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A10049 Lamentations for the death of the late illustrious Prince Henry: and the dissolution of his religious familie Two sermons: preached in his Highnesse chappell at Saint Iames, on the 10. and 15. day of Nouember, being the first Tuesday and Sunday after his decease. By Daniel Price, chaplaine then in attendance. Price, Daniel, 1581-1631. 1613 (1613) STC 20295; ESTC S115213 24,542 47

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LAMENTATIONS FOR the death of the late Illustrious Prince Henry AND the dissolution of his religious Familie Two Sermons Preached in his Highnesse Chappell at Saint IAMES on the 10. and 15. day of Nouember being the first Tuesday and Sunday after his decease By DANIEL PRICE Chaplaine then in attendance MICAH 7.8 Reioyce not against me O mine enemie though I fall I shall rise againe LONDON Printed by THO. SNODHAM for ROGER IACKSON and are to be sould at his shop neere to Fleetstreet Conduit 1613. TO THE HIGH AND MIGHTY PRINCE PRINCE CHARLES THE IOY OF OVR SORROW AND THE HOPE OF SVCCESSION ENGLANDS CHARLEMAINE DANIEL PRICE WITH THE DEDICATION OF THESE HIS TWO MITES WISHETH THE ACCRVMENT OF ALL HAPPINESSE WITH THE DOVBLING OF THE SPIRIT OF HIS BLESSED BROTHER VPON HIM TO THE HONOVRAble Religious and worthy Gentlemen the great Officers to the late renowmed Prince To the Ho. worthy Gentlemen of the Bed-chamber to his Reuerend Brethren the Chaplaines and to all the rest of the Gentlemen and Officers of that Princely familie THe importunity of some the expectation of many and the kinde acceptation of all of you hath caused me to cast these two Mites into the Treasure of the publike sorrow and to present that now to your hands which in my attendance in this woefull time J prouided for your hearts They are plaine both because sorrow dislikes descant and plaine stuffes are fittest for Mourners they are passionate for in my meditation by the riuers of sorrow I sat downe wept and hanged my Harpe vpon the willow trees for euer tuning it to comfort or melody againe and when ye required this song of mee in my heauinesse I knew not how to sing any song of the Lord but a song of sorrow in this strange land strange for the sinnes strange for the iudgements They are yours they once breathed with you and now euer shall liue with you a pledge of that hart that neuer reioyced in any sublunary obiect more then to see while our Sunne did shine such an happy friendly aspect of so many principall Planets and sweet plants in this place let Charity interpret me and none will be offended that vpon impetuous importunity I publish these last offices to the memory of that illustrious Prince our Maister for whom the sound of all tongues and applause of all hands testifie neuer was any more honoured in his life neuer any more lamented in his death that euer beheld the light of heauen in this land My best deuotion faithfulest seruices are presented with these and so I remaine Yours in all Christian dutie Daniell Price The first Sermon Matth. 26.31 I will smite the Shepheard and the Sheepe of the flocke shall be scattered A Great Prince is falne in Israel 2 Sam. 3.38 1 Sam. 4.21 Zach. 11.2 Aust de Pas the ioy of the Christian world is deceased Ichabod the glory of Israel is departed Howle ye poore Firre Trees your Cedar is fallen Lachrimis non verbis miserationibus non orationibus opus est I know it is contrary to the grounds of Art presently at the first entrance to hoise vp sayles in such a sea of lamentation and sorrow But miserie obserues no rules of Oratory and therefore without any further Proeme wee should all take vp that Elegy of Dauid 2 Sam. 1. 2 Sam. 1. O noble Israel he is slaine vpon thy high places Tell it not in Gath nor publish it in Ascalon least the daughters of the vncircumcised reioyce O ye Mountaines of Gilboa vpon yee be neither dew nor raine there the shield of the mighty was cast downe Ionathan was lonely and pleasant in his life swift as an Eagle strong as a Lyon ye sonnes of Israel weepe for Ionathan which clothed you in Scarlet with pleasures and hanged ornaments of Gold vpon your apparell All of you of what condition soeuer heare with silence what you feele with sorrow the very thunderbolt of heauen I will smite the Shepheard and the sheepe of the flocke shall be scattered Take vp a lamentation Ierem. sayth the Lord to the Prophet A lamentation such as was not in the daies of our fathers Alas no lamentation will sit our losse a deluge of teares is little enough to beare the arke of our sorrow Austin is sayd to weepe a shoure of teares Ambrose a flood of tears but you will tell me Doct. Swale Rhetorie intur Patres I am sure Ieremy wished for a fountaine of teares and my sorrowing louing brother hath brought you a Saboath dayes iourney towards this Fountaine him I follow with paces of lamentation and loue and with as faithfull as sorrowfull obseruance to his memory for whom we are commanded to continue these our last accomplishments of attendance we shall both endeuor to teach you that last lesson of our Sauiour Weepe not for me but weepe for your selues I haue at this time setled the foundation of my meditations vpon the farewell of Christ to his Disciples A prophecy found in Zachary 400. yeeres before it was vsed heere Zach 13.7 Mark 14.28 Ioh. 16.27 repeated in Matthew in Mark and Iohn in all these places prophecying of the death of the lord of life Hypocrisie is a true Pharisie but griefe is a bad Scribe expect neither order nor matter sorrow hath deuided such shares among vs the scattered sheepe and flocke of this fold that our soules are euen deuided within vs. The words themselues without any descant be words of amazement and astonishment I will smite the shepherd and the sheepe of the flocke shall be scattered Rom. 1.16 Ier. 23.29 Heb. 4.12 Eph. 6.17 Euery word of the Lord is a power a fire a hammer a Pyoner to ouerthrow strong holds a sword to deuide the reynes and the marrow But this an extraordinary word it is the alarum to a battel the voice of a Trumpet an Earthquake shaking the Pillars of the Earth I will smite the shepheard and the sheep shall be scattered I will smite vox furoris doloris sayth a Glosse the voyce of fury in God Gloss Bern. Leu. 27. Deut. 28. Reu. 3.19 the voyce of misery to man It had beene more milde if as in Leuiticus I will punish or in Deuteronomy I will correct or in the Reuelation I will chastise But who is able to beare his blow who is able to stand before him if he be angry by the least of his blowes wee are cut downe dryed vp and withered I will smite the Shepheard not the sheepe of his Pasture not the Ewes great with yong not the Lambes of the Fold if the sheepe onely had bin smitten Psalme Dauids prayer had serued how long wilt thou proceed in anger against the sheep of this pasture But the stroke is greater more grieuous it is falne vpon the shepheard the guider the glory the Prince of the people I will smite the shepheard And the sheepe shall be scattered his poore followers haue no better phrase
Psalme knappeth the speare in sunder casteth the arrowes in the fire I say why would he let the Archers shoot at King Iosias 1 King 22 It was the voyce of the King of Aram to his Captaines concerning wicked King Ahab fight ye neither against great nor small but against the King but that the Lord should direct that fatall arrow to be the death of his darling Iosias this arrow strikes vs with admiration I cannot but beare part with those mourners in Megiddo Alas for this great day Alas for that good Prince Alas that Iosias is smitten When Dauid numbred the people the people dyed they suffered for his sinne 1 Chro. 21 plectuntur Achiui and Dauid cryeth What haue they done it is euen I that haue sinned Is it not I that haue commanded to number the people but these sheepe what haue they done O Lord my God I beseech thee let thine hand be on me and on my fathers house and not on thy people for their destruction There the people were plagued for the offence of the Prince but heere the Prince is smitten for the offence of the people I finde especially two causes why Iosias was smitten First for the sinnes of the time The first cause of the death of Iosias the sinnes of those dayes I collect out of Zephany to be strange and horride In the front of the Prophecie you may see that he prophesied in the dayes of Iosias Zeph. 1.1 in the second verse of that Chapter there is a fearefull destruction pronounced such as in so few wordes is not to be found in all the Prophets It is a generall obseruation that where we heare some strange desolation threatned there is some strange abhomination committed Obserue both here first the desolation thretned I will surely destroy all things from the Land Zeph. 1.1.2 saith the Lord I will destroy man and beast I will destroy the fowles of the heauen and the fishes of the sea and ruines shall be to the wicked and I will cut off man from the land saith the Lord c. It is so terrible as if that in the Psalm were fulfilled Destructions are come to a perpetuall end Psalm 9. a deluge and Cataclisme a deuastation desolation vnspeakable The greatest plagues that euer came on the world were either the particular in the Iudgements on Egipt or the generall in the drowning of the World In Egipt beside● flyes and lice and frogs and darknesse there was the killing of the first-borne Murraine of Beasts death of Fishes by the water turned into bloud but I find no where that their fowle of heauen were destroyed In the drowning of the World all mankinde was not destroyed eight Soules were preserued and although the beasts of the field and fowles of the ayre perished yet I can no way collect the destruction of the fishes those watry creatures kept their Colonyes In Egipt beasts and fishes were destroyed not the fowles In the floud beasts and fowles not the fishes but in this Man and Beast Fish and Fowle all things threatned to be destroyed from the earth Secondly therefore consider the abhomination committed in those times you may at first sight collect them out of the following verses In the 4. verse Zeph. 1.4.1 there was a remnant of Baall in the land resembling our Papists Secondly Priests and Chemarims fit parallels to our Priests and Iesuits Verse 5 Thirdly in the 5. verse there were some that sware by the Lord and sware by Malcham equalling the false-harted halfe hollow-harted Hipocrites of two Religions in these dayes Verse 6 Fourthly in the 6. verse some that turned backe from the Lord like to our Ephraimitall Apostaticall reuolters Fiftly some that sought not the Lord nor inquired after him shadowing the Atheists of our land Verse 8 Sixtly in the 8. verse such as were cloathed with strange apparell the characters of the guls and gallants of our dayes Verse 9 In the 9. verse some that daunced vpon the threshold so proudly the note of the quaint Crane-paced Courtiers of this time Lastly those that filled houses by cruelty and deceit the brand of the sinfull and couetous Citizens of this Citie Now measure with the cubit of the Sanctuary whether desolation be not fitted to abhomination Runne to and fro through the streete of that Chapter and see and heare and feare and tremble Sinnes were the cause of that threatned destruction sinnes were the Cart-ropes Engines Pioners the Earthquakes Whirlewindes Thunderbolts finall downefall and funerall and deuastation of that State In the time of the Iudges Iudg. 20.44 the Lord almost extinguished the Tribe of Beniamin eighteen thousand at one time 1 King ●2 In the time of the Kings ten Tribes fell from Israell But this misery is more Roote and Branch head and tayle as the Prophet sore-told Man Beast Fish and fowle are destroyed For sinnes he doth stretch out his hand vpon Iudah and vpon all the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinnes he doth worry the Sheepe and smite the Shepheard This is the first reason why Iosias is smitten The second cause of smiting Iosias The second reason that Iosias was smitten was that hee might not see the misery threatned to be brought vpon Israell his eyes should not see that euill Euill must come but not in the dayes of Iosias The word of the Lord is good saith Hezekias onely let peace be in my dayes The Israelites must be bond-slaues in the land of Egipt Genesis but not till the Patriarkes sleepe in peace Tenne Tribes shall be diuided from the twelue yet Salomons eyes shall first be shut Ierusalem shall be destroyed but not till they who mourne in Zyon be marked Ezek. 9.4 Al Italy grieuously troubled but Ambrose must first be at rest Africa shal be spoiled but not till Austine decease Germany was distracted but Luther first must peaceably honourably be buryed England was persecuted and fiered but blessed King Edward must first be receiued into Abrahams bosome God reserueth his iust determinate plagues and stayeth his Vyals till his appointed times All the States of the World haue their Criticall dayes and Climactericall yeeres beginnings setled stations declinations and dissolutions at Gods appointment Certo veniunt ordine Parcae Seneca It was a speech that commands admiration from vs that God should say to Lot Get thee hence I can doe nothing till thou art gone hence Was the power of God limited by himselfe he did actiuely limit his power it was not passiuely limitted by Lot God did limit his wil Genesis or rather both were determinated then limited or terminated It exceedes our thoughts that he in so fauourable a Compassion will forbeare for his loue to some particular Seruant the great wrath he hath laid vp in store for a Nation Gen. 39 5. Gen. 30.27 He doth not onely blesse Potiphar for Ioseph and Laban for Iacob but hold his hand stay his Vials forbeare his