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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A08768 A sermon preached at Gouldsbrough in Yorke-shire, before the right worshipfull Sir Richard Hutton knight, one of His Maiesties iustices of the Court of Common Pleas Oxley, Robert. 1622 (1622) STC 19052.8; ESTC S2836 13,684 28

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of them that dwell therein First for the first scil the Iudgement wherein note the Author of it and the iudgement it selfe The Author of the iudgement is indefinitely exprest vnder the Pronoune ille maketh he that is the Lord by his power maketh the wildernesse a standing water and water springs of a drie ground and thereby causeth fruitfulnesse and when he is thereunto prouoked by the inhabitants sinnes then hee turneth the floud into a wildernesse and maketh the fruitfullest countries become extreme barren A fruitfull land maketh he barren So then it is the Lord that is the Author of fruitfulnesse and barrennesse it is he that sendeth plenty or pouertie Whence two lessons may be taken forth seasonable for two sorts of people scil 1. The rich 2. The poore For the rich The king may not boast of his great Babel nor the rich man of his full barnes but as hauing nothing saue what they haue receiued they should say Not vnto vs Lord not vnto vs but to thy name be ascribed the glory For the poore they should rest contented with their portion and legitimate Gods proceeding for it is he that either for triall of their patience or to reclaime them from their peruersnesse hath turned their fruitfulnesse into barrennesse A fruitfull land maketh he barren Thus much for the Author Now for the iudgement it selfe wherein obserue the matter and the manner For the matter it is a change of fruitfulnesse into barrennesse What it is to be fruitfull and what it is to be barren is well knowne and that such changes haue chanced experience testifieth and therefore we passe by the matter of the iudgement and come to the manner of it scil to shew how the Lord effecteth this change how hee maketh a fruitfull land to become barren The Lord maketh a fruitfull land barren by one of these three meanes scil either First by his supernaturall power or Secondly by naturall meanes or Thirdly by vnnaturall men First by his supernaturall power whereby contrary to the course of nature he maketh the heauen as iron the earth as brasse as he did in the daies of Eliah 1 Reg. 17. when there fell no raine vpon the face of the earth for three yeares space which closed vp their water springs yea that drought caused such a dearth and that dearth was seconded with such a famine as destroyed multitudes both of men and beasts Secondly as the Lord maketh a fruitfull land barren by his supernaturall so hee can effect the same by naturall meanes when hee vseth the creatures which were created for the vse and seruice of man to bee the correctors and reprouers of the faults of men To inlarge this by some instances Amongst the elements the fire is so necessary a creature that without the heat thereof neither man nor any thing made for the good of man could grow or prosper this I say at Gods appointment to mans great preiudice and hinderance rageth with vnmerciful fury consuming to ashes the dwellings commodities and the bodies of men The aire a sweet element made for man to breathe in which he draweth into his intrals to preserue the spirit of life he can alter the propertie thereof making it contagious and infectious inspiring for life death and destruction The waters to which he hath set bounds that they should not passe at his permission ouerflow their bankes and then without all resistance drowne corne fields medowes pastures and whatsoeuer commeth within the currant of their streames The earth which was created fruitfull to make it selfe barren yeelds thornes thistles and briers which choake the growth of come cockle darnell and tares which binde it fast to the ground caterpillers and locusts which eat it in the blade mildewes which blast it in the Eare with sundrie other destructions of the husbandmans labour for there is not any thing of that which is either sowne or planted by the hand of the husband-man but hath some impediment and hinderance from the earth or aire to annoy it and they are all iust iudgements sent from God whereby he maketh a fruitfull land barren for the wickednesse of them that dwell therein Thirdly the Lord maketh a fruitfull land barren by vnnaturall men 1. Whereof one sort being forgetfull of the saying non nobis nati we are not borne for our selues onely but to doe good to others are therfore too carefull for their owne and too carelesse for others welfare their care is to doe mischiefe to others if themselues may gaine thereby for ayming at their priuate gaine they ingrosse and hoord vp the commodities and treasures of the land till they haue caused a publique dearth these I say are Gods instruments though they intend it not effect that vnwittingly which he willeth they are his rod wherewith he scourgeth his people for their sins 2. Another sort carelesse both of themselues and others like desperate Pyrats endeuour to bore holes in the ship they saile in thereby to sinke it in the Ocean like Vipers they labour to eat out the bowels of their natiue soyle their mother countrey which brought them forth by stirring vp mutinous sedition and ciuill discord during which tumults there is no time to sow the ground nor plant vineyards nor any opportune season to gather those fruits of increase which the earth yeelds without tillage but all is laid waste and the land made barren and then when the Lord either by his supernaturall power hath shut fast the windowes of heauen by denying the former and the latter raine or dissolued the waterish clouds into immoderate showers Psal 78. vers 47 48. or when by naturall meanes he giues your fruits to the Caterpillar your labours to the Grashopper and your Mulbery trees to the frost or when by vnnaturall men through their vnnaturall practises he hath despoyled the earth of her fruitfulnesse and made the land barren then I say what followes but famine and pestilence first steps in famine then which there is no temporall punishment more pinching and miserable insomuch that the Prophet Dauid 2 Sam. 24. v. 14. being put to his choyce into which one of the three euils he would fall into rather chused the pestilence then it for it is a lingring and long-lasting torment and hath driuen men to those extremities enormities that nothing else could doe it hath made mothers murtherers and turned the sanctuarie of life into the shambles of death it hath broken downe the hedges both of nurture and nature for in ordinary course man is not meat for man but manchet for his maker 2 Reg. 6. v. 28. yet hath famine made those wombes which gaue children harbour before their births afterwards become the place of their buriall it hath made the practises of men lamentable and abominable both to bee pitied and abhorred It made one as Iosephus relateth De bello Iudaico to cut the throat of another that he might get the morsell he had put in his