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A06191 The kings shoe Made, and ordained to trample on and to treade downe Edomites; to teach in briefe, what is Edoms doome; what the carefull condition of the king, what the loyall submission of a subiect, and what proiects are onely to best purpose. Deliuered in a sermon before the king at Theobalds, October the ninth, 1622: by William Loe, Doctour of Diuinity, chaplaine to his sacred Maiestiy in ordinary. Loe, William, d. 1645. 1623 (1623) STC 16686; ESTC S104104 30,137 54

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so called must affront them and sort them Some to be Pollubra as Moabites some Scabella as Edomites some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Philistines In all these passages see we not what great carefullnesse and manifold incumberances attend the height of Soueraignty when the Princes Peeres Prelates People all referre vnto it at all times vpon all occasions and from all places Waigh we then this regall waight vpon the ballances of our loue duty and allegeance and we shall learne our obedience the better What honest and good Christian heart in consideration of the premisses is not mooued na●… resolued hereby to practise that most holy and Apostolike counsell That first of all Supplications prayers Intercessions and giuing of thankes be made for all men For kings and for all that are in authority that we may leade a quiet and peaceable life i●… all godlinesse and honesty for this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Sauiour For Kings I say by name and for their Delegates yea and that vpon all occasions In time of trouble The Lord heare him in the day of trouble the name of the God of Iacob defend him Send him helpe from his Sanctuary and strengthen him out of Sion In the time of his Deuotion Remember all his offerings O Lord and accept his burnt Sacrifice Graunt him according to his owne heart and fulfill all his counsell In the desire of his triumph The king shall ioy in thy strength O Lord right glad shall hee be in thy Saluation For thou hast giuen him his hearts desire and not denied the request of his lipps In request for his life He asked life of thee O Lord and thou gauest him length of daies euen a life for euer and euer In loue to his posteritie Giue thy iudgements O God vnto the king and thy righteousnesse to the kings sonne So shall he iudge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poore with iudgement For the enlargement of his territoris Let him Lord haue dominion from sea to sea and from tho Riuer to the lands end For the well ordering of his Court O Lord let the King set no wicked thing before his eies let him hate Apostataes Let Lord the froward depart from him let him not know a wicked person Hee that slaundereth or hath an high looke or a proud heart let him not endure and he that telleth lies let him not tarrie in his sight Against all his enemies Doe vnto them O Lord as vnto the Midianites as vnto Sisera as vnto Iabin Which perished at Endar and became as the dung of the earth Make their chiefetaines like Oreb and ●…eeb yea their Princes as Zebah and Zalmanah Make them Lord as a wheele as slubble before the ●…inde Fill their faces with shame let them be confounded and troubled for euer This ought to bee our continuall pious practise vpon these and all other occasions whatsoeuer that occurre as the law of God Nature and Nations as our dutie loue and allegeance doe more force and obligue vs to doe Looke to a third lesson which is written in the very brow of this text thus Not only the power of the King but his Will and skill also are both positiue and indicatiue peremptorie and Imperatiue 1. For as concerning the Power of a King that is without all controuersie and doubt Whether we respect the extent For euery soule in euery thing to euery superiour so S. Peter teacheth must be subiect Or the māner Euery soule Omnis anima ex animo euen from the heart must be subiect not with eye seruice only as men-pleasers but with faithfull and good mindes as herein also seruing the Lord. Or the absolutenesse For I say euery soule to without exception Si quis ten●… quenquam excipere conatur decipere as S. Bernard reasoneth with the Archbishop of Senon in France If seditious Papists and tumultuous Anabaptists and other Sectaries endeuour to exempt themselues from regall Power yet it is sufficient for a temperate sober minded Christian to know that Christ alitèr iussit alitèr gessit saith the same Father Hee taught otherwise hee wrought otherwise In vaine is it then for the dizzie braines of wretched men to coyne a counterfeit exemption where the God of heauen hath made no exception Moreouer note that the Mandate is indefinite Subiection is proper vnto them as they are Powers not only if they be good and gentle but also if they be sullen froward and disorderly In fine see the Plea in barre that the God of heauen hath set against the opposite hands hearts and imaginations of all the sonnes of Belial in this case First against the violence of hand Though not mine annointed Then against the virulence of tongue Curse not the King And lastly against the giddy thoughts Curse not the King no not in thy thought For if thou doe thou art a Traitour and those treasonable thoughts of thine if past or present are to be repented of and the future to be preuented with more blessed cogitations So that hereby we see the Soueraigne Power vindicated from all controulement For if Powers be not so consonant as they should be yet Habent sanctitatem vnctionis licet non habent sanctitatem vitae But this is not all For it may be obiected thus Put the case that the Power of kings bee peremptory yet I hope the Will of kings is not Yes their very Will is not only positiue and Indicatiue but also peremptory and imperatiue Ouer Edom will I cast out my shoe The Power of a king is from God and inuested in the kings owne person for all inferiour Delegates whatsoeuer deriue their authority personally that is from the kings person which person of a king ●…n law is mixta persona iurisdictionis capax and this personall power regulates its owne will It is required then of Subiects iussa capessere non praerogatiuarum Priuilegiorum apices excutere It is for Subiects to suffer the Will of a Soueraigne to be done either of vs or on vs. Of vs when the kings Will is regulated by Gods wisdome and by Gods revealed Will. On vs when his Will is wilfully distempered by misguiding and misperswading passion or otherwise 2. In his irregular and exorbitant Will wee must be Patients in the other we must be Agents readie to goe to runne to die to doe all things with singular cheerefulnesse and alacritie In the the kings transcendent and extrauagant will wee must be Patients couching downe vnder the burthen weeping by the waters of Babilon not warring but looking vp to God for release In this case a Buckler not a sword is to be vsed For the command is not that we should be subiect to vertuous and godly Gouernours but as I haue said it is indefinite to Powers in that they be Powers For if the Power shall be willing to cast out or ouer vs euen his
Conculcation So that all agree in ●…is that by Extention Immission or Proiection of the shoe eyther vpon the neckes of people or ouer their Countries is meant nothing els but to ouercome subdue bring vnder power possesse and subiect euen to vilenesse such men and such Countries The very vulgar acceptation of the word Possession in the Grammaticall sence importeth as much For the etimologie of Possessio is no more but Pedū positio This manner of speaking also hath allusion to the positiue Law recorded in Deut. For the letter of the Lawe is that if the kinsman would not marry the brothers widow and raise vp seede vnto his brother The widow loosing his shoe and spitting in his face he lost the claime and interest of such possessions as belonged to the woman in right of her husband And the house of such a man was called Domus Discalceati that is to say The house of him that had his shoe loosed The practise also of this lawe we finde recorded in the booke of Ruth in the case of Elimelecks land betweene Boos and the kinsman about the widow Ruth who had her interest by right of her husband in the said land Moreouer the frequent vse of this phrase meeting vs very often in the booke of God makes this to be the meaning of the words as cleere as the day This king else-where singing his trophe●… saith They are fallen vnder my feet Caleb the son 〈◊〉 Iephunneth shall possesse the land hee hath trod●… vpon But the people must not meddle with Mo●… Seir for God would not giue them thereof so much as a footes breadth yet euen the place whereon the soles of their feet should tread from the Wildernesse of Lebanon and from the riuer Euphrates vnto the vtmost sea should be theirs If wee take the words yet more properly and punctually as the shooe to be first taken off and so cast out and ouer then the words signifie not Subiugation only but Debellation also of the proud and imperious Idumaeans The prouerbiall phrase importing that ●…hose stout-hearted people should be glad to carry shooes after the King and further implying ●…hat these Idumaeans or Edomites were not wor●…hy to come so neere vnto the Kings person as to ●…ntie the latchet of his shooe and therefore 〈◊〉 defiance of them the king would cast off his ●…ooe out at them and ouer them to yea as af●…erward it came to passe in the daies of Amos the ●…rophet that the wicked rich men sold the poore ●…r shooes whereby was signified the base esteeme ●…ey rated the poore at so now was Edom estee●…ed in the eyes of the king For he now purpo●…th and resolueth to be vnto them as Asher of ●…hom Moses prophesieth that his shooes should be ●…n and brasse to bruise breake and subdue where ●…er he came Lastly Antiquitie tells vs as much ●…r as the manner is now adaies in the beleague●…g of a Citie the Assailants oft-times cast their ●…signes ouer the Wall into the Citie not only to courage their souldiers to follow their colours ●…t also in token that they resolue not to depart thence vntill they haue wonne the Citie so in ancient times they vsed to cast ouer the Walls their Gauntlets Gloues or Shooes to betoken the same things Thus it is plaine by seuerall readings of the text by positiue law and practise of the same by scripture phrase and approued Antiquity that the Intendment and absolute resolution of the king was to subdue and subiect as hee had done Moab to be his Pollubrum so Edom also to be his Scabellum that is euen to Conculcation 10. What scruple now should let the king thus to resolue The Lord God of heauen had taught the king and he knew well how to distinguish betweene an Edomite and an Ephramite otherwise he would neuer haue placed the one at his head the other at his foot The one to be the strength of his counsell the other to feele the waight and crushing of his foot Besides the king had a faire President before him Iosuah at Gods command had done the like to the kings of Ierusalem Hebron Iarmuth Lachish and Eglon fiue in number vpon whose necks he caused his Captaines an●… men of warre to put their feet in Triumph and s●… not to feare or to be dismaied for God wou●… doe so to all their enemies against whom the●… should fight The like also Iosuah hauing receiue●… warrant from God did to the Gibeonites who●… he made hewers of wood and drawers of wa●… to the whole congregation putting them vnd●… tribute and as it were setting his foot vpon the●… euery one knowing that by the shooe both Sy●… dochicos and Metonymic●…s is vnderstood the foot When Moses and Iosuah were commanded to loose their shooes from of their feet What other thing was meant thereby but that God would subdue Pharoh and his to the one and Iericho and hers to the other And to assure them that those who haue the Lord of hosts for their guide need not feare or depend vpon humane power because they dwell vnder the protection of the Almightie Shooes we vse to saue our feet from euery offence that may happen in our iourneying but those that relie vpon the Lord of hosts and resolue with their God shall not need to trust in the arme of flesh for rather then faile innumerable and inuisible armies of Angels shall bee commanded to see that they dash not their feet against a stone In all this Explication I see foure things tending to Application which are these 1. The trampling on and treading downe of Profanenesse by the King 2. The exceeding carefull condition of a King 3. The loyall submission of a Subiest And 4. A Direction for the purposes and proiects of both The first of these we see in this ●…oble Kings purpose and designe which is Ouer Edom to cast out his shooe whereby wee learne that It is a regall resolution to trample ●…n and to tread downe Prophanenesse ●…n Church Citie Court and Countrie bee it in what personages soeuer God tels the King that Conculcation is Edoms doome and the King resolues to doe it 1. Edom is Esau and Esau is a prophane person so the spirit of God speaketh of Esau. Least there be any fornicatour or prophane person as Esau who for one morsell of meat sold his birth-right Prophane persons care not for any title claime or interest to heauen so they may enioy their sinnes without Controlement and haue the pleasures of this world albeit they continue but a short time Edom is Profanenesse and Edomites are prophane persons who are well knowne to the King by their Crie Crueltie Pride Rebellion Riot Contempt of God and scorning of good men and all goodnesse The cry of Edom is Downe with it Downe with it euen to the foundation thereof Albeit this crie exasperate the raising of holy Ierusalem In the
to be bruised to be broken ●…d to haue their backs alwayes bowed downe ●…d neuer to bee able to hold vp their imperious ●…d profane purposes Let them haue their de●…rt pay them their hire as the Lord haue spo●…n it And thinke not Dread Soueraigne that ●…u shall escape the scorne of Edomites For when ●…od shall take away your breath o noble lion ●…nd lions must die a liuing dogge with such pro●…ne persons shall be more pretious then a dead ●…n yea those stinking dead flies will corrupt the ●…eete oyntment of the Apothecarie Trample ●… and treade downe therefore all those enemies ●… your God of his Church of your court cities ●…d Countryes Let none of those wicked ones ●…nd in your presence cut them off from your ●…ourt suffer them not to liue nor to tarrie in ●…ur sight So shall you destroy all the wicked of ●…e land and cut off all wicked doers from the ●…ity of the Lord so shall you aduance Ephra●…tes depresse Edomites supplant profanenesse ●…d tread downe wickednesse euen to the ground God preserued Iaphet to dwell in the tents of Sem. The second of these obseruations I see in v●…hilico Psalmi which is that The height of Soueraigntie is dayly encumbered with an exceeding waight and world of occurrences affaires and deepe designes all of surpassing and especiall care singular skill exquisite cunning and important consequence 1. Incumbred I say on all sides vpon all occasions See the context the people are cast off The king must interceede to bring them in againe The people are scattered and God is angry with them the King must cry to God O turne thee to vs againe If the land tremble with feare be broken with faction shake with the breaches thereof The king is importuned to cry Heale the breach●… oh Lord. Let hard things attend the state and ●… God make the land drinke the wine of Astonishment The king must cry for an ensigne to be displayed that his beloued may bee deliuered th●… God may saue with his right hand and m●… heare the king when he calleth vpon him In case of famine the woman that was dec●… ued by her neighbour in the siege of Samari●… when they were constrained in the famine to e●… their owne children and to make their wombes tombes to bury their seede the king was importuned by the women with Helpe my Lord oh King and the King is constrained to answer their importunity with this If the Lord doe not helpe thee how shall I helpe thee In case of the plague of pestilence the King is perplexed and cryeth when hee saw the Angell of the Lord smite the people Loe I haue sinned and I haue done wickedly but these sheepe what haue they done let thine hand I pray thee be against me and against my fathers house In case of warre and hostility be it either domestique or forraine who is called vpon whom doth it concerne more who mustereth who mastereth the occasioned occurrences but the king Thus be it Dearth Death or Deuill that troubleth the State the King lyes at stake for all Doe you thinke the case is otherwise in Plenty peace or prosperity Surely nothing lesse 2. For Plenty in some States is oft times more intollerable then Penury Prodigall bloods are then most ranke and most vnquiet Haue not I seene Maiestie petitioned against the cheapenesse of corne yea and I remember well how it mooued passion into extremity and that most iustly For what should a father doe that carefully hath prouided for his children to feede plentifully and then they exclaime of being too full In Peace ●…he stirring braines of a State are neuer at rest in ●…euising Monopolies Exemptiōs Engrosings what ●…ot And who in all these and the like is importuned and incumbered but the king Many driuers but few that can hold the plow aright as the old verse saith yea here one only stands and must looke to all All rankes and conditions referre vnto the King Peeres Prelates People All euen from sea to sea and from the riuer to the lands end Some for their bodies that are ●…othsomely diseased some for their minds that are distressed some for their children some for their state Of all some vpon some pretence or other Who is troubled with forraign affaires but the king who releeueth the carefull and aduenturous Merchant in transmarine parts but the Kings alliance and reference with the States beyond the seas Saint Augustine wrote a tract De cura pro mortuis gerenda I am sure none better then Kings may write De cura pro vi●… gerenda yea and pro mortuis too For if a subiect come to a violent and vntimely end doth not the Coroner inquire of his death that the Kings Delegates may bee assertained how the Kings subiect came by his death and order is taken accordingly A purblinde Paynime could say of the carefull Condition and restlesse state of Kings and statesmen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. Calling Kings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The peoples sheepheards Of which Analogie Philo Plato Aristotle Clemens Alexandrinus Basile and Procopius haue lately descanted The plaine song Euthymius in his preface to the booke of the Psalmes hath briefly deliuered Shewing that the king who composed this Psalme was by Gods direction first taught by a shepheards sollicitous imployment how to gouerne a State and was fitted thereunto at the first by his carefullnesse amongst and ouer vnreasonable creatures Whereby he afterwards conceiued the more readily and practised more diligently how to Watch to Striue for his flocke to expose himselfe to dangers to Contend against wild beasts theeues famine cold to goe out and in before them to call them to the pastures to the shades to the fountaines of running water to recall them to the folds to cause them to flocke with his Croke with his voice with his whistle with his pipe sometimes chearing them sometimes deterring them sometimes curbing them sometimes curing them in all desiring not onely to haue them his fat flocke but also his well disposed and well ordered slocke That so he might feede them according to the integrity of his heart and guide them by the skilfulnesse of his hands Which Caietaine expresseth thus with innocency of heart Prudence of head and Example of hand Kings then you see haue their Hearts full their Heads full and their Hands full Cast ' your eye once more vpon the Context Is there cause of Diuision The king must haue skill in Arithmetique Of mensuration He must bee a good Geometrician Of Appropriation A spirit of Discretion is required in him Of Election for Counsell Many circumstances in that Realtie to be considered Doth he longe Prospicere alteri saeculo serere Not onely profound but euen in a manner propheticall skill is to be sought for Stand there Opposites in the way Cunning yea exceeeding Cunning of which word antiquaries haue deriued king quasi Cūning to be
shooe none ought to dare once to lift vp his heele against it Albeit the will of a Soueraigne be to cast out or ouer vs his shooe Shall wee cast our selues out of our dutie of Allegiance or seeke to cast away our king Absit Heare in this point what the Lord said to Samuel They haue not cast thee away but they haue cast me away saith the Lord that I should not raigne ouer them for asmuch as all Power is of God To conclude this point then if the chiefe Apostles Saint Peter and Saint Paul enioyned all men in their times to submit themselues vnto gouernours albeit they were worshippers of Deuills and cruell persecutours of Christians how much more should we now obey and honour religious kings who are defendors of the faith and nursing fathers of the Church as Caesar Baronius in his preface to the eleuenth tombe of his Annalls hath well and honestly obserued against the bloody practises and turbulent proiects of statizing Iesuites But this is not all neither for there is great skill in these Proiestments which ignorance of state affaires in many may cause them maruelously to mistake Conceiuing that certaine passages may be the kings Will onely when as it is indeede the kings most excellent and exquisite Skil of and in the affaires and mysteries of state The king deuides Scechem but it is arithmetically with iustice distributiue to auoide Confusion as Iethro taught Moses He measureth out Succoth but it is to set lymmits that the bundaries may bee exactly knowne to the end that no furious Iehu no mighty hunting Nimrod doe oppresse the helplesse multitude He appropriates Gilead and Manasses but it is Geometrically with commutatiue iustice that Anabaptisticall Communitie the aberration of Anarchies might be auoided and that Meum and Tuum might be the better knowne He aduanceth Ephraim but hee knowes therein what hee doth very well it is to be sure of faithfull Counsellours He setleth Iuda It is to place for an other age In all this here is no cause of Depression no occasion of Conculcation no nor any matter of Sleighting But now when the king must deale with Moab or must haue to doe with Edom It is as proper in regall Skill and policy of state to make Moab that is like an haggard hawke to come to hand and to suppresse Edom to the feete as it is to settle Ephraim at the head or Gilead and Manasses at the side And it is as proper in the cunning of a king to Sleight Philistia and to haue it in derision as it is to bee carefull for Iuda touching the time to come So then wee see what an high pitch of policy they flie who mannage and sway the scepter of kingly cunning It is not for owles battes and wagtailes to soore toward this pitch their sight serues them not their flight is impt with feathers of a lower traine 3. Is there then any Power then like this among the sonnes of men which is immediately from God A quo rex secund post quem primus saith Tertullian in Apologetico Is any Will more absolute which must not be affronted though irregular but must be suffered to be done on vs albeit we suffer death for it Is any Skill branched into more Species or is of an higher straine that must attend so many so mighty so manifold occasions and occurrances If then any Power resist this regall Power preuaile we may boldly pronounce of that Power and that time that It is the houre and power of Darkenesse If any Will affront this absolute Will of the king It is a masterlesse Wilfulnesse and deuoyd of Conscience which neither Gods lawe properly by absolute and soueraigne authority nor yet mans lawe which taketh power from Gods Law can order or bind Indeed this Wilfulnes is rather a furious Rage in the valour of man then Christian courage it is rather a peeuish and peruerse passion then any sanctified sobriety of mans faculty that way If any Sk●…l will be curious to prie and search into the secrets therof and to waue this Cunning albeit it be the Counterplea of some brabbling Lawyer yet it may receiue this lawfull reply That Lawe hath a directiue power not a coactiue ouer kings And Gregorius de Valentia renders the reason for that all actiue power is a Principall that transferres into another and reflects not Besides Master Caluin saith very truely That the Directions and Edicts that come out from the Power Wil and Skill of a king are somewhat more then humane traditions to be accompted of for that they haue not onely their foundation vpon the generall Commandement but also they haue their warrant from the mouth of Christ himselfe 4. So then to the kings rightly regulated and well gouerned Will wee ought all of vs that bee Subiects like a swarme of Bees to follow the master bee like flockes of sheepe to follow the Antecedent like Cranes to follow our captaine ordine literato as Ierome saith in his epistle to Rusticus And if it be a distempered and misguided Will yet in this case we must not rebell nor resist in action no nor reuile or curse in faction or thought but wee ought obeying God rather then man keepe our minds and consciences pure and vndefiled before God but suffer wee must euen vnto death if the will of God be so rather then in any sort to breake out against our Soueraigne And I had rather haue my Soueraigne treade on mee then some to looke vpon me For pes hominis est beatior oculo suis. The foote of a man is better then the eye of a swine But in this scripture is the case so doth the king here take vpon him these seuerall Proiects of Diuision Mensuration Appropriation Exaltation Conculcation and Subiugation euen to vilenes out of his owne absolute Power or doth the king follow his owne Will or relye vpon his owne Skill O nothing lesse indeede the king acts Ase of himselfe for he is Aperse but not Ex se not out of himselfe that is non ex suo ipsius cerebro like the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that subsist onely out of their owne substance For this very Psalme compiled by this good king is a Mirrour for all Magistrates and a patterne for all priuate persons also The King consults God in all For his Power The king acknowledgeth whence he hath it O God thou hast cast vs off Thou hast scattered vs. Thou hast beene displeased with vs. Thou hast made the land to tremble Thou hast broken it Thou hast shewed thy people hard things Thou hast made vs drinke the Wine of astonishment Thou giuest an Ensigne to them that feare thee that it may be displayed because of thy truth that thy beloued may be deliuered Giue helpe in trouble Vaine is the helpe of man Through God we shall doe valiantly And in the very phrase of my text the king saith It is God
instance in him ●…mong many who was in his first designes a most ●…ortunate Prince but in his later time when he ●…ilfully set himselfe against the Duke of Saxony ●…he Land-graue of Hessen Mauritius and others of ●…he reformed religion as if all had beene Edo●…ites he was most disgracefully beaten constrained to skale the Alpes by Torch-light and most ingloriously compelled at last to abandon the field 3. I could mention but that Wilfull inuasion in 88. and thats at home and somewhat moderne for which I hope we shall euer remaine thankfull to our God for our deliuerance At what time doubtlesse the Man of sinne that great Archimandrites the Pope of Rome had said in his heart Ouer England will I cast out my shooe But he spoke this in his humane slippers and not in his papall shooes For notwithstanding all that solemne Proiect long before consulted of in the Preparation and at the time of the Inuasion strongly set on of purpose to cast out and ouer to yet this vnwarranted Wilfulnesse was ouercast and receiued from God a memorable ouerthrow Nay yet I may come neerer home euen into our owne bowels what time neither God nor Angel nor Saint nor man were consulted withall but Diaboli podex in specu was the oracle I meane that matchlesse and mercilesse treason of the gunpouder plot The Wickednesse and Wilfulnesse of which Powder-blast I trust hath blowne vp all good opinion that any wise sober English heart should haue of such hellish Miscreants 4. By this we see then plainely that when great ones will make lust their law and their owne Wi●… their Warrant kings are dethroned and driuen out Duumvirs deiected Triumvirs reiected and Deuolutions of all estates by such exorbitancies became either miserably altered strangely changed or vtterly extinguished The bitter Mutations of estates proceed euen then from this when the true worship of God is turned into superstitious and supercilious conceits of men The translations of States when they are devolued from this people to that people as water is powred out of one vessell into another the dissipations of States when as by aberration of Anarchy they become as a vast and roaring Wildernesse and the ●…umultuous vexations grieuous garboiles of se●…erall signiories euen all these such like miseries proceed from hence because men of eminent place will not consult God in their actions but will goe a whooring after their owne Wilfull and ●…isleading inuentions 5. If then vnwarrantable proiects prosper not ●…ith Kings in case of state nor with Churchmen 〈◊〉 case of religion what hope can priuate men ●…aue to thinke that their deuises should doe good ●…r that their Guiles should be Gaines What meane ●…hen nay how dare the Macheavillian Deuiders ●…ractise their Diuide Impera without warrant ●…aying it is good to fish in troubled waters and ●…herefore they will practise to set diuision be●…eene the King the Subiect as if they were ●…ke the Ephori in the state of Lacedaemon or the ●…ribuni in the state of Rome or Demarchi oue●… the ●…enate of Athens endeuour to maintaine a power ●… the people against the higher powers founded ●…y God But God hath in all ages confounded such Babel builders who with Ludouicus Sfortia Caesar Borgia put in practise such heady and hellish positions The ends that befell these two for whom Macheauill that Florentine Secretary especially framed his hideous heape of politique proiects might bee a warning to all succeeding times the one comming to a violent and vntimely end the other liuing ingloriously in the Prince of Arragon his Kitchine and dying a death mos●… despicable Let such mischiefes befall all such Catiffes who take not God for their Oracle but like furious Iehues and big boned sonnes of Ana●… breake thorow all in their Wilfulnesse and dare the God of heauen to controle them 6. How dare those Measurers and improuen of their land grind the faces of the poore toyling sweating laborious husbandman with rackings and raisings of rents vntill they haue made vp the measure of their sinnes out of measure sinfull Doe they conceaue that their heires shall euer comfortably enioy their substance or their Babes after them the Remainders A Iesuiticall spirit first deuized these improuements to the racking of Heretiques as they tearmed them and others since who haue made great outward semblance of i●…tegritie haue yet beene like apes to imitate those misguiding miscreants Make a modell say they of a●… your land to a Mole-hill that so you may lie i●… your bed see in a view euery field closse groue●… meadow acre and head land in your Farme●… whereby you may set it to the vtmost aduantage For it is lawfull for you to make the most of your owne it makes no matter albeit the Tenant and his eate whig and whay and all that hee hath bee at your command whiles your great knightship and your new vpstart Mushrom ladie must like prodigious Commets be feared and awed in al the country In al this you no one whit consult with God who teacheth by his Apostle That Christian charity seeketh not her owne 1. Cor. 13. But to what passe comes all this great ouerture of impronement how doth it prooue with them Surely these improouers are like to the men of Babel who worshipped Succoth Benoth that is an hen and chickens as some Talmudists haue conceited so vaine is this great Landlords boasting for whiles he and his for a time doe ruffle in their silken ragges like some Montebankes of Italy his Will-ship Worship I would haue said is not an ace aboue a begger but must after a little while desire some of his Tenants to be bound with his greatnesse for taking vp of an hundered pound So light is the gentleman become in his dancing the measures 7. Yet it were somewhat mannerly if these Macheavellian statizers would cast out their shoe ouer their owne lands onely by their vnmeasurable and vnreasonable manner of Improuements rackings and grindings of the poore husbandmens faces but they will also and aske God no leaue rush into Gods Inheritance by Appropriating that to their profane vse which was giuen for the perpetuating of Gods seruice on earth But how doe you thinke Are not they trow ye traitours to God who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 clip and washe the Coine that God hath set his own stamp vpon How much more they who sweepe all away and say Gilead is mine and Manasses is mine yea all is mine quoth the diuel when in truth they haue no interest nor title no not to or in the least tittle Yet ofttimes in such a depopulatiō not the tenāts houses only but the Chappell Church and Chancel Bels Baldricks all are troden downe vnder foot and are turned into vncouth Desolations for Ohim and Zim and dancing Satyrs for Owles and Iack-dawes to build in by day and to roust in by night Welfare the zeale of former times for our forefathers
when man willeth that which God by ●…is reuealed Will would haue him will albeit God 〈◊〉 his secret will willeth another diuerse thing as ●…hen a sonne prayeth for the life of his sicke-fa●…er whom yet God by that sicknesse purposeth 〈◊〉 take away The sonne sinneth not albeit his ●…raying according to Gods reuealed will seeme 〈◊〉 affront Gods secret will which is to take the ●…ther away by death Willfull art thou then O ●…ypocrite that conceitest thou maist make thy ●…rother an vnder troden wretch with pretence of ●…ods secret purpose to colour thy wicked and ●…nwarranted proiects But blessed bee God who hath enlightened a ●…mpe in the heart of our King who from Gods ●…outh hath knowne to maintaine his Sechem ●… Shares Hundreds Wapentakes and Tythings ●… that in seuerall Leets euery man to a number of ●…nne may haue iustice throughout the land Hee ●…th measured his Succoth into number waight ●…d measure The Clarke of the market hauing ●… care of all this Hee hath appropriated hearty ●…leadites man full Manasses and wise Ephramites ●… be his fauourites Chieftaines and Counsellors ●…e haue Beniamin to bee our ruler from whom ●…d from his O God let not the scepter depart till ●…ilo come in his second aduent Yea O Christ ●…ake the Kings and his sonnes enemies thy foot●…ole Cast thy shoe ouer Sathan and his Com●…ices ouer their sinne ouer all torment of consci●…ce that it may not touch them ouer the Malediction of the Lawe that it come not neere them ouer Death and Hell that so through thee O God they may victoriously triumph As for the Remainder if there be any incestuous broode tha●… infest him let them bee like the Moabites make them his Pollubra to be vsefull vnto him for his further and future Designes and when hee hath done with them let them be as an earthen Was●…pot subiect to his Annihilation of them If there be a profane race of Edomites Esauits Iebusites Iesuits and the like let such bee subiected euen to Conculcation yea let our King O God kicke them out of his Court Church Citties and Countryes as Salem insipidum If there be any forraignly transported with transmarine affection of any Nation whatsoeuer let our King O King of Saints sleight them as Dauid did the Philistims If the Tabernacles of Edomites Moabites and Hagarens If Gebal Ammon and Amalech rise vp against them yea albeit Assur ioyne with them and helpe the children of Lot and albeit the Edomites cric Downe with them downe with them euen to the very ground yet O God remember thy promised mercie euer of old and make those enemies like the dunge of the earth Fill their faces with shame and euer bow downe their backes That we alone thy people may alwaies reioyce in thee and may euer see vpon our king and his that their Crowne flourish Assuring our selues that thou O God wilt tread downe his and our enemies at last whether they be spirituall or temporall euen vnder our feet And wee shall through thee doe valiantly to the glory of thy great name to the comfort of thy chosen and to the saluation of our soules and bodies for euermore Say Amen hereunto O faithfull witnesse in heauen that vnto thee with thy holy Father and the holy ghost we may render all praise power might Maiestie and Dominion with the faithfull in the Church as it was in the beginning of time before all times is now in all the world among all faithfull ones and shall bee euer continued when this world is ended in that euerlasting world of blessed Angels and glorified Saints before Christ Iesus his presence for euermore Amen FINIS Iudg. 6. 39. 40 Iudg. ●… 13. Iudg. ●… 16. Iudg. 15. 4. Gen. ●…1 1. 2. Gen. 44 12. Gen. 49. 14. Hosh. 7. v. 8. Ios. 9. 3. Mat. 13. Mat. 22. Rom. 9. 21. Mat. 13. 33. Apoc. 3. 3. Luk. 17. 37. Cant. Sol. 1. 11. Psal. 45. 13. 1. The summ 2. The title Aquila reddit titul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symmachus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vt intelligeremus esse titulum memorabilem dignum qui nunquam aboleatur 3. The occasion 2 Sam. 8. 3. 1 Chron. 18. 3. 4. The reference Quod nasceretur ex te Sanctum vocabitur Luk. 1. Deus erat in Christo mundū reconcilians sibi 2 Cor. 4. Non sarcasticè sed sacrè deridet vt Psal. 2. 5. The parts of the text Prouerbi●… dicuntur quasi Perro verba quia praeter literalem sensū quem exterius praetendunt procul aliud interius dicunt Nam in terra aurum in u●…ce nucleus in hirsut is castane arum operculis fructus latēs requiritur ita in paraboli●… sensus mysticus excudatur 6. The sence and meaning of the text Quam speciosi pedes Euangelizantium pacem Nahum 1 Rom. 10. Amb institut Virgin cap. 14. Nazianzen de orat Sanct. Gregor hom 7. in Euangel Cl●…m 5. Strom. August de essent diuin●… Hieronym in cap. 11. Esaiae 7. The diuers readings of the text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apollin in locum Here the Talmudis●…s streame runs muddy for they as some others now adaies will be tampering and preiudicing Kings affaires which God-wot they eyther fowly mistake or no whit vnderstand Aram Naharim in the title of the Psalme is Mesopotamia 8 The truth of this familiar sence Deut. 25. 6 7 8 9 10. Ruth 4. 7. Psal. 18. 38. Deut. 1. 36. Ibid. 2. 5. Deut. 11. 24. 25. Regum est parcere subiectis debellare superb●…s Amos 2. 6. Deut. 33. 25. R. Him Manuel in tractatu d●… more regum in obsidione vrbium Chirothecas Manicas calceos proijciendi Videri posset simile quiddam sibi velle Cicer●… scribens mirari setamdiu morari Antonium quia soleret ipse accipere manicas nec diutius obsedionis metum sustinere Philipp 2. 9. The warrant of this resolued Action Iosu. 10 24. 25. Iosu. 9. 4. Ex. 3. 5. Iosu. 5. 15. Elias Creteusis in Orat. 1. Nazianz. 11. 146. 1. The first Obseruation 2. The reuelation of the point Heb. 12. 16. Psal. 137. 7. Amos 1. 11. Obadiah cap. 1. v. 3. 4. Luk. 1 10. Alios video stare nugaridum preces fiunt neque solum dūpreces fiunt sed dum sacerdos benedicit Nescis quod cum Angelis stas Cum illis cantas cum illis hymnos dicis stas ridens Non mirum esset si fulmen emitteretur non solum in eos sed etiam in nos Digna enim fulmine sunt haec Non est Eccā Tonstrina aut vnguentaria taberna aut officina forensis Sed locus angelorum Regia coeli coelum ipsum Chrysost. hom 24 in Act. Hom. 36. in 1. Cor. Hom in 2. Io. 14. Cum flagellis vtitur Christus ostendit tales homines servile genus esse non filios sed seruos vel macipia diaboli 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 liquisti 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dū soqueris o profane ●…omer