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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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a ribbe of his side to be his mate and vnseparable companion as man and wife ioyned in Mariage with Gods blessing for increase and multiplication As appeareth in the two first chapters of this booke But God hauing made man right he intangled him selfe ●● holie Scripture speaketh with infinite questions For the diuel enuying mans felicitie in●●gled our mother E●e with questions and lies and then by her first seduced and deceiued allured also Adam to the transgression of Gods commandment And so they lost original iustice which Adam had receiued for him selfe and al mankind and al proceeding from them by natural propagation are borne the children of wrath in original sinne contracted from Adam slaues of the diuel not only subiect to temporal death but also are excluded for euer from heauenly blisse and glorie except by Christs redemption particularly applied they be restored to grace iustice in this life And touching Adam and Eue whose sinne was not original but actual directly committed by them selues Gods mercie so reclamed them by new grace that they despared not as Cain and some orhers did afterwards but with hope of remission were sorie and penitent and accordingly receiued penance and redemption For God brought Adam from his sinne as holie writte testifieth and the same is collected of Eue God shewing the like signes of his prouident mercie towards them both of which we shal by and by note some for example Now let vs see the more principal points of faith and Religion professed and obserued by the Church of God before Noes floud First they beleeued in one Eternal and Omnipotent God who made the whole world and al things therin of nothing which is easely confessed of al that are not plaine Atheists and may be proued against them by reason And therfore Adam and other Patriarches could not erre in this Article nor others be ignorant therof except they were very wicked The Mysterie also of the Blessed Trinitie three Diuine Persons in one God though farre aboue the reach of mans reason yet was beleued more expresly by som● more implied by others and conserued from age to age by tradition at least amongst the chiefe heades and leaders wherupon Moyses afterwardes insinuated the same great Mysterie by diuers wordes and phrase● writing of God and his workes The two wordes God created if they be rightly considered importe so much For the word Elohim God in the plural number signifyeth pluralitie of Persons for manie Gods it can not signifie seeing there is but one God and the verbe bara created in the singular number signifyeth one God in nature and substance albeit three Persons For whatsoeuer God doth in creatures is the worke of the whole Trinitie though holie Scriptures do oftentimes appropriate some worke to one Diuine Person some to another which also proueth distinction of Persons in God So the wordes God created heauen and earth signifie the Father to whom powre is attributed In the beginning signifie the Sonne to whom wisdome is appropriated and the words The Sprite of God moued ouer the waters signifie the Holie Ghost by whose bountiful goodnes the waters were made fruictful Likewise Gods owne wordes Let vs make man signifie the pluralitie of Persons and Image and likenes in the singular number signifie one God Men also knew by faith manie things perteyning to them selues As that the bodie was made of the slime of the earth the soule not produced of anie thing formerly existing but created immediatly of nothing and naturally immortal that the soule of Adam was indued with grace and iustice that he fel from that happie state by yelding to tentation and breaking Gods commandment of abstinence that for the same sinne Adam and Eue were cast forth of Paradise and al mankind subiect to death and other calamities For remedie against sinne restauration to grace they beleeued in Christ promised to be borne of the womans seede who by his death should conquer the wicked serpent deliuer man from captiuitie and restore him to spiritual life And this is the cause of the perpetual enmitie betwen the woman especially the most blessed Virgin Mother of whom Christ tooke flesh and the serpent and betwen her seede the spiritual children of Christ and the serpents seede the whole companie of the wicked Of this battle and conquest Targhum Hierosolimitanum thus speaketh There shal be remedie and health to the children of wemen but to thee o serpent there shal be no medicine yea they shal tread thee vnder their feete in the latter dayes by the powre of Christ their King Likewise Gods familiar conuersation with diuers men in mans shape Gen. 2. 3. 4. 6. and 7. was a signe of Christs incarnation And The Sacrifices immolated did prefigurate his death in respect wherof it is said in the Apocalips The Lamb● was slaine from the beginniing of the world But more expresly S. Paul testifieth that Abel Enoch and Noe beleeued in Christ naming them for example of the first age and others of other times and in the end concludeth that manie more being approued by the same faith receiued not the promise to wit in their life time God prouiding that they without others of the new Law should not be consummate that is not admitted into heauenlie ioyes fruition of God vntil the way of eternal glorie were opened by our Lords Passion and As●ension Neither did the true seruants of God in those first dayes only beleeue in hart but they also professed their saith Religion by external Rites namely in offering of Sacrifice the most special homage seruice to God which is clerly testified cha 4. as wel bloudie in figure of Christs Passion as vnbloudie in figure of the holie Eucharist Also the accepting of the one rightly offered by Abel reiecting the other not donne sincerly by Cair was declared by external signes which Cain disdayning and enuying his brothers good worke knowing his owne to be naught of mere malice killed his brother Besides Sacrifice they had also other Rites in publique Assemblies praying and inuocating the name of our Lord in more solemne maner from Enos time and so forvvard according to that is recorded of him in the end of the fourth chapter for douteles Adam Abel and Seth did also pray and call vpon God and therfore it was some addition or increase of solemnitie in the seruice of God which is referred to Enos They had moreouer other ceremonies of the seuenth day particularly blessed and sanctified by God kept holie by Adam and other Patriarches as Abben Ezra witnesseth in his commentaries vpon the tenne commandements Of abstayning from meates for it semeth the more godlie sorte did eate no flesh before the floud which was after permitted Obseruation of cleane and vncleane beastes for Sacrifice Of peculiar places dedicated to religious vses where people mette together to pray Likwise diuers
went against Gorgias the gouernour of Idumea † And he went forth with footemen three thousand and horsemen foure hundred † Who buckling together it chanced few of the Iewes to be slayne † But Dositheus one of the Bacenors an horseman a valiant man held Gorgias and wheras he would haue taken him aliue a certayne horseman of the Thracians came vpon him and cut of his shoulder and so Gorgias escaped into Maresa † But they that were with Esdrin fighting long and being wearied Iudas inuocated our Lord to be their helper and captayne of the battel † beginning in his countrey language and with hymmes raising a crie draue Gorgias souldiars into flight † And Iudas hauing gathered an armie came into the citie Odollam when the seuenth day came on being purifyed according to the custome they kept the Sabbath in the same place † And the day folowing Iudas came with his companie to take away the bodies of them that were ouerthrowen and with their kinsmen to lay them in the sepulchers of their fathers † And they found vnder the coates of the slayne some of the donaryes of the idols that were in Iamnia from which the lawe forbiddeth the Iewes therfore it was made playne to al that for that cause they were slayne † Al therfore blessed the iust iudgement of our Lord who had made manifest the hidden thinges † And so turning to prayers they besought him that the same offence which was committed might be forgotten But the most valient Iudas exhorted the people to keepe themselues without sinne seing before their eyes what was done because of the sinnes of them that were ouerthrowen † And making a gathering he sent twelue thousand drachmes of siluer to Ierusalem for sacrifice to be offered for sinne wel and religiously thinking of the resurrection † for vnles he hoped that they that were slaine should rise againe it should seeme superfluous and vaine to pray for the dead † And because he considered that they which had taken their sleepe with godlines had very good grace layd vp for them † “ It is therfore a holie and healthful cogitation to pray for the dead that they may be loosed from sinnes ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XII 46 It is a holie and healthful cogitation to pray for the dead The Catholique beleefe doctrine and practise of praying for the dead is so euidently confirmed by this place that our aduersaries haue no better shift to auoide the same then by denying these bookes to be Canonical Scripture VVhich being authentically proued it may here suffice to adde that albeit the Greke text as in other innumerable places differeth from the Latin yet it is no lesse clere for this doctrin VVhich in English is thus v 45. Regarding or considering that grace is layde vp for them that sleepe or dye in pietie tovvitte in true faith and repentance in the next verse 46. inferreth thus VVherupon he Iudas Machabeus made reconciliation or expiation for the dead that they might be deliuered or loosed from their sinne that is from punishment for sinne Omitting therfore multitude of other proofes vve vvil here only cite tvvo great Doctors who with others teach that the denial of this particular point of religion is a condemned heresie S. Augustin li. de Haeresib haer 53. noteth this for a special heresie saying Aerians are named of one Aerius vvho being a priest and taking it greuously that he could not be ordained a Bishop falling into the heresie of the Arrians added some proper doctrines of his ovvne saying that vve ought not to pray nor offer sacrifice for the dead Likevvise S. Bernard Ser. 66 in Cantica in plaine termes saith they are heretikes vvhich beleue not that there is purgatorie fire after death but that the soule departing from the bodie goeth forthvvith either to rest or to damnation Let them then saith he aske of him vvho saide There is some sinne that shal not be forgeuen neither in this vvorld nor in the future why he sayd this if there remaine no remission and purgation of sinne in the future vvorld He therfore aduiseth al to bevvare of such seducers saying See the detracters see the dogges They deride vs because vve baptize infantes for that vve pray for the dead It is also most vvorthie of consideration that Iudas Machabeus vvho did this charitable act for his souldiars slaine in the holie vvarres vvas the High priest or chief Bishop of the Church at that time and defender of true faith and Religion Finally vve may also obserue that he did not anie nevv thing but practised the vsual custome of the vvhole Church For so it appeareth by their sette forme of Office for the dead called HASCHABAH that is Rest or prayer for rest in their booke MAHZOR translated and set forth by Bishop Genebrard in the yeare of our Lord. 1569. VVhere are these expresse supplications Requiescat anima ipsius in cubili suo iaceat in pace dormiat in pace His or her soule rest in his bed lye and slepe in peace Againe Ye Angels of peace come forth to mete him c. And that the Ievves this day vse to pray for the dead is a clere thing and confessed by Protestantes namely Munsterus and Fagius in their Annotations vpon the 14. of Deut. and M. VVhitaker in his first booke against F. Dureus fol 81. CHAP. XIII Menelaus a fugitiue Iewe is put to death 9. Antiochus with his great armie is defeated twise with losse of manie men 23. Philippe rebelling peace is renewed 24. And Iudas is made Lord of Ptolemais IN the yeare an hundred fourtie nine Iudas vnderstood that Antiochus Eupator came with a multitude agaynst Iurie † and with him Lysias the procuratour and cheefe ouer the affayres hauing with him of footemen an hundred tenne thousand of horsemen fiue thousand elephants twentie two chariots with hookes three hundred † And Menelaus also ioyned him selfe with them and with much deceite besought Antiochus not for the weale of his contrie but hoping that he should be appoynted to the principalitie † But the king of kinges stirred vp Antiochus mind against the sinner Lysias suggesting that he was the cause of al the euils he commanded as the custome is with them that being apprehended he should be killed in the same place † And there was in the same place a tower of fiftie cubites hauing an heape of ashes on euerie side this had a prospect steepe downe † From thence he commanded the sacrilegious person to be throwne downe into the ashes al thrusting him forward to death † And by such law it chanced the transgressour of the law to dye Menelaus not to be put into the earth † And in deede very iustly because he committed manie offences toward the altar of God the fyre and ashes wherof was holie himself was condemned into the death of ashes † But the king furiouse in mind came to shew
wombe Ch. 33. v. 14. Behold the dayes wil come sayth our Lord and I wil rayse vp the good word v. 15. I wil make the spring of iustice to bud forth vnto Dauid he shal do iudgement and iustice in the earth Ieremies Lamentations are in greatest part of Christ and his Church And some part can hardly be applied to anie other ch 3. v. 30. He shal geue the cheke to him that striketh him he shal be filled with reproches ch 4. v. 20. Christ our Lord is taken in our sinnes Baruch 2. v. 35. God promising to reduce the people from Babylon addeth And I wil establish vnto them an other testament euerlasting by Christ whose kingdom is for euer that I be their God and they shal be my people Ch. 3. v. 36. This is our God and there shal none other be esteemed against him v. 38. After these thinges he was sene vpon the earth and was conue●sant with men Ezechiel peculiarly called by an Angel the sonne of man was therin a special figure of our Sauiour who so calleth him self And the same prophet hath in plaine termes foreshewed the office of Christ the true Pastor of al pastors eh 34. v. 25. I wil sayth God by this prophet rayse vp ouer them one Pastor who shal feede them my seruant Dauid that is Christ prefigured by Dauid His admirable visions in the three first chapters and nine last perteyne properly and principally to the new Testament of Christ and his Church shewing the abundance of grace and glorie geuen by him to the elect Daniel 7. v. 13. With the cloudes of heauen there came in as it were the Sonne of man and he came euen to the ancient of dayes and in his sight they offered him He came euen to the ancient of dayes because in his Diuinitie he is equal to the Father and in his humanitie he is offered to God in Sacrifice v. 14 His powre is eternal and his kingdom shal not be corrupted ch 9. v. 24. Seuentie wekes of yeares are abridged that sinnes may be forgeuen grace be infused prophecies be fulfilled and the Holie one of holies be annointed Al which belong only to Christ. v. 26. After sixtie two wekes Christ shal be slaine Aggeus 2. v. 8. The desired of al nations shal come Zach. 3. v. 8. I wil bring my seruant the Orient ch 13. v. 7. Strike the Pastour and the shepe shal be dispersed fulfilled in Christs Passion Mat. 26. v. 21. Mala●h 3. v. 2. Forthwith shal come to his temple the Dominator whom you seke the Angel of the testament whom ye desire The booke of wisdom ch 2. v. 12. describeth the malice of the wicked against Christ Let vs say they circumuent the iust because he is vnprofitable to vs and he is contrarie to our workes and reprochfully obiecteth to vs the sinnes of the law v. 13. He boasteth that he hath the knowlege of God and nameth him self the Sonne of God Ecclesiasticus 24. v. 34. God appointed to Dauid his seruant to raise vp a king of him most strong and sitting in the throne of honour for euer Which eternal king proceeding from Dauid can be none but Christ our Sauiour And al the praises of Pa●riarches and Prophetes in the last eight chapters consist in their fayth and expectation of Christ Likewise the Priestes and people 1. Mach. 14. v. 28. 35. and 49. shewed their fayth of Christ to come when they established Simon and his progenie in the gouernment and highpriesthood for euer til there rise the faithful Prophet to witte the Prophet of whom al the prophetes did speake Luc. 24 v. 27. Amongst the rest Ieremie ch 31. v. 23. and Ezechiel ch 44. v. 2. make also especial mention of some singular priuileges of the most excellent virgin Mother of God Of whom also Iudith and Esther were apparent figures who receiued special graces for the benefite of their nation and so did this singular Virgin receiue of God most eminent giftes aboue al other mere creatures for the benefite of the whole Church Of Angels the celestial spirites is frequent mention in the holie Scriptures of this age Their multitude is innumerable and therfore are insinuated to men by general termes Daniel 7. v. 10. Thousandes of thousandes ministered to him and tenne thousand hundred thousandes assisted him And their powre is most great and to men most profitable An Angel defended the three children in the fornace walking with them in the fire Daniel 3. v. 49 95. Another defended Daniel from the lions ch 6. v. 22. The same or an other caried Habacuc from Iurie into Babylon Dan. 14. v. 35. and restored him in his place againe v. 38. The Archangel Gabriel instructed Daniel ch 8. v. 16. 17. ch 9. v. 21. And ch 10. v. 13. 20. Other Angels the Patrones or Guardians of the Persians and Grecians prayed for those countries and S. Michael v. 21. for the Iewes An Angle spake in Zacharie ch 1. v. 9. An other Angel went to mete him ch 2. v. 3. And in respect of Angelical offices both S. Iohn Baptist and our Sauiour himself are figuratiuely called Angeles Malach. 3. v. 1 No meruel therfore that Iudas Machabeus and his armie 2. Machab. 11. v 6. prayed for the assistance of a good Angel which was granted them v. 8. And so they went promptly hauing an helper from heauen v. 10. Their like prayer had the same effect in an other battel 2. Machab. 15 v. 27. Contrarie to these glorious Angeles are other spirites at first created in grace which falling into pride and most obstinate malice are perpetual enimies to God their Creator and to al mankind continually calumniating the workes of God and of al his seruantes wherof they are called Diuels or calumniators They neuer cease tempting al they can to euil so to bring men to eternal death For by the enuie of the diuel Sap. 2. v. 7. death both of soule bodie came into this world The iust stipend of sinne Al sinnes offend God and please the diuels But more particularly they desire to be honored as God with Sacrifice Which therfore they require to themselues and their idols And for this sinne of Idolatrie aboue al others God is most prouoked to wrath for the same most especially punished his people as the Prophet Baruch chap. 4. v. 6. signifieth to the people saying You are sold to the Gentils c. You are deliuered to their aduersaries and geuing the reason why he addeth v. 7. For you haue exasperated him that made you the eternal God immolating to diuels And not to God The same al the Prophetes teach and withal that Sacrifice is the souereigne seruice due to God only and not to any creature how excellent soeuer But of Sacrifice there is so much written that it were ouer long and nedeles to recite the places It importeth more
affliction not able to deliuer them selues seeke reuenge by murmuring and other euil speaches but the perfect resolue to rule their tongues d euen to forbeare sometimes from their owne iust defence e though therby they indure more persecution f sorow suppressed maketh the hart to burne with zele and indignation g If it may please thee let me know how long I shal liue desiring to dye as Elias desired 3. Reg. 19. h my life and al that I haue is as nothing compared to thy eternitie i as a shadow or image appearing in a glasse which is quickly forgotte k therfore there is no cause man should be trubled in mind for temporal miseries l Thou hast suffered me to be reproched by the foolish that prosper in this world m I know my tribulation is by thy prouidence o my life decayeth as a spider hauing spent al her moysture p Almen are strangers in this life heauen being our home q that I may recouer spiritual streingth in this life r after which I shal not be in state to do frceworkes of satisfaction nor merite Christs comming and redeming of manking The 5 key a perteyning vnto the new Testament b the faithful of the old and new Testament reioyce in the coming of Christ c Christ by him se●●e and by others preached the Gospel of saluation d the multiplication of Christians therb● e ●● sacrifice of the old testament sufficed ●o satisfie Gods iustice for the sinne of man f Christ by the eare of obedience performed the redemption of man by his death as was determined from eternitie S. Paul for eares ●aith bodie See Annotations Heb. 10. Heb. 10. g The summe of holie Scripture is of Christs Incarnation death for redemption of man h Againe Christ inculcateth the preaching and receiuing of his Gospel in the whole world i In the greatest and wisest congregations of this world Christ concealeth not his mercie and truth So himselfe professed before Annas Caiphas Pilate and their councels S. Paul preached Christ at Athe●s and in manie nations and so the other Apostles For their voice went into al the coastes of the earth k The prophet now speaketh in the name of Christs mystical bodie the Church praying to be made partaker of mercie and to be deliuered from eu●les l the sinnes also of those which beleue in Christ are so manie that they can not be fully sene in particular m I almost faint in considering so manie and so great iniquities amongst those that professe Christ n The whole Church prayeth in the name of al for the infirme members o The prophet foresheweth that the reprobate for their obstinate malice seeking to hurt others shal be confounded p that skornfully say wel wel wishing al euil to good men q which not only in mouth and outward profession but also in sinceritie of hart seeke thee may with confidence reioyce and praise God r Christ speaketh in the name of sinners truly repenting whose sinnes he vndertaketh to redeme and wash away by his passion ſ The faithful of the old testament pray for Christs first coming into this world and the faithful now pray for his second coming to purge his Church and to reward the good Christs Passion and Resurrection The 5 key a Perteyning to the new testament as appeareth by the 10. verse alleaged by our Sauiour This Psalme is also applied by the Church in the office of the sick whom whosoeuer assisteth in that case may hope to haue assistance in their owne like necessitie Io. 13. v. 18. b He is happie that is not scandalized in Christ Luc. 7. v. 23. coming in pouertie and suffering extreme afflictions c He that trusteth in Christ notwithstanding the contrarie motiues of his wordlie miserie shal be deliuered by him in al distresse d Our Lord wil geue to such seruantes more grace in this life and glorie in the next e not suffer him to be ouercome in tentations f when such constant seruantes are sick to death Christ wil most especially comforte and helpe them g Christ in the behalf of his mystical bodie confesseth their sinnes and prayeth for them h After death suffered for mankind Christ riseth and his name and kingdom is glorious i Those that came not of good wil but of malice to obserue Christs deedes and wordes carped at both sometimes saying he taught against the law and against Moyses sometymes that he ●ast out diuels in the powre of Beelse bub k At last they resolued that he should die l But they could not so suppresse his powre for he rose againe in glorie m By our Sauiours application of this verse it is certaine that the traitor Iudas is here described Ioa. 13. v. 18. Io. 11. Act. 1. n in the day of iudgement Christ Iudge of al wil render to euerie one as they deserue o As before in respect of sinners Christ Iudge of al wil render to euerie one so here in his owne person he auoucheth his owne innocencie which made him apt to satisfie for others p For this mercie of Almightie God in sauing the elect by his Sonnes death he is to be praised for euer eternally q Al the blessed agree in this that God is eternally to be praised and therto say Amen So be it so be it Some diuide the Psalmes into fiue bookes supposing the first booke to end here with these wordes Be it be it not obseruing that the last Psalme hath not this ending S Ierom confuteth this opinion by our Sauiours and S. Peters naming it the booke not bookes of Psalmes Luc. 20. v. 42. Act. 1. Moreouer if this were the end of one booke then the Psalme folowing should not be called the 41. Psalme but the first Psalme of the second booke Eternal glory The 10. key a The sonnes of Core repented and departed from their fathers schisme and so escaped miraculosly the horrible pitte of damnation in●o which heir father and his complices fel. Num. 26. v. 10. By which example al seduced and deceiued Christians are admonished not to persist in schisme or other sinnes And wordlie men ●mbicious of honour be warned to desire seke God aboue al thinges first of al the kingdome of heauen ●o be liuing m●mbe●s of the Catholique Church and the iustice therof to seke thinges wh●●h are aboue 〈◊〉 which are vpon the earth lest hel deuoure them as it denoured the complices of Core Num 1● v. 31. b A harte waxing old and burdened with much heare and great hornes draweth a serpent into his nosethrels so being infected with poyson desireth most ardently to drinke and afterwards casteth his hornes and heare and becometh as it were yong againe c with such feruent desire a true penitent feeling himselfe infected with poyson of sinnes seeketh the water of Gods grace d God is omnipotent and in dede the only true liuing God diuels who are honored in idols ca do no more then God permitteth and so they can
and fasting for them 2. Reg. 1. Al which were to no purpose if soules departed could not be releiued by such meanes It moreouer appeareth that the same royal prophet beleued diuers places to be in hel when he said Psal 85. Thou hast deliuered my soule from the lower hel signifiyng plainly that there is a lower and a higher hel which higher the Church calleth Purgatorie where soules suffer that paine in satisfaction for their sinnes which remaineth not satisfied before death is due after the guilt of sinne is remitted the law prescribing that besides restitution of damage sacrifice should also be offered Leuit. 5. 6. 16. And Dauid was punished by the death of his child 2. Reg. 12. by the plague sent amongst his people 2. Reg. 24. after his sinnes were remitted He feared also punishment in the other world yea two sortes and therfore prayed to be deliuered from both saying Psal 6. Lord rebuke me not in thy furie nor chastice me in thy wrath That is saith S. Gregorie Strike me not with the reprobate nor aflict me with those that are purged by the punishing flames And most expresly signifieth also a higher place called hel saying Psal 15. in the person of Christ to his Father Thou shalt not leaue my soule in hel From vvhence Christ deliuered the holie Patriarches Prophetes and other perfect soules resting vvithout sensible paine brought them into heauen vvhither before him none could enter VVhich vvas also signified by the cities of refuge whence none might depart to their proper countrie til the death of the high priest Num. 35. by Moyses dying in the desert and not entring into the promised land ouer Iordan Deut. 4. 31. 34. Presupposing the general Resurrection of al men as a truth knovven by former traditions king Dauid shevveth the difference of the vvicked and godlie in that time saying Psal 1. The impious shal not rise againe in iudgement nor sinners in the councel of the iust That is the vvicked shal not rise to ioy glorie as the iust godlie shal doe Of general iudgement is more plainly prophecied 1. Reg. 2. That our Lord shal iudge the endes of the earth not that Dauid nor Salomon but Christ should raigne in his m●litant Church euen to the endes of the earth and in fine iudge the vvhole vvorld The same is confirmed Psal 49. God wil come manifestly our God and he wil not kepe silence Fire shal burne forth in his sight Psal 95. He shal iudge the round world in equitie and the peoples in his truth Psal 96. Fire shal goe before him and shal inflame his enemies round about Againe the same royal prophete Psalm 48. describeth the future and eternal state of the damned saying as sheepe creatures vnable to helpe themselues they are put in hel death shal feede vpon them Of the blessed he addeth And the iust shal rule ouer them in the morning that is in the resurrection and Psal 149. The Sainctes shal reioyse in glorie they shal be ioyful in their beddes in eternal rest The exaltations pra●ses of God in their throate and two edged swordes in their handes to doe reuenge in the nations punishments among the peoples To bind their kinges in fetters and their nobles in yron manicles That they may doe in them the iudgement that is written This glorie is to al his Sainctes And much greater glorie belongeth to Sainctes for this is but accidental vttered according to vulgar capacitie The essential and perfect glorie which no eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor hart can cone iu● consisteth in seeing God Among accidental glorious giftes the foure dowries of glorified bodies are especially prefigured Impassibilitie by the wood Setim wherof the Arke was made Exod. 25. Agilitie and Penetrabilitie in some sorte by Dauids quicknes against G●liath and his conuering of him self into Sauls campe and forth againe 1. Reg. 17. and 26. but a more plaine figure of Claritie was in Moyses face Exod. 34. which by his conuersation with God became more glorious then mortal eyes were able to behold glistering and shining as most splendent l●ght through christal described as if his skinne had benne a clere horne a●●earing and spreading beam● like the sunn● proceding from the beautie of his soule so th●● none of al the people could looke directly vpon him except he couered his face Thus much concerning particular pointes of faith and religion And it is no lesse euident that the vniuersal Church and Citie of God stil continued yea was more visible and conspicuous to the whole world then before First by Gods maruelous protection therof in the desert and famous victories and conquestes of the land of Chanaan And by the excellent lawes geuen to this people which al nations admired and none had the like Deut. 4. For in this fourth age besides other lavves and preceptes the spiritual and temporal States were more distinguished and the Ecclesiastical Hierarchie especially disposed in subordination of one supreme head with inferiour gouerners ech in their place and office for edification of the whole bodie For Moyses being chief ruler and conduct●r of the Israelites out of Aegypt receiued and deliuered to them the written Law Exod. 20. And for obseruation and conseruation therof by Gods expresse appointment Leuit. 8. consecrated Aaron the ordinarie High priest himself remayning stil extraordinarie Superiour also aboue Aaron And after Aaron he consecrated in like maner his sonne Eleazar high priest and successour to his father Num. 20. To whom succeded others in this order 1. Paralip 6. Phinees Abisuë Bocci Ozi Zacharias otherwise 1. Reg. 1. called Heli Meraioth Amarias otherwise Achimelec whom Saul slew 1. Reg. 22. Achitob othervvise Abiathar vvho vvas deposed 3. Reg. 2. and Sadoc in vvhose time the Temple vvas founded To these vvere adioyned other Priestes also consecrated in a praescript forme Leuit. 8. and Leuites ordayned to assist in lower and distinct offices Num. 3. 4. In the first degree the Caathites whose office was to carrie the Sanctuarie and vessel therof vvrapped vp by the priestes but vvere forbid in paine of death to touch them or to see them In the second degree the Gersonites vvho carried the cortines and couers of the Tabernacle and vessel of the Altar In the third degree the Merarites vvho carried the bordes barres and pillers vvith their feete pinnes cordes and other implementes of the tabernacle euerie one according to their office and burdens Num. 4. v. vlt. But in the temporal state and gouernment Iosue of the tribe of Ephraim succeeded to Moyses Num. 27. Deut. 3. 34. And after Iosue were diuers interruptions of succession with gouerners of diuers tribes and change of gouernment from Dukes to Iudges and from Iudges to Kinges For after Iosues death the people being sore afflicted by inuasions of Infidels God raised certaine special men with title of Iudges to
transgressed Morally ancient Fathers here note that albeit the life of the Patriarkes seemeth long to vs yet if we cōpare the same to eternitie it is nothing Neither by the iudgement of Philosophers may aniething be counted long that hath an end as Tullie bringing Cato wisely disputing sheweth the longest life to be but a short moment VVhereby againe we may see what losse we sustaine by sinne seeing if sinne had not benne we should al haue benne translated from earth to heauen and neuer haue dyed 24. VVas seene no more That Enoch and Elias are yet aliue is a constant knowne truth in the hartes and mouthes of the faithful saith S. Augustin in his first booke de peccat merit remiss c. 3. and confirmeth the same in diuers other places And it is testified by very many both Greeke and Latin Doctors S. Ireneus li. 5. S. Iustinus Martyr q. 85. ad Orthodoxos S. Hippolitus li. de Antichristo S. Damascen li. 4. de Orthodoxafide S. Hierom. epist 61. ad Pamach c. 11. S. Ambrose in Psalm 45. S. Chrysostom ho. 21. in Gen. ho. 58. in Mat. ho. 4. in epist 2. ad Thess ho. 22. in ep ad Heb. S. Greg. li. 14. Moral c. 11 ho. 12. in Ezech. S. Prosp li. vlt. de promis S. Bede in c. 9. Marc. Theophilact and O●cumenius in cap. 17. Mat. and others innumerable Touching Elias it is manifest in Scriptures that he shal come preach be slaine with an other witnes of Christ before the terrible day of Iudgement Of Enoch Moyses here maketh the matter more then probable saying of euerie one of the rest he dyed onlie of Enoch saith not so but that he appeared or vvas seene no more For which the seuentie two interpreters say And he vvas not found for God translated him VVhich can not signifie death but transporting or remouing to an other place VVhereto agreeth the author of Ecclesiasticus saying Enoch pleased God and vvas translated But most clearly S. Paul saith Enoch vvas translated that he should not see death and he vvas not found for God translated him VVith what plainer wordes can any man declare that a special person were not dead then to say He vvas translated or cōueyed away that he should not see death Neither is it a reasonable euasion to interprete this of spiritual death For so Adam being eternally saued as S. Irenaeus li. 3. c. 34. Epiphan con haeresim 46. S. Agu●●in epist 99. ad Euodium and others teach and the whole Church beleeueth was preserued from that death and so vndoubtedly were Seth and Enos being most holie and the rest here recounted as is most probable Neuertheles for further confutation of the contrarie opinion of Protestants the reader may also obserue the iudgement of S. Chrisostom who affirmeth that Though it be not a matter of faith vvhether Enoch be novv in Paradise from vvhence Adam and Eue vvere expelled or in some other pleasant place Dicunt tamen sacrae Scriprurae quod Deus transtulit eum quod viuentem transtulit eum quod mortem ipse non sit expertus The holie Scriptures say that God translated him and that he translated him aliue that he felt not or hath not experienced death And S. Augustin as expresly saith Non mortuus sed viuus translatus est He to vvit Enoch is translated not dead but aliue Yea he teacheth how his life is sustayned thus many thousand yeares vpon earth And sheweth moreouer that both Enoch and Elias shal dye For seing Enoch and Elias saith he are dead in Adam and carying the ofspring of death in their flesh to pay that debt are to returne to this life of common conuersation and to pay this debt vvhich so long is deferred Diuers reasons are also alleaged why God would reserue these two aliue First to shew by example that as their mortal bodies are long conserued from corrupting or decaying in like sorte Adam and Eue and al others not sinning should haue bene conserued and according to Gods promise neuer haue died but after some good time translated to heauen and indued with immortalitie Secondly to giue vs an argument of immortalitie which is promised after the general Resurrection For seing God doth preserue some mortal so long from al infirmitie we may assuredly beleue that he wil geue immortal eternal life of bobie and soule to his Sainctes after they haue payed the debt of death and are risen againe Thirdly these two one of the law of nature the other of the law of Moyses are preserued aliue to come amongst men againe towards the end of the world to teach testifie and defend the true faith and doctrin of Christ against Antichrist when he shal most violently oppugne persecute the Church Of Enoch it is said in the booke of Ecclesiasticus that he was translated vt det gentibus poenitenntiam that he geue repentance to the nations by his preaching reducing the deceiued from Antichrist And of Elias Malachie prophicieth that he shal come before the great and terrible day of our Lord and shal turne the hart of the fathers that is the people of the Iewes to the sonnes the Christians and of the sonnes the deceiued Christians to the fathers the ancient true Catholiques CHAP. VI. Mans sinnes cause of the deluge 4. Giants vvere then vpon the earth 8. Noe being iust vvas commanded to build the Arke 18. vvherin he vvith seuen persons more and the seede of other liuing things vvere saued AND after that men began to be multiplied vpon the earth had procreation of daughters † The sonnes of God seing the daughters of men that they were faire tooke to them selues wiues out of al which they had chosen And God said My spirit shal not remaine in man for euer because he is flesh his dayes shal be an hūdred twentie yeares † And Giants were vpon the earth in those dayes For after the sonnes of God did companie with the daughters of men and they brought forth children these be the mightie of the olde world famous men † And God seing the malice of men was much on the earth and that al the cogitation of their hart was bent to euil at al times † it repented him that he had made man on the earth And touched inwardly with sorrowe of hart † I wil saith he cleane take away man whom I haue created from the face of the earth from man euen to beastes from that which creepeth euen vnto the foules of the ayre for it repenteth me that I haue made them † But Noe found grace before our Lord † These are the generations of Noe Noe was a iust and perfect man in his generations he did walke with God † And he begat three sonnes Sem Cham Iapheth † And the earth was corrupted before God and was replenished with iniquitie † And when God had perceiued
death of his Saincts Hence also is proued that seeing in this life the good are afflicted and the bad oftentimes prosper temporally there must nedes be an other Court of exact Iustice and an other Reaconing day wherin euerie one shal receiue according as they haue donne good or euil which was sufficiently intimated by Gods discussing and manifesting Abels and Cains deserts which were hidden before and in part rewarding them accordingly yet reseruing the ful reward of the one and punishment of the other to the next world Of the Iudge and his sentence Enoch alleadged by S. Iude the Apostle proficied clerly saying Behold our Lord cometh in his holie thousands to doe iudgement aganst al and to reproue al the impions of al the workes of their impietie wherby they haue donne impiously and of al the hard things which impious sinners haue spoken against him Thus holie Enoch preached touching the wicked which thought there was no Iudgement to come nor Iudge to be feared At this Iudgement al shal appeare in bodie and soule returning to life For that Al men shal rise from death is proued by the immortalitie of mans soule which God did not make nor produce of corruptible matter but immediatly Breathed into his face the breath of life and man became a liuing soule so the soule being immortal and hauing a natural inclination to the bodie mans natural perfection requireth the coniunction of bodie and soule for neither soule nor bodie separated is a man but both ioyned in one subsistence are a man in so much that mankind should perish except the bodies shal rise againe and liue with the soules And then shal the bodies be qualified according to the state of the soules happie or miserable for euer Of Eternal life the translation of Enoch is a figure For seeing God preserueth his corruptible bodie so long from death and infirmitie it is a token and manifest signe that by the same powre of God the bodies of men shal at last day after that al men are once dead rise againe and remaine with the soules for euer The good in Eternal ioy the wicked in Eternal paine Both signified by the custodie of the gate of Paradise by Angels who for euer kepe out these that are stil defiled with sinne and so they depart into fire euerlasting and admit the innocent and iust into the kingdome of heauen which is euerlasting ioy and perfect felicitie Thus we see the face and briefe summe of Religion in the beginning of the world til the floud and the state of the Church which was alwayes Visible consisting of men good and bad with a continual Succession of Rulers as wel spiritual as temporal For the first borne were both Priestes and Princes in euerie familie And amongst the same one euer chief of al. From which ranke Cain was excluded or rather excluded him selfe by Going forth from the face of our Lord. Wherupon holie Moyses r●●teth this Monarchical succession of one chiefe and Supreme Head from Adam by the line of Seth Enos Cainan Malaleel Iared Enoch Mathusala Lamech and Noe. Neuertheles he setteth downe also the progenie of Cain the first beginner of a worldlie schismatical and heretical conuenticle opposite to the Citie of God He denied Gods prouidence as Thargum Hierosolomitanum testifieth protesting to Abel That there was no Iustice nor Iudge nor other world then this no reward for vertue nor punishment for sinne and so desperatly he killed Abel of these negatiue principles proceeded other like detestable opinions and most wicked life sauage and barbarous crueltie and al kind of impietie And in processe of time albeit manie remained in true faith and vnitie of the Church yet by conuersation with such miscreantes especially by occasion of Mariages betwen the faithful and infidels almost the whole world was corrupted in maners But Noe was iust and perfect In punishment therefore of so great and enormious sinnes God sent the general floud wherby al Cains progenie and al other infidels were wholly destroyed and extinguished and the true Church notably purged onlie iust Noe and his familie reserued By whom the same true Church was continued and the world againe replenished with men CHAP. VIII The waters diminishing by litle and litle 6. Noe sendeth forth a crow 8. after him a doue thrise 18. lastly goeth forth with al that were with him in the arke 20. erecteth an Altar and offereth Sacrifice AND God remembred Noe and al the beasts and al the cattle which were with him in the arke and brought a winde vpon the earth and the waters decreased † And the sountaines of the depth and the floud gates of heauen were shut vp and the rayne from heauen was stayd † And the waters returned from the earth going comming and they begane to decrease after a hundred fiftie dayes † And the arke rested the seauenth moneth the seauen twentith day of the moneth vpon the mountaines of Armenia † But the waters for al that were going and decreasing vntil the tenth moneth for in the tenth moneth the first day of the moneth the topps of the mountaines appeared † And after that fourtie dayes were passed Noe opening the windowe of the arke which he had made let forth a crowe † which went forth and did not returne til the waters were dried vpon the earth † He sent forth also a doue after him to see if the waters were ceased yet vpon the face of the earth † Which finding not where her foote might rest returned to him into the arke for the waters were vpon the whole earth and he stretched forth his hand and caught her and brought her into the arke † And hauing expected yet seauen moe dayes againe he let forth a doue out of the arke † But she came to him at euentide carrying a bough of an oliue tree that had greene leaues in her mouth Noe therfore vnderstood that the waters were ceased vpon the earth † And he expected yet neuertheles other seauen dayes and he sent forth a doue which returned not any more vnto him † Therfore in the sixt hundred and one yeare the first moneth the first day of the moneth the waters were cleane diminished vpon the earth and Noe opening the roofe of the arke looked and sawe that the face of the earth was dried † In the second moneth the seuen twentyth day of the moneth the earth was dried † And God spake to Noe saying † Goe forth of the arke thou thy wife thy sonnes and the wiues of thy sonnes with thee † Al cattle that are with thee of al flesh as wel in soules as in beastes al creepers that creepe vpon the earth bring out with thee goe yee vpon the earth increase and multiplie vpon it † Noe therfore went forth and his sonnes his wife and the wiues of his sonnes with him
ancient Fathers vnderstood of Anti Christ namely S. Irenaeus lib. 5. aduers Haeres S. Hyppolitus Martyr Orat de consumma● soeculi S. Ambrose c. 7 de Benedict Patriarch S. Augustin q. 12. in Iosue Prosper lib. de promiss praedicts Dei P. 4. Theodoret. q. vlt. in Gen. S. Gregorie lib. 30. Moral c. 18 and many others vpon the 7. chap. of the Apocalips where they suppose S. Ioan did omitt Dan from amongst the Elect of the Israelitical Tribes in detestation of Antichrist to be borne of that Tribe And certayne it is that the Iewes wil receiue and folowe him for their Messias as our Sauiour himselfe saith VVhich maketh it very probable that he shal be a Iewe borne else they would not so easily admitt him 22. Ioseph a childe encreasing Ioseph was in manie respectes a figure of Christ especially in that he was loued of his father before al his bretheren solde by his brethrn to the Gentiles of enuie and for money aduanced to dignitie and authoritie the deliuerer of Aegypt from famine and called Sauiour of the world al performed in Christ the true Childe encreasing CHAP. L. Ioseph causeth his fathers bodie to be embawmed 3. the dayes of mourning being expired 6. with Pharaos leaue Ioseph with the ancients of Aegypt al his brethren and elder sorte of Israelites goe and solemnly burie the bodie in Chanaan 14. After their returne his brethren fearing le●t ioseph wil now reuenge former iniuries he freely forgeueth al. 22. At the age of 110. yeares adiuring the posteritie to carie his bones into Chanaan he dieth and is put in a coffin VVHICH Ioseph seeing fel vpon his fathers face weeping and kissing him † And he commanded his seruantes the physitians that they should embawme his father with spices † Who fulfilling his commandements there passed fourtie dayes for this was the maner of corses embawmed and Aegypt mourned him seuentie daies † And the mourning time being expired Ioseph spake to the familie of Pharao If I haue found grace in your sight speake in the eares of Pharao † for so much as my father did adiure me saing Behold I die in my sepulchre which I digged for my selfe in the land of Chanaan thou shalt burie me I wil goe vp therfore and burie my father and returne † And Pharao said to him Goe vp and burie thy father as thou wast adiured † Who going vp there went with him al the ancients of Pharaos house and al the elders of the Land of Aegypt † the house of Ioseph with his brethren sauing their little ones and the flockes and heards which they had left in the Land of Gessen † He had also in his traine chariotts and horsemen and it became no smal multitude † And they came to the floore of Atad which is situate beyond Iord aine where celebrating the exequies with great and vehement mourning they spent ful seuen dayes † Which when the Inhabiters of the Land of Chanaan had seene they said This is a great mourning vnto the Aegyptians And therfore the name of that place was called The mourning of Aegypt † Therfore the sonnes of Iacob did as he commanded them † and carying him into the Land of Chanaan they buried him in the duble caue which Abraham had bought with the field for a possession to burie in of Ephron the Hethite against Mambre † And Ioseph returned into Aegypt with his brethren and with al the traine his father being buried † After whose death his brethren fearing and talking one with an other Lest perhaps he be mindful of the iniurie which he suffered and requite vs al the euil that we haue done † they aduertised him saing Thy father commanded vs before he died † that we should say thus much to thee in his wordes I besech that thou forget the wicked fact of thy brethren and the sinne malice which they haue exercised against thee we also desire thee that to the seruants of the God of thy father thou remit this iniquitie Whom when Ioseph ad heard he wept † And his brethren came to him and adoring prostrate on the ground they said We are thy seruantes † To whom he answered Feare not can we resist the wil of God † “ You thought euil against me but God turned that into good that he might exalt me as presently you see and might saue many peoples † Feare not I wil feed you your lirle ones and he comforted them and spake gently mildly † And he dwelt in Aegypt with al his fathers house and liued an hundred and tenne yeares And he sawe the children of Ephraim vnto the third generation Also the children of Machir the sonne of Manasses were borne in Iosephs knees † Which thinges being done he spake to his brethren After my death God wil visite you and wil make you goe vp out of this land to the land which he sware to Abraham Isaac and Iacob † And when he had adiured them and said God wil visite you carie my bones with you out of this place † he died being an hundred and tenne yeares old And being embawmed with spices was put in a coffin in Aegypt ANNOTATIONS CHAP L. 20. You thought euil This plaine distinction sheweth that sinne is wholly of the sinner and that God hath no part therin but turneth it to good For those things which Iosephs brethren did against him were occasions of his aduancement in Aegypt through the omnipotent wisdome of God VVhose ●●opeitie is out of euerie euil to draw good S. Chrisost ho. 67. in Gen. S. Aug. Enchirid. c. 11. li. 14. c. 27. de ●●●it 25. Carie my bones vvith you For the same reasons Ioseph would be finally buried in Chanaan for which Iacob desired to be there buried chap. 47. but Ioseph would not presently be caried thither lest it might haue geuen offence to the Aegyptians or at least haue diminished their fauoure towardes his brethren and withal he would confirme his brethren in their hope of returning seing he was content that his bodie should expect in Aegypt til the whole Nation should returne into Chanaan THE ARGVMENT OF THE BOOKE OF EXODVS MOYSES hauing prosecuted in Genesis the sacred historie of the Church vnto Iosephs death containing the space of 2310. yeares continueth the same in Exodus for 145. yeares more VVhere he first briefly recounteth how a smal number of Israelites especially after the death of Ioseph being much increased a new King risen in the meane time who knew not Ioseph together with other Aegyptians enuying their better partes both of bodie and minde and more fortunate progres in wealth fearing also lest they stil multiplying either by their owne forces or ioyning with other foreners might spoile Aegypt and returne into Chanaan and hating their Religion because they acknowledged one onlie eternal omnipotent God denying and detesting the new imaginarie goddes of the Aegyptians resolued and publickly decreed by oppression to
wife and commit aduontrie with his neighbours wife dying let them die both the adulterer and the aduoutresse † He that lieth with his stepmother and reuealeth the ignominie of his father dying let both die their bloud be vpon them † If anie man lie with his daughter in law let both die because they haue done an heinous fact their bloud be vpon them † He that lieth with man as if he should companie with woman both haue committed abomination dying let them die their bloud be vpon them † He that besides his wife the daughter marieth her mother hath done wickednes he shal burne aliue with them neither shal there so great abomination remaine in the middes of you † He that shal companie with beast and cattel dying let him die the beast also doe ye kil † The woman that shal lie vnder anie beast shal be killed together with the same their bloud be vpon them † He that taketh his sister the daughter of his father or the daughter of his mother and seeth her turpitude and she beholdeth her brothers ignominie they haue committed a shameful thing they shal be slaine in the sight of their people because they haue reuealed one an others turpitude and they shal beare their iniquitie † He rhat compaineth with a woman in her menstrual fluxe and reuealeth her turpitude and she openeth the fountaine of her bloud both shal be destroyed out of the middes of their people † The turpitude of thy aunt by thy mother and of thy aunt by thy father thou shalt not discouer he that doeth this hath disclosed the ignominie of his flesh both shal beare their iniquitie † He that compaineth with the wife of his vncle by the father or of his vncle by the mother and reuealeth the ignominie of his kinted both shal beare their sinne without children they shal die † He that marieth his brothers wife doth an vnlawful thing he hath reuealed his brothers turpitude they shal be without children † Keepe my lawes and iudgementes and doe them lest the land which you shal enter into and inhabite vomite out you also † Walke not in the ordinances of the nations which I wil expel before you For al these thinges haue they done and I haue abhorred them † But to you I speake Possesse their land which I wil geue you for an inheritance a land flowing with milke and honie I the Lord your God that haue seperated you from other peoples † Therfore doe you also seperate the cleane beast from the vncleane and the cleane foule from the vncleane pollute not your soules in beastes and birdes and al thinges that moue on the earth and which I haue shewed vnto you to be polluted † You shal be holie vnto me because I the Lord am holie and I haue separated you from other peoples that you should be mine † Man or woman in whom is a pithonical or diuining spirite dying let them die they shal stone them their bloud be vpon them CHAP. XXI At what funerals Priests may not be present 7. VVhat wemen they may not marie 9. a priests daughter committing fornication must be burned 10. The high Priest shal not vncouer his head nor rent his garment nor be present at anie funeral nor at al goe forth of the holie place 13. when he marieth he must take a virgin 16. None that hath a blemish in his bodie though he be of Aarons stock shal minister in the Sanctuarie nor approch to the Altar OVR Lord said also to Moyses Speake to the priestes the sonnes of Aaron and thou shalt say to them Let not a priest be contaminated in the deathes of his citizens † but onlie in his kinne and nigh of bloud that is to say vpon his father and mother and sonne and daughter brother also † and sister being a virgin which hath not bene maried to a husband † but neither in the prince of his people shal he be contaminated † Neither shal they shaue their head nor beard nor make incisions in their flesh † They shal be holie to their God and shal not pollute his name for the burnt sacrifice of the Lord and breades of their God doe they offer and therfore they shal be holie † A whore and a vile strumpette he shal not take to wife nor her that is put away from her husband because they are cōsecrated to their God † and offer the breades of proposition Be they holie therfore because I also am holie the Lord that sanctifie them † The daughter of a priest if she be taken in whordome dishonour the name of hir father shal be burnt with fire † The grand bishoppe that is to say the priest that is greatest among his brethren vpon whose head hath bene poured the oyle of vnction and whose handes were consecrated in priesthood and who was reuested with the holie vestimentes shal not vncouer his head he shal not rent his garments † and to no dead person shal he enter in at al. vpon his father also and mother shal he not be contaninated † Neither shal he goe forth out of the holie places lest he pollute the Sāctuarie of the Lord because the oyle of the holie vnction of his God is vpon him I the Lord. † He shal take a virgin vnto his wife † but a widow and her that is put away and a filth and a whore he shal not take but a maide of his owne people † that he mingle not the stocke of his kinred with the common people of his nation because I am the Lord that sanctifie him † And our Lord spake to Moyses saying † Speake to Aaron The man of thy seede throughout their families that hath a blemish shal not offer breades to his God † neither shal he approch to his ministerie If he be blinde if lame if he haue a litle or a great or a crooked nose † if his foote be broken if his hand † if he be crooke backed or blere eyed or haue a pearle in his eye or a continual scabbe or drie scurffe in his bodie or be burnt † Euerie one that hath a blemish of the seede of Aaron the priest shal not approch to offer the hostes to the Lord nor the breades to his God † He shal eate notwithstanding of the breades that are offered in the Sanctuarie † yet so that he enter not within the v●ilen or approch to the altar because he hath a blemish and he must not contaninate my Sanctuarie I the Lord that sanctifie them † Moyses therfore spake to Aaron and to his sonnes and to al Israel al thinges that had bene commanded him CHAP. XXII VVho may eate of sanctified things 17. And what things may be offered OVR Lord also spake to Moyses saying † Speake to Aaron and to his sonnes that they beware of those that are the consecrated thinges of the children of Israel and contaninate not the name of the thinges sanctified to me which
opinion saieth he that Samuel himself appeared not but some euil spirit tooke his similitude And this last iudgement of S. Augustin is much confirmed first by the wordes of this text literally and plainly affirming that Samuel appeared and spake to Saul and Saul to him and that Saul vnderstood or●nevv not only thought imagined or supposed that it vvas Samuel Secondly this apparition came sooner preuenting the inchantment and in better order then the pithonical woman expected as appeareth by her answer saying she saw God or an excellent person ascending in comelie maner and attyre whereas euil spirites vsed to appeare as the Rabbins testifie in vglie bodies with the heeles into the ayer and head downward Thirdly the Author of Ecclestasticus ch 46. amongst the prayses of Samuel the prophet saieth he slept or died and certified the King and shevved to him the end of his life VVhere it semeth clere that the same person that died denounced Gods wil and sentence to Saul Moreouer if it had bene an illusion of an euil spirite it would hardly seme anie praise at al. Fourthly the diuel could not naturally foretel that Saul and his sonnes with manie of the people should be slaine the next day and Dauid reign● after him neither is it probable that God reueiled such secretes to euil spirites wherby men might take more occasion to folow nicromancie Fiftly most Fathers and Doctors are of the same iudgement S. Iustinus Martyr Dialogo cum Triphone S. Basil Epist 80. ad Eustathium S. Ambrose li. 1. in Luc. 1. S. Hierom. in Isaiae 7. Iosephus li. 6. c. 15. Antiq. and manie other old and late writers The chiefest argument for the other opinion is the authoritie of Tertullian li. de anima Procopius and Eucherius vpon this place and the vncertaine authors Questionum apud Iustinum q. 52. lib. de mirabil Sac. Script and Quest vet Testamenti q. 27. apud Augustinum tomo 3. et 4. As for the Protestantes denying that soules once parted from their bodies can appeare to anie aliue S. Augustin confuteth them both by this example of Samuel supposing the booke of Ecclesiasticus to be Canonical Scripture and of Moyses being dead and Elias yet liuing whom they hold also to be dead both appearing with Christ in his transfiguration Mat. 17. CHAP. XXIX Dauid going with the Philistijms towards the warre 4. the princes vrge and force the king to send him back THEREFORE al the companies of the Philistijms were gathered together into Aphec and Israel also camped vpon the fountaine which was in Iezrahel † And the princes in dede of the Philistijms marched in hundreds and thousandes but Dauid and his men were in the last companie with Achis † And the princes of the Philistijms sayd to Achis What meane these Hebrewes And Achis sayd to the princes of the Philistijms Doe you not knowe Dauid which was the seruant of Saul the king of Israel and is with me manie daies or yeares and I haue not found any thing in him since the day that he fled to me vntil this day † But the princes of the Philistijms were angrie against him and sayd to him Let this man returne and abide in his place wherein thou hast appointed him and let him not goe downe with vs into battel lest he become an aduersarie to vs when we shal beginne to fight for how can he otherwise pacifie his lord but in our heades † Is not this Dauid to whom they sang in dances saying Saul hath strooke his thousandes Dauid his ten thousandes † Achis therefore called Dauid and sayd to him The Lord liueth thou art iust and good in my sight and thy going out thy coming in is with me in the campe and I haue not found in thee anie euil since the day that thou camest to me vntil this day but thou pleasest not the nobles † Returne therefore and goe in peace and offend not the eies of the princes of the Philistijms † And Dauid sayd to Achis For what haue I done and what hast thou found in me thy seruant since the day that I haue beene in thy sight vntil this day that I may not come and fight against the enemies of my lord the King † And Achis answering spake to Dauid I know that thou art good in my sight as an Angel of God but the princes of the Philistijms haue sayd He shal not goe vp with vs into battel † Therefore arise in the morning thou and the seruantes of thy lord which came with thee and when you are risen in the night and it shal beginne to waxe light goe foreward † Dauid therefore arose in the night he and his men that they might sette foreward in the morning and returne to the land of the Philistijms and the Philistijms went vp into Iezrahel CHAP. XXX Dauid returning to Siceleg findeth it burned and spoiled and himself in danger of the people 7. By our Lords warrant be pursueth the enemie 11. taketh a guide 17. recouereth al that was taken away 22. and rewardeth the souldiars also those that stayed with the baggage 25. making it a lawe for the time to come shat the keepers of the baggage shal haue like share with those that fight in battel AND when Dauid and his men were come to Siceleg the third day the Amalecites had made an inuasion on the south side into Siceleg and had strooken Siceleg and burnt it with fire † And had led away wemen captiue out of it from the lesse vnto the great and had not killed any man but had led them with them and went on their iourney † When Dauid therefore and his men were come to the citie and had found it burnt with fire and their wiues and their sonnes and their daughters to be led away captiue † Dauid and the people that was with him lifted vp their voices and mourned til teares fayled them † For the two wiues also of Dauid were led away captiue Achinoam the Iezraelite and Abigail the wife of Nabal of Carmel † And Dauid was strooken very sad for the people would haue stoned him because the soule of euerie man was bitterly affected vpon their sonnes and daughters but Dauid was strengthened in our Lord his God † And he sayd to Abiathar the priest the sonne of Achimelech Applie vnto me the Ephod And Abiathar applied the Ephod to Dauid † and Dauid consulted our Lord saying Shal I pursue these theeues and shal I take them or no And our Lord sayd to him Pursue them for thou shalt take them without doubt take from them the praye † Dauid therefore went himselfe and the six hundred men that were with him and they came vnto the Torrent Besor some being wearie stayed † But Dauid himself and foure hundred men pursued for two hundred stayed who being wearie could not passe the Torrent Besor † And they found an Aegyptian in the field and brought him to Dauid and they gaue
faithfully and with a perfect hart † Euerie cause that shal come to you of your brethren that dwel in their cities betwen kinred and kinred whersoeuer there is question of the law of the commandement of ceremonies of iustifications shew it them that they sinne not agaynst our Lord and lest there come wrath vpon you and your brethren so doing therfore you shal not sinne † And Amarias the priest and your Bishop shal be chiefe in these thinges which pertayn to God moreouer Zabadias the sonne of Ismahel who is the prince in the house of Iuda shal be ouer those workes which pertayne to the kinges office and you haue maisters the Leuites before you take courage and doe diligently and our Lord wil be with the good CHAP. XX. The Ammonites Moabites and Syrians ioynning forces agaynst Iosaphat 3. he seeketh Gods helpe by publique prayer and fasting 14. A Prophet fortelleth that God wil fight for them 20. so they singing praises to God the enemies kil ech other 24. Iosaphat with his men gather verie great spoiles 30. reigneth in peace 35. but his nauie perisheth for his societee with wicked Ochozias AFTER these thinges were the children of Moab gathered together and the children of Ammon and with them of the Ammonites to fight agaynst Iosaphat † And there came messengers and told Iosaphat saying There cometh agaynst thee a great multitude from those places which are beyond the sea and out of Syria and behold they stay in Asasonthamar which is Engaddi † And Iosaphar being frighted with feare he tooke him wholy to besech ou● Lord and he proclamed a fast to al Iuda † And Iudas was gathered together to pray to our Lord yea and al came out of their cities to besech him † And when Iosaphat stood in the middes of the assemblie of Iuda and Ierusalem in the house of our Lord before the new court † he sayd Lord God of our fathers thou art God in heauen and rulest ouer al the kingdomes of Nations in thy hand is strength and might neither can anie man resist thee † Didst not thou our God kil al the inhabitantes of this land before thy people Israel and gauest it to the seed of Abraham thy frend for euer † And they dwelt in it built in it a Sanctuarie to thy name saying † If euils fal vpon vs the sword of iudgement pestilence famine we wil stand before this house in thy sight wherein thy name is inuocated we wil crie to thee in our tribulations and thou shalt heare and saue vs. † Now therfore behold the children of Ammon and mount Seir by whom thou didst not grant Israel to passe when they came out of Aegypt but they declined from them slew them not † doe the contrarie and endeuoure to cast vs out of the possession which thou hast deliuired to vs. † Our God wilt not thou therfore iudge them In vs in deed there is not so great strength that we can resist this multitude which cometh violently vpon vs. But whereas we are ignorant what we ought to doe this onlie we haue leaft that we direct our eies to thee † And al Iuda stood before our Lord with their litle ones and wiues and their children † And there was Iahaziel the sonne of Zacharias the sonne of Banaias the sonne of Iehiel the sonne of Mathanias a Leuite of the children of Asaph vpon whom the spirit of our Lord came in the middes of the multitude † and he sayd Attend ye al Iuda and you that dwel in Ierusalem and thou king Iosaphat thus sayth our Lord to you Feare not neither dread ye this multitude for it is not your battel but Gods † To morrow you shal goe downe agaynst them for they wil come vp by the steepe named Sis and you shal find them in the vtmost part of the torrent which is agaynst the wildernesse of Ieruel † It shal not be you that shal fight but onlie stand confidently and you shal see the helpe of our Lord ouer you ô Iuda and Ierusalem feare not neither dreade ye to morrow you shal goe out agaynst them and our Lord wil be with you † Iosaphat therfore and Iuda and al the inhabitantes of Ierusalem fel flat on the earth before our Lord and adored him † Moreouer the Leuites of the children of Caath and of the children of Core praysed our Lord the God of Israel with a lowd voice on high † And when they had risen earely in the morning they went forth by the desert of Thecua and they being gone forth Iosaphat standing in the middes of them sayd Heare me ye men of Iuda and al the inhabiters of Ierusalem beleue in the Lord your God and you shal be secure beleue his prophetes and al thinges shal fal out prosperous † He gaue counsel also to the people and appoynted the singing men of our Lord that they should prayse him in their companies and should goe before the host and with agreable voice should say Confesse to our Lord because his mercie is foreuer † And when they began to sing prayses our Lord turned their embushementes vpon themselues to witte of the children of Ammon and of Moab and of mount Seir who were gone forth to fight agaynst Iuda and were striken † For the children of Ammon and of Moab rose together agaynst the inhabitantes of mount Seir to kil and destroy them and when they had in worke atcheued this being turned also agaynst themselues they fel wounded one of an other † Moreouer Iuda when they were come to the watch place that looketh to the desert saw a far of al the countrie abrode ful of dead bodies and that none remayned aliue that could escape death † Iosaphat therfore came and al the people with him to take away the spoiles of the dead and they found among the dead bodies diuerse stuffe garments also and most pretious vessels and they spoiled it soe that they could not carie al thinges nor in three dayes take a Way the spoiles for the greatnesse of the praye † And in the fourth day they were assembled in the Vale of blessing for because there they had blessed our Lord they called that place the Vale of blessing vntil this present day † And euerie man of Iuda returned and the inhabitantes of Ierusalem and Iosaphat before them into Ierusalem with great ioy because our Lord had geuen them ioy of their enemies † And they entered into Ierusalem with psalteries and harpes and trumpettes into the house of our Lord. † And the dread of our Lord fel vpon al the kingdomes of the landes when they heard that our Lord had fought agaynst the enemies of Israel † And the kidgdom of Iosaphat was quiet and God gaue him peace round about † Iosaphat therfore reigned ouer Iuda and he was fiue and thirtie yeares old when he begane to reigne and he reigned fiue and twentie yeares in Ierusalem and the name of
the Temple but commanded first to draw her forth 4. Reg. 11. 2. Par. 23. And as peculiar places so special Psalmes and Hymnes were appointed for diuers purposes and occasions 2. Par. 20. The ministerie of Angeles was very vsual in this time One was sent to comforte and direct Elias the prophet in his afflictions 3. Reg. 19. 4. Reg. 1. An Angel stroke the Assyrians whole campe 4. Reg. 19. 2. Par. 32. Also the Intercession of Angels is so euident Tobiae 12. Raphael offering Tobias prayer to God that Protestants haue no other refuge to auoide this point of faith but by denying the Booke to be Canonical Scripture Honour of other Sainctes and their Intercession is proued a Maiori For so much as honour was religiously exhibited to spiritual power and excellencie in men yet liuing in this world So a Noble man adored Elias the Prophet being farre greater then he is ciuil and worldlie respectes 3. Reg. 18. Eliseus also was adored by his disciples not for anie worldlie authoritie or eminence but for his spiritual power and superioritie amongst them 4. Reg. 2. Likewise al Prophetes and Priestes were religiously honored for their holie and spiritual functions 3. Reg. 13. Much more Sainctes are rightly honored being immortal and in eternal glorie It appeareth also that Elias seuen yeares after that he was translated from humane conuersation when Eliseus was chiefe Prophet 4. Reg. 3. which was in or before the eightenth yeare of Iosaphat who reigned fiue and twentie 3. Reg. 22. had care of Ioram and his kingdom admonishing him by letters of Gods wrath against him and his people for their sinnes 2. Par. 21. And the scripture saieth often that God spared and protected Ierusalem and the kingdom of Iuda for Dauids sake 3. Reg. 11. 15. 4. Reg. 8. 19. 20. 2. Par. 6. 21. Isa 37. we haue also example of Sainctes Reliques in the cloke of Elias 4. Reg. 2. in Eliseus bones 4. Reg. 13. and in an other Prophetes bodie buried in Bethel VVhich Iosias would not suffer to be touched 4. Reg. 23. Images were conserued in the Temple 3. Reg. 7. as before in the Tabernacle when idolartie was most destroyed 3. Reg. 15. 4. Reg. 23. yea an abuse rising of the brasen serpēt for which Ezechias destroyed it 4. Reg. 18. yet he touched not the Images of Cherubins in the Temple VVhich none but Infideles sought to destroy And Osee the Prophet ch 3. bewayleth the want of Theraphim or Images amongst other sacred thinges Sacrifice Altar and Ephod VVherby the ancient Rabbins proue very wel that Images of Angels and the same of other Sainctes are not contrarie to the Decalogue but the images of Idoles Good workes were rewarded and bad punished 3. Reg. 9. and the whole historie of this age testifieth the same VVhere by the way may be obserued that some inst men fel from their iustice as Salomon 1. Par. 28. 3. Reg. 11. Ioas 4. Reg. 12. 2. Par. 24. Ozias 2. Paral. 26. Others from wickednes returned to pietie as Manasses 4. Reg. 23. 2. Par. 33. the multitude of the people very often much folowing the disposition of their kinges Special State of life not commanded by the law was voluntarily professed and obserued by some Prophetes and their disciples called the children of Prophetes Keping particular Rules and wearing distinct habite 4. Reg. 1. 2. 4. The orders of Nazarites and Rechabites instituted before continued stil Amos. 2. Ierem. 35. stil which were very examplar figures of Religious State and Orders in the new Testament and perpetual chastitie of clergie men embraced by such as folow Euangelical counsailes proposed and not commanded by our Sauiour To which S. Paul likewise exhorteth though there be no precept therof to anie before they bind themselues Exequies for the dead were continually kept as the sacred historie witnesseth recording where and with what solennitie the kinges were buried which would be ouerlong nedeles to recite the like is also writen of some Prophetes 3. Reg. 13. 4. Reg. 23. Holie Tobias by example and fatherlie admonition exhorted his sonne to do workes of mercie not only to the liuing but also to the dead Put thy bread and thy wine vpon the sepulture of the iust c. 4. Isaias ch 57. as the Iewes both vnderstood and practised prayed that peace be geuen to the iust in his couch or resting place after his death Of the general Resurrection Elias translation is a figure who yet liuing sheweth that God can and wil restore al men to life againe in their bodies after death as he conserueth him and Enoch in their mortal bodies without corruption Ezechiel also prophecieth of the Resurrection of the dead applying it mystically to spiritual resurrection and restauration of Israel to former state ch 37. Of the last Iudgment and eternal glorie to the good and euerlasting paine to the wicked Salomon agreably to the doctrin of other Prophetes discourseth in his booke of Ecclesiastes namely ch 3. 11. and in the last concludeth thus Let vs al together heare the end of speaking Feare God and obserue his commandmentes for this is euerie man or to this end man is created and God wil bring into Iudgement al thinges that are done for euerie errour or obscure thing whether it be good or euil Neither were these and other pointes of Faith and Religion interrupted but stil beleued and professed in the Church alwaies visible and incontaminate notwithstanding some boughes an● branches became vnstructsul and rotten others brake of and were separated from this vine For when Salomon falling to luxurie multiplying manie wiues and concubines was by them seduced and brought to spiritual fornication and idolatrie making altars offering sacrifices to Idoles the Priestes Prophetes and people generally perseuered in Gods law seruice 3. Reg. 11. After whose death Ieroboam his seruant of the tribe of Ephraim possessing Tenne Tribes called the kingdom of Israel to maintaine his new state fearing that if the people resorted to Ierusalem for religions sake they would depart from him and returne to the right heyres of Dauid and Salomon made an egregious Schisme setting vp two golden calues in Bethel and Dan. 3. Reg. 12. made temples altares and priestes to s●rue them al opposite to Gods ordinance But not only the other Two Tribes called the kingdom of Iuda but also the greatest part of Israel especially Priestes Leuites and deuoutest people repayred stil to Ierusalem not yelding to that schisme and idolairie 2. Par. 11. Moreouer God raised vp and sent special Prophetes to confirme the weake and recal the seduced For Ieroboam had no sowner sette vp his new altar in Bethel and begunne to offer incense vpon it but a Prophet came out of Iuda in the word of our Lord and cried against that altar foretelling that wheras for that present they burnt frankine●nse vpon it the time should come when the
thou know that we are ignorant of what doest thou vnderstand that we know not † There are both oldmen and ancientes among vs much elder then thy fathers † Is it a great matter that God should comforth thee but thy naughtie wordes hinder it † Why doth thy hart eleuate thee and as thinking great thinges hast thou estonied eies † Why doeth thy spirit swel agaynst God to vtter such wordes out of thy mouth † What is man that he should be without spot and that the borne of a woman should appeare iust † Behold among his sainctes none is immutable and the heauens are not cleane in his sight † How much more is man abominable and vnprofitable who drinketh iniquitie as it were water † I wil shew thee heare me that which I haue seene I wil tel thee † Wisemen confesse and hide not their fathers † To whom onlie the earth was geuen and stranger hath not passed by them † The impious is proud al his daies and the number of the yeares of his tyrannie is vncertaine † The sound of terrour is alwaies in his eares and when there is peace he alwaies suspecteth treason † He beleueth not that he may returne from darkenesse to light looking round about for the sword on euerie side † When he shal moue himself to seeke bread he knoweth that the day of darkenesse is prepared in his hand † Tribulation shal terrifie him and distresse shal compasse him as a king that is prepared to battel † For he hath stretched his hand against God and is strengthened against the Omnipotent † He hath runne against him with necke set vp right and is armed with a fatte necke † Fatnesse hath couered his face and from his sides there hangeth tallow † He hath dwelt in desolate cities and in desert houses that are brought into hillockes † He shal not be enriched neither shal his substance continew neither shal he put his roote in the earth † He shal not depart out of darkenes the flame shal drie his boughes and he shal be taken away with the spirit of his owne mouth † He shal not beleeue vainely deceiued with errour that he may be redemed with anie price † Before his daies be accomplished he shal perish and his handes shal wither † His cluster in the first flower shal be hurt as a vine and as the oliue tree casting his flower † For the congregation of the hypocrite is barren and fire shal deuoure their tabernacles which gladly take giftes † He conceiued sorow and hath brought forth iniquitie and his wombe preprareth guiles CHAP. XVI Iob moued by his importune freindes 4. expostulateth their seueritie 12. further describeth his afflictions and appealeth to Gods iudgement that he suffereth more then his sinnes deserue BVT Iob answering sayd † I haue heard often times such things heauie conforters you are al. † Shal wordes ful of winde haue an end or is anie thing trublesome to thee if thou speake † I also could speake thinges like to you and would God your soule were for my soule † I also would confort you with wordes and would wag my head vpon you † I would strengthen you with my mouth and would moue my lippes as sparing you † But what shal I doe If I speake my paine wil not rest and if I hold my peace it wil not depart from me † But now my sorow hath oppressed me and al my limmes are brought to nothing † My wrinkles giue testimonie against me and a false speaker is raysed vp against my face contradicting me † He hath gathered his furie vpon me and threatening me hath gna●hed against me with his teeth mine enemy hath beheld me with terrible eies † They haue opened their mouthes vpon me and exprobating haue strooken my cheke they are filled with my paines † God hath shut me vp with the wicked man and hath deliuered me to the hands of the impious † I sometime that welthie one sodenly am broken he hath held my necke broken me and set me to himself as it were a marke † He hath compassed me with his speares he hath wounded my loynes he hath not spared and hath powred out on the earth my bowels † He hath cut me with wound vpon wound he hath come violently vpon me as it were a giant † I haue sowed sackcloth vpon my skinne and haue couered my flesh with ashes † My face is swollen with weeping and my eyeliddes are dimme † These thinges haue I suffred without the iniquitie of my hand wheras I had cleane prayers to God † Earth couer not my bloud neither let my crie find place in thee to be hid † For behold my witnesse is in heauen and he that knoweth my conscience on high † My freindes ful of wordes mine eie distilleth vnto God † And would God a man might so be iudged with God as the sonne of man is iudged with his companion † For behold the short yeares passe away and I walke the path by the which I shal not returne CHAP. XVII For the greuousnes of his paine Iob expecteth speedie death 4. chargeth his freindes with folie for holding only remuneration in this life 6. himself hopeth happie rest in the other World MY spirit shal be extenuated my daies shal be shortened and the graue only remaineth for me † I haue not sinned and mine eie abideth in bitternesse † Deliuer me and set me beside thee and let anie mans hand fight against me † Thou hast made their hart far from discipline and therfore they shal not be exalted † He promiseth a praye to his felowes and the eies of his children shal faile † He hath set me as it were for a prouerbe of the comon people and I am an example before them † Mine eie is dimne for indignation and my members are brought as it were to nothing † The iust shal be astonied vpon this and the innocent shal be raised vp against the hypocrite † And the iust shal hold his way and with cleane handes shal adde strength † Be al you therfore conuerted and come and I shal not finde among you anie wiseman † My daies haue passed my cogitations are dissipated tormenting my hart † Night they haue turned into day and againe after darkenesse I hope for light † If I shal expect hel is my house and in darkenesse I haue made my bed † I haue sayd to rottenes Thou art my father my mother and my sister to wormes † Where is now then my expectation and my patience who considereth † Al my thinges shal descend into most deepe hel there at the least shal I haue rest thinkest thou CHAP. XVIII Baldad setteth vpon Iob againe chargeing him with present impatience and former impietie 6. and that therfore he suffereth worthie punishment BVT Baldad the Suhite answering sayd † How long wil ye speake vaunting wordes vnderstand ye first and so let vs speake † Why
these things are sayd in part of his waies and where as we haue heard scarce a litle droppe of his word who shal be able to behold the thunder of his greatnes CHAP. XXVII More and more ●ob confirmeth his innocencie auouching that God not presently iudging 11. wil in time condemne the wicked IOB also added taking his parable and sayd † God liueth who hath taken away my iudgement and the Omnipotent which hath brought my soule to bitternesse † That as long as breath remaineth in me and the spirit of God in my nosthrels † My lippes shal not speake iniquitie neither shal my tongue meditate lying † God forbid that I should iudge you to be iust til I faile I wil not departe from mine innocencie † My iustification which I haue begune to hold I wil not forsake for my hart doth not reprehend me in al my life † Let mine enemie be as the impions and mine aduersarie as the wicked one † For what is the hypocrites hope if couetousely he take by violence and God deliuer not his soule † Wil God heare his crie when distresse shal come vpon him † Or can he be delighted in the Omnipotent and inuocate God at al time † I wil teach you by the hand of God what the Omnipotent hath neither wil I hide it † Loe you doe al knowe and why speake you vaine thinges without cause † This is the portion of an impions man with God and inheritance of the violent which they shal receiue of the Omnipotent † If his children be multiplied they shal be in the sword nephewes shal not be filled with bread † They that shal be leaft of him shal be buried in death and his widowes shal not weepe † If he shal heape together siluer as earth and as clay shal prepare garmentes † He shal prepare in deede but the iust man shal be clothed with them and the innocent shal diuide the siluer † He hath built his house as a moth and as a keeper hath he made a bowre † The rich man when he shal sleepe shal take away nothing with him he shal oppen his eies finde nothing † Pouertie as water shal apprehend him in the night a tempest shal oppresse him † The burning wind shal take him vp and cary him away and as a whirle winde shal pul him violently out of his place † And he shal cast vpon him and shal not spare out of his hand fleing he shal flee † He shal claspe his handes vpon him and shal hisse vpon him beholding his place CHAP. XXVIII The maru●lous workes of God the author of nature shew his powre and wisdome 12. and that true riches consist not in temporal creatures but in wisdome 28. and feare of God SILVER hath beginnings of her vaines and gold hath a place where in it is molten † Yron is taken out of the earth and stone resolued with heate is turned into brasse † He hath set a time for darkenesse and the end of al thinges he considereth the stone also of darkenesse and the shadow of death † The torrent diuideth from the pilgrime people them whom the foote of the needie man hath forgotten and to whom there is no way † The land out of which bread grew in his place is destroyed with fire † The place of the sapphire the stones thereof and the cloddes of it gold † The bird hath not knowen the path neither hath the eie of the vulter beheld it † The children of merchantes haue not troden it neither hath the lionesse passed by it † He hath stretched forth his hand to the flint he hath ouerthrowen mountaines from the rootes † In the rockes he hath cut out riuers and his eie hath seene euerie pretious thing † The depthes also of riuers he hath searched hid things he hath brought forth to light † But where is wisdome to be found and what is the place of vnderstanding † Man knoweth not the price therof neither is it found in the land of them that liue pleasently † The depth sayth It is not in me and the sea speaketh It is not with me † The finest gold shal not be geuen for it neither shal siluer be weyed in the change therof † It shal not be compared with the died colours of India nor with Sardonyx the most pretious stone or with the Sapphire † Gold or glasse shal not be equal to it neither shal vessels of gold be changed for it † High and eminent thinges shal not be mentioned in comparison of it and wisedom is drawen out of secrete places † The topazius of Aethiopia shal not be equal to it neither shal it be compared to the cleanest diyng † From whence then cometh wisedom and what is the place of vnderstanding † It is hid from the eies of alliuing the foules of the ayre also know it not † Perdition and death haue sayd With our eares we haue heard the fame therof † God vnderstandeth the way of it and he knoweth the place therof † For he beholdeth the endes of the world looketh on al thinges that are vnder heauen † Who made a poise to the windes and weyed the waters in a measure † When he gaue a lawe to the raynes and a way to the sounding stormes † Then he saw it and declared and prepared and searched it † And he sayd to man Behold the feare of our Lord that is wisedom and to depart from euil vnderstanding CHAP. XXIX Againe Iob recounteth Gods former benefites as Wel his grace wherby he did good workes 5. as temporal prosperitie 9. and wisdome aboue other princes IOB also added taking his parable and sayd † Who wil grant me that I may be according to the former monethes according to the daies in which God kept me † When his lampe shined ouer my head I walked by his light in darknes † As I was in the daies of my youth when God was secretly in my tabernacle † When the Omnipotent was with me and my seruantes round about me † When I washed my feete with butter and the rocke powred me riuets of oile † When I went forth to the gatte of the citie and in the streate they prepared me a chaire † Yong men sawe me and hid them selues and old men rising vp stoode † The princes ceased to speake and did put the finger vpon their mouth † Dukes held in their voice and their tongue cleaued to their throte † The eare hearing counted me blessed and the eie seing gaue testimonie to me † For that I had deliuered the poore man crying out and the pupil that had no helper † The blessing of him that was readie to perish came vpon me and I conforted the hart of the widow † I was clothed with iustice and I reuested me with my iudgement as with a garment and crowne † I was an eie to the blind and a foote to the lame †
his children with former wickednes and him as iniurious to God in his speaches of which if he would repent he should be healed and prosper as before Arguing in general that God neuer afflicteth the innocent nor assisteth the malignant Insinuating therby that Iob was an hypocrite wherto Iob answered chap. 9. 10 that in dede no man may compare nor iustifie himselse before God Neuertheles it standeth wel with Gods iustice powre wisdome that innocentes be sometimes exercised with tribulations more then their offences deserue Thirdly Sophar the third disputer assaulted Iob ch 11. imputing his speach and defence of himself to loquacitie and audacious temeritie in that he desired to know the causes of Gods prouidence in so grieuously afflicting him Of which faultes holie Iob purged himself in the three next chapters stil maintayning his innocencie according to his owne conscience better knowen to himself then to them desiring God to instruct him if he had anie vnknowen sinnes Discoursed also much more profoundly of Gods powre wisdome iustice and prouidence as we● in general as towards himself in particular and professed his faith and great confidence of the Resurrection Againe Eliphaz ch 15. more bitterly then before condemned Iob of presumption and blasphemie discoursed of mans corruptnes and prones to sinne describing the maners of hypochrites and other impious men with their miserable endes and argued Iob for such a one VVho in the next two chapters expostulated with these his freinds that they coming with pretence to comforth him did so violently afflict him by charging him with false and heynous crimes his owne conscience better knowing and testifying his former life and state of his soule then that their imaginations could alter his iudgement And so with contempt of this world desire of death and rest appealed to Gods iudgement against his three freindes touching the matter in controuersie In the meane time comforted himself with meditation of the next world Baldad likewise replied ch 18. with hote contention accusing Iob of insolent impatience inculcating the greuous punishmentes both of him and others for their impietie In answer wherto he lamented againe the wan● of expected comforth especially by such freindes Stil comforted himself with assured faith of the Resurrection Sophar also ch 20. attempted againe to cōuince Iob of impietie and hypochrisie by the miserable and speedie fal of wicked men after prosperitie for so he imagined Iob to be fallen into irrecouerable miserie But Iob shewed the contrarie that some wicked men prosper long yea al their life and the same long and then in a moment goe downe to hel and so the argument of present affliction proued not their opinion against him Eliphaz disputed the third time ch 22. contending that the causes of affliction are not to be attributed to Gods secrete prouidence but to assured sinnes of the wicked Vpon whom only he supposed that afflictions fal inferring that Iob was guiltie of enormious crimes grosse errors Vrged him therfore to returne to God that he might be restored to former prosperitie Iob againe appealed to Gods sentence not in his terrour nor rigour of his iustice but against his aduersaries in this quarel describing Gods powre and wisdome by which he permitteth the innocent to be afflicted the wicked to prosper no man knowing how soone or how late al shal receiue as they deserue Moreouer Baldad disputed the third time very briefly ch 25. endeuouring to terrifie Iob from further answering and especially from appealing to Gods iudgement But Iob very largely in six ensuing chapters discoursed diuinely of Gods souereigne Maieste Powre Wisdom exact Iustice and infinite Mercie Also of wicked mens destruction of his owne former prosperitie and present calamitie together with his good workes and innocencie which he stil anouched in respect of great iniquities After that Iob and his three freindes ceassed nothing being agreed vpon in the point of controuersie the diuel yet ceassed not but sturred vp a yongman called Eliu proud and arrogant but not vnlerned who abruptly condemned them al to witte Iob of pertinacie the others of insufficiencie And therfore tooke vpon him to conuince Iob though the others could not Very like to late-rising Protestantes or Puritaines bragging that by new argumentes and proofes neuer heard of they wil ouerthrow the Papistes or Catholique Romaine Church and doctrin which al former enimies Iewes Pagaines Turkes and Heretikes nor Hel gates could not ouercome This yong Eliu therfore with his Priuate spirite wiser in his owne conceipt then al that went before him assaulted constant Iob ch 32. and fiue more ensuing with manie wordes and bragges often chalenging prouoking but not extorting anie answer from so graue a man to his friuolous and idle argumentes largely discoursing of thinges either not denied or so manifest false that euerie meane seruant of God could easely conuince them and neuer approching to the maine controuersie only railed against holie Iob charging him more furiously then anie had donne before with impietie impatience ignorance pride blasphemie and obstinacie vices farre from Iobs sanctitie dilating also of Gods iustice mercie wisdome powre and prouidence and that no man ought to contend nor expostulate with God that afflictions must be borne patiently and that God is iust and maruelous in his workes wherof no wiseman euer doubted and so Iob conuinced him with silence But God himself for decision of al from ch 38. to the end of the Booke first by way of examining instructed Iob more particularly reciting manie maruelous workes of nature shewing therby his Diuine Maiestie Powre and wisdome exercising Iob in more patience and withal perfecting him in humilitie So that with al reuerent feare and subiection he offered and submitted him selfe to Gods onlie good pleasure Then finally God gaue sentence that Iob had defended the truth his three freindes had erred VVhom after Sacrifice and Iobs prayer for them he pardoned restored Iob to health and to duble prosperitie of al he had lost before geuing him also long life and a happie end In this historie besides the literal sense shewing that Iob was iust and sincere and not for his sinnes as his freindes falsly supposed but for his more mere●e was most extremly afflicted and afterwards restored to health and wealth we haue also h●re in the Allegorical sense an especial figure of Christ who as he was absolutly most innocent most perfect so was he without cōparison most afflicted of al mankind Likewise Iobs restauration to better state then before signified in the Anagogical sense the Resurrection and rest●uratiō of better most glorious qualities in the blessed with fulnes of daies in eternal glorie Finally in the Moral sense which S. Gregorie most especially prosecuteth al Christians haue here a most notable example of al vertues namely of patience wherin Iob proceded by degrees to great perfection For he was first
in honour did not vnderstand he was compared to beasts without vnderstanding and became like to them † This their way is a scandal to them and afterward in their mouth they shal take pleasure † As sheepe they are put in hel death shal feede vpon them And the iust shal rule ouer them in the morning and their aide shal waxe old in hel from their glorie † Neuerthelesse God wil redeme my soule out of the hand of hel when he shal take me † Feare not when a man shal be made rich and when the glory of his house shal be multiplied † Because when he shal dye he shal not take al thinges neyther shal his glorie goe downe with him † Because his soule in his life shal be blessed he wil confesse to thee when thou shalt do him good † He shal enter in euen to the progenies of his fathers and he shal not see light for euer † Man when he was in honour did not vnderstand he was compared to beasts without vnderstanding and became like to them PSALME XLIX Christ in his first coming calleth al Nations 3. in his second wil iudge the world 7. In the meane time God exhorteth al men to serue him in puritie of vertue which he much preferreth before external sacrifice of the old law 17. reprehending such as professe or teach the right way and liue wickedly † A Psalme to Asaph THE God of goddes our Lord hath spoken and he hath called the earth from the rysing of the sunne euen to the going downe † Out of Syon the beauty of his comelines † God wil come manifestly our God and he wil not kepe silence Fire shal burne forth in his sight and round about him a mighty tempest † He shal cal the heauen from aboue and the earth to discerne his people † Gather ye together his saincts vnto him which ordaine his testament aboue sacrifices † And the heauens shal shew forth his iustice because God is Iudge † Heare ô my people and I wil speake Israel and I wil testifie to thee God thy God am I. † I wil not rebuke thee in thy sacrifices and thy holocaustes are in my sight alwaies † I wil not take calues out of thy house nor buckegoats out of thy flockes † Because al the wilde beasts of the woods be myne the cattle in the mountaines and oxen † I haue knowne al the foules of the ayer and the beauty of the fielde is with me † If I shal be hungrie I wil not tel thee for the round earth is myne and the fulnes therof † Wil I eate the flesh of oxen or wil I drinke the blood of bucke goats † Immolate to God “ the sacrifice of praise and pay thy vowes to the Highest † And inuocate me in the day of tribulation I wil deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me † But to the sinner God hath sayde Why doest thou declare my iustices and takest my testament by thy mouth † But thou hast hated discipline cast my words behind thee † If thou didst see a theefe thou didst rune with him and with adulterers thou didst put thy portion † Thy mouth hath abounded with malice and thy tongue fourged guiles † Sitting thou spakest against thy brother and against thy mothers sonne thou didst put a scandal † these things hast thou done and I haue held my peace † Thou hast thought vniustly that I wil be like thee I wil reproue thee and set it against thy face † Vnderstand these things you that forget God lest sometime he take you violently and there be none to deliuer you † The “ sacrifice of prayse shal glorifie me and there is the way by which I wil shew him the saluation of God ANNOTATIONS PSALME XLIX 14. 23. The sacrifice of praise For better and more due performing of external sacrifice it is requisite that those which offer it or desire to participate do bring with them necessarie internal vertues or disposition as sorow and repentāce for their sinnes which is a kind of improper sacrifice mentioned in the next Psalme the sacrifice of iustice which rendereth ro euerie one that is due Psal 4. and sacrifise of praise or thankes geuing for al Gods benefites receiued or expected which kindes of internal and improper sacrifices do nothing preiudice but rightly prepare men to the fruict of external sacrifice euer vsed in the law of nature the law of Moyses and of Christ This place also hath an other higher and prophetical sense of the Sacrifice of Christs bodie in the Eucharist which is both propitiatorie and Sacrifise of praise and thankes geuing So S. Augustin orat aduersus Iudeos c. 6. teacheth that here certainly is a plaine change of the old sacrifices The same he affirmeth Ep. 120. c. 18. God foreshewing that the old sacrifices should be changed which were offered in shadow of a sacrifice to come I wil not take faith God to Israel calues nor goares at thy hand c. but appointeth that al Israel al nations from the rysing of the sunne to the setting shal immolate the sacrifice of praise the same Christ whom old Simeon knew an infant whom he receiued into his handes Likewise li. contra aduers legis prophet c. 20. The Church offereth to God in the bodie of Christ the sacrifice of praise PSALME L. King Dauid in great sorow for his sinnes of adultrie and murder most seriously prayeth God of his manifold mercies to remitte and purge al his offences and paines due for them 12. to restore vnto him the grace of the Holie Ghost lost by his sinnes 15. that he may teach others as in deede his singular example may teach the whole world true penance 19. contrition of hart worthely to offer sacrifice for the whole Church † Vnto the end a Psalme of Dauid † “ when Nathan the Prophet came to him after that he had sinned with Bethsabee 2. Reg. 12. HAVE mercie on me ô God according to thy great mercie And according to the multitude of thy commiserations take away myne iniquitie † “ Wash me more amply from mine iniquitie cleanse me from my sinne † Because I do know myne iniquitie and my sinne is before me alwaies † To thee onely haue I sinned and haue done euil before thee that thou mayst be iustified in thy words and mayst ouercome when thou art iudged † For behold “ I was conceiued in iniquities my mother conceiued me in sinnes † For behold thou hast loued truth the vncertaine and hidden thinges of thy wisdome thou hast made manifest to me † Thou shalt sprinkle me with hyssope and I shal be clensed thou shalt wash me and I shal be made whiter then snow † To my hearing thou shalt
Idumea † Wil t not thou ô God which hast repelled vs and wilt not thou goeforth ô God in our hoastes † Geue vs helpe out of tribulation because mans saluation is vayne † In God we shal doe strength and he wil bring our enemies to nothing PSALME CVIII Christ by the mouth of Dauid requesteth of God to be iustly declared innocent and his enimies punished 6. particularly describing Iudas the traitors malice 21. and his owne temporal afflictions 26. prayeth 30. and praiseth God for his deliuerie † Vnto the end a Psalme of Dauid O God conceale not my prayse because the mouth of the sinner and the mouth of the deceitful man is open vpon me † They haue spoken against me with deceitful tongue and with wordes of hatred they haue compassed me and they haue impugned me without cause † For that they should loue me they backbited me but I prayed † And they set against me euil thinges for good and hatred for my loue Appoint a sinner ouer him and let the diuel stand on his righthand † When he is iudged let him comeforth condemned and let his prayer be turned into sinne † Let his dayes be made fewe and let an other take his bishopricke † Let his children be made orphans and his wife a widow † Let his children be transported wandering and let them begge and let them be cast out of their habitations † Let the vsurer search al his substance and let strangers spoile his labours † Let there be none to helpe him neither let there be anie to haue pittie on his pupilles † Let his children come to destruction in one generation let his name be cleane put out † Let the iniquitie of his fathers returne to memorie in the sight of our Lord and let not the sinne of his mother be blotted out † Let them be before our Lord alwayes and let the memorie of them perish out of the earth † For that he remembred not to doe mercie † And he persecuted the poore and needie man and the compunct in hart to kil him † And he loued cursing and it shal come to him and he would not blessing and it shal be far from him And he put on cursing as a garment and it entred as water into his inner partes and as oile in his bones † Be it to him as a garment wherwith he is couered and as a girdle wherwith he is alwayes girded † This is the worke of them that detract from me before our Lord and that speake euils against my soule † And thou Lord Lord doe with me for thy names sake because thy mercie is swete Deliuer me † because I am needie and poore and my hart is trubled within me † As a shadow when it declineth am I taken away and I am shaken as locustes † My knees are weakened with fasting and my flesh is changed by reason of oile † And I am made a reproch to them they saw me and wagged their heades † Helpe me ô Lord my God saue me according to thy mercie † And let them know that this is thy hand and thou ô Lord hast done it † They wil curse and thou shalt blesse let them that rise vp against me be confounded but thy seruant shal reioyce † Let them that detract from me be clothed with shame and let them be couered with their confusion as with a duble patched cloke † I wil confesse to our Lord excedingly with my mouth and in the middes of manie I wil prayse him † Because he hath stood on the righthand of the poore that he might saue my soule from the persecutors PSALME CIX Christ rising and ascending into heauen sitteth on the right hand of God 2. beginning in Ierusalem reigneth in the Church of the whole earth 4. vseth the Priesthood of Melchisedechs order to the end of the world 6. and shal iudge the world † A psalme of Dauid OVR Lord sayd to my Lord Sitte on my right hand til I make thine enemies thy footestoole of thy feete † Our Lord wil sendforth the rod of thy strength from Sion rule thou in the middes of thine enemies † With thee the beginning in the day of thy strength in the brightnes of holie thinges from the wombe before the day starre I begat thee † Our Lord sware and it shal not repent him Thou art “ a Priest for euer “ according to the order of Melchisedech † Our Lord on thy righthand hath broken kinges in the day of his wrath † He shal iudge in nations he shal fil ruines he shal crush the heads in the land of manie † Of the torrent in the way he shal drinke therfore shal he exalt the head ANNOTATIONS CIX 4. A Priest for euer In two respectes Christ is a Priest for euer in that from the first instant of his incarnation he was and remaneth a Priest now also in heauen and al other Priestes are his ministerial vicares not successors So that al priestlie functions which they doe he by them doth the same as the principal Priest VVherupon saith S. Paul 1. Cor 4. So let a man thincke of vs as of the ministers of Christ and dispensers of the mysteries of God Secondly Christ dayly offering Sacrifice by the handes of his Priestes doth continually pacifie Gods wrath in behalf of those sinners for whom it is duly applied euen to the end of the world VVheras the Priesthood of Aaron and of al others in the old Testament ceassed by their deathes both in the office and in the effect 4 According to the order of Melchisedech As Melchisedech king of peace and iustice without father mother or genealogie expressed in holie Scriptures or otherwise knowen to the world was Priest or the Hieghest offered bread and wine an vnbloudie sacrifice communicating with both Chananeites and Hebrewes blessed Abraham and tooke tithes of him and his subiectes so Christ the true King of peace iustice without father of his humanity without mother of his Diuinitie the Sonne of God of ineffable genealogie borne of a virgin in his humanitie the Priest of God offereth Sacrifice not only bloudie on the Crosse but also vnbloudie in the formes of bread and wine continueth the same by the ministerie of other Priestes maketh al nations partakers therof blesseth them and receiueth of them al dutiful and rellgious seruice as of his subiectes PSALME CX Praise of God for benefites 4. especially for the B. Sacrament of the Eucharist 6 with other graces imperted to the Catholique Church Alleluia I Wil confesse to thee ô Lord with al my hart in the counsel of the iust and b the congregation † The workes of our Lord are great exquisite according to al his willes † Confession and magnificence his worke
and let vs enioy the good thinges that are and let vs quickly vse the creature as in youth † Let vs fil ourselues with precious wine and oyntments and let not the flowre of the time passe vs. † Let vs crowne ourselues with roses before they wither let there be no medow which our riote shal not passe through † Let none of vs be exempted from our rioteousnes euerie where let vs leaue signes of ioy because this is our portion and this our lot † Let vs oppresse the poore iust man and not spare the widow nor reuerence the oldmans grey head of long time † But let our strength be the law of iustice for that which is Weake is found vnprofitable † Let vs therfore circumuent the iust because he is vnprofitable to vs and he is contrarie to our workes and reprochfully obiecteth vnto vs the sinnes of the law and defameth in vs the sinnes of our discipline † He boasteth that he hath the knowlege of God and nameth himselfe the sonne of God † He is made vnto vs to the defaming of our cogitations † He is greuous vnto vs euen to behold because his life la vnlike to others and his wayes are changed † We are estemed of him as triflers and he absteyneth from our wayes as from vncleannes and he preferreth the later ends of the iust and glorieth that he hath God for his father † Let vs see therfore if his wordes be true and let vs proue what thinges shal come to him and we shal know what shal be his later ends † For if he be the true sonne of God he wil defend him wil deliuer him from the hands of the aduersaries † By contumelie and torment let vs examine him that we may know his reuerence and proue his patience † To a most shameful death let vs condemne him for there shal be respect had vnto him by his wordes † These thinges haue they thought and haue erred for their malice hath blinded them † And they haue not knowen the sacraments of God nor hoped for the reward of iustice nor estemed the honour of holie soules † For God created man incorruptible and to the image of his owne likenes he made him † But by the enuie of the diuel death entred into the world † and they folow him that are of his part CHAP. III The iust contemned by the wicked and proued by tentations are happie 10. and the wicked vnhappie 12. Chastitie shal be rewarded adulterous generations shal not prosper BVT the soules of the iust are in the hand of God and the torment of death shal not touch them † They semed in the eies of the vnwise to die and their decease was counted affliction † and that which with vs is the way is destruction but they are in peace † And though before men they suffered torments their hope is ful of immortalitie † Vexed in few thinges in many they shal be wel disposed of because God hath tempted them and hath found them worthie of him selfe † As gold in the furnace he hath proued them and as an host of holocaust he hath receiued them and in time there shal be respect of them † The iust shal shine and as sparkes in a place of reedes they shal runne abrode † They shal iudge nations haue dominion ouer peoples and their Lord shal reigne for euer † They that trust in him shal vnderstand truth and the faithful in loue shal rest in him because rest and peace is to his elect † But the impious according to the thinges which they haue thought shal haue correption which haue neglected the iust haue reuolted from our Lord. † For he that reiecteth wisdom and discipline is vnhappie and their hope is vaine and labours without fruite and their workes vnprofitable † Their wiues are sensles and their children most wicked † Cursed is their creature because happie is the barren woman and the vndefiled which hath not knowen bed in sinne she shal haue fruite in visitation of holie soules † and the eunuch that hath not wrought iniquitie with his hands nor thought most wicked things against God for the chosen gift of fayth shal be geuen to him and a most acceptable lot in the temple of God † For of good labour there is glorious fruite and the roote of wisdom which falleth not † But the children of adulterers shal be in consummation and the sede of the vnlawful bed shal be destroyed † And if certes they be of long life they shal be reputed for nothing their last oldage shal be without honour † And if they dye quickly they shal haue no hope nor speach of comfort in the day of acknowledging † For of a wicked nation the endes are cruel CHAP. IIII. Great difference betwen chaste and adulterous generations 7. Speedier death of the iust is recompensed by Gods prouidence 19. but the wicked incurre greater damnation by liuing long O How beautiful is the chaste generation with glorie for the memorie therof is immortal because it is knowen both with God and with men † When it is present they imitate it and they desire it when it hath withdrawen itself and it triumpheth crowned for euer winning the reward of vndefiled conflictes † But the multitude of the impious that hath manie children shal not be profitable and bastarde plants shal not take deepe roote nor lay sure fundation † And if in the boughes for a ●ime they shal spring being weakly set they shal be moued of the winde and by the vehemencie of the windes they shal be rooted out † For the vnperfect boughes shal be broken and their fruites shal be vnprofitable and sowre to eate and meete for nothing † For the children that be borne of wicked sleepes are witnesses of wickednes against the parents in their examination † But the iust if he be preuented with death shal be in a place of refreshing † For venerable oldage is not that of long time nor accounted by the number of yeares but the vnderstanding of a man are grey heares † and an immaculate life is old age † Pleasing God he is made beloued and liuing among sinners he was translated † “ He was taken away lest malice should change his vnderstanding or lest anie guile might deceiue his soule † For the bewitching of vanitie obscureth good thinges and the inconstancie of concupiscence peruerteth the vnderstanding that is without malice † Being consummate in short space he fulfilled much time † for his soule pleased God for this cause he hastened to bring him out of the middes of iniquiries but the peoples that are seing and not vnderstanding nor putting such thinges in their hartes † that the grace of God and mercie is toward his saintes and respect toward his elect † But the iust dead condemneth the impions aliue and youth soone ended the long life of the vniust † For they
wil haue pittie vpon the inchanter stricking of a serpent or of anie that come nere to beastes so also he that kepeth companie with a wicked man and is wrapped in his sinnes † For one houre he wil tarie with thee but if thou decline he wil not abide it † In his lippes the enimie speaketh swetely and in his hart he lyeth in wayte that he may ouerthrow thee into the pitte † In his eyes the enimie weepeth and if he may finde a time he wil not be satisfied with bloud † and if euils happen to thee thou shalt finde him there first † In his eyes the enimie weepeth and as it were helping thee he wil vndermine thy feete † He wil shake his head and clappe his hand and whispering manie thinges he wil change his countenance CHAP. XIII Conuersation with the proud rich and potent is dangerous 9. Relie vpon Gods helpe 11. Beware of pusillanimitie of presumption 19. A meane is necessarie and the companie of equals is most secure HE that toucheth pitch shal be defiled with it and he that communicateth with the proud shal put on pride † He shal take a burden vpon him that communicateth with one more honorable then himself And be not companion with one richer then thyself † What societie shal the caudron haue with the earthen potte for when they shal knock one against the other it shal be broken † The rich man hath done vniustly and he wil fume but the poore man being hurt wil hold his peace † If thou geue he wil take thee and if thou haue not he wil forsake thee † If thou haue he wil liue with thee and wil emptie thee and he wil not be sorie for thee † If thou be necessarie for him he wil supplant thee and smiling wil put thee in hope telling thee good thinges and wil say What wantest thou † And he wil confound thee in his meates til he emptie thee twise thrise and at the last he wil mocke thee and afterward seeing he wil forsake thee and wil shake his head at thee † Humble thyself to God and expect his handes † Take heede lest seduced into follie thou be humbled † Be not humble in thy wisdom lest hmbled thou be seduced into follie † Being called of the mightier depart for by this he wil cal thee the more † Be not importune lest thou be reiected and be not farre from him lest thou goe into obliuion † Stay not to speake felowlike with him neither credite his manie wordes For by much talke he wil proue thee and smiling wil examine thee of thy secretes † His cruel mind wil kepe thy wordes and he wil not spare for malice and for bandes † Take heede to thyself and attend diligently to thyn hearing because thou walkest with thy subuersion † But hearing those thinges see as it were in sleepe and thou shalt watch † Loue God al thy life and inuocate him for thy saluation † Euerie beast loueth the like to it self so also euerie man the nerest to himself † Al flesh wil match with the like to itself and euerie man wil associate himself to his like † If the woolfshal at anie time communicate with the lambe so the sinner with the iust † What fellowshippe hath an holy man with a dogge or what part hath the riche with the poore † The wilde asse in the deserte is the lyons pray so the poore are also the pastures of the riche † And as humilitie is abomination to the proude so also the poore man is the execration of the riche † The riche man being moued is confirmed by his frendes but the humble when he is fallen shal be thrust out euen of his familiars † To the rich deceeued there are many recouerers he hath spoken proud wordes and they haue iustified him † The humble was deceiued he moreouer is rebuked also he hath spoken wisely and place was not geuen vnto him † The rich man spake and al helde their peace and they wil carry his worde euen to the cloudes † The poore man spake and they say Who is this and if he stumble they wil ouerthrowe him † Substance is good to him that hath no sinne in his conscience and pouertie is most wicked in the mouth of the impious † The hart of a man altereth his countenance either into good or into euil † The token of a good hart and a good countenance thou shalt hardly finde and with labour CHAP. XIIII Offence of the tongue is a frequent and dangerous sinne 3. Riches are hurtful to a couetous and to an enuious mind 11. workes of mercie necessarie 22. and perseuerance in wisdom BLESSED is the man that hath not offended in a worde out of his mouth and is not pricked with the sorrow of sinne † Happie is he that hath not had heauines of his minde and hath not fallen from his hope † Substance is without reason to the couetous man and niggard and for the spiteful enuious man to what purpose is gold † He that heapeth together from his hart vniustly gathereth for others and in his goodes an other wil kepe riote † He that is wicked to himselfe to what other man wil he be good and he shal haue no pleasure in his goodes † He that enuieth himselfe nothing is worse then he and this is the reward of his malice † and if he doe good he doth yt ignorantly and not willing and at the last he manifesteth his malice † The eye of the enuious is wicked and turneth away his face and despiseth his owne soule † The eye of the couteous man insatiable in a portion of iniquitie wil not be satisfied til he consume his owne soule withering it † An euil eye is towards euil thinges he shal haue his fil of bread needie in heauines shal he be at his table † Sonne if thou haue it doe good to thyselfe and offer to God worthie oblations † Be mindful that death slacketh not and that the couenant of hel hath beene shewed thee for the couenant of this world shal dye the death † Before death do good to thy freind and according to thine abilitie stretching out thy hand geue to the poore † Be not defrauded of thy good day and let not a litle portion of a good gift ouerpasse the. † Shalt thou not leaue to others thy sorrowes labours in the deuision of the lotte † Geue and take and iustifie thy soule † Before thy death worke iustice for in hel there can not meat be found † Al flesh shal waxe olde as grasse and as the leafe fructifying on a greene tree † Some grow and some are shaken of so the generation of flesh and bloude one is ended and an other is borne † Al corruptible worke shal faile in the end and he that worketh it shal goe therwith † And euerie excellent worke shal be iustified and he that
haue not lent not because of wickednes but they were afraid to be defrauded without cause † But yet vpon the humble be stronger of minde for almes differre him not † Because of the commandment receiue the poore and because of his pouertie send him not away emptie † Lose money for thy brother and thy freind and hide it not vnder a stone vnto perdition † Put thy treasure in the precepts of the Highest it shal profite thee more then gold † Shut vp almes in the hart of the poore and the same shal obteyne for thee against al euil † Aboue the shilde of the mightie aboue the speare it shal fight against tnyne enemie † A good man becometh suretie for his neighbour and he that hath lost shame wil leaue him to himself † Forget not the kindnes of a suertie for he hath geuen his life for thee † The sinner and vncleane person fleeth from his suretie † A sinner counteth the goodes of his suretie to himself and vnthankful in minde wil forsake him that deliuered him † A man is suretie for his neighbour and when he hath lost shame he shal be forsaken of him † Naughtie suretieshippe hath vndone manie that were In good case and hath tossed them as a waue of the sea † Whurling round about it hath made mightie men to remoue and they haue wandred in strange nations † A sinner that trangresseth the commandment of our Lord shal fal into naughtie suretieshippe and he that endeuoureth to doe manie thinges shal fal into iudgement † Recouer thy neighbour according to thy power and take heed to thy self that thou fal not † The beginning of mans life water bread and garment and house couering his turpitude † Better is the poore mans fayre vnder a roofe of bordes then sumptuous cheere in a strange place without a house † Let the least thing please thee in steede of a great and thou shalt not heare the reproach of peregrination † It is a naughtie life to change lodging from house to house and where he shal lodge he shal not deale boldely nor open his mouth † He shal lodge and feede and make the vnthanckful drinke and beside these thinges he shal heare bitter wordes † Passe thou stranger furnish the table with the thinges thou hast in thy hand feede the rest † Depart from the presence of the honour of my freindes for the necessitie of my house my brother is to be lodged with me † These thinges be greuous to a man that hath vnderstanding rebuke for the house and the reproch of the lender CHAP. XXX Chastisment of children is necessarie and indulgence very dangerous 14. Health is better then riches 17. A trublesome life is worse then death 22. Be not pensiue but chereful in mind HE that loueth his soune doth accustome him to stripes that he may reioyce in his later end and not grope after the doores of his neighboures † He that teacheth his sonne shal be praised in him in the middes of them of his houshold he shal glorie in him † He that teacheth his sonne doth cast the enemie into emulation and in the middes of his freindes he shal glorie in him † His father is dead he is as it were not dead for he hath left behind him the like to himself † In his life he sawe and reioyced in him in his death he was not made sorie neither was he confounded before the enemies † For he left a defender of his house against the enemies one that should render thanck to his freindes † For the soules of his sonnes he wil binde vp his woundes at euerie voice his bowels shal be trubled † An vntamed horse becometh stubburne and a dissolute childe wil become headie † Pamper thy sonne and he wil make thee afraid play with him and he wil make thee sorowful † Laugh not with him lest thou be sorie and at the last thy teeth shal be on edge † Geue him not power in his youth and contemne not his cogitations † Curbe his necke in youth and knock his sides whiles he is a childe lest perhaps he be hardned and beleeue thee not and he shal be sorow of minde to thee † Teach thy sonne and worke in him that thou offend not in his dishonestie † Better is a poore man whole and strong of force then a rich man weake and scourged with miserie † The health of the soule in holines of iustice is better then al gold and siluer and a sound bodie then infinite reuenewes † There is no riches aboue the riches of the health of the bodie and there is noe delight aboue the ioy of the hart † Better is death then a bitter life and euerlasting rest then continual sicknes † Good thinges hid in a mouth that is shut are as messes of meates set about a graue † What shal sacrifice profite an idol for neither shal he eate nor smel † so he that is chased away of our Lord beareth the rewardes of iniquitie † seing with his eies groning as an eunuch embracing a virgin and sighing † Geue not heuines to thy soule afflict not thyself in thy counsel † Ioyfulnes of the hart this is the life of a man and a treasure without defect of holines and the ioy of a man is long life † Haue mercie on thine owne soule pleasing God and refraine and comfort thy hart in his holines and expel sorow far from thee † For sorow hath killed manie and there is noe profite in it † Enuie and anger diminish the daies and thought wil bring old age before the time † A magnifical hart is good in bankettes for his bankettes are made diligently CHAP. XXXI By seeking vertue and laboring for necessaries the flesh is subdued to the spirite 8. Moderate riches are best 12. with temperance in diette 30. especially in drinking VVATCHING after honestie shal pine the flesh the thought thereof taketh away sleepe † The thought of foreknowlege turneth away the vnderstanding greuous infirmitie maketh a sober soule † The riche man hath laboured in gathering of substance together in his rest he shal be replenished with his goodes † The poore man hath laboured in the diminishing of his liuing and in the end he is made poore † He that loueth gold shal not be iustified he that foloweth after corruption shal be replenished of it † Manie haue bene geuen into falles for gold and their perdition hath come by the beautie thereof † The gold of them that sacrifice is a wood of offence wo to them that folow after it and euerie vnwise man shal perish in it † Blessed is the rich man that is found without spot and that hath not gone after gold nor hoped in money and treasures † Who is this we wil praise him for he hath done meruelous thinges in
stake into the ground and say to thee † Thy way is good and stand ouer against thee to see what wil befal thee † With an irreligious man treate not of holines and with the vniust of iustice and with a woman of the thing whereof she is ielous with a feareful man of warre with a marchant of traficke with a byer of selling with an enuious man of geuing thankes † with the impious of pietie with the vnhonest of honestie with the field labourer of al worke † with him that worketh by the yeare of the ending of the yeare with a slothful seruant of much working attend not to these in al counsel † But be continual with a holie man whomsoeuer thou shalt know to obserue the feare of God † whose soule is according to thine owne soule and who when thou shalt stumble in the darke wil be sorie for thee † And establish with thy self an hart of good counsel for there is none other thing more worth to thee then it † The soule of a holie man vttereth sometime true thinges more then seuen watchmen that sitte in a high place to watch † And in al these beseech the Highest that he direct thy way in truth † Before al workes let a true word goe before thee and stable counsel before euerie act † A wicked word shal change the hart out of which rise foure partes good and euil life and death and the tongue is a continual ruler of them There is a subtile man teacher of manie and to his owne soule he is vnprofitable † A cunning man hath taught manie and is swete to his owne soule † He that speaketh sophistically is odious in euerie thing he shal be defrauded † Grace is not geuen him of our Lord for he is defrauded of al wisdom † There is a wise man wise to his owne soule and the fruite of his vnderstanding is laudable † A wise man teacheth his people and the fruites of his vnderstanding are faithful † A wise man shal be filled with blessinges and they that see wil praise him † The life of a man is in the number of dayes but the dayes of Israel are innumerable † A wise man in the people shal inherite honour and his name shal liue for euer † Sonne in thy life proue thy soule if it be wicked geue it not power † for al thinges are not expedient for al and euerie kinde pleaseth not euerie soule † Be not greedie in al feasting and power not out thy self vpon al meate † for in manie meates there shal be infirmitie and greedines shal approch euen to choler † Because of surfet manie haue died but he that is abstinent shal adde life CHAP. XXXVIII God hath ordained corporal 9. and spiritual medicines 16. Vse moderate not excessiue sorow for the dead 26. Tradesmen and artificers are necessarie much more spiritual pastors HONOVR the phisition for necessitie for the Highest hath created him † For al medicine is of God it shal receiue gift of the king † The knowlege of the phisition shal exalt his head and in the sight of great men he shal be praised † The Highest hath created medicines of the earth and a wise man wil not abhorre them † Was not bitter water made sweete by wood † The vertue of these thinges is come to the knowlege of men and the Highest hath geuen knowlege to men for to be honoured in his meruelous thinges † Curing with these thinges he shal mitigate paine and the apothecarie shal make confections of swetenes and shal make ointments of health and his workes shal not be consummated † For the peace of God is vpon the face of the earth † Sonne in thine infirmitie contemne not thy self but pray our Lord and he wil cure thee † Turne away from sinne and direct thy handes and from al offence cleanse thy hart † Geue sweetenes and a memorial of fine floure and make a fat oblation and geue place to the phisition † For our Lord created him and let him not depart from thee because his workes be necessarie † For there is a time when thou maist fal into their handes † and they shal beseech our Lord that he direct their rest and healing for their conuersation † He that sinneth in his sight that made him shal fal into the handes of the phisition † Sonne vpon the dead shed teares and beginne to weepe as hauing suffered doleful thinges and according to iudgement couer his bodie and neglect not his burial † But for detraction beare bitterly the mourning of him one day and be comforted for the heauines † and make mourning according to his desert one day or two because of detraction † For by heauines death hasteneth and it couereth the strength and sorow of the hart boweth the necke † In abstraction sorow is permanent and the substance of the poore is according to his hart † Geue not thine hart into heauines but expel it from thee and remember the latter endes † and forget not for neither is there returne and him thou shalt profit nothing and thou shalt hurt thy self † Be mindful of my iudgement for thine also must be so to me yesterday and to thee to day † In the repose of the dead make the memorie of him to rest and comfort him in the departing of his spirit † The wisdom of a scribe in the time of vacance and he that is lesse in action shal receiue wisdom † With what wisdom shal he be replenished that holdeth the plough and glorieth in the goade driueth oxen with the prickle and conuerseth in their workes and his talke is in the breede of bulles † He wil geue his hart to turne vp furrowes and his watching in the feeding of kine † So euerie craftsman and workemaster that passeth the night as the day that maketh grauen seales and his continual diligence varieth the picture he wil geue his hart to the similitude of the picture and his watching wil perfect the worke † So the yronsmith sitting by the anuil and considering the worke of yron The vapour of the fire wil parche his flesh and he striueth in the heate of the fournace † The noyse of the hammer reneweth his eare and his eye is against the similitude of the vessel † He wil geue his hart to the finishing of the workes and his watching wil polish to perfection † So the potter sitting at his worke turning the wheele with his feete who is alwayes set in carefulnes for his worke and al his working is in number † With his arme he wil fashion the clay and before his feete he wil bend his strength † He wil geue his hart to finish the vernishing thereof and his watching wil make cleane the fournace † Al these haue hoped in their handes and euerie one is wise in his owne art † Without these a citie is not built † And
the tribes of Iacob † Blessed are they that saw thee and were honored in thy freindshipe † For we liue by life only but after death our name shal not be such † Elias was in dede hid in the whirlewind his spirit was complete in Eliseus in his daies he feared not the prince and no man ouercame him by might † Neither did any word ouercome him and his bodie prophecied being dead † In his life he did wonders and in death he wrought meruelous thinges † In al these thinges the people repented not and they departed not from their sinnes til they were cast out of their land and were dispersed into al the earth † And there was leaft a verie smal nation and a prince in the house of Dauid † Some of them did that which pleased God but others committed manie sinnes † Ezechias fenced his citie and brough in water into the middes thereof and digged a rocke with yron and built a wel for water † In his daies came vp Sennacherib and sent Rabsaces and lifted vp his hand against them and put forth his hand vpon Sion and became proude by his mightines † Then were their harts and hands moued and they were in sorow as trauailing wemen † And they inuocated our merciful Lord and spredding their handes they lifted them vp to heauen and the holie Lord God quickly heard their voice † He was not mindful of their sinnes neither did he geue them to their enemies but purged them by the hand of Isaie the holie prophete † He ouerthrew the campe of the Assirians and the Angel of our Lord destroyed them † For Ezechias did that which pleased God and went strongly in the way of Dauid his father which Isaie commanded him the great prophet and faithful in the sight of God † In his daies the sunne returned backward added life to the king † By a great spirite he saw the last thinges and comforted the mourners in Sion † For euer he shewed the thinges to come secret thinges before they came to passe ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XLVIII 10 VVho art vvritten Amongst other quarels Protestantes except against the authentical auctoritie of this booke because the auctor saith that Enoch and Elias shal come againe to appease the wrath of our Lord to reconcile the father to the sonne and to restore the tribes of Iacob But that this is no iust exception is clere by other holie Scriptures where the same vniforme doctrin of the whole Church is no lesse euident then in this booke For God himself saith the same also by the mouth of his prophet Malachie Behold I wil send you Elias the prophet before the day of our Lord come the great and dreadful Christ also sayth Elias in deede shal come and restore al thinges VVherupon S. Chrysostom after he hath shewed how terrible Antichrist shal be by reason of his temporal powre crueltie and wicked lawes he addeth Feare thou not He shal only haue force in the reprobate that perish For then also Elias shal come to fortifie the faithful Likewise the wordes in the Apocalips I wil geue to my two witnesses they shal prophecie a thousand two hundred and three score dayes were euer inuariably vnderstood by tradition from the first preachers of Christ as the ancient writer Aretas testifieth that Enoch and Elias shal come admonish al not to geue credite to the deceiptful wonders of Antichrist and that they shal trauel in this testimonie the space of three yeares and a half For 1260. dayes come very nere to that space of time CHAP. XLIX Praises of Iosias who like to Dauid and Ezechias tooke away occasions of idolatrie 8. Praises of Ieremie 10. Ezechiel 12. and the twelue Prophetes 13. Also of Zorobabel Iesus the sonne of Iosedech Nehemias Enoch Ioseph Seth Sem and Adam THE memorie of Iosias is according to the confection of perfume made by the worke of an apothecarie † His remembrance shal be sweete as honie in euerie mouth and as musick in banket of wine † He was directed by God into the repentance of the nation and he tooke away the abominations of impietie † And he gouerned his hart toward our Lord and in the daies of sinners he strengthened pietie † Except Dauid and Ezechias and Iosias al committed sinne † For the kinges of Iuda forsooke the law of the Highest and contemned the feare of God † For they gaue their kingdom to others and their glorie to a strange nation † They burnt the chosen citie of holines and made the waies thereof desolate in the hand of Ieremie † For they euil intreated him who was consecrated a prophet from his mothers wombe to ouerthrow and pluck vp and destroy and to build againe and renewe † Ezechiel who saw the sight of glorie which he shewed him in the chariote of Cherubs † For he made mention of the enemies in rayne to doe good vnto them that haue shewed right waies † And the bones of the twelue prophets wel may they spring out of their place for they haue strengthened Iacob and haue redeemed themselues in the fidelitie of power † How may we magnifie Zorobabel for he also was as a signet on the right hand † and so Iesus the sonne of Iosedec who in their daies built the house and erected the holie temple to our Lord prepared to euerlasting glorie † And Nehemias in the memorie of much time who erected vs our walles ouerthrowen and set vp the gates and lockes who built our houses † No man hath bene borne in the earth like to Henoch for he also was taken vp from the earth † Neither as Ioseph who was a man borne prince of his bretheren the stay of the nation the ruler of his bretheren the stay of the people † and his bones were visited and after death they prophecied † Seth and Sem obteyned glorie with men and aboue euerie soule in the beginning Adam CHAP. L. Praises of Simon the High Priest 27. Detestation of certaine persecuting aduersaries 29. With conclusion that the obseruers of this doctrine shal be wise and happie SIMON the sonne of Onias the high priest who in his life held vp the house and in his daies strengthned the temple † The height also of the temple was founded by him the duble building and high walles of the temple † In his daies the welles of waters flowed out and they were filled as the sea aboue measure † Who had care of his nation and deliuered it from perdition † Who preuailed to amplifie the citie who obteyned glorie in conuersing with the nation and amplified the entrance of the house and the court † As the morning starre in the middes of a cloude and as the ful moone he shineth in his dayes † And as the sunne shining so did he shine in the temple of God † As the rainbow that shineth among
that the Apostles and al the faithful of Christ vvere signed in their foreheades vvith the signe of THAV the last of the Hebrew letters bearing the forme of a Crosse the same saith he vvith the Greke letter TAV and our Latin T. VVho further both in that place and li de corona ●●luis li●de resurrect carnis testifieth the most frequent vse of this holie signe of the Crosse After him S Cyprian vvitnesseth the same in his time Epist ad Tybaritanos li. ad Dem●tr●anum li. 1. ca. 8. Testimoniorum aduers Iudaeos More especially li. 2. c. 22. proueth by this place amongst other holie Scriptures that in this signe of the Crosse is health to al that are signed therwith in the foreheades S. Chrysostom li. cont Gentiles Amongst other demonstrations sheweth by the honour and daylie vse of the Crosse that Christ is God because none but God could make a thing vvhich before vvas so execrable to be novv euery where so highly esteemed And in his Homilies 55. in Mat. 16. 84. in Ioan. 19. and other places vvitnesseth that in Baptisme in the most holie Eucharist in the Sacrament of holie Orders in al most excellent Mysteries the Ensigne of Victorie the signe of the Crosse is euer present vnto vs in al his discourse teaching to glorie not only in Christ crucified but also to honour the signe of the Crosse And that vvho soeuer despiseth the signe of the Crosse despiseth in deede Christ Crucified To omitte others S. Augustin recordeth li. 1. Confess c. 11. that himself vvhen he vvas a childe and dangerously sicke vvas by his mothers pious care signed vvith the signe of the Crosse li. de catechizandis rudibus c 20. teacheth that euerie one is to be signed in the forehead with the signe of the Crosse that al Christians are so signed Also Tract 118. in Ioan. VVhat is the signe of Christ saith he which al know but the Crosse of Christ which signe vnles it be adioyned as wel to the foreheades of them that beleue in Christ as to the vv●ter it selfe vvherevvith they are regenerate and to the chri●●●ne oyle vvherevvith they are anointed as also to the Sacrifice vvherevvith they are nourished none of these thinges is rightly performed Or vvil you haue him to speake more plainly or more generally Ser 101. de tempore VVith the signe of the Crosse saith he our Lords bodie is consecrated al thinges vvhatsoeuer are sanctified are consecrated vvith the inuocation of Christs name in this signe VVho pleaseth to see more testimonies of ancient Fathers may also reade S. Basil li. de Spiritu Sancto S. Cyril of Ierusalem Catechesi 4. 13. S. Ambrose Orat. ●unebri de obitu Theodosij S. Gregorie Epist 126. The apparition also of this signe to Constantin the great vvith this inscription IN HOC VINCES is most famous vvritten by Eusebius Caesariensis li. 1 c. 22 23. de vita Constantini and manie others The same signe also appeared in Ierusalem in the time of his sonne Constantius as S. Cyril of Ierusalem testifieth in his Epistle to the same Emperour And Nicephorus li. 10. c. 2. Hist Eccles vvriteth that the formes of Crosses fel vvith the devv vpon the garments of Iulian the Apostata and of his folovvers And manie other histories both ancient and moderne make mention of the like apparitions But aboue al others the most principal is to come The Signe of the Sonne of man as our B. Sauiour himself fortelleth vvhich shal appeare in the heauen at his coming to iudge the vvhole vvorld his most proper Ensigne the Crosse by vvhich he conquered the diuel sinne death and al enimies of God and men So al ancient Fathers vndoubtedly vnderstand his prediction Mat. 24. Then vvil this signe appeare to the great confusion of al vnsigned miscreants vvith other vvicked enimies of the Crosse and Crucifix For then shal al the vvorld both men and Angels see vvhat infinite charitie our most blessed Redeemer hath vsed for mans saluation and hovv iustly those that either doe not beleue or not regard his so vnspeakable mercie shal be adiudged to euerlasting damnation in the pitie and fire of hel And on the other side al those that are rightly signed in their foreheades and haue accordingly performed that which in Baptisme they promised shal mete this sauing Ensigne vvith incomparable comforth ●oy and gladnes vvho coming clothed ●n vvhite robes vvith palmes of victorie in their handes shal then receiue glorious crovvnes in eternal life CHAP. X. Destruction of the citie is againe signified by apparence of fire sprinkled therin 9. with description of Cherubims foure wheeles and of the foure liuing creatures AND I saw and behold in the firmament that was ouer the head of the Cherubs as it were the sapphire stone as it were the forme of the similitude of a throne appeared ouer them † And he spake to the man that was clothed with the linnen garments and sayd Goe in the middes of the wheeles that are vnder the Cherubs and fil thy hand with the coles of fyre that are betwen the Cherubs powre them out vpon the citie And he went in in my sight † and the Cherubs stood on the right hand of the house when the man went in and a cloude filled the inner court † And the glorie of our Lord was lifted vp from aboue the Cherub to the threshold of the house and the house was replenished with the cloude and the court was replenished with the brightnes of the glorie of our Lord. † And the sound of the winges of the Cherubs was heard euen to the vtter court as it were the voice of God almightie speaking † And when he had commanded the man that was clothed with the linnen garments saying Take fyre from the middes of the wheeles that are betwen the Cherubs he being gone in stood beside the wheele † And a Cherub streched out his hand from the middes of the Cherubs to the fyre that was betwen the Cherubs and he tooke gaue into his handes that was clothed with the linnen garments who taking it went forth † And there appeared in the Cherubs the similitude of a mans hand vnder their winges † And I saw and behold foure wheeles by the Cherubs one wheele by one Cherub and another wheele by one Cherub and the forme of the wheeles was as it were the resemblance of the stone Chrysolithus † and their resemblance one similitude to the foure as it were a wheele in the middes of a wheele † And when they walked they went into foure partes and they returned not walking but to the place wherunto that which was first declined the rest also folowed neither did they turne † And al their bodie and neckes and handes and winges and the circles were ful of eyes in the circuite of the foure wheeles † And these wheeles he called voluble my self hearing it † And one had foure
take it † Then shal the spirit be changed and he shal passe fal this is his strength of his God † Why wast thou not from the beginning ô Lord my God my holie one we shal not dye Lord thou hast appoynted him for iudgement and strong to chastise thou hast founded him † Thine eyes are cleane from seing euil thou canst not looke toward iniquitie Why lookest thou not vpon them that doe vniust thinges holdest thy peace when the impious deuoureth him that is more iust then him self † And thou wilt make men as the fishes of the sea as the creeping beast not hauing a prince † He lifted vp al in the hooke he drew it in his traine and gathered it into his nette vpon this he wil be glad and reioyce † Therfore wil he immolate to his trayne and he wil sacrifice do his nette because by them his portion is fatte and his meate chosen † For this cause therfore spreddeth he his trayne and alwayes to kil the nations he wil not spare CHAP. II. The captiuitie of the two tribes their relaxation Christ wil assuredly come though not quickly 5. Their afflicters the Chaldees shal be destroyed 18. and al other idolaters I WIL stand vpon my watch and fixe my steppe vpon the munition and I wil behold to see what may be sayd to me and what I may answer to him that rebuketh me † And our Lord answered me sayd Write the vision make it playne vpon tables that he which runneth may read it ouer † Because as yet the vision is far and it shal appeare at the end and shal not lye if he shal make tariance expect him because coming he wil come he wil not slacke † Behold he that is incredulous his soule shal not be right in him self but the iust shal liue in his faith † And as wine deceiueth him that drinketh so shal the prowd man be and he shal not be beautified who as it were hel hath dilated his soule and himself as death and he is not filled and he hath gathered together vnto him al nations and hath heaped together vnto him al peoples † Why shal not al these take vp a parable vpon him and a speach of obscure sayings of him and it be sayd Wo to him that multiplieth thinges not his owne how long also doth he agrauat against himself thicke clay † Why shal they not rise sodenly that shal bite thee and they that teare thee be raysed vp and thou be for a spoile to them † Because thou hast spoiled manie nations al that shal be left of the peoples shal spoile thee for the bloud of man and the iniquitie of the land of the citie and of al that dwel therein † Wo to him that gathereth together naughtie auarice to his house that his nest may be on high and thinketh he is deliuered out of the hand of euil † Thou hast thought confusion to thy house thou hast cut in sunder manie peoples and thy soule hath sinned † Because the stone out of the wal shal crie and the timber that is betwen the iunctures of the buildings shal answer † Wo to him that buildeth a citie in blouds and prepareth a citie in iniquitie † Why are not these thinges from the Lord of hosts For the peoples shal labour in much fire and the nations in vaine and they shal faynt † Because the earth shal be replenished that they may know the glorie of our Lord as waters couering the sea † Wo to him that geueth drinke to his freind putting in his gal and making drunke that he may behold his nakednes † Thou art filled with ignominie for glorie drinke thou also and be fast a sleepe the cuppe of the right hand of our Lord shal compasse thee and the vomite of ignominte vpon thy glorie † Because the iniquitie of Libanus shal couer thee and the wasting of the beasts shal terrifie them for the blouds of men and the iniquitie of the land and of the citie and of al that dwel therein † What profiteth the thing engrauen that the forger therof hath grauen it a molten and a false image because the forger therof hath hoped in his forgerie to make dumme idols † Wo vnto him that sayth to wood Awake Arise to the dumme stone Why can it teach Behold this same is couered with gold and siluer and there is no spirit in the bowels therof † But our Lord is in his holie temple let al the earth be silent at his presence CHAP. III. 1. The prayer of Habacuc the prophet for ignorances LORD I heard thy hearing and was afrayd Lord thy worke in the middes of yeares quicken it In the middes of yeares shalt thou make it knowen when thou art angrie thou wilt remember mercie † God wil come from the South and the holie one from mount Pharan His glorie shal couer the heauens and the earth is ful of his prayse † His brightnes shal be as the light hornes in his handes There is his strength hid † Before his face shal death goe and the deuil shal goe forth before his feete † He stood and measured the earth he beheld and dissolued the Gentils and the mountaines of the world were broken The hilles of the world were bowed by the wayes of his eternitie † For iniquitie I saw the tents of Aethiopia the skinnes of the land of Madian shal be trubled † Why wast thou angrie with the riuers ô Lord or was thy furie in the riuers or thine indignation in the sea Who wilt mount vpon thy horses and thy chariots saluation † Raysing thou wilt rayse vp thy bow the othe to the tribes which thou hast spoken Thou wilt curte the riuers of the earth † The mountaines saw thee and were sorie the gulfe of water passed The depth gaue his voice the height lifted vp his handes † The sunne and the moone stood in their habitation in the light of thine arrowes they shal goe in the brightnes of thy glittering speare † In freating thou wilt treade downe the earth in furie thou wilt astonish the Gentils † Thou wentst forth the saluation of thy people saluation with thy Christ Thou strokest the head out of the house of the impious thou hast discouered the fundation euen to the neck † Thou hast cursed his scepters the head of his warriers them that come as a whirlewinde to disperse me Their exultation as his that deuoureth the poore in secrete † Thou madest a way in the sea for thy horses in the middes of manie waters † I heard and my bellie was trubled at the voice my lippes trembled let rottenes enter in my bones swarme vnder me That I may rest in the day of tribulation that I may ascend to our girded people † For the figtree shal not florish and there shal be no spring
length he may punish vs. † For which cause he neuer certes remoueth away his mercie from vs but chastening his people by aduersitie he forsaketh them not † But let these thinges be sayd of vs in few wordes for an admonition of the readers And now we must come to the storie † Therfore Eleazarus one of the chief of the Scribes a man striken in age and comely of countenance with open mouth gaping was compelled to eate swines flesh † But he embracing rather a most glorious death then an hateful life went before voluntarily to the punishment † And considering how he ought to come patiently susteyning he determined not to committe vnalwful thinges for loue of life † But they that stood by moued with vnlawful pitie for the old frendshipe of the man taking him in secrete desired that flesh might be brought which it was lawful for him to eate that he might feyne to haue eaten as the king had commanded of the flesh of the sacrifice † that by this fact he might be deliuered from death and for the old freindshipe of the man they did him this courtesie † But he begane to thinke vpon the worthie preeminence of his age and ancientnes and the houre heares of natural nobilitie his doinges from a childe of very good conuersation and according to the ordinances and the holie law made of God he answered quickly saying that he would rather be sent vnto hel † For it is not meete quoth he for our age to feyne that manie young men thinking that Eleazarus of foure score yeare tenne is passed to the life of Aliens † they also through my dissimulation and for a litle time of corruptible life may be deceiued and hereby I may purchase a stayne and a curse to mine old age † For although at this present time I be deliuered from the punishments of men yet neither aliue nor dead shal I escape the hand of the Almightie † Wherfore in departing manfully out of this life I shal appeare worthie of mine old age † and to yong men I shal leaue a constant example if with readie mind and stoutly I suffer an honest death for the most graue and most holie lawes These thinges being spoken forthwith he was drawen to execution † And they that led him and had bene a litle before more milde were turned into wrath for the wordes spoken of him which they thought were vttered through arrogancie † But when he was now in killing with the strokes he groned and sayd O Lord which hast the holie knowlege thou knowest manifestly that wheras I might be deliuered from death I doe susteyne sore paines of the bodie but according to the soule for thy feare I doe willingly suffer these thinges † And this man certes in this maner departed this life leauing not only to yong men but also to the whole nation the memorie of his death for an example of vertue and fortitude CHAP. VII The noble Martyrdome of seuen refusing to eate swines flesh and boldly admonishing king Antiochus of his damnable state 41. Lastly the mother hauing encoreged her sonnes likewise dyeth gloriously AND it came to passe that seuen brethren together with their mother being apprehended to be compelled by the king to eate against the law swines flesh were tormented with whippes and scourges † But one of them which was the first sayd thus What seekest thou and what wilt thou lerne of vs we are readie to dye rather then to transgresse the lawes of God coming from our fathers † The king therfore being wrath commanded frying pannes and brasen pottes to be heated † the which forth with being heated he commanded his tongue that had spoken first to be cut out and the skinne of his head being drawen of the endes also of his handes and feete to be chopped of the rest of his bretheren and his mother looking on † And when he was now made in al partes vnprofitable he commanded fire to be put vnto him and that breathing as yet he should be fried in the frying panne wherin when he was long tormented the rest together with the mother exhorted one an other to dye manfully † saying Our Lord God wil behold the truth and wil take pleasure in vs as Moyses declared in the profession of the Canticle And in his seruants he wil take pleasure † That first therfore being dead in this maner they brought the next to make him a mocking stocke the skinne of his head with the heares being drawen of they asked if he would eare before that he were punished throughout the whole bodie in euerie member † But he answering in his countrie speach said I wil not doe it Wherfore this also in the next place receiued the torments of the first † and being at the verie last gaspe thus he said Thou in dede ô most wicked man in this present life destroyest vs but the king of the world wil raise vs vp which dye for his lawes in the resurrection of eternal life † After him the third is had in derision and being demanded his tongue he quickly put it forth and constantly stretched out his handes † and with confidence he said From heauen doe I possesse these but for the lawes of God now doe I contemne these selfe same because I hope that I shal receiue them againe of him † So that the king and they that were with him merueled at the yong mans courege because he estemed the torments as nothing † And this being thus dead the fourth they vexed in like maner tormenting him † And when he was now euen to dye thus he said It is better for them that are put to death by men to exspect hope of God that they shal be raysed vp againe by him For to thee there shal not be resurrection vnto life † And when they had brought the fifth they tormented him But he looking vpon him † sayd Thou hauing power among men wheras thou art corruptible doest what thou wilt but thinke not that our stock is forsaken of God † And doe thou patiently abide and thou shalt see his great power in what sort he wil torment thee and thy seede † After him they brought the sixth and he beginning to dye sayd thus Be not deceiued vainely for we suffer this for our owne sakes sinning against our God and thinges worthie of admiration are done in vs † but doe not thinke that thou shalt escape vnpunished for that thou hast attempted to fight against God † But the mother aboue measure meruelous and worthie of good mens memorie which beholding her seuen sonnes perishing in one dayes space bare it with a good hart for the hope that she had in God † exhorted euerie one of them in their countrie language manfully being replenished with wisedome and ioyning a mans hart to a womans cogitation † she sayd to them I know not how you appeared in my wombe for neither did I
that with sorowes haue kept thy testimonies † Neither thinke thou of them that in thy sight haue conuerst falsly but remember them that according to thy wil haue knowen thy feare † Neither be thou willing to destroy thē that haue had the maners of beastes but respect them that haue taught thy law gloriously † Neither haue indignation towards them which are iudged worse then beastes but loue them that alwayes haue confidence in thy iustice and glorie † Because we and our fathers languish with such diseases but thou for sinners shalt be called merciful † For if thou shalt be desirous to haue mercie on vs then thou shalt be called merciful to vs hauing no workes of iustice † For the iust which haue manie workes layd vp of their owne workes shal receiue reward † For what is man that thou art angrie with him or the corruptible kinde that thou art so bitter touching it † For in truth there is no man of them that be borne which hath not done impiously and of them that confesse which haue not sinned † For in this shal thy iustice be declared and thy goodnes ô Lord when thou shalt haue mercie on them that haue no substance of good workes † And he answered me and sayd Thou hast spoken somethinges rightly and according to thy wordes so also shal it be done † because I wil not in dede thinke vpon the worke of them that haue sinned before death before the iudgement before perdition † but I wil reioyce vpon the creature of the iust and I wil remember their pilgrimage also and saluation and receiuing of reward † Therfore as I haue spoken so also it is † For as the husbandman soweth vpon the ground manie seedes and planteth manie plantes but not al which were sowen in time are preserued nor yet al that were planted shal take roote so they also that are sowen in the world shal not al be saued † And I answered and sayd If I haue found grace let me speake † As the seede of the husbandman if it come not vp or receiue not the rayne in time if it be corupted with much rayne perisheth † so likewise also man who made with thy handes and thou named his image because thou art likened to him for whom thou hast made al thinges and hast likened him to the seede of the husbandman † Be not angrie vpon vs but spare thy people and haue mercie on thy inheritance And thou hast mercie on thy creature † And he answered me and sayd The thinges that are present to them that are present and that shal be to them that shal be † For thou lackest much to be able to loue my creature aboue me and to thee often times euen to thyselfe I haue approched but to the vniust neuer † But in this also thou art meruelous before the Highest † because thou hast humbled thyself as becometh thee hast not iudged thyself that among the iust thou maist be very much glorified † For which cause manie miseries and miserable thinges shal be done to them that inhabite the world in the later dayes because they haue walked in much pride † But thou for thyselfe vnderstand for them that are like vnto thee seeke glorie † For to you paradise is open the tree of life is planted time to come is prepared abundance is prepared a citie is builded rest is approued goodnes is perfited perfit wisdome † The roote of euil is signed from you infirmitie and mothe is hid from you corruption is fled into hel in obliuion † Sorowes are past the treasure of immortalitie is shewed in the end † Adde not therfore inquiring of the multitude of them that perish † For they also receiuing libertie haue despised the Highest and contemned his lawe and forsaken his wayes † Yea and moreouer they haue troden downe his iust ones † and haue sayd in their hart that there is no God and that knowing that they dye † For as the thinges aforesayd shal receiue you so thirst and torment which are prepared shal take them for he would not man to be destroyed † But they them selues also which a●e created haue de●yled his name which made them haue bene vnkinde to him that prepared life † Wherfore my iudgement now approcheth † Which thinges I haue not shewed to al but to thee to few like vnto thee And I answered and sayd † Behold now Lord thou hast shewed me a multitude of signes which thou wilt beginne to doe in the latter times but thou hast not shewed me at what time CHAP. IX Certaine signes shal goe before the day of iudgement 14. More shal perish then be saued 25. Prayer with other good workes are meanes to saluation AND he answered me and sayd Measuring measure thou the time in it selfe and it shal be when thou seest after a certaine part of the signes which are spoken of before shal passe † then shalt thou vnderstand that the same is the time wherin the Highest wil beginne to visite the world that was made by him † And when there shal be sene in the world mouing of places and truble of peoples † then shalt thou vnderstand that of these spake the Highest from the dayes that were before thee from the beginning † For as al that is made in the world hath a beginning and also a consummation and the consummation is manifest † so also the times of the Highest haue the beginning manifest in wonders and powers and the consummations in worke and in signes † And it shal be euery one that shal be saued and that can escape by his workes and by fayth in which you haue beleeued † shal be leaft out of the foresayd dangers and shal see my saluation in my land and in my costes because I haue sanctified my ●elfe from the world † And then shal they be in miserie that now haue abused my wayes and they that haue reiected them in contempt shal abide in torments † For they that knew not me hauing obtained benefits when they liued † and they that loathed my law when they yet had libertie † and when as yet place of penance was open to them vnderstoode not but despised they must after death in torment know it † Thou therfore be not yet curious how the impious shal be tormented but inquire how the iust shal be saued and whose the world is and for whom the world is and when † And I answered and sayd † I haue spoken hertofore and now I say and hereafter wil say that they are moe which perish then that shal be saued † as a floud is multiplied aboue more then a droppe † And he ansvvered me and sayd Like as the field so also the sedes and as the flovvers such also the colours and as the workeman such also the worke and such as the husbandman such is the husbandrie because it was the time of the world † And
† My righthand shal not spare sinners neither shal the sword cease vpon them that shede innocent bloud vpon the earth † Fire came forth from his wrath and hath deuoured the fundations of the earth and sinners as it were straw set on fire † Woe to them that sinne and obserue not my comandmentes sayth our Lord. † I wil not spare them depart ô children from the powre Defile not my sanctification † because the Lord knoweth al that sinne against him therefore hath he deliuered them into death and into slaughter † For now are euils come vpon the world and you shal tarrie in them For God wil not deliuer you because you haue sinned against him † Behold an horrible vision and the face of it from the east † And the nations of dragons of Arabians shal come forth in manie chariots as a winde the number of them is caried vpon the earth so that now al doe feare and tremble that shal heare them † the Carmonians madde for anger and they shal goe forth as wild boares out of the wood they shal come with great power and shal stand in fight with them they shal waste the portion of the land of the Assirians † And after these thinges the dragons shal preuaile mindful of their natiuitie and conspiring shal turne themselues in great force to pursue them † These shal be trubled and hold their peace at their force and shal turne their fete into flight † And from the territorie of the Assirians the besiegers shal beseige them and shal consume one of them and there shal be feare and trembling in their armie and contention against their kinges † Behold cloudes from the east and from the north vnto the south and their face very horrible ful of wrath and storme † And they shal beate one against an other and they shal beate downe manie starres and their starre vpon the earth and bloud shal be from the sword vnto the bellie † And mans dung vnto the camels litter and there shal be much feare and trembling vpon the earth † And they shal shake that shal see that wrath and tremble shal take them and after these thinges there shal manie showers be moued † from the south and the north and an other portion from the weast † And the windes from the east shal preuaile vpon it and shal shut it vp and the cloudes which he raised in wrath and the starre to make terrour to the east winde and the west shal be destroyed † And there shal be exalted great and mightie cloudes ful of wrath and a starre to terrifie al the earth and the inhabitantes therof and they shal powre in vpon euerie high and eminent place a terrible starre † fire and haile and flying swordes and manie waters so that al fildes also shal be filled and al riuers with the fulnes of manie waters † And they shal throw downe cities and walles and mountaines and hilles and the trees of the woodes and the grasse of the medowes and their corne † And they shal passe constant vnto Babylon and shal raise her † They shal come together against her and shal compasse her and shal power out the starre and al wrath vpon her and the dust and smoke shal goe vp euen into heauen and round about shal lament her † And they that shal remaine vnder her shal serue them that terified her † And thou Asia agreeing into the hope of Babylon and the glorie of her person † woe be to thee thou wretch because thou art like to her and hast adorned thy daughters in fornication to please glorie in thy louers which haue desired alwayes to fornicate with thee † Thou hast imitated the odious in al her workes and in her inuentions therefore sayth God † I wil send in euils vpon thee widow hood pouertie and famine and sword and pestilence to destroy thy houses by violation and death and glorie of thy vertue † As a flower shal be withered when the heate shal rise that is sent forth vpon thee † thou shalt be weakned as a litle poore soule plaged and chastised of wemen that the mightie and the louers may not receiue thee † Wil I be zealous against thee sayth our Lord † vnles thou hadst slayne myne elect at al times exalting the slaughter of the handes and saying vpon their death when thou wast drunken † Adorne the beautie of thy countenance † The reward of thy fornication is in thy bosome therefore thou shalt receiue recompence † As thou shalt doe to my elect sayth our Lord so shal God do to thee and shal deliuer thee vnto euil † And thy children shal dye for famine and thou shalt fal by the sword and thy cities shal be destroyed al thyne shal fal in the filde by the sword † And they that are in the mountaines shal perish with famine and shal eate their owne flesh drinke kloud for the famine of bread and thirst of waters † Vnhappie by the seas shalt thou come and againe thou shalt receuie euils † And in the passage they shal beate against the idle citie and shal destroy some portion of thy land and shal deface part of thy glorie againe returning to Babylon ouerthrowen † And being throwen downe thou shalt be to them for stubble and they shal be to thee fire † and deuoure thee and thy cities thy land and thy mountaynes al thy woodes and fruitful trees they wil burne with fire † Thy children they shal lead captiue shal haue thy goodes for a praye and the glorie of thy face they shal destroy CHAP. XVI Al are admonished that extreme calamities shal fal vpon this world 36. the penitent returning to iustice shal escape 55. as al thinges were made by Gods omnipotent powre at his wil so al thinges shal serue to the reward of the blessed and punishment of the wicked VVOE to thee Babylon Asia woe to thee Aegypt and Syria † Gird yourselues with sackclothes and shirtes of heare mourne for your children be sorie because your destruction is at hand † The sword is sent in vpon you and who is he that can turne it away † Fire is sent in vpon you and who is he that can quench it † Euiles are sent in vpon you and who is he that can repel them † Shal anie man repel the lion being hungrie in the woode or quench the fire in stubble forthwith when it beginneth to burne † Shal anie man repel the arrow shot of a strong archer † Our strong Lord sendeth in euiles and who is he that can repel them † Fire came forth from his wrath and who is he that can quench it † He wil lighten who shal not feare he wil thunder and who shal not be afrayde † Our Lord wil threaten and who shal not vtterly be destroyed before his face † The earth hath trembled and the fundations thereof the sea tosseth vp waues from the
of you by violence shal make the slaine to be meate for idols † And they that shal consent vnto them shal be to them in derision and in reproch and in conculcation † For there shal be place against places and against the next cities great insurrection vpon them that feare our Lord. † They shal be as it were madde sparing no bodie to spoyle and waste yet them that feare our Lord. † because they shal waste and spoyle the goodes and shal cast them out of their houses † Then shal appeare the probation of mine elect as gold that is proued by the fire † Heare my beloued sayth our Lord Behold the dayes of tribulation are come and out of them I wil deliuer you † Doe not feare nor stagger because God is your guide † And he that kepeth my commandmentes and precepts sayth our Lord God Let not your sinnes ouerway you nor your inquities be aduanced ouer you † Woe to them that are entangled with their sinnes and are couered with their iniquities as a filde is entangled with the wood the path therof couered with thornes by which no man passeth it is closed out cast to be deuoured of the fire FINIS A table of the Epistles taken forth of the old Testament vpon certayne festiual dayes The other feastes and al the sundayes haue their Epistles in the new Testament As is there noted In the feast of our Blessed Ladies Conception Prou. 8 v. 22 to the v. 36 S. Iohn Euangelist Eccli 15. v. 1. to v. 7. The Epiphanie Isaioe 60. v. 1. to v. 7. Candlemasse day Malach 3. v. 1. to v. 5. S. Thomas Aquinas Sap. 7. v. 7. to v. 15. The Annunciation of our B. Ladie Isaioe 7. v. 11. to v. 16. S. Marke Ezechiel 1. v. 5. to v. 14. S. Philippe and S. Iames. Sap. 5. v. 1. to v. 6. S Iohn ante portam Latinam the same The Natiuitie of S. Iohn Baptist Isa 49. v. 1. to v. 6. v. 23. Visitation of our B. Ladie Cant. 2. v. 8. to v. 15. The octaue of S. Peter and S. Paul Eccli 44. v. 10. to v. 16. S. Marie Magdalen Cant. 3. v. 2. to 6. ca. 8. v. 6. to 8. S. Anne Prouerb 31. v. 10. to the end of the chap. The Assumption of our B. Ladie Eccli 24. v. 11. to 21. Decollation of S. Iohn Baptist Iere. 1. v. 17. to the end The Natiuitie of our B. Ladie Prouerb 8. v. 22. to 36. S. Mathew Ezech. 1. v. 10. to 15. S. Martin Eccli 44. v. 25. ca. 45. v. 1. to v. 9. S. Cecilie Eccli 51. v. 13. to 18. S. Catherin Eccli 51. v. 1. to 13. In the Anniuersarie of the dead 2. Mach. 12. v. 42. to the end of the chapter Deo Gratias AN HISTORICAL TABLE OF THE TIMES SPECIAL PERSONS MOST NOT ABLE THINGES AND CANONICAL BOOKES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT Anni mundi Pattiarches Especial pointes of the sacred historie of Gods Church euer visible Schismes and infidelitie Canonical Scriptures a The first yeare first weeke Adam the first man of whom al mankind is propagated a Creation of heauen and earth and al thinges therin in six dayes Gen. 1. Man last created was made lord of al corporal creatures of this lower world placed in paradise Gen. 2. For transgressing Gods cōmandment Adam and Eue were cast out of paradise But by Gods grace repenting had promise of a Redemer Gen. 3.   Genesis conteyneth the historie of the visible Church from the beginning of the world to the death of Ioseph in the yeare of the world 2340. b 130. Seth borne Cain the first borne became a husbandman Abel next borne a shepheard Gen. 4. God respecting Abels sacrifice and not Cains Cain killed Abel Gen. 4.     c. 235. Enos borne Seths children and other faythful were called the sonnes of God to distinguish the true Church from the wicked citie begune by Cain Gen. 6. Cain wentforth from the face of our Lord begane a new city opposite to the Citie of God   d. 325. Cainan In the dayes of Enos begane publique prayers of manie assembling together besides Sacrifice which was before Gen. 4. v. 26. Gen. 4. v. 16. His generations in the right line to Lamech who slew him are these without notice of time when they were borne or dyed Enoch Irad Mauiael Mathusael Lamech Gen. 4. v. 17.   e 395. Malaleel       f 460. Iared       g 622. Enoch Mathusala Lamech Enoch a Prophet pleased God in al his wayes None borne in the earth like to Enoch Eccli 49. v. 16. Some declining from God and marchīg in mariage with Cains race begate those monstruous men huge of stature most wicked cruel called giantes   h 687. Noe bor k Adam dyed at the age of 930. yeares Gen. 5. v. 5. To whom Seth succeded chief Patriarch And so in the rest Gen. 6. v. 4.   i 874. Sem bor And the next two yeares Cham Iaphet l Enoch in the yeare of his age 365. was sene no more because God tooke him Gen. 5. v. 24. Enoch was translated that he should not see death Heb. 11. v. 5.     k 930.   m Seth dyed in the yeare of his age 912.     l 987.   o Enos dyed anno aetatis 905.     m 1042.   p Cainan dyed an aet 980.     n 1056.   q Malaleel dyed an aet 895.     o 1140.   r Iared dyed an aet 962.     p 1265.   s Noe the preacher of iustice forewarned al men that except they repented God would destroy them with a floud And by Gods commandement built an Arke or shippe wherin himself his familie with other liuing creatures were preserued from drowning     q 1290.   v Lamech dyed before his father in the yeare of his age 777.     r 1422.   w Mathusala dyed an aet 969. immediatly before the floud as semeth most probable     s 1536.         t 1556.         v 1651.         w 1656         x 1656.   x The same yeare of the world 1656. the 17. day of the second moneth Noe with his three sonnes his wife and their wiues in al eight persons and seuen payres of euerie kinde of cleane liuing creatures and two payres of vncleane entered into the Arke And presently it rayned fourtie dayes and nightes together Wherby al liuing creatures on the earth out of the arke were drowned Gen. 7. Al Cains race with other wicked infideles were vtterly destroyed by the flould Gen. 7.   THE END OF THE FIRST AGE AND BEGINNING OF THE SECOND y 1658. Arphaxad borne the sonne of Sem. The whole earth being couered with water Noe with his familie and other liuing creatures remained in the arke twelue monethes and ten dayes a iust yeare of the sunne then coming forth built an altar and offered
in the space of nere 300. yeares     l 2564.     l Othoniel the first Iudge of the tribe of Iuda deliuered the Israelites from molestation of the king of Syria He gouerned comprehending also the intermission fourtie yeares Iudic. 3. v. 11. Neither did it suffice their phancies to cōmend themselues and their goodes to the protection of few goddes but diuers thinges yea and the same thinges according to diuers state to diuers goddes and goddesses As S. Augustin noteth li. 4. c. 8. de ciuit that they thought it not sufficient to cōmend their landes possessions to one god or goddesse but the fieldes to one moūtaines to an other little hilles to an other valleys or medowes to an other Likewise their corne not al to one but the sede newly sowne to one beginning to brewerd to an other when it riseth beginneth to haue knottes to an other when it bladeth to an other when the eare springeth to an other when it is ripe readie to be reaped to an other And so without end more and more vaine goddes were imagined by the diuels suggestion The booke of Iudges sheweth the state of the people of God the space of nere three hundred yeares after the death of Iosue when they had sometimes temporal gouerners of diuers tribes some times none m 2588.     m Aod of the tribe of Beniamin the second Iudge killed Eglon king of Moab and so deliuered Israel and slew tenne thousand Moabites Iud. 3. v. 20. 29.           n Samgar a husbandman the third Iudge killing six hundred Philisthimes with the culter of a plough defended Israel Iudic. 3. v. 31. He with Aod and the times wanting iudges gouerned seuentie fiue yeares     o 2663.     o Barach by direction of Debora a prophetesse fighting against Sisara chiefe captaine of Iabin king of Asor Iahil a stout woman slew the same captaine striking a naile in his head Iud. 4. They gouerned 38. yeares       Abisue Salmon p Gedeon confirmed by miracles that he was sent of God ouertherw the Madianites and deliuered Israel gouerning fourtie yeares Iudic. 6. 7. 8.     p 2701.     q Abimelech the base sonne of Gedeon vniustly vsurping auctoritie killed his seuenty bretheren one only escaping but within three yeares was hated of his folowers and slaine by a woman Iud 9.     q 2741.     r Thola defended the countrie from inuasion of enimies three yeares Iud. 10.     r 2744.     s Iair a potent noble man defended the people twentie two yeares Iud. 10. v. 3.     s 2767. Bocci   t Iepte first reiected but afterwards intreated by the ancientes of the people fought for them and ouerthrew the enemies And vpon an vndiscrete vow offered his daughter in sacrifice Iud. 11.     t 2789.   Booz     who so deluding men brought them to eternal ruine       v He killed in ciuil warre fourtie two thousand Ephraimites and gouerned six yeares Iud. 12.     w 2795.     w Abesan a fortunate good man ruled in peace seuen yeares Iudic. 12. v. 9. About this time Booz of the tribe of Iuda maried Ruth a Moabite by whom the right line of Iudas descended by Phares to Dauid Ruth 4. v. 18. c. The people in this time of peace fel againe to idolatrie For which God suffered the Philistimes to afflict them Iud. 13. The tribe of Dan set vp idolatrie Iud. 18.   x 2802.     x Ahialon gouerned likewise in peace tenne yeares Iud. 12. v. 11. A hainous crime being committed in the tribe of Beniamin and not punished the other Israelites made battle against them being themselues also great sinners lost manie men in two conflictes but in the third the tribe of Beniamin was almost destroyed Iud. 19. v. 20. The booke of Ruth amongst other mysteries sheweth the genealogie of Dauid of whose sede Christ was borne y 2812.   Obed. y Abdon an other nobleman gouerned eight yeares Iud. 12. v. 13.     z 2820. Ozi   z Samson from his birth a Nazareite of admirable streingth did manie heroical actes killed manie Philistimes in his life more by his owne death He gouerned twentie yeares Iud. 13. v. 5. c. ch 16. v. 31.     a 2840. Hei otherwise Zaraias   a Heli of the stocke of Aaron by the line of Ithamar was High priest and gouerned Israel fourtie yeares 1. Reg. 4. v. 18.         Isai or Iesse b Samuel whose mother being long barren had presented him an infant in the temple according to her vow was a Nazareire and a prophet from a child 1.   The foure bookes of kings shew the state of the Church from the b 2880.         first kinges of Gods people to their captiuitie And the two bookes of Paralipomenon do repete briefly some thinges written before partly adde thinges omitted in other bookes   Maraioth Dauid b. Reg. 1. 3. And after the death of Heli gouerned the people of Israel before Saul twentie yeares And with him twentie yeares more About the yeare of the world 2830. Troy was taken and destroyed by the Grecians In which battel were Agamemnon Vlisses Achilles Nestor many others not in dede so renowmed for anie vertues or factes of their owne as Homer Horace Vi●gil Onid others by poetical libertie flatterie sette them forth But most follie appeareth in that the citie of Rome was afterwards commended to those goddes which were taken in Troy not able to defend them selues from inuasion and spoile S. Aug. li. 1. c. 3. ciuit The psalmes written by Dauid a summarie of al holie Scriptures c 2900. Achimelech or Amarias Dauid king c By the importunitie of the people to haue a king God appointed Samuel to annoint Saul 1. Reg. 10. who at first gouerned wel but afterwards declining from God was deposed Dauid annointed by the same prophet Samuel 1. Reg. 16. Yet Saul was not actually depriued of the scepter so long as he liued 1. Reg. 31.     d 2920. Abiathar or Achitob Salomon d Dauid king prophet●● led his kingdom as a right parterne of al good kinges made the booke of Psalmes ful of al diuine knowlege prepared meanes for building the temple ordained diuers sortes of musitians and reigned fourtie yeares 2. Reg. totus 2. Par. 23 c.     e 2960. Sadoc   e Salomon excelling in wisdom prospered in this world 3. Reg. 3. c.     f 2964.     f He built the temple and adorned the same with al excellent furniture requisite for Gods seruice disposing al in order as Dauid had ordained     THE END OF THE FOVRTH AGE THE BEGINNING OF THE FIFTH AGE Annimūdi High-priests kinges of luda The sacred Historie Schismes and infidelitie Scriptures g 2972.     g The temple being finished in seuen yeares was
made S. Peter the rocke therof b. 5. 77. Rodde of Aaron brought forth buddes flowers and fruict a 359. Rome begane to be built about the yeare of the world 3. 71. b. 1089. Romane Monarchie was greater then the former b 792. 1003. Ruth a Moabite prefigured the vocation of Gentiles a 564. She was very commendable for her vertues a 569. A comforte to the Gentiles in that Christ descended from her b 473. S Sabbath daie that is our saturdaie instituted a 7. 216. 250. 307. 430. 756. b 947. Sackcloth worne for penance a 774. 802. 977. 1021. 1042. 1080. b 501. 795. 824. 838. Sacramentes of Circumcision a 65. of hostes for sinne 267. of consecrating Priests 275. of diuers washinges and purifications 288. and manie others in the old Law More in number lesse in effect then the Sacramentes of Christ a 705. Sacramentes of the New law for most part were prefigured in the old Testament a 199. 32. 705. Sacrament of the Eucharist was prefigured a 150. 188. 210. Sacrifice is due to God only as Lord of al creatures a 5. 31. 47. 198. 262. b 424. 842. 993. And to no creature how excellent soeuer a. 15. 219. 528. 705. Sacrifice is the proper office of a Priest a 57. Three kindes of Sacrifices a 262. Sacrifice ordained for three causes a 264. b 581. Diuers for diuers sinnes a. 267. for diuers feastes a 380. with distinct hostes appointed by the Law a 425. Sacrifice in beastes birdes and other thinges mystical a 60. 362. Sacrifice by the Law of Moyses limited to one place a 423. 510. 707. 873. by dispensation in other place s. a 519. 545. 707. 893. And in the new Testament one online Sacrifice in al places of the world b 884. 993. Sacrifices of the old Law to be changed b 69. 98. 884. 993. Sacrifice of the Eucharist perpetual to the end of the world b 280. 544. 885. 993. Sacrilege seuerely punished b. 953. Sacrilegious murther reuenged a 908. Sainctes are to be honoured a 8. 34. 218. 531. 935. b 252. Are lawfully and profitably inuocated a 33● 245. 710. 1068. 1110. b 503. 541. 575. 697. 778. 987. 996. They may know our thoughtes a 605. 107. b 541. 578. Salathiel the sonne of Iechonias and father of Zorobabel was borne and died in the captiuitie of Babylon a 824. 947. 951. b 865. Salomon signifieth Pacifier was also called Ecclesiastes the Preacher and Idida beloued He writte three bookes b 333. 334. He was also called the Gatherer b 314. Lamuel b 315. He prefigured Christ in diuers respectes a 856. b 131. 166. Salomon deposed Abiather by extraordinarie commission a 692. Salomons saluation is doubtful a 732. 866. b 354. Salt signifieth discretion and was required in euerie sacrifice a 265 361. It maketh ground barren a 537. Saluation dependeth vpon grace and merites a 33. b 267. 994. See workes meritorious Samaria the head cittie of the tenne Tribes a 737. Samaritanes Schismatiques a 734. fel into manie sectes a 744. 798. 941. Samson a Nazareite and a figure of Christ a 545. 553. He did manie strange great thinges a 548. c. He sinned not in killing himself with the Philistimes a 553. c. 941. Samuel of the tribe of Leui prophecied a childe a 574. He annointed Saul King a 590. Also Dauid 604. He appeared after his death a 631. b 441. Sanaballat procured licence for Manasses to build a schismatical temple b 960. 1000. Sapiential bookes teach the way to serue God b 267. Al fiue are Canonical Scripture b 268. Saraias Highpriest slaine in Rebla a 816. b 997. Satisfaction a 32. 270. Sauiour properly perteineth to Christ is also attributed to some men a 128. 521. Saul the first King of the sraelites began wel a 587. 595. He afterwards offended in disobedience and presumption a 596. 602. 837. He was releeued in spiritual afflition by Dauids musique a 704. Of great enuie he hated and persecuted Dauid a 610. In distresse he consulted a Pithon spirite a 629. And in desperate extremitie killed himselfe a 635. Scandal hurteth the weake not the perfect b 233. Schisme and heretical conuenticles must be auoided a 355. 358. 510. 511. 756. 771. 887. 896. 949. b 56. 232. 238. 526. 696. 710. 777. 862. 894. 896. Schismatical Temples in Garizim and in Egypt b 800. 960. 1000. Schoole of paganisme was set vs in Ierusalem by Iason an Apostata b. 955. Scriptures are of most eminent auctoritie a 3. They haue foure senses a 4. Yea many literal senses b 19. 188. Mystical sense is sometimes as certaine as the literal b 8●1 They are hard to be vnderstood a 3. 16. 22. 46. 115. 435. b. 214. 216. 485. 490. 674. 680. 758. Scriptures seeming contrary are reconciled by tenne rules a 820. They can not in deede be contrary one place to an other ibid. b 293. They are best expounded by the holie Fathers a. 251. b 14. Secresie iustly enioyned or promised bindeth in conscience b 434. Sectes of Panimes Barbarisme Scythisme and Grecisme a. 48. Manie Sectes also of the Schismatical Samaritanes a 798. 941. Innumerable amongst the Grecians b 1000. Sepulchers a 33. 151. 515. Christs sepulcher glorious b. 468. 527. Serpentes most craftie a. 9. Serpent of brasse erected for curing infirmitie a 336. b 366. Afterwards broken in peeces a 799. Seruice of false goddes doth not appease them a 915. Seuen times signifie seuen yeares b. 783. Seuentie two Interpreters of the Hebrew Bible into Greke b 1000 Shamfastnes is sometimes good sometimes vicious b 379. Simon High priest and general captaine b 936. 1003. Simonie committed by Giezi a 770. Sinne entred by enuie of the Diuel a 11. Sinnes before the floud were great in foure respectes a 23. Sinnes of commission and omission a 272. b 820. Sinnes lesse and greater or venial and mortal a 401. 407. b 399. Sinnes of al sortes must be punished a 9. 33. 40. 351. 685. 512. 894. b 65. 95. 188. 345. 413. 459. 535. 557. 569. 576. 591. 631. 719. 817. 888. Sinners for punishment are suffered sometimes to fal into other sinnes a 455. 463. 492. 577. 910. b 389. 572. 679 697. 808. 833. Al sinnes are remissible during this life a 577. 798. 1031. b 65. 188. 328 552. 579. 666. 706. Some sinners are of the Elect and shal be called and iustified b. 8●1 Sinful people are often vnconstant b. 627. Slouth breedeth contempt in this life and damnation in the next b. 404. Sodome and Gomorrha were destroyed with brimstone a 70. Sonnes of God are the faithful godlie people a 20. Sophonias prophecied the captiuitie of the two tribes b 861. Soules of men are dayly created a 6. b 3●8 Soules departed may be releeued by Sacrifice and prayers a 33. 202. 637. 711. 995. b 24. 284. 979. 996. Soules sometimes appeare assuming bodies after death a 632. Spartians otherwise called Lacedemonians descended from Abraham b 933. 934. Succession a special proofe of true doctrine b 926. 934. Succession of spiritual Gouernors prooueth their
things indifferent bind in conscience Temporal punishment due after sinne is remitted Death due to al for Original sinne Yea to infants who haue no other sinne Also other penalties insticted vpon infants Math. 9 Luc. 10. S. Epiph. in compē f●dei Cat. S. Aug. epist 80. Caluin l. 3. inst c. 4 parag 31. 32. Rom. 5. lib. 13. de ciuit c 6. lib. 2. de pec mer. remis c. 34. Gen. 17. Ioan. 3. S. Greg. li. 4. Moral c. 2. The second part Of the fal of man and propagation of man and of sinne :: Serpēts most craftie to escape harme when they hurt men so is the diuel 2. Cor. 11. 3. Eccl. 25. 1. Tim. 2 14. :: After sinne they were ashamed not before S. Chris :: Al this curse perteineth to the diuel that spake in the serpēt S Aug l. 2. de Gen. ad lit cap. 36. S. Beda in hunc locum :: Earthlie or worldlie and carnal men S. Greg. in Psal 101. :: Though good men resist tentations at the first assaults and so bruise the serpēts head yet he ●●●●o●eth stil to deceiue especially in the end of mans life signified by the ●eele S Gre. in cap. 1. Iob. 1. Cor. 14. :: Al men trauel one way or other such as suffer wides to ouergrowe in their souls shal after this life either sustaine the fyre of Purgatorie or eternal paine S. Aug. li 2. c. 20 de Gen. cō Man :: She was mother rather of al the dying but in figure of our B. Lady who is mother of Christ life it selfe she is called mother of the liuing S. Epiph. her 78. Sinne entred among men by the enuie craft of the diuel man cōsenting to his suggestions Eue first sined in thought then in words last in deedes Cap. 2. 24. Ioan. 8 44. S. Aug. lib. 14. deciuit c. 11. Rupert li. de Trinit operibus eius c. 4. Bad sequels of sinne Lib. de vera Religione c. 14. Lib. 1. Retract c. 13. No sinne can be without freewil Concupiscēce no sinne but the effect and occasion of sinne Also occasion of merite S Aug. lib. 1. de nupt con c. 23. Gal. 5. 2 Tim. 2. The Latin text defended against Kemnisius and other Protestants See Card. Bellarmin li. 2. c. 12. de verbo Dei Both readings veld the same sense As Adam was the cause and ●●e an occasion of mans captiuitie so Christ is the true cause and his mother an occasion of our restauration * S ●●eneus li 3. c. 33. lib. 5. circa med S. Epiph Haer. 78. S. Ieron ep 22. ad Eustoch S. Aug. or S. Fulgent ser 18 de Sanctis de fide Symb. de Agone Christiano Ser. 2. super Missus est Our B. Ladie resisted al euil suggestions Iob 42. Esai 58. Ierem. 6. Ionae 3. Mat. 11. The ceremonie of ashes on Ashwenesday Gods prouidence concurreth with mans free wil. de grat liber arb c. 6. de corrept grat ad art falso impos Paradise defended by Angels and by fire sworde God destroyeth not nature Good Angels hinder diuels of their desires S. Aug. lib. 11. de Gen ad lit c. 40. :: A figure of the Lambe that was slaine from the beginning of the world Apoc. 13 v. 8. Heb. 11. Sap. 10. ● 10. 3. :: VVilful murther is one of the sinnes that crie to God for reuenge :: By the increase of Abrahās seede by the line onlie of Isaac and Iacob besides the issues of Ismael and Esau in litle more then 400. yeares to aboue six hundreth thousand men able to beare armes Num. 1. it appeareth that Caines progenie in as manie yeates might suffice to people a citie yea a whole countrie S. Aug. l. 15 ciuit c. 8. :: This Lamech of Cains issue is the first that is noted in Scripture to haue taken two wiues External Sacrifice due to God in euerie Law Lib 10. de ciuit ● 5. Leuit. 1 Dan 12. Mal. 1. Luc. 22. Sacrifice due to God onlie and to no creature Lib. 10. ciuit cap. 4. Aristot li. 2 Meta his ●tl i● 9. Polit. 7. c. 8. To. 3. q. 4. Quaest. Hebraie Lib 15. ciuit c. 7. Mala. 1. Hebr. 11. Leuit. 9. Iudic. 6. 2. Par. 7. 3. Reg 18. 2. Mac 1 Abels Sacrifice declared acceptable not Cains by some external signe Reward and punishment according to our workes Mat. 16. Rom. 2. Freewil in mā also after his falle Heretical trāslation Bible 1579. ●b 15. c. 7. ciuit Quaest Hebraic in Gen. The Hebrew also Greeke text proue freewil in Cain Freewil testified by antiquitie vniuersalitie and consent of lerned reasonable persons Luther abhor red the name of freewil S. Augustin li. de v●ra Rel. ca. 14. lib. de seruo arbitrio Caluin also misliketh the word freewil lib. 2. c. 2. par 8. lib. 2. aduers Iouinian VVhere is necessitie there is nether reward not punishment due 1. Ioan. 2. Tract de Zelo liuore Going forth of the Church a marke of Heretikes 1. Ioan. 3. lib. de Pastore c. 8. c. 20. Scripture hard Tom. 3. ad 1. quaest Damas● A probable sense according to the Hebrewes Tradition S. Chris ho. 20. in Gen. Lib. 1. Antiq. ca. 2. Origen in Gen. Luc. 3. Mystical sense Suidas vocabulo Seth. Ioseph l. 1. Ant● S. Aug. epist 99. ad Euod Publike prayer besides Sacrifice in the Church of God Sap. 2 24. Eccli 17 1. :: This Hebrew phrase vvalked vvith God signifieth that he liued wel pleased God :: The seuentie two Interpreters say God translated him And so doth S. Paul Heb. 11. :: This is the longest life of al here recited But if we consider that Adam was as strong of bodie the first day he was ere ated as these others were at the age of 60. yeares before which none are said no haue begot children and so subsract 60. yeares from Mathusala then Adam liued in mans state longer then he by 21. yeares a The second prophecie before Male on Easter Eue. S. Aug. li. 15. ciuit c. 20. The cōtinual succession of Gods Church and interruption of other communities How mā died the day that he sinned 2. R. 14. ho. 37. in Euangel Psal 89. S. Ireneus li. 5. aduer Heret Cicero li. de Senec. q 1. Tuscul Al time is short in respect of eternitie Enoch Elias yet liuing in bodie li. 20. ciuit c 29. lib. 2. de gratia Christi c. 23. tract 4. in Ioā Manifest Scripture that Elias yet liueth and shal be slaine an other with him Likewise that Enoch did not see death Malac. 4 Apo. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccli 44 Heb. 11. These Scriptures speake of temporal not of spiritual death ho. 21. in Gen. lib. 1. de pec mer. c. 2. 3. l. 9. de Gē ad lit c. 6. S. Tho. in c. 11. ad Hebreos The Fathers proue by the scriptures that Enoch is not dead Causes why Enoch Elias are reserued aliue
Without a Redemer to do good Rom. 5. d Without faith in Christ none had meritorious workes These three verses being not in the Hebrew nor Greke yet are in the English an 1577. and are three distinct verses in other psalmes 5. 9 ●5 e They are wholly occupied in vexing others Isa 52. ● 8. f The Prophet speaketh this in the person of God g With greedines to hurt the good h Not beleeuing in God they feared Idols that is diuels i who in dede can not hurt Gods seruants k Though innumerable be very wicked yet some are iust l mocked and derided those that trust in God m The Prophet wisheth and withal prophecieth that Christ our Sauiour wilcome who is premised to Israel n Redemed man from the captiuitie of the diuel o those that supplant vice p and contem plate God VVithout Christs grace no man is nor can be iust The law shewed the insufficiencie of mans wil. Grace cureth the wil The wil being cured cooperateth with g●●●e Venial sinnes exclude not from heauen Good workes done in mortal sinnes auail not to saluation Of eternal Beatitude The 10. key a In heaue as appeareth by the last verse b One requisite thing is to be free or cleansed from sinne c the second is to do good d Sincerely in thought e word and f dede g nor harkened to detraction h Glorie is the reward of good workes i Vsurie excludeth from heauen VVhy this and certaine others are called the Psalmes of Dauid Both faith and good workes necessarie to saluation Heb. 1● Only the state of glorie is immutable Of Christs victorie The 5. key a Stylographiae signifieth a thing most worthie to be noted towitte Christ crucified b and most worthie of the prophets consideration c Christ as man did often pray as appeareth in the Gospel d Christs passion was not needful nor profitable to God but to man e God speaketh shewing that Christ should make his meruelous charity knowen to his Apostles and other seruantes f Men feeling their infirmities and miseries g make hast in seeking remedies h Sacrifices to idols shal ● cease in Gentiles i Their names shal be changed from heathen to be called Christians k Eternal glorie cōsisteth in seing God l God is the reward of suffering paines for Christ m In diuision of temporal inheritance land is measured by cordes as Iosue 10. so portions in heauen are geuen with large measure n Christ also receiued al nations for his inheritance o Wisdome to make good election of spiritual thinges rather then temporal p Not only by day but also by night q Also my corporal paines geue me instruction r Christ had God continually before his eyes cuerieman ought to thincke frequently of God ſ for God stil protecteth the iust Act. e. v. 25. t in limbo patrum v Christs body corrupted not in the graue Act. 2. 13 w death and resurrection is the way to life x Perfect glorie consisteth in seing God y in eternity Christ a King sometimes exercised temporal iurisdiction God the proper inheritāce of Christ and Christians Clergie men professe expresly to serue God for God him felfe not for temporal profite psal ●● v. 11. 2 〈◊〉 a. v. 4. Protestantes denving that Christ de●●ended into limbus translate graue for b●● 1552. 1577. 1603. Gods prouidence protecting the iust The 3. key a in my iust cause heare my petition b seing I pray sincerly not in feaned affection c Thou that 's seest al thinge declare my right against mine aduersaries d my intētion e most secret cogitations f by tribulations g Whose conscience is pure from greuous sinne may pray with this confidence otherwise repentance is first necessarie But the whole Church may euer pray in this maner because there be alwayes some iust and holy in respect of whom it is truly called holy h for thy precepts i the narrow way of vertue k none can of them selues walke rightly but by Gods helpe l against thy omnipotent powre m from their cruel and furious countenance n they haue shut out al pittie or commiseration o They intend vtterly to destroy me euen to the ground p Except God preuent mās industry is not sufficiēt q restraine their powre which they haue by thy permission that they may not persecute so much as they intend r This is a prophecy that the wicked from the elect ſ which iudgement beginneth sometimes in this life t the pleasures of this world which God approueth not nor acknowledgeth amongst good thinges v the iust shal be approued w Nothing doth satiate mans mind but the sight of God in eternal glorie This Psalme called a Praier is both a sword buck ●●r in afflictiō Dauid singularly protected by God The ● key a Though literally this Psalme perteyned to Dauid yet in figure of Christ and of the Church or e●erie iust soule b The Holie Ghost inspired Dauid to render these thankes for his often deliuerie from dangers c Saul is specially named because he was his most potent worldlie enimie d These first wordes as also diuers others are added and many changed in this and other Psalmes by the Septuagint who often leauing the Hebrew text render the sense and so this agreeth in substance with the same Psalme recorded 2. Reg. 22. e by whom I am strong H●b 2. f high firme saluation g This is aptly applied to al mankind after his fal declaring our state in sinne and inducing to penance in the office of Masse on Septuagesima sunday h mortal flesh subiect to death i violent incursions of tentions to sinne k exceding great afflictiōs of mind like to torments of hel which I also feare l secrete tentations haue deceiued me m Earnest prayer is the best remedie in al tribulations n As it is certaine that God heard Dauids prayers so he assuredly heareth al that sincerly flee vnto him o Gods anger against sinne maketh high and loftie thinges to shake euen the most obstinate presumptuous sinners p Diuine wrath is like to smoke of the nosethrles or flaming fire and burning coles q Gods punishment sometimes cometh so swiftly as if the heauens bowed towards the earth r Gods furie is as a darke desolate night or horrible wist r Yet whē sinners repē God most speedely as fleing with winges of mercie comforteth protecteth them ſ God being in him selfe in cōprehensible is also secret in his determinations and couert in his procedinges or actes t Gods splēdor oppressing mās sense yet instructeth him by his meruelous vvorkes VVhich mystically signifieth that Christ illuminateth the vvorld by his Apostles and other preachers denouncing his iustice peace and his vvil in al thinges perteyning to man v from tribulations w From Saul Absolō Moabites Ammonites and al temporal and spiritual enemies So in the rest of this Psalme the Prophet speaketh for most part in proper termes vvithout Metaphores or other figures
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
supposing me to be like a ruinous or shaken wal that is easily throwne downe g They thinck stil to depriue me of my reward the price of my laboures and merites h but I runne so much more diligently as thirsting after righteousnes in this life and glorie in the next to finish my course i A most dangerous tentation when after threates and crueltie persecutors endeuour by swete wordes and promises to perswaed the iust to fal into sinne k I resolutly purpose not to yeld to anie tentations l Gods faithful seruantes are not only constant themselues but also exhorte and perswade al others as much as in them lieth to serue God and trust in him m Vsing false weightes they defraud one an other n God hauing nce spoken it is most assured o Two especial attributes of God p God is Omnipotent so that he can both reward and punish infinitly q and Merciful that he is readie to receiue al sinners into his fauour if they wil repent and turne vnto him Mat. 16. Rom. 2. 1. Cor. 3. Gal. 6. Dauids deuotion in banishment the 8. key a Holie Dauid made this deuout meditation when he was in the forest of Haret or desert of Ziph 1. Reg. 22. 23. and could not come to the tabernacle of God nor to Ierusalem where he especially desired to be in the inheritance of our Lord which was to him a great affliction As the like is now to Catholiques when they are put in close prison for their faith or otherwise hindered that they can not be present at the most holie and daylie Sacrifice In which ease we must supplie as we may this great losse and comfort ourselues with this or like Psalme or prayer saying O God my God to thee I watch b Euen from the first downing of the morning c my soule thirsteth after thee d yea also my very flesh and whole bodie feeleth great paines by this affliction of mind and desireth releefe and rest e Being now in case that I can not serue thee ô God as I would yet I exhibite myselfe present in spirite before thy holie place f meditating thy powre and thy glorie g This consolation in banishment from thy diuine Seruice is sweeter to me then manie temporal liues or anie worldlie prosperitie h For as the Passions of Christ abound in vs saith S. Paul 2. Cor. 1. so also by Christ our comfort aboundeth i Replenish my soul ô God with the aboundance of thy grace k so shal I be more able to praise thee l Seing in the night also in my bed I meditate of thee m I wil more diligently do the same in the morning n My temporal and spiritual enimies o and they shal be damned for their sinnes p It happened l●terally to Saul that he was slaine in battle which he made against his enimies q and his dead bodie was hung on a wall 1. Reg. 31. exposed to wilde beastes or birdes though it was after wards bu nt and buried r Dauid was presently after Sauls death exalted to the kingdome in figure of Christ whose name and glorie was exalted after the destruction of the Iewes by Pagane Emperours A confident prayer in trih●lation the 7. key a By example of thy former protection b from the conspiracie of wicked men I trust most assuredly in thy helpe c They are resolued to intrappe me d But as they haue failed so 〈…〉 and be ouerreached in their bad counsels as Achitophel 2. Reg. 17. e God hath chosen the weake of this world ●o confound the strong f much merueled seing the wicked so punished g The iust shal be praised for rightly seruing God Conuersion o● Gentiles the 6. key a The seuentie interpreters seing Dauid here prophecie of the peoples returne from Babylou added the names of Ieremie and Ezechiel who being in that captiuitie prophecied the same more largely As likewise these and other Prophetes foresavv in spirite and more especially prophecied the going forth of al nations from Babylon that is forsaking Idolatrie and embracing true Religion ●n the Church of Christ so S. Augustin Eutymius and others b Not in Babylon nor els vvhere but only in the Church praises and vovves are gratful to God c Alnations shal know thee d The wicked are insolent in threatning e but thou mercifully pardoning our sinnes they shal not hurt vs. f They are happie to whom thou hast prepared grace and glorie g The voice of the faithful reioycing in the hope of eternal glorie Rom. 5 h nothing polluted shal enter into heauen Apo. 21. i Thou which art al powreful as appeareth by the huge montaines k seas and other thy workc● l Thou wilt by thy omnipotent powre moue the hartes of obdurate men and so conuert innumerable of al nations to thee m Thou wilt draw manie to thee with ioy and gladnes from the vttermost coastes of the east and weast n God wrought diuers miracles in waters Gen. 7. Exo. 7. 14. 15. Iosue 3. 4. Reg. 5. 6. c. o likewise in prouiding meate for his people Exo. 16. 3. Reg. 17. 4. Reg. 4. 7. c. which were figures of Baptisme Eucharist and other Sacraments of Christ washing from sinnes and augmenting grace p so replenishing the Chureh with most sacred Mysteries q Endewing the Apostles and other preachers with spiritual grace and lerning r continuing the succession of pastores to watter and feede the faithful people ſ God blesseth the whole course or circle of time of the Church militant in this world t and the crowne or happie end of euerie iust persons life vv those vvhich are more eminent shal particularly reioyce in their ovvne and others spiritual progresse in vertue v Euen those which before had only a shew of beautie but in dede vvere barren shal yelde abundant fruict x The principal pastores shal in proportion reioyce aboue the rest for the grace and glorie of al their flocke y the subiectes also and inferior people shal be satiate vvith their happie lotte z Al together prelates and people higher and lovver shal vvith vn forme voice sing praises to God and perpetual hymnes Perpetuitie of the Church S. Aug. Eutym Reward of the iust Sainctes crownes are of Gods benignitie The Corones of our Lord and our Ladie Gentils succede the Iewes the 6. key a Mystical resurrection Gentiles succeding in place of the Iewes b Shew your internal ioy by external wordes and deedes c In drovvning the vvorld in confounding the tongues in Babel in burning Sodom and Gomorrha with brimston in plaging the Aegyptians in drovvning Pharao and his vvhole armie in the read sea in destroying the Chananites and other infideles in punishing the tenne tribes and aftervvards the other tvvo by captiuitie and innumerable other punishments al for sinnes d for vvhich euen the vvicked though not sincerly conuerted yet of seruile feare feaned and falsly promised to amend but performed it not as Pharao afflicted vvith plagues vvas
dignitie vvisdome or other like qualitie but their iust merites :: A prayer of iust zele e Shal most wicked men stil be suffered to speake so insolently :: A description of heathnish and heretical crueltie :: Scarse anie Atheistes are so blind as thus to thinke but manie sinners so behaue them selues as if God saw not knew not or at least cared not vvhat they do f So vnpossible is it that God should be ignorant or careles vvhat men do that he also knovveth and obserueth most secret thoughtes g Mitigate and temper his afflictions that by patience and fortitude the iust may perseuere and not be ouerwhelmed h The whole Church shal neuer be reiected nor forsaken i Iustice is conuerted into iudgement vvhen iust meaning is put in vvorke and practise that it may appeare in iudgement Also God vvho doth suffereth al iustly vvil conserue his inheritance the Church euen vnto the day of iudgement k The sense is easie by transposing the vvordes al that are right of hart are nere it that is shal like and approue Gods iustice vvhen the vvicked shal repine and blaspheme it l when I felt and complained that I was in danger thou didst assist me m Onlie faith sufficeth not but careful laboure in keping Gods commandmnts is required n The iust do hope for eternal saluation to which God wil bring them o And God the reuenger of wronges wil at last cast the wicked into eternal torments Christ our Lord and king the 5. key a Praise songue with voices b inspired to Dauid written by him This Inuitation is most fitly ordayned by the Church for the proeme or beginning of Mattins c VVith great and solemne exultation d God our Creator is also our Protector Sauiour e Let vs be more diligent and preuent our accustomed time For no man can preuent Gods grace with anie good worke who first preuenteth vs els we can neither doe nor thincke anie good thing f not only in singing his praise with voice but also with musical instruments g So also Isaias c. 45. v. 23. and S. Paul Philip. 2. teach that kneeling or bowing the knees as an external religious ceremonie is acceptable to God h It is most iust and necessarie that we adore God because he made vs and al this world for vs hath also redemed vs and made vs his people as shepe of his pasture and as a Pastor feedeth and gouerneth vs. i of his making k Though some haue often repelled and resisted Gods grace yet if they receiue it being offered againe it wil auaile them to remission of sinnes l The Israelites in the desert tempted God by desiring water and flesh of voluptuous concupiscence without necessitie For Manna did both extinguish their thirst and tasted vnto them whatsoeuer they desired Exo. 16. That also which was left vngathered when the sunne waxed hotte melted v. 21. and serued their cattel for drincke So this tentation was a figure of those which require to communicate vnder both kindes as if one did not conteine as much as both m By this mention of the offence of fourtie yeares as long before passed is conuinced that Moyses writte not this Psalme who died in the very fourtith yeare of their abode in the desert And S Paul citing the wordes of this Psalme Heb. 4. manifestly acknowlegeth Dauid the writter therof and that it was written long after Moyses time in these wordes v 7 Againe he limiteth a certaine day To day in Dauid saying after so long time as is aboue saide To day if you shal heare his voice do not obdurate your hartes For if Iesus that is Iosue had geuen them rest he would neuer speake of an other day afterward n Being greatly offended I approched nere vnto them in punishing the offenders o Those that murmured died in the desert and entered not into the promised land euen so those that finally offend Christ shal not enter into euerlasting rest Heb. 3. 4. It is in mans freewil to resist good motions Concil Triden Sess 6. c. 5 Christs diuine powre the 5. key a Inspired to Dauid and written by him b prophecying the restauration of the temple after the future captiuitie And that in figure of the vniuersal redemption of mankind by Christ from the captiuitie of the diuel ● 1. Par. 16. v. 23. c For a new benefite farre greater then the deliuerie of Israel from Aegypt d The same wordes Sing to our Lord thrise repeted signifie the Blessed Trinitie as some Fathers note Likewise v. 7. and 8. Bring ye to our Lord c. in both places concluding in the singular number blesse his name bring to his name importing one God e VVhat creatures soeuer spiritual or corporal visible or inuisible the paganes serue for goddes stil they ●e diuels that deceiue them and diuers wayes vsurpe diuine honour making such idolaters to thinke that there is diuine powre where none is f He only is true God who is Creator of heauen and of al creatures For no creature can create anie thing at al that is make anie thing of nothing but only God g Diuers ancient Doctors read more in this place Our Lord hath reigned from the wood to witte Christ by his death on the crosse conquered the diuel sinne and death and thence begane to reigne S. Iustinus Martyr dialogo aduers Triphonem Tertullian li. aduers Iudaeos c. 9. 13 aduers Marcionem li. 3 c. 19. 21. S Augustin in this place according to the old Roman Psalter Before him Arnobius and after him Cassiadorus and others wherby it is probable that it was sometimes in the Hebrew text and blotted out by the Iewes h The Psalmist in abundance of spirite inuiteth al creatures to praise God as Daniel in his Canticle c. 3. i Christ iudgeth now in the world by his ministers discerning and deciding causes rewarding and punishing but especially he wil iudge al in the last day The last iudgement the 9. key a In figure of Christ b whose bodie rose the third day after his death to whom manie returned beleuing in him after his resurrection which fel from him in his passion and to whom al thinges shal be subdued as to their true Lord in the day of iudgement c Holie Dauid and other Prophetes hauing great ioy to see long before in spirite only Christs kingdom extended in the whole earth yea to the Ilandes we Ilanders haue great cause to be gladde that God hath not only so blessed vs long since but as yet conserueth seede wherby we trust the whole Iland shal be againe restored vnto him d As in a cloud with terror God gaue his law to the Iewes so in a cloud with greater terror and maiestie he wil iudge the world e not as manie corrupted seates of iudgement in this world but as a corrected tribunal where iustice and right iudgement shal be practised :: These thinges are denounced as if they were alredy donne
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
certaine that Salomon was sometime innocent and holie but was peruerted by wemen 3. Reg. 11. 3 Reg. 3. v 9. 12. :: Here againe it is euident that the Auctor reporteth Salomons speaches 1. Paral. 28. v. 5. 2. Par. 1. v. 9. :: VVisdom increated is with God yea is God him selfe Prou. 8. v. 22. :: VVisdom vvhich is geuen to men procedeth from God as a gift created :: Mans wisdom vvithout special wisdom from God is not sufficient to gouerne ourselues much lesse others The 3. part The excellent effectes of wisdom iustice :: Adam Gen. 1. v. 27. :: By this it is certaine that our first parēt Adam truly repented and had remission of his sinne Gen. 4. v. 8. Gen. 6. :: Noe. :: Abraham Gen. 19. :: Lot :: In al trees about Sodom there is only shew of fruite which when it is touched falleth into dust :: Lots wife an example of inconstancie :: Iacob Gen. 28. Gen. 37. :: Ioseph Gen. 41. :: Gods peculiar people Exo. 1. Exo. 3. Exo. 14. Exo. 12. Exo. 15. :: Moyses Exo. 16. Exo. 27. :: The Amalachites Exo. 17. Num 20. :: VVhen the Israelites wanted water God gaue them abundance out of rockes :: But turned the Aegyptians waters into blood :: After affliction the benefite of peace is more gratful :: Moyses was reiected when he iudged betwen his bretheren Exo. 2. :: 14. but was afterwards the deliuer of the whole people Act. 7. v. 45. Leuit. 26. v. 22. Iere. 8. v. 17. ● Aegyptians seruing beasts for goddes were plaged by frogges stuiphes flees and locustes :: God made no creature euil as the Manichees foolishly imagined neither is there any God but one who alone created al thinges :: From the land of Iurie called sacred because God was there tightly serued in the old testament and mans redemption vvas wrought there by Christ Exo. 23. Deut. 7. :: By custom malice became as it were natural after that nature was corrupted :: Gods powre being almightie is only limited by his vvil Rom. 1. v. 23. :: Serpents battes moles like beastes which seme not only super fluous in the world but also hurtful yet were estemed as goddes :: Knowing him to be the only true God by vvhom they saw their false goddes destroyed yet they did not serue him as God :: Gods most proper name is HE WHICH 1● Exo. 3. v. 14. Rom. 1. Deut. 4. :: Seing no creature how excellent soeuer is or may be estemed a god it is more foolish to thinke an Image or statua or anie thing framed by mans handes can be God Isa 4. Iere. 10. God is the beginning of al thinges absolute and independing :: Great madnes to inuocate a wodden idol more base commonly more corruptible then the wood of a shippe :: As the Israelites went through the redsea :: The auctor prophetically alludeth to the wood of the Crosse on which our Sauiour redemed mankind :: From whole death procedeth mans iustification :: Inuention of Idols brought men to spiritual fornications corruption of maners :: This first idolatrie was only pr●u●tly exercised by the father and his seruants at their masters cōmandment by which occasion publique idolatrie came into the world wicked custom in time preuailing :: The name GOD in the proper signification can not be geuen to anie creature Manie enormious crimes procede from dolatrie :: Two sort es of periurie swearing by false goddes and swearing vntruthes Caluin falsly chargeth this booke vvith ●r●or Gen. 31. Images of false goddes are rightly called idols Idolatrie begane by vvorshipping images of dead men vvith diuine honour Priuate idolatrie was before publique :: Of the diue●s sortes of idols and ●dolaters see our brife Annotion vpon the 113. Psal :: Idolaters hauing forsaken and forgot the onlie true God become as Atheists making their temporal gaine of false goddes :: And so waxing insolent contemte and persecute the seruants of God :: Some idolaters worshipped brute beastes for goddes as being better then sensles images but al are abominable :: The Aegyptians were plagued for their idolatrie :: And that by beastes because they worshipped beastes for goddes and by death of their first begotten for their crueltie against Gods people :: God punished his owne people as a father for their amendment :: The brasen serpent not by anie vertue inherent but as a signe of Gods fauoure vvas the meanes of curing the people Num. 21. :: VVith the plague of haile there vvas also fire mixed Exo. 9. v. 24. VVhich destroyed the profitable cattle :: But burnt not other beastes that plagued the Aegyptians :: Haile did not extinguish the fire by Gods povvre aboue nature :: See the miracles of Manna Annoe Exod 16. :: He speaketh againe of Manna :: The vaine imagination of the vvicked that himself shal be saued vvil faile him Exo. ● 10. :: Literally the 〈…〉 s ●●●●a knes th●er dayes together Exo 10. v. 22. Morally they other g●n● les vvere in darknes vvithout faith in God til Christs Resurrection the third day :: A trubled conscience is a great torment :: This signified the conuersion of al nations to Christ :: The Church is called holie because it professeth holines and hath alwayes some holie men without the Church there is no sanctitie :: VVhen the Aegyptians drowned the Hebrews children Moyses was saued and reserued to guide the Israelites when the Aegyptians were drowned :: A prophecie of Christ comming into this world when there was temporal peace but extreme darkenes of ●gnorance :: An other example of difference in Gods punishing his people for their ●mendment and of the obstinate vnto their ●uine Exo 14. ● ●8 Num. 16. ● 46. Num 10 :: God foreseing the Aegyptians malice permitted them to persecute his people but was no way the cause nor auctor of their sinne Exo. 14. Exo. 16. :: The Amorrheites refused to grant them passage Num 21. v. 21. The Aegyptians brought them into seruitude Exo. 1. God changing the natural properties of elementes by them wrought iustice on sinners S. Greg. ●● 35. in Euang. Exo. 9. v. 24. Exo. 16. v. 2● Particular testimonies that this booke is holie Scripture It was written in Hebrew translated into Greke Difference betwen Ecclesiasticus and Ecclesiastes Panaretos The contents diuided into two partes By reason of a more perfect law the people of Israel were more renowmed then anie other nation in the world Deut. 4. :: Translations into other languages hardly expresse the se●se of the original tongue The 1. part Praises and preceptes of vvisdom :: Mans vvisdom is not able to comprehend the vvorkes of God :: Eternal glorie is the fruicte of the feare of our Lord not that this one vertue sufficeth but it is the beginning grounded in true faith and bringeth forth other vertues diuine giftes vvith the fruites of the Holie Ghost a ioyful crowne in the end Prou. 1. 9. :: Men drowned in
no light of vertue in himself like the moone butsometimes semeth to haue more light sometimes lesse sometimes none at al. S. Bernard Prou. 10. :: He that expresly doth iniurie to an other is iuitly punished also in this vvorld :: Hovv secretly soeuer anie hutteth an other he vvoundeth his ovvne conscience and can not escape Gods iudgement Prou. 26. Eccle. 10. :: He that seeketh reuenge contrarie to the course of iustice or of euil intention or of rancor of mind sinneth greuously ●ut 6. R●m 11. Charitie requireth that we remitte iniuries with three conditions if the offender be truly penitent if the remission of punishment be not against iustice nor against necessarie discipline 〈◊〉 ●● :: Vndiscrete reporte to one what an other hath saide is often cause of much discontentment and of dissention :: To heare detraction is as bad as to speake it :: Lending is a worke of mercie a kinde of almes To repay that is borowed is a worke of iustice wittingly not to restore is as bad as theft Exo. 22. Deut. 14. T●b 4. :: Great fruite of workes of mercie :: Prudence requireth that by helping an other thou doest not ouerthrovv thyself Pr●● 1● 2● Deut. 6. :: The eldest sonne being heire to his father is to haue ●pecial case of the other children euen to the aduenturing of his owne hurt for their liues :: Teeth on edge o● g●ashing of teeth is a part of hel paines ●●● 8. 1● sometimes beginneth in this life :: 〈…〉 is aboue al riche● and honour Deut. 14. :: Suffer not vnnecessarie pensiuenes to afflict thy mind through pusillanimitie Prau 12. 15. 17. :: ●●ut relie wholly ●●●● God 's ●●l and prouidence resigning thy wil ●●to his :: They that imploy al their studie to getre vertues shal be more free from tentations of the flesh :: And from drawsines of mind whereupon S Ierom admonisheth Loue the studies of holie Scriptures and thou vvilt not loue the vices of the fresh Epist ad Rusticum Monach :: It is in mans freewil to transgresse therfore they are happie that through Gods grace do not breake his commandments Prou. ●● Prou. 22. :: As bread is the chiefe sustenāce of the bodie so doctrine is of the minde which being good nourisheth if it be bad corrupteth them that receiue it Psa 103. Prou 31. :: Humilitie is necessarie in al but most especially in men of auctoritie The greatest art in this life is to contemne vaine glorie in height of auctoritie S Greg. de cura pastorali Eccle. 3. :: God di●ecteth mens resolutions and actions when they vse the meanes of consultation as he hath appointed for vvhen two or three are gathered in his name he is in middes of them Mat. 18. :: Do not against thy cōference :: Men ledde with passions runne from one vice into an other without ceasing Especially heretikes runne into manie errors Against which S Paul prescribeth this rule It is best that the hart be established with grace Heb. 13. v. 9. Rom. ● :: Vaine dreames are not to be regarded but some are good from God Gen 37. 40. 41. Dan. 2. 4. Mat. 1. :: Vvhatsoeuer is written in holy Scripture is vndoubtedly true and no ●ote of the law shal perish :: God also prouideth that alwayes there be some which truly explicate his lavv Psa 32. Prou. 21. v. 27. Prou. 15. v. 8. Leuit. 19. :: He that destroyeth that an other buildeth bringeth tvvo mens labours to nothing :: R●cidiuation into sinne maketh the ●o●●er repentāce frustrate Mat. 18. v. 33. :: Sacrifices of penance Psal ●● of iustice Psal ● and of praise ●●a 4● 〈…〉 then 〈…〉 1. Reg. 15 v. 22. Iere. 7. :: Neuertheles 〈…〉 is also necessarie Exo. ●● 〈◊〉 ●4 D●●●●● 2 Cor. ● ●●●● :: Often times so much A● Prou. 24. Seuen times shal the iust fal shal ●●● againe Leuit. 22. Deut. 1● 2 P●●●● 19. Rom. 2. Act. 10. :: This prayer implieth also a prophecie of the conuersion of the Gentiles as the like very often in the Psalmes 58. 6● 65. c. Exo. 4. Num. 6. :: As there i● difference of meates 〈◊〉 so there ought to be discret on in wordes in choosing a wi●e in al actions and desires :: In concord smal thinges increase by discord al thinges goe to hauocke :: As freindshippe is a most necessarie thing in humane life so fained frēdshippe is most dangerous :: Man is bond to vse al pru●lentendeuour withal most especially to pray for Gods direction :: The dayes of the Blessed in heauen who see God are eternal :: The same which S. Paul admonisheth 1. Cor 11. let euerie one proue him self by examining rectifying his conscience 1. Cor. 6. :: Mans bodie naturally needeth sustenāce sometimes phisike and so doth his soule which as it is more excellent so it ought to be more regarded Exo. 25. Isa 38. Spiritual infirmitie requireth spiritual phisike :: To auoide euil speach shew that thou art truly sorie for the death of thy freind But moderate thy sorow lest it hurt thy self Prou. ●5 17. 2. Reg. 12 :: VVhen pastores haue ley sure from preaching they may then profite others by writing So S. Paul not only preached but also writte So likewise the Doctors of the Church and other holie fathers :: Besides actiue life commended in the former chap. it is necessarie that vertuous men vse also meditation cōtemplation Vnto which foure dispositions are requisite described in this chapt 1. True knowlege of holie My●●eries without the which meditation wil be erronious 2. :: Puritie of soule free frō greuous sinnes and endowed vvith vertues :: Humilitie is especially required in contemplatiue persons 3. Gen. 1. Exo. 1. :: Hope of eternal reward comforteth encoregeth the seruants of God 4. Gen. ● :: In the meane time God geueth necessaries for this life VVhich the good vse rightly to their merite the wicked vse euil to their damnation :: Diuels were created in state of grace and of their owne wil fel from God consequently are eternally punished :: The penalties which al men euen new borne infants suffer do shew that al in general are guiltie of original sinne for if they were not guiltie then punishment were not iust That Christ also would be subiect to the same penalties was for the sinnes of others And though his ● mother vvas preserued from this sinne yet she vvas not exempted from the general penaltie of al mankinde Gen. 7. Eccle. 1. :: The societie of Christs Church florishing in al vertues excelleth the benefites of the old Testament :: Euerie one is bound to labour that he want not necessaries :: It is to no purpose after death to accuse the shortnes or length of life pretending the same to haue bene cause of sinne For God doth al iustly yea and for the best if men would so vse his benefites :: It behoueth children and scholars to
spiritual Et cont Mend. c. 1● ●●●ym in P●al 1●7 VVhy God would haue them obscure Isai of noble lineage and a mar●i● prophecied a long time Presat ad Paul Lusto Is called the Euangelical Prophet Hewritte in a high stile S. Ie●o Epist ad Pa●●●● Et in com Isa● S. Aug. ●● 18. c. 27. ●u●t lib 9 c. ● con●●●● Heb. 1. Liued in the kingdom of Iuda The contents diuided into two general partes and into eight particular 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The first part The kingdom of Iuda shal be captiue in Babylon for their ingratitude towards Gods and other sinnes :: Not A●●s the third of the lesse prophetes for this name is written in other letters in Hebrew but one of the royal bloud as S. Ierom. testifieth :: Prince Priest and people are al sicke of ingratitude against God other iniquities :: Ierusalem defaced and destroyed :: God continually preserueth some holie seede that his Church neuer faileth Rom. 9. :: Much wickednes reigned in Ierusalem before their captiuitie in Babylon but much more at Christs passion when they persecuted him euen to the Crosse and his disciples and al christians til their citie was taken by the Romanes and the whole nation dispersed :: The Rabbins vnderstand those Iudges and Priestes that gouerned the people after their deliuerie from captiuitie but S. Ierom expoundeth this and the like places of the Apostles and their success●●s :: It is not only certaine but also euident that the prophet speaketh here and in innumerable other places of the Church of Christ which is the citie set vpon a mountaine Mat 5. vnto which al nations are gathered a●d al the time of the new Testament is called the last houre 1. Ioan. 2. because no time shal folow after this but al eternitie :: The Iewes were reiected after Christs death before which they were stil conserued though often seuerely punished And so now the Church of Christ shal neuer be reiected no● :: It is most absurde and contrarie to this and other Scriptures that Protestants seyne of great idolatrie in the Christian world for a thousand or more yeares together professing Christs name Religion and yet continually committing as these new masters imagine grosse idolatrie :: This was fulfilled first in the captiuitie of Babylon and more notoriously after Christs passion in the destruction of Ierusalem and dispersion of the Iewes euen to this day and yet forward til nere the end of this world :: An Ecclesiastical preacher must not flatter the people He must moue teares sayth S. Ierom not laughter Apoc. 1. :: By the metaphor of wemen S. Ierom vnderstandeth the cities of Iurie of which Ierusalem was the head and Sion the chiefe place there of al which were defaced by the Babylonians but more fully destroyed by Titus and Vespatian fourtie yeares after Christs Passion :: After the reduction of heathnish or heretical people to catholique religion there wil be great want of spiritual pastors :: Not al the Iewes that escaped temporal death in the destruction of Ierusalem but those only shal be eternally saued that beleuing shal be baptized and liue wel :: Isaie of the tribe of Iuda here prophecieth the doleful songue which Christ vttered weeping ouer Ierusalem fore seeing foretelling their destruction Luc. 19. v. 41. Mat. 21. :: Al this sheweth that God only subtracting his protection no man nor people is able to stand of whose ruine God is not the auctor but only permitteth that they fal into sinnes and so into other miseries :: An admonition to celebrate festiual dayes with ●oly religious exercises and not to folow drunkennes nor other wicked or vaine thinges Rom. 12. :: Greuous sinnes must be greuously punished Such as was the sinne of the Ievves persecuting Christ 4. Reg. 15 2. Par. 26 :: Neither Isaie nor Moyses nor anie other mortal man did euer see God in himselfe but only shadowed Yet the wicked calumniously accused condemned and put Isaie to cruel death vpon pretence of blasphemie for saying that he saw God VVhich he otherwise said not but couered by the vvinges of the Seraphimes Origen in hunc locum S. Ierom. Tradi Hebraicis in Paral. Apoc. 4. Rom. 1● :: Isaie was not only an Euangelical but also an Apostolical prophet with whom God here treateth and procedeth as with an Apostle saying VVhom shal I send and the prophet answering Send me God sent him saying Goe c. S. Ierom in Pro●mio Isais Mat. 23. :: Before this the kinges of Syria and of Israel had taken king Achaz in battel and caried avvay great spoyles 2. Paral. 28. But presuming to do the like againe God suffered them not to preuaile My stically this signified that heretikes of diuers sectes conspire together to impugne the Catho like Church VVhich they do much afflict and terrifie but can neuer ouerthrow i● S. Ierom in hunc lo●●● 4. Reg. 16 :: Though Achaz vvas very vvicked and committed idolatrie 4. Reg. 16. 2. Par. 28. yet he beleued in God Almightie knovving that he ought not to tempt him :: Vpon occasion of Gods mercie promised vvithout mans desert which king Achaz hardly beleued to confirme the same with a farre greatter example God inspired the Prophet also to forshevv the greater mysterie of Christs Incarnation his conception birth of a virgin for the redemption of ●l mankind Luc. 1. 4. Reg. 19. :: The mysterie here prophocied is of so great importance as would require a very great booke for ful explication therof :: Christ the Sonne of God and virgins child quickly taketh the pray from the diuel who before possessed almost al the world :: The prophet speaketh of the tenne tribes vvhich ioyned forces with the king of Syria against Ierusalem but them selues vvere first brought into captiuity by the Assyrians God protecting Ierusalem for that time and long after Luc. 2. Rom. 9. 1. Pet. 2. :: VVheter they seke to God in their extreme distresse not sincerely but ●●acted :: or seke worldlie helpe they shal not escape miserie :: S. Mathew expoundeth this prophecie of Christ first preaching in Galilee VVhere his disciples beleued in him folowed him Mat. 4. :: But after his passion few Iewes beleued in him in comparison of the Gentiles Iudic. 7. :: He that is great yea omnipotent God is borne a litle one in this vvorld and vvithout violence conquereth ruleth al the vvorld Luc. 2. :: God punishing sinners and they not repenting his iust furie stil increaseth punishing eternally al those that neuer repent :: VVhere is no repentance there can be no remission As v. 12. 17. ch 10. v. 4. c. :: VVheras good lawes are the stabilitie of the cōmon wealth wicked are the ruine therof Such as Ieroboam made forbidding to goe to Ierusalem and setting vp golden calues in Bethel and Dan causing the people to serue them as the goddes of Israel 3. Reg. 12. v. 16. Such also as the Scribes and
Pharises made deuising wicked traditions contrarie to Gods commandments Mat. 15. v. 5. :: The Iewes are called a deceiptful nation because they broke their promise made to God that they would serue him and kepe his commandments Exo. 19. v. 8. 4 Reg. ●● :: Senacharib not by his owne powre but as Gods instrument minister afflicted the Israelites Neuertheles he persecuted them of his owne free wil which God vsed for the punishment of his people In general therfore euil men are like to instruments without sense but differ in that mens actions are voluntarie vnreasonable and sensles creatures haue no wil at al but only natural ap●nes and inclination Iudi. 7. :: By these places Senacherib passed with his armie from Aegypt to Ierusalem :: The blessed virgin Act. 13. :: Christ our Sauiour replenished with the seuen giftes of the Holie Ghost of whose infinite plenitude his seruantes participate as it pleaseth his diuine spirite to impert 2. Thes 2. Rom. 15. :: Christ after his death which to the vvorld was ignominious vvould be gloriously buried by very honorable persons Ioseph and Nicodemus with abundance of most precious spices vvrapped in finne linnen and laide in a nevv monument to shew that the glorie of the iust beginneth from their death where the glorie of the vvicked endeth Christs sepulchre stil also remaineth glorious honored euen by the Turkes much more by Catholique Christians Ex● 15. Psal 117. The 2 part Tenne prophetical comminations against so manie people 's The 1. against Babylon :: The Iewes gaue thankes for their deliuerie from captiuitie of Babylon much more the Church of Christ rendereth thankes for her deliuerie from al sinnes :: Nemrod began the kingdom of Babylon Gen. 10. his sonne Belus did much augment it and his sonne Ninus brought it to be a very great Empire Monarchie But at last after 1240. yeares it was ouercome by Cyrus king of Persia Ezech. 32. Ioel. 3. Mat. 24. Mar. 13. ●uc 2● :: Medes and Persians were called sanctified in that they were the ministers of Gods iustice in the ruine of Babylon which the Prophet foretelling calleth it The burden of Babylon :: After the slaughter there shal be so few Babylonians or Chaldeans left aliue that one man shal be more rare and precious then much fine gold Psal 1●6 Gen. 1● :: An other citie was built by the same name but much lesse in an other place of Chaldea :: Isaie prophecied the destruction of Babylon aboue 100. yeares before the Iewes were caried thither captiue and their captiuitie indured 70. yeares VVhich was released by Cyrus after he had ouercome the Babylonians Yet this space of nere 200. yeares is counted a short time in respect of so great a Monarchie as this was which had now continued aboue a thousand yeares from the time of Ninus yea was begunne by Nemrod Gen. 10. v. v. :: As Lucifer the greatest diuel so Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon fel through pride into extreme miserie :: The miraculous destruction of the Assiriansarmie beseging Ierusalem is recorded 4. Reg. 19. :: The second commination is against the Philistians 4 Reg 1● :: Though Achaz was dead whom the Philistims feared yet Ezechias a better king did afflict them more then the other had done 4. Reg. 18. v 8. Much more Ozias 2. Par. 26 :: From Ierusalem which is situated on the north of Philistea :: The third commination was against the Moabites :: Destruction made in the night preuented that they feared not the imminent danger but so much the more they were afflicted being sodainly oppressed vvith extreme myserie Iere. 4● EE●ch 7. :: Miscrie euen of ●●mi●s moueth a charitable hart to compassion So the Prophet lamenteth the Moabites afflictiō :: In the great miserie of he Moabites the Prophet saw one special cause of consolation that Christ the lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world should be borne of their lineage by one of th●er progenie :: Of Ruth a Moabite who was maried to Booz and so was Dauids great grandmother Ruth 4. See the argument of Ruth :: The vvarres against Moab continued three yeares :: In vvhich it was brought into seruitude The fourth prophetical commination vvas against the Syrians Iosue 10. 11. c. :: After that the Assirians had afflicted the Israelites and their confederates them selues were also afflicted The fift was against the Aethiopians and Aegyptians * Or paper boates :: The Aegyptians bid their messengers goe swiftly tel the Iewes that they shal haue present helpe according as they require expect :: But the prophet shevveth that the Aegyptians them selues shal be ouerthrowne by the Assirians :: VVhen our B. Sauiour was caried in his infancie by his mother into Aegypt the idoles of that countrie lost their powre And the inhabitantes vvere specially blessed afterwards very manie beleued in Christ and sincerely serued him :: Both Iewes and Christians vnderstand this prophecie of the conuersion of the Aegyptians to Christ But the Ievves expect it as yet to come vve know that it is already fulfilled At least in part For there vvere sometimes manie Christians in that countrie yea manie most excellent Sainctes S. Paul S. Antonie S. Hilarion and innumerable others :: The holie prophet of noble bloud vvas not disobedient nor ashamed to goe naked because nothing is more honest then to obey Gods commandment S. Ierom. in ●un● locum Gods prouidence in punishing al that trust in men not in him Examples of mutations in kingdomes The sixt commination was against the Assirians specially the Babylonians :: Cyrus king of the Persians a people of smal powre of the Medes of great streingth Iere. 51. Apoc. 14. :: The seuenth prophetical commination was against the Idumeans :: The eight against the Ismaelites Arabiam :: The ninth against the cheefe rulers of Ierusalem :: Sion situated on a hil and often called a montaine is here called a vale for the afflicted state wherin it was in the captiuitie :: This Sobna had some of fi●e about the Temple but by craftie intrusion and vniust vsurpation rather then by lawful induction was very couetous ambicious so by Gods iudgement fel into miserie The tenth commination was against the Tyrians :: Tyrus was an iland as Ezechiel also describeth it ch 27. in the entrance yea situated in the hart of the sea but not farre distant for king Alexander filled vp that passage of water and made it continent :: The Tyrians reioyced in the Iewes captiuitie therfore God punished them with like captiuitie of 70. yeares The third part Prophecies perteyning to the whole world Osee 4. :: Diuersitie of states which is now in the world shal cease at the general iudgement and al men shal receiue according to their delertes :: Nere the end of the world manie forgetting the law of God nature wil rage in extreme furie against others persecuting murthering one an
are circumcised in hart which argue●h them of hypochrifie :: Heathnis● idolaters thought the●● was diuine powre in the planetes and other starres But the faithful know th●● they are the creatures of God made for the benefite of men not that men should serue or feare th●● :: Of other idols made of vvood siluer gold and the like it is more easie to see the vanitie Mich. 7. Apoc. 15. Psa 134. :: Man can not do anie good thing without Gods helpe nor anie euil without his permission neither of which destroyeth freewil As in the present example Nabuchodonosor could not afflict the Iewes but by Gods permision Psal 6. Psal 78. :: Not for the priuilegies of kinred being the children of Abraham Isaac and Iacob nor for suffering circumcision nor for the rest of the Sabbath but for obedience in keeping the couenant and precepts our Lord is the God of Israel and Israel his people S. Ierom. :: Ch. 7. v. 16. ch 14. v. 11. :: Flesh offered in sacrifice is hol●e but profiteth not those that are obstinate in sinne :: By consent of al Churches saith S. Ierom this is spoken of Christ :: VVho so bore himself as if he had not knowen when the Iewes condemned him in their councel For otherwise he knew and foretold that he should be betrayed crucified Mat. 20. v 18. 19 ch 26 v. 2. :: He speaketh only of the wicked for stil some reliques remaine Isa 10. Ier. 4. Ro. 9. :: Prophetes other holie men not ignorant nor doubtful of Gods prouidence speake sometimes in the person of the weake as desirous to know why God suffereth the wicked to prosper in this world and the godlie to be afflicted Iob. 21. v. 7. Dauid Psal 72. v. 2. 3. Abacuc 1. v. 3. Iob. 21. Abac. 1. * S●gregate :: After that the children are chasticed the rodde is to be burned The 2. part The peoples ingratitude s●ning against God and persecuring the Prophet :: Prophecies vttered in factes haue more force to perswade then only wordes And therfore the Prophetes by Gods commandment vse both these wayes Heb. 1. :: An other prophetical similitude to signifie that the Iewes shal be perplexe not knowing what to do in extreme disstresse as sensles men ouercome with much wine ●am 1. :: Custome is as it were an other nature hard to be altered yet Gods grace raiseth some inueterate sinners to true repentance but this is rare And of them selues without grace no sinners can rise nor repent :: The Iewes suffered famine thirst by reason of drought for their sinnes which also signifieth depriuation of God● grace for their former wickednes :: As one that braggeth and esteemeth him self strong :: False prophetes seducing the people can not excuse them from sinne For when the blind leadeth the blind both fal into the pitte Lam. 1. 2. :: Notwithstanding there were very manie greuous sinners yet in respect of the iust the Church is a virgine :: The Geneua Bible is corruptly translated contrarie to the Hebrew and Greeke Though Moyses and Samuel stood before me :: This Hebrew phrase signifieth that some shal dye by sicknes some by the sword some by famine some shal be lead into captiuitie as God hath feuerally ordayned Zach. 11. 4. Reg. 21. Amos. 8. :: There can hardly be concord betwen potent kingdomes :: The weaker is easily afflicted by the stronger :: The Prophet fearing his ovvne vveaknes prayeth to be deliuered from persecution :: Defer not to deliuer me As Psal 12. v 2. 3 Psal 1. 2● :: Vaine hopes :: The people shal yeld to the prophets admonition not he to their peruersitie No prayers of others do aauaile for obstinate impenitent sinners Sainctes after their death pray for men in this world This text is vnderstood of Moyses and Samuel them selues :: Ieremie not only liued single in the time of tribulation but also rema●ned a virgin al his li●e S. Ier●m li 1. aduer Iouian post medium :: After long expectation of amendment generation after generation adding more sinnes at last cometh great punishment :: But againe after punishment God sheweth his mercie :: The Apostles :: Other Apostolical men :: Not only Christ is a rock but he hath also geuen to his Apostle Peter to be called a rocke In whose iudgements they that rest are rightly sayde to be translated from the rocke S. Iero. in hunc locum :: To make men is the worke of God and therfore it is very absurde that a man can make goddes S. Iero. ibidem :: These metaphorical termes signifie that their sinnes were inueterated and hard to be blotted out :: Chiefe and principal trust must be in Gods helpe not in mans strength or policie Isa 30. Psal 1. :: It is proper to God only by his owne powre to search the hart of man and to know his secrete thoughts vvhich men nor Angels can not naturally know but holie Angels glorified Sainctes do knovv the thoughtes of men by light of glorie vvhen mortal men pray vnto them prophetes know by light of prophecie as Elizeus savv vvhen Giezi tooke bribes and by special inspiration S. Peter knew the fraude of Ananias Za phira Act. 5. Psa 7. v. 10. Apoc. 2. v. 23. :: By the sabbath as often els vvhere is meant the obseruation of al the lavv :: Such temporal rewardes vvere commonly promised in the old testament but in the nevv is promised life euerlasting eternal glorie :: A potter can make a nevv vessel of the same clay being misformed in casting so it be yet fresh moyst but God can also reforme man being hardned in hart as if he made a new potte of an old one broken into peeces or deformed Isa 45. Rom. 9. :: Alluding to his owne persecution the prophet here speaketh expresly of Christ as S. Ierom sheweth it verified when the Iewes crucified Christ crying Crucifie him crucifie him :: VVordes actions together instruct both by the eares eyes and so moue more effectually as S. Ierom often noteth :: That which is vnpossible to men is possible to God Mat. 19. See Annot ch 18. v. ● :: Phassur signifieth multiplying principalitie but his name was changed into Feare on euerie side to signifie that he should be terrified by many enimies :: As Iob saith S. Ierom so this holie prophet in hyperbolical wordes she weth his afflicted mind signifying that which our Sauiour also affirmeth Mat. 26. It were better not to be then to be in miserie as Iacob hauing liued in much trauel and affliction calleth his dayes few and euil Gen. 47. Amos also ●● 5. saith The day of our Lord afflicting is darknes not light Likewise S. Paul calleth this world wicked Gal. 1 and the dayes euil Ephes 5. Iob. 3. The 3. part Comminations to Ierusalem especially to the King euil priests false prophets for which Ieremie is againe persecuted :: This reuelation was made to
is the Sabbath of our Lord therfore it shal not be found † And the seuenth day came and some of the people going forth to gather found not † And our Lord said to Moyses How long wil you not keepe my commandementes and my law † See that our Lord hath geuen you a Sabbath and for this cause on the sixt day he geueth you duble portions let each man tarie with himselfe and let none goe forth out of his place the seuenth day † And the people kept the Sabbath on the seuenth day † And the house of Israel called the name therof Manna which was as it were coriander seede white and the taist therof like to flowre with honie † And Moyses sayd This is the word which our Lord hath commanded Fil a gomor of it and let it be kept vnto the generations to come hereafter that they may know the bread wherwith I fed you in the wildernes when you were brought forth out of the Land of Aehypt † And Moyses sayd to Aaron Take one vessel and put Manna into it so much as a gomor can hold and lay it vp before our Lord to keepe vnto your generations † as our Lord commanded Moyses And Aaron put it in the tabernacle to be reserued † And the children of Israel did ●a●e Manna fourtie yeares til they came into the habitable land with this meate were they fed vntil they touched the borders of the land of Chanaan † And a gomor is the tenth part of an ephi ANNOTATIONS CHAP. XVI 15. Man hu vvhat is this VVhen the people of Israel in the desert had spent their prouision of meate brought from Aegypt and according to Gods promise had receiued store of quailes going forth in the morning they sawe a strange thing lye vpon the ground like to hoare frost wherat merueling they said one to an other VVhat is this in their language Man hu VVherupon saith Theodoret q. 30. in Exod their demand vvas turned into the name and it vvas called Manna VVhich as the same and other ancient Doctors gather by the holie Scriptures was a wonderful and miraculous meate and withal a figure of a more excellent thing long after promised and geuen by our B. Sauiour in the holie Sacrament of the Eucharist As witnesse S. Gregorie Nys●en ●nar vit● Moysi ●ir●a m●dium S. Ambrose li. de ijs qui Myst. in●●●ant cap. 8. S. Cyril Alexandrinus S Chry●ostom S. Augustin Theophilact and others vpon the sixt of S. Iohn VVhere also the text of our Sauiours long discourse with the Capharnaites sheweth euidently that he promised to geue a farre better meate then Manna to those that beleued in him Iam saieth our Lord the bread of life vvhich desended from heauen your fathers did eate Manna in the desert and died The bread vvhich I vvil geue is my flesh for the life of the vvorld My flesh 〈◊〉 meate in deede and my bloud is drinck● indeede c. S. Paul likewise teacheth 1. Cor 10 that this Manna and the vvater issuing out of the rocke were figures of the same B Sacrament as is noted in those places Here only we commend to the Christian readers remēbrance that the thing figured doth euer excede the figure according to S Pauls doctrin Collos 2. wishing him therfore to consider that in Manna were at least twelue clere miracles Fir●● it was made by Angels wherof it is called the bread of Angels Secondly it was not produced from the earth nor water as ordinarie meates are but came from the ayre Thirdly how fast or slowly soeuer anie man did gather it in the end ech one had the same measure ful called a gomor and no more nor lesse Fourthly the sixth day which was next before the Sabbath that which they gathered was found to be duble portions to other dayes that is two gomors for euerie one Fiftly there fel none at al on the Sabbath day Sixtly if in the rest of the weke anie part was left al night it putrified and was corrupt in the morning but the night before the Sabbath day it remained sound and good Seuently notwithstanding diuersitie of stomakes in so great a multitude the same measure was sufficient and no more to euerie one young and old and of middle age Eightly the heate of the sunne melted and consumed that which remained in the field though otherwise it indu●ed heate of the fire seething in water grinding in milles and beating in motters Ninthly it tasted to euerie one what they desired Tenthly it seemed neuerthelesse to the euil minded loathsome and light meate but pleasant to the good Eleuently part of it was kept in the Arke by Gods commandment and was not corrupted in manie hundreth peares Twelftly this strange and extraordinarie prouision continued fourtie yeares that is til the children of Israel came to the promised land and then ceased You see then so miraculous a figure farre excelled Zuinglius or Caluins communion bread which containeth no miracle at al only signifying Christs bodie But as our Sauiours owne wordes importe and ancient fathers teach vs by Manna was prefigured Christs verie bodie and bloud with his soule and Diuinitie vnder the forme of bread For this indeede infinitly excelleth Manna containing al the foresaid or rather much more eminent miracles For first it was consecrated by the maruelous power of Christs word and euer since the same is done by the like power communicated to Priests 2 in his Church militant 3 one and the verie same and not manie in innumerable places and in euerie les●e or greater forme yea in the least particle of the accidents that may be Christ is whole and entire 4 It geueth abundance of grace in this life signified by the day before the Sabbath for the glorie of the next li●e in eternal ●est 5 where is no more vse of Sacraments but euerlasting fruition of glorie 6 VVhoso euer therfore would make temporal commoditie of this heauenlie foode as it were reseruing Manna for other dayes of the weke it perisheth to him and turneth to his ignominie but being reserued in the faithful soule for the life to come which is the true Sabbath it remaineth an heauenlie treasure 7 And so it auaileth to euerie one as their soule which is the spiritual stomake of supernatural meate is lesse or more disposed 8 Though heate of persecution and other aduerse power take away this Sacrament and Sacrifice abrode in the field of this world yet no power extinguisheth it within the Church where it is in due maner prepared and ministred to the children of God 9 where it yeldeth al comfort strength and contentment to good spiritual desires 10 but to the incredulous Capharnaitessemeth vnpossible and to carnal conceipts loathsome 11 Being worthely receiued into our mortal bodies our arke or temporal tabernacle it remaineth in incorruptible effect wherby the bodie
shal be raised againe from death and together with the soule be eternally glorified 12 In the meane time of this pilagrimage of mankind it is our way-faring special prouision dailie and supersubstantial bread til we shal possesse the promised land the kingdome of heauen in eternal blisse CHAP. XVII The people murmuring againe in Raphidim for want of drinck our Lord giueth them water out of arock 8. Amalech fighteth with them And Moyseslifting vp his hand in prayer Israel ouercometh otherwise Amalech pr●●a●leth THERFORE al the multitude of the children of Israel setting forward from the desert Sin by their mansions according to the word of our Lord camped in Raphidim where there was no water for the people to drinke † Who chiding against Moyses said Geue vs water that we may drinke To whom Moyses answered Why chide you against me Wherfore doe you tempt our Lord † The people therfore was thirstie there for lacke of water and murmured against Moyses saying Why didst thou make vs goe forth out of Aegypt to kil vs and our children and our beastes with thirst † And Moyses cried to our Lord saying What shal I doe to this people Yet a litle while and they wil stone me † And our Lord said to Moyses Goe before the people and take with thee of the ancients of Israel and the rodde wherwith thou didst strike the riuer take in thy hand and goe † Behold I wil stand there before thee vpon the rocke Horeb and thou shalt strike the rocke and water shal goe out therof that the people may drinke Moyses did so before the ancientes of Israel † and he called the name of that place Temptation because of the chiding of the children of Israel and for that they tempted our Lord saying Is the Lord amongst vs or not † And Amalec came and fought against Israel in Raphidim † And Moyses sayd to Iosue Choose out men and goe forth and fight against Amalec to morow I wil stand in the toppe of the hil hauing the rodde of God in my hand † Iosue did as Moyses had spoken and he fought against Amalec but Moyses and Aaron and Hur went vp vpon the toppe of the hil † And when Moyses lifted vp his hands Israel ouercame but if he did lette them downe a little Amalec ouercame † And the handes of Moyses were heauie therfore they tooke a stone and putte vnder him wherupon he sate and Aaron and Hur staied vp his handes on both sides And it came to passe that his handes were not wearie vntil sunne sette † And Iosue put Amalec to flight his people by the edge of the sword † And our Lord said to Moyses Write this for a monument in a booke deliuer it to the eares of Iosue for I wil destroy the memorie of Amalec from vnder heauen † And Moyses builded an Altar and called the name therof Our Lord my exaltation saying † Because the hand of our Lords throne and the warre of our Lord shal be against Amalec from generation vnto generation CHAP. XVIII Iethro Moyses father in law bringeth to him his wise and childrens 8. And hearing the great workes of God 12. offereth Sacrifice 13 and Wisely aduised Moyses to appoint subordinate officers to iudge lesse causes reseruing the greater to him selfe AND when Iethro the priest of Madian the allied of Moyses had heard al the thinges that God had done to Moyses and to Israel his people and that our Lord had brought forth Israel out of Aegypt † he tooke Sephora the wife of Moyses whom he had sent backe † and her two sonnes of which one was called Gersam his father saying I haue bene a stranger in a forren countrie † And the other Eliezer for the God of my father quoth he is my helper and hath deliuered me from Pharaoes sword † Iethro therfore the allied of Moyses came and his sonnes and his wife to Moyses into the desert where he was camped beside the mountayne of God † And he sent word to Moyses saying I Iethro thy allied come to thee and thy wife and thy two children with her † Who going forth to mere his allied adored and kissed him and they saluted on an other with wordes of peace And when he was entred into the tent † Moyses told his allied al thinges that our Lord had done to Pharao and the Aegyptians for Israel and the whole trauaile which had chanced to them in the iourney and that our Lord had deliuered them † And Iethro reioyced for al the good thinges that our Lord had done to Israel because he had deliuered them out of the handes of the Aegyptians † and he said Blessed is the Lord that hath deliuered you out of the hand of the Aegyptians and out of the hand of Pharao that hath deliuered his people out of the hand of Aegypt † Now doe I know that the Lord is great aboue al goddes for because they dealt proudely against them † Iethro therfore the allied of Moyses offered holocaustes and hostes to God and Aaron and al the ancientes of Israel came to eate bread with him before God † And the next day Moyses sate to iudge the people who stoode by Moyses from morning vntil night † Which thing when his allied had seene to witte al thinges that he did in the people he said What is this that thou doest in the people Why sittest thou alone and al the people attendeth from morning vntil night † To whom Moyses answered The people cometh to me seeking the sentence of God † And when anie controuersie chanceth among them they come vnto me to iudge betwene them and to shew the preceptes of God and his lawes † But he said Thou doest not wel † thou art t●red with foolish labour both thou and this people that is with thee the busines is aboue thy strength thou alone canst not susteyne it † But heare my wordes and counseils and God shal be with thee Be thou to the people in those thinges that pertaine to God to report their wordes vnto him † and to shew to the people the ceremonies and rite of wor●hipping and the way wherin they ought to walke and the worke that they ought to doe † And prouide out of al the people men that are wise and doe feare God in whom there is truth and that doe hate aua●ice and appointe of them tribunes and centurions and quinquagenarians and deanes † which may iudge the people at al tymes and what great matter soeuer ●●a● fal out let them referre it to thee and let them iudge the lesse matters only and so it may be lighter for thee the burden being imparted vnto others † If thou doest this thou shalt fulfil the commandment of God and shal be able to beare his preceptes and al this people shal returne to their places with p●eace † Which thinges when Movses heard he did al thinges that he had suggested vnto him † And choosing substantial men
day soeuer I am in tribulation incline thine eare to me In what day soeuer I shal inuocate thee heare me speedely † Because my dayes haue vanished as smoke and my bones are withered as a drie burnt firebrand † I am striken as grasse and my hart is withered because I haue forgotten to eate my bread † For the voyce of my groning my bone hath cleaued to my flesh † I am become like a pellicane of the wildernes I am become as a nightcrow in the house † I haue watched and am become as a sparow solitarie in the housetoppe † Al the day did mine enemies vpbrayde me and they that praysed me sware against me † Because I did eate ashes as bread mingled my drinke with weeping † At the face of thy wrath and indignation because lifting me vp thou hast throwne me downe † My daies haue declined as a shadow and I am withered as grasse † But thou ô Lord endurest for euer and thy memorial in generation and generation † Thou rysing vp shal haue mercie on Sion because it is time to haue mercie on it because the time cometh † Because the stones therof haue pleased thy seruantes and they shal haue pittie on the earth therof † And the Gentiles shal feare thy name ô Lord and al the kinges of the earth thy glorie † Because our Lord hath built Sion and he shal be seene in his glorie † He hath had respect to the prayer of the humble and he hath not despised their petition † Let these thinges be written vnto an other generation and the people that shal be created shal praise our Lord. † Because he hath looked forth from his high holie place our Lord from heauen hath looked vpon the earth † That he might heare the gronings of the fettered that he might loose the children of them that are slayne † That they may shewforth the name of our Lord in Sion and his praise in Ierusalem † In the assembling of the people together in one and kinges to serue our Lord. † He answered him in the way of his strength Shew me the fewnes of my daies † Cal me not backe in the halfe of my daies thy yeares are vnto generation and generation † In the beginning ô Lord thou didst found the earth and the heauens are the workes of thy hands † They shal perish but thou art permanent and they shal al waxe old as a garment And as a vesture thou shalt change them and they shal be changed † but thou art the selfe same and thy yeares shal not faile † The children of thy seruantes shal inhabite and their seede shal be directed for euer PSALME CII Thankes to God for priuate 6. and publike benefites 17. His mercie iustice and other proprieties are immutable 20. Angels and al other creatures are inuited to praise him † To Dauid himself MY soule blesse thou our Lord and al thinges that are within me his holie name † My soule blesse thou our Lord and forget not al his retributions † Who is propitious to al thine iniquities who healeth al thine infirmities † Who redemeth thy life from deadly falling who crowneth thee in mercie and commiserations † Who replenisheth thy desire in good thinges “ thy youth shal be rewed as the eagles † Our Lord doth mercies and iudgement to al that suffer wrong † He made his waies knowne to Moyses his willes to the children of Israel † Our Lord is pitieful and merciful long suffering and very merciful † He wil not be angrie alwayes neither wil he threaten for euer † He hath not done to vs according to our sinnes neither according to our iniquities hath he rewarded vs. † For according to the height of heauen from the earth hath he strengthned his mercie vpon them that feare him † As far as the East is distant from the West hath he made our iniquities far from vs. † As a father hath compassion of his children so hath our † Lord compassion on them that feare him † because he hath knowen our making He remembred that we are dust † man his daies are as grasse as the floure of the filde so shal he florish † Because the spirit shal passe in him and he shal not stand and he shal know his place no more † But the mercie of our Lord from euerlasting and vnto euerlasting vpon them that feare him And his iustice is vpon the childrens children to them that keepe his testament † And are mindful of his commandmentes to doe them † Our Lord hath prepared his seate in heauen and his kindom shal haue dominion ouer al. † Blesse our Lord al ye his Angels mightie in powre doing his word that feare the voice of his wordes † Blesse our Lord al ye his hoastes you his ministers that doe his wil. † Blesse ye our Lord al his workes in euerie place of his dominion my soule blesse thou our Lord. ANNOTATIONS PSALME CII 5 Thy youth shal be renevved as the Eagles Aristotel and Plinie write that an Eagle decayeth not nor euer dieth by old age but the vpper part of her beake st l growing at last h●ndereth her from eating and so she dieth of fam●ne Saadias and other Hebrew Rabbins reporte that an Eagle euerie tenne yeares washeth herselfe ●n the sea as in a ba●h then flying very hiegh burneth her fethers in the elemental fire new fethers growing she becometh fresh as in her first youth t●l at last about an huadred yeares old she is not able to rise from the water and so is drowned S. Augustin more probably affirmeth that in long time her ●e●ke growing long and stopping her mouth that she can not eate she breaketh the vpper hooked part therof against a stone and so receiueth meate and recouereth strength as in her youth But whatsoeuer is the natural propert e of this kinglie birde the Royal Prophet here instructeth vs by the s●nilitude of her long life or by the renouation of her streingth that iust men Gods seruantes are spiritually renouated in Christ the principal rocke on who● the Church al the faithful are built either by receiuing new streingth by his grace in their soules after they are weakened by sinne as S. Ierom and Eu hymius expound this place or by restauration of their bodies glorified in the resurrection as S. Augustin teacheth or by both as most Catholique Doctors vnderstand it For one sense of holie Scripture excludeth not an other Especially when one is subordinate to the other As here these two senses do very wel concurre seing the state of the bodie after the resurrection dependeth vpon the state of the soule at
the time of death 9 He vvil not be angrie alvvayes Origen misunderstood this place and some other like holding an erronius opinion that al euen the most wicked sinners both men and d●uels shal at last be saued and not eternally damned which is a condemned heresie contrarie to euident places of holie Scriptures Psal 9 v 6. The impious hath perished their name thou hast destroyed for euer for euer euer Mat. 2● The wicked shal goe into fire euerlasting into euerlasting punishment Apoc. 20. The beast and the false prophet and the same reason is for al the vvicked shal be tormented day and night for euer and euer Neither are the●e vvordes God vvil not be angrie alvvayes spoken vniuersally touching al sinners vvhosoeuer but are limited v 13 17 to those that seare him and kepe his testament vvheras al those that dye in mortal sinne are stil o●●●●na●e in malice and can neuer rightly repent nor rightly feare God nor kepe his commandments PSALME CIII The Psalmist inuiteth himself and others to praise God for his meruelous workes in the heauens 5. the earth and water 9. limiting their bondes producing al thinges necessarie for al liuing creatures in conuenient seasons 27. With continual prouidence of al. † To Dauid him self MY soule blesse thou our Lord ô Lord my God thou art magnified excedingly † Thou hast put on confession and beautie being clothed with light as with a garment Stretching out the heauen as a skinne † which couerest the higher partes therof with waters Which makest the cloude for thee to ascend on which walkest vpon the winges of windes † Which makest spirites thine Angels and thy ministers a burning fyre † Which hast founded the earth vpon the stabilitie therof it shal not be inclined for euer and euer † The depth as a garment is his clothing vpon the mountaines shal waters stand † At thy reprehention they shal flee at the voice of thy thunder they shal feare † The mountaines ascend and the plaine fildes descend into the place which thou hast founded for them † Thou hast set a bound which they shal not passe ouer neither shal they returne to couer the earth † Which sendestforth fontaines in the valles betwen the middest of mountaines shal waters passe † Al the beastes of the filde shal drinke the wilde asses shal expect in their thirst † Ouer them shal the foules of the ayre inhabite out of the middes of rockes they shal geueforth voices † Watering the mountaines from his higher places of the fruite of thy worke shal the earth be filled † Bringing forth grasse for beastes and herbe for the seruice of men That thou mayst bring forth bread out of the earth † and wine may make the hart of man ioyful That he may make the face chereful with oile and bread may confirme the hart of man † The trees of the silde shal be filled and the ceders of Libanus which he hath planted † there sparowes shal make their nest The house of the hearne is the leader of them † the high mountaines for hartes the rocke a refuge for the Irchins † He made the moone for seasons the sunne knoweth his going downe † Thou didst appoint darkenes and night was made in it shal al the beastes of the wood passe † The whelpes of lions roaring to rauen and to seeke of God meate for themselues † The sunne is risen and they are gathered together and in their couches they shal be placed † Man shal goe forth to his worke and to his working vntil euening † How magnified are thy workes ô Lord thou hast made al thinges in wisedom the earth is filled with thy possession † This great sea and very large there are creeping beastes wherof there is no number Litle beastes with great † there shippes shal passe This dragon whom thou madest to delude † al expect of thee that thou geue them meate in season † Thou geuing vnto them they shal gather it thou opening thy hand al shal be filled with bountie † But thou turning away the face they shal be trubled thou shalt take away their spirite and they shal faile and shal returne into their dust † Thou shalt sendforth thy spirit and they shal be created and thou shalt renewe the face of the earth † Be the glorie of our Lord for euer our Lord wil reioice in his workes † Who looketh vpon the earth maketh it to tremble who toucheth the mountaines and they smoke † I wil chaunte to our Lord in my life I wil sing to my God as long as I am † Let my speach be acceptable to him but I wil take delight in our Lord. † Let sinners faile from the earth and the vniust so that they be not my soule blesse thou our Lord. PSALME CIIII. The Israelites are exhorted to sing praises to God 5. for his meruelous benefites towards Abraham Isaac and Iacob 11. whose particular familie being then smal went from Chanaan into Aegypt 17. Whither Ioseph by Gods prouidence was caried before there increased in number was persecuted 26. deliuered by Moyses and Aaron working manie great miracles 36. protected and fedde in the desert 44. and finally possessed Chanaan Alleluia CONFESSE ye to our Lord and inuocate his name shewforth his workes among the Gentiles † Chaunt to him and sing to him tel ye al his meruelous workes † Prayse ye him in his holie name let the hart of them reioice that seeke our Lord. † Seeke ye our Lord and be confirmed seeke his face alwayes † Remember ye his meruelous workes which he hath done his wonders and the iudgments of his mouth † The seede of Abraham his seruantes the children of Iacob his elect † He is the Lord our God in al the earth are his iudgementes † He hath bene mindeful for euer of his testament of the word which he commanded vnto a thousand generations † Which he disposed to Abraham and of his oath to Isaac † And he appointed it to Iacob for a precept and to Israel for an eternal testament † Saying To thee wil I geue the land of Chanaan the corde of your inheritance † When they were of smal number very few and seiourners therof † And they passed from nation into nation from kingdom to an other people † He leift not a man to hurt them and he rebuked kings for their sake † Touch not my annointed and toward my prophetes be not malignant † And he called a famine vpon the land and he desstroyed al the strength of bread † He sent a man before them Ioseph was sold to be a seruant † They humbled his feete in fetters yron passed through his soule † vntil his word came The word of our Lord inflamed him † the king sent and
desire nor anie of the rest is in a mans owne powre as of himself so much as to thinke a good thought but Gods grace preuenteth sturreth men vp and continually assisteth in al good beginninges progresse and perseuerance as the same diuine auctor teacheth a litle before v. 14. wisdom preuenteth them that couete her that she first may shew herself vnto them Then to admitte or refuse is in their powre that haue good motions And therfore sinne is rightly imputed and damnation iustly inflicted vpon the wicked because as Nehemias 2. Esd 9. v. 17. testifieth of the vngratful people they would not heare And they hardened their neckes and gaue the head to returne to their seruitude as it were by contention or striuing against God through their owne free wil which appeareth here to remaine in sinners On the other side the same Nehemias in confidence of reward for good workes and of his voluntarie cooperating with Gods grace feared not to pray 2. Esd 5. v. 19 in these wordes Remember me my God to good according to al thinges which I haue done to this people Some men moreouer besides the commandments of the law voluntarily professed a peculiar state of holie life a plaine figure or rather an example of Euangelical counsels As in the former ages the Nazerites whose rule is prescribed Numeri 6. practised by Sampson Iudic. 13. and Samuel 1. Reg. 1. and the Rechabites Iere. 35. so in this last age next before Christ the Assideans or Esseni 1. Mach. 2. v. 42. of whom Iudas Machabeus in his time was head or captaine 2. Mach. 14. v. 6. Ieremie the prophet ch 16. v. 2. by Gods ordinance liued single vnmaried al the time of the captiuitie Thou shalt not take a wife and thou shalt not haue sonnes and daughters in this place to witte in Ierusalem Neither did he marie when he was afterwardes in Aegypt But of his owne accord remayned a virgin al his life as S. Ierom writeth li 1. aduers Iouinianum Prayers of Sainctes after they are departed from this world is wanifestly deduced of the sacred text lere 15. v. 1. of Moyses and Samuel not to be heard if they should pray for the people whom God had decreed to punish were consequently to be heard in some other case And more expresly 2. Mach. 15. v. 12. 14. is recorded that Onias and Ieremie did pray for al the people and for al the holie citie Reuerent estimation of Reliques and other holie thinges is manifest by the fact of the same Prophet Ieremie who by Gods ordinance 2. Mach. 2. v. 1. 5. hid the holie fire and the Tabernacle and the Arke the Altar of incense in a caue that they should not be prophaned by infidels ransaking Ierusalem and the temple Other holie ornaments also and vesseles were restored by the fauorable king Cyrus 1. Esd 1. v. 7. ch 8. v. 30. In figure also of the holie Crosse on which Christ was to redeme mankind those that mourned for the abominations in Ierusalem Ezec. 9. vvere signed in their foreheades vvith the letter Thau or T. and so were saued from the common slaughter of the vnsigned Prayer and Sacrifice for the dead is likewise clere 2. Mach. 12. v. 43. c. if either the text may be admitted for Canonical saying v. 46. It is a holie and healthful cogitation to pray for the dead or for good testimonie of Iudas fact being Highpriest and doing that which the whole Church practised and which the Iewes yet obserue to this day Of the General Resurrection is good testimnie in the same place v. 43. and 44. as the ground of Iudas his pietie towardos the dead wel and religiously thincking of the Resurrection For vnles he hoped that they which were slaine should rise againe it should seme superfluous and vaine to pray for the dead But seing he did beleue the Resurrection he did right wel and piously And seing the beleefe of resurrection is true it foloweth as this auctor inferreth that it is a holie thing to pray for the dead Malachie the last of the Prophetes in the last chapter foresheweth and describeth the General iudgement in the end of this world wherin the wicked hal be condemned and the iust eternally rewarded Which day shal come sayth he kindled as a surnace Al that do impietie dying in that state shal be stubble and that day shal in flame them And there shal rise to you that feare my name the Sunne of iustice and health in his winges or glorious beames healing and curing al body lie infirmities and defectes Before which day he foretelleth of two signes v. 5. The coming of Elias the Prophet and. v. 6. the conuersion of the Iewes to Christ And thus much may here suffice for particular pointes of religion in this age It resteth to view the state and gouernment of the Church in this time Which may be considered according to the foure Monarchies of heathen nations the Chaldees the Medes Persians the Grecians and the Romanes Vnder the Chaldees whose Emperial citie was Babylon they were in captiuitie seuentie yeares By the Medes and Persians for that Monarchie consisted of those two nations they were released from captiuitie with manie fauoures yet sometimes afflicted Vnder the Monarchie of the Grecians they were partly in extreme persecution of Antiochus Epiphanes and of other Grecian kinges and princes partly in warres for defence of Gods lawes Before and after which persecution and warres as wel vnder the Grecians as the Romans til Christs Passion the Church was for most part in peace yet some times afflicted But omitting manie intricate diffi●uliies about the times and reignes of sundrie heathen kinges it wil suffice our purpose to shew the general state of the Iewish nation with their owne particular gouerners spiritual and temporal with more or lesse fauour of forreine Princes First therfore concerning their estate in their captiuitie in Babylon we may here obserue Gods prouidence in that before the citie and temple of Ierusalem were destroyed and the whole nation made captiue Ioachin otherwise called Iechonias the sonne of Ioachaz who was also called Iechonias king of Iuda was transported into Babylon and his mother and manie other principal persons 4. Reg. 24. v. 15. Likewise Iosedech sonne of Saraias highpriest 1. Paral. 6. v. 15. was caried into Babylon And in the meane time Sedecias vncle to Ioachin reigned in Iuda who in the eleuenth yeare was taken and caried captiue into Babylon and there died Ioachin yet liuing in prison And Saraias the Highpriest with others was slayne in Rebla when Ierusalem was destroyed 4. Reg. 25. v. 18. 21. To whom Iosedech succeded in the highpriesthood So that both the issue of Dauid in the right line of our Sauiours genealogie and the Highpriest of Aarons stocke were in Babylon before the whole bodie of the nation was brought thither
This Iechonias or Ioachin remained in prison til the death of Nabuchodonosor the space of thirtie seuen yeares and was then deliuered by Euilmerodach and by him entertayned courteously as a prince 4. Reg. 25. v. 27. He maried there and had issue Salathiel and Salathiel h●d Zorobabel Who together with Iosue sonne of Iosedech highpriest Esdras Nehemias others recited 1. Esd 2. conducted the children of Israel from Babylon into their countrie There were also in a former transmigration Daniel and the other three children Ananias Misael Azarias of the royal or principal bloud in the third yeare of Ioakim otherwise called Eliacim sonne of Iosias 4. Reg. 23. v. 34 king of Iuda Dan. 1. v. 1. 6. These with others were caried ●s hostages into Babylon and brought vp more liberally Where seruing God sincerely abstayning from vnlawful meates were protected by God much also estemed and promoted in that place For Daniel about the age of twelue yeares conuinced the two wicked Iudges and deliuered Susanna from their cruel handes Dan. 13. And afterwardes for declaring and interpreting the kings dreame Dan. 2. and excellent wisdom and gift of prophecie was admired by al aduanced by the king but maligned by certaine enuious sorcerers and great men Wherby he was sometimes in great danger but stil deliuered by Gods powre protecting him Dan. 6. 14. The other three children were likewise aduanced Dan. 2. v. 49. and therfore by diuers enuied and for refusing to adore an idol set vp by Nabuchodonosor were cast into a hote burning furnace and there preserued Dan. 3. Ieremie who before this time begane to prophecie whiles he was a childe Iere. 1. continued in the time of captiuitie in Ierusalem and Iurie with much affliction and stil prophecying finally dyed in Aegypt Baruch his scribe and also a Prophete went sometimes into Babylon and returned into Iurie Baruch 1. instructing and exhorting the people Ezechiel was caried with king Iechonias and Iosedech into Babylon and there prophecied ch 1. v. 2. part of the same time with Daniel in great part the same thinges with Ieremie And during the captiuitie king Iechonias Iosedech the highpriest Ieremie Baruch Ezechiel prophetes innumerable others some Martyres and manie Confessors parted from this world But Daniel yet liued And in place of Iosedech Highpriest Iosue succeded and the progenie of king Iechonias continuing in Salathiel and Zorobabel the nation ●ad them and other eminent men with temporal dependence vpon forreine princes in the next Monarchie of the Medes and Persians For when Darius king of Medes had slaine Ba●●azar king of the Chaldees and so possessed Babylon with the whole countrie he brought the Monarchie to the Medes Persians Dan. 5. v. 31. and within the space of one yeare he dyed and Cyrus succeding granted leaue to al the Iewes to returne into Iurie and there to build vp their temple and citie of Ierusalem which Nabuchodonosor had destroyed At which time Daniel had his vision that Christ our Sauiour should come into the world within seuentie weekes of seuen yeares to the weke that is in foure hundred ninetie yeares after the perfect finishing of the temple and citie Dan. 9. v. 24. 25. But when they were so built againe that the wekes beganne to be counted is very obscure as it was the wil of God that the prophecie being certayne in itself should not be ouer clere to euerie mans vnderstanding but as likewise manie other prophecies shut and sealed Dan. 12. v. 6. 9. 13. In this time of the Medes and Persians Monarchie Mardocheus remayning in Chaldea after the relaxation had that vision in a dreame Esther 11. after which folowed the historie of him Quene Esther and wicked Aman with the danger and deliuerie of al the Iewes in those partes Some thinke it likewise probable that the historie of Iudith happened after the captiuitie though others suppose that it was in the time of Manasses king of Iuda which not being our purpose to discusse and decide we wil passe to thinges more certayne The prophetes Aggeus Zachatias nere twentie yeares after the relaxation earnestly exhorted the princes people to build vp the temple which had bene begunne and now was neglected vpon vaine feare thincking the time was not yet come of building the house of our Lord. Aggeus 1. v. 2. Wherupon the prophet reproueth them expostulating thus Why is it time for you to dwel in embowed houses and this house of our Lord desert And assureth them v. 10. that their ground should remaine barren and ch 2. v. 15. their sacrifices vngratful til they should build the temple promising moreouer that this new temple should be more glorious by Christs personal presence therin then the former temple built by Salomon But especially the Church of Christ presigured by the temple should farre excel the Synagoge of the old testament ch 2. v. 10. Great shal be the glorie of this last house more then of the first Which Zacharie confirmeth inuiting the Gentiles to come and the Iewes to returne into Christs Church ch 2. v. 6. O flee out of the land of the North sayth our Lord because into the foure windes of heauen haue I dispersed you v. 7. O Sion flee thou that dwellest with the daughter of Babylon And by diuers other visions and prophecies they forshew the conuersion of the Gentiles and reiection of the Iewes for their obduration but in the end they also shal be conuerted Malachie prophecied after the finishing of the temple exhorting al to offer their sacrifices with puritie of hart reprehending both priestes and people for not so doing ch 1. He also foresheweth the reiection of the Iewes calling of the Gentiles with the change of the old sacrifices and institution of a new farre more excellent and more effectual to be offered euerie where v. 10. 11. He concludeth his prophecie ch 4. foretelling the terrible day of Iudgement and life or death euerlasting These later prophetes yet liuing as Iosephus Eusehius Theodoretus and others testifie in their histories the Grecians obtained so great a Monarchie by king Alexander the Great of Macedo that being parted after his death amongst manie yet al were great kingdomes some longer some shorter time In the beginning wherof when king Alexander came to Ierusalem as Iosephus writeth li. 11. c. 8. Antiquit. Iaddus the highpriest going forth in his pontifical attyre to mete him the same king straightwayes fel downe at his feete with al reuerence And being demanded by his freindes the princes of his armie why he so much honored the highpriest he answered that he honored no● the man for himself but for his office and God in him who had appeared to him in slepe in that very habite and ornaments when he in Macedonia discoursed in his minde of making battel against the Persians promising him assured victorie Shortly