Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n abraham_n call_v canaan_n 1,554 5 10.1521 5 false
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
A01252 The comforter: or A comfortable treatise wherein are contained many reaso[n]s taken out of the word, to assure the forgiunes of sinnes to the conscience that is troubled with the feeling thereof. Together with the temptations of Sathan to the contrarie, taken from experience: written by Iohn Freeman sometime minister of the word, in Lewes in Sussex. Freeman, John, fl. 1611. 1606 (1606) STC 11368; ESTC S113774 85,859 215

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

Lord than to put any confidence in man yea that it is better to trust in the Lord than to put any confidence in Princes With whom did the Lord euer make a couenāt broke it To whom did the Lord euer make a promise and fulfilled it not Call to mind all the promises of God made in former times in the ages that are past and see if euer he failed in any one iote of his promises He promised to giue vnto Abraham a son and by him a seed that should be multiplyed as the starres as the sand by the sea shore How hard a matter was this and in reason impossible to be performed For if wee consider either the body of Abraham it was dead he being almost an hundred yeares old or rhe deadnes of Saraes womb with whome it ceased to be after the manner of women we shal see the accomplishing hereof to be in the iudgement and opinion of flesh and bloud impossible And therefore howsoeuer Abraham being stronge in faith staggered not through vnbeleefe at the promises of God but laughed for ioy yet Sa●a laughed them to scorn as things not to be hoped for and thereby might through her vnbeliefe haue depriued her selfe of the blessing of God yet the Lord would rather worke miracles alter the course of nature than he would not accomplish that promised seed that he promised vnto Abraham Insomuch that neither Abrahams dead bodie nor Saraes dead wombe no nor Saraes dead faith for so in this regard I may call it could make the promise of God of none effect Again he promised vnto the same Abraham to giue vnto his seed after him the land of Canaan for their possession Now doe but consider with thy selfe how many lets there might haue seemed to haue hindered this that was promised Abraham himselfe had no possession therin at all as Stephen mentioneth no not the bredth of a foot his seede consisted onely in one Isack Those that should be borne of him must be in bondage foure hundred yeares to a strange nation and there they must be euilly intreated The Aegyptians were more in number than they were and therefore able by violence to keepe them in bondage still Pharaoes hart was hardened so that he would not let them goe The redde sea might haue stopped their passage the long and barren wi●dernesse might haue consumed them and beene their graue the fierie Serpents might haue deuoured them the Amalakites might haue ouercome them in battell hunger and thirst might haue pined them away their rebellion against Moses their murmuring against Aaron their idolatrie against God their whoredome with the daughters of Moab might haue razed them out of the face of the earth The townes of the land of Canaan were mightie and walled vp to the heauens The people thereof were of the sonnes of Ana●k euen giants and of a tall stature The people of the Iewes were weake vnarmed not exercised in the warres and that which is more full of vnbeleefe and of a hard heart All these might haue mooued the Lord to haue broken his promise if any thing possible could procure him therevnto but none of all these neither the hardnes of Pharaoes heart nor the power of the Aegyptians nor the depth of the sea nor the barrennesse of the wildernesse nor the sting of the Serpents nor the force of the Amalakites nor the strength of the Cities nor the might of the Gyants no nor the sinnes of the seede of Abraham could make the Lord to chaunge his promise or alter that which hee had spoken with his lipps Moreouer the Lord promised to send his sonne into the world made of a woman of the seede of Abraham and of the stocke of Dauid and by him to redeem mankind Now how many things might haue mooued the Lord to haue broked his promise God himselfe must make himselfe voyde and emptie as the Apostle speaketh he must take vpō him the shape of a seruant and be made the creature he must be a man that should haue good experience of infirmities bee counted so vile that all his people should hide their faces from him he must be subiect to cold heat hunger thirst nakednesse and pouertie he must be tempted by Sathan despised of men tormented of God he must bee whipped and scorned yea hee must bee hanged vpon the crosse and die a most shamefull death he must be made sinne the curse of God for vs he much descend into hell and haue the portion of the reprobate and damned soule for to redeeme vs. All these might haue moued the father to haue pitied and so to haue spared his onely son especially they might haue moued God not so to haue abased himselfe but to haue continued in his owne glory and blessednes But most especially might that prayer that Christ the sonne of God made to his father in the garden where hee intreated him in the bitternes of his soule to remoue if it were possible that cup away from him that is that he might not indure those tormentes and suffer that death together with the contempt and infidelitie of the Iewes haue caused the father either for his sonnes request or the peoples desert to haue repented him and so to haue changed his promise with his purpose But neither the regard of Gods owne glorie in his son nor the abasing nor the abusing nor the miserie nor the torments nor the curse nor the death no nor the damnation as it were I meane the portion of the damned allotted vnto his son nor yet his intreatie nor mans infidelity could bring that to passe What should I stand in repeating of the promise of God made to Noah which was no more to destroy the world with water although no doubt the sins since the flood haue ouerpassed all that euer went before The promise made to Dauid which was that he would giue him the kingdome of Israell which he brought to passe notwithstanding the might the malice the rage of Saule The promise that he made to the Iewes concerning their returne out of the captiuitie of Babilon which when they saw effected they were as it wete one that dreamed and their mouth was filled with laughter What shall I need to repeat euery one when it is manifest that neuer a one euer failed or came to naught Let these suffice to assure thee that that Lord whose promises haue bin euer euen as himselfe immutable and vnchangeable notwithstanding all lets and hinderances will not now begin with thee either by reason of the monstrousnes or multitude or manner of thy sinnes or weakenesse of thy faith to breake his promises and to retaine thy sinnes which he promised to forgiue I do not denie but that thy sinnes might be monstrous and many yea and malicious also and therfore they might seeme to bee great reasons to stay the accomplishment of these forenamed promises but if thou compare them with those mountaines which the Lord ouerpassed and
maner which I will also set downe that thou maiest conser them together saying This ●s the couenant that I w●ll ma●e with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord. I will put my lawes in ther inward parts wr te thē●n the r harts And I wil be their God they shal be my people And they shal not teach euery man his neighbour saying Know the Lord for al shal k●ow me frō the least to the greatest of thē For I wil be merc●ful vnto their vnrighteousnes I will remember their sins and their iniquities no more In which words thou seest the very coūterpane of the former Indēture of the Lords couenāts almost word for word So that now thou hast a pair of these Indētures of couenāts to warrant thee forgiunes of thy sins And least thou shouldst lose or lay vp that Indenture that is with thee at thy heeles and so should not haue it to shew when need requireth behold the kindnes of God to thee ward who hath taken the paine to coppie out the sum of the couenants in the 10. to the Hebrues in these words following This is the couenāt that I will make vnto them after those daies saith the Lord. I wil put my lawes in their harts in the r minds wil I write them And their si●s and iniquities wil I remēber no more So that thou seest how faithfully the Lord as one that ment not to deale deceitfully with thee hath dealt in this behalfe What can he do more Thou wilt not take his word nor his oath he hath entred into couenants bound himselfe by his Indenture to performe his couenants And this Indenture he hath caused to be made interchangeably and so a paire of them to be drawn one for the principall on the behalfe of the Lord the other for euer to remaine with thee And that which is more he hath giuen withall a coppie thereof if thou shouldest forget where to find the Indenture it selfe And least thou shouldst take some exception against the hand or the scriuener that wrote the same the Lord as before I said drew the couenants Indenture it selfe with his owne hand and finger which is the holy Ghost who is with the father and the son God blessed for euermore As plainely appeareth by the witnesse of the holy Ghost himselfe who saith that no Scripture came of any priuate motion b●t holy men wrote as they were moued and g ●ded by the holy Ghost ●nd therfore Christ Peter and Paule with all the rest of the Apostles when they spake of the writings of the Prophets and their witnes called it the witnes and writings of the holy Ghost So that these Indentures were drawen and written by the holy Ghost which is the hand and finger of God So that thou hast the couenants of God drawne also with the Lords owne hand for thy better and full assurance And least that this Indenture should want any thing of his ful vertue power and strength the Lord hath added his Sacraments which are fitly by Paule in the fourth to the Romane speaking of circumcision which was a Sacrament to Abraham and the same that Baptisme is in the particular or that the Supper of the Lord is in the generall vnto vs called the seals of the couenant of God So that the Lord hauing added his Sacraments to his couenants hath therein added his seale to his Indentures For his Sacraments a●e his seales The matter whereof consisteth not as doe the seales of kings and princes of the earth either of yellow or greene or red wax but of the red bloud of the Imaculat and vnspotted Lambe the Son of God Iesus Christ which is visibly exhibited in the Sacrament of the Supper of the Lord. For which cause the Lord himselfe and the Apostle Paule in the 11. of the first to the Corin. calleth the cup in the Lords supper the blo●d of the new couenāt for that this new couenāt before set down is ratified established cōfirmed therwith sealed as it were with a seal Wherin also least thou sho●ldst take some exception against this seale as if it were either counter●ait or by stealth added and affi●ed thervnto thou art to vnderstand first that it is the Lords broad seale For euen as in the kings broad seale there is imprinted ingrauen and so represented the person of his maiestie so in this Sacrament of the Lords supper which is his seale is imprinted in grauen and so represented the ve●y body and blood and so the very and liuely person of the son of God Iesus Christ the bread representing his bodie the wine representing his bloud that in such a liuely maner forme as that Christ himselfe calleth the bread his body and the wine his bloud it selfe So that the person of the King is not so liue●y represented in his broad seale as the person of the Son of God is represented in his broad seale Secondly thou art to know that therein also is his seale of armes ingrauen For therin is shewed forth the arms of Christ nailed to the crosse which is the cognisance of a true Christian his bodie broken and his bloud shed for the remission of thy sinnes And this is in such a liuely maner by the breaking of the bread which is his bodie and the shedding of the wine which is his bloud shewed forth vnto the eies of our body as that we there behold visibly as in a mirror Christ crucified before our eies his body broken and his bloud shed for the forgiuenesse of our sins So that our eies may there see the worke of our redemption fulfilled so with all his seale of armes his armes being spread vpon the crosse and his bodie wounded for our transgressions So that euen as the broad seale of England hath on the one side the person of the Prince and on the other side the armes of the land ingrauen so hath this seale of God fixed to his Indenture of couenants the person of the Lord on the one side his armes on the other side liuely and euidently imprinted Thirdly thou must cōsider that this is his seale which is vsually affixed in such cases and to such writings For it hath been alwaies the vse of the Lord to seale these and such like couenants of spirituall graces by the shedding of blood As may appear in the 15 of Genesis where the Lord confirming and sealing his couenant of the land of Canaan which represented that heauenly Ierusalem vnto them which he promised vnto Ab●aham and his seed caused him to sl●y a calfe a goat and a ram of three yeares of age and to cut them a sunder according to the vse of those nations So the Lord in the 17 of Genesis being to enter into a new couenāt with Abraham concerning the child of promise sealed the same with circumcision which was a Sacrament of blood But most liuely of all this appeareth in the 24 of