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A17231 A true description of the passion of our Sauiour Iesus Christ as it was acted by the bloodie Iewes: and registred by the blessed Euangelists. In English meetre by Iohn Bullokar, Calend. Nouemb. 1618. J. B. (John Bullokar) 1622 (1622) STC 4085; ESTC S117069 12,475 36

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For God so lou'd the world that now he gaue His onely Sonne from sinne the same to saue Who Lambe-like mild in league with heau'ns decree Folding earth-dwellers in as deare embrace Would pleading for himselfe repulsed be That for vs praying he might still find grace O rare obedience perfect zeales true signe How much owe we for this great loue of thine But now he riseth from the dewie ground To visit his Disciples left distrest And finds them all securely sleeping sound When waking Peter heauy as the rest O Simon art thou now asleepe quoth he What couldst thou not watch one bare houre with me As he would say Wert thou of selfe-accord So prodigall of vowes with timelesse speed And do'st so soone neglect thy helplesse Lord In drowsie slumber at his greatest need Ill canst thou in my safegard spend thy blood That wilt not wake to do thine owne soule good Not so false Iudas who for pettie gaine Sleepes not a winke this night nor can forbeare Postes round the waked streetes cals vp his traine Sollicits helpe seekes armour euery where Marshals his Band himselfe and thinkes a yeere Till he may come to apprehend me here O shame that Satans slaues so forward are In acting mischiefe that shall bring damnation And you to saue your soules deuoid of care O watch and pray therefore lest ill temptation Oppresse your faith the spirit faine would do it But that weake flesh is hardly brought vnto it Not yet through-wak't he leaues thē slumbring stil And fraught with feares departs againe to pray Impulst by weaknesse of his humane will O Father if this cup in no wise may Passe by vnlesse the potion worke in me Thy heauenly pleasure let performed be Thus this good Shepheard iealous of his sheepe Whom rauening Wolues he knowes will soone molest Watches with care whilst they securely sleepe And sighes alone that they in peace may rest Not sparing to ingage his proper life To saue them all from slaughtring butchers knife His prayer ended he returnes againe And finds like comfort that he found before They still slept hard vnable to refraine One minutes rest and which did grieue him more So carelesse of the former words he spake Quite vnprouided what excuse to make O now what horror in this soule doth dwell ●aked of helpe forsaken all alone ●●ught by his bloodie foes assail'd of hell ●etraid or else neglected of his owne Giuen vp by heau'n to die with painfull shame And bare the burden of all sinners blame ●wake my soule run forth with ioy and dread 〈◊〉 to this garden where thy Sauiour lies ●●ere shalt thou see the Booke of life wide spred ●ith lessons stor'd of heauenly mysteries There shalt thou see thy truth thy strength thy food Thy way thy life thy light and all thy good ●here shalt thou see the way of patience ●he Sun-bright lampe of burning charitie ●he perfect patterne of obedience ●he mirrour of profound humility The root of loue the goale of vertues race The salue of sinne and fulnesse of Gods grace ●here shalt thou see the strength of Israels weale ●●at valiant Dauid thy most louing God ●●est to the fight arm'd all in fiery zeale ●●rning with hot desire to spend his blood And wash away the foule opprobrious blot That threats vile bondage if he succour not Emboldened with exceeding loue of thee Here in these paled lists alone he stayes Expecting till his foes arriued be Meane while accumulating sundry wayes With willing mind to his al-ready store Such paines as neuer flesh did feele before O with what sorrow did the nobler part Of his pure soule where Reason hath her seat Pity th' inferiour where weake Sense doth smart How faithfully for it did he intreat Vntill at last concorded both in one They ioyntly cride Father thy will be done Yet though this blessed Vnion did gain-say Detract of time whereto faint flesh aspires From the Disciples he departs away And to his praying place againe ●et●es And there the third time doth with teares implore Vsing like words as he had vsde before When lo an Angel gliding through the ayre Appeares to him from starrie Region sent Which makes him for a while desist his prayer To hearken what this heauenly Herald meant Who nearer comes with sweet speech comforteth His fainting Lord against dismay of death Sweet Iesu how art thou deiected now From sublime glory to disgrace and feare Most true it is the Prophet spake That thou Art somewhat lower made then Angels were Since in thine agonizing languishment To comfort thee an Angel downe is sent See see O Angel how thy Maker lies Below and here on earth afflicted sore Whom plac't in maiestie aboue the skies With feare and reuerence you do all adore Wonder of wonders the like neuer done How can thine eyes endure to looke thereon Can riuers adde vnto their fountaines slow Through whose supply those streames they haue do runne Can branches helpe the quickning root to grow Or pale-fac't Moone lend light vnto the Sunne How canst thou Angel comfort then his mind In whom thy selfe dost all thy comfore find But this O man must needs on thee be laid Whose fleshes frailtie and sinnes earned smart Doth with surcharging horror so inuade That euen almost forgetting his best part His Godheads power be sdaines not in this dread Of his owne creature to be comforted And yet alas this comfort could not cure The death-sicke dolours of his wounded heart But now the time grew on his body pure Vnto the dreadfull Crosse must needes depart And rising vp he thus to them did say The man was neere that should their Lord betray No sooner had our Sauiour told this newes But straight the traitorous Iudas with a kisse Betraid his Lord and Master to the Iewes A cruell act which lost eternall blisse The sands on shore in number are not told His sundry faults passe number to vnfold O let me breathe before I do proceed Surcharging loads will craue a little rest The grants are small to them that stand in need That will not bring some comfort to their brest And he that writes what doth in wicked lurke Shall breathe him twice before he end his worke Looke how the Sea-fowles on a stormy day Do flocke themselues about the Ocean shore As thicke as Leaues when Summer fleetes away So throng these Iewes vnto him more and more Cruell reward he ought to them good will And they like traitours sought his blood to spill ●●en from the Garden they their Master brought 〈◊〉 to the Priests and Elders of their crue ●●ey bore false witnesse there his life they sought ●ch cride that death should be his onely due Labouring indeed as much as in them lay To take the Life of liues their Lord away ●●d then from thence they drag'd him to his death ●●en to the Crosse they nail'd his hands and feet ●●en did they stop their blessed Sauiours breath ●●en did they him with scornefull titles greet And now the Scripture true is brought to passe For he amongst the wicked counted was 〈◊〉 now the houre of death being fully runne ●●e heauens were darke he to his Father cries 〈◊〉 God my God why dost thou leaue thy Sonne ●●d ending so his soule from bodie flies A happy death since death doth make vs liue And blest be He that blessed life doth giue FINIS
Crosse and Passion suffred here Or valuing light what thou hast bought so deare But Peter hearing what his Master told And cleare in conscience from so blacke a sinne Presuming of his strength with courage bold To promise for himselfe doth thus begin Though all the world offended were in thee Yet herewith spotted Peter would not be O Simon Simon thus doth Christ reply The subtill Fiend your setled thoughts to quaile Hath sought to sift you all as wheat but I Haue prayd for thee that thy faith might not faile Thou therefore once turn'd to the perfect way Confirme thy weaker brethren what thou may To whom th'Apostle growne more confident Lord I am ready with resolued heart Not onely to endure imprisonment Or in such slight affliction take thy part But with thee lose my life if need require To shew my loue and further thy desire The wakefull Cocke saith Christ twice shall not crow This night till thou hast three times me denide Yet Peter cannot be perswaded so But plights his faith most constant to abide At which the rest seeing his courage such By solemne vow protest to do as much O what high taskes can rashnesse vndertake Ere difficulty of the worke be knowne What vaunts can ouer-weening humors make Which in an instant will he ouerthrowne Great oddes in what they 'l do and what they speake Their words are strong their deeds will be but weake Boldly they boast themselues resolu'd to slay And die with Christ in such a quarrell good Yet one small storme shall blow them all away And he for them must bide and shed his blood So feeble are th' attempts by man begun When heauenly grace is not relide vpon But Christ in mercy doth not sue the debt Which they by vow stand bound this night to pay Knowing their weake estates vnable yet He well is pleasd to grant a longer day When after his Ascension they shall In vnknowne shores be wider scattered all Then shall self-penance scourge the trothles blame Of this nights worke that now their worke defaces Then shall they boldly preach his healthfull Name Not recking danger or the worlds disgraces Then shall they go to prisons ioyfully And for his Truths sake glorious Martyrs die By this the Lambe of God who for mans sinne With willing steps went meeting to be slaine And made a Sacrifice is entred in The Garden with his yet-vnscattered traine To whom he sorrowing speakes Here sit stay Whilst I withdraw my selfe awhile to pray Then Peter Iames and Iohn he takes aside When straight with an exceeding feare opprest His stonisht sences could no longer hide The griefe that had surcharg'd his guiltlesse brest My soule is heauie to the death saith he Abide you here and watch awhile with me Accompany thy Sauiour O my Soule In outward signes of inward griping wo Breake forth in sighs and with true teares condole The dreadfull horror that torments him so Sith for thy sake this sorrow pierc't his heart Good reason in his griefe thou beare some part See how that heauenly face is altred quite Scarce to be knowne by what it was euen now Dead-pale vsurpes the seat of red and white And Care sits figur'd in his wrinkled brow Distressefull feare seemes drown'd in watery eyne That ouerwash his cheekes with weeping brine Like as the bright Sunne in a Welkin faire With pitchie mist on sudden ouer-cast Shoots forth his beames in vaine to cleare the ayer Cloud vpon cloud still thickning wondrous fast Blacke night doth ouer-hang the shadowed land Threatning a cruell tempest out of hand Or as the Sea tost by some boisterous wind Doth mainly beat vpon the quiet shore Swels in huge waues aboue due course of kind And with selfe-motion laboureth more and more Such is the troubled state and deepe vnrest Wherewith our Sauiours soule is now opprest O heauens great'st strength and Angels chiefest ioy Earths hope hels feare true God omnipotent What griefe can vexe or terror strange dismay Thy spotlesse soule with such sad languishment What terror can these pangs of passion breed Which make thee seeme not as thou art indeed Is death the entrance to felicity The finall date of all terrestriall wo The glorious triumph of thy victory The way by which perforce all flesh must go So dreadfull to affright thee like as those Which here on earth their highest blisse repose O wherefore didst thou leaue thy heauenly Throne And shrowd a Godhead in our mortall frame Why hast thou here by signes thy might made knowne And taken to thy selfe a Sauiours name If not to quell the rage of hellish powers And lastly by thy death to redeeme ours If now wo worth the while thou shouldst giue o're And leaue thy worke so neere an happy end Who then ah who shall promisd health restore To vs whose hopes on thee alone depend No Sonne but thou of earthly mother bred Hath power to crush the cursed Serpents head ●n outward shew thou didst pretend of late An inward longing for this present time ●rging the Traitor to accelerate The issue of his il-conceiued crime Yet now the houre and Iudas both are nie Thy courage failes and thou art loth to die But oh what haue I said can feare dismay Whom mou'd to wrath the earth doth quake to see Can his thoughts change so soone whose power doth stay All powers in stable order as they be Ah! no defects impaire not heauenly store And he is now the same he was before This sad eclipsing feare that seemes so dimme The glorious Sun-shine of his Deity Could neuer haue a rising cause from him But from our natures imbecillity Which though supported by celestiall grace Yet faintly shrinkes and shewes of what it was In what he hath assum'd our feeble flesh Therein he trembling faints and stands dismaid Like as that strength we haue in our distresse Comes not of vs but of his heauenly ayd To right our cause his Godhead suffers wrong He weake by vs and we by him are strong When first made Adam ioylesse all alone In Edens beauteous Garden did remaine To fashion Eue he gaue his proper bone And had with flesh the place fill'd vp againe So Christs deare-loued Spouse the Church still weares His rib of strength and he her frailty beares Retir'd about a stones cast from the rest Hem'd in with horror such exceeding waight Of earth-committed sinnes his soule opprest That on both knees he fals and after straight His paine increasing prostrate lies to pray That from him this sad houre might passe away Ah Abba Father which all things didst make And do'st preserue them made if so may be Bow downe thine eyes and for thy mercy sake Remoue this bitter cup of wrath from me Yet let not my will be fulfill'd herein But thine deare Father which hath euer bin Full oft else-where good Christ did intercesse For vs and neuer had one sute debar'd And yet folliciting his owne distresse Obtaines not of his Father to be heard
A true DESCRIPTION OF THE PASSION OF OVR SAVIOVR IESVS CHRIST As it was acted by the bloodie Iewes And registred by the blessed Euangelists In English Meetre by IOHN BVLLOKAR Calend. Nouemb. 1618. LONDON Printed by George Purslowe for Samuel Rand and are to be sold at his shop neere Holburne Bridge 1622. A true DESCRIPTION of our Sauiours PASSION WRapt in our sinfull flesh yet free from sinne The louing-worlds Redeemer lōg had sought Vnto himselfe the stubborne Iewes to winne With mighty signes wonders daily wrought But wished fruit his zeale could neuer gaine He plowd the sands and reapt but losse of paine And when he had full thirty three yeeres space For men and with men dwelt on earth below Lending rich treasures of his heauenly grace To pay those countlesse debts that Sinne did owe. The time was come that should our God restore To heauen aboue from whence he came before Whose passage must by Death prepared be As erst the holy Prophets had foretold That so his death from death might set vs free Whom sinne from life as slaues to death had sold So deadly was the diuellish Serpents sting That nought but Gods death life to man could bring Which to assure vs ere he parted hence He leaues behind for our immortall good A full release of Adams first offence Scaling the Charter with his dearest blood That man might see his loue and learne thereby To loath the sinne that made a God to die Yet neuer could the powerfull stroke of death Nor Fate nor Chance nor Satans secret blow Nor humane force enforce him yeeld his breath Vntill his Will gaue leaue it should be so The Iewes might rage yet heauen had fore decreed He chose to die though they did act the deed But lest the sudden storme if vnforetold Should drowne the seeds of Faith so lately sowne Or make new kindled loue of him grow cold In weak conceits not to perfection growne He shewes them euery thing must come to passe That of him in the Scripture written was And knowing that the houre approched now To his small number of Disciples he Plamely foretels his death and manner how Withall the time when as his death should be To strength their doubtfull thoughts make thé know He could foresee though would not shun the blow Two dayes there are saith he and then the Feast Of Easter comes when Moses did command In memory that Israel was releast From hard oppression of proud Egypt land The Paschall lambe should yeerely eaten be Of all their seed whom God had Io set free But now the old Lawes end approcheth nie These shadowing Figures shortly must away The Sonne of man shall be betraid to die And on the Crosse the worlds great ransome pay To free it from infernall Charons power Whose tyrant rage would life and soule deuoure Thus hauing warn'd whilst at Bethania he Receiu'd in Simons house doth there remaine A woman by him late from sinne set free Doth come her louing Lord to entertaine Bringing a boxe of Alabaster faire Fill'd with an oyntment costly sweet and rare O Loue sole life of Peace and death of Strife Strong knot to tye sweet vnion of consent Thoughts purity faire Mappe of Angels life Heauens new-made Liuery Nurce of all content How true it is the world of thee doth say That whoso loues can brooke no long delay The curious Boxe she breaks and quickly powres This precious liquor on her Sauiours head Whose sweet distilling drops full mainly showres Adowne his necke and on his garments shed Refining all the ayre neere which they fell With fragrant odour of their pleasing smell But enuious Malice soone occasion finds This womans godly meaning to reproue Some standers by do murmure in their minds As discontent to see such zealous loue His owne Disciples too that sate at bord Do grudge such cost bestowd vpon their Lord. Why need this needlesse waste be made say they Of what was worth three hundred pence at least It better had bin sold and giuen away To poore for almes against this holy Feast 'T is pitie such sweet oyle so dearely bought With idle vaine expence should come to nought Thus they But Christ that sought to saue his foes Forgets not now to helpe a friend at need He soone perceiues the grudging thoughts of those That were mislikers of this womans deed And mildly doth rebuke them for their sinne With praise of her that did the worke begin O why should you whom I haue chose for mine Against your louing Lord offended be Why should your murmuring hearts with spite repine At her whose faith wrought this good worke on me Take heed this lesson first was learnt at Hell To grudge at grace and enuie doing well The poore may be relieued when you will No want of them the earth doth euer find But me you shall not haue amongst you still The work 's now done that heauen had erst assign'd And she that knew I shortly hence must go Against my buriall did this cost bestow Of truth therefore I say in each place where The worlds Redemption shal be preacht or taught This womans zeale shall be related there In memory of what she now hath wrought Great loue shall surely reape a great reward Heauen do's the hart not outward shews regard By this the Priests and Scribes whose hearts were set A fire with burning spite and deadly hate At Caiaphas palace are together met In councell closely to deliberate How they might Iesus take by subtill traine And with some shew of Iustice haue him slaine Yet must we not say they in any wise At this great Feast in such a course proceed Left the rude people should against vs rise Or stir rebellion to withstand the deed His words his workes and doctrine haue bin such That him as now we cannot safely touch But Sathan fearing lest by this delay His long-desired worke should rest vnwrought Presents them with an vnexpected way Wherby their mischiefe might to passe be brought Iudas one of the Twelue whom Christ had chose Vnhappy wretch to this assembly goes There doth the Traitour set his Lord to sale Mongst those he knew long sought to sucke his blood Whose precious worth this caitiffe counts so small He bids them make the price as they thought good What will you giue me thus doth Iudas say And I into your hands will him betray O blessed Lady hadst thou present beene When thus thy Sonne by theeuish hands was sold To bloody Merchants it had soone beene seene How deare true owners wel-got pearles do hold Thy tender loue had pitcht the price so hie That Iewish wealth one haire should neuer buy But thou true picture of pure piety Resignst to heauens decree thy proper right Suffering a damned wretch contemptuously To make a market of thy dearst delight Then hie thee hie thee since the case so stands Come buy thine own frō these Priests murthring hands And Iudas O if greedy hope of gaine Entice