Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n evil_a good_a great_a 3,686 5 2.7944 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
A00831 A very fruitfull exposition of the Commaundements by way of questions and answeres for greater plainnesse together with an application of euery one to the soule and conscience of man, profitable for all, and especially for them that (beeing not otherwise furnished) are yet desirous both to see themselues, and to deliuer to others some larger speech of euery point that is but briefly named in the shorter catechismes. By Geruase Babington. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1583 (1583) STC 1095; ESTC S108401 209,221 568

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of true Christians is to bee praied vnto since other doctrine is deliuered by the Church of Rome Ans First it is prooued by the words of the Apostle Paul Rom. 10. Howe shal they call vpon him in whome they haue not beleeued as though he should say Beléefe must néedes euer goe before prayer whereupon then thus wee may reason Wee must onely pray to him in whom we must beléeue but we may ought beléeue onely in God the Father God the Sonne and GOD the holie Ghost therefore onely to these thrée persons one onely God must our prayers be directed The first proposition we sée prooued by Paul the second by the articles of our faith all the scripture the conclusion followeth vpon thē both Secondly it is prooued by Christ himselfe who teaching his Apostles to pray and in them all other men biddeth them neither call vpon Angel nor saint no not vpon his mother Marie But when you pray saith he say Our Father which art in heauē That is what forme of words so euer you vse euer direct your praiers vnto God and to him only And Father in this place signifieth any of the thrée persons and is not to be restrained onely to the first person Thirdly wee haue no commaundement to pray to any but to God onely we haue no promise to be heard if wee doe no example in Scriptures of any godly man or woman that hath done it euer at any time or vpon any occasion we haue no punishment threatened if we doe it not but to pray to God we are commaunded Psal 50. we are promised to be helped we haue examples and we are threatened if we doe it not Therefore whether of these two is to be done who séeth not Que. What is the fourth duetie of this commaundement Ans Fourthly we are bound by this Lawe to acknowledge God alone to be the guider and gouernour of all things of whom we receiue all the benefites that we haue and therefore that wee trust and stay vpon him alone Que. Here are three seuerall thinges affirmed very worthie to be seuerallie considered and therfore first I pray you howe is it prooued that God guideth gouerneth all things Ans Besides a number of other places which might be alledged to prooue it withal a very good testimonie is that in the Psalme Whatsoeuer pleased the Lorde that did he in heauen and earth Psal 135.6 in the sea and in all the depth Where marke well the space of the Lordes dominion in heauen he rulech in earth he ruleth in the sea he ruleth and in all these whatsoeuer it pleaseth him that doeth he at all times and seasons The like spéeche againe hath the same Prophet in an other place Psal 115.3 But our God is in heauen saith he and doeth whatsoeuer he wil The eyes of all things waite vpon him Psal 145.15 and he giueth them meate in due season So then nothing without him is done at any time but his power almightie guideth and gouerneth all things Que. Howe is it prooued that all good commeth to vs from this directing prouidence of the Lorde Ans The holy ghost in plaine words affirmeth it by his Apostle Iames Iames. 1.17 Euery good giuing euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the father of light Que. This doctrine is plaine And yet notwithstāding euer it hath had euen in these dais hath som enemies Such obiectiōs as I haue hard at times I wil propound vnto you I pray you aunswere thē The first is this if God rule all things by his prouidence direction then must he needs be author of sin also in that he hindreth it not but suffreth it to be done Ans I answere to this your first doubt thus that the argument is not good neither foloweth that béecause all thinges are doone by his prouidence therefore hée should be author of euill For one may bée author of an action yet not of the euil in the action as in this similitude wée sée If a man cut with an euill knife hee is the cause of cutting but not of euill cutting or hackling of the knife but the badnesse of the knife is the cause of that Againe if a man strike the stringes of an instrument that is out of tune he is the cause that the stringes sounde but that they sounde iarringlie and out of tune that is in themselues and the man that striketh is not to bée blamed for it Therefore séeing one maie bée the cause of an action and yet not of the euil in the action you sée it doth not folowe that if God bée the cause of the action by and by the euill in the thing must néedes also procéede of him Nay contrarilie this doctrine is a sealed truth That no euill commeth of GOD in any worke but though in euerie thing that is done the Lord bée some worker yet as he doth it it is euer good Marke but an example or two Iob. 1. Iob his great aduersitie procéeded of God and by God in some respect it procéedeth of Satan also and of the Chaldeans that robbed him Yet sée that which Satan did malitiously and the Chaldeans couetously that did the Lord well to good purpose to the glorie of his name to the instruction and comfort of vs all and to Iobs great benefite also Gen. 38. Iosephs affliction againe it came by God by his brethren by his light mistresse and ouer credulous master but yet so much as God did was well done to the great benefite of his father and friends after and what the other did was euill wrongfully done to Ioseph The like againe may be said touching the death of Christ Had not God his worke in it when his determinate counsell appointed it Act. 2.23 and deliuered him vp Had not Iudas his worke in betraying him Had not the Iewes their worke whose wicked hands crucified and slew him Yet that which they did most horriblie the Lorde himselfe did in vnspeakeable mercie to all our endelesse comfortes Therefore whatsoeuer procéedeth of GOD as it commeth from him it is most good although the same thing as it commeth of man and by man bée wicked and euill and no author of euill is he though guider and gouernour of all things Que. My seconde doubt then is this if GOD gouerne all thinges by his prouidence then looke howe hee list to haue things and so shall they be men cannot chaunge his will and therefore it skilleth not what wee doe Ans Surely the conclusion is very wicked and no way followeth vpon Gods prouidence For albeit he direct all things yet we must euer vse the meanes that God hath appointed notwithstanding for so we sée Gods children euer did and tempted not the Lord by any such wicked spéeche as this Rebecca had heard Gods owne mouth speake it Gen. 27. that hee would of her two sonnes Esau and Iacob make two
say the ordinarie forerunners of murther quarrelling and fighting with their fellowes whatsoeuer And assuredly if the Lorde were in vs as we thinke he is that méeke spirite of his would kill more and more that fearefull hastinesse to reuenge that is euen in al and we would learne of him Math. 11.25 for hee is meeke and lowly in heart Que. What thinke you of killing by combat Ans I must néedes thinke that the practise in a Christian common wealth being naught and vnlawfull the death that therby insues is horrible murther and condemned in this commaundement Nowe that to fight a combat in a godly state is not tollerable it may easily appeare if you weigh the causes for which it is at any time taken in hande For if they be not as it will appeare sufficient to warrant it then is it not warrantable The first cause that is alleadged for it is to trie a trueth which otherwise can not bee knowen say they But it may bee answered that the ende good doeth not by and by make the meanes good to try out a trueth is good but to try it with the hazarde of life is more than can be warranted There are manie lawefull meanes to finde out trueth by and if all those faile then is it euident that the Lorde for some cause reserueth it to himselfe for a secret and to séeke importunately and impaciently by extraordinarie meanes as a combat is to finde it out is to tempt the Lorde and euen as it were by violence to draw from him the manifestation of the which as yet he would not haue reueiled Secondly the one partie is innocent yet either of thē desireth the death of an other indifferently so the murder is in the hart of both of them which amongest Christians shoulde not be countenaunced Sometimes the combat is craued for vaine ostentation of corage strength many a Thraso thinking his glorie to stande in the chalenging of an other to vngodlinesse but this I hope no man will say to be a good cause for a Magistrate to admit of a combat Sometimes to auoyd or reuenge some great disgrace offred to a man he beggeth thus to fight But a Christian man that must make an accompt at the day of iudgement of his life giuen him from aboue must learne to estéeme more of life than honour if honour by lawefull meanes may not be kept and more of God and his commaundement than of them both Besides the profession of a Christian is to heare euill and to suffer euill though hee doe well and deserue so therefore farre should wee be from yéelding to such heates Some alleadge that it endeth strife and therefore is to be admitted but to this may serue the aunswere to the first cause alleadged for it And besides who knoweth not that howesoeuer it endeth it betwixt those two because the one of them dyeth yet layeth it the foundation of euen deadly hatred in the heartes of all their frindes seede and posteritie so that for one which is killed there starteth vp an hundred discontented heartes séeking and following all occasions of strife against their enemies Therefore in peace and at home howe a Christian Magistrate may allowe the combat wee finde no sufficient cause and warrant For the fielde yet some doe thinke it is méete and that they haue reason for it for say they when two armies are incamped in battle together if vppon causes it bee iudged fitte not to hazarde the losse of manie but to committe it to two champions either side agréeing to yéelde vppon the ouerthrowe of their man who can mislike this But we answere that as yet the combat in it selfe is not prooued good but is euill and to doe euill that good may come of it wee may not Againe in such a case as this we must consider not onely of the men and their safetie but also of the cause and his honestie The cause is certainely either good or euill either iust or iniust If it bee good and iust then is not the credite of it to bee layde vppon one man onelie to the mocking of iustice and right and if it bee euill and vniust then of a Christian Magistrate not one mannes life is to be spent in it and for it Yea but say they yet further the partie that hath the good cause is farre the weaker and not able to stande if they once ioyne all together and therefore this other way of two to trie all is good And we answere also further that this were a maruelous distrust of Gods mercie and power not tollerable in a Christian For if the cause be good and méete to be maintayned then is the cause the Lordes the men the Lordes and hee saueth not by bowe nor speare nor by the multitude of an hoste so that wee shoulde so regarde these but giueth victorie at his will to the weaker and driueth away as the winde the dust verie mightie force assembled against him and his children Therefore not euen yet doe I see a cause to beare out anie combat If there be anie corruption in menne that iustice bee not doone which sometimes also is a cause alleadged we must say as hee sayde committing our selues and our matter to GOD. Video fero spero That is I sée I suffer I trust in God And euen with a good heart be readie to beare any thing rather than by a thing whereof I haue no warrant to séeke my satisfaction Que. Why what say you then of Dauids act with Goliah Ans I say it was an extraordinary motion in the hart of Dauid wrought by the Lorde vppon the hearing of such blasphemie against God Num. 25. Exod. 32. 1. King 18. and it may not bee our imitation no more than the fact of Phinees of the Leuites or of Eliah which were all mere extraordinarie and had their warrant by such specialtie from the Lorde as that others may not looke it shall extend to them if they doe the like Que. What nowe of killing of our selues is that neuer tollerable Ans Much of this matter hath S. Augustine in his first booke of the city of God And first he reasoneth thus Chap. 1. If Iudas did euill in hanging himselfe which hee thinketh no man will denie what may warrant anie man or woman to lay violent handes vppon themselues Chap. 28. For neuer can anie fall in earth to a fowler fact or to worse estate in the eyes of God and man Secondlie saith hee the lawe saith not Thou shalt not kill thy neighbor limiting it as it were to some but indefinitelie Thou shalt not kill extending it largelie to all and therefore saith he not euen our selues may we make away Thirdlie not Iob in all his extremitie durst doe this whē as yet one pricke woulde haue finished all his woe Chap. 24. And therefore no man may kill himselfe Que. Well but yet because you name Augustine I haue heard of some causes propounded by him in
this behalfe if we be not dead And a number mo reasons might yet be brought if I should make a treatise in a preface Only this one mo I must needes remember which me thinke should awake anie man aliue in this matter In the sixt of Marke it is said of Christ that going out and seeing a great multitude of people gathered together Mark 6. he had compassion on them because they were like sheepe without a sheephearde and hee went out and taught them many thinges And in the Greeke it is more vehement expressing as it were an aking of his heart as we call it or a yearning of his bowels to see so pitifull a sight as so manie people without a teacher Vpon which notable place I haue vsed in my selfe to make two conclusions First a comfort then a feare My comfort is this that he which mourneth to see his people want the benefite of his worde will giue his people his woorde if they seeke it and wish it and where he hath vouchsafed it alreadie there continue it blesse it and giue it power if we pray For otherwise howe shoulde it paine him to see it wanting My feare is this that if his heart ake to see his sheepe depriued of a shephearde hee will assuredly bee reuenged euen in great wrath of them that are the causers of it And for Christ his sake let it bee considered For as wee liue wee may not alwaies looke to laugh if we make our God to mourne Thus then if negligence be the cause that a countrey is not furnished with some able ministers me thinke we may awake our heartes by the worde of the Lorde and weying it well receiue from him some better feeling in so great a matter But if couetousnesse be the cause and we greatly giuen to sequester that benefit to our selues sauing onely some portion to one to beare the name then marke we againe the witnesse also of the same scriptures against vs euen in this And to saue mine owne labour my iudgement being young heare I beseeche you the proofes and reasons against this sinne by a godly and graue Diuine intreating of this matter laide downe vnto my ●ands First he alleadgeth against it that de●criptiō of a wicked Prince in the booke of Samuel amōgst whose euils this is named one 1. Sam. 8.15 that he will take the tythes and giue ●hem to his seruantes Concluding thereon that if the king might not take the tythes to himselfe because then they were due to the priestes by Gods owne order and commandement for the mainteinance of his seruice surelie no priuate man nowe may doe it so long as by authoritie the same are established for the ministers mainteynance and support Secondlie if in the law he was accursed that remoued the merestone of the field Deut. 27.17 because hee did wrong in succession to diuers ten thousande times more is the remoouing of the ministers liuing subiect to the Lords wrath because both presently successiuelie it is hurtfull to a number moe and in a greater matter Thirdlie by the Prophete Malachie the Lorde complayneth in expresse tearmes Mala. 3.8 that the taking away of the tythes and offerings from that ende that they were appointed vnto was a robbing and spoiling of him yea euen such a spoyling as he woulde visite with a great and greeuous curse Now if it were so then all the world must confesse it is no lesse nowe so long as authority ratifieth this means to maintaine the ministers and therefore assuredlie will haue a sharpe reuēge Fourthlie in the gospel the Iewes alledge it vnto Christ as an argument of loue to thē and their Nation in the Centurion that hee had built them a synagogue Luk. 7.5 plainely insinuating that they woulde haue iudged the contrarie if hee had spoyled their Synagogue of his mainteynance And Christ reprehendeth not this conclusion Fiftly if David the king standing in so great distresse for water 1. Chro. 11.16 yet would not drinke of the water of Bethleem because it was gotten with the daunger of some fewe mens temporal liues should it not teach a great conscience to any man in the world the tasteth of God his truth hopeth for cōfort in anie other world howe he not needing peraduenture but abundantlie prouided for otherwise by the mercy of his God drinketh eateth that which is gotten with apparant hazard of eternall life ●rō the bodies and soules God knoweth ●f how many Truely rightworshipful it ●hould 1. Cor. 9. Gala. 6. c. and the power of hell is not able ●o deny it But such is the meat drinke or other mainteinance whatsoeuer that we reape by the Church when it is due ●o an other for an other purpose and ●herfore you know the conclusion Sixt●y all those places in the scriptures commanding and inioyning the worlde to a maintainance sufficient mainteinance 〈◊〉 able teachers in it doe plainly prooue 〈◊〉 sinne of this to sequester to our selues ●he liuings allotted to thē vnles some o●her equiualent or sufficiēt way be taken ●or them by authoritie Againe Possidon in vita Aug. 10.24 if the graue learned father S. Austen was so high●ie offended and so sharpely rebuked a gentleman in his time for taking away ●is owne gift which before he had giuē●o the mainteināce of his Church wold ●ee not haue bin a seuere censor against ●hē thinke we that should haue taken away what neither they nor any of theirs euer gaue If the stories so cōmend the noble Emperor Cōstantine for cōmāding goods ●aken from the Churches to be restored to them againe woulde they not haue blotted him aswell Euseb lib. 10. cap. 5. Tit. Liuius lib. 42. if hee himselfe had beene a spoiler of the same If the Romans so dealt with Q. Fuluius for vncouering a part of Iunoes temple to coue● an other temple in Rome with the sam● tiles that they misliked him condem●ned him tolde him Pirrhus or Anniba● woulde not haue doone so tolde him 〈◊〉 had beene too much to haue doone to priuate mans house an inferiour plac● to a temple and in conclusion force● him to sende home those tiles againe may not such as garnish either thēselue● or their houses with Church liuings an leaue neither teacher nor almost tile● where both should be well consider b● it what this people would haue though● of them if they had liued there An● what is the concept of a people pro●phane in respect of theirs that know● and serue the Lord These then and d●●uers other reasons which for feare 〈◊〉 length I pretermit alledgeth hee the●● against this foule offence Onelie o●● place more I must needs remember an● it is a good one to wit howe Balthas● ●●ng of Babylon himselfe his Princes ●●s wiues and concubines drinking and ●asting in the vessels of gold taken from ●●e Temple euen then espied the fin●●rs of an hande writing vppon the ●●all before his face that his
children Mariages another of the daily desires of worldly men This they séeke this they couet this day and night they beat their heads about Yet daily examples be before their faces of sorowe and tormēt not to be expressed growing to parentes by such proude and gréedie attempts beside the continuall griefe that sonne or daughter so bestowed often riseth and goeth to bed withall Therefore I say to goe no further since these vsuall desires of men in this worlde are often not attained vnto to their liking ●hough greatly laboured for and yet if they be attained euen in great measure haue no certaine or sure comfort in them but all the pleasure in them and ●y them quickely fadeth away strongly ●t prooueth that our chiefe care should not be of these things but rather what ●ur case shal be in another world whē al these things shall haue their end which ●s the matter I haue rehearsed thē for An other proofe of the same may this be the reuealed will of God the Lord testifieth he would haue all men saued The second reason to prooue that our chiefe care should be howe to be saued and ●ome to the knowledge of his trueth he would not thē death of a sinner c. therfore unlesse we also set our care to the ●ame ende namely howe we may be ●aued in the day of iudgement we oppose our selues not onely against our ●wne good but euen against the Lords will we striue with our God and wee shall surely reape the reward of such ●s rob him of his creatures Thirdly the horrour of hell and condemnation prooue The third that our care to be saued should be great For what meane those fearefull names of hell of prison chaines of darkenesse the lake burning with fire and brimstone the de●th pitch brimstone weeping and gnashing of teeth the worme that neuer dyeth the fier that neuer goeth out with a number such like I say what meane they or why hath the spirite of GOD set them downe but to strike a terror into vs of damnation and consequently thereupon a true care to be saued The fourth Fourthly the vnspeakeable ioyes of heauen that unmeasurable and endlesse comfort that there shall bee had with all the children o● GOD Patriar●hes Prophetes Apostles Martyrs yea with the Lorde himselfe and all his Angels with Christ our Sauiour and Lambe slaine for vs who shall wipe all teares from our eyes doeth crie vpon vs with shriking sound now while we haue time to vse our time to see mercie and séeke mercie to imbrace it and take it offered to such good vnto vs and neuer in securitie passing our oportunitie to be causes that then we shall heare these words Depart ye wicked into endlesse woe What an honor woulde I thinke it if the Prince passing by among the great multitude should spie mee out call mee to him imbrace me speake kindly to me take mee with him place me by him and so forth Howe would my heart daunce hereat and all men talke of my good hap Now is the passing of a mortall Prince on earth like the comming of Iesus Christ in the cloudes Is the honour they can giue comparable to that the Lorde of Lordes shall giue to his elect O my heart féeleth what my pen cannot write there is no comparison betwixt the persons the places the preferments and therefore if the one so ioy mée that for it I would take any paines thrise dead is my heart within me if to obtaine the other it bée not carefull Lastly The fifth the examples of care continuall and great euer in Gods children how they might serue him and please him that hereafter they might sit with him and neuer part from him ought mightily to perswade vs to be like vnto them in this indeuour their labours their watchings their sufferings all shot but at this ende the glorie of the Lorde and their owne saluation and howe great were they What spéeches of desire euen aboue all treasure to bée saued in the great day haue they vttered And shall we not followe them God forbid Thus therefore prooued vnto vs is the first point of a Christian man and womans care namely that it ought to be this howe they should be saued in the day of iudgement and so come to life euerlasting Que. Howe is the second point prooued vnto vs namely that in the meane time so long as wee liue in this world wee ought to bee carefull to liue according to Gods holy will Ans Surely it is prooued verie strongly vnto vs both by our election creation redemption iustification and vocation if we will marke them For why hath the Lord elected vs to eternal ioy in Christ Iesus That wee might conclude libertie thereon to sinne at our pleasure Our election prooueth it as many wicked spirites reason No no. But let the Apostle bee iudge and tell vs why who saieth Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should bee holy and without blame before him in loue So saieth he of our creation also Our creation prooueth it that wee are the Lordes workemanship created in Christ Iesus to good workes Ephes 2.10 which GOD hath ordained that wee shoulde walke in them And of our redemption Luke plainely speaketh Our redemption prooueth it that we are deliuered out of the hands of our enemies Luke 1. that we should serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life Our iustification prooueth it Our iustification hath euer ioyned with it inseparably the grace of ●anctification and they cannot bee parted For howe shall we saieth the Apostle Rom. 6.2 that are dead to sinne liue yet therein and so forth as followeth in the place Lastly of our vocation the Apostle Peter saieth thus As he that hath called is holy so be you holy in all manner of conuersation So that wee sée thereby all these meanes prooued vnto vs that we ought as long as we liue to be carefull of this that we behaue our selues according to the will of the Lord which is the seconde point whereof in your question ye demaunded some confirmation Que. But howe can we knowe we are discharged before Gods iudgement seate Ans Your booke answereth you that wee can neuer knowe howe wee be discharged before the iudgement seate of God vntill such time as we knowe our owne miserable estates by reason of the greatnesse of our sinne and the horrible punishment which we deserue for the same And the proofes your booke vseth are plaine to inferre this conclusion For doeth man séeke to the Phisition that hath no néede of health either to be procured or preserued by his meanes No our owne experience doth approue the speach of Christ to bee true when he saieth Matth. 9.12 The whole haue no neede of the Phisition but the sicke Matth. 11.13 For in déede it is the diseased that take
spéeches in the scriptures against it Let all bitternesse and anger and wrath be put away from you Ephes ● 31 and be ye curteous one towardes an other and tender hearted forgiuing one an other euen as God for Christes sake forgaue you saith the Apostle And againe Be slowe to wrath saith an other Iam. 4.19 For the wrath of man doeth not accomplish the righteousnesse of God That is anger and wrath hindreth Gods worke in vs. Vnto which and a number such other perswasions in the worde the prophane writers by the verie light of reason haue agréeed and sought in their sort to giue men a sight of this foule vice Anger haue they saide is the beginning of madnesse anger is the drunkennesse of the minde anger admitteth not anie good counsell anger is the roote of murther and death with a number such spéeches Que. Foule then I see is this vice in all and especially in a Christian and therefore it were good we knewe howe to auoide it Ans We reade that a king of Thracia being presented with a sort of verie fine glasses by and by brake them all in péeces And being asked the reason answered that hee did it to auoyde the wrath that hee was sure would be in him against them that should breake them afterwarde Howe then are we taught by this king though not euerie way to doe as hee did yet with him to bee carefull to preuent our anger by taking away the occasion The occasions of anger in manie men are plaie and gaming curiositie in dealing and medling taking a matter as they thinke they heard it when indéede they heard it not right nipping woordes and gawling spéeches with a number such which if men will not haue anie care to eschewe then in vaine doe they say they are afraide to let murther into their heartes For in truth the effectes will followe if the ordinarie causes doe goe before Que. Why but is all anger forbidden ●o a Christian Ans No indéede it is as lawfull for a man in time place in his office for a iust cause to be angry in a conuenient measure as it is vnlawfull otherwise And it is apparant by the children of God in all ages the Patriarkes Prophetes Apostles and others whose hearts haue burned with misliking of euill and wordes bewrayed asmuch vnto them Wherefore truly was it sayd of the godly father Nolle irasci vbi irascendum est nolle emendare peccatum est That is for a man not to be angrie whē he should be angry is as much as to be vnwilling to amend what is amisse Que. Proceede nowe I pray you to the other branches Ans Anger as was saide begetteth hatred nay becommeth hatred if it be let to settle For Odium est inueterata ira Hatred is nothing else but olde anger And therefore since anger is apparantly forbidden in this commandement hatred by consequence being festred anger must néedes be much more Besides wee haue heard the wordes of the scripture plaine He that hateth his brother is a mansleaer 1. Iohn 5. Therfore I passe it ouer and come to the fellowe that is euer ioyned with it when it méeteth with a fit subiect to wit Enuie a vice compounded of the hatred of an other for vertue Enuie what it is guiftes fauour honour and such like and of selfe loue which maketh vs gréeue to sée our selues in these thinges excelled of him A vice also of the spirite of God by name forbidden Eate not the meate sayth Solomon of him that hath an euill eie Prou. 23.6 neither desire his dainties Let vs not be desirous of vaine glorie sayth the Apostle prouoking one an other Galat. 5.26 enuying one an other But laying aside all maliciousnesse all guile and dissimulation all enuie and euill speaking 1. Pet. 2.1 as newe borne babes let vs desire the sincere milke of the worde of God that wee may growe thereby Vnto which expresse testimonies if w● ioyne the experience of such euill as en●uie hath wrought we shall plainele sé● the foulnes of it Num. 12.10 Aaron and Miriam en●uied Moyses and the Lord with leprosi● plagued her Corah and his companie enuied him also and the Lorde as abhorred made the earth to shrinke and swallowe them vp quicke with all that they possessed Saul had an eie vpon Dauid for the womens singing and it stirred him still to séeke the life of his sonne and seruant Iosephs brethren enuied him and it almost brought them to his bloudshedding Euerie way therfore is enuie in a Christian poyson and apparantly it falteth against this commaundement It is a possession besides that destroyeth the possessour For as the rust the iron and mothes a garmen so eateth vppe enuie the man that enuieth These thinges make enuie loathsome ynough to a godly minde and yet is there more to bee sayde against it For besides all this enuie as it wisheth an other mans fall so doth it reioyce if it happen vnto him Which also is a thing verie horrible in the eyes of God For hee that mocketh the poore sayth Salomon reprocheth him that made him Prou. 17.5 and hee that reioyceth at destruction shall not be vnpunished Againe Bee thou not glad when thine enemie falleth 24.18 and let not thy heart reioyce when hee stumbleth least the Lorde see it and it displease him and he turne his wrath from him to be auenged of thee To the which wordes of Salomon howe consonant was the practise of Iob testified in that most excellent spéeche of his If I reioyced at his destruction that hateth me Iob. 31. sayeth be or was mooued to ioye when euill came vpon him If I suffred my mouth to sinne by wishing a curse vnto his soule c. Meaning that hee neuer did it neither would doe For it is a fearefull sinne Calamitas illius fores pulsat qui aliorum calamitatibus non mouetur That is Miserie knocketh at his dore of right whose heart sorroweth not to see others in aduersitie And neuer obiect his harde happe to any man could the Gréeke Oratour say for fortune is common to all what is to come is not yet séene Therefore euen this companion of enuie maketh it worse as I hope wée sée and of all that woulde please the Lorde more carefullie to bee shunned To reioyce at the sinnes of an other much more must bee gréeuous if his worldlie estate may not be reioyced at that it is euill Besides when by sinne the Lorde is gréeued and my brother wounded to eternall death what a spirite were it to reioyce Againe consider our selues in comparison with them that offende and either we are better like or worse the two later giue no cause of ioy and the former should fill our heart with praise for our grace giuen of God and not our mouthes with mockes at the infirmitie of others Que. What else is forbidden Ans Last of all as the murther of the heart is forbidden all
it wee may first sée that if we haue that thing which our neighbour woulde borowe and wee able without our hurt well to spare it him we are bound to do it or els we sinne against this law of God we euen steale from our brother that which in right is his For GOD woulde not euer haue made a lawe for recompence of the lender if his thing lent receyue anie harme vnlesse it had béene a necessarie duetie of loue to lende when wee may Therefore this narownesse of heart and vnkinde disposition to grudge vnto anie that good which by lending wee can possible doe him it is hatefull in the eyes of God and a playne breach of this commandement Secondlie in this lawe as one verie well hath noted Vsurie we may sée a great light giuen to that harde controuersie concerning vsurie of monie For marke I pray you howe he saith in plaine tearmes That if the thing were hired although it perished in vse yet should it not be made good by him which hired it for it came for his hire The monie which vsurers giue out is hired as wee knowe Therefore if 〈◊〉 were a thing that might bee hired yo● sée the sentence of God though it per●●shed Secondlie marke againe how th● lawe saith though a man lend of méer● loue fréely without anie hire yet shal● his recompence bee nothing more tha● good will againe vnlesse it die or b●● hurt which he lendeth Now monie nei●ther dieth neither commonlie is ani● whit hurt but returneth euerie wa● as good as it came Thirdlie conside● howe the lawe will haue an apparan● hurt of the thing lent or else it allowet● no recompence but vsurers will hau● consideration for likely losse For sa● they if I had had my monie possiblie I coulde haue gayned thus much with if yet are they not sure they coulde hau● doone it for God coulde haue crosse● their expectation and being not sur● that they could haue gayned it is no● apparant that they haue béene hindred but this lawe of God prouideth in equitie onelie for apparant harme therefore nothing for them Fourthly the equitie of this lawe is onelie this tha● 〈◊〉 will be no looser and therefore pro●●●●on is made for recompence if the 〈◊〉 lent receyued hurt but vsurers ●●ll haue their goodwill as they call it ●ertaine and an excessiue gayner ●ftlie in this lawe of God the borow●● is respected that hee shoulde haue ●●lpe of his neighbour and not pay for 〈◊〉 vnlesse hee hurt the thing which hee ●●rowed but vsurie regardeth wholie ●●e lender Wherefore it séemeth that this lawe of our God had euer anie ●●uitie this vsurie of monie had euer ●●aine iniurie and that this kinde of ●●nding is voide of loue and therefore ●pparantly a breach of this commaun●ement Thus therefore wee sée what ●●ght the equitie of this lawe of lending ●●ueth to this question of vsurie which ●quitie remaineth and euer shall Que. But I pray you what thinke ●ou of giuing vsurie which manie a good man is constrayned to do Ans Truely for mine owne part I ●m satisfied to thinke it also euill by the wordes of Ieremie who saith he hath neither giuen vsurie nor taken and yet they hated him Insinuating plainly that i● he had doone either he could haue found iust cause in himselfe why he should be euill thought of Que. What is the law of pledges Ans If thou takest thy neighbours raiment to pledge Exod. 22.26 saith the lawe thou shalt restore it to him ere the sunne goe downe For that is his couering only and this is his garment for his skinne wherin shal he sleepe Therefore when he crieth vnto me I wil heare him for I am merciful Deut. 24.6 And in an other place No man shall take the vpper or nether milstone to pledg● for this gage is his liuing 10. And whē thou shalt aske againe of thy neighbour anie thing lent 11. thou shalt not goe into hi● house to fet his pledge but thou shal● stande without and the man which borrowed it of thee shall bring the pledge out of the dores vnto thee 12. Furthermore i● he be a poore body thou shalt not sleep● with his pledge 13. but shalt restore him the pledge when the sunne goeth down tha● he may sleep in his raimēt blesse thee it shal be righteousnes to thee before the Lord thy God The very ende of al● ●hich laws as you sée is nothing but this ●ercy kindenes of man towards man ●●en in this matter of taking paunes ●nd therefore if my dealing herein be ●●arpe hard and cruel laying aside as it ●ere al regard of other mens néedes so my selfe may be safe is it not apparant I faile in loue towardes the wealth ●ood estate of my brother outward and ●●erefore haue broken this commande●ent It must néedes be granted Que. What is the law for things com●itted to our custody Ans If a man deliuer vnto his neigh●our saith the law to keepe asse or oxe Exod. 22.10 〈◊〉 sheepe or any beast and it die or 〈◊〉 hurt or taken away by enimies no ●●an see it 11. an oth of the Lord shal be be●●ixt thē two that he hath not put his hand ●●to his neighbours good the owner 〈◊〉 it shall take the oth he shal not make 〈◊〉 good But if it be stolne from him 12. he ●●all make restitution vnto the owner ●●ereof If it bee torne in peeces he ●●all bring record 13. and shal not make it ●●odwhich is deuored By which lawes ●●us much we may note that notwithstanding for thinges committed to thei● custodie it might fall out that they might be brought before the magistrat● by othe to protest their trueth and ho●nestie which corrupt flesh will lightli● grudge at or else to their cost to make that good the kéeping whereof neuer gained them pennie yet neuerthelesse woulde the Lorde haue man euen here in to showe his loue and in no case fo● either of these respectes or anie other t● denie it Wherefore it followeth the● and both nowe and euer shall followe that whosoeuer shal not willinglie an● readily take into his custodie that thin● which hee may kéepe to the benefite o● his neighbour better than hee that dot● deliuer it him and so taken truly kéepe and faithfullie restore it againe vnt● them that of right shoulde haue it tha● man or woman want in their hearte● affection or loue to their neighbours they withholde the thing which is du● vnto them namelie the fruite of thei● loue in this particular we stande vpon and therefore guiltie they are befor● God of stealth the breach of this com●mandement Que. What is the lawe of finding thinges lost Ans Thou shalt not saith the lawe see thy brothers oxe nor his sheepe goe astray and withdrawe thy selfe from thē Deut. 22.1 but shalt bring thē againe vnto thy brother and if thy brother bee not neere vnto
couetous hart hath made you often to offende in this duetie Alas wee sée it not wée knowe it not we féele it not to be a sinne to retayne what wee finde or almost to finde before it be lost and so to conceyle it So gapeth ech man after worldlie gayne and so séeke we to haue howe so euer we haue it if it happen into our hands and wee well like of it But sinne will bee sinne when such gotten goods will no where bée séene and the Lorde giue vs féeling of it nowe betimes Next let vs looke of our buying and selling wherein also all loue is to bee showed to our brethren and an equalitie kept so néere as wee can of commoditie giuen and taken But howe manie of vs doe this there is a God that knoweth and a conscience within vs that if it were wakened woulde crie I feare mee lowde we are gréeuouslie guiltie For where is that man or woman of trade almost to bee founde that taking vp a standing in faire or Market doeth once thinke with themselues that there they stande to showe their loue to their brethren as to them selues and so to interchange their commodities with them as that in the testimonie of a good conscience and euen God being witnesse so néere as they can they kéepe an equalitie giuing as good as they take and taking no more than they giue in value and worth No alas it is too well knowen and too much amongst vs daily séene that we thinke wee haue our standing there to praie vppon all that come to vs so much as wee can to deceiue them to spoyle and robbe them in a sort and to get for our wares what possiblie wee may with an vtter neglect and refusall of equalitie And therefore we sel as we may bee safe though wee neuer bee paide aboue halfe wée sell to day with a pinching price wee make accompt God maie sende vs some losse and therefore betimes we wrecke our selues vppon our brethren and so take of them for that which wee doe sell as that if it happen that GOD doe so deale with vs wee may bee reuenged before hande and able to abide it if it bee not great To conclude we are meriest when we haue robbed most and then goe wee singing home when wee haue giuen occasion to the most to crie So dull and deade are our heartes within vs and so hath a gréedie minde to rake vp riches spoyled vs of loue or any thought thereof towards our brethren And as litle conscience there is often in the buyer who if hee might haue for a pennie that is worth a pounde coulde well inough digest it And therefore if one in hys néede come vnto vs for present monie wee will none of his commoditie wée want it not wee estéeme it not wée looke lightlie both of the man and the matter till wee haue brought him to our owne price and God knowes farre farre vnder the value of the thing So that hee which of charitie in his néede shoulde bee helped is of vs commonlie by reason of his néede prayed vppon and most cruellie robbed And yet we be no théeues Ah God be mercifull to vs awake vs and neuer deale with vs according to our iniquities for his Christes sake But passe wee nowe on 〈◊〉 other branches of this commande●ent and so shall we further sée what ●anner of men and women wee are 〈◊〉 obedience to the Lorde Who séeth ●ot who knoweth not Oppression that all oppres●●on of my brother in his goods is con●rarie to that loue that I ought to ●eare to him and his goods And how ●ande wee in this matter Haue wée ●euer detained the poore seruauntes ●ages Of seruantes and wrecked our anger vppon ●im to his harme further than a mercifull heart shoulde haue doone Haue wee not taken euen the flower of ●is youth the strength of his yeares ●nd the verie iuice and sappe of hys ●odie to serue our turnes withall and ●hen either turned him off vnrewarded ●r taken from him or diminished without cause other than our owne co●etousnesse the reward that our aun●estour gaue to his seruice before If ●ee haue doone it alas it is a great ●ppression a great wrong and it stan●eth not with that loue that I am ●harged withall towardes him in this ●ommaundement But a man must first knowe sinne before hee can flie 〈◊〉 and nowe wee knowe it I trust w●● hate it Strangers Haue wee neuer againe dea● vnkindlie with a straunger but eue● so as if GOD shoulde banishe 〈◊〉 from our warme home to fore● coast wée woulde bee glad to fée● our selues at their handes If we haue this is oppression and wee should n●● doe it for anie thing Widowe and fatherlesse Haue wee n●● hurt the desolate Widowe the fatherlesse childe or anie whose might wa●● lesse than ours to beare off the hardne● of our handes Haue we not lift vp ou● force against them when we sawe we● might haue helped them in the gate I● we haue what can we say why we shul● not rot in péeces for it our armes be broken from the bones Iob. 31.22 as Iob wishe● to him in such a case Haue wee neue● respected the person more of one tha● an other in cause of iustice a strong meanes to drawe vs to oppression Haue wee neuer suffered these hande● to féele the weight of a bribers gift to drawe vs to oppression Bribes O spare no● to spie your sinne euen to the full if you ●●ue offended and yet accuse not your ●●ues if you dare boast of innocencie ●●ppie were our countrie and a thou●●●de comfortes were it to euerie one 〈◊〉 vs if the dulnesse of our heartes in ●●ese deadlie sinnes pulled not vppon vs ●●e often offending in them and then ●●ch sinne such wrath againe from hea●en aboue as is most due vnto it Alas ●●e sée not neither euer will bee made 〈◊〉 sée what loue by this lawe wee owe 〈◊〉 all men in their goods but we robbe ●●em we spoyle them and wee take ●●●tes to do it and yet we be no théeues But God is God as hee was euer ●●●ne is sinne though wee will not see 〈◊〉 and a iust day of a iust rewarde to ●uerie man for euerie matter must ●here bee Wee beléeue it we say it in ●ur articles often yet wée deale as if ●ee neuer thought it What shoulde I ●●y of that cloke and couer and cause of ●uch oppression the cloth and liueries ●f Superiours Liueries Am I the giuer or the ●aker If I bee the giuer haue I ne●er boulstred my cognisance out to doe ●he thing that God forbiddeth Haue I harkened about to sée and learne ho● they vse the credit that is giuen the●● God knowes wee haue litle néede to 〈◊〉 charged with other mens sinnes 〈◊〉 no doubt such a maister shall with su●● a mans offences For we shall neuer 〈◊〉 able to beare in our selues the bu●● then of our owne Am
Nothing but a man may euen aswell doe the one as the other thought he And in trueth it is a notable saying of Hieron Note Vilium est hominum alios viles facere qui suo merito placere non possunt placere velle aliorum comparatione It is the propertie of a vile nature to seeke by tales to make others vile or by a comparison with others whome they presse with their prattles to come to be accounted of when simplie and truely there is nothing in themselues worthie of cōmendation Filthie therfore foul● it is to be a false reporter And what better is it to be a willing hearer of all detractions brought vnto me of others Doth not euen the same God and lawe condemne this also aswell as the other Thou shalt not receiue a false tale sayth the lawe no not receiue it I say Exod. 23. and marke it well Math. 7.1 Iudge not sayth Christ and yee shall not be iudged for with what iudgement yee iudge ye shall b● iudged and with what measure ye mete it shal be measured to you againe Hee that hath itching eares to heare of others shall reape for rewarde himselfe as priuie spéeches to his owne discredite Hieron ad Nepotian Take héede therefore sayth a godly father that thou neither depraue thy selfe anie man neither yet willingly heare others doe it But flie to heare as thou wouldest flie to speake what tendeth vnto slander For as he that speaketh euill hath the deuill in his tongue so he that heareth euill hath him in his eare It is the poyson of friendshippe and the verie cutthrote of all amitie betwixt man and man to loue to heare what péeuish tongues shall séeke to speake For soone créepes it in by mine ●are that will neuer créepe out againe whilest the breath is in mee Let no proofe be brought for it and neuer so much against it yet stickes the scarre of ●uspition still and something I thinke ●o the blotte of my brother though I ●an be content not to credite all This ●pen eare so gréedie to heare and not ●isely waying who telleth it of whom 〈◊〉 what manner to what ende with such like circumstances what losse hath it laide full manie a time vppon both men and women What hatred what enuie what ielousie what suspition what disquiet thoughtes and grinding greife hath it settled soundly in manie an one Howe stealeth it the loue of man from his wife of father from his childe and of friende from his long and liked acquaintance Howe alienateth it the heart of a true seruant from his maister if he will yéelde to what his fraile fleshe will assuredly pricke him And howe manie a maister hath shaken off through spéech of hate light pick-thankes such trueth and loue such seruice and strength as neuer after coulde in like manner be gained againe with goulde But what should we say There is no mischiefe to the mischeife of the tongue and therefore no question but a danger great to attende vnto it without good discretion Then to procéede to the thirde If telling and hearing the deprauinges of the wicked be forbidden must it not also néedes be euill to beléeu● them Certainely much more For i● is a degrée further to beléeue the report that is made vnto vs than to heare it And if a man ought to be slow to speake when he is not certaine much more should he be slowe to beléeue what may be false before he knowes it Sée therefore howe the Lorde speaketh to such among the Israelites as were to punish the offenders Deutro 13 1● If thou heare sayth he concerning any of the cities which the Lorde thy God hath giuen thee to dwell in wicked men are gone out from among you and haue drawen away the inhabitants of their citie saying let vs goe and serue other gods which you haue not knowen then thou shalt seeke and make search and inquire diligently if it be true and so forth What I pray you might meane this repetition of wordes to séeke to search to inquire and that diligently but to admonish vs what a fault it is to condemne before we knowe and to beléeue what euer we heare by and by Likewise againe if an idolater were accused and had but one witnesse against him Deutro 17. ● he might not be put to death vpon the testimonie of that one but at the mouth of two or three witnesses shall he that is worthie of death die sayth the Lawe all to teach vs that we may not be light of beléefe when we are whispered in the eare against a man and by and by kill him in our heartes by ceasing to thinke well of him any more vppon one reporters spéech For to robbe him of that credite in my heart that hee had before with me vnlesse he deserue it is a branch of murther as hath before béene prooued Againe as Salomon sayth of answering a matter before a man heare it that it is follie and a shame to him that doth it so say we and thinke we of beléeuing a matter before we knowe it Prou. 18.13 for it is as true Gen. 39. Is it not registred of Putiphar Iosephes maister to his blemish as long as euer the worlde indureth that hee was too credulous Was it not a blotte in Dauid and so by gods speciall wisedome left vnto vs to consider of it that he would beléeue so quickly a false flattering Siba against his trustie and most true hearted seruant Mephibbosheth 2. Sam. 16.1 But what should I heape vp examples May not euen euerie mans conscience tell him that the fault is not litle the discredite whereof God hath left vnto vs but in one example I conclude therfore this matter of light beléeuing such tales as vngodlily and falsely are made vnto vs with the spéech of wise and experienced Syrac in his booke Blame no man sayth he before thou hast inquired the matter vnderstande first Syrac 11.7 and then reforme righteouslie giue no sentence before thou hast heard the cause neither interrupt men in the middest of their tales God giue vs the vse of it For great is the hurt of light beléefe both towardes bodie and also soule Que. Yet there remaineth one thing more in the booke Ans It is true and that is this In priuate offences to speake anie thing although it be true to the hurt of our brothers good name if by priuate admonitions he may be wonne is a branche and a breach of this commaundement The Apostle Peter prooueth it when he sayth thus But aboue all thinges haue feruent loue among you For loue couereth a multitude of sinnes Paule prooueth it in like wordes also 1. Petr. 4.8 Loue suffereth all thinges 1. Cor. 13.7 it beleeueth all thinges it hopeth all things it indureth al things If therefore we loue our brother there wil be a care we plainely sée that we vtter nothing to the hurting of his good name
our thoughtes offende and what most carefully we are to take héede of Also I further consider the maruelous care and strict regard that euerie Christian man and woman ought to haue of their senses séeing all euill thoughtes are forbidden For it is the eie and the eare that sendeth in sinne in store into our hearts and neuer shall we haue the one reformed vnlesse there be a stable couenaunt made with the other Iob. 31.1 The heart will conceiue wickedly if the eies fréely behoulde vanities But checke the one and ye stay the other maruelouslie And no more quench you the fire by withdrawing the wood than assuredly you staie the course of wicked conceites when you watch and warde well ouer your senses Que. But I pray you what shall wee thinke of dreames which seeme to be sinnefull and we cannot amende them Ans We must consider the causes of them and thereby aswell as we can growe to some right conceit of our offending by them and in them The causes are either inwarde or outwarde and of inwarde either the minde it selfe or the bodie For often doth the minde the bodie sléeping and the senses resting remember those thinges which it waking conceiued and either desired or feared Also the diuerse complexion and temperature of the bodie occasioneth diuers kindes of dreames whereby the physition will guesse the nature of the bodie and causes of disease in the sicke Cholericke men will dreame of fires and downefaules Melancholicke men of monstrous and horrible thinges The phlegmatike of waters and dull matters And the sanguine of pleasant and comfortable euentes The outwarde causes are also diuers as the influence of the heauens the circumstance of elementes necessitie and want some hapning chance and such like Thus doe hungry men dreame of meat drunken men of moysture and so foorth Quae vigilantes cogitauimus ea solent postea dormientibus obuersari sayth one That is Such thinges as waking wee earnestly thought of euen such thinges often wee sleeping dreame of Aucupibus volucres aurigae somnia currus The fouler dreames that birdes he takes And carters cart his visions makes Therefore these things thus knowen and weighed if we dreame wickedly to name no particulars let euerie one consider well what occasion in him selfe he can finde of the same and if his owne disorder either in dyet or spéech or meditation or anie way hath done it then néedeth he none to tell him his conscience is a thousande witnesses hee hath offended Thus answered Gregorie byshoppe of Rome when he was writ vnto for his iudgement of this matter and if I can find in my selfe none of all these to procure it in me yet knowe if it be euill it is a frute of corruption and weigh well the lawe of the Lorde in this behalfe laide downe Plutarch saith Leuit. 15. Honest dreames are an argument of vertue in a man and then me thinke in reason a contrarie effect should bewray a contrarie cause The same man saith Peruersorum somnia semper turbata De virt viti Plutarch Euill mens dremes are cōmonly troublesome But I referre you for more of this to others And this onely I say againe the bodie well ordred and the minde well occupied hardly shall our dreames feare vs for euill Que. What nowe then might be the affirmatiue part of this commaundement Ans If thus wee sée all wandring wayes from vpright integritie be they but euen in thought and that also in the least degrée without any consent to be by this lawe condemned as impure what should we sée on the contrary part to be commanded but euen a full perfect and absolute conformitie both of minde will appetite and whatsoeuer is in man to the lawe of God That which Moses in these words describeth Thou shalt loue the Lorde thy God with all thy heart Deutro 6.5 and with all thy soule and with all thy might Luke 10.27 and our Sauiour Christ doth adde vnto it for plainenesse sake with all thy thought That also which S. Paule describeth thus This is the will of God euen your sanctification 1. Thess 4.7 and that yee should abstaine from fornication that euerie one of you shoulde knowe howe to possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour and not in the lust of concupiscence and so foorth From which exact perfection looke howe farre our conscience truely awaked doeth tell vs we are wanting euen so farre accursed stande we before the Lorde for not fulfilling all if wee had not a Sauiour Que. Is there anie punishment outwarde appointed to this lawe Ans No and that because man can not iudge the guilt of hidden heart But it suffiseth to feare any man that feareth any thing to consider that the spiritual punishment allotted vnto it as to the rest is eternall death and endlesse torture both of bodie and soule for euermore in flame of lasting fire Onely one storie that I remember there is recorded of some outwarde execution vppon an inward thought and that is of Glaucus King of Sparta Herodotus who for conceiuing but a thought to retaine Milesius his pledge committed to his kéeping yet not dooing it was vtterly destroyed both he and his and so foretolde by the Oracle whereat he asked counsell The Application LEt vs weigh now well what hath béene sayd I beséech you and neuer spare to speake or feare to confesse if not openly before the worlde yet secretly in our heartes vnto the Lorde what due regarde of passed course compared with this lawe shall make vs sée Though we were able which yet neuer any could but Iesus Christ to stande cleare before the Lorde in all the former preceptes either for déede or thought yet are we neuer able to say wee are cleare of this For consider hath there neuer thought but good crept into that heart of yours within at no time since the day that you were first able to thinke a thought till this present houre weigh it well And what though you haue neuer consented to it yet wo wo vnto vs for consent wee sée neuerthelesse by this lawe of God that we are but gone For here is condemned the verie entrance and beeing of anie vile conceit within vs for any time though vpon some better wakening we repell it and abhorre it and thrust it away without his act And who is able to say he neuer thought awry in the least maner or measure that might be Nay what conscience cryeth not if it be a litle rowsed that in verie fearefull manner measure we haue all herein transgressed and offended Call out our houses and chambers wherein and vnder which we haue liued aske the fieldes the gardens the walles and hedges where we haue often walked summon the seates where we haue sit examine the pillowes whereon our heades could take no rest what guilt against our heartes in this behalfe they well can witnesse euery one of them Shall they not speake first one by one and