Selected quad for the lemma: glory_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
glory_n affliction_n light_a weight_n 7,836 5 9.3268 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A59383 Olbia, the new i[s]land lately discovered with its religion and rites of worship, laws, customs, and government, characters and language : with education of their children in their sciences, arts and manufactures with other things remarkable / by a Christian pilgrim, driven by tempest from Civita Vecchia, or some other parts about Rome, through the straits, into the Atlantick Ocean ; the first part, from the original. Sadler, John, 1615-1674. 1660 (1660) Wing S278; ESTC R9276 335,173 410

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Naball or a natural fool before the wisest man or Angel of the Lord and like a little childe and lesse and weaker much before the strongest and most mighty Giant clothed with double armour Will he contend for ever when our spirit that is His in us must fail and if it should not yet by conquest he can get no glory from us but a blush to think he should be grieved or provoked to contest with that which is so far below h● and so much unworthy of his wrath and so uncapable o● bearing the power of it If he would or could express it abroad out of himself He hath already learned much of God that knoweth how that great and infinite Being is one pure simple Act without all shadow of change as he is in himself and yet in Christ is all doth all beareth all suffereth all for he is Love and can ungod himself for ought I yet see as soon as do or speak or think a thought or any thing or act without Love Though he may hide his love which yet must hide and cover all transgressions if the Proverbs do not deceive us So that in a veile or mask it may appear as frowning or an angry face when yet Love is at the heart and the Lamentations say he doth not afflict from his heart or grieve the children of men and I never read any Scripture praying that God would alter his heart towards any but very many that he would alter his face and turn again and shine upon them or lift up the light of his countenance that so they might be saved He that seeth how that which is Infinite m●st be principle and end subject and object to it self and all it 's own actings yea and Passions or Sufferings also to eternity wil not wonder to hear that God never spake a word or did an act or struck a stroke but on or in and through his own Bowels Jesus Christ. As a tender man How much more a tender God never striketh any but it even pierceth his own soul or Bowels and the harder the object is the more it makes our hand also to ake in striking it but it is because our hand is hard also How easie is it to darken Counsell by words without knowledge But how soon also would True Wisdome come and teach and lead us if we would cry after her and call her Sister and wait early at her gates in a silent freedome from the noise and crowd and dust of this world and vain thoughts or forms of words darkning Counsel without knowledge I have yet said nothing or at least very little of the great sufferings of God in Jesus Christ And indeed what can any man or Angel say of his Sufferings when as all the Gospel is but a little short discourse of some few things which he began and but began to say and do Nor is it much wonder that we should hear or know no more of that of which he spake so Little For he did not cry or cause his voyce to be heard in the streets when hungry thirfty harborless not knowing where to rest his head sl●ghted Contradicted by Sinners betrayed by his own Disciple accused by a multitude scorned spit upon reviled buffe ed and bound scourged by Pilat Crowned with Thornes wearied with the Crosse and broken on it and so cruelly pierced that the hardest heart shall see relent and mourn over him and yet as a sheep is dumb before the shearer so he opened not his mouth Nor did Living Man complain but Dying God cried to his Father My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Thou art holy still and inhabi●st the Praises of Israell Our Fathers trusted in thee they trusted and then cried and still trusted Faith begot Prayer and that increased Faith and they were delivered many times at all times never confounded or ashamed But I am a Worm and no man a reproach of men and despised of all people But thou art Holy still We are yet but in the Porch and have scarce touched the threshold of his Sufferings which the old Greek Liturgy so rightly tearmed as well unknowable as unutterable O how he loved us How great is his goodnesse How great is his Beauty which was yet deformed more then any man or any Creature Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows He was wounded for our transgressions He was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was on him and by his stripes we are healed All we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way and the Lord hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all I might add also that sufferings are of such account with God that though he never promise ought but sutable to all our doings Yet our light afflictions or sufferings which are but for a moment work unto us also but his shadows a far more exceeding and eternall weight of glory with so great Hyperbole as cannot be expressed And because he made his soul an offering for sinne he did prolong his daies raised from the dead and shall see his seed and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand And therefore he shall divide the spoile with the strong and have a portion with the mighty And for suffering of Death he was Crowned with Honour and Glory that by the grace of God he should taste death for every man For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many sonnes unto glory to make the Captain of their Salvation Perfect through Sufferings and though he were a Sonne yet he learned Obedience by the things he suffered For as it pleased the Lord that All fulnesse should dwel in him so it pleased him also in bringing in that fulness into his narrowness as a man to put him to sore pain and thus to make and keep him still quick or of tender sence in the Fear of the Lord which of all he needed most because he knew and saw and felt most Love Which was therefore poyzed with most Holy fear which kept him still in aw and made him most tender also unto others as we see discoursed in the Epist to the Hebrews God would not trust him or us in his hands while he was only taughr his fear or his love by precept till he had it also by the deepest experience And when he put him under the Law ●or us he did not only tell him what measure thou meetest shall be meet again pressed down and running over And he that killeth with the sword shall be killed with the Sword and he that leadeth Captive shall be led Captive And he that diggeth a Pit shall fall into it which are often repeated in the Scripture and spoken to Christ also as well as to us But he also shewed him the horrible Pit and shut him up in it that he might still remember it and by his own experience knowing the
draw All men to him and to make All things new being as the Psalms expresse not only to satisfie the desire of every living thing which is no great matter except also they have great and good desires for else I know not ought I feare or more oppose or pray against then his giving me the desire of my own foolish narrow heart but also that he shall give forth Good and goodnesse so that all things shall be filled with it As we may find by comparing the 85. Psalm concluding thus Yea the Lord shall give forth Good or goodnesse and Righteousnesse shall go before him and direct or set us in the way of his steps with the 104. and 145. Psal. which of all is to be marked most as that which giveth name to all the Book of Psalms as the Jews tell us being thence All called Praises or Songs of blessing The Lord is gracious and full of compassion slow to anger and of great mercy the Lord is good to All and his tender mercies are over All his works All thy works shall praise thee O Lord and thy Sainis shall bless thee The Lord upholdeth All that fall and raiseth up all that are bowed down which is again so repeated and enlarged in the next Psalm also that it may teach us how Christ put himself under that Law also to mourn with every one that mourneth and to weep with every one that weepeth yea and to make us sensible of our own wants and emptinesse that so he may fill us being sent to comfort every one that mourneth and to replenish every empty soul. At this I awaked and my sleep was sweet to me as the Prophet expresseth it Yea and Christ is such an Head to every man as Paul expresseth and such a Root to all our soules and Spirits that our mourning and our sufferings reach and pierce his soul also And in all our afflictions he is afflicted For if any one member suffers all suffer but especially the head and heart and if one be honoured all rejoyce with it The strength of a King is in his Subjects and his glory in their multitude and greatnesse Riches Honour Happinesse and Freedome it being more honour also to govern one freeman then many slaves And it is a union with free Subjects that maketh a King so strong that as Solomo● saith There is no rising against him Where the Arabick also may help us to a better sence and notion of Alkum then is yet common May we not all say to our Saviour as Abigail did to David When my Lord shall sit on the throne of his Rest and when the Lord hath done to my Lord according to all he promised shall it indeed be any offence or grief of heart to my Lord that he spared us and did not shed our blood or avenge himself which is so much forbidden or reserve a grudge in his heart against the Children of his people When he shall see us all come bowing to him to his glory and his Fathers glory also who is glorified he saith when we bear much fruit And is not he so also When He beareth much And as much as he can If he could have been contented to be happy glorious all alone he never needed any world of men or Angels But O! how was he straitned in himself till he had found a means to multiply himself his Image Happinesse and Glory by Creation How much more than by Redemption while we live we shall praise him and shall ever bless him if he save us But the grave cannot praise him death cannot celebrate him the living the living shall praise thee as Hezekiah said And what profit is there in our bloud He did not care to drink the bloud of beasts doth he now delight in eating mans flesh and drinking mans bloud Or what doth he gain by losing us Can the enemie give a recompense for us As Esther spake of Haman And if he cut us off will he not look in the morning and when he sees our places empty will he not have desire to the work of his own hands as Job and the Psalmist to that needle work he curiously wrought in his closet When he hath ground us to powder will he not say return again againe yee sons of men O that God would perswade us even in suffering according to his will to commit our souls to his keeping as to a Faithfull Creator Can he be angry more in time then from eternity before he made the World or ought that could provoke him Or if he can may little children so provoke him with their raising dust or dirty pies against him that he must also turn and curse them in the name of God and give them up to Bears to teare them will he offer children also and his own to Moloch Or with musick drown their yellings in Gehinnon or in Tophet which he so much hates and threatens and his soul abhors so much in others Or if fury can be in him which yet himself denyeth in the Prophet Isa. can it rest in such a bosome When as Solomon saith it resteth in the bosome of fools Can it remain in such a soul which hath so often spoken it self well pleased satisfied and infinitely delighted in himself and his Image his Son and his own most glorious and most gracious Righteousness Can the Sun go down upon his wrath Or if he must for some great reason act a part awhile and wear a mask or frown and cast abroad his Thunderbolts and shew the fierceness of his sore displeasure or the Power of his anger or wrath can it be shown upon a moath a bubble nothing weaker than nothing will he also set his eyes or heart or heavy hand on that which is not What Glory Honour Profit Pleasure can the Power and Wisdom that we lay aside awhile the Goodness of an Infinite God beget it self in crushing us Will the King of Israel hunt a Partridge in the Mountains or pursuite a fly will he prosecute dry stubble or the little moats of dust in the balance can his Almighty Arm delight to strangle little worms or wrestle with a shadow will he create a mighty whirlwind to contend with nothing less than nothing and lighter than vanity when his very thoughts may easily create the Angels and his Word this glorious World and think it down again at pleasure Drawing in his breath or spirit and they perish and then giving it out again and they are created as the Psalmist shadoweth out his Respiration or his hearts Diastole Syslole VVill his sore and great and strong sword contend with feathers or lead captive atomes will it boast it self in cutting little straws or glory in a Triumph over that which is more feeble than the tender grass when yet it might awake against a man that is his Fellow and his equal match Mighty to bear his weight and power and wrath and strongest blowes when we are all to him as