Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n good_a great_a think_v 4,338 5 3.9369 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
A06475 Obiectorum reductio: or, Daily imployment for the soule In occasional meditations upon severall subjects. By Donald Lupton. Lupton, Donald, d. 1676. 1634 (1634) STC 16945; ESTC S103968 30,649 174

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it is not of or from it selfe but borrowed from the Sunne That is absolutely perfect whose subsistence is in it selfe That body is but imperfect whose Fundamentals are Externall dependances Those Princes are counted weake whose Forces are borrowed from their Neighbours Miserable is that man who in● His necessary imployments must have a Legge from one a Hand from another and an Eye from a third That party dares not disobey him by whose power his Head stands on his Shoulders Seldome doe they accomplish any great Actions whose Materials are other mens Beneplacits To borrow another mans faith to goe to Heaven would seeme but the Errand of a beggarly Christian. The body of the Moone Encreases and Decreases to our sence it is as subject to change as it is to mo●motion If Phylosophy will serve for an Argument Mans ●mutable state of his body sympathizes or else is caused from it But howsoever it is no such mervaile if men bee unconstant faulty and fa●ding since those more Caelestiall and Superior creatures stood not all stedfast The Angels kept not their first Integrity Worthy Calvin hath it Si peccare norunt Parentes in paradiso quid mirum si Nos in sterquilinio It is Oh Saviour with our soules as with the Moone shee hath light onely from the Sunne The light and lustre wee have in our soules is thy comelinesse and beauty We are darknes but thou hast made us light in the ●ord Let mee O Lord cast away now the workes of darknes and put vpon my soule the Armour of of Light Lux mea a Te. MEDITATION 40. Vpon the falling of Leaves in Autumne VVHat a strange alteration is here in this Tree The last quarter how flourishing how replenished and decked with thousands of Attendants in greene ●romising much to the sa●isfying of the beholders but ●his was in Summer How many such seeming Parasites are there which will spread Saile with us in 〈◊〉 faire gale of Wind or in a prosperous terme promising ●idelity but in the tempests and violent stormes of adversity or affliction are sodainely gone with a Non Novimus Few men make haste to that Market where there is nothing to be bought but blowes It showes also to us the fraile condition of the body and worldly preferments how beautifull and comely hath this man beene and how honourable this day when sodainely but one ●it of a feaver or one frowne of a Prince hath ●opt both in a moment Sodainely have such Meteors and Comets beene extinguished God make mee so resolute in perseverance that I may hold my first love So neither the heate in Summer shall make mee too proud nor the frosts in Winter affright or displace me MEDITATION 41. Vpon Reubens divisions Iudg. 5. 15. 16. I wonder much and grieve more at this unmatchable seperation Can those hearts which should alwaies bee united in so small a distance be divided was it any discontent that this Tribe harboured because it lost the priviledge of the first borne Indeed lawfull Heires seldome part with their Prerogatives but threaten revenge or intend it to the present possessors with Esa● could not the Equall Testament of a father so inspired be admitted for just in so many Generations Without malice or revenge This had beene a faire opportunity for Reuben to have gaind that honour in the field which he lost in an unlawfull Bed Was it because Deborah a Woman was then the Generall in the Feild And so Reubens Regiment scorned to be led up in Armes by ●o weake an instrument but certainly he was then the more culpable being so potent a Tribe and absent VVill he put the fault in Iordan because he could not Passe over his high sweld VVaves Oh no! A willing minde slights such poore excuses and will affront the ●reatest perills VVas it the force of the Enemies Army that affrigh●ed him or did he thinke he should come too late For ●he first he could not have ●azarded his life in a fairer quarrell nor amongst nearer friends and if he had come though after the Battaile no question but Deborah and all the Lords would have beene glad to have ●eene his Colours in the Feild to tryumph though not to Fight It would have shewed a readines and propensity of minde and would have made an Apology for his whole Tribe Howsoever hee should have renewed his old familiarity with his brethren and more then that I● would have caused a great feare in the Army of the Aduersaries to have heard his Drummes ●eating to succou● his Brethren The union of Brethren is terrible but their divisions are alwaies spurres to their Adversaries and great advantages But briefly to lay him forth hee was busie about his private Commodities his Flocks and his Heards workt more with him then Gods cause It is a great fault to slip opportunites in doing good especially to our selues and brethren how ●ong could he thinke to have ●njoyd his flockes at home ●f his Enemies had got the ●eild from his Brethren Our ●rivate gaines must not be ●referd before our Countries And such and no other are worldly men when I am assaulted by the power of Satan or tentations What comfort will these afford my soule Noe they will neyther lend me Comfort Councell or Prayer So his fault was in respect of the Cause the Time his Person his Freinds Aduersaries and Example Concordiâ Res parvae Crescunt Discordiâ evertuntur Maximae MEDITATION 42. Vpon Sleepe THe naturall sleepe is 〈◊〉 cessation of all labor mo●tion action With excesse i● brings poverty shame dis●grace sicknesses diseases ● Hee that is given to sleep● shall not bee rich It stupe●fies besots the best sences● and faculties of the sou●● and makes them unfit so any good imployment o● virtuous action It is th● Rust of the whole man Nature cannot move t● Grace in its owne condition The spirituall sluggard i● ●he onely poore man Hee ●●at lies downe in the sleepe ●f sinne shall rise in shame No such diseased person ●s the spirituall sluggard ●is poverty and shame may ●ome slowly but violently as ●n Armed man I beseech thee O Lord ●o waken mee from slum●ring or sleeping in sinne So may worke powerfully and ●h●erefully while the time ●nd day of grace doth shine ●he night of death will come ●hen no man can worke I ●ould wish that all would ●ake St. Pauls counsell Awake thou that sleepest arise ●ud stand up and Christ shall ●ive thee light Somnus animae periculosus MEDITATION 43. Vpon the sight of a faire Garden I Question not the Gard●ners skill nor his diligenc● neither doubt I the goodne●● either of the Ground 〈◊〉 of the Seed sowne in i● Yet I see more Weeds the● Herbes or Rootes wha● base vsurping intruding Hinderers are these of be●●ter things Pull them up what make they growing 〈◊〉 so choyce a Piece to th● disturbance of those whole some and medicinabl● Hearbes and Flowers se● the patient Wisedome of the Master They must grow for
a vaine folly was it to dippe in water to swimme in blood What a strange delusion was this to seeme the cleaner to be the fo●ler Outward pretences may and are often voyde of sincerity Many Roman Pharisees doe often sprinkle themselves in Holy water yet vnder this wallow in the blood of Princes and Gods weaker members and so many Hypocrites amongst us under the forme of sanctity commit the deepest and desperatest impieties The worst complexions and sordidst natures are deepliest pain●ed The grosser villanies have the fairer excuse That great Imposter when Hee meanes worst appeares as ●n Angell of Light We ●●e not to relye upon appearances I desire not to ●ash with him I had ra●her have a cleane Heart ●nd foule Hands then cleane Hands and a soule Heart Praestat esse●quam ●ideri MEDITATION 3. Vpon the sight of a Toade VVHich of us tiro are of the Ancienter House the Earth is our mother This creature may plead antiquity of nature I of sinne My originall Polution makes this so loathsome to the sight I am beholden to it for bearing so patiently some part of my burthen By nature I am as full of poyson as It. Every sinne is not onely venemous but mortall In my corrupted nature I doe appeare in the Eyes of God as ugly as this deformed beast It would perhaps be better if it could I may bee if I will This creatures deformity comes from mee mine from my selfe and Satan How am I beholden to that God that did not though hee iustly might have made me so How am I bound to praise Him who to make mee comely le ts the whole creature suffer under vanity Rom. 8. MEDITATION 4. Vpon hearing a Woman to die in child-bed THE unlawfull desire to taste fruit made her di● in bearing fruit Eves sinne procurd her suffering The opening her wombe is a preparative to her grave It may well bee called a Travaile when the Mother takes her journey out of the World I see truely what a dangerous thing it is to conceive and breed sinne St. Iames spoke true That sinne when it is conceived brings fort●death Children I thinke have good cause to love their Parents who are willing to part with life themselves to give it these How ought ●ve then O Saviour to love thee who to give us eternall life was so willing to lay downe thine owne life in the grave And in the case of regeneration so must every Child of God doe His body must die wholy to sinne that soule and body may live wholy unto righteousnes unto glory The onely way to live hereafter is to die here MEDITATION 5. Vpon SAVLS going from Heirusalem to Damascus VVHither posts this deepe-learnd Pharisee with such Eagernes and Zeale did Gamaliel his T●tor ever read such a Lecture of bloody persecution to him where found he this Axiome in the whole Law to persecute the Gospell where learnt he ever to make Mose fight against Christ Could he so deeply love the Seruant and yet kill the Master Al● knowledge and Religion in ●●y professor is but zeale blin●d without Christ. It may ●eme strange that the Professors of Divinity should ●ave such ●arres and so deep●● uyed Behold the great ●oodnes of God In the depth of darknes Saul is caught ●nd compassed with the great ●●ght of a glorious Sauiour We ●re not masters of our Owne ●houghts It was a true ●peech of Ioseph ye thought ●ill but God brought it to Good VVhen wee thinke many times to doe most ●ee then cannot doe any ●hing I see it 's vaine figh●ing against the Church of Christ. God does well know ●ow to catch a Sinner at ad●antage Even all thing persecution it selfe work for the good of Gods Saint He beganne his Iourney Saul But ends it a Paul 〈◊〉 if I be asked where Saul 〈◊〉 I may safely answere Is 〈◊〉 Saul now among the Prophet and Apostles blessed for Euer MEDITATION 6. Vpon DAVIDS Adultery IS it not pity such a Ros● should have such a Canker so faire a face such a Blemish But what Saint is priviledged with the state ●f Perfection here This ●●ll as it proved was but for is surer standing better ●eed taking The greatest ●●enesit I see that God ●nds to recover Him is a ●od Sermon preacht and Well ●pplyed by a Worthy and well ●arned Prophet send O God such alwayes upon ●eed in the Courts of earth●y Princes They deserue there ●laces with reverence with ●espect No Member of Christ can expect a Freedome from tentation Our head ●ad his trialls and those ●harpe ones too by that wick●d One. the fairest Sunne sometimes meetes with Cloudes So the purest lights of the Church want 〈◊〉 their blemishes O God● let not me so much 〈◊〉 that he fell as reioyce 〈◊〉 he did in time recover 〈◊〉 me looke well to my self For I may be sure that if S●tan durst invade such a religious Crowne He will not 〈◊〉 the weaker subiect The be● course to keepe out Satan to avoyd idlenesse MEDITATION 7. Vpon CAINS murther● his brother A●●L VVHat but two ●●thr●n in a who● World and they together 〈◊〉 the eares What 's the ●uarrell for wealth or ho●●o● the one was not knowne ●he other not affected Was 〈◊〉 religion this would have ●aught Cain love not revenge This was an early persecution ●he divell began Warr be●imes goodnesse can no soo●●er be begun but it shall ●●eete with opposition We must not loose our religion though we bleed for it by our 〈◊〉 brethren All in a family 〈◊〉 not the children of the 〈◊〉 father Grace is not tyed 〈◊〉 the first-borne God may ●hoose the youngest leave the ●ldest Cain scornes to hate ●nder blood-shedding The divell is a murtherer from the beginning Brethrens divisions especially in matters of Religion are hardly reconciled But though this one dyes God knowes how to bring up another goodnes shall be sure of Enemies but it cannot be utterly rooted out Abell hath had abundance of brethren Cai● did not so much kill Abeas himselfe It is a true Maxime that Sanguis m●●rti●rum semen Ecclesiae S. 〈◊〉 shall conclude it in thi● saying That he that 〈◊〉 borne after the flesh persec●●ted him that was borne afte● the Spirit MEDITATION 3. Vpon the good Samaritan and the wounded Man SEe how we poore wretches are beset with dangers our life is but a con●inued passage through robbers Free booters It 's the safest to keepe our selues at home When we goe forth we expose our selues to hazards It 's not every Mans happines to have such a compassionate Passenger That man liues safe whose minde keepes within A retired life hath the fewer inconueniences This Man found most good at the hands o● a stranger A friend is more Neere then a brother It is grace not nature affection not affinity that are most sensible and sympathizing of distresses I see plainely that those Iewish ceremo●nies are not so Helpfull as the mercies of God in Iesus Christ It 's not