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A11777 The holie Bible faithfully translated into English, out of the authentical Latin. Diligently conferred with the Hebrew, Greeke, and other editions in diuers languages. With arguments of the bookes, and chapters: annotations. tables: and other helpes ... By the English College of Doway; Bible. O.T. English. Douai. Martin, Gregory, d. 1582. 1609-1610 (1610) STC 2207; ESTC S101944 2,522,627 2,280

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† Let the enemie persecute my soule and take it and treade downe my life in the earth and bring downe my glorie into the dust † Arise Lord in thy wrath and be exalted in the coastes of myne enemies And arise ô Lord my God in the precept which thou hast cōmanded † and a sinagogue of peoples shal compasse thee And for it returne on high † our Lord iudgeth peoples Iudge me ô Lord according to my iustice and according to my innocencie vpon me † The wickednesse of sinners shal be consumed and thou shalt direct the iust which searchest the hart and raynes ô God † My iust helpe is from our Lord who saueth those that be right of hart God is a iust iudge strong patient is he angrie euerie day † Vnlesse you wil be conuerted he shal shake his sword he hath bent his bow and prepared it † And in it he hath prepared the vessels of death he hath made his arrowes for them that burne † Behold he hath bredde with iniustice he hath conceiued sorow and brought forth iniquitie † He hath opened a pit and digged it vp and he is fallen into the diche which he made † His sorrow shal be turned vpon his head and his iniquitie shal descend vpon his crowne † I wil confesse to our Lord according to his iustice and wil sing to the name of our Lord most high PSALME VIII God is magnified praised for his meruelous worke of creatures 5. but especially of mankind singularly exalted by the Incarnation of Christ. † Vnto the end for “ presses the Psalme of Dauid O LORD our Lord how meruelous is thy name in the whole earth Because thy magnificence is eleuated aboue the heauens † Out of the mouth of infantes and sucklinges thou hast perfected praise because of thine enemies that thou mayest destroy the enemie and reuenger † Because I shal see thy heauens the workes of thy fingers the moone and the starres which thou hast founded † What is man that thou art mindful of him or the sonne of man that thou visitest him † Thou hast minished him a litle lesse then Angels with glorie and honour thou hast crowned him † and hast appointed him ouer the worke of thy handes † Thou hast subiected al thinges vnder his feete al sheepe and oxen moreouer also the beastes of the field † The birdes of the ayre and fishes of the sea that walke the pathes of the sea † O Lord our Lord how meruelous is thy name in the whole earth ANNOTATIONS PASLME VIII 1. Presses Most Hebrew Doctors say the word Gittith may either signifie the place where this Psalme was made or the musical instrument on which it was song But most Christian Doctors expound it literally of Christs Passion who was stretched on the Crosse and al his sacred bloud pressed and drawne out of his bodie VVhich Metaphor Isaias also vseth demanding of Christ VVhy is thy clothing redde and thy garments as theirs that tread in the vine presse and answereth in Christs person I haue troden the presse alone S. Augustin also applieth it morally to the Church where Christ is the vine the Apostles are the branches spreaders that is preachers of the Ghospel Christians are the grapes Christian vertues are the wine Namely patience and fortitude in afflictions VVherby the good are purified and seuered from amiddes the reprobate as wine is pressed out of the grapes barreled and laid vp in sellers and * the huskes and carnels cast to hogges or other beastes PSALME IX The Church prayseth God for her protection 4. in repelling the enemies force 8. in punishing the wicked and rewarding the iust † Vnto the end for the secrets of the sonne the Psalme of Dauid I WIL confesse to thee ō Lord with al my hart I wil tel al thy meruelous thinges I wil be glad and reioyce in thee I wil sing to thy name ō most High † In turning mine enemie backward they shal be weakened and perish before thy face Because thou hast done my iudgement and my cause thou hast sitte vpon the throne which iudgest iustice Thou hast rebuked the Gentiles and the impious hath perished their name thou hast destroyed for euer and for euer and euer † The swordes of the enemie haue fayled vnto the end and their cities thou hast destroyed † Their memorie hath perished with a sound and our Lord abideth for euer He hath prepared his throne in iudgement † he wil iudge the whole world in equitie he wil iudge the people in iustice † And our Lord is made a refuge for the poore an helper in opportunities in tribulation † And let them hope in thee that know thy name because thou hast not forsaken them that seeke thee ô Lord. † Sing to our Lord which dwelleth in Sion declare his studies among the Gentiles † Because he requiring bloud remembred them he hath not forgotten the crie of the poore † Haue mercie on me ô Lord See my humiliation by my enemies † Which exaltest me from the gates of death that I may declare al thy prayses in the gates of the daughter of Sion † I wil reioyce in thy saluation the Gentiles are fastened in the destruction which they made In this snare which they hid is their foote taken † Our Lord shal be knowen doing iudgements the sinner is taken in the workes of his owne handes † Let sinners be turned into hel al nations that forget God † Because to the end there shal not be obliuion of the poore man the patience of the poore shal not perish in the end † Arise Lord let not man be strengthned let the Gentiles be iudged in thy sight † Appoint Lord a lawgeuer ouer them that the Gentiles may know that they be men The 10. Psalme according to the Hebrevves † Why Lord hast thou departed far of despisest in opportunities in tribulation † Whiles the impious is proude the poore is set on fyre they are caught in the counsels which they deuise † Because the sinner is praysed in the desires of his soule and the vniust man is blessed † The sinner hath exasperated our Lord according to the multitude of his wrath he shal not seeke † There is no God in his sight his waies are defiled at al time Thy iudgementes are taken away from his face he shal rule ouer al his enemies † For he hath sayd in his hart I wil not be moued from genetion vnto generation without euil Whose mouth is ful of cursing and bitternesse and guile vnder his tongue labour and sorrow † He sitteth in waite with the rich in secrete places to kil the innocent † His
vertuous race of good life Much more those which also indure persecution for the truthes sake shal receiue most copious great rewardes in heauen For albeit the passions of this time in themselues are not condigne to the glorie to come that shal be reueled in vs yet our tribulation which presently is momentanie and light worketh through grace aboue measure excedingly an eternal weight of glorie VVhat shal we therfore meditate of the especial prerogatiue of English Catholiques at this time For to you it is geuen for Christ not only that you beleue in him but also that you suffer for him A litle now if you must be made pensiue in diuers tentations that the probation of your faith much more precious then gold which is proued by the fire may be found vnto praise and glorie and honour in the reuelation of Iesus Christ Manie of you haue susteyned the spoile of your goodes with ioy knowing that you haue a better and a permanent substance Others haue benne depriued of your children fathers mothers brothers sisters and nerest frendes in readie resolution also some with sentence of death to lose your owne liues Others haue had trial of reproches mockeries and stripes Others of bandes prisons and banishmentes The innumerable renowmed late English Martyres Confessors whose happie soules for confessing true faith before men are now most glorious in heauen we passe here with silence because their due praise requiring longer discourse yea rather Angels then English tongues farre surpasseth the reach of our conceiptes And so we leaue it to your deuout meditation They now secure for themselues and solicitous for vs their dearest clientes incessantly we are wel assured intercede before Christs Diuine Maiestie for our happie consummation with the conuersion of our whole countrie To you therfore dearest frendes mortal we direct this speach admonishing ourselues you in the Apostles wordes that for so much as we haue not yet resisted tentations to last bloud and death itself patience is stil necessarie for vs that doing the wil of God we may receiue the promise So we repine not in tribulation but euer loue them that hate vs pittying their case and reioycing in our owne For neither can we see during this life how much good they do vs nor know how manie of them shal be as we hartely desire they al may be saued our Lord and Sauiour hauing paide the same price by his death for them and for vs. Loue al therefore pray for al. Do not lose your confidence which hath a great remuneration For yet a litle and a very litle while he that is to come wil come and he wil not slacke Now the iust liueth by faith beleeuing with hart to iustice and confessing with mouth to saluation But he that withdraweth himself shal not please Christs soule Attend to your saluation dearest countriemen You that are farre of draw nere put on Christ And you that are within Christs fold kepe your standing perseuere in him to the end His grace dwel and remaine in you that glorious crownes may be geuen you AMEN From the English College in Doway the Octaues of AL SAINCTES 1609. The God of patience and comfort geue you to be of one mind one tovvards another in IESVS Christ that of one mind vvith one mouth you may glorifie God THE SVMME AND PARTITION OF THE HOLIE BIBLE With a brife note of the Canonical and Apochryphal Bookes By the vniforme consent of al learned Diuines the holie Bible or written word of God conteyneth Expressed orimplied al thinges that man is to beleue to obserue to auoid for obtayning of aeternal saluation That is al matters of faith maners by which we may know and serue God and so be spiritually ioyned with him in this life in eternitie For both the old new Testament propose and testifie vnto vs one and the same God the same Christ the same Church and other Mysteries of our beleefe not differing in substance but in maner of vttering the old more obscurely in figures and prophecies foretelling those thinges which the New declareth in great part as donne and performed VVherupon saith S. Augustin In the Old Testament the New lieth hidden in the New the Old lieth open And touching their names wherein appareth difference the one saith the same Doctor is called the old Testament either because it propofeth promises of temporal thinges VVherwith our old corruptnes is allured Or in respect of the New by which it is fulfilled and in some part abolished The other is called the New because by it man is renewed and hath promise of eternal life VVhich shal neuer waxe old nor decay Likewise S. Gregorie the great testifieth this conformitie and correspondence betwen the Old and New Testament affirming that the same is signified by the prophet Esccbiels vision of an hcele which had foure faces or apparence of foure whiles the shape whereof was as it were a wheele in the middes of a wheele What is this saith he nisi quod in Testamenti veteris litera Testamentum nouum latuit per Allegoriam but that in the letter of the old Testament the New lay hidden by an Allegorie And as the same is the summe and subject of both Testaments so both are diuided for the more principal partes therof into foure sortes of Bookes Legal Historical Sapiential Prophetical The Legal bookes of the old Testament are the fiue Bookes of Moises Genesis Exodus Leuiticus Numeri Deuteronomie whereto answer in the new Testament the foure Gospels of S. Matthew S. Marke S. Luke S. Iohn Historical bookes of the old Testament are the Bookes of Iosue Iudges Ruth foure bookes of Kinges two of Paralipomenon Esdras with Nehemias Tobias Iudith Hester Iob two of the Machabees vnto which in the new Testament answer the Actes of the Apostles Sapiential of the old Testament are the Prouerbes Ecclesiastes Canticles Booke of wisdome Ecclesiasticus and of like sorte are in the new Testament the Epistles of S. Paul of other Apostles Prophetical bookes are Dauids Psalter which is also Sapiential yea like wise Legal and Historical the Bookes of Isaias Ieremias with Baruch Ezechiel Daniel the twelue lesse Prophetes Osea Ioel Amos Abdias Ionas Michaeas Nahum Abacuc Sophonias Aggaeus Zacharias Malachias And in the new Testament the Apocalips of S. Iohn the Apostle Al these Bookes are vndoubtedly Canonical as the Authores cited in the inner margent testifie And consequently al and al the partes therof are of infallible truth For otherwise as S. Augustin teacheth if anie part were false or doubtful al were vncertaine once admittiug falsehood saith he Epist 8. ad Ieroni in such soueraigne authoritie no parcel of these bookes should remaine which anie way should seme hard to maners or incredible to beleue but it might by this most pernicious rule be turned to an officious
other things in the first age were figures of Christs Sacraments the Spirite of God geuing powre to the waters as Tertullian S. Hierom and others expound it and the floud of Noe by S. Peters testimonie were figures of Baptisme Mariage instituted in Paradise is the very paterne of holie Matrimonie a Sacrament in the Church of Christ where one man and one wife are on lie lawful and not more at once in anie wise Christ reforming that which in Moyses law was tolerated for hardnes of mens hartes and for auoyding murther to put away one wife and take an other to this first institution as it was in the beginning two in one flesh not three nor more The repentance of Adam and Eue was a perfect and examplare figure of the Sacrament of Penance First they were ashamed couering their nakednes and hiding them selues which shewed their griefe and sorow for the sinne committed Secondly they confessed their fault and by what meanes it happened For God examining Adam he answered truly and simply saing The woman which thou gauest me to be my companion gaue me of the tree and I did eate Likwise Eue confessed sincerly saying The serpent deceiued me and I did eate Thirdly God gaue them penance besides death before threatned and other penalties annexed that Eue should in paine and trauel bring forth her children and Adam should eate his bread in the sweate of his face And withal cast them forth of Paradise But not forth of his fauoure as appeared by his making them garments of skinnes granting them and their posteritie the rest of the earth to liue and labour in especially to serue him and do penance with admonition to remember that of duct man was made and into dust he shal returne Al which were signes of loue and that finally he would bring them and manie more to eternal saluation The first borne and heades of families were Priests al the time of the law of nature vntil the law being changed God tooke Priests only of the stock of Aaron and the rest of the Leuites to assist them in that function Aaron his sonnes thou shalt appoint saith our Lord ouer the seruice of Priesthood for I haue taken the Leuites of the children of Israel for euerie first borne And ● Paul teacheth that changing of Priesthood and changing of the law goe alwayes together shewing euidently that euerie lawful communitie or commonwealth vnder God hath external Priesthood So that if there had benne no distinct order of external Priesthood in the law of nature or now were none in the law of grace as Protestantes say there is not there were no law at al. See more of this point in the Annotations chap. 7. ad Hebre. Here we only obserue that Abel Seth Enos and other Patriarches were Priestes and exercised priestlie functions yea Cain also was a Priest though a bad one and offered Sacrifice But external offices or ministerie without a wel disposed mind and sincere vertues producing Good workes did neuer iustifie anie man And therfore Cains Sacrifice offered with a peruerse mind was not respected by God as Abels was wherupon he becoming worse and more malicious God sharply reproued his anger and enuie conceiued without iust cause saying If thou doest wel shalt thou not receiue againe but if thou doest il shal not thy sinne forwith be present at the dore clerly shewing that euerie one shal receiue according to his workes This place also euidently sheweth Freewil yea in a wicked man For this expostulation had neuer benne vttered by our most reasonable Lord and Maister if Cain had benne depriued of freewil For he might haue excused himselfe and must needes haue benne holden excused if he had benne forced to do as he did But God charged him as inexcusable and as one that knew or ought to know that he had freewil And doth further inculcate that he had and should haue powre and freewil ouer his concupiscence to correct the same if he would saying The lust therof shal be vnder thee and thou shalt haue domion ouer it So that no sinner be he neuer so wicked much lesse a iust man lacketh freewil yet Luther abhorreth the very word and Caluin wisheth it out of the world Temporal punishment is proued to be due for sinne remitted by that both death and other penalties are inflicted by Gods iustice vpon men after iustification and by the particular punishments laid vpon Adam and Eue confessing their faultes Purgatorie is also proued by the same iustice of God For when anie dieth penitent and yet haue not madeful satisfaction they must suffer for that remaineth after death and be purged before they can enter into rest which remnant of debt our B. Sauiour calleth The last farthing and saith it must be payed The lewes also at this day hold the doctrin of Purgatorie by tradition And consequently they Pray for soules departed not only to God but also to the ancient Patriarches which likewise sheweth Inuocation of Saincts in these wordes Yee fathers which sleepe in Hebron open to him the gates of Eden that is of Paradise which was planted in Eden And Hebron is the place where Adam was buried and his sepulcher religiously conserued in the time of Iosue aboue 1500 yeares after his death The same is the place which Abraham bought and there buried Sara where also him selfe and Isaac and Iacob were buried and to which finally the bodies of the twelue sonnes of Iacob were translated from Sichem As Iosephus writeth And sichem also was specially honored because such persons had benne buried there as S. Hierom witnesseth of his owne knowledge in his time Againe by religious care of burying the dead in this first age Enoch was more certainly knowen to be Translated aliue and not to be dead For the seuentie Interpreters and S. Paul say He was not found which importeth that they sought diligently for him and that his bodie could not be found for God translated him By al which we see mutual offices and communion of good workes amongst good men aliue and dead which is called Cōmunion of Saincts And herein Angels lacked not their offices For God set Cherubins to kepe the gate of Paradise that neither man should enter being iustly expelled for sinne nor diuels as S. Augustin noteth left they should take fruite of the tree of life and geuing it to men allure them to more sinne And now Saincts being exalted to Angels glorie haue like honorable offices towards other men as Angels haue Yea the bloud of Abel vniustly shed by Cain and iustly to be reuenged by God sheweth the peculiar honour which God bestoweth vpon his Saints for their vertues and merites in this life especially in their death For Precious in the sight of our Lord is the
put it vpon their shoulders † And the children of Israel did as Moyses had commanded and they asked of the Aegyptians vessels of siluer and gold and very much rayment † And our Lord gaue grace to the people before the Aegyptians that they did lend them and they spoyled the Aegyptians † And the children of Israel sette forward from Ramesse into Socoth almost six hundred thousand of foote men beside litle ones † But also the common people of al sortes innumerable went vp with them sheepe and heardes and beastes of diuerse kindes exceding manie † And they baked the meale which a litle before they had taken out of Aegypt tempered and made hearth cakes vnleauened for it could not be leauened the Aegyptians vrging them to depart not suffering them to make any tarriance neither did they thinke vpon preparing any meate † And the dwelling of the children of Israel that they abode in Aegypt was foure hundred thirty yeares † The which being expired the same day al the armie of our Lord went forth out of the Land of Aegypt † This is the obseruable night of our Lord when he brought them forth out of the Land of Aegypt this night al the children of Israel must obserue in their generations † And our Lord said to Moyses and Aaron This is the religion of the Phase No aliene shal eate of it † And euerie bought seruant shal be circumcised and so shal eate † The stranger and the hireling shal not eate therof † In one house shal it be eaten neither shal you carrie forth of the flesh therof out of the house neither shal you breake a bone therof † Al the assemblie of the children of Israel shal make it † And if any of the soiourners be willing to dwel among you and make the Phase of the Lord first al the male that he hath shal be circumcised and then shal he celebrate it according to the rite he shal be as he that is borne in the land but if there be any man vncircumcised he shal not eate therof † Al one law shal be to him that is borne in the land and to the prose lyte that soiourneth with you † And al the children of Israel did as our Lord had commanded Moyses and Aaron † And the same day our Lord brought forth the children of Israel out of the Land of Aegypt by their troupes ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XII 3. The tenth day Our Sauiour Christ instituting the Sacrament of the Eucharist after the celebration of the Paschal lambe whiles they were at supper the night before his death therby sufficiently declared that this old Pasch was a figure not only of his Passion and Sacrifice on the Crosse but also of that he then did so solemnly with his Apostles whom also in that action he made Priests commanding them and their successors to do the same in commemo●ation of him til the end of the world Other circumstances likewise and conference of the one with the other make it more clere that as in some respectes it more resembled Christs Passion and Sacrifice on the Crosse so in others it more expressed the Eucharist and mystical commemoration of his death though also in manie it profigured Christ in both places For example The preparing of the lambe the tenth day signified our Sauiours coming into Hierusalem the same tenth day of the first moone now represented in the Church on Palmesunday Also the choise qualities of the lambe vvithout spotte a male of the first yeare foreshewed in general the puritie fortitude meeknes and al perfection of the true Lambe of God that ta●eth avvay the sinne of the vvorlde More particularly the killing and bereuing the Paschal Lambe of natural life the sprinkling of his bloud on the dore-postes the ●●st●●● at t●e ●ire and not breaking anie b●ne therof most specially expressed Christs death on the Crosse But the fourtenth day the euining agree only with the Eucharist instituted the night before our Lords Passion which he suffered the fiftenth being the ful moore and at midday as ancient S. Dionyse of Ariopagite in two Episties to Polic●rpus and to Appollophanes testifieth admiring the miracle of the sunnes Eclip●e that hapned the same time Neither did the ●ating of the Lambe directly prefigurate the oblation on the Crosse for Christ was not crucified to be eaten but the Sacrament in formes and bread and vvine was expresly figured by eating the lambe with vnleauened bread and drinking the cuppe therto idioyned Luc. 2● v 17. In like sorte the Lambe immolated in commemoration of the deliuerie of Israel from death and from seruitude when the-first-borne of Aegypt were slaine most aptly prefigured the Eucharist which is a perpetuat commemoration of mans redemption and deliuerie from eternal death and from bondage of the diuel and sinne by Christes death on the Crosse which death in dede was the very redemption and deliuerie of mankind and not a commemoration therof Finally the immolating of the Lambe vvithin the house with precise commandment to carie nothing therof forth perteined particularly to the Eucharist which our Lord celebrated vvithin the house wherby S. Cyprian lib. de vnit Eccles proueth that the B. Sacrament must not be giuen to anie ou● of the Catholique Church though Christs Passion be extended to al the world as wel to bring such as are without into the Church as to saue those that are already entred in In this sorte the most ancient and best expositors of holie Scripture explicate this special figure of the Paschal Lambe As we shalhere produce some witnesses in confirmation of this truth Tertulian lib. 4. contra Marcionem expounding our Sauiours wordes VVith desire I haue desired to eate this Pasch vvith you before I suffer saieth Christ coueted not veruecinam Iudaeorum the mutton of the Iewes but professing that with desire he desired to eate the Pasch as his owne for it was vnmete that God should couete anie thing not his owne the bread which he toooke and gaue to his disciples he made his owne bodie saying This is my bodie that is a figure of my bodie Figura autem nonsuisset nisi veritatis esset corpus But it had not bene a figure saith he onles it vv●re a bodies of veritie or a verie bodie to wit not phantastical as the heretike Marcion imagined because the figures in the old Testament were not figures except a true bodie answered vnto them So the Sacramentaries sense that Tertullian should cal the Eucharist a figure is quite against his meaning and maketh him conclude nothing against Marcion wheras his whole drift is by the figures of the old Testament to proue that in the Eucharist is the true real bodie of Christ and that consequently Christ hath a true and real bodie Origen in 26. Mat. teacheth that in the great parlar where Christ did ea●e the Paschal Lambe he also made his new Pasch S. Cyprian
the ceremonies therof A stranger shal not ioyne with you † Watch in the custodie of the Sanctuarie and in the ministerie of the altar lest indignation rise vpon the children of Israel † I haue geuen you your brethren the Leuites out of the middes of the children of Israel and haue deliuered them a gifte to the Lord to serue in the ministeries of his tabernacle † And thou and thy sonnes looke to your priesthood and al thinges that perteyne to the seruice of the altar and that are within the vele shal be executed by the priestes if anie stranger approch he shal be slaine † And our Lord spake to Aaron behold I haue geuen thee the custodie of my first fruites Al thinges that are sanctified of the children of Israel haue I deliuered to thee and to thy sonnes for the priestlie office as euerlasting ordinances † These thinges therfore shalt thou take of those that are sanctified and are offered to the Lord. Al oblation and sacrifice and whatsoeuer is rendred to me for sinne and offence becometh Holie of holies shal be thine and thy sonnes † In the Sanctuarie shalt thou eate it males onlie shal eate therof because it is to thee a cōsecrated thing † But the first fruites which the children of Israel shal vow and offer I haue geuen thee and thy sonnes and thy daughters for a perpetual right he that is cleane in thy house shal eate them † Al the best of oile and wine and corne whatsoeuer first fruites they offer to the Lord I haue geuen them to thee † Of fruites al the first that the ground bringeth forth and are brought to the Lord shal turne to thy vses he that is cleane in thy house shal eate them † Euerie thing that the children of Israel render by vow shal be thine † Whatsoeuer first breaketh forth from the matrice of al flesh which they offer to the Lord whether it be of men or of beastes shal be thy right yet so that for the first borne of man thou take a price and euerie beast that is vncleane thou cause to be redemed † whose redemption shal be after one moneth for fiue sicles of siluer by the weight of the Sanctuarie A sicle hath twentie oboles † But the first borne of beefe and sheepe and goate thou shalt not cause to be redemed because they are sanctified to the Lord. onlie the bloud of them thou shalt powre vpon the altar and the fatte thou shalt burne for a most sweete odour to the Lord. † But the flesh shal turne to thy vse as the consecrated brest and the right shoulder shal be thine † Al the first fruites of the Sanctuarie which the children of Israel offer to the Lord haue I geuen thee and thy sonnes and daughters for a perpetual right A couenant of salt is it for euer before the Lord to thee and to thy sonnes † And our Lord said to Aaron In their land you shal possesse nothing neither shal you haue a portion among them I am thy portion and inheritance in the middes of the children of Israel † And to the sonnes of Leui I haue geuen al the tithes of Israel in possession for the ministerie wherwith they serue me in the tabernacle of couenant † that the children of Israel approch not any more to the tabernacle nor committe deadlie sinne † onlie the sonnes of Leui seruing me in the tabernacle and bearing the sinnes of the people it shal be an euerlasting ordinance in your generations No other thing shal they possesse † being content with the oblation of tithes which I haue separated for their vses and necessaries † And our Lord spake to Moyses saying † Command the Leuites and denounce vnto them When you shal receiue of the children of Israel the tithes which I haue geuen you offer first fruites of them to the Lord that is to say the tenth part of the tenth † that it may be reputed to you for an oblation of first fruites as wel of the barne floores as of the presses † and of al thinges wherof you receiue tithes the first fruites offer to the Lord and geue them to Aaron the priest † Al thinges that you shal offer of the tithes and shal separate for the giftes of the Lord they shal be the best and chosen thinges † And thou shalt say to them If you offer al the goodlie and the better thinges of the tithes it shal be reputed to you as if you had geuen first fruites of the barne floore and the presse † and you shal eate them in al your places as wel you as your families because it is the reward for the ministerie wherwith you serue in the tabernacle of testimonie † And you shal not sinne in this point reseruing the principal and fatte thinges to your selues lest you pollute the oblations of the children of Israel and die CHAP. XIX A redde cow is offered in burnt victime for sinne 9. whose ashes are mingled in water for expiation of diuers legal vncleanes 11. as by touching the dead 14. by entring into the tent of the dead also the vessel that is therin and the vessel that lacketh a couer 22. and whatsoeuer the vncleane toucheth AND our Lord spake to Moyses and Aaron saying † This is the religion of the victime which the Lord hath appointed Command the children of Israel that they bring vnto thee a redde cow of ful age wherin is no blemish and that hath not caried yoke † and you shal deliuer her to Eleazar the priest who bringing her forth without the campe shal immolate her in the sight of al † and dipping his finger in her bloud shal sprinkle it against the doores of the tabernacle seuen times † and shal burne her in the sight of al committing aswel her skinne and the flesh as the bloud and the dong to the fire † Wood also of the cedar and hyssope and scarlet twise died shal the priest cast into the flame that wasteth the cow † And then at length washing his garmentes and his bodie he shal enter into the campe and shal be polluted vntil euen † But he also that burneth her shal wash his garmentes and his bodie and shal be vncleane vntil euen † And a man that is cleane shal gather the ashes of the cow and shal powre them out without the campe in a most cleane place that they may be reserued for the multitude of the children of Israel and for water of aspersion because the cowe was burnt for sinne † And when he that caried the ashes of the cow hath washed his garmentes he shal be vncleane vntil euen The children of Israel and the strangers that dwel among them shal haue this for a holie thing by a perpetual ordinance † He that toucheth the dead corps of a man and is vncleane therfore seuen daies † shal be sprinkled of
are they whom our Lord commanded to diuide the Land of Chanaan to the children of Israel CHAP. XXXV Cities and suburbes are appointed for the Leuites among the other tribes 6. Of which six shal be for refuge of such as vnwittingly kil anie man 22. where keping them selues til the death of the high Priest they shal be safe 30. VVilful murtherers conuicted so it be by more then one witnes must die forthwith THESE thinges also spake our Lord to Moyses in the champion countries of Moab vpon Iordan against Iericho † Command the children of Israel that they geue vnto the Leuites of their possessions † cities to dwel in and their suburbes round about that them selues may abide in the townes and the suburbes may be for their cattel and beastes † which from the walles of the cities outward round about shal reach the space of a thousand paces † Toward the East shal be two thousand cubites and toward the South in like manner shal be two thousand toward the sea also which looketh to the West shal be the same measure and the North part shal be limitted with equal boundes And the cities shal be in the middes and the suburbes without † And of the same townes which you shal geue to the Leuites six shal be separated for the ayde of fugitiues that he may flee to them which hath shed bloud and beside these other fourtie two townes † that is in al fourtie eight with their suburbes † And those cities that shal be geuen of the possessions of the children of Israel from them that haue more moe shal be taken away and that haue lesse fewer Eache shal geue townes to the Leuites according to the measure of their inheritance † Our Lord said to Moyses † Speake to the children of Israel thou shalt say to them When you shal haue passed ouer Iordan into the Land of Chanaan † determine what cities shal be for the succour of fugitiues that haue not voluntaryly shed bloud † in which when the fugitiue shal be the kinseman of him that is killed can not kil him vntil he stand in the sight of the multitude and his cause be iudged † And of those cities that are separated for refuge of the fugitiues † three shal be beyond Iordan and three in the Land of Chanaan † as wel for the children of Israel as for strangers and soiouners that he may flee to them which hath not voluntaryly shed bloud † If any man strike with yron and he die that was strooken he shal be guiltie of murder and him self shal die † If he cast a stone and he that is strooken die he shal be punished in like manner † If he that is strooken with wood die he shal be reuenged by the strikers bloud † The kinsman of him that is slaine shal kil the murderer as sowne as he apprehendeth him he shal kil him † If through hatred one push a man or cast any thing at him by stratageme † or being his enemie strike him with his hand and he die the striker shal be guiltie of murder the kinseman of him that is slaine as sowne as he findeth him shal kil him † But if by chance medlie and without hatred † and enemitie he do any of these thinges † and this be proued in the hearing of the people and the question debated betwen him that stroke the next of bloud † the innocent shal be deliuered from the hand of the reuenger by sentence shal be brought backe into the citie to which he had fled and he shal tarie there vntil the High priest that is anointed with the holie oile do die † If the murderer be found without the limites of the cities that are deputed to the banished † and be strooken of him that is the reuenger of bloud he shal be guiltles that killed him † For the fugitiue ought to haue stayed in the citie vntil the death of the High priest And after he is dead then shal the murderer returne into his countrie † These thinges shal be perpetual and for an ordinance in al your habitations † The murderer shal be punished by witnesses none shal be condemned at the testimonie of one man † You shal not take a price of him that is guiltie of bloud he also shal die forth with † The banished and fugitiues before the death of the High priest may by no meanes returne into their owne cities † Pollute not the land of your habitation which is polluted with the bloud of innocentes neither can it otherwise be expiated but by his bloud that shedeth an other mans bloud † And so shal your possession be cleansed my self abyding with you For I am the Lord that dwel among the children of Israel CHAP. XXXVI That the inheritances may not be alienated from one tribe to an other al must marrie within their owne tribes AND the princes also of the families of Galaad the sonne of Machir the sonne of Manasses of the stocke of the children of Ioseph came and spake to Moyses before the princes of Israel and said † Our Lord hath commanded thee our lord that thou shouldest by lotte diuide the Land to the children of Israel and that to the daughters of Salphaad our brother thou shouldest geue the possession dew to their father † Whom if men of an other tribe take to wiues their possession shal folow and being translated to an other tribe it shal be a diminishing of our inheritance † And so it shal come to pas●e that when the Iubilee that is the fiftith yeare of remission is come the “ distribution of the lottes shal be confounded and the possession of one shal passe to others † Moyses answered the children of Israel and as our Lord commanded said The tribe of the children of Ioseph hath spoken rightly † And this law is promulgated of our Lord touching the daughters of Salphaad Let them marrie to whom they wil onlie that it be to the men of their owne tribe † lest the possession of the children of Israel be mingled from tribe into tribe For al men shal marrie wiues of their owne tribe and kinred † and al wemen shal take husbandes of the same tribe that the inheritance may remaine in the families † and that the tribes be not mingled among themselues but remaine so † as they were separated by our Lord. And the daughters of Salphaad did as it had beene commanded † and Maala and Thersa and Hegla and Melcha and Noa were married to the sonnes of their vncle by their father † of the familie of Manasses who was the sonne of Ioseph and the possession that had beene allotted to them remained in the tribe and familie of their father † These are the commandementes and iudgementes which our Lord commanded by the hand of Moyses to the children of Israel in the champion countries of Moab vpon Iordan against Iericho ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XXXVI 4. Distribution of lottes By reason
neere at hand whither to escape † This shal be the law of the murderer that fleeth whose life is to be saued He that striketh his neighbour vnwitting and that is proued yesterday and the day before to haue had no hatred against him † but to haue gone with him simply vnto the wood to cutte wood and in cutting the wood of axe slipped out of his hand and the yron falling from the handle strooke his freind and killed him he shal flee to one of the cities aforesaid and liue † lest perhaps the next kinseman of him whose bloud was shed pricked with sorow pursew and apprehend him if the way be too long and stricke his life that is not guiltie of death because he is proued to haue had no hatred before against him that was slaine † Therfore I command thee that thou separat three cities of equal distance one from an other † And when our Lord thy God shal haue dilated thy borders as he sware to thy fathers and shal geue thee al the Land that he promised them † yet so if thou keepe his commandementes and do the thinges which I command thee this day that thou loue our Lord thy God and walke in his wayes at al time thou shalt adde to thee other three cities and shalt duble the number of the three cities aforesaid † that innocent bloud be not shed in the middes of the Land which our Lord thy God wil geue thee to possesse lest thou be guiltie of bloud † But if any man hating his neighbour lie in wayte for his life and rise and strike him and he die and he flee to one of the cities aforesaid † the ancientes of his citie shal send acd take him out of the place of refuge and shal deliuer him into the hand of the kinseman of him whose bloud was shed and he shal die † Thou shalt not pitie him and thou shalt take away the guiltie bloud out of Israel that it may be wel with thee † Thou shalt not take and transferre thy neighbours boundes which thy predecessours did sette in thy possession which our Lord thy God wil geue thee in the Land that thou shalt receiue to possesse † One witnesse shal not stand against any man whatsoeuer sinne or wickednesse it be but in the mouth of two or three witnesses shal euerie word stand † If a lying witnesse stand against a man accusing him of preuarication † both of them whose the cause is shal stand before our Lord in the sight of the priestes and the iudges that shal be in those daies † And when searching most diligently they shal finde that the false witnes hath said a lie against his brother † they shal render to him as he meant to doe to his brother and thou shalt take away the euil out of the middes of thee † that others hearing may haue feare and may not be bold to doe such things † Thou shalt not pitie him but life for life eie for eie tooth for tooth hand for hand foote for foote shalt thou exacte CHAP. XX. Lawful warres are to be vndertaken with corege and confidence 5. Such as for special causes may be discoreged must be dismissed from the field 10. VVhat to be obserued towardes the enimie 19. VVhat trees may not be cut downe and what sorte may be for the vse of warres IF thou goe forth to warre against thyne enemies and see the horse men and chariottes and the multitude of the aduersaries hoste greater then thou hast thou shalt not feare them because the Lord thy God is with thee which brought thee out of the Land of Aegypt † And when the battel is now at hand the priest shal stand before the armie and shal speake to the people thus † Heare Israel you this day ioyne battel against your enemies let not your hart feare be not affrayd retire not neither dread them † because our Lord your God is in the middes of you and wil fight for you against your aduersaries to deliuer you from danger † The Captaine 's also through euerie bande in the hearing of the hoste shal proclaime what man is there that hath built a new house and hath not dedicated it let him goe and returne into his house lest perhaps he die in the battel and an other dedicate it † What man is there that hath planted a vineyard and hath not as yet made it to be common wherof al men may lawfully eate let him goe and returne into his house lest perhaps he die in the battel and an other man execute his office † What man is there that hath despoused a wife and not taken her let him goe and returne into his house lest perhaps he die in the warre and an other take her † These thinges being said they shal adde the rest and shal speake to the people What man is there feareful and fainte harted let him goe and returne into his house lest he make the hartes of his brethren to feare as him selfe is frighted with feare † And when the Captaines of the host shal hold their peace and make an end of speaking euerie man shal prepare their bandes to fight † If at anie time thou come to winne a citie thou shalt first offer peace † If they receiue it and open the gates to thee al the people that is therein shal be saued and shal serue thee vnder tribute † But if they wil not make peace and shal beginne battel against thee thou shalt assalt it † And when our Lord thy God shal deliuer it into thy hand thou shalt strike al that is therein of the male sexe in the edge of the sword † excepting wemen and children the cattel and other thinges that are in the citie Al the praye thou shalt diuide to the armie and thou shalt eate of the spoiles of thine enemies which our Lord thy God shal geue thee † So shalt thou doe to al cities that be verie farre from thee and be not of these cities which thou shalt receiue in possession † But of those cities that shal be geuen thee thou shalt suffer none at al to liue † but shalt kil them in the edge of the sword to witte the Hetheite and Amorrheite and Chananeite the Pherezeite and Heueite and Iebuseite as our Lord thy God hath commanded thee † lest perhaps they teach you to doe al the abominations which them selues did worke to their goddes and you sinne against our Lord your God † When thou hast besieged a citie a long time and hast compassed it with munition to winne it thou shalt not cutte downe the trees that may be eaten of neither shalt thou spoile the countrie round about with axes because it is a tree and not a man neither can it increase the number of warryers against thee † But if there be any trees not fruitful but wilde and apt for other vses cutte them downe and make engines vntil thou take the citie
conteyne his thankesgeuing to God for benefites receiued and prophecie of thinges to come with a catalogue of valiant men THE SECOND BOOKE OF SAMVEL WHICH WE CAL THE SECOND OF KINGES CHAP. 1. Dauid hearing that Saul and Ionathas are slaine 11. mourneth with al his familie weeping and fasting 13. causeth him to be slaine who affirmed that he had killed king Saul 18. He traineth vp archers 19. and inuiteth also al Israel to mourne AND it came to passe after that Saul was dead that Dauid returned from the slaughter of Amalec and taryed in Siceleg two dayes † And in the third day there appeared a man coming out of Sauls campe his garments torne and sprinkled on the head with dust and as he came to Dauid he fel vpon his face and adored † And Dauid said vnto him Whence comest thou Who said to him I fledde out of the campe of Israel † And Dauid said vnto him What is the matter that is done tel me Who said The people is fled out of the battel and many of the people are ouerthrowen and dead yca Saul also and Ionathas his sonne are dead † And Dauid said to the yong man that told him How knowest thou that Saul is dead and Ionathas his sonne † And the young man that told him sayd By chance I came into mount Gelboe and Saulleaned vpon his speare moreouer the chariots and horsemen approched vnto him † and turning backward and seing me he called To whom when I had answered here I am † he said to me Who art thou And I said to him I am an Amalecite † And he said to me Stand vpon me and kil me because anguishes hold me and as yet al my life is in me † And standing vpon him I killed him for I knewe that he could not liue after the fal and I tooke the Diademe that was on his head the bracelette from his arme and haue brought to thee my lord hither † And Dauid taking his garments rent them and al the men that were with him † and they mourned and wept and fasted vntil euening vpon Saul and vpon Ionathas his sonne and vpon the people of our Lord and vpon the house of Israel because they were fallen by the sword † And Dauid said to the yong man that had told him Whence art whou Who answered I am the sonne of a man a stranger of Amalec † Dauid said to him Why didst thou not feare to put to thy hand to kil the annointed of our Lord † And Dauid calling one of his seruants said Goe runne vpon him Who stroke him and he died † And Dauid said to him Thy bloud be vpon thine owne head for thyn owne mouth hath spoken against thee saying I haue slaine the annointed of our Lord. † And Dauid mourned this kind of mourning vpon Saul and vpon Ionathas his sonne † and he commanded that they should teach the children of Iuda the bowe as it is written in the Booke of the iust And he said Consider o Israel for them that be dead wounded vpon thy high places † The Nobles ô Israel are slayne vpon thy mountaynes how are the valiants fallen † Tel it not in Geth neither tel ye it in the high waies of Ascalon lest perhaps the daughters of the Philisthijms be gladde lest the daughters of the vncircumcised reioice † Mountaines of Gelboe let neither dew nor rayne come vpon you neither be they fields of the first fruits because there was the shield of the valiantes cast away the shield of Saul as though he were not annointed with oyle † From the bloud of the slaine from the fatte of the valiants the arrowe of Ionathas neuer returned backward and the sword of Saul did not returne emptie † Saul and Ionathas amiable and comely in their life in death also were not diuided swifter then eagles stronger then lyons † Yee daughters of Israel weepe vpon Saul who clothed you with scarlet in delicaces who gaue golden ornaments to your attyre † How haue the valiantes fallen in battel Ionathas bene slayne in thy high places † I am sorie for thee my brother Ionathas exceeding beautiful and amiable aboue the loue of wemen As the mother loueth her onlie sonne so did I loue thee † How haue the strong fallen and the weapons of warre perished CHAP. II. Dauid is receiued and annointed King of Iuda 5. He commendeth those of Iabes Galaad which buried Saul 8. Isboseth the sonne of Saul reigneth ouer the rest of Israel 12. whereby riseth sharpe warre betwen Abner and Ioab chief captaines of the two kinges 30. Manie more are slaine of Abners partie then of Ioabs THEREFORE after these thinges Dauid consulted our Lord saying Shal I goe vp into one of the cities of Iuda And our Lord said to him Goe vp And Dauid said Whit her shal I goe vp And he answered him Into Hebron † Dauid therefore went vp and his two wiues Achinoam the Iezrahelite and Abigail the wife of Nabal of Carmel † yea and the men also that were with him Dauid brought euery one with his houshould and they abode in the townes of Hebron † And the men of Iuda came and annoynted Dauid there to reigne ouer the house of Iuda And it was told Dauid that the men of Iabes Galaad had buried Saul † Dauid therefore sent messengers vnto the men of Iabes Galaad and sayd vnto them Blessed be you to our Lord which haue done this mercie with your lord Saul and haue buried him † And now our Lord certes wil render you mercie and truth but I also wil requite you the good turne for that you haue done this thing † Let your handes be strengthned and be yee stout men for although your lord Saul be dead yet the house of Iuda hath annointed me to be their king † But Abner the sonne of Ner prince of Sauls armie tooke Isboseth the sonne of Saul led him about through the campe † and ordained him king ouer Galaad and ouer Gessuri and ouer Iezrahel ouer Ephraim and ouer Beniamin and ouer al Israel † Fourtie yeares old was Isboseth the sonne of Saul when he began to reigne ouer Israel and he reigned two yeares and only the house of Iuda folowed Dauid † And the number of the daies that Dauid abode reigning in Hebron ouer the house of Iuda was seuen yeares and six monethes † And Abner the sonne of Ner went forth and the seruantes of Isboseth the sonne of Saul out of the campe into Gabaon † Moreouer Ioab the sonne of Saruia and the seruants of Dauid went forth and mette them beside the poole of Gabaon and when they were come together into one place they sate one ouer against an other these on the one side of the poole and they on the other † And Abner said to Ioab Let the yong men rise and play before vs. And Ioab answered Let them rise † There rose therefore and passed twelue in number
Caluin and his complices gether poyson of these holie wordes denying that sinnes are truly taken away but only couered and stil remayne say they in the iustest VVhich sense would make this Scripture contrarie to other places Isaie 6. thyn iniquitie shal be taken away and thy sinne shal be cleansed Ioan. 1. The lambe of God which taketh away the sinne of the world Act. 3. Be penitent and conuert that your sinnes may be put out 1. Cor. 6 you are washed you are sanctified you are iustified the like which shew the true real taking away of sinnes true sanctification and iustification As S. Ierom or some other ancient authentical autor explicateth this place saying Sinnes are so couered by baptisme penance that they are not to be reueled in the day of iudgement not imputed in him that diligently purgeth him selfe in this world or by martyrdom S. Augustin teacheth the same saying Sinnes are couered are wholly couered are abolished Neither must you vnderstand saith he that sinnes are couered as though stil they were and liued VVhy then did the prophet say sinnes are couered they are not to be punished More clerly li. 1. c 13. cont duas Epist Pelag. The Pelagians calumniating Catholiques as if they taught that sinnes are not taken away but shauen as heares are cut with a rasor the rootes remaining in he flesh vvhich he answereth none affirmeth but an infidel Likewise S. Gregorie teacheth that a sinner couereth his sinnes wel when with contrarie vertues he ouerwhelmeth former vices and with good deedes blotteth out former euil deedes He couereth them euil when either for shame or feare or obstinacie or desperation he concealeth his sinnes omitting to confesse them God couereth sinnes as a phisition couereth woundes by applying medicinal plaster which in deede cureth them Thus ancient lerned holie Fathers expound this text Further explicating that albeit thinges couered and only therby hidde from men do remaine as they were before they were hid yet whatsoeuer is hid to God is in dede vtterly taken away for nothing that is can be hid from God And the contrarie doctrin of Protestants is iniurious either to Gods powre if they say he can not quite take away sinnes or to his mercie if he wil not or to his iustice if he neuer punish sinnes euer remayning and to his truth if he repute otherwise then in deede the thing is It is also iniurious to Christ to say his bloud and death is not effectual to take away sinnes iniurious to innumerable places of holie Scripture which affirme plainly that sinnes by Gods grace are vtterly taken away Finally it is iniurious to Sainctes in heauen arguing them as stil infected with sinnes if in dede sinnes yet remaine in them which is most absurde and blasphemie to speake And yet foloweth by necessarie consequence For if the iustest liued died in sinne they should remaine eternally in sinne 2. Neither is there guile in his spirite In remission of sinnes the penitent necessarily must so cooperate that he haue no guile in his spirite or hart for if he haue then he faileth of the forsaide blessednes and his iniquities are not forgeuen nor his sinnes couered to God but to be imputed and punished Yet the repentance of a sinner be it neuer so sincere hartie and without guile doth not merite remission of sinne but only disposeth therto But after remission it is satisfactorie for the paine due for sinnes and meritorious of glorie According as S. Augustin here teacheth saying Good or meritorious workes goe not before faith and remission but folow the same PSALME XXXII The prophet exhorteth to praise God 4. describing his powre prouidence mercie and wisdom 16. no saluation but by him 20. and therfore prayeth for his helpe The Psalme of Dauid REIOYCE ye iust in our Lord praysing becometh the righteous † Confesse ye to our Lord on the harpe on a psalter of ten strings sing to him † Sing ye to him a new song sing wel to him in iubilation † Because the word of our Lord is right and al his workes are in faith † He loueth mercie and iudgement the earth is ful of the mercie of our Lord. † By the word of our Lord the heauens are established and by the spirit of his mouth al the power of them † Gathering together the waters of the sea as it were in a bottel putting the depthes in treasures † Let al the earth feare our Lord and let al the inhabitantes of the world be moued at him † Because he said and they were made he commanded and they were created † Our Lord l dissipateth the counsels of nations and he reproueth the cogitations of people and he reproueth the counsels of princes † But the counsel of our Lord abydeth for euer the cogitations of his hart in generation and generation † Blessed is the nation whose God is our Lord the people whom he hath chosen for his inheritance † Our Lord hath looked from heauen he hath sene al the children of men † From his prepared habitation he hath looked vpon al that inhabite the earth † Who made their hartes seuerally who vnderstandeth al their workes † The king is not saued by much powre and the gyant shal not be saued in the multitude of his strength † The horse fayleth to safetie and in the abundance of his force he shal not be saued † Behold the eies of our Lord be vpon them that feare him and on them that hope vpon his mercie † That he may deliuer their soules from death and nourish them in famine † Our soule expecteth our Lord because he is our helper and protector Because in him our hart shal reioyce and we haue trusted in his holie name Let thy mercie ô Lord be made vpon vs as we haue hoped in thee PSALME XXXIII King Dauid by his owne example being deliuered from danger exhorteth al men to render thankes for Gods benefites 12. shewing wherin iustice consisteth 16. and Gods special prouidence towards the iust To Dauid when “ he changed his countenance before Abimelech and he dismist him and he went away 1. Reg. 21. I WIL bles●e our Lord at al time his prayse alwayes in my mouth † In our Lord my soule shal be praised let the milde heare and reioyce † Magnifie ye our Lord with me and let vs exalt his name for euer † I haue sought out our Lord and he hath heard me and from al my tribulations he hath deliuered me † Come ye to him and be illuminated and your faces shal not be confounded † This poore man hath cried and our Lord hath heard him and from al his tribulations he hath saued him † The Angel of our Lord shal put in him selfe about them that feare him and shal deliuer them † Tast
the world haue obtained riches † And I saide Then haue I iustified my hart without cause and haue washed my handes amongst innocentes † And haue bene scourged al the day and my chastising in the morninges † If I saide I wil speake this behold I reproued the nation of thy children † I thought to know this thing it is labour before me † Vntil I may enter into the sanctuarie of God and may vnderstand concerning their latter endes † But yet for guiles thou hast put it to them thou hast cast them downe whiles they were eleuated † How are they brought into desolation they haue failed sodanely they haue perished for their iniquitie † As the dreame of them that rise ô Lord in thy citie thou shalt bring their image to nothing † Because my hart is inflamed and my reynes are changed And I am brought to nothing and knew not † As a beast am I become with thee and I alwaies with thee † Thou hast helde my right hand and in thy wil thou hast conducted me and with glorie thou hast receiued me † For what is to me in heauen and besides thee what would I vpon the earth † My flesh hath fainted and my hart God of my hart and God my portion for euer For behold they that make them selues faire from thee shal perish thou hast destroyed al that fornicate from thee † But it is good for me to cleaue to God to put my hope in our Lord God That I may shew forth al thy prayses in the gates of the daughter of Sion PSALME LXXIII Faithful people pressed with persecution lamentably complayning besecheth God to respect his owne inheritance cruelly afflicted ●● and leift long without helpe 12. wheras heretofore he releeued his people in like distresses 18. And therfore confidently hopeth he wil renenge the blasphemers of his name Vnderstanding to Asaph VVHY hast thou ô God repelled for euer is thy furie wrath vpon the sheepe of thy pasture Be mindful of thy congregation which thou hast possessed from the beginning Thou hast redemed the rod of thine inheritan●●e mount Sion in which thou hast dwelt † Lift vp thy handes vpon their prides for euer how great thinges hath the enimie done malignantly in the holy place † And they that hate thee haue gloried in the middes of thy solemnitie They haue sette their signes for signes † and haue not knowne as in the issue on high As in a wood of trees they haue with axes † cut out the gates therof together in hatchet and chippeaxe they haue cast it downe † They haue burnt thy sanctuarie with fire they haue polluted the tabernacle of thy name in the earth † Their kinred together haue saide in their hart Let vs make al the festiual daies of God to cease from the earth † Our signes we haue not seene there is now no prophet and he wil know vs no more † How long ô God shal the enimie vpbraide the aduersarie prouoke thy name for euer † Why doest thou turne away thy hand and thy right hand out of the middes of thy bosome for euer † But God our king before the worldes he hath wrought saluation in the middes of the earth † Thou in thy strength hast confirmed the sea thou hast crushed the head of Dragons in the waters † Thou hast broken the heads of the dragon thou hast giuen him for meate to the peoples of the Aethiopians † Thou hast broken vp fountanes and torrentes thou hast dried the riuers of Ethan † The day is thine and the night is thine thou hast made the morning and the sunne † Thou hast made al the coasts of the earth the summer and the spring thou hast formed them † Be mindeful of this the enimie hath vpbraided our Lord and a foolish people hath prouoked thy name † Deliuer not to beasts the soules that confesse to thee and the soules of thy poore forget not for euer † Haue respect vnto thy testament because they that are obscure of the earth are filled with houses of iniquities † Let not the humble be turned away being confounded the poore and needy shal praise thy name † Arise God iudge thy cause be mindful of those thy reproches that are from the foolish man al the day † Forget not the voices of thine enimies the pride of them that hate thee hath ascended alwaies PSALME LXXIIII Christ with his Assessors wil iudge the whole world at the last day in the meane time exhorteth sinners to amend their life 7. for none shal escape iust iudgement 1● The wicked shal be punished and the good rewarded Vnto the end Corrupt not a Psalme of Canticle to Asaph VVE wil confesse to thee ô God we wil confesse and wil inuocate thy name We wil tel thy meruelouse workes † when I shal take a time I wil iudge iustices † The earth is melted and al that dwel in it I haue confirmed the pillers thereof † I said to the wicked doe not wickedly and to them that offend Exalt not the horne † Exalt not your horne on high speake not iniquitie aganst God † For neither from the East nor from the West nor from the desert mountanes † because God is Iudge This man he humbleth and him he exalteth † because there is a cuppe in the hand of our Lord of mere wine ful of mixture And he hath powred it out of this into that but yet the dregges therof are not emptied al the sinners of the earth shal drinke † But I wil shewforth for euer I wil sing to the God of Iacob † And I wil breake al the hornes of sinners and the hornes of the iust shal be exalted PSALME LXXV The royal prophet singeth Gods praises for his particular prouidence towards the Iewes 10. further to be extended to al the meeke of the whole earth Vnto the end in prayses a Psalme to Asaph a Canticle to the Assirians God is knowne in Iewrie in Israel his name is great † And his place is made in peace and his habitation in Sion † There he brake the powres of bowes the shilde the sword and the battle † Thou doest illuminate meruelousely from the eternal mountaynes † al the foolish of hart were trubled † They slept their sleepe and al the men of riches found nothing in their handes † At thy reprehension ô God of Iacob they haue al slumbered that mounted on horses † Thou art terrible and who shal resist thee from that time thy wrath † From heauen thou hast made thy iudgement hearde the earth trembled and was quiet When God arose vnto iudgement
Iacob and his place they haue made desolate † Remember not our old iniquities let thy mercies quickly preuent vs because we are become exceding poore † Help vs ô God our sauiour and for the glorie of thy name ô Lord deliuer vs and be propicious to our sinnes for thy names sake † Lest they say perhaps amongst the Gentiles where is their God and be notified in the nations before our eies The reuenge of the bloud of thy seruants which hath benne shed † let the groning of thefettered enter in thy sight According to the greatnes of thine arme possesse thou the children of them that are put to death † And render to our neighboures seuenfold in their bosome their reproch where with they haue reproched thee ô Lord. † But we thy people and the sheepe of thy pasture wil confesse to thee for euer Vnto generation and generation we wil shew forth thy praise PSALME LXXIX The Prophet prayeth for the release of Israel in great tribulation 15. forsheweth the coming of Christ to redeme man from sinne and from thraldome of the diuel † Vnto the end for them that shal be changed testimonie to Asaph a Psalme † Thou that rulest Israel attend that conductest Ioseph as a sheepe Which sittest vpon the cherubs be manifest † before Ephraim Beniamin and Manasses Raise vp thy might and come to saue vs. † O God conuert vs and shew thy face we shal be saued † O Lord the God of hostes how long wilt thou be angrie vpon the prayer of thy seruant † Thou wilt feede vs with the bread of teares and giue vs drinke with teares in mesure † Thou hast made vs to be a contradiction to our neigh boures and our enimies haue scorned vs. † O God of hosts conuert vs and shew thy face and we shal be saued † Thou didst transport the vineyeard out of Aegypt thou didst cast out the Gentiles and plantedst it † Thou wast the guide of the way in the sight therof thou didst plant the rootes therof and it filled the earth † The shadow of it couered the mountanes and the bowghes of it the ceders of God † It extended her branches euen to the sea and her boughes vnto the riuer † Why hast thou destroyed the hedge therof and al that passe by the way doe plucke it † The boare of the wood hath destroyed it and the singular wilde beest hath eaten it † O God of hoasts returne regard from heauen and see and visite this vineyeard † And perfite it which thy right hand hath planted and vpon the sonne of man whom thou hast confirmed to thee † Thinges burnt with fyre and digged doune at the increpation of thy countenance shal perish † Let thy hand be vpon the man of thy right hand and vpon the sonne of man whom thou hast confirmed to thee † And we depart not from thee thou wilt quicken vs and we wil inuocate thy name † O Lord the God of hoastes conuert vs and shew thy face and we shal be saued PSALME LXXX Al men are inuited to celebrate festiual dayes 6. which were instituted in memorie of benefites receiued 9. the deuent shal be protected and the negligent leift in distresse † Vnto the end for wine presses a Psalme to Asaph him self † REioice to God our helper make Iubilation to the God of Iacob † Take ye Psalme and giue timbrel pleasant Psalter with the harpe † Sound ye with trumpet in the new moone in the notable day of your solemnitie † Because it is a precept in Israel and iudgement to the God of Iacob † He put it for a testimonie in Ioseph when he came out of the Land of Aegypt he heard a tongue which he knew not He turned away his backe from burdens his handes serued in baskettes † In tribulation thou didest inuocate me and I heard thee I heard thee in the secret of the tempest I proued thee at the water of contradiction † Heare ô my people and I wil contest thee Israel if thou wilt heare me † There shal be no new God in thee neither shalt thou adore a strange God † For I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Aegypt dilate thy mouth and I wil fil it † And my People heard not my voice and Israel attended not to me † And I let them alone according to the desires of their hart they shal goe in their owne inuentions † If my people had heard me if Israel had walked in my wayes † I had for nothing perhaps humbled their enimies and had laide my hand vpon those that afflict them † The enimies of our Lord haue lied to him and their time shal be for euer † And he fedde them of the fatte of corne and out of the rocke with honie he filled them PSALME LXXXI The Prophet declareth 2. that God reprehendeth vniust Iudges and Magistrates premonisheth them of his seuere eternal punishment 8. wherto the prophet conforming his wil prayeth for the same † A Psalme to Asaph GOd stood in the assemblie of goddes and in the middes he iudgeth goddes † How long iudge ye iniquitie and accept ye the persons of sinners † Iudge ye for the needie and the pupil iustifie ye the humble and the poore † Take away the poore and deliuer the needie from the hand of the sinner † They knew not neither did they vnderstand they walke in darkenesse al the fundations of the earth shal be moued † I saide Yow are goddes and the sonnes of the highest al. † But you shal die as men and fal as one of the princes † Arise ô God iudge the earth because thou shalt inherite in al the Gentiles PSALME LXXXII The Church impugned by al sortes of enimies 10. prayeth God to confound them as the hath donne diuers the like 17. wherby some shal be conuerted † A Canticle of Psalme to Asaph O God who shal be like to thee hold not thy peace neither be thou appeased ô God † For behold thine enimies haue made a sound they that hate thee haue lifted vp the head † They haue taken malignant counsel vpon thy people and they haue deuised against thy saincts † They haue saide Come and let vs destroy them out of the nation and let the name of Israel be remembred no more † Because they haue deuised with one consent they haue together made a couenant against thee † The tabernacles of the Idumeians and the Ismahelites Moab and the Agarens † Gebal and
to stand vpright and his lacke of reuerence is the stopping of the eares † Sheding of bloud is in the brawling of the proud and their cursing is a greeuous hearing † He that discloseth the secrete of a freind loseth credite and he shal not finde a freind to his minde † Loue thy neighhour and be ioyned with him in fidelitie † But if thou discouer his secrets thou shalt not pursew after him † For as a man that loseth his freind so also he that loseth the freindshipe of his neigbbour † And as he that letteth a bird goe out of his hand so hast thou leaft thy neighbour shalt not take him † Folow him not because he is far absent for he is fled as a doe out of the snare because his soule is wounded † Thou canst no more blinde him and of a curse there is reconciliation † but to disclose the secrets of a freind is the desperation of an vnhappie soule † He that winketh with the eie forgeth wicked thinges and no man wil cast him of † in the sight of thyne eyes he wil sweete his mouth and wil be in admiration vpon thy wordes but at the last he wil peruert his mouth and in thy wordes he wil lay a scandal † I haue heard manie thinges haue not esteemed them equal to him and our Lord wil hate him † He that casteth a stone on high it wil fal vpon his head and the deceitful stroke wil diuide the woundes of the deceitful † He that diggeth a pit shal fal into it and he that setteth a stone for his neighbour shal stumble on it he that layeth a snare for an other shal perish in it † To a man that doth most wicked counsel it shal be turned vpon himself and he shal not know from whence it cometh to him † Derision reproch of the proud and vengeance as a lyon shal lie in waite for him † They shal perish in a snare that are delighted with the fal of the iust and sorow shal consume them before they die † Anger and furie both are execrable and the sinful man shal be subiect to them CHAP. XXVIII Abstaine from reuenge 8. and strife 15. from making debate 28. from hearing and speaking euil HE that wil be reuenged shal finde reuenge of our Lord and keepeing he wil keepe his sinne † Forgeue thy neighbour hurting thee then shal thy sinnes be loosed to thee when thou prayest † Man to man reserueth anger and doth he seeke remedie of God † He hath not mercie on a man like vnto himself and doth he intreate for his owne sinnes † Himself whereas he is flesh reserueth anger and doth he aske propitiation of God Who by prayer shal obteyne for his sinne † Remember the last thinges cease to be at enmitie † for consumption and death are imminent in his commandmentes † Remember the feare of God and be not angrie with thy neighbour † Remember the testament of the High contemne the ignorance of thy neigbour † Refraine thyself from strife and thou shalt diminish thy sinnes † for an angrie man kindleth strife and a sinful man wil truble his freindes and in the middes of them that are at peace he wil cast in enmitie † For according to the wood of the forest so the fire burneth and according to the power of a man so shal his anger be and according to his substance he wil increase his anger † Hastie contention kindleth a fire and hastie strife shedeth bloud and an il testifying tongue bringeth death † If thou blow vpon a sparck it wil burne as a fire and if thou spitte thereon it shal be quenched both procede out of the mouth † The whisperer duble tounged is accurst for he hath trubled manie that were at peace † A third tongue hath moued manie and dispersed them from nation into nation † It hath destroyed the walled citie of the rich and hath digged downe the houses of great men † It hath cut the forces of peoples and vndone strong nations † A third tongue hath cast out manlie wemen and depriued them of their labours † He that regardeth it shal not haue rest neither shal he haue a freind in whom he may repose † The stroke of a whippe maketh a blew marke but the stroke of the tongue wil breake the bones † Manie haue fallen by the edge of the sword but not so as they that haue perished by their tongue † Blessed is he that is couered from a wicked tongue that hath not passed into the anger therof and that hath not drawen the yoke therof and hath not bene tyed in the bandes therof † for the yoke of it is a yoke of yron and the band of it is a band of brasse † The death of it is a most wicked death and hel is more profitable then it † The continuance of it shal not be permanent but it shal obteyne the waies of the vniust and it shal not burne the iust in the flame therof † They that forsake God shal fal into it and it shal burne in them and shal not be quenched and it shal be sent in vpon them as a lion and as a leopard it shal hurt them † Hedge thine eares with thornes and heare not a wicked tongue and make doores to thy mouth and locks † Lay together thy siluer and make balance to thy wordes and right bridles to thy mouth † and take heede lest perhaps thou slippe in thy tongue fal in the sight of the enemies that lie in wayte for thee and thy fal be vncurable vnto death CHAP. XXIX Lend charitably 3. and restore faithfully 10. For the fault of il debters omitte not to helpe the honest 12. rather geue almes where nede is 19. Be thankful for suretiship 28. Liue frugally 32. Goe not a ghestning for delicate chere HE that lendeth to his neighbour doth mercie and he that preuayleth with hand keepeth the commandments † Lend to thy neighbour in the time of his necessitie and againe repay thy neighbour in his time † Confirme thy word and doe faithfully with him thou shalt finde at al time that which is necessarie for thee † Manie haue esteemed a thing lent as a thing found and haue geuen molestation to them that did helpe them † Til they receiue they kisse the handes of the lender and in promises they humble their voice † and in the time of repaying they wil aske a time and wil speake wordes of tediousnes and murmurings and wil make the time an excuse † and if he be able to pay he wil resist he wil pay scarse halfe of the whole and wil account it as a thing found † but if not he wil defraude him of his money and possesse him an enemie without cause † and wil repay him reproches and curses and for honour and benefite wil repay him contumelie † Manie
violence of manie waters ouerflowing sent forth vpon a large ground † The crowne of pride of the drunkards of Ephraim shal be troden vnder feete † And the flowre of the glorie of his exultation which is vpon the toppe of the valley of fatte ones shal be falling as a timely fruite before the ripenesse of autumme which when he that seeth it shal behold as soone as he taketh it in his hand he wil deuoure it † In that day the Lord of hostes shal be a crowne of glorie and a garland of exultation to the residue of his people † and a spirit of iudgement to him that sitteth in iudgement and strength to them that returne out of battel to the gate † But these also haue bene ignorant because of wine and by drunkennes haue erred the priest and the prophete haue bene ignorant because of drunkennes they are swalowed vp with wine they haue erred in drunkennes they haue not knowne him that seeth they haue bene ignorant of iudgement † For al tables were filled with vomiting and filth so that there was no more place † Whom shal he teach knowledge and whom shal he make to vnderstand the thing heard them that are weyned from the milke that are plucked away from the breasts † For command recommand command recommand expect reexpect expect reexpect a litle there a litle there † For in the speach of lippe and in an other tougue he wil speake to his people † To whom he sayd This is my rest refresh the wearie and this is my refreshing they would not heare † And the word of our Lord shal be to them command recommand command recommand expect reexpect expect reexpect a litle there a litle there that they may goe and fal backward and be destroyed and snared and taken † For this cause heare the word of our Lord ye scorneful men which rule ouer my people that is in Ierusalem † For you haue sayd We haue stroken a league with death and with hel we haue made a couenant The scourge ouerflowing when it shal passe shal not come vpon vs because we haue made lying our hope and with lying we are protected † Therfore thus sayth our Lord God Behold I wil send in the foundations of Sion a stone an approued stone a corner stone pretious founded in the foundation He that beleueth let him not make hast † And I wil put iudgement in weight and iustice in measure and haile shal ouerthrow the hope of lying and waters shal ouerflow the protection † And your league with death shal be abolished and your couenant with hel shal not stand when the scourge ouerflowing shal passe you shal be troden downe of it † Whensoeuer it shal passe through it shal take you away because in the morning early it shal passe through in the day and in the night and vexation alone shal geue vnderstanding in the hearing † For the bed is streitened so that one must fal out and a short mantel can not couer both † For our Lord shal stand as in the mount of diuisions as in the valley which is in Gabaon shal he be angrie that he may doe his worke his strange worke that he may worke his worke is strange from him † And now mocke not lest perhaps your bonds be tied strayte For I haue heard of our Lord the God of hostes consummation and abridgement vpon al the earth † Harken with your eares and heare my voice attend and heare my speach † Wil the ploughman plowe al the day to sow wil he cut and harrow his ground † Wil he not when he hath made euen the face therof sprinkle cummine and place the wheate by order and the barley and millet and vetche in their bondes † And his God wil instruct him in iudgement he wil teach him † For gith shal not be threshed with instruments that haue teeth neither shal the wayne wheele turne about vpon cummine but gith shal be beaten out with a rodde and cummine with a staffe † But bread corne shal be broken smal but the thresher shal not thresh it for euer neither shal the wayne wheele vexe it nor breake it with the teeth therof † And this is come forth from our Lord the God of hostes that he might make his counsel meruelous and magnifie iustice CHAP. XXIX The Prophet bewaleth the Iewes destruction 9. for their blinde obstinacie 17. prophecying the Gentiles conuersion VVOE to Ariel Ariel the citie which Dauid ouercame yeare is added to yeare the solemnities are at an end † And I wil make a trench about Ariel and it shal be sorowful moorning and it shal be to me as Ariel † And I wil compasse as a sphere round about thee and wil cast a rampier against thee and place munitions to besiege thee † Thou shalt be humbled thou shalt speake out of the earth and out of the gronnd thy speach shal be heard and thy voice shal be out of the earth as the Pythons and out of the ground thy speach shal mutter † And the multitude of them that fanne thee shal be as smal dust and as issles passing away the multitude of them that haue preuailed agaynst thee † And it shal be sodenly forthwith It shal be visited of the Lord of hostes in thunder and earth quake and with great voice of whirlewind and tempest and with flame of deuouring fyre † And the multitude of al nations that haue fought agaynst Ariel shal be as the dreame of a vision in the night and al that haue waried and beseged preuailed agaynst it † And as he that is hungrie dreameth eateth but when he is awake his soule is emptie as he that is thirstie dreameth and drinketh and after he is awake faint as yet thirsteth and his soule is emptie so shal the multitude be of al the Gentiles that haue fought agaynst mount Sion † Be astonied and meruel wauer and stagger be ye drunke and not of wine be moued not of drunkenes † Because our Lord hath mingled vnto you the spirit of drowsines he wil shut your eyes he wil couer your prophetes and princes that see visions † And the vision of al shal be vnto you as the wordes of a booke sealed which when they shal geue to him that knoweth letters they shal say Read this and he shal answer I can not for it is sealed † And the booke shal be geuen to one that knoweth not letters and it shal be sayd to him Reade and he shal answer I know not letters † And our Lord sayd Because this people approcheth with their mouth and with their lippes glorifieth me but their hart is far from me and they haue feared me by the commandement and doctrines of men † therfore behold I wil adde to make admiration to this people by a great and wonderful miracle for wisdom
thy God out of the Land of Aegypt I wil yet make thee sitte in tabernacles as in the dayes of festiuitie † And I haue spoken vpon the prophets and I haue multiplied vision and in the hand of the prophets I haue bene resembled † If an idol in Galaad then in vaine were they in Galgal immolating with oxen for their altars also as heapes vpon the furrowes of the filde † Iacob fled into the countrie of Syria and Israel serued for a wife and for a wife he kept her † But by a prophete our Lord brought Israel out of Aegypt and by a prophete he was preserued † Ephraim hath prouoked me to wrath in his bitternes and his bloud shal come vpon him and his reproch his Lord wil restore to him CHAP. XIII For their obstinacie in idolatrie 7. greatest plagues are threatned 10. from which none shal be able to deliuer them 14. But at last Christ coming wil redeme al by his death EPHRAIM speaking horrour inuaded Israel and he sinned in Baal and died † And now they haue added to sinne and they haue made to themselues a molten of their siluer as it were the similitude of idols the whole is the worke of craftesmen the these they say Immolate men adoring calues † Therfore they shal be as a morning cloude and as a morning dew passing away as dust caught with a whirlewind out of the floore and as smoke out of the chimnie † But I the Lord thy God out of the Land of Aegypt and God beside me thou shalt not know and there is no Sauiour beside me † I knew thee in the desert in the land of wildernes † According to their pustures they were filled and were made ful they haue lifted vp their harr and haue forgotten me † And I wil be vnto them as a lionesse as a leopard in the way of the Assyrians † I wil meete them as a beare her yong being violently taken away and I wil breake in sunder the inner partes of their liuer and wil consume them there as a lion the beast of the filde shal teare them † Perdition is thine ô Israel onlie in me thy helpe † Where is thy king Now especially let him saue thee in al thy cities thy iudges of whom thou saydst Geue me kinges and princes † I wil geue thee a king in my furie and wil take him away in mine indignation † The iniquitie of Ephraim is bound together his sinne is hidden † The sorowes of a woman in trauel shal come to him he a sonne not wise for now he shal not stand the confraction of the children † Out of the hand of death I wil deliuer them from death I wil redeme them I wil be thy death ô death thy bitte wil I be ô hel consolation is hidden from mine eyes † Because he shal diuide betwen bretheren our Lord wil bring a burning winde rising from the desert and it shal drie vp his vaines and shal make his fountaine desolate and he shal spoyle the treasure of euerie vessel that is to be desired CHAP. XIIII The prophet forewarning the people of their future afflictions 2. exhorteth them to repentance and confession of their sinnes 5. foreshewing that God wil geue much grace to the penitent 10. Al which mysteries only the godlie wise shal vnderstand LET Samaria perish because she hath stirred vp her God to bitternes let them perish by the sword let their litle ones be dashed and let the wemen with child be cut in sunder † Conuert ô Israel to our Lord thy God because thou art fallen in thine iniquitie † Take wordes with you and conuert to our Lord and say to him Take away al iniquitie and receiue good and we wil render the calues of our lippes † Assur shal not saue vs we wil not mount vpon horse neither wil we say any more Our goddes the worke of our handes because thou wilt haue mercie on that pupil which is in thee † I wil heale their confractions I wil loue them voluntarily because my furie is auerted from them † I wil be as dew Israel shal spring as the lillie and his roote shal breake forth as that of Libanus † His boughes shal goe and his glorie shal be as the oliuetree and his smel as of Libanus † They shal be conuerted that sitte vnder his shadow they shal liue with wheate and they shal spring as a vine his memorial as the wine of Libanus † Ephraim what haue I to doe any more with idols I wil heare and I wil direct him as a verdant firretree out of me thy fruit is found † Who is wise and shal vnderstand these thinges of vnderstanding and shal know these thinges because the wayes of our Lord be right and the iust shal walke in them but preuaricatours shal fal in them THE PROPHECIE OF IOEL IOEL the sonne of Phatuel borne in Bethoron of the tribe of Issachar prophecied the same time or part therof with Osee according to S. Ieromes rule approued by most expositers that when anie of these twelue Prophetes expresseth not what time he writte the same time is vnderstood which the precedent prophet noteth He prophecied to the kingdom of Iuda as appeareth by expresse mention of Sacrifice Priestes house of God Ierusalem and Sion but describeth also the whole land of twelue tribes consumed by the Eruke Locust Bruke and Blast And after the euersion of the former people the coming of the Holie Ghost vpon the seruants of God men and wemen the 120. faithful gathered in the chamber in Sion Finally foreshewing the general Iudgement and future eternal world CHAP. I. The Chaldees shal miserably waste the kingdom of Iuda 9. take away sacrifice by destroying the temple 10. and so make the land barren spiritually and temporally THE word of our Lord that was made to Ioel the sonne of Phatuel † Heare this ye ancients and harken with your eares al ye inhabitants of the land if this hath bene done in your dayes or in the dayes of your fathers † Vpon this tel you to your children and your children to their children and their childred to an other generation † “ The residue of the eruke hath the locust eaten the residue of the locust hath the bruke eaten and the residue of the bruke hath the blast eaten † Awake you that be drunke and weepe and how le al ye that drinke wine in sweetnes because it is perished from your mouth † For a nation is ascended vpon my land strong innumerable his teeth as the teeth of a lion and his checkteeth as of a lions whelpe † He hath layd my vineyard into a desert and hath pilled of the barke of my figtree stripping he hath spoiled it and cast it forth the boughes therof are made white † Mourne as a virgin girded with sackcloth vpon the husband of her
the wine † And thou hast kept the precepts of Amri and al the worke of the house of Achab and thou hast walked in their willes that I might geue thee into perdition and the inhabitants therin into hissing and the reproch of my people you shal beare CHAP. VII The prophet lamenteth that for al his preaching few are good and manie corrupt in maners 5. therfore their miseries approch 7. from which they shal be againe deliuered 14. and prosper 20. and al mankind shal be redemed by Christ VVO is me because I am become as he that gathereth in autumne the clusters of vintage there is no cluster to eate timely ripe figges my soule hath desired † The holie is perished out of the earth there is none righteous among men al lie in wayte for bloud euerie one hunteth his brother to death † The euil of their handes they cal good the prince requireth and the iudge is in rendring and the great man hath spoken the desire of his soule and they haue trubled it † He that is left among them is as a brier and he that is righteous as the thorne of the hedge The day of thy speculation thy visitation cometh now shal be the destruction of them † Beleue not a frend and trust not in prince from her that fleepeth in thy bosome keepe the closures of thy mouth † Because the sonne doth contumelie to the father the daughter ryseth agaynst her mother the daughter in law against her mother in law a mans enemies they of his owne houshold † But I wil looke towards our Lord I wil expect God my sauiour my God wil heare me † Reioyce not thou mine enemie ouer me because I am fallen I shal arise when I haue sitte in darkenes our Lord is my light † I wil beare the wrath of our Lord because I haue sinned to him vntil he iudge my iudgement he wil bring me forth into the light I shal see his iustice † And mine enemie shal behold and she shal be couered with confusion which sayth to me where is the Lord thy God Mine eyes shal looke on her now shal she be into conculcation as the myre of the streetes † The day that thy walles may be builded vp in that day shal the law be made far of † In that day and Assur shal come euen to thee euen to the fensed cities and from the fensed cities euen to the riuer and to sea from sea and to mountaine from mountaine † And the land shal be into desolation for the inhabitants therof and for the fruite of their cogitations † Feede thy people with thy e rod the flocke of thine inheritance them that dwel alone in in the forest in the middes of Carmel they shal feede vpon Basan and Galaad according to the dayes of old † According to the dayes of thy coming forth out of the Land of Aegypt I wil shew him meruels † The nations shal see and shal be confounded vpon al their strength they shal put the hand vpon the mouth their eares shal be deafe † They shal lieke dust as serpents as the creeping beasts of the earth they shal be trubled in their houses the Lord our God they shal dreade and shal feare thee † What God is like to thee which takest away iniquitie and passest ouer the sinne of the remnant of thine inheritance he wil send his furie in no more because he is willing mercie † He wil returne and wil haue mercie on vs he wil lay away our iniquities and he wil cast al our sinnes into the botome of the sea † Thou wilt geue truth to Iacob mercie to Abraham which thou hast sworne to our fathers from the dayes of old THE PROPHECIE OF NAHVM NAHVM borne in Elcese a towne in Galiley prophecied shortly after the captiuitie of the tenne tribes against Niniue about fiftie yeares after Ionas preaching and their repentance when they became more wicked then before foreshewing their vtter ruine and ignominie In figure of the destruction of idolatrie in al nations by Christ euangelizing and announcing peace to al that wil beleue in him CHAP. 1. Niniue shal be destroyed not able to escape Gods powreful wrath 9. The Asstrians shal not preuaile against Ierusalem 13. but themselves shal be slaine THE burden of Niniuie The booke of the vision of Nahum the Elce●e●te † God is ielous our Lord reuenging our Lord reuenging and hauing furie our Lord reuenging on his aduerseries and he is angrie with his enemies † Our Lord is patient and great of strength and clensing he wil not make innocent Our Lords wayes in tempest and whirle wind and clowdes the dust of his feete † Rebuking the sea and driyng it vp and bringing al riuers to a desert Basan is weakened and Carmel the floure of Libanus is faided † The mountaines were moued at him and the hilles were desolate and the earth hath trembled at his presence and the world and al that dwel therin † Befote the face of his indignation who shal stand and who shal resist in the wrath of his furie his indignation is powred out as fire and the rockes are dissolued by him † Our Lord is good and strenghning in the day of tribulation and knowing them that hope in him † And in a floud passing by he wil make a consummation of the place therof darkenes shal pursew his enemies † VVhat thinke ye against our Lord consumation he wil make there shal not rise duble tribulation † Because as thornes claspe one an other so the feast of them that drinke together they shal be consumed as stuble ful of drienes † Out of thee shal come forth one that thinketh malice against our Lord in the minde deuising preuarication † Thus saith our Lord If they shal be perfect and so a grear manie so also shal they be shorne and he shal passe by I haue afflicted thee and I wil afflict thee no more And now I wil breake his rod from of thy backe and I wil burst thy bondes in sunder † And Our Lord wil command vpon thee there shal not be sowen of thy name any more out of the house of thy God I wil destroy sculptil molten I wil put thy graue because thou art dishonored † Behold vpon the mountaines the feete of him that Euangalizeth and preacheth peace celebrate ô Iuda thy festiuities render thy vowes because Belial shal no more adde to passe through thee he is wholly perished CHAP. II. The Chaldees shal mightely inuade the Assirians 5. take and ransacke Niniue HE is come vp that shal scatter before thee that shal keepe the seige behold the way fortifie the loynes strengthen force excedingly † Because our Lord hath rendered the pride of Iacob as the pride of Israel because the waters haue dissipated them and haue marred their branches † The
geue you spirit and soule and life and the members of euerie one I my selfe framed not † But in deede the Creator of the world that hath formed the natiuitie of man and that inuented the origine of al he wil restore againe with mercie vnto you spirit and life as now you despise your selues for his lawes † But Antiochus thinking himselfe contemned and withal despising the voice of the vpbrayder when the yonger was yet aliue he did not only exhort with wordes but also with oth he affirmed that he would make him rich happie and being turned from the lawes of his fathers he would account him a freind and geue him thinges necessarie † But when the yong man was not inclined to these thinges the king called the mother and counselled her to deale with the yong man to saue his life † And when he had exhorted her in manie wordes she promised that she would counsel her sonne † Therfore bending towards him mocking the cruel tyrant she sayd in her countrie language My sonne haue pitie on me which haue borne thee in my wombe nine moneths and gaue thee milke for three yeares and nourished thee and brought thee vnto this age † I beseech thee my sonne that thou looke to heauen and earth and to al thinges that are in them and vnderstand that God of nothing made them and mankinde † so shal it come to passe that thou wilt not feare this tormenter but being made a worthie partaker with thy bretheren take thou death that in that mercie I may receiue thee againe with thy bretheren † When she as yet was saying these thinges the yong man sayd For whom stay you I obey not the commandement of the king but the commandement of the law which was geuen vs by Moyses † But thou that art become the inuenter of al malice against the Hebrewes shal not escape the hand of God † For we for our sinnes doe suffer these thinges † And if the Lord our God hath bene angrie with vs a litle for rebuke correction yet he wil be reconciled againe to his seruants † But thou ô wicked and of al men most flagicious be not in vaine extolled with vaine hopes inflamed against his seruantes † For thou hast not yet escaped the iudgement of the almightie God and him that beholdeth al thinges † For my bretheren hauing now susteyned short payne are become vnder the testament of eternal life but thou by the iudgement of God shalt receiue iust punishment for thy pride † And I as also my brethren doe yeld my life and my bodie for the lawes of our fathets inuocating God to be propicious to our nation quickly and that thou with torments and stripes maist confesse that he onlie is God † But in me and in my brethren shal the wrath of the Almightie cease which hath iustly bene brought vpon al our stocke † Then the king incensed with anger raged against him more cruelly aboue al the rest taking it grieuously that he was mocked † And this same therfore died vnspotted wholy trusting in our Lord. † And last of al after the sonnes the mother also was consumed † Therfore of the sacrifices and of the exceeding cruelties there is ynough sayd CHAP. VIII Iudas Machabeus with six thousand men commendîng their cause to God 6. prospereth in battel 8. Philippe soliciting for more helpe Nicanor and Gorgias are sent with twentie thousand men against Iudas 12. whose men beginning to feare and some flying he encoregeth the rest 19. reciting manie examples of Gods assistance 22. disposeth his armie and pr●uayleth 30. killing manie of Timothees and Bacchide● men 34. The principal hardly escaping by flight acknowlege that God protecteth the lewes BVT Iudas Machabeus and they that were with him went in secretely into the townes and calling together their kinsemen and taking vnto them those that continewed in Iudaisme they brought out to them six thousand men † And they inuocated our Lord that he would haue respect vnto his people that was troden of al and would haue mercie on the temple that was cotaminated of the impious † he would haue pitie also vpon the destruction of the citie which was forth with to be made flat with the ground and would heare the voice of the bloud crying to him † he would remember also the most vniust deathes of innocent children and the blasphemies done to his name and would take indignation for them † But Machabeus hauing gathered a multitude became intolerable to the heathen for the wrath of our Lord was turned into mercie † And coming vpon the castels and cities vnlooked for he burnt them taking commodious places he made not few slaughters of the enemies † and especially in the nightes he was caried to such excursions and the fame of his manlines was spred abrode euerie where † But Philip seing the man to come forward by litle and litle and that thinges for the more part succeeded with him prosperously wrote to Ptolomee the gouernour of Coelesyria and Phoenicia to geue ayde to the kinges affaires † And he with spede sent Nicanor the sonne of Patroclus of the principals of his freindes geuing him of the nations mingled together no lesse then twentie thousand armed men to destroy vtterly al the stocke of the Iewes adioyning also vnto him Gorgias a man of warre and in martial affayres of very great experience † And Nicanor appointed that he would supplie vnto the king the tribute that was to be geuen to the Romanes two thousand talents out of the captiuitie of the Iewes † and forthwith he sent to the cities by the sea side calling men together to the buying of the Iewish slaues promising that he would sel ninetie slaues for a talent not looking to the vengeance which was to folow him from the Almightie † But Iudas when he vnderstood it shewed to those Iewes that were with him the coming of Nicanor † Of whom certaine fearing and not crediting the iustice of God fled away † and others if they had any thing left sold it withal be sought our Lord that he would deliuer them from the impious Nicanor who had sold them before he came neere them † and if not for them yet for the testament that was with their fathers and for the inuocation of his holie magnifical name vpon them † But Machabeus calling together seuen thousand that were with him desired that they would not be reconciled to the enemies nor feare the multitude of the enemies coming against them vniustly but would fight manfully † hauing before their eyes the contume lie that was vniustly done by them to the holie place and moreouer the iniurie also of the citie being made a laughing stocke besides also the ordinances of the ancesters broken † For they in dede trust to their weapons sayd he and to their boldnes also but we trust in the Almightie Lord who can vtterly destroy
iniquitie were trubled and saluation was directed in his hand For he and his folowers 2. Mach. 8. v. 2. inuocated our Lord that he would haue respect to his owne people the temple the citie heare the voice of bloud crying vnto him remember the most vniust deathes of innocentes and the blasphemies done to his name So he with a few hauing made this preparation by prayer ouerthrew the armies of Antiochus with their foure principal captaines Apollonius 1. Mach. 3. v. 11. and v. 23. Seron ch 4. Gorgias and Lysias Then clensing the temple v. 36. li. 2. ch 10. renewed the holie vessels which were destroyed by Antiochus and dedicated a new altar v. 47. 56. And whiles Iudas with his bretheren deliuered the people from al bordering enimies 1. Mach. 5. li. 2. ch 10. 11. Antiochus Epiphanes li. 1. c. 6. li. 2. ch 9. dyed most miserably And his young sonne Antiochus Eupator reigned Against whose captaines Iudas had stil more victories li. 2. ch 12. 13. Then folowed the last battel of Nicanor sent by king Demetrius where he was slaine by Iudas forces in the middes of his armie li. 1. ch 7. li. 2. ch 15. wherof Demetrius hearing sent new forces with Bacchides and Alcimus and more then two partes of Iudas smal campe fleying away he with only eight hundred li. 1. ch 9. setting vpon the enemies defeated the strongest part of their armie but an other part coming at his backe great slaughter was made on both sides and Iudas after manie heroical actes was now slaine in battel dying with most renowmed glorie v. 18. al good men lamenting his death After him Ionathas his brother succeded Highpriest and general captaine ch 9. v. 28. who managing the common affayres with great wisdom pietie and coreg● the wicked vsurper Alcimus who not long before swearing that he would not hurt the Assideans presently killed threescore of them in one day li. 1. ch 7. v. 15. and beginning to deface the temple was sodenly strooken with a palsie and dyed miserably li. 1. ch 9. v. 54. Ionathas prospering against the enimies confirmed league with the Romanes and Lacedemonians ch 12. At last was deceiued and both he and his sonnes were trecherously slaine by Tryphon ch 13. So Simon his brother was made Highpriest and captaine general by publique consent ch 14 who after manie noble actes ch 15. was also vilanously slaine with two of his sonnes by his sonne in law Ptolomee And his other sonne Ioannes Hyrcanus succeded ch 16. In his dayes the Iewes in Ierusalem writte to their bretheren in Aegypt exhorting them not to frequent the schismatical temple in Aegypt but to kepe the feastes which were instituted in Ierusalem Thus much of the trublesome state of the Church reduced to peace by the Machabees Shortly after which time the Romane kingdom hauing bene often increased in the space of nere seuen hundred yeares from the building of Rome was by Pompeius the great subduing the East countries extended so farre that as Plinie writeth li. 7. c. 26. Asia Minor was now as it were the middle part which before was the vttermost borders of their dominions And the same Pompeius amongst the rest taking Ierusalem brought the Iewes vnder the Romane Empyre nere fourescore yeares before Christ vnder whom they enioyed some liberties til Herod Ascalonita a stranger borne his father an Idumean his mother an Arabique was first made gouernour of Galelee then Tetrach of Iudea and afterwards king therof who being aduanced by the Romanes to royal dignitie endeuouring by sundrie benefites to get the peoples fauoure amongst other thinges enlarged and adorned their Temple making it as it were a new edifice in comparison of that which was built after the captiuitie yea more excellent as some thinke then that which Salomon built But this new king made saile of spiritual offices Namely he sold the office of the Highpriest for money and that from yeare to yeare or for shorte and limited time In him was fulfilled the prophecie of the Patriarch Iacob Gen 49. geuing it for a signe that Christ our Redemer should presently come into this world saying The scepter shal not be taken away from Iudas and a duke out of his thigh til he do come that is to be sent and the same shal be the expectation of the Gentiles And therfore Herod hearing by the Sages that the true king of Iewes was borne in extreme furie murdered the innocent Infantes Mat. ● And so both Iewes and Gentiles were admonished that the Messias was borne of the se●de and right line of King Dauid Whose Genealogie before the captiuitie we noted in the fifth age of the world to Ioachaz sonne of Iosias Now therfore to prosecute the same we must obserue that wheras S. Mathew sayth Iosias begate Iechonias by this Iechonias he meaneth Ioachaz otherwise called Iechonias or els he ascribeth the nephew to the grandfather as his sonne For Iosias was slaine at least eleuen yeares before Iechonias the father of Salathiel was borne And this later Iechonias was also called Ioachin the first of the third Tessaradechad so the second Salathiel the 3. Zorobabel 4. Abiud 5. Eliachim 6. Azor. 7. Sadoc 8. Achim 9. Eliud 10. Eleazar 11. Mathan 12. Iacob 13. Ioseph the husband of Marie of whom was borne the fouretenth IESVS CHRIST And this knowen by tradition not written before S. Matthewes Gospel The succession also of the Highpriestes declared in our former Recapitulations of the fourth and fifth ages from Aaron to Iosedech who was High-priest in the captiuitie after that his father Saraias was slaine 4. Reg. 25. v. 18. continued as partly by holie scriptures the rest by other auctors appeareth in this order After the same Iosedech his sonne Iosue then Ioachim Eliachim Eliasib Ioiada Ionathan Iaddus in the time of king Alexander Onias the first Simon Priscus Eleazarus by whom the Seuentie two Interpreters were sent to king Prolomeus Philodelphus Manasses who became an Apostata Onias the second Simon the second of whom is worthie mention Eccli 50. Onias the third whose brother Iason obtayned the office of the king by symonie and became an Apostata so was neuer lawful neither those th●●●f lowed him Menelaus of the tribe of Beniamin Lisimachus his brother vicar Alcimus though of Aarons stocke yet for his Apostasie vnlawful Al which time the true Highpriestes were of the Machabees Matthathias his sonnes Iudas Ionathas and Simon his sonne Ioannes Hyrcanus Then Aristobulus Alexander an other Hyrcanus in whose time Pompeius tooke Ierusalem Antigonus after whom Herod put Anaelus in the office for money And so the rest or most of them that folowed were symoniacal Aristobulus Iosue Simon Mathias Iosephus Iozarus Eleazarus Iosue Anna Ismael Eleazarus Simon and Caiphas vvho in councel Ioan. 11. v 49. gaue sentence which himselfe vnderstood not that it was
and not these schismatikes were called and sent by God to gouerne his people :: Aaron being already established high Priest God againe confirmeth in ●le●zar the progenie of priestlie succession in Aarons stock and no● in other Leuites S. Aug q. 30. in ●um :: This multitude did only in wordes fauour schisma●●kes what iudgemēt then remaineth to those which 〈◊〉 external ac●●● participat● 〈◊〉 hereti●●● This historie ●others others were writtē for our admonition 1. Cor. 10. Core and his c●plices were not heretikes but only schismatikes God accepteth not sacrifice done against his ordinance God by ●pre 〈…〉 hmēt pre●●nted heres●● wherto al 〈…〉 tendeth Not only the authores of wickednes bu● al that con ●nt much more that cooperate ar● vvorthie of death Rom. ● :: For more satisfaction to the whole people God confirmeth Aarons authoritie by a new miracle v. 10. :: The rodde signified the B. Virgin mother and the * desormat● fully formed :: almondes Christ to wit the v●te● pill his humanitie the shel his crosse the kernel his diuinitie VVho pacified by the bloud of his crosse al thinges in earth and in heauen Collos 1. S. Aug. ser 3. de temp Example of one miracle proueth the possibilitie of an other :: Oz● was slaine for touching the arck ● Reg. 6. :: This couenant of first-fruites and other rights geuen to the Priests shal be perpetual as salt is in euerie sacrifice Leuit. 2. :: Punishable with death :: The same things saith S August q. 33. and Theodoret q. 36. in Num which were shadow ed and prefigured in the old Testament are reueled and manifested in the New And this special sacrifice prefigured diuers particular things in Christs Passiō a His bodie of Adam signifying redde earth b At the age of 33. yeares c Alwayes most pure from sinne d Free from al bondage e Crucified without the gate of Hierusalem f Al Sacramēts haue their vertue of Christs bloud g From the sole of his feet to the toppe of his head al wounded with the whippes crowne nailes c. h VVood of the crosse brought life to the world i Liuely heate of so infinite charitie dissolueth the coldnes of death k Christs suffering an exāple that we must also sustaine afflictions l Those that procured o● cooperated to Christs death were polluted with sinne m Ioseph and Nicodemus buried Christ n His sepulcher was glorious o Those also that buried him neded cloansing by his Passion not for that work but for their sinnes p The old law did not remitte sinnes but the new q Baptisme in the name of the B. Trinitie r Without which no other Sacramēt auaileth The Epistle on friday in the third weke of Lent :: The ●ock signified Christ the rodde his Crosse s. Aug. ● 35 in Num :: By this the crosse is more euidently signified which was made of two peeces of wood s. Aug. 〈…〉 :: Not doubting of Gods powre but supposing it vnmete that God shold stil worke miracles for so ●●b borne a people they did not speake to the rock asthey were cōmanded but chiding the incredulous multitude spake to them ambiguously so by occasion of others sinne also offended and for the same were punished 〈…〉 P●ut 1 v 〈◊〉 ● v. 16. 4 ● 2● s. Aug q. 19. The●● q 38 in Xu● :: Mourning the dead was long before this obserued by tradition G●● 23. 50. :: God forbidding images of idols yet commandeth to make an image for a good purpose :: Christ expoundeth this erecting of the brasen serpent of him self to be cru●●fied Ioan. 3. :: As the Aegyptians were drowned in the sea so the Amorrheites were oppressed by the rockes falling vpon them the waters caried their carcases into the valley of Moab :: He consulted his false god whom he serued called him the Lord not knowing our Lord God almightie Theodoret. q. 40. Pr●copius in Num. :: God our Lord answered him not suffering the diuel to speake in this case :: Being sufficiently informed before for worldlie lucre he demandeth againe God for his punishment letteth him goe but suffereth him not to curse no● speake euil of the Israelites but cōtrariwise to prophecie much good which should come vnto them :: Nothing is here to be more merueled sayeth S. Augustin then that he was not afraide whē he heard his asse speake vnto him But being accustomed to such monstruous things he replied familiarly nothing therwith astoonished :: Yet seing an Angel he fel downe terrified and adored him ● 48. in Num. :: Balaam knowing him to be an Angel that appeared neither adored him with diuine honour as God nor with ciuil as a mortal man but with religious honour lesse then diuine more then ciuil See Exod. 20. :: God sometimes maketh false prophetes to vtter a truth because preiudicate mindes do rather geue eare to such thē to true prophetes Theod. q. 45. in Num. :: Before the diuel would curse Gods people he required sacrifice which being offered yet he could not worke his malice For by Gods commandmēs saith S. Hierom de mans 42. Israel is blessed cursing turned into praise and Gods voice is heard sounding from a profaine mouth :: Heretikes other infidels desire sometimes to die in state of Catholiques though they wil not liue as they do S. Greg. li. 33. c. 27. Moral * ●ikne● of id●l :: VVhen Infidels can not draw others to false worship or cursing they are content that men professe no God nor religion at al. :: The spirite of prophecie came more vpon him but not grace iustifying M 〈…〉 do prophecie and cast out diuels and worke other miracles and yet be dāned Mat. 7. v. 22. :: In some ●o● this prophecie was fulfilled in King Dauid 2. Reg. 5. 8. seq but perfectly in Christ the bright and mornīg starre Apoc. 22. To whom not anie one or manie but in general al nations are geuē for inheritāce and the endes of the world in possession Psal 2. Act. ● v. 8. :: Not to his countrie but to his place of abode among the Madianites for there he was slaine shortly after chap. 31. v. 8. :: Balaam gaue this diuelish counsel to allure men by bellichere and lecherie vnto idolatrie chap. 31. v. 16. And euen so Heretikes drawe manie in these daies to heresie Sea Apoc. 2. v. 14. :: By assistance of the princes hang the idolaters v. 5. :: Either Phinees was one of the Iudges and so an example for such Magistrates to do iustice or he had a particular inspiration which is no warrant for priuate men to do the like For by Catholique doctrin killing of men is neither allowed nor excused but whē it is done by publique authoritie or by mere casualitie against the killers wil. Catechis Rom. p. 3. c. 6. q. 5. D. T●● 2. 2. q. 60 a. 6. :: Gods wrath being pacified by extirpation of the old bad people the new progenie is numbered which shal possesse the
reproches v God semed to be wel pleased with Christ as with his owne Sonne if it be so let him deliuer him from these afflictions say these blasphemers w diuine powre without man formed me in the wombe of my mother a virgin x As I haue no father but thee O God so without intermission from myn incarnation to this time I haue had thee my protector y leaue me not now without comforte seing I must dye as thou hast determined and I freely consented yet leaue me not in death but raise me againe to life Psal 15. v. 9. 10. z Almost al are become myn enemies and those few that would can not helpe me a Delicate lasciuious yougmen b and the scribes Pharises and elders of the people haue al conspired against me c condemning me and perswading the people to crie Crucifie crucifie him d So weakned with paines of torments as fluide water not able to consist e My bones and strongest partes of my bodie are weakned verified when our Sauiour fel downe vnder his crosse f the part that first and last liueth is weakened as soft waxe by heat of the fire and ready to faile g al my powres and radical humiditie is dried vp as a potters vessel is baked in the furnace h Through exceding great drught which our Sauiour professed on the crosse saying I thirst i thus thou O God hast suffered me to come to the last breath of life next to death Yet finally ou● Seuiour gaue vp his spirite before he should haue died v. 21. k Agane this royal Prophet recounteth by whom and how our B. Sauiour should suffer euen as clere as tho Euangelistes afterwards haue written the historie ●●● 19. l Our Sauiours body was so racked on the crosse that his bones might be seene and counted m The persecuters vvittingly determined al ti●● crueltie beheld it vvith their eyes and vvithout al compassion persisted in malice reioyced and blasphemed n the souldiars that crucified our Sauiour taking his garments for their praye o yet in mysterie of his Church diuided not his coate p He prophecieth Christs speedy resurrection q Christs saul vvas not seperated from his bodie by force of the torments but he preuenting death freely yelded vp his spirite Ioan. 10. v. 9. 10. r the most pure and sanctified soule of vvhose fulnes al other iust soules are sanctified ſ that it stay not in hel vvhich deuoured al other soules in the old Testament t The propagation of the Church of Christ in al nations v not the carnal but spiritual children of Iacob Isaac and Abraham Rom. 9. v. 8. w the Church gethered both of Ievves and Gentiles is very great and vniuersal x Our Sauiour promised to geue his ovvne bodie the bread of life Ioan. 6 and performed the same at his last supper y those that be faithful humble and poore in spirit participat the sruict of this most excellent Sacrament z The effect of this B. Sacrament is the resurrection in glorie and life euerlasting a Gentiles which haue bene idolaters shal recollect themselues when they heare Christ preached and shal turne to true Religion b Although men can neither deserue to be conuerted nor to perseuere in iustice yet Christ meriteth to haue a continual kingdom which is the perpetual visible Catholique Church c Not only the poore sorte but also the mightie ones of the world shal be conuerted to Christ participate his B. Bodie in the Sacrament d and religiously adore the same e Al that adore God shad adore him in this Sacraments f Death being once ouercome it shal haue no more powre g Againe the prophet inculcateth the continuance of the Catholique Church h Apostles and other preachers of Christ Christs Resurrection The Passion of Christ according to Dauid Christs conditional prayer was not heard His absolute prayers were alwaies heard Christs suffered for our example ● Pet. 2. The Hebrew text corrupted by the Iewes This Psalme is of Christ Prophecie of the visible and vniuersal Church in hu●● Psal S. Agustin proueth the Church to be alwaies visible and great by this Psalme The Eucharist prophecied in this place Real presence of Christ in the Eucharist Thāksgeuing for Gods protection The 7. key a Christ the good pastor gouerneth protecteth Isa 40. Iere. 23. Ezech. 34. Ioan. 10. 1. Pet. 2. 5. b and feedeth his faithful flocke c Baptisme of regeneration d which is the first iustification e Gods precepts which the baptised must obserue Mat. 28. v. 20. f Saluation is in the name and powre of Christ not in mans owne merites g in great dangers of tentations to mortal sinne h yet by Gods grace we may resist i Gods direction and law is streight k and strong l Christ hath prepared for our spiritual foode the B. Sacrament of the Eucharist S. Cyprian Epist 63. Eutim in hunc Psal m against al spiritual enemies the world the flesh and the diuel n Christian soules are also streingthned by the Sacraments of Confirmation Penance holie-Orders Matrimonie and Extreme Vnction o The B. Sacrament and Sacrifice of Christs bodie and bloud p continual and final peseuerance is by Gods special grace q in eternal life Christ Lord of al the world The 5. key a Christ rising from death the first day of the weeke had al powre geuen him in heauen and in earth Mat. 28. b Not only the soile it selfe but al the fruict and al that dwel therin are Gods c Though Christ created and redeemed al yet only the iust shal inherite heauen d not occupied himselfe in vaine and vnprofitable thinges but in commendable workes e Gods mercy goeth before iustifications iust workes folow and so glorie is the reward of al. f This sorte of people thus seruing God shal receiue euerlasting blisse g The prophet contemplating in spirite Christs Ascension inuiteth Angels to receiue him and by prosopopeia speaketh also to the gates of heauen by which he is to enter h Angels answer admiring demanding as in a dialogue how Christ is become so glorious i The Prophet answereth that Christ by his powre hath ouercome al enemies in battel k Againe he willeth Angels to open the gates and biddeth the gates to enlarge them selues l the Angels demand as before m the prophet answereth that Christ is Lord also of Angels and al heauenlie powres vnder God A prayer of the faithful The 7. key a This Psalme perteyneth more properly to the new testament And is artificially composed the verses beginnīg with distinct letters in order of the Hebrew Alphabet to the last verse b my min● to be attētiue c not be frustrate of my petition d that patiently expect the time when God wil assist e This maner of praying is frequent in the Psalmes signifying as a prophecie that so it wil come to passe and the conformitie of the iust to Gods iustice f in true faith and religion g al our
our sinnes al his life l He prayed also for his resurrection and glorification m VVith al possible confusion Christs exaltation the 5. key Mat. 22. Act. 2. 1. Cor. 15. Heb. 1. 10. a God the Father b To God the Sonne the Lord of Dauid and of al mankind yet the sonne of Dauid according to his humanitie c He limiteth not the time but excludeth al time wherin the enimie might imagine that Christs kingdom should cease signifying that Christ shal reigne til al his enimies be subdued much more afterwards in al eternitie d The Church of Christ beginning in Ierusalem on whitsunday the fiftith day from his Resurrection continueth euer more e Thou shalt haue principalitie f in the day of thy powrful conquest and rising from death g in excellencie of al holie spiritual mysteries and graces h because I God the Father of my substance begate thee God the Sonne in eternitie The same which Micheas saith c. 5. v. 2. His comingforth from the beginning from the dayes of eternitie i God most firmly and vnchangeably affirmed that thou Christ our Messias art not only a King but also a Priest Heb. 5. v. 7. k not for a time as Aaron was but for euet l neither of Aarons order but according to the Order of Melchisedec m Kinges that sometimes persecute Christans are subdued with other people to Christ n He shal iudge and punish the incredulous people o make great slanghters amongst those that resist p and bring princes with their populous kingdome to nothing q He shal in the meane time and also his best seruants suffer much tribulation in this life r and for the same ●e highly exalted in life euerlasting Christs Priesthood for euer both in function and in effect The resemblance of Christs and Melchisedecs Priesthood Graces geuen to the Church the 6. key a I wil praise God both in secret for discharge of myn owne conscience b and in publique for edification of others This Psalme in the Hebrew is composed with euerie verse and middle of verse begunning with a distinct letter in order of the Alphabet c Gods wil is the whole cause of al his workes d Euerie worke of his is praise worthie and magnifical e God hath leift one most special and beneficial memorie of al other benefites his owne bodie and bloud in memorie of his Passion and our redemption f the spiritual foode and sustinance of al the soules that rightly feare him g Of his promise to conserue his Church perpetually h the powrable operation of his death and of al his mysteries i Gods commandments do iustifie al that kepe them k He also of his mercie redemed man that he might be able to kepe his precepts l Begingning with feare of God bringeth at last by other degrees to true wisdom which two are the first and last of the seuen giftes of the Holie Ghost The meanes to be happie the 7. key a The Septuagint Interpreters added this mention of Aggeus and Zacharie returning from captiuitie to signifie that this Psalme was very proper meete to be cōmended to the people at that time wherby they might lerne that their sinnes were the cause of their captiuitie and of al their miseries and if they desired temporal or spiritual prosperitie they must obserue the meanes here prescribed to obtayne the same b He that sincerly feareth God wil take great delight in keping his commandments This Psalme is also composed by the Alphaber as the next before Psal 1. c So doing he and his shal prosper d The iust shal not only prosper in this world but also in the next e God wil also comfort the iust in tribulations f That shal geue discrete and wholsome counsel to the afflicted g Workes of mercie are also called iustice because they concurre to mans iustification 2. Cor. 9● h and to his saluation Gods prouidence the 3. key a Al Gods seruants b In respect of God al creatures are low though they be in heauen c See the example of Ioseph so aduanced d of Sara Rebecca Rachael and other wemen made fruictful The meruelous passage of Israel from Aegypt the 4. key a People of false religion counted barbarous especially such as also persecute the true Religion for otherwise the Aegyptians were both ciuil in maners and lerned in manie sciences b The people of Iewes were more notoriously renowmed in the world from the time of their deliuerie out of Aegypt for the peculiar people whom God sanctified and in whom as in his elected enheritance or dominion he dwelled and reigned c The Psalmist writing in verse doth often describe thinges in poetical maner but more truly then prophane poetes for that in very dede al creatures otherwise sensles as the sea do in a sorte feele the powre of their Creator obey his wil d VVhen the Israelites went forth of Aegypt e when they entred into Chanaan f Either there was an earthquake or some other mouing of hilles not mentioned by Moyses or els the Psalmist speaketh of the rockes of the torrentes which bowed that the Israelites might rest in Ar and lie in the borders of the Moabites Num 21 v 15 g By the figure Apostrophe he speaketh to the sea riuer and hilles vsing also Prosopopoeia as if senfles thinges vnderstood and should answer h An other miraculous benefite that the rocke yelded them water in their necessitie * Here some Hebrewe Rabbins beginne an other Psalme but by the coherence of the matter S. Augustin proueth that it i● but one Psalme where is shewed that the true inuisible God is knowen by such workes as are here recited and contratiwise that the Gētils idoles are not goddes because they are made of siluer gold or other matter by mens handes hauing resemblance of liuing thinges are altogether sensles i Thou didstal this ô God of mere mercie towards thy people k for thy truths sake seing thou didst promise to protect them l that the Gentiles should not take occasion to blaspheme m This is a iust prayer of the zelous conforming their desires to Gods wil But if God geue idolaters grace to amend then al the iust wil also reioice in their cenuersion n Though manie Iewes fel to idolatrie yet there alwayes remained so manie in Gods true seruice that it mighst stil be truly saide The house of Israel hath hoped in our Lord as is here auerred o This in effect al worldlie politikes say in their hartes as it were quitting their interest of heauen to God p and contenting themselues with earthlie possessions q But when such prophane men are dead they make no shew at al of praising r for parting from the earth they descend into hel and there eternally blaspheme God God ● ſ Contrarivvise the iust aspiring to heauen vvhich is the proper kingdom of God vsing this vvorld as they ought to do for a meanes to ascend into heauen shal
Confidence in God procureth his assistance Psa 106. * li. 2. c. 8. v. 8. O :: The fourth great battle of Iudas vvas agaynst Lysias sent by Antiochus into Iurie 1. Reg. 17. 1. Reg. 14. :: As it vvas the first and chiefe intention of Iudas to defend religion holie things so hauing expugned their enimies his chief care is to purge the temple and to restore al holie rites of Gods true seruice :: Altars temples statues of false goddes made of stone and set vp in the temple ch 1. v. 50. vvere novv destroyed :: The temple vvas purged tvvo yeares some thing more after the prophanation vvhich vvas in the yeare 145. ch 1. v. 57. :: Our Sauiour obserued this feast being instituted long after the Lavv of Moyses Ioan. 10. v. 226 Ioan. 10. * li. 2. ● 10. v. ● :: In this chapter is mention of tenne battles in vvhich Iudas or his bretheren Ionathas and Simon vvere victors Q :: The first against the Idumeans in A●rabathane :: The second against the Beanites a vtterly destroyed :: The third against the Ammonites b villages :: The fourth against the Galadites :: The fifth against the Galileans of the Gentiles :: The sixth against the Carnaimites :: The seuenth against the Ephronites Num. 20. :: A good and pious captaine cherisheth and comforteth the vveake souldiars and en●oreged ●l to shew their so●titude :: Men that pre●ume of their ovvne strength without commission from lawful auctotitie haue not Gods assistance and so faylein their attemptes as not called of God amongst those men by vvhom saluation is made in Israel v. 62. :: The eight against the Idumeans in Chebron :: The ninth against the Samaritanes :: The tenth against the Philistimes in Azotus :: The ful historie of Antiochus Epiphanes his death is vvritten in this chapter to the 16. v. and in al the 9. of the second booke Finally he returned into the countrie of Babylon but before he arriued there he heard the bad newes of his armie in Iurie fel into intolerable and desperate diseases v. 8. and li. 2. ch 9. v 5. :: Al this vvas but seaned repentance li. ● ch 9. v 13. :: Antiochus begane to persecute the Ievves in the yeare 143. ch 1. v. 21. and dying this yeare 149 it appeareth that his persecution dured about six yeares or some vvhat more agreable to the answer of the Angel Dan. 8. v. 14. that it should indure 2300. dayes vvhich make six yeares almost foure monethes vvithin vvhich time Iudas by his valure obteyned purged the holie places in the yeare 148. ch 6. v 52 some monethes before Antiochus death * li. 2. c. 9. v. 1. S * li. 2. c. 10. v. 10. V :: Bloud of the grup vvine Deut ●2 v 14. a●● iuyce of mulberies do incite elephantes to fight A● some kinde of bloud or smel therof doth incire houndes to hunt Vallesius c. 82 sacrae Philosophia :: S Ambiose li. 1 c. 40 Offic. highly commendeth the fortitude of this souldiat putting himself in so present danger of death fighting for religion * li. 2. c. 13. v. 1. X :: This Scleucus vvas brother to Antiochus Epiphanes so Antiochus Eupator vvas Demetrius his consin german :: Alcimus was novv in place of the high-priest as Menelaus had bene before him set vp by Antiochus therfore is righ●ly here sayd he vvould haue bene the chiefe priest but in dede vvas not For the true high-priesthood vvas amongst the Machabees :: This vsurper vvith his complices deuised false accusations against Iudas and the rest to incense the king against them And by great giftes gayned the kings fauour li. 2 c. 14. v. 4. :: Among the Scribes the Assideans vvere first consulted being as lerned as the Pharises or anie other and in dede more sincere as we noted ch 2. v. 42. :: And so Alcimus deceiuing them in a matter of fact tovvitte that himself meant truly as he did not cruelly murdered thre● score of them Psal 78. * li. 2. c. 14. v. 1. :: This Nicanor vvas the most terrible enimie against Iudas but was at last slaine by him v. 43. li. 2. c. 15. v. 28. Z * li. 2 c. 14. v. 12. :: This was the last conflict betwen Iudas and Nicanor vvritten more largely in the last chapter of the second booke 4. Reg. 19. :: VVhiles Iudas disposed thinges perteyning to religion and the common-vvealth Demetrius prepared for warres ch 9. v. 3. * li. 2. c. 15. v. 1. :: Of the renow med actes of the Romans other Historiographers haue also vvritten largely especially Liuius Diodorus Iustinus Florus Varre Plutarchus and manie others d :: Vvhat places these vvere losephus expresseth li. 12. c. 17. :: Polybius li. 5. vvriteth that Antiochus had 102. elephants in his vvarre against Prolemeus therfore it is not to be merueled that he had 120. against the Romans :: Though Rome vvas then gouerned by tvvo consuls Yet one only ruled euerie day in their course not both in one day for so saith Liuius li. 2 hist it should haue bene more terror of tvvo rulers then before it had bene of one king :: This happened about a yeare after the death of Nicanor ch 7. v. 50 li. 2 c. 15 38. :: Strongest men are not free from first motions of perturbation but reflecting vpon their ovvne infirmitie and considing in Gods prouidence take corege in a good cause being assured either of temporal victorie or of eternal glorie As now it happened to this most glorious Champion v. 18. :: The mightie may fal in the sight of men but Iudas his fortitude proued and confirmed by former heroical actes vvith prosperous successe vvas now perfectly consummate by this most glorious end S. Ambr. li. 1. c. 4● Offre :: VVhere there is no gouernour the people shal fal Pro. 11. v. 14. :: Ionathas the third general captaine of the Macha bees vvas also high priest after the death of Iudas Though Alcimus by the kinges fauoure vniustly vsurped the office ch 7. v. 9. vvhiles Iudas yet liued and vntil this time v 54. :: They also killed him v. 38. 42. :: To reuenge or punish faultes in due measure other right circumstances is a special vertue moderating mans defence of his person honour or right vvithout crueltie or remisnes and so the children sometimes are temporally punished for their parents finnes and the communitie for their leaders either for their consent before the fact or after or to preuent that they doe not the like S. Tho. 2. 2. q. 108. 2. Par. 20. v. 3. :: Ionathas and his men svvame not to the other side but to an other place on the same side for othervvise the armies had bene parted by the riuer and so there had bene no conflict that time :: Iosephus li. 12. c. 17. confesseth that Iudas vvas highpriest but erreth in saying he succeded after Alcimus neither considering that Alcimus vvas not in dede
furie at my hand thou shalt drinke thereof to al nations vnto the which I shal send thee † And they shal drinke and be trubled and be madde at the face of the sword which I shal send among them † And I tooke the cuppe at the hand of our Lord and I dranke to al the nations to which our Lord sent me † to Ierusalem and the cities of ●uda and to the kinges thereof princes thereof that I would geue them into desolation and into astonishment and into hissing and into malediction as is this day † To Pharao the king of Aegypt and to his seruants and his princes al his people † and to al generally to al the kinges of the land of Ausitis and to al the kinges of the land of the Philisthijms and of Ascalon and of Gaza and of Accaron and to the remnant of Azotus † and of Idumea and of Moab and to the children of Ammon † And to al the kinges of Tyre and to al the kinges of Sidon and to the kinges of the land of the iles who are beyond the Sea † And to Dedan and Thema and Buz and to al that haue their heare powled † And to al the kinges of Arabia and to al the kinges of the West that dwel in the desert † And to al the kinges of Zambri and to al the kinges of Elam and to al the kinges of the Medes † also to al the kinges of the North from neere and from a farre of to euerie one against his brother and to al the kingdomes of the earth which are vpon the face thereof and the king of Sesac shal drinke after them † And thou shalt say to them Thus saith the Lord of hostes the God of Israel Drinke ye and be drunken vomite and fal and rise not at the face of the sword which I shal send among you † And when they shal not take the cuppe of thy hand to drinke thou shalt say to them Thus saith the Lord of hostes Drinking you shal drinke † because loe in the citie wherein my name is inuocated wil I beginne to afflict and shal you be as innocent and scape free you shal not scape free for I cal the sword vpon al the inhabitants of the earth saith the Lord of hostes † And thou shalt prophecie vnto them al these wordes and shalt say to them Our Lord from on high shal roare and from his holie habitation shal geue his voice roaring he shal roare vpon his beautie the crie as it were of them that tread grapes shal be sung against al the inhabitants of the earth † The sound is come euen to the endes of the earth because there is iudgement to our Lord with the Nations he entreth iudgement with al flesh the impious I haue deliuered to the sword saith our Lord. † Thus saith the Lord of hostes Behold affliction shal go forth from nation to nation a great whirlewind shal goe forth from the endes of the earth † And the slaine of our Lord shal be in that day from the one end of the earth euen to the other end thereof they shal not be mourned and they shal not be gathered vp nor buried as a dunghil shal they lie vpon the face of the earth † Howle ye pastoures and crie and sprinkle your selues with ashes ye leaders of the flocke because your daies are accomplished to be slaine and your dissipations and you shal fal as precious vessels † And flight shal faile from the pastours and saluation from the principals of the flocke † A voice of the crie of the pastoures and an bowling of the principals of the flocke because our Lord hath wasted their pastures † And the fieldes of peace haue bene silent at the presence of the wrath of the furie of our Lord. † He hath as a lyon forsaken his couert because their land is made into desolation at the presence of the wrath of the doue and at the presence of the wrath of the furie of our Lord. CHAP. XXVI The prophet for preaching Gods commination 7. is apprehended by the priestes and false prophetes 10. but deliuered from death by the ancientes of the people 18. alleaging the examples of Michaeas 20. and Vrias prophecying the same before IN THE beginning of the kingdom of Ioakim the sonne of Iosias king of Iuda came this word from our Lord saying † Thus saith our Lord Stand in the court of the house of our Lord and thou shalt speake to al the cities of Iuda out of the which they come to adore in the house of our Lord al the wordes which I haue commanded thee to speake vnto them withdraw not a word † if perhaps they wil heare and be conuerted euerie one from his euil way and it may repent me of the euil that I thinke to doe to them for the malice of their studies † And thou shalt say to them Thus saith our Lord If you wil not heare me to walke in my law which I haue geuen you † that you heare the wordes of my seruants the prophetes which I sent to you in the night rising and directing and you heard not † I wil geue this house as Silo and this citie I wil geue into malediction to al the nations of the earth † And the priestes and prophetes and al the people heard Ieremie speaking these wordes in the house of our Lord. † And when Ieremie had ended speaking al thinges that our Lord had commanded him to speake vnto al the people the priestes and prophetes and al the people apprehended him saying Let him dye the death † Why hath he prophecied in the name of our Lord saying This house shal be as Silo and this citie shal be made desolate for that there is no inhabitant And al the people was gathered together against Ieremie in the house of our Lord. † And the princes of Iuda heard these wordes and they went vp from the kings house into the house of our Lord and sa●e in the entrie of the new gate of the house of our Lord. † And the priestes and the prophetes spake to the princes and to al the people saying The iudgement of death is to this man because he hath prophecied against this citie as you haue heard with your eares † And Ieremie spake to al the princes and to al the people saying Our Lord sent me that I should prophecie to this house to this citie al the wordes that you haue heard † Now therfore make your waies good and your studies heare the voice of our Lord your God and our Lord wil repent him of the euil that he hath spoken against you † But I loe am in your handes doe vnto me that which is good and right in your eyes † Howbeit know ye and vnderstand that if you kil me you shal betray innocent bloud against your selues and against this citie and the
inhabitantes therof For in truth our Lord sent me to you that I should speake al these wordes in your eares † And the princes and al the people said to the priestes and to the prophetes There is no iudgement of death to this man because he hath spoken to vs in the name of the Lord our God † Men therefore of the ancients of the land rose vp and they spake to al the assemblie of the people saying † Michaeas the Morasthi was a prophet in the daies of Ezechias the king of Iuda and he spake to al the people Iuda saying Thus saith the Lord of hostes Sion shal be plowed as a field and Ierusalem shal be as an heape of stones and the mount of the house as the high places of woodes † Did Ezechias the king of Iuda and al Iuda condemne him to death Did they not feare our Lord and beseech the face of our Lord and it repented our Lord of the euil that he had spoken against them Therefore we doe great euil against our selues † There was also a man prophecying in the name of our Lord Vrias the sonne of Semei of Cariathiarim and he prophecied against this citie and against this land according to al the wordes of Ieremie † And king Ioakim and al his mighties and his princes heard these wordes the king sought to kil him And Vrias heard and was afraied and fled and went into Aegypt † And king Ioakim sent men into Aegypt Elnathan the sonne of Achobor and men with him into Aegypt † And they brought Vrias out of Aegypt and brought him to king Ioakim and he stroke him with the sword and he cast forth his carcasse in the sepulchers of the base vulgar people † Therefore the hand of Ahicam the sonne of Saphan was with Ieremie that he should not be deliuered into the handes of the people and they kil him CHAP. XXVII Ieremie putteth chaines about his owne necke and then sendeth them to sundrie kinges admonishing them that they must either be subiect to the king of Babylon 8. or perish by sword famine and pestilence 14. Inueigheth against false prophetes preaching the contrarie 16. and falsly affirming that the vessels already taken away shal quickly be restored 18. wheras in dede the rest shal also be caried away but al at last restored IN THE beginning of the kingdom of Ioakim the sonne of Iosias king of Iuda was this word made to Ieremie from our Lord saying † Thus saith our Lord to me Make thee bandes and chaynes and thou shalt put them on thy necke † And thou shalt send them to the king of Edom and to the king of Moab and to the king of the children of Ammon and to the king of Tyre and to the king of Sidon by the hand of the messengers that are come to Ierusalem to Sedecias the king of Iuda † And thou shalt command them that they speake to their lordes Thus saith the Lord of hostes the God of Israel Thus shal you say to your lordes † I made the earth and men and the beastes that are vpon the face of the earth in my great strength and in my stretched out arme and I haue geuen it to him that pleased in mine eies † And now therefore I haue geuen al these landes into the hand of Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon my seruant more ouer also the beastes of the field I haue geuen him to serue him † And al nations shal serue him and his sonne and his sonnes sonne til the time come of his land and of himself and manie nations and great kinges shal serue him † But the nation and kingdome that shal not serue Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon and who soeuer shal not bowe his necke vnder the yoke of the king of Babylon I wil visite vpon that nation with sword and with famine and with pestilence saith our Lord til I consume them in his hand † You therefore heare not your prophetes and deuiners and dreamers and southsayers and sorcerers that say to you You shal not serue the king of Babylon † Because they prophecie lies vnto you that they may make you far from your countrie and cast you out and you perish † But the nation that shal submit their necke vnder the yoke of the king of Babylon and shal serue him the same wil I let alone in their owne land saith our Lord and they shal husband it and dwel in it † And to Sedecias the king of Iuda I haue spoken according to al these wordes saying Submitte your neckes vnder the yoke of the king of Babylon serue him and his people you shal liue † Why wil you dye thou and thy people with the sword and famine the pestilence as the Lord hath spoken to the nation that wil not serue the king of Babylon † Heare not the wordes of the prophetes that say to you You shal not serue the king of Babylon because they speake a lie to you † Because I sent them not saith our Lord they prophecie in my name falsely that they may cast you out you perish as wel you as the prophetes that prophecie vnto you † And to the priestes and to this people I haue spoken saying Thus saith our Lord Heare not the wordes of your prophetes that prophecie to you saying Behold the vessels of our Lord shal returne out of Babylon euen now quickly for they prophecie a lie vnto you † Therefore heare them not but serue the king of Babylon that you may liue Why is this citie geuen into desolation † And if they be prophetes and the word of our Lord be in them let them interpose themselues before the Lord of hostes that the vessels which were leaft in the house of our Lord and in the house of the king of Iuda and in Ierusalem come not into Babylon † Because thus saith the Lord of hostes to the pillars and to the sea and to the feete and to the rest of the vessels that are remayning in this citie † Which Nabuchodonosor the king of Babylon tooke not when he transported Ieconias the sonne of Ioakim the king of Iuda from Ierusalem into Babylon and al the great men of Iuda and Ierusalem † Because thus saith the Lord of hostes the God of Israel to the vessels that are left in the house of our Lord and in the house of the king of Iuda and Ierusalem † They shal be transported into Babylon and there they shal be vntil the day of their visitation saith our Lord and I wil cause them to be brought and to be restored in this place CHAP. XXVIII Hananias a false prophet auoucheth that within two yeares the holie vessel and king I echonias with other captiues shal be restored 5. I eremie prayeth that it may be so 7. but prophecieth that it wil not so be 10. The false prophet in confirmation of that he saith breaketh I eremies chaine 12.