Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n england_n king_n lord_n 4,602 5 4.1139 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A34527 Gods providence, a sermon preached before the honourable House of Commons at their late solemne fast, Decemb. 28, 1642, in S. Margarets Church at Westminster by Ed. Corbett ... Corbet, Edward, d. 1658. 1642 (1642) Wing C6241; ESTC R20147 26,491 35

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

which he doth not want and sets down a course of meanes which he will not alter and then it concerns us to answer Providence with industrie to put forth our strength and to use such meanes as God vouchsafes If we have the honour to be Gods Instruments we must do the office of Instruments and be active we must cast our care on God for the issue but we must sweat our selves in the prosecution Hell it self shall never prevaile against the flock of Christ yet they must strive to enter in at the narrow Gate they must work out their own salvation with fear and trembling Election to the end includes the meanes whosoever will be happy in another world must first be good in this Presumption is as dangerous as distrust and he may justly lose the fruite of a happy end who neglects the use of lawfull meanes 3. Confide in God in the want of meanes It was a pious speech of Luther in an Epistle to Melancton God is able to preserve his own cause from falling or to raise it when it is fallen God is never more neere his people than when deliverance seemes furthest off they can be in no condition where he is at a stand and cannot help them This war which we think will devoure us all may be an Instrument of preservation as the whale which swallowed up Jonas was a meanes to bring him to the shoare The depths of Mercy are beyond the depths of misery and God hath his own ways of helping his Children when all things else deny them help The violence of the wind turn'd back the Darts of Bugenius his Armie into their own faces for the victory of Theodosius A number of little fishes will come to feed the Rochellers in a hard siege Moab and Ammon the Enemies of Judah shall destroy one another So mightie is God in power and excellent in working Say that our sins are many and our transgressions great yet Gods mercys are more and his glory will be greater in pardoning No faults can damme up the endles goodnesse of the Almightie we cannot offend so much as he can pardon Say that our enemies are many and mightie and cruell yet Ahab with a few yong Men vanquished Benhadad's great Army and 32 Kings with him The Divell is stronger by Man's wickednesse than by his own power Say what we can and say the worst we can that England is sore wounded and poore Ireland is giving up the Ghost Yet remember that Repentance preserv'd Ninive which in 40 days was to be destroy'd that Fayth delivered Daniel out of the Lions mouth That he who will raise our bodies can mend our worst condition Was Abraham deceived who trusted in God for a Sonne against the course of Nature Or David who being compassed about with the waters of affliction hoped for better times Or the 3 Children who beleev'd that God would deliver them out of the fiery furnace O Lord my God in thee have I put my trust save me from all that persecute me and deliver me And deliver us all he will if we all pray unto him for faithfull prayer is Omnipotent And pray unto him we shall if we all trust in him for trust is the roote and life of succesfull prayer Let us all therefore Pray and Trust and Trust and Pray that our heavenly father would work a good understanding betwixt King Charles and his great Counsell that he would look with the Eye of compassion upon dying Ireland that his mercyfull hand would make up the breaches of distracted England that his goodnesse would take away the cause of all calamities our many and great and crying sins And after our prayers let us trust againe that seeing it is all one with the Lord to save with many or with few to help with meanes or without meanes He will in due time produce a sweet correspondence betwixt the King and people he will deliver bleeding Ireland out of the hands of bloudy Rebells He will restore distressed England to a happy condition he will pardon our iniquities and remember them no more Let us pray therefore and trust continually and let us never cease to trust and pray FINIS Die Mercurii 28. Decemb. 16●2 IT is this day ordered by the House of Commons that Master Corbett shall have thanks returned him from this House for the great paines he took in the Sermon he preached this day at S. Margaretts in the Citie of Westminster at the intreaty of this House And that he be desired to print his Sermon And it is ordered that no man shall presume to print it but hee whom the said Master Corbett shall authorize under his hand-writing And it is further ordered that Sir Iohn Corbett a Member of this House shall returne the thanks to Master Corbett H. ELSYNGE Cler. Parl. D. Comm. I appoynt Rob. Bostock Stationer to print this Sermon ED. CORBET ERRATA PAg. 9. l. 20. r. destroyes l. 11. r. untruths l. 35. r. thus p. 10. that Gallen p. 11. l. 1. r. every grasse l. 36. r. ruled p. 13 l 31. r When that scarlet p. 13. in the margentr Visa est in●igna quam Tullianae dignitati compararem p. 16. r. Gold Math. 16.17 Ioh 3.4 1. Cor. 2.10 Joh 5.39 Math. 11.25 1. Cor. 1.19 D. Twisse D. Amesius Cameron P●du Moulin c. Psa. 115.10 Eph. 1.11 Tract. de ●vers Arist. dogmatum L. 4 de Gene c. 12. in En●● c. 96. Quisquis diffitetur insanit Rom. 9.21 Jer. 18.4 Mi●o ineffabili modo non fieri propter ejus voluntatem quod contra ejus voluntatem fit In. 2. q. 2. Greg. l 2. ●or c. 12 H●e●o cont. p●lag●a O●●g l. 2. {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Psal 33 6 Contaren de ●erf l. 2 c. 5 Aquinas Con Gen l. 3. c. 24. Thom. p. 1. q 104 Sua in Met. Vasquez in 1. p. d. 72. Scotus in 2. d. 1. q 5. Hurtad● c. Hieron. in Ep. ad Ctesiphon●ē in l. 1. Contra Pe●agianos act 17.25 〈◊〉 2.13 Act. 17.28 Math. 14.29 Dan. 3.27 Exod. 1● 21 Numb. 20.8 Ios. 10.13 In 1. ad Heb. Hom 2. ad Heb. Vs 2. Sam. 15.26 Damnati gratias agant accusatio votū poena felic●tas· Iob. ● 10 Heb. 12.6 Job 3. Ier. 12 1.2 Consuevisse Deos quos pro scelere ulcisci velint his secundiores res diuturniorem sanitatem conceder Caes. l. 1. de bell Gall Iob 21.7 Math. 26.39.42 Isa. 45.9 Psal. 139.12 Sen. Ep. 41. Hil. l 8. de pri. Chrysost. in locum Ps. 7 2. Ier. 11.20 Psal. 94.11 Gen. 6.5 Isa. 64.6 Pro. 16.4 Psa. 34.10 1. Tim. 2.4 Heb. 12 2 Job 16.19 Ap 2. pro Chr. p. 57. De mend ad Cons. l. 1. c 6. Iob 13.7.9 Prov. 16.4 Exod. 32.32 Non nisi cū m●ntitur perseverat Tertul. Papists defen. aequivocation Psal. 14 1. Ideo dixit in corde suo quia hoc nemo audet d●cere etjamsi audet cogitare August V. 18. C. 1. V. 21. In vita Anse●mi Modò veritatis antiti●●ta ve●● Religionis corona jam sentina confluges omnium haeresium Nuntius Popheticus p. 34. Nehem. 9.6 Iob. 38.11 Theodor in his Sermons of Prov. Chrysost. in his Sermons of Prov. L●ssius in his base of Provid. c De usu partium c. 7. Rom. 11.53 Math. 6 2● 29. 1● 29.30 vid. aug. l. 5 de Civ. Deie 11. l. 10. c. 14. Pro. 16.33 Lam. 3.37 Deu. 19.4 2. Sam. 17. 1. Sam. 2.25 Prov. ● 1 Prov. 19. ●● C. 12. C. 15. Vid. de Alipio l. 6. confess August c. 7. de Iul. Caes. apud Suet. in Cas. c. ●1 Exod. 34.24 Jer. 10.2 Rom 8.28 Joel 2.31 Mat. 24.29 C. 18. M. Meade in his clavis Apo. Alst. in his diatr. Caro●us Gallus in his clavis Proph. See the Inter on the Reve. Napier Fon. Br●gh Con●a Man Math. 24.14 Vide Heurrius de leg. Eva●g ad Jndo See Wee●● Treatise of the Iew p. 355. Mich. 4.3 Esa. 54.11 L. de mundo c. 6. Vide Catech Ra. ●cov Sleyd Com Rulling l. 1. Enchyr. c. 17. 1. Cor. 11.29 Act. 14.3 Ph. 2.16 Rom. 1.16 Burtor in Syn. Jud. Weens treatise of the Iew p. 349. Dignitati comparar● Aug. Con. l 3. c. 5. Act 26.24 Act 17.32 2. Cor. 5.18 Rom. 10.14 2 Cor. 10.4 Heb. 4.12 1. Chro. 28.9 Ier. 17.10 1. Sam. 16.7 Aug. l. 3. Conf. c. 6. Hom. 3. in 1. ad Cor. {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Nostri ut de viris taceam pueri mulierculae tortores suos taciti vincunt expromere illis gemitum nec igni● potest Lae. l. 5 c. 13. Socrates l 1. ca. 5. hist. Ecc. 1. Cor. 1.26 Rom. 8. v. 6.7 Rom. 8. v. 6 7. Ier. 32. v. 39.40 Prov. 1.7 Psa. 119. v. 98 99 100 Luke 16. v. 13.14 Psa. 119. v. 98.99.100 2. Sam. 16.23 Iob● ● Mat. 16.26 Splendiae peccata Iob. 3.4 1. Cor 2.14 Psa 19.6 119.130 Titus 3.3 1. Cor. 4. Psal. 44.14 Rom. 11.22 Lev. 26.43 Luke 23.43 Act. 9. Calv. in Ep. dead. in 1. ad Cor. Epist. 1 ad Heliod Ignatius Antiochen Apol. 2. pro Christ p. 54 55. See Tertul. adver. Gen●es c. 2. Adamus in vita 1. King 18.17 1. Cor. 4.13 See Tertul. Apol. contra Gent. c. 39. Salv. l. 3. 2. Kings 5 1. Cor. 11. Act. 2. Isa. 55.11 Heb. 4.12 A Gell. l. 1. c. 13 Florus l. 1. c. 14. Deu. 38. Math. 4. ●2 Exod. 8. v. 26. Ioel 2. See Junius in locum Gen. 50.20 2. King 2.29 1. King 18.34.35 Act. 5 15. Ezech. 9.4 Hook Ecc. pol l. 5 sec. 42. See the storie The danger is past as soone as the letter is burnt Isa. 38. 2 King 20.7 Ficus suapte natura possunt pus evocare educere Cels l. 5. cap. 12. Eccl. 10.10 Iosep. Anti. l. 15. c. 14. Rev. 11.16 So some good Divines interpret 2 King 5. Iohn 9. Iudg 7. 2 King 3.22 er 27.5 Isa. 47.10 Josu 1. 2. Chro. 20.17 Exod. 14. Luk. 13. ●4 Phil. 2.12 Jon. 1 1● Syms Hist. c. 14. p. 67 c. 16. p. 183 2. Chr. 20.22 Isa. 28. ●9 1. King 20 Jon. 3. Dan. 6. Dan. 3.17 Psa. 7.1 Alsted●