feast of Pentecost in memorie of the lawe n This was an other great benefite to geue an expresse law for their instruction o Obseruing my commandments aske what thou wilt and I wil geue it thee Pom. 1. ● 24. p Very easely q of my freewil and liberalitie without necessitie or obligation r The wicked that promise to serue God and do it not shal be in eternal torments In the meane time God bestowed these benefites vpon them for the iusts sake Admonition to Magistrates the. 7. key a The wordes of the prophet admonishing al magistrates that when they sitte in iudgement or determine anie cause God who is there and euerie where present b attendeth their processe and therfore it behoneth them to be aduised what they doe euen as if they heard God speaking as here foloweth c The wordes of God though not vttered sensibly yet in effect intimated by his law according wherto he wil procede in iudgement against vniust Iudges d Such iudges procede in grosse ignorance not caring to vnderstand but content to walke in darknes e Ye are so euil disposed that you would turne al vpside downe instifying the wicked and condemning the iust f For your office which you participate of me you are certaine goddes vpon earth g But when you die you shal find that you are men subiect to Gods iudgement h yea your punishment wil be greuous and importable for the mightie shal mightely suffer torments Sap. ● i Againe the wordes of the prophet praying God k that eing he is Lord of al he wil iudge al. Persecuters of the Church confounded or conuerted the 6 key a Seing none is like to thee ô God b shew thy powre and maiestie c be not silent d The cruel persecuters are most insolent e and proud f That there be no more anie faithful people g anie Catholiques leift aliue h The progenie of Esau i the seede of Ismael k descending from the elder sonne of Lot l the issue of Abraham by Agar who falsly cal them selues Sarascens as if they were of Sara m People of Gebal a citie of Syria n of the other sonne of Lot o those that first oppugned the Israelites after they were parted from Aegypt Exo. 17. p The Philistians q and Tyrians al nere neighboures and some of them nere akine to the Israelites were their great enimies r Others also coming further of ioyned against Gods people in figure that al heretikes and other infidels conspire together against Catholiques ſ The Psalmist therfore prayeth and withal prophecieth that God wil at last destroy them as he did Madian Num 31. Iudic. 6. 7. t Sisara captaine general v for Iabin king of Asor nere Cisson Iudic. 4. v. 7. 23. w Within the territorie of Manasses Ios 17. which they inuaded x slaine and not buried y These foure princes of the Madianites were slaine by Gedeons forces Iudic. 7. 8. z By foure similitudes the prophet describeth the punishment that shal fal vpon persecuters :: By foure similitudes the prophet describeth the punishment that shal fal vpon persecuters 1. 2. 3. 4. a God by punishing seeketh the conuersion of sinners not their eternal death b But such as be stil obstinate and finally impenitent do perish for euer c God only the creator of heauen and earth is properly called LORD VVhose essential and incommunicable name is VVHICH IS Exo. 3. v. 14. 6. v. 3. Eternal glorie the 10. key a For men afflicted in this vale of miserie b By the children of Core not being musitians but porters in the temple 1. Par. 26. S. Augustin here and in other titles of Psalmes vnderstandeth the faithful children of Christ c The glorious mansions in heauen which God hath prepared for the iust d Vehement desires do sometimes depriue vs of external sense e The mind reioycing in hope the bodie is also recreated releeued and reuiued which before was dulle and heauie f As sparowes by natural instinct seeking habitations finde houses to dwel in g and turtles haue nestes wherin to lay their young ones so faithful soules seeke to dwel in heauen and in the meane time to lay vp good workes within the Catholique Church out of which sayth S. Augustin in this place how good soeuer workes do seme as when paganes and heretikes feede the hungrie cloth the naked receiue strangers into their houses visite the sicke comforte prisoners being not laid in the nest conculcabuntur conterentur non seruabuntur non custodientur they shal be trodde vnder foote they shal be bruised in peeces they shal not be conserued they shal not be kept but
our sinnes al his life l He prayed also for his resurrection and glorification m VVith al possible confusion Christs exaltation the 5. key Mat. 22. Act. 2. 1. Cor. 15. Heb. 1. 10. a God the Father b To God the Sonne the Lord of Dauid and of al mankind yet the sonne of Dauid according to his humanitie c He limiteth not the time but excludeth al time wherin the enimie might imagine that Christs kingdom should cease signifying that Christ shal reigne til al his enimies be subdued much more afterwards in al eternitie d The Church of Christ beginning in Ierusalem on whitsunday the fiftith day from his Resurrection continueth euer more e Thou shalt haue principalitie f in the day of thy powrful conquest and rising from death g in excellencie of al holie spiritual mysteries and graces h because I God the Father of my substance begate thee God the Sonne in eternitie The same which Micheas saith c. 5. v. 2. His comingforth from the beginning from the dayes of eternitie i God most firmly and vnchangeably affirmed that thou Christ our Messias art not only a King but also a Priest Heb. 5. v. 7. k not for a time as Aaron was but for euet l neither of Aarons order but according to the Order of Melchisedec m Kinges that sometimes persecute Christans are subdued with other people to Christ n He shal iudge and punish the incredulous people o make great slanghters amongst those that resist p and bring princes with their populous kingdome to nothing q He shal in the meane time and also his best seruants suffer much tribulation in this life r and for the same ●e highly exalted in life euerlasting Christs Priesthood for euer both in function and in effect The resemblance of Christs and Melchisedecs Priesthood Graces geuen to the Church the 6. key a I wil praise God both in secret for discharge of myn owne conscience b and in publique for edification of others This Psalme in the Hebrew is composed with euerie verse and middle of verse begunning with a distinct letter in order of the Alphabet c Gods wil is the whole cause of al his workes d Euerie worke of his is praise worthie and magnifical e God hath leift one most special and beneficial memorie of al other benefites his owne bodie and bloud in memorie of his Passion and our redemption f the spiritual foode and sustinance of al the soules that rightly feare him g Of his promise to conserue his Church perpetually h the powrable operation of his death and of al his mysteries i Gods commandments do iustifie al that kepe them k He also of his mercie redemed man that he might be able to kepe his precepts l Begingning with feare of God bringeth at last by other degrees to true wisdom which two are the first and last of the seuen giftes of the Holie Ghost The meanes to be happie the 7. key a The Septuagint Interpreters added this mention of Aggeus and Zacharie returning from captiuitie to signifie that this Psalme was very proper meete to be cōmended to the people at that time wherby they might lerne that their sinnes were the cause of their captiuitie and of al their miseries and if they desired temporal or spiritual prosperitie they must obserue the meanes here prescribed to obtayne the same b He that sincerly feareth God wil take great delight in keping his commandments This Psalme is also composed by the Alphaber as the next before Psal 1. c So doing he and his shal prosper d The iust shal not only prosper in this world but also in the next e God wil also comfort the iust in tribulations f That shal geue discrete and wholsome counsel to the afflicted g Workes of mercie are also called iustice because they concurre to mans iustification 2. Cor. 9● h and to his saluation Gods prouidence the 3. key a Al Gods seruants b In respect of God al creatures are low though they be in heauen c See the example of Ioseph so aduanced d of Sara Rebecca Rachael and other wemen made fruictful The meruelous passage of Israel from Aegypt the 4. key a People of false religion counted barbarous especially such as also persecute the true Religion for otherwise the Aegyptians were both ciuil in maners and lerned in manie sciences b The people of Iewes were more notoriously renowmed in the world from the time of their deliuerie out of Aegypt for the peculiar people whom God sanctified and in whom as in his elected enheritance or dominion he dwelled and reigned c The Psalmist writing in verse doth often describe thinges in poetical maner but more truly then prophane poetes for that in very dede al creatures otherwise sensles as the sea do in a sorte feele the powre of their Creator obey his wil d VVhen the Israelites went forth of Aegypt e when they entred into Chanaan f Either there was an earthquake or some other mouing of hilles not mentioned by Moyses or els the Psalmist speaketh of the rockes of the torrentes which bowed that the Israelites might rest in Ar and lie in the borders of the Moabites Num 21 v 15 g By the figure Apostrophe he speaketh to the sea riuer and hilles vsing also Prosopopoeia as if senfles thinges vnderstood and should answer h An other miraculous benefite that the rocke yelded them water in their necessitie * Here some Hebrewe Rabbins beginne an other Psalme but by the coherence of the matter S. Augustin proueth that it i● but one Psalme where is shewed that the true inuisible God is knowen by such workes as are here recited and contratiwise that the Gētils idoles are not goddes because they are made of siluer gold or other matter by mens handes hauing resemblance of liuing thinges are altogether sensles i Thou didstal this ô God of mere mercie towards thy people k for thy truths sake seing thou didst promise to protect them l that the Gentiles should not take occasion to blaspheme m This is a iust prayer of the zelous conforming their desires to Gods wil But if God geue idolaters grace to amend then al the iust wil also reioice in their cenuersion n Though manie Iewes fel to idolatrie yet there alwayes remained so manie in Gods true seruice that it mighst stil be truly saide The house of Israel hath hoped in our Lord as is here auerred o This in effect al worldlie politikes say in their hartes as it were quitting their interest of heauen to God p and contenting themselues with earthlie possessions q But when such prophane men are dead they make no shew at al of praising r for parting from the earth they descend into hel and there eternally blaspheme God God ● ſ Contrarivvise the iust aspiring to heauen vvhich is the proper kingdom of God vsing this vvorld as they ought to do for a meanes to ascend into heauen shal
and tentations then those by vvhich the damned vvere ouercome Thirdly certaine more excellent Sainctes namely the Apostles and al those that forsaking proprietie of temporal In Psal 121. v. 5. li. 3. in Mat. 19. ho. in Nat. S. ●ened goodes geue that they haue to the poore as some religious Orders doe or into a Communitie as the Apostles and manie primitiue Christians did Mat. 4. v 20. cap. 19. v 27. Act. 4. v. 34. 1. Cor. 6. v. 3. shal sitte in iudgement seates assessorie iudges with Christ and iudge those that render account of wel or euil spending the temporal landes or goodes which they possessed in this vvorld So teach S. Augustin S. Ierom. S. Beda and others God most excellent and most laudable the first key a Al ye Angels and men that are in the holie and highest heauen praise our Lord. b Al ye creatures that are in and vnder the first moueable firmament praise our Lord. c And you especially Gods peculiar people amongst whom and for whom diuine miracles haue bene wrought praise our Lord d with al your possible endeuoure for though his infinite Excellencie excedeth the powre of al creatures to praise him sufficiently yet it resteth that you may infinitly extend your wil and desire to praise our Lord according to the multitude of his greatnes e Out of this your great and infinite desire let your tongues sound and sing diuine praises as wel vvith voice as musical instruments f VVherof six most vsual in the Tabernacle and Temple vvere these Trumpet Psalter Harpe Timbrel Organ and Cymbal g By the vvay the Psalmist interposeth agane tvvo especial thinges vvhich make perfect harmonie vvithout vvhich no instrument is gratful to God Vnitie amongst his seruants signified by the Quire of consonant voices h and mortification of passions signified by Stringes vvhich are made of dead beastes bovvels i Man created of corruptible bodie and immortal soule is finally admonished to praise our Lord ouer and aboue the praises of al other corporal creatures vvho also is more especially bond therto then Angels because God hath voutsaffed to make himselfe Man to redeme man that vvas lost by sinne and to endew him vvith nevv grace and so bring him to euerlasting glorie vvhere vvith holie Angels men also for euer euer shal praise our Lord vvith hart voice and iubilation of spirite singing as the Psalmist concludeth Alleluia The number of Psalmes signifieth the agrement of the old and nevv ● estament Three fifeties sign ●●● P●na●ce Mercie vvith ●ustice and Praises of God 〈◊〉 ● 〈◊〉 An. D● 380. Gloria Patri added by tradition The coherence of this part with the rest The contents of Sapiential bookes Preface before Iosue Why they are so called They are al Canonical Scripture Salomon is auctor of the three first Proem Annot. Prefac Tobiae Other bookes of Salomon not extant S. Iero in proem S. Aug. li. 17. c. 20. ●iuii A brief summe of these three Prologo galeato a Prouerbs b Ecclesiastes c Canticles VVhy this booke is called Prouerbes and Parables The contents Diuided into foure parts The first part An inuitation to seeke vvisdom vvith some general precepts a By these sentencious similitudes the studious may better conceiue and vnderstand true vvisdom and the vertues belonging therto b profound solide vvitte c Not only yongmen and inexperienced but also the vvise may lerne more vvisdom by these patables d shal be fitte to gouerne others e Feare of our Lord that is reuerence of his diuine Maiestie vvith desire duly to serue him and neuer to offend him is the first degree in ascending to perfect vvisdom vvhich consisteth not only in the vnderstanding but also in action g The second to resist euil suggestions h The proper remedie against such alurements is to be vvatchful and to ●ee from them Three kindes of vvisdom Diuine Attributes are not qualiries in God but his substance VVisdom increated is God himselfe VVisdom the gifte of Holie Ghost Humane vvisdom Four benefites of God Vocation Helpe Instruction Repreheasion Reward of workes a This frequent maner of proposing the vvay and meanes to vvisdom If thou vvilt receiue my vvordes c. shevveth most cuidently the povvre of mans free vvil b Not euerie desire or sleight seeking of vvi●dom sufficieth but such laborious seeking is required as a couetous man s●ekerb●re●sure vvhich he knoweth to be hid in the ground Sap. 3. v. 32. 10. v. ● c A description of peruers sinners especially of heretikes Foure markes of an heretike 1. He forsaketh the knowen faith Isaiae 35. v. ● 2. He glorieth in his ovvne invention 3 Teacheth pleasing thinges Rom. 1● v. 18. 4. Admitteth no iudge but himself ●it ● v. 11. a It auaileth litle to heare good instructions except we 〈…〉 them in memorie b not ●n books only but in the hart c and ●ut them in execution d knovv also that al thy streingth is in Go● in whom th●● m●●st 〈◊〉 ●●ust not in th●● o 〈…〉 〈…〉 e e 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 〈…〉 those that endeuour 〈◊〉 God is a 〈◊〉 of his s●u●ur tovvards them and therfore his other promises vvhich seme to be temporal are to be vnderstood of the next life f God revvardeth as it vvere vvith both handes promising eternal life g and competent meanes in this life h M 〈…〉 for the wordes of thy mouth i Almes in season 〈◊〉 vvorth to that vvhich is differred long :: As Salomon was instructed by his father king Dauid so he teacheth others the right order hovve to lerne vvisdom :: The first part of wisdom is to desire it For nothing hinde res● from being ●ust but that ●ustice is not desired S. Aug in Psal 118. v. 20. :: As the hart is the principal part of the bodie so the vvil is the chiefest powre of the soule from vvhich good or euil procedeth a To auoide al impietie it is first of al necessarie not to thinke speake nor heare vnlawful thinges b By woman is generally vnderstood concupiscence of vvhat sinne soeuer as ch 1. v. 10. ch 3. v. 33 chap 4. v. 14. c The vvorld the flesh and the diuel are strangers d And cruel enemies that render for revvard eternal damnation e Good doctrine is to be imperted to men of sincere intention f no to contemners and obstinate in●idels The vvisman doth not absolutly disvvade from al maner of suretishippe but from rashly or vnaduisedly ansvvering for others And especially exhorteth to vse al diligence in performing or causing others to performe that vvhich is promised or couenanted :: Euerie one that sinneth vvittingly and of malice refusing to obey God imployeth his mouth eyes feete handes and al partes vvith a vvicked hart and intention to peruerte others most proper to heretikes apostates from the faith :: The forme● six are al damnable but this seuenth is most detestable because it is opposite to the chief vertue charitie it breaketh vnitie is the proper sinne
praised her she returneth al the praise to him d Praying him to come and stil remaine vvith her e Acknovvleging him to be the only Sauiour of both old and nevv testament a The Synagogue prosecuteth her prayer desiring Christs Incarnation b Christ admonisheth vvordlie men not to molest those that serue him in contemplation other spiritual vertues c Angels and other Sainctes of the triumphant Church admire the beautie of the C●n●les conuerted which is also vnderstood of euerie holie soule ascending from this world into heauen And more singularly of the most glorious virgin mother of God f The Church of Gentiles reioyceth in the strong defence vvhervvith her Sauiour hath established her g Keepers of this vinyard vvere the Prophetes and Apostles and their Successors are stil the kepers therof h Christ shevveth that together vvith the pastors himself especially hath care of his Church alvvayes assisting the visible gouerners therof vvith his inuisible grace i The vvhole Church militant vvel contented yea desiring Christs Ascension into heauen for the good of al that here serue him prayeth him from thence to send abundance of his grace that vve may ascend the high mountaines of perfect charitie and zele of Gods honour that he vvil make our soules such hilles the garden of al vertues so voutsafe to dwel therin Amen d The Synagogue of the Iewes was corrupt vnder the tree of Christs Crosse when they cried Crucifie him Crucifie him And againe His bloud be vpon vs and vpon our children Againe VVe haue no King but Caesar c. e Christ againe sheweth his affection towards his Church of the Gentiles calling her his owne sister and the Synagogs sister promising and bestowing on her manie excellent benefites Both the auctor auctoritie of this booke were sometimes doubtful The same doubt is of Ecclesiasticus It is most probable that Philo a Iew writte this booke collecting manie sentences of Salomons Argum. lib. Reg. Fiue Sapiential bookes of the old testament Chap. 7. 8. 9. The Iewes denie these bookes to be Canonical Mat. 22. Exo. 3. They are iudged by very manie ancient fathers and afterwards defined by the Church to be Canonical Scriptures Et li. 17. c. 20. ●●●● The contents Diuided into three patts The 1. part An admonition to loue and practise iustice 3. Reg. 3. Isa 56. 2. Par. 1● :: Mortal sinnes are not only committed in dedes vvordes but also in though tes :: He that maliciously curseth s●u●sed of God ●al 5. v. 22. :: Be not cause of your owne eternal death by euil life :: Desperate death deliuereth not the wicked from calamities :: Neither are an●e damned vvhile they are in th●● life :: But sinners not repenting being et●●nal 〈…〉 them 〈…〉 〈…〉 be 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 be after death fal to these prophane thoughts and speaches of infidelitie :: Of infidelitie touching paine or reward after death procedeth the Epicures life :: Infidels are not content to liue in riote but doe also enuie and persecute the iust vvhose good examples vexe their mindes sturred therto by the diuel :: An euident prophecie of the Iewes malice persecuting our Sauiour Fulfilled by the chief Priestes Scribes and Ancientes recorded dy the Euangelists Mat. 27. v. 41. Mar 14. v. 53. Mat. 27. v. 43. :: vvant of beleuing diuine Mysteries namely the reward of the iust punishmēt of the wic ked is cause of dissolute life and of hatred against the good :: Temporal death of the iust is the way to eternal life vvhere damnation called here the tormēt of death shal not touch them :: For albelt Martyrs seme in the eyes of the vnwise to dye or to be extinguished they passe in dede into eternal and vnspeakeable glorie Chap. 5. v. 4 Mat. 13. v. 43. :: Al the iust shal approue Gods iudgmēt condemning the wicked :: Literally is vnderstood that the wiues of adulterers often become adultresses their children wicked Morally their sensualitie al their vvorkes are wholly corrupted * See S. Ierom. in Isa 56. v. 4. :: Chastitie of the bodie is a singular great vertue spiritual chastitie of true faith and religion is greatter and more generally commended as the roote and fundation of al vertues For vvithout faith it is vnpossible to please God :: VVhen soeuer the iust dieth it is profitable for him dying yong his immaculate life is more commendable then old age in the wicked v. 16. :: The damned shal be vvithout al excuse vtterly confounded in their owne consciences Gods prescience d●●th not preiudice mans free wil. ●tl 17. ● 30. ciuit :: VVicked men in their false conceipt iudge the trauels of the iust to be vaine fructles :: Repentance of the damned is only for the losse paine whereinto they are fallen not of loue towards God or vertue nor of hate towards sinne therfore is fructles bringing no comforte nor helpe at al but euerlasting torment and anguish of mind Chap. 3. v. 2. Pro. ●0 v. 19. :: For the certaintie of thinges that shal be Prophetes do very often speake in the pretertence of thinges to come as if they vvere already past :: As the ioy of the blessed so contrariwise the miserie of the damned is meruelous great for euer vnchangeable Eccle. 9. v. 18. :: Al powre is from God therfore to be respected though the magistrates sometimes abuse their auctoritie Rom. 1● v. 1. :: As euerie ones charge is more or lesse so his account is easier or har der and the punishment if he offend smaller or greater S. Gre. ho. 9. in Euang. :: VVisdom is attained by this gradation and so from first to last a resolute desire ioyneth faithful soules to God v. 21. The second part VVisdom procedeth from God and is procured by prayer :: The perfectest children are borne in the beginning of the tenth moneth :: Children in the mothers wombe are as in slepe :: Salomon whose sayinges are here recited praied for wisdom obtained it 3. Reg. 3. 3. Reg ● v. 9. :: God first gaue him grace to desire wisdom before al other thinges as he explicateth plainly cap. 8. v. 21. :: Salomon was a most excellent Philosopher :: Proper Epithetons of the spirite of wisdom :: See the Annotation Prouerb 1. v. 2. Heb. 1. v. 3. :: God the increated wisdom is infinite and wisdom created is also most excellent amongst Gods giftes 3. Reg. 3. Prou. ● :: This is also the speach of Salomon recited by the writer of this booke :: Of Salomons wisdom riches glorie renowmed fame not only the bookes of Kinges Paralipomenon but also our Sauiour doth witnes Mat. 6. 12. :: It is not certaine that Salomon hath immortal glorie but rather by immortalitie is here vnderstood that his glorious fame remaineth to the end of this world :: Neuertheles wisdom of her part geueth life and glorie euerlasting to al that perseuere to the end of this life :: It is
:: Reasonable soules if they folow reason and al sensible soules doe in their maner praise the prouidence of God in vsing al creatures to that end for which they were treated :: Man at first recemed original iustice by losing wherof we al fel into original sinne :: God gaue a precept to man to be obserued for exercise of his obedience so to be rewarded and vnder paine of punishment if he transgreded ●en 2. Rom. 13. :: Perseuerance in vertue to the end is necessarie which none can merite :: But must stil pray for it :: Al creatures according to their substantial forme in general were created together though they were afterwards formed in particular kindes as they are distinctly recited in Genesis with the order ornaments of the world S. Aug. li. 4. c. 33 34. de Gen. ad litter VVhere he expresly affirmeth that this Scripture was written by inspiration of the same spirite of truth wherby Genesis was written Psal 89. v. 10. 1. Cor. 11. :: They pray alwayes that pray at certaine conuenient times And stil haue intention so to frequent the same exercise al their life S. Aug. Epist 121. c. 9. ad Probam Luc. 18. 1. 1. Thes. 5. :: The best remedie against great sinnes is to auoide smal ones and not to contemne the least but diligently to amend al. 3. Reg. 11. Ios 22. :: That this document perteyneth to common conuersation with worldie men appeareth by the next verse But to reuele secrete sinnes to a spiritual father in sacramental confession is necessarie vvholesome and secure It is al●o very commendable and most lawful in holie religious Societies vvhere they willingly for their owne spiritual good submitte themselues to such a godlie rule L●uit 1● Mat. 15. Iac. 3. :: False pretence of pietie is hypocrisie :: And in a Superior to oppen his ovvne secrete fault to his subiects is pusillanimitie :: Discretion auoideth both by concealing and reueling faultes as reason directeth and iustice requireth Eccle. ● :: He that taketh reptchension in good part when he is faulty meriteth pardon and when he is not faultie he satifieth for his other sinnes and meriteth reward :: His intention is ful of guile that flattereth by shew of loue and of praise but he wil detract so much the more in the end reproch thee when he may gette probable aduantage against thee Prou. 12. Exo 23. Deut 16. :: VVisdom is to be shewed in vvordes and deedes vvhen it may profite others :: To conceale faultes so they be amended is most conuenient :: As a serpent deceiptfully approcheth stingeth the bodie so al sinnes inuegle and hurt the soule :: It is a signe that he is guiltie who contemneth freindly admonition :: He that truly feareth God wil diligently examine his ovvne actes defectes when he is vvarned :: As walles of stone built in the frost so riches or good name vniustly gotten wil not cōtinue long :: Senseles or bad talke is tedious to al good men :: VVordes that may edifie are gratful to al godlie eares :: VVicked men condemning the diuel or anie other wicked do in dede condeme them selues And to them agreeth that sentence of our Sauiour By thyne owne mouth I iudge thee naughtie seruant Luc. 19. :: Contempt ignominie is the worldlie punishment of the slouthful besides his eternal damnation at the day of iudgement Mat. 25 ● 30 :: In this and other places is not vnderstood a foole that by defect of natural vvitte is ignorant or an ideote but he that is voide of grace ful of malice and wickednes For the wicked life of such a one is worse then his death v. 12. Gen 50. Prou. ●3 Prou ●● :: A true freind wil not be lost for temporal damage no● danger :: But the vices of derision reproch and the like violate al freindshipe with wise and good m●n Ps 140. :: Man being weake and the enimie suttle strong he is not able to resist tentations without Gods special grace for which the vvisman therfore prayeth instructing al by his example to do the same :: Precepts how to gouerne the mouth and tongue :: Against rash vntrue vnlawful swearing Iere. 4. Mat. 5. :: In oathes God is called to witnes as he that can not lie but b●a●phemie attributeth th●t to God which perteyneth not him or attributeth to some creature that which only belongeth to God and so is a contrarie sinne to vnlawful swearing :: Both are mortal sinnes :: Admonition against sinnes of the tongue :: Reproch to parents and other neighboures :: Against couetousnes :: Fornication :: Adultrie Isa 29. :: Seing earnal adultrie shal be seuerely punished much more spiritual as schisme heresie and apostasie from Catholique Religion Leui 20. Deut. 22. :: Diuine wisdom the Second Person of the B. Trinitie begotten not created praiseth it self According to the phrase of speach Iere. 51. v. 14. The Lord of hostes hath svvorne by his soule that is by himself :: God offereth his grace but forceth not anie to accept it :: Creation is not here taken in the strict signification but for diuine production in that God the Father by vnderstanding begetteth God the Sonne As likewise the Father and the Sonne by loue produce the Holie Ghost :: in the Church only is effectual grace Psa ●●● :: The more grace any hath the more he desireth and receiueth :: In Dauids progenie God preserued the kinglie state til the captiuitie and the estimation of the royal bloud vnto Christ But in al this Dauid was a figure of Christ VVho sitteth in the Throne of honour absolutly for eu●● Ios● 3. :: Three very commendable thinges :: Other three detestable :: Nine happie thinges in this life Iac. 3. :: Al happines in this life is grounded in the feare of God :: The description of heresie vnder the figure of a wicked woman whose malice is secretly couered vnder pretence of truth and ●●●●●● Prou ●● :: Layheadshi●e in spiritual causes is so vnreasonab le and absurde that ●●w heretikes 〈…〉 ure it :: An vnqu●●● life dep●iu●th a man of much comforth and therfore continual peace ●● as a duble life :: As whe● o●●n mo●e the yoke o● their necke● doth moue withal so a wicked woman to witt● heresie can not rest nor let others rest quiet :: The Catholique faith is the ground al al vertues :: Those that kepe innes or ailehouses are alwayes talking as willing to please al but in much talke wanteth not sinne Prou. 10. v. 19. 1. Tim 6. :: The soule is kept in good state by fearing God :: After that sinne is purged there remaine reliques in the soule as dust in a siene vvhen the chaffe is cast out til it be more purged or washed Psal 50. v. 4. Prou. 27. VVhether the sunne shineth forth or not it is alvvayes light so is a vvisman alvvayes vertuous vvhetherit appea●● outvvardly or no. A foole or vvicked man hath
esteme that which their elders teach :: though the same doth not seme reasonable in their owne opinion Mat 5. v. 28. :: It is not lawful to reueale that which we iustly promise to conceale Leuit 19. Deu. 1 16 Prou. 24. Iacob ● :: There is lesse danger in conuersing familiarly with a wicked man then with a freindlie woman In which conuersarion much prudence is required as is before admonished chap. ● :: The excellencie of God which can not be sene with mortal eye Exo. 33. is proposed to our meditation in his workes The like in Iob. 38. 39. 40. 41. and in manie places of holie Scripture :: Of al sensles creatures yea of sensible also that haue not reason the sunne is most excellent Of which al corporal ●reatures receiue their light by whose influence al generation of creatures procedeth wherof is this Maxime in Philosophie that the sunne and man begette a man And Aristotel calleth the sunne the father of men and of goddes li. 2. de anima But the faithful know it is a creature inferior to man in respect of his reasonable soule and in them both in al other creatures acknowlege superexcellent infinite Maiestic in God VVhich also appeareth euen in the least creatures whose natural substances qualities with other accidents the more anie man considereth the more he shal admire God the onlie Creator of al. The 2. part Examples and praises of holie men with praise thankes to God :: Vertuous men are rightly called Lordes and Princes so the children of Heth sayde to Abraham My Lord the●● art a prince of God among v● Gen. 23. :: Enoch shal preach penance in the time of Antichrist Gen 5. Gen. 6. :: Noe was perfect Gen. 9. Gen. 12. :: Abraham father of al the beleuers in Christ Gen. 22. Heb. 11. :: Isaac and Iacob were blessed in Abraham Exo. 3. Num. 12. :: Moyses saw Gods workes more clerely then other Prophets yet saw not his substances as is noted Exo. 33. :: Aarons priesthood continued so long as Moyses law that was til Christ And now the priesthood according to the order of Melchisedech continueth to the end of the world Exo. 28. Leuit. 8. Num. 16. :: The tribe of Leui had not a portion of inheritance separate from the iest but had tithes first fruites and oblations for their temporal prouision Num. 25. :: King Dauid gaue special assistance to the Priestes and greatly aduanced Gods seruice 1. Paral 23. ●●● :: Iosue succeded in the temporal gouernment for the spiritual perteyned to the successors of Aaron Num. 27. Iosu 10. Only Iosue and Caleb remained of those which came out of Aegypt al the rest dyed in the desert and their children entered into Chanaan Num. 14● Iosu 14. :: Though some of the Iudges were sometimes great sinners yet they were finally iust for their good actes much renowmed 1. Reg 17 :: Samuel annointed Saul and Dauid kinges 1. Reg 7. ● Reg. 12 :: If Samuel himself had not appeared but some other spitite it could not haue bene noted in his praises See 1. Reg. 28. 1 Reg. 28 2. Reg 11 1. Reg. 17 Ibidem 1. Reg 18 :: Amongst al the renoumed actes of Dauid his pure and sincere hart most pleased God 1. Par. 25 2. Reg 12 :: For Dauids sake God gaue wisdom to Salomon and peace in his kingdom 3. Reg. 3. :: By Apostrophe the auctor turneth his speach to Salomon 3. Reg 4. 3. Reg. 10 :: Salomons sinnes were punished but Gods mercie continued in conseruing his posteritie Psal 88. 3 Reg. 11 Psal 88. v. 34. 3 Reg. 1● 3. Reg 17 :: Elias procured fire from heauen to burne his sacrifice 3. Reg. 18 and ●w●e more to burne an hundred men which persecuted him 4. Reg. 1. 3. Reg. 19 4. Reg. 2. :: The miracle wrought by his dead bodie shewed that he was an holie prophet 4. Reg. 13. See the miracles of Elias and Eliseus To. 1. pag. 940. 4 Reg 13 4. Reg. 20 4. Reg. 18 :: Prayer preuailed when forces were not sufficient Sec 4. Reg. 19. 4 Reg. 19 Isa 37. 4. Reg 2● Isa 38. Not only this booke but also other holie scriptures witnes that Elias shal returne and preach before the end of the world S. Chrysostom Aretas and other Doctors testifie the same See Annot. Gen. 5. Mal. 4. Mat. 17. In 2. Thes 2. Apoc. 11. 4. Reg. 22 2. Par 34 4. Reg. 23 :: Manie other kinges of Iuda refrained alwayes from committing idolatrie but these three destroyed al places of idolatrie in their kingdom which the others did not 4. Reg. 25 Iere. 1. Ezech. 1. Agge 2. 1. Esd 3. 3. Esd 5. Zach. 3. 2. Esd 2. Gen. 5. Gen. 39. 40. c. :: See the Annotation ch 38 v. 10. :: Ioseph prophecying that the people should depart from Aegypt willed them to carie his bones with them Gen. 50. So by carying his bones they professed that he had truly prophecied :: This Simon called Iustus and Priscus was high priest when this booke was written in the time of Ptolomie the first king of Aegypt a very holie man and dead before it was translated into Greke about the time of Ptolomie the third called Euergetes nere 300. yeares before Christ Iosephus li. 12. Antiqui * Libation● Three nations the Idumeans Philistijmes and Samaritanes did most persecute the Isralites the Samaritanes were not one pure nation but mixt of Assirians and Iewes and so here called no nation Num. 6. v. 23. :: They are also called a foolish people because they knowing true religion mixed idolatrie therwith according to diuers sectes as appeareth 4. Reg. 17. v. 29. :: VVhere we are not able to render recompence to benefactors especially to God we are the more bond to acknowlege his manie great benefites altogether vndeserued by vs. :: VVhen senses are most ripe and the soule most free from great sinnes is the aptest time to serue God to get al vertues and true knowlege Eccle. 12. :: In stead of riches labour to get wisdom for it is much better then al gold siluer :: Merite is in this life and reward in the next Gods special benefite of sending Prophetes to the people The function of Prophetes to exhorte to repentance with hope of Gods mercie by Christ Foure greatter Prophetes and welue lesse● were auctors of the prophetical bookes folowing Baruchs booke being inserted in Ieremies Prophecies are called visions for their certaintie Light of prophecie is next to the light of glorie and more clere then the light of faith Prophecies are hard to be vnderstood for diuers causes 2. Pet. 1 Suddaine transition from one thing to an other S. Ierom. i●c 2. 3 Nahum That which is spoken of certaine persons is ment of others S. Chrys ●o 8. i●●●ath 2. S. Aug. d●catech ●●●ibus c. 3. Prophecies are often vttered in figuratiue speaches Some consist in thinges done others are mixt with histories and temporal thinges with
high priest but an vsurper nor that he liued after Iudas vvho vvas slaine a yeare before this time v. 3 18. VVherby and by manie other such errors vve see that Iosephus is rather to be corrected by this booke then to disalovv this booke because it differeth from Iosephus or other like auctors :: Euil counsel hovv soeuer it happeneth to them that folovv it is euer hurtful to them that geue it :: He falsely auovvched that he vvas the sonne of Antiochus Epiphanes for he was in dede of very meane birth Iustinus li. 35. :: It vvas not in the kinges povvre to make Ionatha● high priest but he being so before the ●ing from this time did so account him :: This king Demetrius to gette his desired purpose sticked not to vvrite a plainelye for he had heard that the Ievves had refused him and made league vvith his enimie Alexander v 22 23. :: Notwithstanding the great offers of euil disposed men Ionathas and al prudent men considering their former vvicked dedes do not geue credite to glorious vvordes ch 7. v. 11. :: This Ptolomeus Philometor decided a controuersie that the Iewes had the true temple in Ierusalem and that the Samaritanes temple in Garizim vvas schismatical vvhich he iudged because albeit both pleaded antiquitie yet only the Iewes proued by continual succession of high priestes from Aaron and shewed that the other departed from them first in the time of Ieroboam and aftervvardes built that temple in Garizim vvhen some were returned from captiuitie vvherof Iosephus vvriteth li. 13. c. 6. Antiquit Our Sauiour also iudged that the cause of the Ievves vvas better Ioan. 4. v. 22. :: VVhen caluminators see that the innocent is iustified and honored they faile in their hart to procede against him :: Ionathas set his armie in that maner as on euerie side his men stood in front readie to resist the force of the enemie coming towards them al their backes so turned vvithin their ovvne squadron that the enemie could no vvay enter without present resistance and so those of the embushment could only cast dartes but could not breake the aray of Ionathas campe not make anie entrance with out their owne present death :: By this hyperbolical description very frequent in holie scripture is signified that Ptolomeus armie vvas exceding great yea greater then can be easily conceiued therfore is described by excessiue termes :: VVhen pastors endeuour to extirpate si●ne out of the mindes of the people those that hate godlines suggest to temporal princes that such spiritual preaching is dangerous to their state :: But zelous men cease not from so necessarie a worke because Gods vvord is not ●yed 2. Tim. 2. :: And vvise kinges vvil most esteme of such men knovving that their fidelitie tovvards God is an assurance that they vvil also be faithful to princes :: The king had before adioyned principal places to Iudea vvhich were called ●opa●chi● that is places of principalitie or principal gouernments novv he granted also immunities to them as to al Iudea and Samaria :: Three thousand faithful enco●●●●ing vvith an hundred twentie thousand infidels killed of them in one day an hundred thousand :: As to vveare purple and to bare a crowne so to drinke in gold cuppes and to vveare a gold cheyne vvas proper to kinges and to vvhom they gaue license :: It is an ancient ceremonie in al uations often mentioned in these bookes to confirme peace by geuing ech other the right hand :: Only tvvo captaines remained and vvith them some souldiars as Iosephus vvriteth about 50 for it is not to be thought that Ionathas vvould haue returned to battel v 72. being but three men in al to beginne a new assault :: Sparta the chief citie of Lacedemonia called also Lacedemon and Theramne :: Spartians otherwise called Lacedemonians by Iosephus and other vvriters descended from Abraham v. 21. and vvere in great league vvith the Ievves :: The Spartianes had written this epistle before Onias vvritte to thē though it be here placed after :: There remained vvith the Spartiates old vvrites of genealogies as Iosephus supposeth li. 12. c. 5. li. 13. c. 9. :: Morally in Tryphon is noted the practise of the diuel vvho intending to ouerthrovv a king or a kingdom first seeketh to deceiue the pastores and to destroy them especially by error or other sinne For as S. Gregorie teacheth ho. 38. if the pastors life be corrupted his doctrine vvil be contemned :: Simon the fourth general captaine of the Machabees high-priest excelled his bretheren in vvisdome by the restimonie of his father c. 2. v 65. :: He vndertooke by al his endeuour to defend and deliuer his nation from danger and to restore their former libertie :: Simon being vvise choise the lesse euil and lesse danger For if he had not sent that vvas demanded it was very like and almost cettaine that Ionathas should be slaine and it vvould haue bene imputed to Simon that he had not taken iust care of his brothers life vvherby the people vvould haue bene alienated from him and perhaps haue reuolted from him and also from religion S. Tho. in hunc locum :: This vvas not vaine glory but true glorie to kepe memorie of so great vertue therby to stur vp others to imitation He that loueth honour saith S. Augustin li. cont Secundin c. 17. imitateth God But humble soules desire houour in God proud men vvil be honoured more then God or vvithout God O hovv manie Epitaphes are of vvicked men nothing els but perpetual monuments of their ambition vanitie iniustice crucltie other vices but those that are of true vertues are to Gods more honour the auctor of al vertues * a precious chaine :: By hovv much more that mercie is admixed vvith iustice so that iustice be not destroyed and that religion be aduanced the better it pleaseth God and edifieth the vvel disposed :: This Iohn Hyreanus defended the countrie against inuaders ch 16. :: Simon had novv gouerned the people two yeares beginning with great difficulties but hence forth enioyed peace til Antiochus Sedetes brake the league inuaded Iurie ch 15. v. 27. 39. :: He reduced manie Ievves from captiuitie :: Sparta being the chief citie of Lacedemonia had manie cities subiect depending as vpon their Metropolitane :: Vvhen peace was estabished in al Iurie and friendshippe confirmed vvith the Romanes Lacedemonians the vvhole nation of the Ievves in gratitude tovvards Simon vvho onlie novv remained of Mathathias sonnes confirmed him in the office of high-priest perpetually or for euer v. 41 that is during his life to his progenie v. 49 :: The hieghpriesthood continevved in this familie of the Machabees vntil Herod tooke it from them selling it for money and then shortly came Christ the faith ful Prophet :: This Antiochus Sedetes sonne of Demetrius Soter vvas brother to Demetrius the second who was now captiue in Per ●●a ch 14.
shal be raised againe from death and together with the soule be eternally glorified 12 In the meane time of this pilagrimage of mankind it is our way-faring special prouision dailie and supersubstantial bread til we shal possesse the promised land the kingdome of heauen in eternal blisse CHAP. XVII The people murmuring againe in Raphidim for want of drinck our Lord giueth them water out of arock 8. Amalech fighteth with them And Moyseslifting vp his hand in prayer Israel ouercometh otherwise Amalech pr●●a●leth THERFORE al the multitude of the children of Israel setting forward from the desert Sin by their mansions according to the word of our Lord camped in Raphidim where there was no water for the people to drinke † Who chiding against Moyses said Geue vs water that we may drinke To whom Moyses answered Why chide you against me Wherfore doe you tempt our Lord † The people therfore was thirstie there for lacke of water and murmured against Moyses saying Why didst thou make vs goe forth out of Aegypt to kil vs and our children and our beastes with thirst † And Moyses cried to our Lord saying What shal I doe to this people Yet a litle while and they wil stone me † And our Lord said to Moyses Goe before the people and take with thee of the ancients of Israel and the rodde wherwith thou didst strike the riuer take in thy hand and goe † Behold I wil stand there before thee vpon the rocke Horeb and thou shalt strike the rocke and water shal goe out therof that the people may drinke Moyses did so before the ancientes of Israel † and he called the name of that place Temptation because of the chiding of the children of Israel and for that they tempted our Lord saying Is the Lord amongst vs or not † And Amalec came and fought against Israel in Raphidim † And Moyses sayd to Iosue Choose out men and goe forth and fight against Amalec to morow I wil stand in the toppe of the hil hauing the rodde of God in my hand † Iosue did as Moyses had spoken and he fought against Amalec but Moyses and Aaron and Hur went vp vpon the toppe of the hil † And when Moyses lifted vp his hands Israel ouercame but if he did lette them downe a little Amalec ouercame † And the handes of Moyses were heauie therfore they tooke a stone and putte vnder him wherupon he sate and Aaron and Hur staied vp his handes on both sides And it came to passe that his handes were not wearie vntil sunne sette † And Iosue put Amalec to flight his people by the edge of the sword † And our Lord said to Moyses Write this for a monument in a booke deliuer it to the eares of Iosue for I wil destroy the memorie of Amalec from vnder heauen † And Moyses builded an Altar and called the name therof Our Lord my exaltation saying † Because the hand of our Lords throne and the warre of our Lord shal be against Amalec from generation vnto generation CHAP. XVIII Iethro Moyses father in law bringeth to him his wise and childrens 8. And hearing the great workes of God 12. offereth Sacrifice 13 and Wisely aduised Moyses to appoint subordinate officers to iudge lesse causes reseruing the greater to him selfe AND when Iethro the priest of Madian the allied of Moyses had heard al the thinges that God had done to Moyses and to Israel his people and that our Lord had brought forth Israel out of Aegypt † he tooke Sephora the wife of Moyses whom he had sent backe † and her two sonnes of which one was called Gersam his father saying I haue bene a stranger in a forren countrie † And the other Eliezer for the God of my father quoth he is my helper and hath deliuered me from Pharaoes sword † Iethro therfore the allied of Moyses came and his sonnes and his wife to Moyses into the desert where he was camped beside the mountayne of God † And he sent word to Moyses saying I Iethro thy allied come to thee and thy wife and thy two children with her † Who going forth to mere his allied adored and kissed him and they saluted on an other with wordes of peace And when he was entred into the tent † Moyses told his allied al thinges that our Lord had done to Pharao and the Aegyptians for Israel and the whole trauaile which had chanced to them in the iourney and that our Lord had deliuered them † And Iethro reioyced for al the good thinges that our Lord had done to Israel because he had deliuered them out of the handes of the Aegyptians † and he said Blessed is the Lord that hath deliuered you out of the hand of the Aegyptians and out of the hand of Pharao that hath deliuered his people out of the hand of Aegypt † Now doe I know that the Lord is great aboue al goddes for because they dealt proudely against them † Iethro therfore the allied of Moyses offered holocaustes and hostes to God and Aaron and al the ancientes of Israel came to eate bread with him before God † And the next day Moyses sate to iudge the people who stoode by Moyses from morning vntil night † Which thing when his allied had seene to witte al thinges that he did in the people he said What is this that thou doest in the people Why sittest thou alone and al the people attendeth from morning vntil night † To whom Moyses answered The people cometh to me seeking the sentence of God † And when anie controuersie chanceth among them they come vnto me to iudge betwene them and to shew the preceptes of God and his lawes † But he said Thou doest not wel † thou art t●red with foolish labour both thou and this people that is with thee the busines is aboue thy strength thou alone canst not susteyne it † But heare my wordes and counseils and God shal be with thee Be thou to the people in those thinges that pertaine to God to report their wordes vnto him † and to shew to the people the ceremonies and rite of wor●hipping and the way wherin they ought to walke and the worke that they ought to doe † And prouide out of al the people men that are wise and doe feare God in whom there is truth and that doe hate aua●ice and appointe of them tribunes and centurions and quinquagenarians and deanes † which may iudge the people at al tymes and what great matter soeuer ●●a● fal out let them referre it to thee and let them iudge the lesse matters only and so it may be lighter for thee the burden being imparted vnto others † If thou doest this thou shalt fulfil the commandment of God and shal be able to beare his preceptes and al this people shal returne to their places with p●eace † Which thinges when Movses heard he did al thinges that he had suggested vnto him † And choosing substantial men