Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n let_v lord_n see_v 4,698 5 3.6890 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A54095 An account of W. Penn's travails in Holland and Germany, anno MDCLXXVII, for the service of the Gospel of Christ, by way of journal containing also divers letters and epistles writ to several great and eminent persons whilst there. Penn, William, 1644-1718.; Penn, William, 1644-1718. To the churches of Jesus throughout the world. 1694 (1694) Wing P1244; ESTC R18015 98,942 298

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Meeting six years ago in this City and I remember the power had that operation upon them that I said to B F. and T R. then with me it will not be long before they will publickly own and bear testimony in this place and about three months after he came forth and she about a year after him and from their fidelity and integrity notwithstanding all the sore and bitter tempest of Persecution a fine Meeting sprang but at this day they are scattered being still sent away as fast as they return We visited his Mother's Family where we found three of his Sisters in the love of Truth his fourth Sister being also a Friend and is Wife of John Claus living at Amsterdam We had a little sweet comfortable Meeting with them After it returning to my lodging as I was writing to Doctor Andrews President of the Counsel of State who is reported to have been the Author of this cruelty to our Friends a burden came upon me my writing would not serve turn but I must go my self and in the fear and name of the Lord to plead the innocent and suffering cause of our Friends with him So away we went to his house he was at first astonished to see what manner of Men we were but after a little time he comported himself with more kindness than we expected at his hand I askt him if He and the Senate had not received a Letter in Latine from an English-man about two years since concerning their Severity towards the People called Quakers He told me he had I replyed I was the Man and I was constrained in Conscience to visit him on their behalf and I could not see how he being a Common-wealth's-man and 〈◊〉 Protestant could persecute I pleaded with the Unnaturalness the I●christianity and Imprudence of such proceedings and prest ●ur Reason● earnestly but tenderly upon him he assaulted us with several Objections but blessed be the Lord they were mostly fictitious and therefore easily removed and answered He also promised me That if I would write to the Senate a Remonstrance of the Case of our Friends and express my Request therein and inclose it to him he would both present it and get it to be read and make it appear that he was not so much our enemy as we lookt upon him to be I promised to send him some Books containing a Defence of our Principles which were accordingly put into the hands of Eliza. Haesbert to deliver him in my name Having taken our leave of the Old Woman and her Daughters and a Man-friend residing in that City and left the blessings and peace of our God amongst them We took Ship for Lier where we arrived the next morning thence we took Waggon for Bremen where we came safe through the Lord's goodness the next day where we met our Friends and Companions G. Keith and B. Burly who were come hither some hours before us from Amsterdam In this City there is a work of the Lord begun though yet obscurely We had a travel upon our spirits that the blessed and precious Truth of our dear Lord and Master might find a place to rest its foot upon to that purpose we wrote to two Ministers under some Suffering from their Brethren because of their great zeal against the formality and deadness of the so called reformed Churches This we sent by a Merchant who we formerly met at Herwerden With some difficulty we got to them but the person chiefly struck at was shy to speak with us his reason was this it was known that we were in Town and it was one of the accusations against him that he was a Fosterer of all the strange Religions that came through the Town Also he was then actually under Process and that the People that had heard of the innocency of his cause conceived a prejudice against our Name though it might be without cause he could not at present confer with us and said he was sorry for it with all his heart but what we should say to his Brother should be the same as if it been said to him to whom he referred us however I took hold of his Arm and said I have this Message to deliver to thee that I may disburden my self before the Lord which was this Mind that which hath touched thy heart let that guide thee do not thou order that consult not with Flesh and Blood how to maintain that cause which Flesh and Blood in thy enemies persecuteth thee for He answered rather than I will betray that cause or desert Christ by Gods strength they shall pull my flesh of my bones So he left us in his house and truely we had a good time with his Companion the other Minister about three hours testifying unto him that the day was come and coming in which the Lord would gather out of all Sects that stand in the oldness of the Letter into his own Holy Spirit Life and Power and in this the Unity of Faith and Bond of Peace should stand and therefore that he and all of them should have an eye to the principle of God that being turned to that they might speak from it and that therein they would Glorifie God and be edified So we parted leaving the man in a sensible and savoury frame We visited the Merchant twice and had a very good time with him the man is of a loving and simple Spirit and the Love of God opened our hearts to him often We also visited Doctor Johan Sophrony Cozack an odd Compositum of a man he had great and strange openings he hath writ several hundred tracts some of them are now printed at Amsterdam he is a great enemy to the Priests and in society with none of a merry yet of a rough disposition without any method or decency in his Cloaths Food Furniture and Entertainments he wants but three of fourscore yet of a wonderful Vigor and pregnancy we were twice with him and we have reason to think he was as loving to us as to any body and truly he did show at parting some serious and hearty kindness but we could fasten little upon him as to God's Power or any inward sense of us or our testimony yet we had little to object against what we had said nay some things were very extraordinary From him we went to Doctor Belingham an English Physitian a man of a lowly and tender spirit who received us in much love lamenting when we left him that he had no more time with us At the Inn we had frequent opportunity to declare the way of Truth and we must needs say we were heard with patience and Sobriety particularly of a Doctor of Law who lodged at the house and an ancient Man of Kiel in Holstein we left Books amongst them all and in the Love and Fear of God we took our leave of them on the fifth day after dinner and begun our journey towards Herwerden the Court of the Princess where
and have beheld his Glory and confessed it to be the Glory of the only begotten Son of God and who by Obedience to his appearance are become the Children of Light and of the Day and as the First-Fruits to God after this long Night of Apostacy might for ever walk and dwell in his holy Covenant Christ Jesus the Light of the World because in him we have always Peace but out of him comes all the Trouble And whilst this heavenly Sense rested with me the Lord God that made me and called me by his Grace unto Salvation laid it upon me to visit you in an holy Exhortation And it is the Exhortation of my Life at this time in the earnest and fervent Motion of the Power and Spirit of Jesus to beseech you all who are turned to the Light of Christ that shineth in your Hearts and believe in it That you carefully and faithfully walk in it in the same Dread Awe and Fear in which you began that that holy Poverty of Spirit that is precious in the Eyes of the Lord and was in the Days of your first Love may dwell and rest with you that you may daily feel the same heavenly Hunger and Thirst the same Lowliness and Humility of Mind the same Zeal and Tenderness and the same Sincerity and Love unfeigned that God may fill you out of his heavenly Treasure with the Riches of Life and crown you with holy Victory and Dominion over the God and Spirit of this World That your Alpha may be your Omega and your Author your Finisher and your first Love your last Love that so none may make Shipwrack of Faith and of a good Conscience nor faint by the Way And as in this State we are kept in holy Watchfulness to God as in the beginning the Table which our heavenly Father spreads and the Blessings with which he compasseth us about shall not become a Snare unto us nor shall we turn the Grace and Mercies of the Lord into Wantonness but we shall eat and drink in an holy Fear apparel our selves in Fear buy and sell in Fear visit one another in Fear keep Meetings and there wait upon the Lord in Fear yea whatsoever we take in hand to do it shall be in the holy Fear of God and with an holy Tenderness of his Glory and Regard to the Prosperity of his Truth yea we shall deny our selves not only in the unlawful things but in the things that are even lawful to us for the Sake of the many Millions that are unconverted to God For my Friends and Brethren God hath laid upon us whom he hath honoured with the beginning of his great Work in the World the Care both of this Age and of the Ages to come that they may walk as they have us for Examples yea the Lord God hath chosen you to place his Name in you the Lord hath entrusted you with his Glory that you might hold it forth to all Nations and that the Generations unborn may call you Blessed Therefore let none be Treacherous to the Lord nor reward him Evil for Good nor betray his Cause directly by wilful Wickedness nor indirectly by Negligence and Unfaithfulness But be zealous and valiant for Truth on Earth let none be slothful or careless O remember the slothful Servant's State And let the loving-kindness of the Lord overcome every Soul to Faithfulness For with him are Riches and Honour and every good thing And whither should any go he hath the words of Eternal Life O let none loose their Testimony but hold it up for God let thy Gift be never so small thy Testimony never so little Through thy whole Conversation bear it for God and be true to what thou art convinced of And wait all upon the Lord that you may grow in your heavenly Testimony that Life may fill your Hearts your Houses and your Meetings that you may daily wait to know and to receive Power to do the Will of God on Earth as it is in Heaven And O! that the Cross of Jesus may be in high and honourable Esteem with every one that the Liberty of all may stand in the Cross which alone preserveth for it is the Power of God that crucifieth us to the World and the World to us And through Death way is made unto Life and Immortality which by this blessed Cross the Gospel the Power is brought to Light So shall the Seed of Life that God hath sown in our Hearts grow and in that Seed shall we all come to be Blessed unto whom God hath appointed the Dominion over us and it is good for all to live under the Holy Government of it for the Ways of it are the Ways of Pleasantness and all its Paths are Peace and all that are born of it can say Thy Scepter is a Scepter of Righteousness And O! That all Friends every where may continually bow unto his righteous Scepter and keep to his holy Law which is written in their Hearts that it may be a Light to their Feet and a Lanthorn to their Paths So shall they come to witness that holy Promise made good unto them That the Spirit which I have given unto him the Seed and the Words which I have put into his Mouth shall not depart from him nor from his Seed nor from his Seed's Seed unto all Generations Wherefore Friends redeem the Time because the Days are Evil God hath given you to see they are so and be ye separated more and more yea perfectly disentangled from the Cares of this World And be ye not cumbred with the many things but stand loose from the things that are seen which are Temporal And you that are Poor murmur not but be Patient and trust in the Lord and submit to his Providence and he will provide for you that which is convenient for you the Days of your appointed Time And you that are Rich keep in the Moderation and strive not to multiply earthly Treasure nor to heap up uncertain Riches to your selves but what God hath given you more than what is convenient for your own Use wait for his Wisdom to employ it for his Glory that you may be faithful Stewards of this World 's Mammon and the Lord God shall reward you into your Bosoms of the Riches of that Kingdom that shall never have an End O my Friends and Brethren whether Rich or Poor in Bonds or at Liberty in whatsoever State you are the Salutation of the universal Life of Jesus is to you And the Exhortation is to bow to what is made known unto you and in the Light by which ye have received in measure the Knowledg of God watch and wait diligently to the farther Revelation of the Mind and Will of God unto you that ye may be endued from on High with Power and Might in your inward Man to answer the call and requirings of the Lord that ye may be enabled to make known to the Nations what is the Riches
Minister of the Gospel be at the beck of any Mortal living or give his Soul and Conscience to the time and appointment of another the thing in it self is utterly wrong and against the very Nature and Worship of the new and everlasting Covenant You had better meet to read the Scriptures the Book of Martyrs c. if you cannot sit and wait in silence upon the Lord till his Angel move upon your Hearts than to uphold such a formal limited and ceremonious Worship this is not the Way out of Babylon And I have a deep sense upon my Soul that if the Young Man strive beyond the talent God hath given him to answer his Office and fill up his Place and wait not for the pure and living Word of God in his Heart to open his Mouth but either studieth for his Sermons or speaketh his own Words he will be utterly ruined Wherefore O Dear Friend have a care thou art no Snare to him nor he to thee Man's Works smother and stifle the true life of Christ what have you to do but to look to Jesus the Author of the holy desires that are in you who himself hath visited you tempt not the Lord provoke not God what should any Man Preach from but Christ and what should he Preach people too but Christ in them the hope of Glory Consider nothing feedeth that which is born of God but that which cometh down from God even the Bread of God which is the Son of God which giveth his life for the World feel it and feed on it let none mock God nor grieve his eternal Spirit that is come to seal them up from the mouth of Man that hath deceived them that Jesus the anointing may teach them and abide with them for ever Be stedfast and immoveable and this will draw the Young Man near to the Lord and empty him of himself and purge away mixtures and then you will all come to the Divine Silence and when all Flesh is silent before the Lord then is it the Lord's time to Speak and if you will hear your Souls shall live O my Soul is in great pain that you may be all chastly preserved in that divine Sense begotten in your Hearts by the eternal Word of God that abideth for ever that nothing may ever be able to extinguish it But more especially thou my Dear Friend mayest be kept in faithfulness for the Lord is come very near to thee and thou must begin the Work the Lord God expecteth it at thy hand if one Sheep break through the rest will follow wherefore watch O watch that thou may'st be strengthned and confirmed and strengthen all that is begotten of God in that Family by thy weighty savoury and circumspect life O how is my Soul affected with thy present condition it is the fervent Supplication of my heart that thou may'st through the daily obedience of the Cross of Jesus conquer and shine as a bright and glorious Star in the Firmament of God's eternal Kingdom So let it be Lord Jesus Amen We tenderly yet freely spoke ou● hearts to him before we parted which done in God's love we too● our leave of him and Dusseldorp and got that Night to Duysburgh being the third Day of the Week We first visited Dr. Mastricht a Ma● of a good natural Temper but a rigid Calvinist I perceived by him that they held a Consultation about seeing us at Bruch but they all concluded it was best to decline meeting with us because of the Graef he being ready to fling our Name in reproach upon them in his displeasure and this would confirm him in his Jealousies of them This might excuse the Countess but by no means Kuper and if I had any sense Mastricht was there with them upon design to frustrate the hopes we had conceived of meeting with her We from tha● descended to other things of weight● and in love and peace parted From his House we returned to our Inn and after Supper we visited the Schult who with much civility and some tenderness received us his Sister also came to us and we had a good little Meeting with them and our God was with us and his pure and tender life appeared for our Justification and pleaded our innocent Cause in their Consciences and so we parted with them leaving our Master's Peace amongst them The next day we came to Wesel being the 4th day where we understood by Dr. Schuler that thy Sister desired that we would be so kind as to see her when we returned upon that we went and visited her she received us very kindly Thy Brother in Law 's two Sisters were present we stayed with them at least two Hours Many Questions she put to me which I was glad to have an Opportunity to Answer for it made way for a Meeting she intreated us to come again if we stayed and told us our Visit was very grateful to her adding That because we past 〈◊〉 by the last time she concluded wi●● herself we had no hopes of her with more to that effect From thence we went to Dr. Schuler's who freely offered us his House for a Meeting next day and indeed the Man is bold after his manner The next day about Seven I writ a Billiet in French to thy Sister to inform her of the Meeting to begin about Eight She came and her two Sisters with her there was Rosendale Colonel Copius and his Wife and about three or four more and to our great Joy the Lord Almighty was with us and his holy Power reached their Hearts and the Doctor and Copius confessed to our Testimony The Meeting lasted about three Hours being done we took our leave of them in the Spirit of Jesus and so returned to our Inn. The Taylor all this while afraid of coming to our Inn or to the Doctor 's to the Meeting great Fears have overtaken him and the poor Man liveth but in a dry Land After Dinner we visited Copius and Rosendale and at Copius's we had a blessed broken Meeting he his Wife Rosendale his Wife and another Woman Wife to one Dr. Willick's Brother present they were extreamly affected and overcome by the Power of the Lord 't was like one of our Herwerden Meetings indeed much Tenderness was upon all their Spirits This done and having left Books both there and with thy Sister we left Wesel with Hearts full of Joy and Peace and let me say this That more kindness more openness we have scarcely found in all our Travels O that this blessed Sense may dwell with them A Seed there is in that place God will gather yea a noble People he will find out And I doubt not but there will be a good Meeting of Friends in that City before many Years go about my love is great to that place O how God is our dear Lord to us who helpeth our Infirmities and carrieth through all Opposition and feedeth us with his Divine Presence