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A43384 Select hymns, taken out of Mr. Herbert's Temple, and turn'd into the common metre To be sung in the tunes ordinarily us'd in churches.; Temple. Selections Herbert, George, 1593-1633.; Woodford, Samuel, 1636-1700. 1697 (1697) Wing H1515A; ESTC R221290 17,526 49

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Lovers Lute His narrow Grief will him allow The softer-strain and Rhyme My harsher Sorrows do exclude Both Measure Tune and Time Self-Condemnation To the Tune of Psal. 113. THou who condemnest Jewish Hate For chusing of a Murderer Before a Saviour Lord of Glory Look back upon thy own Estate Call home thine Eye that wanderer That thine own Choice may be thy Story He that doth Love and Love amiss This VVorld before true Christian Joy How doth He make a Jewish Choice The VVorld an ancient Murderer is Thousands it hath and doth destroy VVith her enchanting Looks and Voice 2. He that hath made a sorry VVedding Between his Soul and Gold preferr'd False Gain and Riches before true Hath done what He condemns in Reading Hath Sold for Money His Dear Lord And is Himself a Iudas-Iew Thus we prevent the last great Day And judge our selves that Light which Passion And Sin before did Dim and Choak VVhen once these Snuffs are ta'ne away Shines bright ev'n unto Condemnation And that without Excuse or Cloak Bitter-Sweet To the Tune of Psalm 67. AH my Dear angry Lord Since thou dost Love yet strike Thou dost cast down yet help afford Sure I will do the like I will complain yet Praise Bewail and yet approve And all my other sowre-sweet Days I will lament yet Love The Glance To the Tune of Psalm 100. WHen first thy sweet and gracious Eye Vouchsaf'd in midst of Youth and Night To look on me who lay before In Sin I felt a strange delight Since that Time many a bitter Storm I 've felt which would have quite destroy'd My Soul had the malicious Harm His sway and swing fully enjoy'd But the first Joy sprung from thine Eye Did still so work within my Soul That after all it got the Day And did the surging Griefs controul If the first Glance so powerful be Mirth open'd and seal'd up again VVhat wonders shall we feel at last VVhen thou shalt look us out of Pain VVhen we shall see thy full ey'd Love And that one Heav'nly glorious Light More than a thousand Suns above Shall be disbursing joyful Light Aaron To the Tune of Psalm 100. HOliness written on the Head Light and Perfections on the Breast Harmonious Bells raising the Dead To Life Thus are true Aarons drest But oh prophaneness in my Head Defects and darkness in my Breast A noise of Passions like a Knell Ala poor Priest thus am I drest And yet I have another Head Christ is my only Heart and Breast He is my Musick causing Life In him alone I am well drest Now again Holy in my Head Perfect and Light in Heart and Breast My Doctrine tun'd by Christ who lives In me Come People Aaron's drest Discipline To the Tune of Psalm 67. O Throw away thy Rod And throw away thy Wrath Thou art my Saviour and my God O take the gentle Path. Thou seest my Hearts desire Unto thy Will is bent To nothing I do more aspire Than to a full Consent There 's not a Word or Look That I affect to own But what I have or learn by Book And that thy Book alone And though I fail I weep And though I halt in Pace Yet still I go or rather creep Unto the Throne of Grace Then let thy Wrath remove And Love will do the Deed For with thy Blood and with thy Love These stony Hearts will bleed Thy Love is swift of Foot Thy Love 's a Man of War That is victorious and can shoot And hit our Hearts from far And who can scape this Bow For that which wrought on Thee That brought thee down and made thee low Needs must it work on me O throw away thy Rod And though Man frailties hath Yet we are Creatures thou art God O throw away thy Wrath. The Invitation To the Tune of Psalm 100. COme hither all whose Heart and Taste Savours this Earth Here mend your fare God hath prepar'd and is a Feast In whom alone all dainties are Come hither you whom Love of Wine Hath made you Drink for hurt not good Now weep what you have drunk amiss And cat his Flesh and drink his Blood Come hither all whom Fear and Pain Arraigns and brings your Sins to sight Taste and fear not for God is here Who will on Sin return the fright Come hither all whom Joy destroys And makes you graze without your bounds Here is a Joy that drowns all Joys As doth a Flond the lower grounds Come hither all whom Love exalts And lifts you up unto the sky Here is Love breathing ev'n in Death Which after Death can never Dye Thus Lord I have invited all And still I will invite to Thee For it doth seem but Just and Right That where all is there all should be Desertion To the Tune of Psalm 67. SOul's Joy when thou art gone Which yet sure cannot be Because thou dost abide in me And I depend on Thee Yet when thou dost suppress The Joy of thy abode And in my Power not stir abroad But leave me to my Load Oh what a Damp doth seize My Soul no stormy Night Can so afflict or so affright As thy eclipsed Light Ah Lord do not withdraw Thy Love lest Sin appear And when thou dost but shine less clear Say that thou art not here And then what Life I have When Sin doth rave and boast That I may seek but thou art lost Thou and alone thou know'st Oh what a deadly Cold Doth make me half believe That Sin saith true but while I grieve Thou com'st and dost relieve Death To the Tune of Psalm 100. DEath thou wast once an uncouth thing Hid'ous and nothing else but Bones Mouth open but thou couldst not sing The sad Effects of sadder Groans For we were wont to look on Thee As at some nine or ten Years hence Flesh turn'd to Dust and Bones to sticks After the loss of Life and Sence On this side of Thee we did look We shot too short whence we did find Dust drawing Tears but shedding none The Shells of Fledge Souls left behind But since our Sav'ours Death hath put Some Blood and Vigour in thy Face Thou art much sought for as a good Thou art grown Fair and full of Grace We now behold Thee gay and glad As thou wilt be at Judgment-Day Thy Bones with Beauty shall be clad When Souls shall wear their new aray Therefore we can go Dye as Sleep And safely trust half that we have Making our Pillows Doan or Dust Unto an honest faithful Grave New Testament-Hymns Taken out of Dr. Woodford's PARAPHRASE And Turn'd into the Common Metre The Song of the Blessed Uirgin 1. MY Soul doth magnifie the Lord My Spirit in Him rejoyce My Saviours Praises to Record My Spirit provokes my Voice Nor Soul nor Spirit my Will or Mind Shall in his Praise lye still With Voice and Lyre I 'll all my Powers Summon to shew their skill 2. The Church his Handmaids low Estate He kindly did
I am here thy Servant Lord One born within thy House Son of thy Handmaid Son of Prayer A Son of Tears and Vows Psalm 22.9 and 71.6 Thou took'st me from my Mothers Womb When my first Breath I drew Where I was curiously wrought All Praise to Thee is due Psalm 22.9 10. My Parents then devoting me Upon Thee I was cast And from my Mothers Belly Thou My God in Cov'nant wast And while a feeble Infant I Hung on my Mothers Breast Thou mad'st me hope for there I had This ground of Hope and Rest That being in thy Family Thy Charge I there became Thou wast my Father and my God I bore on me thy Name Psalm 71.5 Then in pursuance of thy Word Thy Covenant of Truth Thou gav'st me Grace and wast the Guide And Hope of my Raw Youth Psalm 22.10 By all Engagements and by Vows Renewed I am thine And thou art from that Time to this By the same Title mine Psalm 71.9 And now when Age and Troubles come Lord for thy former Love Leave me not here distrest below Till lodged safe above Lose not an ancient Servant Lord Whose Work is almost done Who took'st me first into thy House Before my Work begun Psalm 71.18 Leave me not Lord till I have taught These Babes to know thy Will That as I 've prais'd my Fathers God My Seed may own Thee still An Ode AH Me What a Wretch should I be Should I suffer what I see That my Sins do require There is none of them so small That for Vengeance doth not call And for bitterness and gall Loss of Body Soul and all In the Pit of wo and thrall 'T is no less than endless Fire That in Justice is their hire 2. Sin Sin With my Life did begin And I have liv'd therein All my Days heretofore Sins of Head Heart Hands and Tongue Through my Life all along Like a thred have they run Binding me to be undone So many and great they 're grown That if Justice Scan the score I must perish evermore 3. Poor I Whether now shall I fly To be set Liberty From this depth of Misery 'T is not Sea 't is not Shore 'T is not all the Indian Ore 'T is not Rome with all her Store That hath Salve to Cure my Sore Only One can me restore To that Altar I will siy There I 'll Live there I 'll Dye 4. Save Save Mercy Lord do I crave Other refuge none I have But thy Mercy to implore Look upon me through the Side That the Spear made so wide Look on me through Him that dy●d And for Sin was crucify'd Grant his wounds my Sins may hide And his Blood may cross my score And I ask but one thing more 5. Grace Grace In my Heart do thou place That I may run the Race Which thy Laws do require Give me Lord I humbly sue Grace to know Grace to do Grace that may me so renew And confirm and perfect too That when Death shall claim its due Grace in Glory may expire This is All my Desire FINIS A Catalogue of Books Printed for Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and Three Crowns in Cheapside ANnotations upon the Holy Bible wherein the sacred Text is inserted and various Readings annexed together with Parallel Scriptures the more difficult Terms in each Verse are explain'd seeming Contradictions reconciled Questions and Doubts Resolved and the whole Text open'd in two Vol. Fol. By the late Reverend and Learned Divine Mr. Mat. Pool The Christian in compleat Armour or a Treatise of the Saints War against the Devil where a discovery is made of that Grand Enemy of God and his People in his Policy Power Seat of his Empire wickedness and chief Design against the Saints A Magazine open'd from whence the Christian is furnished with Spiritual Arms for the Battle helped on with his Armour taught the use of his Weapon together with the happy Issue of the whole War By W. Gurnal M. A. of Emanuel Colledge sixth Edition Vol. One Hundred Select Sermons on several Texts of Scripture By Tho. Horton D. D. Fol. Sermons and Discourses on several Divine Subjects by the late Reverend and Learned Mr. David Clarkson B. D. and Fellow of Clare-Hall Cambridge Fol. A Body of Practical Divinity consisting of above one hundred seventy six Sermons on the lesser Catechism composed by the Reverend Assembly of Divines at Westminster with a Supplement of some Sermons on several Texts of Scripture By Tho. Watson formerly Minister of St. Stephens Walbrook London Fol. A Paraphrase on the New Testament with Notes Doctrinal and Practical by plainness and brevity fitted to the Use of Religious Families in their daily Reading of the Scriptures and of the Younger and Poorer sort of Ministers who want fuller helps With an Advertisement of Difficulties in the Revelation second Edition Corrected By the late Reverend Mr. Rich. Baxter Discourses upon the Rich Man and Lazarus By Timothy Cruso Octavo Redemption of Time the Wisdom and Duty of Christians in Evil Days By Iohn Wade Minister at Hammersmith The Confirming Work of Religion and its great Things made plain by their Primary Evidences and Demonstrations whereby the meanest in the Church may soon be made able to render a rational Account of their Faith By Rob. Fleming Author of the Fulfilling of the Scriptures Now Publish'd by Daniel Burgess the second Edition A New Creature or a short Discourse opening the Nature Properties and Necessity of the great Work of the New Creation upon the Souls of Men on Gal. 6.15 A Family Altar erected to the Honour of the Eternal God or a solemn Essay to promote the Worship of God in Private Houses on Gen. 32.2 3. Together with the best Entail or Dying Parents loving Hopes for their surviving Children grounded upon the Covenant of Grace with Believers and their Seed These two by O. H●ywood The Gospel Mystery of Sanctification open'd in sundry practical Directions suited especially to the Case of those who labour under the Guilt and Power of Indwelling Sin To which is added a Sermon of Justification By Mr. Walter Marshal late Preacher of the Gospel The Golden Snuffers or Christian Reprovers and Reformers Characterized Caution'd and Encouraged A Sermon Preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners in London Feb. 15th 1696. By Daniel Burgess A sure Guide to Heaven Or an Earnest Invitation to Sinners to turn to God in Order to their Eternal Salvation Shewing the thoughtful Sinner what he must do to be Saved By Ioseph Allein Minister of the Gospel A Brief Concordance to the Holy Bible of the most usual and useful Places which one may have occasion to seek for By Sam. Clark M. A. Jehovah our Righteousness or the Justification of Believers by the Righteousness of Christ only 〈◊〉 asserted and applied in several Sermons By Sam●●● Tomlyn A. M. Minister of the Gospel A Discourse concerning Old Age tending to the Instruction Caution and Comfort of Age● Persons By Richard Steel M. A. The Rod or the Sword the Present Dilemma o● the Nations of ●ngland Scotland and Ireland Con●●sidered Argued and Improved in a Discour●● from Ezekiel Chap. 21. Ver. 13.