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A06500 A commentarie vpon the fiftene Psalmes, called Psalmi graduum, that is, Psalmes of degrees faithfully copied out of the lectures of D. Martin Luther ; very frutefull and comfortable for all Christian afflicted consciences to reade ; translated out of Latine into Englishe by Henry Bull. Luther, Martin, 1483-1546.; Bull, Henry, d. 1575? 1577 (1577) STC 16975.5; ESTC S108926 281,089 318

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tentations continuing and succeding one after an other one still following vpon an other But what is the ende of this continuance Euen this that they shall possesse eternall ioy and felicitie As the author of the Epistle to the Hebrewes doth notably declare No chastising sayth he for the present time seemeth to be ioyous but greeuous here you heare of teares but afterward it bringeth the quiet frute of righteousnes vnto them which are thereby exercised here you heare that they shall returne with ioy Albeit then that this seede is prolonged and deferred yet is it not so for euer but the ioy that shall follow is euerlasting Thus the kingdom of Christ consisteth not in the power and riches of the world but in eternall redemption which we must attaine vnto through great afflictions and infinite crosses Wherein notwithstanding we are supported by the word and prayer vntill we come to the fulnes of our saluation in the kingdom of heauen The 127. Psalme Except the Lorde builde the house they labour in vaine that build it This Psalme beareth the title of Salomon and in deede it seemeth that Salomon was the author thereof For Salomon in all his books sheweth him selfe to be a politicall teacher and handleth not the principall article of his father Dauid as touching iustification or as touching Christ the heire and ofspring of Dauid but he treateth of those thinges wherein he him selfe was exercised and whereunto he was appoynted of God that is to say of things perteining to ciuill gouernment And this he doth in such sorte as in politicall matters no Philosopher did euer teach For he applieth all ciuill gouernment vnto faith whatsoeuer is done either in the cōmon wealth or houshold affaires the same he referreth altogither to the diuine spirituall gouernment which other writers whether they be Philosophers or Oratours do not For albeit both lawes do teach reason also doth shew by what meanes a cōmon wealth or a family may rightly be gouerned yet doe they not teach from whence the successe therof must be loked for that the things which are well deuised may prosper take good effect For reason knoweth but onely the materiall and the formall cause the finall and efficient cause it knoweth not that is it knoweth not from whence ciuill and houshold gouernment commeth and by whom it is preserued or to what ende it tendeth Aristotle Xenophon Plato Cicero and others although they wrote very well of ciuill gouernment yet doe they not teach the true efficient and the finall cause thereof For they thinke publike peace honestie and glorie to be the finall and the principall cause And the efficient cause they make a wise man or a prudent Magistrate or as they term him a good man or a good Citizen But we shall heare Salomon disputing farre otherwise For they haue and doe follow onely the iudgement of reason but he hath the holy Ghost which teacheth him the finall and efficient cause of ciuill and houshold gouernment He hath also reason and experience for he gouerned both a common wealth and a family Wherefore he is taught not only by the holy Ghost but also by experience to speake as he doth For he was occupied in great affaires and had experience of high and weighty matters And we ought the more highly to esteme of this Psalme for that it is written of so excellent a man concerning true politicall and houshold gouernment Which Psalme although it be but short for it conteyneth but only sixe verses yet is it full of singular doctrine And as for the formall and materiall cause he toucheth them not For he seeth that there are houses already there are common wealthes well ordered and also furnished with good lawes and Magistrates But is that enough No forsoth For the two principall causes are yet lacking For as touching the formall cause it may be that the Gentiles had better lawes then the Iewes And as touching the materiall cause it may be also that some Magistrates among the Gentiles were better then they which were among the people of god But these are but onely the matter and the forme We must goe further therefore and seeke to know the principall causes of common wealthes and houshold gouernment who it is that maketh a common wealth and familie also to what ende he ordeyneth the same These causes the Gentiles naturall reason do not know For reason beholdeth but onely the matter and the forme and because she knoweth not the efficient cause therof she goeth about to gouerne common weales and families according to that ende which she her selfe doth imagine Therefore she is deceaued and all her policies and deuises come to naught So Demosthenes taketh vpon him to rule the common wealth of Athens he maketh him selfe the efficient cause thereof that is he goeth about to gouerne it by his owne wisedom and policie as a wise man To what ende Forsoth to establish publike peace and tranquillitie to winne glory and quietnes to himselfe and his cuntrey and to the ende that all thinges may come to passe as he by his owne policie and wisedom hath deuised But God who hateth proude deuises and presumptuous enterprises worketh farre otherwise In the matter then and in the forme there is no default but in the efficient cause the wisest man of all is deceaued The same hapned to Cicero in the common wealth of Rome And the same also hapned to Iulius Caesar. Nowe therefore commeth this teacher Salomon which hath a farre other maner of spirite ioyned with great experience which teacheth who is the author and the ende that is to say the efficient and the finall cause of ciuill and houshold gouernment For he comprehendeth both and teacheth that he which would happily gouerne a familie or a common wealth should not make him selfe the principall cause therof for then should he ouerthrow al. For in both kinds of life a man shall finde many troubles which will vexe and torment his minde driue him to impaciencie cause him to despaire and to be weary of all togither yea and to say that Satan brought him into those calamities And not without cause For why doth he presume to take vppon him such a gouernment as is farre aboue his power So Demosthenes being oppressed with many troubles in the common weale sayd that if there were two wayes set before him the one leading to the common weale and the other to death he would chuse the way that leadeth vnto death before the other Likewise it hapneth in houshold gouernment He that entreth into matrimonie promiseth vnto him selfe all easy pleasaunt thinges He thinketh it an easie matter to frame his wife to bring vp his children and to order his family as he him selfe doth imagine When these things proue contrary to his expectation either his wife is disobedient his children stubborn vnthākful his family negligent or his neighbours troublesome
such wayes as he liketh best But afterwardes the matter falleth out contrary to his expectation Now his wife lyeth sicke now his children dye now one calamitie or an other hapneth An other man deuiseth an exact forme of gouerning of the common wealth but experience teacheth him that he is miserablie deceaued All this is done and in deede wel done to the end thou shouldest knowe that God will not suffer thy presumption vnpunished which goest about by thine owne wisedom and policy to take from him his diuine power and maiestie But if no trouble happen to such presumptuous and carelesse wretches it is a manifest token that great and horrible calamities hang ouer their heades which at length they shall feele and shall not escape To be briefe there is no kinde of life wherein ye shall not see verie many thinges come othewise to passe then a man woulde looke for Howe many thinges haue hapned to our aduersaries the Papistes contrary to their expectation And of those thinges whereof they thought them selues to be most sure and certeyne what haue they brought to passe So it hapneth to euery Magistrate and to euery familie that many tymes they can not accomplish that they take in hande What gayne they then by their policies and paynefull trauells but vanitie in that they torment them selues without any profite and so spende their liues that there is almost no tyme wherein they enioy a quiet minde So shall ye finde some Princes to be most happie if they woulde quietly enioy those giftes wherewith God hath endued them And this is the meane whereby they might so doe if they woulde commende 〈◊〉 vnto god But what doe they They take vppon them those thinges which are aboue their power and not required of God and lose that happines which they did enioy and with these cares and trauells they afflict and torment them selues euen vnto death And worthely For why doe they so arrogantly take vppon them those thinges which God requireth not at their handes and doe not quietly enioy those thinges which they possesse As Salomon sayth There is an euill which I haue seene vnder the Sunne and it is muche amongest men A man to whome God hath giuen riches and treasures and honour and he wanteth nothing for his soule of all that it desireth but God giueth him not power to eate thereof c. For if we could be content with those thinges which we haue and quietly vse the giftes of God and so reioyce with our wife our children and families geuing thankes into God for the same and with a good conscience doing our dutie in our vocation what could be so happy as we But we doe that which this verse forbiddeth We rise earely we lye downe late we torment our selues and with sorrowe we eate our breade This is the life of man throughout the whole world as the holy Ghoste here witnesseth The cause is for that no man is content with his owne state The benefites which God hath bestowed vpon vs to vse and enioy we doe mislike And as we doe not way or consider our owne good gifts and commodities so haue we a loue and liking of other mens and couet the like And what haue we thereby Uanitie of vanities bread of affliction vnprofitable care and trauel lying down and rysing vp in vaine Wherefore the godly alone doe content them selues with those good thinges which they enioy For they knowe that God is the giuer and gouerner of all good thinges Wherefore they laboure with an vpright heart and those things which they get with their labour they vse as the gifts of God do not presume to be the authors and efficient causes thereof therefore they haue quietnes and peace of conscience And if any trouble happen they can ouercome it with Iob saying God hath giuen and God hath taken away the name of God be blessed So can they bothe vse the good giftes which they haue and also ouercome all troubles and calamities The flesh can doe neither of these but is occupyed only about such thinges as it would haue and whilest it seeketh and traueleth for the same it loseth the good thinges which presently it doth enioy As did Esops dogge which in snatching at the shadow lost the flesh which he had in his iawes and the shadow withall This dogge therefore is an image of the whole worlde wherin ye may se as it were one master of the houshold to whom God hath giuen a wife children a family substance c. These thinges are the flesh in the doggs mouth What doth he now The giftes which he hath he doth not regarde but afflicteth him selfe with other vaine cares for such thinges as he hath not nor shall euer attaine vnto But these thinges can not be learned out of bookes ▪ but experience and practise is the onely glose that interpreteth this Psalme For I my self also doe vnderstand these matters and can teach them vnto others Yet often times it so commeth to passe that I weary my selfe with vaine labours and trauells The cause is for that the desire and presumption to be like vnto God ▪ which is in vs ▪ and begun in Paradise can not be vtterly shaken of no not in the Sainctes and children of god Nowe the more a man hath of this originall poyson the lesse quietnes of minde and inward peace he hath according to that saying of Augustine Thou hast commaunded Lord and so commeth it to passe that euery vnordinate mind should be a punishment vnto it self For like as drunkennes bringeth with it his owne punishment that is to fay cruditie and headach so an inordinate mind bringeth with it the bread of sorrow and laboureth in vaine This is it which I sayd before that this sentence is to be vnderstand not onely of artificers but generally of all men in all offices and callings that it is in vayne for them to rise early that is to say to be curious and carefull and to presume of them selues in any kind of life So the Magistrate riseth earely when he hath a care that all thinges may be done as he hath determined Likewise in all kindes of life to rise earely is when a man hath no quietnes no time of rest from cares and trauells vnlesse he obteyne that he seeketh for But all this is in vayne Hereof haue I seene innumerable examples and ye shall see the like if ye liue Yong men because they lacke experience doe not yet vnderstand these matters But in time ye shall see that in all states and kindes of life in husbandmen artificers the learned vnlearned Magistrates Kinges Princes ye shall see I say that they rise earely that is they are carefull they appoynt certeyne endes whereunto they direct all their deuises and policies They make them selues efficient causes and take vpon them to rule all thinges by their owne wisedom This the Gentiles also did see and therefore they sayd that fortune beareth rule
First of all here is to be noted that the Prophet doth not by and by enter i●ts the promises of God concerning matrimony as though they were giuen onely in respect of matrimony but he beginneth with the first table calleth him blessed that feareth the lord And this he doth to shew that the world doth not vnderstād what it is to marry a wife and to liue in the state of Christian matrimony Wherefore if any troubles come it can not beare them patiently and therefore it is not blessed but rather miserable and vnhappy But he that feareth the Lord whether he be called to any gouernment in the common weale or marry a wife is blessed what successe so euer follow thereof For it may be that euen they also which feare the Lord shall haue no good successe in matrimony but shall be coupled eyther with wicked or with froward and disobedient wiues or else they shall be otherwise shaken with one tentation or other as with the vntimely death of a good wife or with vntractable and degenerate children or with barennes lacke of fruite Here if a man be godly and fearing God he shall soone ouercome these troubles tentations For thus will he thinke with him selfe I haue mette with such a wife as is vnto me many wayes a great crosse and vexation with whom no man else could quietly liue one day But this gift God hath giuen me that I should know and acknowledge him to be both my creator and father and to learne patiently to endure abide his good will and pleasure c. with this gift are ouercome not onely all the troubles and miseries of matrimony but all calamities besides what so euer The Prophet therfore beginneth this holy hymne or this mariage song after this maner If thou wilt be happy and blessed hast a mind to liue in the state of matrimony this shalt thou finde that the Lord will giue vnto thee a wife house and children with other commodities But aboue all things see that thou feare God and in the name of God begin this kind of life This is a profitable doctrine which here the holy Ghost setteth forth euen at the beginning to the ende that he which can not liue a single life should begin his matrimony with the first commaundement and calling vpon God for his help succour should come forth into the presence of God and say Lord thou sayest vnto me in thy word that thou art and wilt be my Lord and my god Thou hast made me a man or thou hast made me a woman This is thine owne creation and this is thine owne worke I did not so make my selfe neyther was I so made by fortune or chaūce Giue good successe therfore vnto thy creature graunt that I may be a happy husbande or that I may be a happy wife c. that so we may beginne in the feare of God that we be not secure careles or presuming of our owne strength nor rashly enter into this kind of life like sauage brutish people and such as neither know nor feare God but may call vpon him who hath created vs to this kind of life Then shall all thinges come luckely to passe then shall they haue good successe The holy Ghost beginneth his holy hymne after an other maner then other Poetes doe For he exhorteth vs that we shoulde first of al call vppon God and conceiue in our harts a sure trust of his mercy For God will not turne his eare from thee if thou call him thy creator but will againe acknowledge thee to be his creature and will not deny this to be his worke that thou art a man or that thou art a woman But presumption he abhorreth and will not haue thee to beginne this kinde of life trusting in thine owne policie but rather that thou shouldest suspecte the same knowing that God will not prosper thy doings and policies except thou aske counsell of him Therefore sayth hee Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. For we haue dayly examples before our eyes that at the beginning there is often times vehement and feruent loue betweene man and wife whiche afterwarde is easily quenched so that either they liue miserably and vnquietly togither or else the one forsaketh the other Some times they are so drowned in wealth and pleasure that they liue all togither without the feare of God And this is a farre greater misery But worthely doe these miseryes and calamities fal vppon them For why doe they not ioyne withall the feare of God Here thou muste learne therefore to liue in the feare of God who hath created thee that thou shouldest be a husbande or that thou shouldest be a wife and he will also gouerne blesse and prosper thy mariage But if thou wilt not acknowledge him to be thy gouerner but wilt rule thy wife and thy family after thine owne fantasie without inuocation and prayer vnto God it will followe that either thou shalt ouerthrow all togither or shalt be so blinded with continuall successe that thou shalt fall yet into farre greater euils God wil be feared and serued that is he will haue vs to confesse and acknowledge that what so euer we take in hande can not prosper or haue any good successe without his helpe and assistaunce It is very profitable and necessary with all diligence to teach this doctrine to those which are yet young that they may know it and follow it The cause is this for that matrimony remayneth in the world and in the flesh that is to say euen in the middest of Deuils The husband as touching the fleshe soone lotheth or hateth the wife or the wife her husband What is the cause hereof Euen this is the cause for that matrimony consisteth in the fleshe which is wholy corrupt poysoned with sinne This the flesh I meane Satan inflameth with hatred and euery light offence or else with ielousie Wherefore if thou looke not vnto the wil of God thy matrimony can neuer be vnto thee either stable or comfortable Wherefore youth must be well enstructed as touching matrimony that when any man shall marry a wife he may liue with her in the fauour and blessing of God and say Lord this is thy gift that I am a man This wife also is thy gift We are in the worlde and this fraile flesh and in the middest of deuils the disturbers of matrimoniall loue Giue vnto vs therefore thy blessing that albeit some offences doe rise betwene vs yet thy blessing and the reuerent consideration of thy giftes wherewith thou hast endued vs in this our matrimony may vanquish and ouercome the same c. This is the cause why he beginneth this verse with the feare of God that he may take from vs all presumption lest we shoulde thinke that we shall haue and enioy all thinges as we our selues haue imagined For so shal it not be or if it so come to passe it shal not be
A COMMENTARIE VPON THE FIFTENE PSALMES CALLED PSALMI Graduum that is Psalmes of Degrees FAITHFVLLY COPIED OVT OF THE LECTVRES OF D. Martin Luther very frutefull and comfortable for all Christian afflicted consciences to reade Translated out of Latine into Englishe by HENRY BVLL Imprinted at London by Thomas Vautroullier dwelling in the Blacke Friers by Ludgate CVM PRIVILEGIO 1577. TO THE CHRISTIAN READER GRACE AND PEACE in Christ Iesu. ALBEIT the reading of the Scripture it selfe and the simple text thereof without further helpes hath matter enough to giue intelligence and instruction sufficient for the soule of mā to saluation if with hart and diligence it be earnestly applyed and followed as it should yet notwithstanding the helpe of good cōmentaries explications annexed withall especially such as be learned and godly is not hurtfull but rather is much requisite greatly needefull both for opening of places of difficulty for dissoluing doubtes and debating of controuersies such as may and vse many times to happen Wherefore most highly bound we are to the goodnes of our Lorde and Sauiour who hath herein so well prouided for our infirmitie in blessing this time of ours so plentifully with so many learned writers and worthy workers in his word As in al times he hath done but most chiefly in this time of ours is now to be seene In which time as we haue to giue thankes for many other of late memorie famous singular instruments of Christes glory so namely for the author compiler of this present work Martin Luther VVho although of many hitherto either hath not beene redde and so not throughly knowne or of a great number hated and maligned or of some lightly regarded or peraduenture misiudged Yet to such as either haue aduisedly redd him or shall be disposed to take trial of him hauing by experience of infirmities and affliction any skill to iudge of true diuinitie shall be founde emonges many preachers teachers of this our time most chiefly worthie not onely of iust commendation but also to be compared with the chiefest yea and so necessary for these times of the Church to be seene and redde that the poore mourning soules of the afflicted can not well want him that for diuers purposes especially for two principall causes First for true comfort spiritual consolation to such weake minds as in cases of conscience are distressed and wrastle in faith against the terrour of Satan of death of damnation against the power of the lawe and wrath of God wherein I see very fewe or none without comparison be it spoken in these our daies to instruct more fruitfully with like feeling and experience Secondly for discerning and discussing the difference betwene the law and the Gospell how these two partes are to be separated and distincted a sonder as repugnant and contrary and yet notwithstanding howe they both stand togither in Scripture and doctrine and yet in doctrine no repugnance The knowledge whereof how requisite it is for all Christians to learne the miserable lack thereof will soone declare For where these two be not rightly parted but confounded what can followe there but confusion of conscience either leading to despaire or else to blind securitie without any order in doctrine or true comfort of saluation As by examples of time is soone seene namely if we loke into the later times of the Romish Church where for want of right distinguishing betwene these two great errors haue risen and no great maruel For where the Gospell is taken for the lawe and the lawe for the Gospel and Christ receaued but onely for a law giuer and where things go by workes and lawe of deseruing what hope or assurance of saluation can be there considering our workes in their best kind to be so imperfect and vnprofitable And what shall be said then of our naughtie workes but especially ▪ what shall be said then to the mourning lamenting sinner who feleth no good thing dwelling in him but all wickednes shall he then despaire or how else will ye comfort him For if Christ in his principall office be but a teacher of the lawe and of workes and that be the chiefest thing to be required in a Christian to worke saluation by the law of working where is then grace mercie promise faith iustifying peace rest of conscience redemption from malediction of the law if we be vnder the law still briefly where is the new couenāt of God made by his sonne if the olde couenant made by Moses doe yet remaine if it do not remaine then must there needs be a differēce betwene the law the gospel betwene the old Testamēt the new betwene the law of works the law of faith betwene Moses Christ betwene the master the seruaunt betwene Agar and Sara and their two children Now what difference this is thou shalt not neede Christian reader by me to be instructed hauing here the boke of Martin Luther to reade and peruse VVho as in his former treatise before set forth vppon the Epistle to the Galathians so likewise in these his commentaries vppon the Psalmes doth so liuely at large discourse that matter with many other things moe full of heauenly instruction edificatiō that hauing him though thou hadst no other expositour vpon the holy Scripture thou maist haue almost sufficient to make a perfect souldier against all the fierie darts of the tempting enemie Againe hauing all other and lacking this writer thou shouldest yet want some thing to the perfect practise and experience of a Christian diuine Although I neede not in the behalfe of this treatise vse any suche commendation the booke being able sufficiently to commende it selfe yet thus much by way of preface I thought good to notifie and premonish whereby I might the rather animate and encourage thy studious diligence good reader to ouer-reade this booke Wherin if it shall please thee to bestow the labour as the paine I trust will not be tedious so in the profite thereof I doubt not but thy labour shall be recompensed with no lesse spirituall consolation to thy soules health then the godly translator thereof M. Bull did receaue in translating of the same Who as he once made his vow vnto the Lord for certeine causes to turne this booke from latine into english so with no lesse fidelitie did well performe the same Blessed be the Lorde therefore which both put him in mind first to take this worke in hand and also graunted him life to the accomplishment thereof for so it pleased the Lord to continue his life so long till this vowed worke was fully finished And not onely that but also after his trauell taken gaue him to receaue such sweetenes thereby as in neuer thing more in all his life Now from him departed to turne to you that remaine aliue I meane all studious readers as we● thē that be wel willers to the gospel as also that be enemies yet not called to
the truth both which sortes I haue here in few words to exhort to desire first such as haue mind to heare reade the doctrine of truth that they in life will follow that they heare and reade Of the other companie this I haue to craue that for as much as the gracious goodnes of the Lord hath raysed vp before their face such plenty of preachers teachers writers and translators wherby by all meanes to call them and to do them good they wisely againe for their partes wil consider what they haue to do that is to take the time before them not to refuse the riches of Gods great grace offered least peraduenture hereafter ignorance wil not excuse them wheras now the light of truth so euidently appearing wittingly and willingly they stoppe their eyes from seeing their eares from hearing The Lord God of peace father of all mercy consolation for Christ Iesus his Sonnes sake open our hartes and senses that all preiudice pertinacie set aside we may both be willing to learne the right way of perfect faith and truth and no lesse carefull in life to follow that we learne growing vp in grace and knowledge more and more till we atteyne at length to the full measure which is in Christ Iesu our Lord Amen Iohn Foxe THE PREFACE OF D. MARTIN LVTHER VPPON the fifteene Psalmes called Psalmes of degrees YE haue heard me before many times declare in the beginning of my Lectures for vvhat cause I haue taken in hand to expound the holy Scriptures not for any desire I haue to teach nevve and straunge thinges vvhich haue not beene knovvne or heard before for our diuinitie is so vvel knovvn both in the Latine tongue and also in our ovvne Language that vve may seeme novv to haue more neede of exhortation then instruction but because the diligent teaching and setting forth of the vvorde of God is a kinde of Gods seruice or vvorship properly belonging to the nevve Testament being much more acceptable vnto God more holy excellent then vvere all the vvorshippings and sacrifices of the olde Testament and therefore euen vvhen the lavv vvas yet in his ful strength the holy Prophets of God vtterly reiecting the burnt offerings and other sacrifices of the lavv did commend aboue all other the sacrifice of praise In like maner also ought vve so much the more earnestly diligently to set forth this kind of vvorship because that after so great blindnes vvherein vv haue liued the vvisedom of God hath as the Sunne in the mid day appeared and shined vnto vs againe Therefore like as it hath bene counted a maner of seruitude in times past to heare a godly sermon vvhich men vvere vvont to doe euen as they did their seruile labors so must vve novv othervvise thinke that they vvhich teach reade vvrite or heare the holy Scriptures are Gods true Priestes vvhich serue their God vvith a vvorthy and thankful kind of vvorship Albeit true it is also that vve can not here attaine to such full knovvledge of spirituall matters but that dayly vve haue neede to learne them again to be exercised confirmed therin because of the continuall vexations and assaultes of Satan that as vve are neuer vvithout occasions of declining falling from God so likevvise vve should not cease to exercise our selues in the continuall meditation of the vvord of God to the edifying both of our selues and of the Church For there is nothing so pernitious as the opinion of many at this day vvho as soone as they haue gotten neuer so litle knovvledge of this heauenly vvisedom thinke them selues by and by to be greate doctors For seeing that these thinges doe not consist in fine and eloquent talke in reasoning and disputing but in practise and experience directed not by mans reason but by the spirite of God they are miserably deceiued that rest in bare and naked knovvledge vvhich is but vnprofitable vvithout experience and practise In the olde Testament God appoynted but onely the ten commaundements vvherin he vvould haue his people to be exercised and occupyed But vvho vvas there euer amonge the Sainctes of God vvhich could say that he vvas able to atteyne to the vvisedom of the holy Ghost sette forth in those commaundements And shall vve vvhich in the nevv Testament haue the vvhole Scripture set forth vnto vs glory in the fulnes and perfection of our knovvledge Let vs not thinke therefore so highly of our selues but let vs humble our selues before the holy Ghoste and confesse this vvisedom to be infinite and such as vve could neuer fully attayne vnto although vve should spende our vvhole life in the study of the Scriptures For although by the grace of God vve are not vvithout some knovvledge yet because vve are continually oppressed vvith cloudes of tentations vve must haue recourse to this fountaine yea to this fire that our hartes may be kindled therevvith and that vve may giue no place to Satan or our ovvne flesh vvhereby the first fruites of the spirit might be quenched in vs This lothing of Gods vvord vvhich riseth of a false opinion of knovvledge is alas to common at this day For a remedy therefore against this euill Moses commaundeth that the lavv of God should be diligently set forth to the posteritie that is to say should continually be taught and exercised though it vvere neuer so vvel knovvne before For this cause therefore I haue taken in hand to expounde the Psalmes that vve might learne to abhorre this damnable lothing of the vvord of God and also to confirme and as it vvere to nourish the good spirite of God in vs by the exercise and practise of the same But the chiefest cause that moued me hereunto is for that vve knovv this kind of vvorship aboue all other to please God vvhen vve set forth his vvord in teaching in reading in vvriting in hearing c. And this one thing ought to keep vs in the continual exercise of the vvord of god For to teach to exercise and to set forth the vvorde vvhat is it else but continually to offer sacrifice vnto God continually to vvorship God continually to be exercised in the three first commaundements Lamentable it is to see vvhat a multitude there is of such as cōtinually blaspheme God either in teaching false doctrine or in persecuting the truth VVherfore very necessary it is that vve vvhiche in comparison of them are so small a number should serue the Lord our God praise his holy name vvhich both hath giuen vs this life and promised the life to come Moreouer our ovvne daunger giueth vs good vvarning to take heede that vvhiles vve thus neglect loth the vvord vve feele not his heauy vvrath plage vpon vs before vve be vvare For vvhen vve are once vveery of the vvorde then follovveth the contempt of the same vvhich contēpt the Lord so punisheth that he taketh his vvord cleane avvay Hereof the Papacie may be
were iudged with equitie The celestiall Ierusalem hath the tribunall seate where iudgement is shall be most iustly pronounced vpon the vniuersall world and vppon all men that either haue beene be or shall be The Lord graunt that with an inuincible faith we may mount vp to this celestiall Ierusalem the citie of God where are such ioyes felicitie as neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor tongue can tel nor yet heart can think Verse 6. Pray for the peace of Ierusalem let them prosper that loue thee To pray for the peace of Ierusalem is to pray for the safetie prosperitie and welfare of the Church of God that Satan haue no power to hinder the course and fruite of the word Dauid sawe first in spirit this horrible contempt of the word and ministery moreouer he saw that this glorious gift could not be preserued by mans diligence Therefore he goeth about here to stirre vppe the harts of men to pray for the preseruation of this gift As if he said Here is the Lords owne seate and throne of iudgement notwithstanding how few doe reuerence and regard it as they should doe Yea the greatest part of the world hateth it and wisheth the subuersion therof Wherfore I exhort you ▪ O ye litle flock to honour and reuerence this seate to pray for the peace thereof louingly to salute it and to say The Lord out of Sion blesse thee c. So long as this citie flourisheth ye haue the Lord him self speaking saying giuing victory against all the assaults of Satan against sinne the terrour of conscience c. What cause haue ye then to pray for the prosperitie of this citie wherby ye inioy such heauenly benefites When the church of God doth not prosper it cannot go wel with any perticular member thereof No maruell then why Dauid so earnestly exhorteth all the faithfull to pray for the peace and prosperitie of the Church Wherefore if we will pray as we ought to do we must first and principally commend vnto God the common state of the church For he that seeketh his owne welfare and neglecteth the state and prosperitie of the Church doth not only shew him selfe to be voyd of all sense and zeale of true piety but also the prayers which he maketh for him selfe are in vaine profite him nothing Let them prosper that loue thee He wisheth vnto them which loue the word and reuerence this seat that God would blesse them with all maner of blessing felicitie And this prayer is very necessary For we see dayly howe the true professors of the Gospell are in daunger by the ministers of Satan the enemies of God his truth on euery side which could be content rather to haue the Turke to reigne ouer them yea the deuill him selfe and all the furies of hell then to see vs prosper and the Gospel to flourish least their cursed workes of darknes and infidelitie should appeare vnto the world Verse 7. Peace be within thy walls and prosperitie within thy pallaces Nowe that the Prophet hath exhorted all men to pray for the peace and prosperitie of Ierusalem he turneth vnto the citie and doth not onely wish wel vnto it but also he sheweth vnto other how they should pray for it The summe whereof is that true religion may flourish the ministerie and ministers of the word may be defended against the false prophets that concord may be maintained emongst the pastors and preachers of the word and that the ciuil gouernment may prosper Howe necessary this prayer is experience daily teacheth vs For where these 2. things are namely concord in the Church and peace in the ciuill state there can no good thing be lacking therfore the deuil so busily laboureth to trouble the peace of them both This was the cause why there was such a multitude of false prophets rebells seditious persons emongst this people as the stories do testify Wherfore Dauid being taught by his owne experience prayeth for these 2. thinges without the which the world is nothing els but a wild desert Example hereof may be vnto vs the late times wherein we liued vnder the Pope before this light of the Gospel beganne to shyne For then when the sound doctrine of the word was lacking what could the Pope all his shauelings doe What one verse did they rightly vnderstand throughout the whole psalter Wherby it came to passe that they were not able to resist most manifest impieties which by the strong mighty delusions of the deuil ouerflowed the world as in pilgrimages where they maintained most damnable idolatries and caused the people to adore the works of their owne handes and if any man spake against them he was vp and by taken and burnt as an heretike So true is it that when the word is once lost the world remaineth in most horrible darkenes and can doe nothing else but abuse the giftes of God and so falleth to most detestable impietie or else to desperation This Dauid foreseeth and therefore he prayeth so earnestly for the prosperitie of Ierusalem for faithfull pastors in the Church and godly Princes in the politike state Verse 8. For my brethren and neighbours sakes I will wish thee now prosperitie Here Dauid sheweth the cause as he doth also in the verse following why he prayeth thus for Ierusalem As if he sayd In that I wish that peace may be in thee o Ierusalem in that I desire thy prosperity and welfare I doe it for my brethren and neighbours sakes that is for my fellowes and companions in faith and religion And here in his owne person he sheweth the commō complaint of all those that rule either in the church or in the common weale or in families which is that the greater part of men is euer peruerse and wicked The godly pastour when he goeth about with great care diligence to reforme the corrupt life and wickednes of the people seeth notwithstanding that the more part stil remaineth peruerse intractable The Magistrate traueling with like care and diligence in his calling findeth the people disobedient incorrigible Likewise is it in houshold gouernment What vnfaithfull seruice shalt thou finde euen amongst those whom thou thoughtest to haue found most true and faithfull Hereof it commeth that many are discomforted and vtterly discouraged seeing so litle fruite and successe to ensue of their godly trauels Notwithstanding we see it can not otherwise be For Satan our perpetuall enemy ceaseth neither night nor day to stirre vppe discord and peruerse opinions in the Church in the ciuil state stubborne and disobedient persons in houshold gouernment negligent and vnfaithfull families Here we must looke with Dauid not to the greater part which is euer wicked but to our brethren and neighbours So doth Paule in the 2. Timoth. 3. For the elects sake I susteyne and suffer all things sayth he For if it were not for their sakes who would willingly take vpon him the office of
they suffer togither so they cry vnto God for helpe and succour as well for other as for them selues Yea the common calamitie of their brethren is to them a greater crosse then their owne Haue mercy vpon vs c. This repetition as it doth declare a great vehemencie and feruentnes of spirite in the afflicted crying vnto God for helpe and deliuerance so it sheweth their affliction and calamitie to be exceeding greeuous For we haue suffered too much contempt He sayd before that the godly being brought to extreme miserie by the tyranny and oppression of the wicked did lift vp their eyes to God for helpe and succour Nowe he sheweth also what despite and reproch they suffred of the proud and scornfull Whereby it appeareth that the vngodly sought not only with crueltie and oppression but also with despite contempt and ignominy to tread as it were vnder foote the children of god He saith not onely we suffer contempt but we are filled with contempt and ignominie vsing a similitude taken of a vessell which is filled so full that it can conteine no more Thus the children of God do not burst out at the first into these gronings and grieuous complaints when so euer they are contemned and despised but patiently suffer in hope that God will at the length ease their miserye vntill they be filled with all maner of despite contempt and scorning of the wicked whereby they are compelled to cry vnto God doubling their complaint as followeth in the next verse Verse 4. Our soule is filled too ful of the mocking of the welthy and of the despitefulnes of the proude When the godly are not onely oppressed with iniuries hated and despised but also mocked and scorned of the wicked there can be to them no greater misery And this is it that they specially here complaine of as of all their calamities the moste greeuous The cause why he saith that the welthy and proud doe so spitefully sette them selues against the Church of God is for that they which are of power and authoritie in the world are alwaies wont to despise and contemne the godly which doe so much esteeme the glory wealth and prosperitie of this worlde that they regard nothing at all the spirituall kingdom of Christ yea the more they rise in wealth and dignitie the more their pride encreaseth This place teacheth then that it is no straunge or newe thing if the children of God be contemned of the children of this worlde which abound in wealth and riches And it is not without good cause that here the wealthy are also called proud for wealth and prosperity maketh men proude the children of this world and worldlinges I meane For Dauid and many other were also riche and yet they were so broken with afflictions and so exercised both within and without that they could haue no such pleasure or delight in their wealth and worldly prosperitie whereby they might waxe proude or fall into securitie But the case of the wicked is farre otherwise for their riches wealth and dignitie is as a rewarde of their securitie and vngodlines Contrariwise the godly are in misery and affliction despised of the world as abiects fooles and idiotes as the example of the auncient Prophets Christ him self and his apostles with all the deare Sainctes of God do teach we by daily experience doe proue For when we goe aboute to draw men from couetousnes blasphemy voluptuousnes and such other vices they laugh vs to scorne and when they heare of the iudgement of God the reward of sinne the punishment of the wicked they count 〈◊〉 this geare to be but a fable suche as Virgill imagineth of hell to make men afeard But if they were exercised with afflictions and calamities as the godly are and had a scholemaster to teach them that they are but men as Dauid prayeth in the ix Psalme they would learne another song The .124 Psalme If the Lord had not bene on our side c. This Psalme is a thankes giuing to God for his great mercy in preseruing his people placed as the stories doe shewe in the middes of the Gentiles and heathen people as a flock of sheepe in a wild forrest or in respect of the multitude as a citie compared to a mighty kingdom being compassed on euery side with the kings of the Assirians the Egyptians the Ammonites the Ismaelites the Moabites whom Satan had stirred vp with deadly hatred to vexe and persecute them seeking by all meanes to roote them out from the earth that thereby he might vtterly deface and abolish the word and worship of the lord This daunger Dauid sawe and thanked God which had preserued his people from the rage of so many lyons and dragons which notwithstanding that they neuer ceased to seeke their destruction yet all that they went about was in vaine And what a miracle was this that this people could so long continue notwithstanding the malice and rage of so many deuils Dauid therefore in this Psalme exhorteth his people to be thankfull to the Lorde their God so mightely preseruing defending and deliuering them from the violence of so many nations and kingdoms hating and persecuting them on euery side Which Psalme we also doe sing not onely against our aduersaries which hate and persecute the word but also against spirituall wickednes For we are taught by the Gospell that there are nowe seuen Deuills which lye in wayte for vs where as we were before in daunger but of one which cease not to styrre vppe the whole worlde against vs Yea our case were more tolerable if we had but onely the worlde and not Satan also with all his angells and the gates of hell wholy bent against vs But yet further to molest and vexe vs besides all these we haue also the third enemie which we cary alwayes about with vs which we nourish also and foster at home with vs and euen with in vs the flesh I meane which giueth vs no rest but continually tempteth vs to sinne fighteth against faith and striueth in our members against the spirite For as much then as the Church of God is neuer free from these daungers let vs also sing to the praise of Christ this psalme that he preserueth vs his members from all these enemies For it were extreme ingratitude not to acknowledge this miracle that notwithstanding all these the Church doth yet continue and that there be some which truely teach and confesse Christ beleue in Christ though Satan rage the world and false brethren conspire against vs and the flesh as an vntamed beast fight against the word and faith neuer so much This is the benefit then that Dauid so highly extolleth and wisheth that his people would vnderstand and giue thankes to God for the same Verse 1. If the Lord had not bene on our side may Israel now say Verse 2. If the Lord had not bene on our side when men rose vp against vs Verse 3. They had
power taketh no place in vs vntill we be vtterly to speake after the maner of the Scripture exinanited that is stript naked of all worldly hope and helpes that man hath in him selfe and brought to nothing like as when he saueth a ship from drowning now ready to perish and past all remedy As the two storyes of the Gospell one of the shippe the other of the daunger of Peter doe testifie Verse 2. As the mountaines are about Ierusalem so is the Lord about his people from henceforth and for euer Where many hundred thousands of men are there are scarsely 7. thousand which knowe God or beleue in God and yet for their sakes the whole multitude is called Gods people .. Euen so was it in Ierusalem Albeit the greater part was wicked and godles yet was Ierusalem called holy not onely in respect of a small number of the godly but also because God had his abiding there So when there was not one iust person in Sodome but Loth with his two daughters yet could not the angell destroy Sodome with fire so long as Loth was in it Likewise where 4 or 5. or 10. godly persons are to be found for their sakes the whole citie is called holy For these are the elect corner stones these are the precious pearles which God so highly estemeth and for whose sakes he spareth the wicked Therefore saith Dauid As Ierusalem is compassed about with mountaines so doth the Lord compasse his people and mightely defend them on euery side In like maner Zachary prophecieth of a citie whose wall is of fire These similitudes doe set forth vnto vs the safetie of Gods people that weake and litle por● flocke against all daungers Upon this promise if we also doe rest which at this day enioy the inestimable benefite of Gods holye word we shall be defended against the rage of Satan the whole worlde not by fiery and brasen walls but by the Lord him selfe These thinges albeit we cannot comprehend yet should we beleue them so certainly as if we did see them with our bodily eyes If we should see our selues compassed about with brasen and fiery walls we would be without all feare and triumph against Satan But it is a matter of faith not to trust vnto that which the eyes see but which the worde offereth and promiseth This one thing therefore is lacking in vs that we haue not the eyes of the spirite but we iudge according to the eyes and sense of the fleshe For else we should be no more afraide then they which beeing closed within the walls of an inuincible castle feare not the force and power of their enemyes be they neuer so terrible We must not doubt therefore but if we beleue we are compassed about with fiery and brasen mountaines that is to say we abide for euer inuincible against the rage of Satan and all the powers of darkenes Blessed therefore is he that beleueth These mountaines are the Angells which compasse vs on euery side that Satan with his angells and ministers can not hurt vs as he would Whose malice and power is such that if they did not continually beholde vs continually defend vs and watch ouer vs he would destroy vs euery moment This can all they testifie which knowe that Satan is a murtherer and a lyer which can not abide to see the godly prosper therefore he seketh by all meanes to roote them out from the face of the earth That we are not then vtterly consumed it is the benefite of these mountaines by whom we are so compassed and defended Some times Satan hurleth his dartes at vs as it were through the window to destroy vs and worketh vs in deede some sorrow but he can not moue vs. This similitude seemeth to be taken out of the story of Helizeus in the 2. boke of the Kinges where the seruaunt of Helizeus saw the hilles about him full of fiery chariotes and horsemen compassing Helizeus round about and mightely defending him This succour which the seruant of Helizeus sawe and the Prophet beleued when he saw nothing is saith the Prophet round about all them which trust in the Lord as also the 34. Psalme witnesseth The Angell of the Lorde pitcheth round aboute them that feare him But our eyes are shut vp and see not these miracles whereof notwithstanding we haue dayly experience This promise then will neuer deceiue vs onely let vs not deceiue our selues If therefore we did beleue no doubt we shoulde sleepe we should liue we should dye yea that more is we should suffer what so euer Satan and the world can doe against vs without all feare For thus should we thinke If I suffer any thing it is not without the will of God nor without good cause well knowne though not ●nto me yet vnto god Therefore although Satan breake through the wall in one place yet shall he neuer be able vtterly to ouerthrowe it altogither Thus should we think in our troubles and afflictions and comfort our selues with the good will of god But we are afraid when any trouble commeth and neuer feele that securitie which faith bringeth Thus doe we worthely suffer the punishment of our incredulitie which we nurrishe within vs although we be called away from it by so many notable places of the Scripture Besides all this it is not enough that we are compassed about with fiery walles that is with the sure custody the continuall watch and warde of the Angells but the Lorde him selfe is our wall so that euery way we are defended by the Lorde against all daungers Aboue vs he is a heauen on both sides he is as a wall vnder vs he is as a strong rocke whereuppon we stand so are we euery way sure and safe Nowe if Satan through these munitions cast his dartes at vs it must needs be that the Lorde him selfe shall be hurt before we take harme But great is our incredulitie which heare all these thinges in vaine Yet must they be taught and learned lest the time come that we be destitute of all counsell and comfort in these matters For certain it is that the hower shal come when we must haue experience of these thinges or else vtterly perish Where he addeth From henceforth for euer By these words he sheweth that this vigilancie of the Lorde our God euer vs is not temporall but eternall according to that which he said before in the first verse of this Psalme They shall remaine for euer Let vs learne therfore out of this Psalme that our constancy and perseuerance consisteth in this that we are defended by the power and prouidence of the Lord on euery side Verse 3. For the rodde of the wicked shall not rest on the lotte of the righteous lest the righteous put forth their hand vnto wickednes Here the Prophet plainly declareth that the people which rest vnder this defence and protection are afflicted and subiecte to all miseryes and calamities as touching the
body Nowe then shouldest thou be able to gouerne the bodyes and the mindes of other in any one house citie or common wealth As Ieremy sayth The way of man is not in him selfe neither is it in man to walke and to direct his steppes So this body which thou bearest about is not in thine owne handes This is the true maner of teaching as touching ciuill and houshold gouernment namely to shew the efficient and the final cause thereof And this doctrine is so much the more necessary for that we are all vnder the one of these two gouernments For although thou be not a married man yet must thou needes be in some part of the houshold gouernment For either thou art a sonne a daughter a seruaunt or thou hast seruants or neighbours or else thou are in some place and calling in the house or in the societie of men Nowe it cannot be auoyded but that many thinges will happen vnto thee in thy vocation both tedious and greeuous Wherefore thou must learne how to behaue thy selfe in these kindes of life also from whence they come and to what ende they are ordayned But of all others they haue most neede of this knowledge which are placed in authoritie or any kinde of life aboue others to whom it belongeth to rule either in the common wealth or to gouerne a family that they may know what is the end of their rule gouernment This Psalme therefore properly pertaineth to Salomons Ecclesiastes and not only conteineth the same doctrine but in a maner the same wordes also In Ecclesiastes he saith I haue seene vanities that is I haue seene that there hath bene no successe eyther in housholde or in politike gouernment but vexation of spirit was in them both VVherefore there is nothing better for a man then to reioyce in God and to doe good in his life as much as he is able This Psalme therefore seemeth to be as it were a briefe summe of that booke whereby he teacheth both what is the efficient cause of politike and housholde gouernment and also to what ende they must be directed He teacheth that we are but Gods ministers and workmen and are not the efficient but the instrumentall cause wherby God worketh these things As Wisdom it selfe sayth By me kings rule So the father is the instrument of generation But God is the fountaine and author of life Likewise the Magistrate is but the instrumēt wherby God maintaineth peace and politike lawes The husband and wife are the instrumentes whereby both house goods are preserued The knowledge hereof bringeth great consolation For if matters fal out otherwise or if we doe not attaine to the ende whereunto they were appoynted we may sa yt I am but an instrument and these thinges are not in my power but are gouerned of a greater and an higher power Wherfore if my wife dye if my children dye if any other trouble affliction or calamitie happen say These thinges are not in my hand I am but onely as an instrument I doe all that I can I labour and trauel I am carefull and vigilant but the Lord in whose hands all these things are giue good successe or else all my endeuour all my trauell is in vaine For if the first cause be lacking the second cause can doe nothing And thus teacheth this Psalme as touching the efficient cause In like maner it teacheth also concerning the final cause Wherby we may vnderstand that all things are the meere gift of God and perteyne to the glory and the seruice of God not to our own glory and our owne pleasure So that we ought to say thus hath the Lord done ht hath giuen this happy ende To him therefore be praise and glory for euer Amen Verse 1. Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it These are wordes of great force and power whereby he generally condemneth all our labour trauell declaring that it is not the efficieut cause of those commodities for the which we trauell Here view and consider all the histories both holy and prophane of all nations and ye shall see that God gaue such a gift vnto many that they began to rule both common wealthes and families with great commendation But when they sawe that there followed no good successe they were vtterly discouraged often tymes for their great care trauel they gained nothing else but extreme ingratitude Howe many excellent men in the common wealth of Athens howe many emonges the Lacedemonians how many in the common wealth of Rome were condemned cast into exile by vnthankfull citizens Yea this is generally the condition of all men which in their vocation whether it be priuat or publike endeuour to liue vprightly and carefully trauell to doe good in the common weale that they being hindred by the malice deceitful prac●ises of others ran neuer bring to passe that they take in hand For Satan deuiseth so many letts stirreth vp so many enemies such hatred conspiracies against them that either they are ouercome with impacience and so cast away all care of the common wealth or being moued with great indignation they become cruel against those whom they see to withstand their proceedings Thus eyther of a desperate mind they forsake all or with crueltie and tiranny they wil rule all But let vs learne to keepe a meane and if God haue called vs to the gouernment of a familie let vs say O Lorde thou hast giuen me a wife house and children Ouer these by thy authoritie I am made a ruler I will doe therefore what in me lyeth that all thinges may be well gouerned If they haue not such successe as I desire I will write Patience But if they come well to passe and take good successe then wil I say thankes and praise be vnto thee O lord It is not my work● but thy gift alone And euen so must he doe which is called to any office in the common wealth which hath farre more neede of this holy counsell because of the great troubles and trauells which he must susteyne He that is able thus to doe shall liue quietly in matrimony and in the gouernment of the common wealth and shal enioy the comfort and tranquilitie of heart and conscience in the middes of all daungers and calamities Wherefore this I often teach and this counsell I giue that such as enter into any office in the common wealth or into matrimony should begin with inuocation of Gods holy name and prayer So that who so euer would marry a wife should earnestly call vpon God and craue his helpe that he would not onely giue him a good wife but also that he would gouerne and direct the whole course of his life For when this is neglected he marrieth a wife vpon hope that he shall haue such a one as his new loue doth imagine But afterwards when it falleth out otherwise so that
he findeth some fault in his wife or els some other trouble hapneth then either he becommeth a lion in his owne house as Salomon saith and is sory for that he hath done or else neglecting his familie he goeth one way and his wife an other and so he wasteth all that he hath For when he seeth that all thinges which he thought should haue had most happy successe fall out cleane contrary to his expectation he rageth and layeth all the fault in matrimonie but most wickedly For thy fauk and thy folly it is which so doest since thou wilt needes be the efficient cause of the gouerning and guyding of thy familie which thing God hath not giuen vnto thee For thou shouldest haue bene but onely the instrumentall thereof Wherfore submitte thy selfe rather to an other master and gouerner and say O Lord teach thou me that I may rightly gouerne my familie execute my office in the common wealth c. Rule thou and he thou my helper that I offend not for I will doe that in me lyeth If it take good successe I will acknowledge thy gift thanke thee and praise thy name If it succeede not yet will I beare it with patience For thou art the first cause and I am but the second cause thou art the creator thou art all in all and workest all and I am but the instrument If we with heart and minde thus prepared would seeke to gouerne all thinges would prosper and happily proceed But now whether ye behold the Magistrate or new maried persons ye shall see great presumption For they so beginne all thinges that they take in hande as though it were impossible they should come otherwise to passe then they themselues doe imagine They begin as though they were the first and the efficient cause and appoynt such an ende to their deuises and enterprises as serueth to their owne glory and pleasure But God sayth Thus shalt thou not doe for then shalt thou perish And worthely For they are rebells and blasphemers which will presume vpon that which belongeth to the first cause alone For when eyther the pen will teach the scribe how to write or the axe wil teach the carpenter how to square his timber nothing can be wel done And euen so is it in this case when we will take vpon vs such gouernment as belongeth to God alone It is expedient for you to consider the examples of this great folly which are to be seene euery where aboundantly in Princes Courts in cities and families For thus doe they think I am the author and master of this familie this policie this gouernment c. Moste worthely therefore are they troubled and vexed when there followeth no such successe as they looked for And herevpon followeth as I said eyther a miserable confusion both in houshold and politike gouernment or else playne tyranny So in matrimony if neither the husband will beare with his wife nor the wife will giue place to her husband not onely the mutuall loue and concord in matrimony is broken but also it so falleth out that the husband is chaunged into a tyranne or else he neglecteth and forsaketh all togither What must we here doe The Pope aunswereth and giueth this counsell that we should flie into some solitary place or into some monastery Not so saith the holy Ghost This is not the counsell of God but of the deuill But thus do thou Consider that thou art Gods instrument beleue that there is yet an other magistrate and principall gouernour of the house whose name is the lord Except he be the principall cause it shall followe as this Psalme saith that the house shall not be builded and that neither politike nor householde gouernment shall prosper So must we iudge also of the finall cause If thou wilte referre all things to that ende which thou hast imagined and thinkest that thou shalt not be deceiued thou errest as experience teacheth One man taketh vppon him an office in the common wealth to get estimation and dignitie and findeth the contrary An other by matrimony seeketh pleasure seeketh a bewtifull and obedient wife but he is deceiued and proueth also the contrary And well worthy For why doest thou presume to rule either in politike or houshold gouernment as a God and thinkest that thy wisedom aud thy policy are able to gouerne these thinges and that thou hast no neede to lift vp thine eyes to him which is aboue and to desire his helpe When thou seest therefore that afterwardes it falleth out otherwise then doest thou learne to sing this Psalme Except the Lord builde the citie they labour in vaine that builde it Before thou thoughtest that there was no other Lord or gouerner besides thy selfe of whose help thou shouldest haue need to gouerne thy house Others which are not come to this knowledge either are at continuall debate with their wiues or else they forsake both wiues families and flie away Worthely worthely iustly and by the iust iudgement of God thus commeth it to passe For why doest thou being but vile dunge presume as a God to take vppon thee that heauenly gouernment that I say which is aboue nature with a naturall affection and earthly minde Thy clyming and presumptuous spirite therefore God iustly confoundeth Why doest thou not rather say on this wise Lorde thou hast giuen me a wife children a familie assist me and helpe me Gouerne thou and guide them or else in vaine is all my trauell Nowe for as much as the holy Scripture teacheth vs and experience also agreeth thereunto that without Gods helpe all is in vaine that we take in hande therefore we ought not to be ignorant of these thinges They labour in vaine saith he which builde it The cause is this that either they become tyrannes or else desperate forsake all togither So commeth to ruine both politike and houshold gouernment Now what madnes is this so to rule that either thou or thy family must perish Why doe we not rather as the holy Ghost here teacheth vs that we may preserue both Whiche is if we learne to knowe the principall cause and the true master and gouerner of the house if we call vppon him trust in him and say Thou Lord hast created me to be a ruler of a familie and hast giuen me those things which pertaine thereunto But this burden is to heauy for me to beare Therfore take vpon thee my charge O Lorde gouerne thou in my steede be thou the maister of the house for I will humbly giue place vnto thee Then will God heare thee and he will say All this will I doe so that thou canst be content if any thing happen otherwise then thou doest desire willingly to beare it and with patience to ouercome it and not to despaire of the ende and good successe thereof forsaking thy vocation to the which I haue called thee For since thou doest call vpon me and doest thankfully acknowledge those
nature And this is but the strength of humane wisedome created in man at the beginning in Paradise Wherfore the holy Ghost careth not for these things only he doth approue them as excellent giftes and treasures necessary for mans life and sayth All these thinges are of my creation Moreouer he goeth about here to rayse vp the blinde and decayed nature of man and to call vs from all trust and confidence in flesh to the ende we should not attempt any thing aboue our power nor attribute any thing vnto our selues For by the fall of Adam nature is so corrupt that it cannot see the good giftes of God to be giftes in deede but the politike heade thinketh that he enioyeth all thinges by his owne wisedom and policie he looketh not vpward nor glorifieth God but sayth this haue I done But this doing is in deede an vtter vndoing Wherefore seeing that common wealthes and families are ordeyned already seeing that lawes artes and sciences by the ordinaunce of God were at the first created togither with man the nature of man doth wickedly abuse them in that it sayth I will doe I will gouerne and I will bring these things to this ende to this perfection whereby I will procure mine owne quietnes glory and pleasure With this presumption of God is highly offended and therefore he geueth no successe thereunto And good cause why For as he made the Sunne that thou shouldest haue the vse of it and not to the ende thou shouldest rule it so he gaue thee ground that thou shouldest till it but not to the end it should bring forth what and how much thou wouldest haue but what and how much he would giue So he gaue thee witte reason a wife a family and other thinges But this is euermore the peruersenes of mans nature corrupt through the sinne of Adam that it will not acknowledge the giftes of god Of Gods gifts it ought to say with thankes giuing This I haue receiued but proudly blasphemously it saith This I haue done It ought to say This hath my Lord God giuen me but it sayth this haue I gotten I wil gouerne mainteyne it by mine owne wisedom It is the Lord then which buildeth the house which giueth ● wife children liuing which kepeth the city giueth publike peace mainteyneth lawes c. Wherfore these words Except the Lord should be written with great letters yea with golden letters because the nature of man fighteth against them and that through the sinne of the fall of Adam in that we attribute all thinges vnto our selues and those things which we ought to ascribe vnto God we take and enioy as if they were our owne And to this Satan also stirreth vppe our corrupt nature which of it selfe is inclined thereunto Wherefore it followeth that our deuises and enterprises are voide of all good successe and we our selues are neuer quiet If this vice of presumption were not we should finde much more quietnes and haue better successe in all our doinges For God would saye vnto vs Thou takest me for the onely creator and geuer of those thinges which thou enioyest therefore wil I blesse thee .. But because we doe not so he ouerwhelmeth vs with many miseryes and calamities he letteth the deuill lose setteth hell open as it were against vs so that in housholde gouernment great troubles are stirred vp and in the common weale warres manslaughter For since we will not heare him teaching and warning by the word he will teach vs with scourges with our owne calamities that like vnto the Phrygians we shoulde learne to be wise by our owne harmes and knowe that we are not Lords gouerners of these thinges So Cicero at the last was compelled thus to say Alas I was yet neuer wise And yet some time I was estemed to be that which in deed I was not but in vaine O people of Rome how much hath thine opinion which thou didest conceaue of me deceaued thee For he so gouerned the people of Rome by his owne wisedome and policie that at the last he lost his heade This is our corruption which we haue by the first and originall sinne of Adam When we wil not acknowledge the Lord giuing and gouerning but doe all thinges without his feare and with a trust and confidence in our own strength So in housholde gouernment it falleth out that he giueth to some proude yong man a faire wife which is either a harlot or else vnapt to all good huswifery housholde affaires whereby she is a perpetuall burden vnto her husband The like hapneth also to Princes rulers and Magistrates in the common wealth so that none can winde them selues out of those troubles which by their owne folly they fall into A worthy plague and punishment For why will they haue God to be a geuer when they them selues wil be the builders and gouerners But the world although it heare these thinges neither careth for them nor yet beleueth them These wordes therefore are spoken onely vnto the godly Except the Lord keepeth the citie the watchmen keepe it in vaine As if he said The Lorde is the keeper and if he be not present what so euer is doone in the common wealth is but in vaine When I was a student at Erford I hearde this saying of a certaine wise and learned man called Martinus Sangerhaufen that Erford should continue inuincible as touching riches and strong munitions but the time should come when that strong and riche common wealth should lack men This was a wise saying Wherby he signified that cōmon wealthes are not maintained through wealth riches and power if godly expert gouerners be lacking Let men build thē as much as they will and let them fortifie their cities if they can with yron walls let them heape togither mountaines of golde yet shall all these thinges be but in vaine without godly gouerners First of all therefore this must God work that the citizens and people may be godly and fearing God Moreouer that the Magistrats may be both godly and expert men Also that the Princes and higher powers may be such as serue God feare God such as loue reuerence his worde These are true strong mighty fortifications of kingdoms common wealthes When God hath giuen these munitions then may men deuise also strong walls ditches But because this is not done therfore kingdoms and Empires are ouerthrowne one after an other And I am of this opinion that Empires kingdoms common wealthes had prospered continued much longer if Monarches Princes had omitted this pronoune I that is to say if they had not bene proud through the confidence which they had in their own strēgth and wisedom But now when the King of Babylon Nabuchodonosor lifting vp him self in pride presuming of his own strength said This haue I done he liued seuen yeres togither with grasse and wandred in the fieldes
neuer waxe rich Wherfore they exhorted them to winne industrie with their trauell so should they the sooner attaine to that which they so painfully sought For a master of a housholde in whom there is some industrie can doe more with one pe●ee of gold then some other can doe with two A woman skilful of houshold affaires industrious prouident withal can liue with her family a whole yeare of those charges wherwith an other woman not so industrious prouident and discreete is not able to endure halfe a yeare For industrie hath alwaies best successe But they them selues which gaue this counsel to those poore men did not see that industrie is also the gift of god Now the cause why industrie so greatly helpeth and bringeth such successe to our endeuours and labours is for that it obserueth the circumstances of persons places conuenient times other occasions that nothing be done in vaine nor labour lost These thinges he that doth not obserue in houshold and politike gouernment must of necessity be many times deceiued No maruell is it then if great riches are not able to suffice a man in whom this industrie is lacking that is which doth not with discretion obserue consider the circumstances before mentioned These men therefore gaue this counsel that industrie should be ioyned with labour because labour without industrie hath no successe But Salomon speaketh more properly not that industrie but that the Lord him selfe is the cause For euen this also is the gifte of God through industrie to gouerne the common wealth and to doe nothing rashly but to obserue all occasions and to seeke all opportunitie that all thinges may be done in conuenient time place c. Such a wi●●ad that noble Prince Friderike Duke of Saxony Elector He was in deed a man industrious who said not all thinges who did not all thinges vpon a sudden which he was able to say or doe He dissembled many thinges but in conuenient time and place he did more with a word then many other without this industrie could doe with power and great strength Such are they which are not onely painefull and diligent but also industrious which can waite for occasion and time conuenient when one word will strike and pearce more deepely then at an other time many swordes could doe But this is humane and not diuine wisedom Wherfore it is not sufficient to gouerne such high weighty matters but there muste be prayer also ioyned therewith that the Lorde would be present that he would keepe watch and warde or else shall mans industrie be all in vaine be it neuer so greate So teacheth this Psalme as touching the principall cause whereby all the indeuours counsells and policies of men are ruled and directed and keepeth vs that we make no confusion or mixture of causes and that of the first cause we make not the second cause or else in deede no cause at all For he did not create things and so leaue them saith a certaine Philosopher speaking of God and very well He did not so ordaine matrimonie and ciuill gouernment as the shipwright doeth the shippe who after that hee hath finished his worke so leaueth it and committeth it to the mariner to be guided as he will. But God is still present with his creature and gouerneth both the house and the common wealth This men doe not knowe but thinke that God hath no regarde of those thinges which we doe but leaueth them vnto vs Contrary to this prophane and wicked opinion Salomon teacheth vs that we should feare God call vpon him and so take in hand to gouern our families and to serue the common wealth as God hath appointed vs with a cheerefull hart Also he admonisheth vs not to presume vpon our owne wisedome policie power munitions or riches All historyes are ful of examples and our owne experience also doth witnesse that presumption hath neuer good successe and yet the world will still be the worlde and doth not beleue Wherfore these things are profitable for none but for the godly But if the world will not heare and obey let it rage let it vexe and torment it selfe since it seeth and feeleth it selfe to watch to labour to be oppressed with continuall toyle and trauell and all in vaine And this doth it worthely iustly and most iustly suffer For here it is written that except the Lorde keepeth the citie the keeper watcheth in vaine and this doe they reiect Wherefore the Lord also reiecteth them he will not keepe nor builde their citie and so what remaineth but onely in vaine Verse 2. It is in vaine for you to rise earely and to lye downe late and eate the breade of sorrow It is in vaine saith he for a man to rise earely to goe late to bed and with great labour to get his liuing for so signifieth bread in this place The Hebrewes call it the bread of affliction The meaning then of these wordes is this that bothe in houshold and ciuill gouernment all mans endeuour all his care study and trauel is in vaine except it be blessed from aboue For by these kinds of speech to rise earely and to lye downe late he signifieth greate care and paineful trauel As if he saide It is not thy strength thy care thy study and endeuour that can make thee riche but the blessing of God maketh a man rich c. God wil not giue successe vnto thee because of thy labour like as he will not giue riches to such as are idle and carelesse Notwithstanding thou must labour and yet must thou commit and commend al to God which blesseth and giueth successe vnto all But it seemeth as the text soundeth that the Prophet here forbiddeth laboure contrary to that sayinge in Genesis In the sweat of thy face thou shalt eate thy bread Also to these wordes of S. Paule Let him ruleth doe it with diligence Here he seemeth to say the contrary For he pronounceth that to laboure to rise earely and to lye downe late to be carefull and painfull is but in vaine whereas notwithstanding in other places sloth and idlenes are condemned Here ye must make a distinction betwene faith and workes or betwene the spirite and the fleshe With thy hart thou must trust in God and call vppon him but if thou hast maried a wife or bearest any office in the common wealth that perteineth to the olde man to the flesh not to the spirit to works and not to faith Here thou must labour and exercise the outwarde man Thou must rise earely and lye downe late that is thou must be carefull as touching the outwarde man howe thou maist prouide for thy family doe good in the common wealth c but thy minde must be free and voyde of care for care ought to extend no farther then to the outward man onely That is the outwarde man ought not to be idle and slouthfull but diligently to doe that
which he is called vnto in labouring in studying in deuising in prouiding as an instrument So the handes must labour but the hart must looke vpward from labour to the Lord and craue helpe of him So that whiles the outward man is exercised with labour and trauel the hart of the new man in the steede of care and trauel must f●ye to prayer and say Lorde I obey and willingly followe thy calling I wil therefore doe all thinges in thy name Gouerne thou direct my labours This consolation is so great that it can not be expressed For although no successe follow yet art thou quiet in mind sayest Thus it hath pleased god I am not the principall cause to doe what I would but the instrument cause onely haue done what I could For like as when thou hurte ●ethy ha●● with thyne axe or with some other toole in doing thy works yet thy hand remaineth the same it was before and is not caste away euen so although thy family be disobedient commende the matter to God and doe what thou canst then shalt thou doe both these thinges so as God wil be wel pleased that is thou shalt rise earely and not rise earely thou shal labour and yet shalt not labour in vaine For as touching the old man thou eatest the bread of sorrowe but thy hart is quiet and at rest in hope of succour and the blessing of the Lord. These thinges we dayly teach and yet is the couetousnes of men so great that there is no ende of heaping vp riches by hooke or crooke by right or wrong Yea they wil rather omitte the seruice of God the hearing and preaching of his worde then any gaineful labour They doe not see that whiles they neglect the worde and seeke their owne gaine they procure vnto them selues a farre greater losse which although they doe not presently feele yet shall it come to passe that their riches which with so greate labour they heape togither by Gods iust iudgement shall perish eyther by theeues by warre by fire or otherwise or else they shall neuer come to the heyre whom they doe appoynt But in Popery this perswasion was deepely rooted in mens heartes that if they had once heard a Masse they beleued that what so euer they tooke in hand that day should prosper Howe great then is our impietie which doe not giue that reuerence to God and his word which they gaue to their own idolatrous worke yea which preferre our owne gayne our wealth and riches aboue God and the incomparable rich treasure of his word Wherefore it shall come to passe that for the punishment of this sinne the world shall be brought to greater pouertie and from day to day there shall be greater scarsitie of all thinges like as we also doe see at this day that there is greater dearth of all thinges then hath bene in times past What is the cause Forsoth we rise earely we lye downe late and eate the bread of affliction We delite in earthly cares in toyle and trauell be it neuer so paynefull to enrich our selues and in the meane season we neglect God and his word Therefore will God heape vppon vs aboundantly both cares and calamities end that most iustly for that it is which we so greedely seeke But I returne to the text In the which ye see that housholde and ciuill gouernment are wholy committed vnto vs but yet so that we must know and acknowledge our selues to be but Gods instruments and Gods workemen not authors or first causes of these diuine matters Therefore the Prophet thought it not enough to say affirmatiuely God him selfe gouerneth and maketh the citie he buildeth the house and appoynteth the family but he setteth downe also the negatiue and sayth Ye doe it not And this is the part of a good teacher But as I haue sayd the worlde can not abide the negatiue For the worlde sayth This will I this haue I done and this will I doe It will needes be the gouerner of common wealthes and rule in Gods steede Wherefore it receaueth a iust reward in that his enterprises are all in vayne and his labours without successe As the Psalme sayth Their dayes are consumed in vanitie that is to say they were deade before they could bring to passe that they tooke in hande For since they will not beleeue that God gouerneth all thinges they see their owne policie to be but vanities their labours vnprofitable and of none effect Let euery one of vs therefore abyde in his degree and calling and let vs knowe that this God requireth of vs that we say I beleue in one God that is God will still be God the creator and maker of all things and vs he will take and account as his workemen onely as instruments and not authors or principall causes But because we couet to be authors and efficient causes therefore we finde nothing but vanitie and bread of affliction This sentence must be enlarged and applied to all states and degrees of men and not onely to artificers and men of occupation which rise earely to doe their worke Not that it is euill to rise earely and goe late to bed not that it is euill to be exercised with labour all the day For these thinges God requireth of all men but sloth and idlenes is accursed But we must here put a distinction betwene labour and presumption He doth not condemne labour but diuilish presumption he condemneth because that we not contented with our owne trauel and care doe take vpon vs also Gods office and care which he hath for vs and he will wrest from vs his diuine power and maiesty which we so presumptuously vsurpe and take vpon vs he will haue vs to labour and not to be idle For this tentation is naturally rooted in vs that we presume to be as gods This diuilish presumption beganne in paradise when Satan sayd to Eue Ye shall be like gods it alwaies continueth fast fixed in this flesh so that it can not be suppressed as it ought to be and as we both teach and are taught but needes we will be gods This is therefore a very naturall disease and corruption of the creature Against this presumption and this care which perteyneth to the diuine maiestie alone the holy Ghost here fighteth when he sayth that it is not our endeuour wisedom and policie but God him selfe that ruleth these thinges and we are but his instruments But the wicked are neuer the better Yea the godly also doe offend herein very often For we are not content with our owne state and condition but we will be gouerners also and wil appoynt the beginning the middes and the end as may best serue for our owne commoditie Wherefore we tyre our selues with vayne cares night and day as the examples of the whole world doe declare One man purposeth to marry this mayden or that and in ordering of his house in guyding of his familie to vse
principall regarde vnto the fruite What madnes then is this that men in smaller matters can chose the best thinges and for a greater commoditie winke at those which are euill and will not doe the same in the woman which is the good creature of God As though the woman also did not see some lothsome thinges for so these nice and delicate hypocrites doe tearme them to be reprehended likewise in their husbandes In a childe we can discerne betwene the child and his order his scabbes his diseases or any like thinge For who reiecteth his child because he hath defiled him selfe yea who forsaketh him because he is scabbed and scurny or infected with the pestilence or any other contagious disease Is not his ordure and vncleannes washed away Is not he carefully tended and tendred in his sicknes that he may recouer his health againe Thus we shadow and couer the faults and deformities of nature with the greatnes and excellencie of that good thing whiche we knowe to consist in the health and welfare of our children Here who would not detest him which should say that the child should be cast away because he defileth him selfe or because of his desease be it neuer so greate As these holy hypocrites doe moste spitefully reprehend those duties of matrimonye which the man sheweth towardes his wife What shall we not thinke her to be the creature of God and partaker of the benefite of Christ Besides this that she is giuen vnto vs to this ende that she may be an help vnto vs Wherefore they are diuilish words which the wicked doe vse against the lawfull company and duties that are betweene man and wife because they will seeme to be holy and great louers of chastitie and worthely to contemne these thinges If such men were worthy to be fathers they should vnderstand how litle it would offend a good or naturall father euen to kisse his scabbed and sick childe to handle and to heale his sores For if infantes should be caste away eyther because of their diseases or scabbednes I praye you Syr where should you and I nowe haue beene Wherefore the worlde is sharply to be rebuked which euen in the best thinges considereth the faults but esteemeth not the vertues And where as it cannot lacke the vse of these vertues and hath them dayly euen as it were in his handes yet is it so blinde that it can not see them But this commeth of originall sinne to be starke blind euen in the most excellent creatures of God and not to vnderstand what good thinges and great blessings are offered vnto vs in and by them but rather to be offended with such small faults or incommodities which in comparison thereof are in a maner nothing to be regarded Wherefore we must here doe as Cicero sayth he was wont to doe in pleading of causes to wit that if there were any euil therein that he passed ouer with silence but if there were any good thing that he vrged that he amplified therin he was wholy occupied For who will haue the lesse regard of his owne body because he hath a sore in his breast or in his longs or some other malady in any other part of his body Yea haue we not therefore a greater care regard of our bodies Looke vpon our Courtiers who when they haue well pampred them selues and carry their bellies full of dyrt and dunge walke in their silkes and other sumptuous apparel decked with gold and other goodly ornaments and smelling as though their bodye were nothing else but a precious balme and yet doe they not once thinke how full of filthines they are Thus we hide our faultes and deformities most diligently that which is honest or appeareth so to be we set forth and magnifie to the vttermost But nowe why doe we not the like in matrimony why doe we not couer the faultes and commend the vertues thereof Nay we doe cleane contrary So blinded we are with originall sinne that in the best and most holy thinges we pick out that onely which we may reprehend In like maner we doe also in the word of God and in all things that perteyne to the kingdom of god For whereas he giueth vnto vs the vse of the sunne plenty of vittells a whole body c. these blessings no man considereth no man giueth thankes for them But if God begin to viset vs with the pestilence if we be pinched a litle with dearth scarsitie of vittells or but one of our teeth doe ake by and by we are so vexed that the anguish therof either hideth or vtterly taketh away from vs the remembrance of all Gods benefites Thus goeth it with the world and with our owne reason that we are more moued with one euill as we esteme it then with a thousand good thinges besides But the holy Ghost taketh a contrary way For he couereth the faultes and that which is good he setteth forth with worthy prayses Wherefore he so paynteth out the wife that he commaundeth thee to consider of her as of a vine planted in thy house and giuen to thee of God whose fruites are diuine plantes much more pleasaunt and more excellent then the oliue tree For albeit they degenerate and grow out of kind and become euill plantes yet can it not be denyed but that they are the gift of God and that must we acknowledge Nowe let them as I haue sayd which haue the gift of chastitie be without this vine and let them delite in their other vine and other fruites But we are nowe in the prayse of this kind of vine Here the wife is as the fruitefull vine and the children as the oliue plantes For so the holy Ghost teacheth vs and the matter it selfe testifieth the same although the holy Ghost did not thus teach vs at all For the very Gentiles did highly commend naturall affections loue and kindnes of one towardes an other This doe also the ballets which are vsed amongest vs Germanes testifie whereby the faithfull and louing affection betwene man and wife is set forth with singular prayses and that this life hath nothing more ioyfull and excellent then is a faithfull wife and louing to her husband The same also doe all wise and godly men confesse not for the pleasure of the flesh which is greater in whoredom fornication and other vncleannes For thereby vncleane lust is enflamed but in matrimony it is quenched And the greatest pleasure that a man can haue is this when his wife is of a kind and a louing heart towardes him This is an excellent gift and highly to be estemed and singularly commended in women Whereof these swine are vtterly ignorant which thinke the wife to be nothing else but a swinish puddle of filthy pleasures Nay she is an excellent instrument planted of God in thy house that therein she may be as a fruitefull vine For this cause husbandes ought to loue their wiues and children yea more then their owne liues
the cause why cities were first builded that men ioyning their strēgth power to gither might be able to defend them and theirs from the force and crueltie of others Afterwards when there was not ayde and helpe enough in one citie many ioyned their powers togither So common weales and kingdoms were first begunne to stablish and mainteyne peace which married persons haue neede of Nowe that nature did thus vnite and ioyne these thinges togither and taught men so to do reason it selfe doth see and perceaue But the true cause the holy Ghost here setteth forth to witte that these thinges come of the blessing which the Lord giueth to married persons but specially to the godly who ought to knowe and acknowledge that the first blessing is to feare God the next is to haue wife and children the third to enioy politike peace and quietnes What wouldest thou haue more Wherefore for thy vine and oliue plantes which thou hast in thy house thou shalt see that the Lord giueth Kings Princes lawes and whatsoeuer is necessary for the defence and preseruation of the common weale and peace And here we are admonished that since Kinges Princes and Magistrates are ordeyned for the benefite of married persons and families they ought likewise to yeld obedience vnto them and whatsoeuer else they haue neede of whiles they watch for the preseruation of peace For they are the ministers of God as Paule calleth them giuen of God for this purpose that we may enioy his blessinges in peace Which peace how great a benefite it is the common prouerbe of the Germanes witnesseth which sayth that a man which hath two kine should giue the one that he may quietly enioy the other For what auayleth it thee if thou haue thy house full of riches and are not able to defend the same against theeues and robbers Seeing therefore that this is done by the Magistrate yea seeing that iudgement and lawes doe restore that to the owner which is vniustly taken away good cause there is why honour and obedience is to be giuen to the Magistrate as the minister of Gods blessings which he bestoweth to the married persons For this third blessing of matrimony is here recited of Dauid that they may see the wealth and welfare of Ierusalem that is to say that they may see Ierusalem flourish first by true religion and sounde doctrine and secondly by godly Magistrates For these are the benefites and blessinges not onely of one house but of all Ierusalem Thus the holy Ghoste commendeth vnto vs the giftes of God in a goodly order The firste is the feare of god This feare comprehendeth the thinges which are conteined in the first table Nowe for the feare of God afterwardes God giueth house and famylye Thirdly for houses and familyes well ordered and gouerned in the feare of God followeth also the thirde blessing that is to say a happy common weale Wherefore let vs learne to vnderstande rightly the benefites which we receaue by godly Magistrates and for them let vs be thankful Againe let vs learne that this gift of God to haue good Magistrats is giuen vnto those and for those maryed persons and those familyes which feare god Which gift the wicked also doe enioy but yet no otherwise then swine doe their draffe and swill without any thankes giuing vnto God or thankful remembrance of this or any other of Gods giftes For as the destruction of Sodome was differred because of Loth so oftentimes for a fewe godly familyes or a godly Prince God blesseth the whole common weale Verse 6. That thou mayst see thy childrens children and peace vpon Israel It is giuen to many to haue children in matrimony and to many it is not Therefore we sayd before that this is a commendation and not a promise perteining to euery man perticularly but generally vnto matrimony to the kinde of life it self So vnto some it is giuen to see the children and nephewes of their children To some againe matrimony is all togither barren and fruiteles For these things the Lord distributeth to euery one as is most expedient for them Notwithstanding the godly married persons must pray vnto God for them and most commonly also they doe enioy them And maruelous is that naturall affection and loue especially in olde men which they beare vnto their childrens children for they loue them more tenderly then their owne Wherefore for as much as this Psalme tendeth to the setting forth and bewtifying of matrimony and wisheth all felicitie to the married persons the holy ghost addeth this moreouer concerning their long and fruitfull posteritie as a singular comfort because he would omit none of those good blessings whiche are giuen of God to suche as are marryed though not to all yet to the most parte Nowe although we sayde before that all such prayers haue a promise included in them yet notwithstanding this is the maner of corporall promises that God giueth them so as is most profitable and expedient for euery man Wherefore we must apply the promise which is included in this prayer to the kind of life it selfe and not to euery married person namely that such as liue in godly matrimony and feare God shall encrease and multiply vnto a fruiteful and a great posteritie and that for their sake the blessing shall flowe vnto all the people as he addeth in this clause peace vpon Israell that is to say all wealth and prosperitie I wish vnto Israell for thy sake Thus the Psalme commendeth and defendeth matrimony against those spitefull sclanders and reproches of the world which can not iudge but according to the sense and feeling of the fleshe Wherefore as it is offended with the troubles and burthens of matrimony so is it offended also with those things which happen in ciuill gouernment when it must obey lawes pay tribute to the Prince or be are any other like burthen For it would so liue that what soeuer is best or most pleasant in matrimonye that onely it would enioy without all griefe or molestation As we may see there be many whiche marry wiues because they imagine that there is nothing in matrimony but mere loue amorous delites and fleshly pleasures In like maner how many shal ye find which through an inordinate loue and desire of glory seeke to rule and be in authoritie But afterwardes when in matrimony they must suffer troubles and vexations and in politike gouernment enuy hatred cursed speaking and sclaunders they cry out that they were deceiued and become impatient Yea it can not otherwise be but that these things must so come to passe For that which is the best and most excellent in both kindes of life the blessing of the Lord I meane they nothing esteme Wherfore we must haue a speciall regard vnto the blessing and we must haue also the word of God before our eyes to the ende that when all other thinges are full of daungers full of troubles miseries and vexations we may rest and
vnderstanding thereof into a fantasie of their owne imagination For the Prophets did know that the true God although he be of him selfe and of his owne nature infinite and incomprehensible was included notwithstanding in the Mercieseat whereunto he had bound him selfe by his word and promise Wherefore although they called him the God of heauen maker of all thinges yet this had they as a more neere proper token of the true God that they knewe him to haue his dwelling in Sion When they prayed therfore vnto God or talked of God they did it according to that forme and maner wherby God had reueiled him self in his word and promises Albeit therefore the Prophet maketh no mention in this place of that tabernacle or promises but semeth to speak vnto God simply and without all respect thereof yet we must vnderstand that he speaketh no otherwise to God then as he is setts forth in his word worship Like as we ought now no otherwise to thinke or speake of God then as he is in our true Mercieseate christ For so Christ himselfe saith vnto Philip He that seeth me seeth my father No man commeth vnto my father but by me When we haue attained this knowledge then may we safely worship God and call vpon him as he is the maker of heauen and earth and so shall we vndoubtedly find him For although of him selfe and when he is not thus reueiled he is vnsearchable and not to be found yet in his word and promises wherein he wrappeth him selfe he will both be found knowne of them that will there seke after him The Iewes therfore praying before the arke worshipped the true God of heauen and earth For God by his worde had promised that he would be there present there would heare the praiers of his people Euen so we likewise loking vnto Christ worshipping him doe worship the true God for he hath reueiled him selfe in christ Therefore Christ saith VVhat so euer yee shall aske the father in my name he will giue it you They therefore that pray vnto God and fasten not their eyes and minds vpon Christ come not vnto God but worship the imaginations of their owne harts in steed of the true God are plaine idolaters For neither wil god be sought nor found nor heare our praiers but in our mercieseat Christ. Wherfore if we wil find God in deede knowe him as we should do with boldnes come vnto him let vs loke vnto Christ according to y saying of S. Iohn He that seeth me seeth my father Thus y word gathereth togither y wandring cogitations of our harts vnto this only person Christ God man to the end we should know that there is or can be found no God without Christ Dost thou not beleue saith he that the father is in me I in him In like maner did the holy Iewes pray vnto God dwelling in Sion That place who so euer neglected although they vsed one and the same kind of worship the same wordes in prayer which they did notwithstanding they committed idolatrie because they did contrary to this commaundement namely that he would be worshipped in Ierusalem This is then a general rule to be obserued in all the Psalmes in the whole Scriptures that in the olde Testament there was no God but in Sion or in the place of the tabernacle and that all prayers were made vnto God sitting betwene the Cherubins Nowe when this temple was destroyed God set vp an other temple in the which he would be sought serued and worshipped Without this temple there is no God but the deuill in steede of God is there both sought and founde and therefore men fall either into desperation if they haue an euil conscience or else through hypocrisie into presumption as did the Idolatrous Iewes and as our Papistes now doe most arrogantly presuming of their owne righteousnes Hereunto doe these and such like sentences of the Psalmes the Prophets apperteine I lift vp mine eyes vnto the mountaines Again The Lorde out of Sion blesse thee In like maner are all such other sentences also to be vnderstand wherin is added no manifest signification of the place or of the temple as in this place Out of the depth haue I called vnto thee O Lord. He doth not here cal the Lord absolutely the maker of heauen earth as the Turks also do but the same God which dwelleth in Sion whose word promises they had amongs them that he would there receaue heare their prayes The Prophet resteth therefore wholy onely in the assured confidence of y free mercy grace of God but of that God which was in Sion which said vnto Satan I will put enmitie betwene thee and the seede of the woman For God will not be sought by our deuises Which if we shoulde doe what should we need then the word To what end was the law why was Christ reueiled Behold our aduersaries the papists wherunto they are come They pray much They recite Psalmes often They say Pater noster qui es in caelis c. But beca●se they contemne the worde yea and persecute it also with might and maine therefore vnder these good wordes they mainteine plaine idolatrie So hapneth it also to the Turkes euen then when they say they worship the liuing God the maker of heauen and earth For this cause I do so often admonish you that without Christ ye should shut your eyes and stoppe your eares and say ye knowe no God besides him which was in the lappe of the virgine Marie and suckt her breastes Where this God Christ Iesus is there is God wholy there is the whole diuinitie there is the father and the holy Ghost Without this Christ there is no god I haue known many in the kingdom of Antichrist which seeking to comprehend God by mans speculations haue horribly perished and if God through his inestimable mercie had not deliuered me from this tentation I had also fallen headlong into destruction Albeit the Prophet as I sayd maketh here no expresse mention of the temple yet shal ye see how in this psalme he wrappeth the promise concerning christ For this is the whole argument of this Psalme that there is no saluation no grace no iustification but in that God which forgiueth sinnes And is this God any other then the same which sayd vnto the Serpent The seede of the woman shall bruse thy head Therefore he taketh God here as a promise maker and sheweth that Christ was promised of the father to be a sacrifice for the sinnes of the world And here the Prophete setteth foorth vnto vs a principall poynt of doctrine touching Christian righteousnes Christian wisedom and the glory of christ These thinges Dauid treateth of euen then when the law was in his full strength and leapeth ouer the boundes of the law into Paradise or rather into the very heauen of grace mercie For why should I not
but must looke vnto the mercieseate So that albeit we can not deny but that we are sinners yet the remission of sinnes we may not denye And why is the remission of sinnes promised if sinners may not enioy the same Moreouer in that Dauid speaketh of mercie he con●esseth that he is a sinner and that mercie doeth properly pertaine vnto him But thou wilte say Sinnes make a man vnworthy to receaue mercie at Gods handes therefore let Dauid Paule and Peter hope for mercie as they which are holy and worthy to receaue mercie c. Such cogitations flye th●● euen as a present poyson and destruction of thy soule and thinke rather on this wise Because I am a sinner therefore remission of sinnes pertaineth vnto me Wherefore I will not despaire I will not suffer my selfe to be swallowed vppe with heauynes but I will turne vnto the Lord who hath promised mercie who also hath commaunded that I should trust and beleue in him Thus Dauid setteth forth in this verse the summe and effect of all true Christian doctrine that sunne which giueth light vnto the Church For whiles this doctrine standeth the Church shall stand and flourish But when this doctrine fayleth the Church must needes faile and fall to ruine This doctrine I doe so often and so diligently repeate for that Satan desireth and seeketh nothing so much as to plucke the knowledge thereof out of all mens hartes And this is the speciall cause of all the troubles which he stirreth vp either publikely or priuately We see what mischiefe he hath brought into the Church by Schismes and factions not onely in that men contending and striuing for newe matters haue almost forgotten this article but many also offended through dissentions and discord beginne now to loth and contemne the same It is therefore the part of a faithful Pastor not to suffer him selfe by such offences to be remoued from this article but with an inuincible constancie and continual trauell to set forth and aduance the same Moreouer how often commeth it to passe that in those also which are cast downe with the beholding and consideration of the law and their owne sinnes this article of the forgiuenes of sinnes is either lost or else in great daunger Dauid therefore in this Psalme setteth forth as hereafter we shall heare not onely his owne experience but also exhortations and promises whereby it may appeare that he carefully traueled for the preseruation of this doctrine And in deede the greatnes of the daunger ought to stirre vp a carefull diligence in this behalfe and daily to encrease the same in vs For where this doctrine is lost the mind is ouerwhelmed with all kindes of tentations So when in the Papacie this article was lost what was so monstrous that was not gladly hearde and receiued of all men The impudencie of the Monkes all the religious rable was so great that I am ashamed to speak it there was not in a maner so much as the cracke of their foule panch but they would haue men to reuerence it But contrariwise where this knowledge is reteyned and this doctrine preached all heresies may easily be ouerthrown And hereof the Papacie is a notable example which by the preaching and publishing of this one poynt of doctrine is now vanquished and banished out of mens hartes For although you reproue the life of the Papistes and speake against their whoredom conetousnes tyranny and such like enormities neuer so much and by the euill workes of the law detect their impietie yet shall you nothing preuaile For all this the Pope doth not sticke to confesse as in deede he can neuer deny his manifest abominations But sayth he although our life be defiled with sinne yet our doctrine and our kingdom notwithstanding is holy In like maner the deuill in the lawe and workes can not be conuicted For he can therein so handle him selfe that he will easily breake out as it were through a spyders webbe and lose nothing of all his power But then is he ouercome in deede when the doctrine of fayth is diligently and truely taught aud that the Papistes haue not onely lost but also haue defaced with their filthy doctrine and opinions both Christ and the true maner of iustification If we sticke to this ankerhold both the Pope and Satan shall be put to flight For if their doctrine be once conuicted as false and erroneous they haue nothing to defende them selues withall Wherfore endeuour your selues with all diligēce that this doctrine may be of you both well knowne surely stablished in your harts And let none be so arrogant as to think that he hath atteyned the full perfect knowledge of this heauenly wisedom For so long as Satan the world and our owne reason can do any thing we shall neuer be perfect in this knowledge And because we are as it were souldiers placed in the forefront of the battaile therefore we are in daunger of many perills which to withstand it is not in the power or wisedom of man. The summe and effect therefore of all these wordes Because there is mercie with thee is this that God will not deale with vs according to the lawe because we likewise should not deale with him according to the law but say with the Publicane Lorde be mercifull vnto me a sinner They that goe beyond these boundes of grace and leauing this rich and ample grace wil dispute of the law and works calling to account what they haue done and what they haue left vndone the further they go the deeper they plunge them selues in hell I say not this without good cause I see what hapned to good Bernard whom if you examine wel you shall find him contrary to him selfe For when he treateth of faith with an inward feeling he teacheth Christ purely he stirreth vppe mens hartes to the loue of Christ effectually and setteth forth his benefites sincerely then smelleth he of ●othing else but roses and hony But contrariwise when he disputeth out of the law or of the lawe then reasoneth he no otherwise then if he were some Turke or Iewe which either knoweth not Christ or plainly denieth him So is it likewise with all others that take vpon them the office of teaching and preaching For when they speake with an inward feeling and practise and are not caried away with disputations contentions they teach Christ purely But when they e●ter into the discourse of the law they so dispute as if there were no Christ which had instituted the law yea which with his owne blood had purchased the remission of sinnes This doe we also find to be most true when we fal in matters of the law mens traditions Wherfore we must stand fast in this Paradise or heauen of grace and seeke no further that we may remaine in this simple confession of Dauid VVith thee there is mercie But why doth he adde moreouer That thou mayest be feared
out of Sion and a newe kingdome of Christe out of Ierusalem Notwithstanding they say that this Ierusalem should be greater then the whole earth and the walles thereof should be the endes of the earth These thinges can not be vnderstand of the corporall Ierusalem which notwithstanding was the first occasion of the beginning of the kingdom of Christ but after wardes it was horribly destroyed like as also the wicked sorte of Dauids posteritie were rooted out but the godly remained vntill Christ was borne Moreouer it is euident that this election and choosing began vnder Dauid For before that time the citie of Ierusalem belonged to the Iebusites but vnder Dauid it was chosen by the promise of God to be a citie for the Kinges and Priestes in such sort that like as before the persons of the Priests did not wander from tribe to tribe but were alwayes certaine so the persons and successions of the Kings should not nowe vncertainly wander as the Iudges and the Princes did which continued not in any certaine tribe and here againe he vseth the worde of choosing to confound the presumption confidence of merite which was so groūded in their hartes to the ende they might vnderstand that this citie was appointed by the good pleasure of God to be a seate and harborowe for religion and policie For this deuilish vice was peculiar vnto the Iewes that they gloried in their merites their seruice and ceremonies For this cause Moses also sharply reproueth them and warneth them that they should not thinke they had obteyned these great benefites through their owne righteousnes Not for thy righteousnes saith he hath the Lorde brought thee into this land This deuilish presumption we see also to be in the Papacie but much worse then it was emongest the people of god For they vsed that worship seruice which was commaunded of god But in Popery there is nothing but mans inuentions which are the worshipping of idolls Nowe whereas the Lord promiseth that he will dwell in Ierusalem this seemeth to be but a small matter But we must loke to the Maiestie of the inhabitour and then the place be it neuer so base and contemptible shall become glorious For this did the word promise that he whom the heauens could not comprehend should be found in Ierusalem This is therefore a singular promise when men may knowe and enioy a certaine place wherein God may be founde that they wander not in the imaginations of their owne harts euery man choosing vnto him selfe a God or a place where he may serue God according to his owne fantasie as Ieroboam did which is horrible idolatrie Wherefore it is the great mercie of God that he hath appoynted a certaine place for his word and his whole seruice to the which place the Scripture attributeth this excellent name and title that it is called the holy citie not for the holines of the people inhabiting the same but for the holines of the Lord sanctifying all things by his word This glory hath the Church of the newe Testament also in that she hath for her head not the Pope as the wicked Papists doe most wickedly affirme but Christ sitting at the right hande of the father who is present with his word Sacraments This is an inestimable glory which dependeth not vpon our righteousnes but vpon the great mercie of God accepting approuing and commending all thinges that we doe for Christ his sonnes sake our head But the citie of Ierusalem found Satan her deadly and cruel enemie in this respect also because it was as it were the worke-house of God in the which he dayly exercised and wrought all maner of holy workes blessings benefites for his people Yet was it of God notwithstanding meruelously preserued to this end that his people should not be vncerteine where he would be found worshipped and heard And here agayne we are admonished that all these thinges come of gift and not of merite of mercie and not of workes For he hath chosen vnto him selfe this rest it hath pleased him to dwell in this place So it commeth not of our desert that we enioy the Gospell and other great blessings of god All these are the giftes of God through his great mercie and goodnes bestowed vpon vs for Christes sake Verse 15. Her vitailes I will blesse and will satisfie her poore with bread This word vitailes signifieth properly a pray But why doth the Scripture so call the sustenance whereby we liue Euen for the same cause for the which Christ calleth it our dayly breade So that like as beastes doe dayly followe their pray and finde it they sowe not they labour not but by pray they atteyne all that they haue Euen so shoulde we not heape vppe that through couetousnes and incredulitie which may serue vs for many yeres but shoulde daily looke for and receiue at the handes of the Lord that which is dayly offered vnto vs employing our labour notwithstanding as a meane to atteine the same therewith be content as the beast is when he hath obteined his pray For couetousnes incredulitie is not content with present benefits although the Lorde doe neuer so faythfully promise to feede vs and giue vs all things necessary for this life Thus the Scripture properly very aptly calleth our foode and sustenance a pray which commeth vnto vs taking no care but labouring leauing the care vnto God as our Sauiour Christ teacheth vs Matt. 6. who commaundeth vs to labour and diligently endeuour to doe that belongeth to our vocation for of the Hebrewes that is counted labour which euery day hath and bringeth with it But withall he commaundeth vs to take no thought for worldly thinges but to leaue all carefulnes vnto the Lorde who promiseth that we shall no more lacke then the birdes and other beastes doe which haue that is sufficient and yet labour not nor make prouision for the same For this is not the ende of our labour that in this life we should still seeke to enrich our selues and neuer be satisfied For although we haue the treasures of this world yet with this life we must forsake them And like as this life is not certeine but is as a pray which we so long enioy as it pleaseth the Lorde euen so is the portion of our sustenance but as you would say a snatch wherewith we must be content to liue and not be carefull for the time to come So doth this word condemne all faithlesse carefulnes and carefull incredulitie wherewith notwithstanding we can nothing preuaile Cyprian hath a goodly saying to this effect and worthie to be remembred Christians saith he which haue forsaken this world doe so litle care for earthly thinges that they aske no more but foode and rayment For their hartes are fixed vppon the eternall treasures of the world to come They seeke to liue but from day to day as straungers hauing here no
continuing citie but looking for one to come And good cause there is why that Disciple of Christ should desire no more but for the present day which is commaunded not to be careful for to morrowe For it is an absurde thing that we should desire to liue long in this world which pray for the spedy comming of the kingdom of Christ. That which followeth her poore I will satisfie with bread is a phrase or kind of speech well knowne For breade the Hebrewes are wont to call meate and drinke like as we call vitailes whatsoeuer perteineth to our foode and sustenance These things he promiseth but to the poore for so he calleth his people For he seeth the condition of his Church to be such that in the middes of the riches and wealth of the world it onely hungreth thirsteth The pouertie of the Leuites was exceeding great vntill they aspired to honor and dignitie as also our Prelates doe For Satan so ruleth in these matters that he neuer ceaseth to oppresse the ministerie as much as in him lyeth with pouertie and contempt This many not contented to beare doe fall so farre that rather then they will lack they will teach the thinges that please men that so they may attaine to wealth and dignitie The godly must therefore hold fast this promise that the Lord saith he will giue breade vnto his poore For both these thinges shall come to passe that they shall haue breade and yet they shall be poore And why Because the kingdom of Christ is not of this world Let those therefore which are of the ministery and are the principall part of this kingdom be content to suffer reproch hatred and contempt or else let them be no ministers For the inheritance of this world is not promised to the godly but the assured and euerlasting inhertiance of the life to come Wherefore Christ calleth the poore in spirite blessed and happy which notwithstanding must suffer many calamities On the other side those that abound in wealth and are full he calleth miserable and vnhappy because the time shall come when they shall weepe Wherefore let vs thus make our account that if we wil be the people of God we must in this life content our selues with those thinges whiche are necessary for the back and the belly All other incommodities let vs patiently beare and ouercome in hope of the glory whiche shall be reuealed vpon the sonnes of God. Verse 16. And will cloth her Priestes with saluation and her Sainctes shall showt for ioy This promise is farre more excellent then that whereof we haue now spoken For here God promiseth that he will so gouern the Pastors and Ministers that they shal be pure holy through the word and haue a good conscience If we would compare these thinges with that small defecte of corporall thinges we should beare it much more cherefully and patiently When I was a Monke I liued in most miserable darkenes and infinite snares of conscience where through the multitude of mens traditions sinne brought forth sinne I was bound against nature to that impure and incestuous single life Here if a man should haue asked me what I would giue to redeeme the quietnes and peace of conscience and those inestimable graces and glory which we enioy at this day by the word and the spirite of God I would humbly haue cast downe my self prostrate vpon the ground giuen my life gladly for this onely quietnes and libertie of conscience in Christ. But now when we are clothed in deede with saluation through great and assured promises of the forgiuenes of sinnes and eternal life we forget these spirituall riches and we complaine that we are not made Kinges and Princes in this corporall life We doe not preferre our eternall and spirituall glory before these transitory and corruptible things And what a foule ingratitude is it so to be offended with this externall pouertie and not to ioy and reioyce rather in these inestimable treasures of the spirite Who woulde not rather hauing these giftes of the spirite begge his bread from dore to dore then enioy the riches and treasures of all the Prelates and the whole kingdom of the Pope Whome we see in this wealth of the world because they are enemyes to the worde to be most desperate and damnable For they are without remission of sinnes hope of eternall life the knowledge of Christ and all the heauenly benefits and blessings which we by the word doe so plentifully enioy Wherefore if we be neuer so poore afflicted vexed full of anguish and heauynes contemptible and abominable in the sight of the world yet let vs comfort our selues with this that we haue the treasures of the kingdome of heauen that by faith in the worde wee shall haue the victorie ouer sinne death and hell and that we are wholy clothed with saluation How many were oppressed with desperation before this happy age wherein we liue But if they had had this knowledge of grace and these consolations which we now haue by the worde woulde they not thinke ye haue sustained the losse of all the riches in the world and all worldly felicitie For when a man feeleth the wrath of God and desperation then infinite riches and treasures are nothing esteemed What doth knowledge learning wisedome what doe possessions kingdoms and dominions then auaile All these thinges who would not gladly forsake and cast away that onely he might haue his conscience quieted and at peace with God Wherefore Paule very aptly calleth the knowledge of grace an absolute or a full perfection because all good thinges are conteyned in this knowledge For if we liue here by begging our bread is not this well recompensed in that we are nourished with the food of Angells eternall life and Christ him selfe Who so fauoreth not these thinges let him seeke for a Cardinalls hatte with the ministers and souldiers of Satan Let him seeke the wealth the riches and glorie of this world As for me I seeke other riches which I esteeme aboue all worldly wealth and treasures Thirtie yeares agoe if I had had the true knowledge and vnderstanding but of one Psalme I should haue thought my selfe to be a God for then all thinges were full of grosse ignorance horrible abominations and all kindes of idolatrie But now when the Lord hath opened vnto vs as it were a flood of heauenly wisedom and knowledge we are vnthankfull and become so worldly so fine and so delicate that we will lacke nothing that the worlde hath But Esay sayth The bedde is strait and there is no place for both Albeit the thinges we doe not condemne for they are the giftes of God and therefore let those which haue them being lawfully gotten and in the feare of God vse them with thankesgiuing and without offence and let those to whom they are not giuen beare their want and necessitie with christian patience and without grudging As
iudgement of faith God is greater then all our afflictions and calamities Psal. 75. To the flesh God semeth to be no keper but a destroyer God is a keper and still watcheth ouer vs. The kingdom of the deuill Psal. 97. The argument of the Psalme A singuler gift of God to acknowledge how in estimable a benefite it is to haue the word The tabernacle of Moises The meaning of this place is that man knoweth not by these outward things that is by prosperitie or aduersitie whome God doth fauour or hate Eccl. 9. VVhat inestimable benefits the word bringeth The benefits of the second table The benefits of the first table The spirituall giftes which God giueth by his word The word must be continuall● taught exercised practised A comparison betwene the Gentiles the Iewes Paralip 17● What Dauid meaneth by the house of the Lord. Psal. 13● Standing feete what they signifie 2. Cor. 12. To pluck downe to oppresse the Church is to build it vp Exod. 1. Ierusalem set in the midds of her aduersaries notwithstanding mightely prospered The proper office of God. 4. Kings 5. Ierusalem the holy citie The chiefest seruice of God is to preach the word pray To testifie what it signifieth To giue thankes to the Lord is a fruite of the word The image of the heauenly Ierusalem Colo. 3. Heb. 12. The argument of the Psalme A breife praier in necessity carrieth power with it 4. Reg. 9. 2. Reg. 6. A vehement groning of the hart destitute of all comfort Psal. 2. Psal. 116. Tim 6. Luke 9. God sometimes prolongeth his help in tentation The patience of the faithfull The humilitie of the faithfull The argument of the Psalme The people of Israel as a sheepe amōg many wolues Note who are most thankfull The snares of Satan Psal. 93. The name of the Lorde is our onely Sanctuary succour in all afflictions The fruite of afflictions The argument of the Psalme The power of the word Psal. 33. Psal 48. To hope and trust in the Lorde is the greatest ●eruice that we can doe to him The nature of faith Ierusalem called holy by the figure Synecdoche where a part is taken for the whole Olde things are passed away behold all thinges are become newe Virgil. The argument of the Psalme Of what maner of captiuitie this Psalme treateth Act. 12. Gen. 45. Psal. 9. 2. Tim. 2. Speculation is a naked knowledge without experience and practise Psal. 117. Rom. 1.5 Mens ordinances must onely serue for the exercise of the body not to bind the conscience Iohn 12. Phil. 3. Satans prerogatiue Rom. 7. Philip. 3. If we will be partakers of his glory we must be also partakers of his sufferings 1. Pet. 4. Iohn 16. Psal. 137. The argument of the Psalme Aristotle and others howe and wherein they erre The principal causes of the good gouernment of common wealthes and families Demosthenes Cicero Iulius Caesar The efficient cause of the true gouernment of conmon wealths housholds The abuse of matrimonie and houshold gouernment The burdens of matrimony are infinit The Papists did condēne ciuill gouernment matrimony as worldly kindes of life Mark. 6.20 The idle bellied Monkes would haue nothing to doe with ciuill or houshold affaires The Monks could nether teach nor comfort mē in their necessities Naaman Syrus Prouerb 16. Ierem. 10. Doctrine cōcerning ciuil housholde gouernment This Psalme conteineth the summe and effect of the booke of the Ecclesiastes of Salomon Eccle. 2.12 The finall cause of ciuill and houshold gouernment Many wise and politike gouerners deseruing well of the common wealth haue bene euill vsed condemned and cast into exile We must walke in the midde way and keepe a meane They that enter into any publike office or into matrimonie must beginne with inuocation and calling vpon God. Godly Magistrates and maried folke howe they ought to vse them selues The principall master of the houshold magistrate is God. God the true master of the housholde Dauids houshold gouernment most miserable They labour in vaine that labour without the Lorde To build The building To labour To labour in vayne The good gouernment of housholds and families is the founteyne and headspring of the common wealth Houshold gouernmēt was begun of God in Paradise Artes and sciences and such other giftes God approueth as necessary for mans life otherwise he regardeth them not therefore man hath no cause to glory in them The words of Cicero Marke what it is to rule and gouerne without God. Martinus Sangerhaufen The true munitions and fortifications of common welths Daniel 4. The cause of the destruction of greate kindoms Monarchies Esay 37. Esay 45. The successe of the wicked To keepe what it signifieth Kings Princes and Magistrates the Prophet calleth keepers To labour in vaine * Industrie is such a labor diligence as is ioyned with a prouident care discretion in obseruing of persons places conuenient times with other circumstances that no labour be spent in vain Labour with out industry hath no good successe Friderike Duke of Saxonie a very wise discrete man. Industrious and prouident men God is still present with his creature The bread of affliction To rise earely c. Rom. 10. Psal. 77.33 Labour is not forbidden but presumption is condemned Eccle. 6. The godly are contented with that they haue Esops dogge which swimming ouer the water with a peece of flesh in his mouth snatched at the shadowe of the flesh shining in the water and so lost both A wise saying of Augustine Wise men some times committe great folly These words fortune chaunce casualty such like are not vsed because any thing commeth otherwise to passe then by the prouidence of God but for that many things fall out otherwise then we looked for the cause thereof we can not see * The song of fooles to say I had not thought or had I wist Wise and mightie men bring not to passe that they go about The whole world riseth earely in vayne The naturall presumption of man to be like vnto God or to be as Gods. The abuse of the giftes of God in the worlde The ministery of Angells about yong children infants Philip. 4. Note the end of those men that are not thankfull to God for their wealth and welfare but attribute all to fortune and chaunce The argument of the Psalme A priuilege as touching continencie and to whom it is giuen Chast matrimony can not stād with the vnchast and filthy religion of the Papistes * Actiue or passiue that is which either come vnto vs by labour trauel or which we suffer inwardly or outwardly by anye meanes Matth. 9. * That is to liue chast without matrimony 1. Timoth. 4. 1. Cor 7. Matth. 9.12 The argument of the Psalme Cap. 12. Psal. 6. He setteth the similitude of the grasse in the house topp against the similitude of the plowers This iudgement that the enemies are like grasse and therfore shall