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A05282 Queene Elizabeth, paraleld in her princely vertues, with Dauid, Iosua, and Hezekia 1 With Dauid her afflictions, to build the Church 2 With Iosua in her puissance, to protect the Church· 3 With Hezechia in her pietie, to reforme the Chureh [sic]. In three sermons, as they were preached three seuerall Queenes dayes. By William Leigh, Bachelor of Diuinitie. Leigh, William, 1550-1639. 1612 (1612) STC 15426; ESTC S108411 64,116 162

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Gilboah vpon you bee neither dewe nor rayne nor fieldes of offering for then the shield of the mightie is cast downe The shield of Saul as though he had not beene annointed with oyle The mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddo where Iosias was slaine wil neuer bee forgotten where euery familie mourned a part c. and vttered their passions with this pitifull plaint the Crowne of our head is fallē woe vnto vs that euer we sinned Lastly that one may stand for all I appeale to your owne passions who haue at any time seene your own soueraigne whether your teares of ioy haue not expressed your feare of griefe mourning like the Turtle-Doue whose sweetest song is in her sorrowe least hauing lost her mate shee should not finde him and hauing found her mate least shee might loose him thousands within the kingdome doe thus blend in their moyst and mixt teares vpon the sight and thoughts of their soueraigne And here leaue we the peoples passions and come wee to their praier the sweete perfume of their deuotion in these wordes LORD remember Dauid in all his affliction Wherein first I doe obserue in that the people flye to GOD for their King with no lesse loue then loyaltie they hold that the powers that are ordained of God they hold that he looseth the collar of kings girdeth their loynes with a girdle they hold that he sitteth in the middest of magistrats demandeth an accoūt of their gouernment I say they hold that it is hee and hee alone that setteth vp and pulleth downe that leadeth his people along by the hands of Moses and Aaron Wee say then with him who saide well Abrahamum non invenit dominus sed fecit patrem multarum gentium the Lord did not finde Abraham but hee made him a father of many nations hee called him from Hur of the Chaldeans Moses from the sedges Dauid frō the Ewes great with lābe to feede Iacob his people and Israel his inheritance Nay Christ Iesus king of kings and Lord of lords not by intrusion but by inauguration from his father thus I will set my king vpon my holy hill of Sion Aske of mee and I will giue thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the vttermost parts of the earth for thy possession Antichristian then miserable damnable is the doctrine of all such as dare say that Popes may either set vp or pull down Princes discharge the subiect of his obedience put a knife in the hād of any to sheath it in the bowels of their soueraignes Antichristian was the practise of that proude Pope who trod vpon the neck of Kings Emperours made them to hold his stirrop because they held not steddily tripped the crownes frō their heads Ego et r●x meus argued neither faith nor frailty in Cardinal Wolfey I may fastly say it was disloyaltie in Warwicke to giue out that he had rather make a King then be a King nay nay prowd peare it was neuer in thy power to make a King for the making of a King is the worke of a God and if it be true of all things much more of a Kings The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away as it pleaseth the Lord so come things to passe Then cease your malice you miscreants of states for you can neuer preuaile against the Lord the powers that be are ordained of God who resisteth them resisteth the ordinance of God Is it possible to back the Sun Moone or Stars in their speedy course can ye hush the harmonie of the heauens or stil the raging of the sea cā ye alter the course of the yeare of seede time haruest of winter sōmer of the day of the night can ye either giue ●ife or deliuer fro death can ye create a new world with another gouernmēt then may ●ye resist the Lords ordinance in this Alter states pluck away all power from a powerfull God But it is not in you or your Romane God ô yee popish repiners it s not your boysterous bull can push downe a Prince it s not the croaking of your frogges and Locusts your Iesuited crew and Seminarie broode can blast our doctrine blemish our state or bereaue vs of our Soueraigne disquiet you may destroy you may not for the offences of the people there be many Princes if our sins sacke vs not wee shall neuer fall if the Lord say prosper how can our branch wither and if he say from heauen ride on because of the word of truth of meekenes and of righteousnes who dare say from the earth light off ride rule and raigne no more trayterous is the hart that thinkes it trayterous is the mouth that speakes it trayterous is the hand that works it trayterous is the pen that writes it And yet woe is me to tell this our age and climate is pestered with men of such poysoned breathes who dare both thinke say doe and write that a mortall man may manage kingdomes and authorise subiects to depriue their Princes as if the powers that be were not ordained of God their faculties are of force their bulles are divulged their antichristian doctrine is traduced by Symancha Costerus and Dolman who haue blackened the aire with their derne diuinitie whilest they auerre that subiects may rise rebell kill their kings if they be not pleasing to their deuotion Augustine mourned much for that hee had euer read against the true God Tonantem Iouem adulterantem of a thundering God and of an adulterous God for so deemed the Pagans of their Iupiter Capitolinus Much more may Papists grieue that euer they either read or reuerenced in the place of God their capital Pope tonantem adulterantem a cursing God and a carnall God adulterating states and cursing Kings and yet to God be the praise his Bul bolts are but birdboults blunted by a better God witnes the flourishing blessed estate both of our Church and kingdome vnder the happie gouernment of our dread Soueraigne by whom the Lord hath multiplied our nation increased our ioy and neuer with no blessings powred vpon her from heauen then since Impius Quintus cursed her from the earth for she liueth a blessed Prince and he is dead a cursed Pope and if any trayterous Bechry the sonne of rebellious Iemini haue in his heart so bad a thought or in his mouth so foule a word kindled with heate of that bull as to say A precibus ad praelium frō prayers to your pikes and to your tents ô Israel we haue no part in Queene Elizabeth let the iudgement of Bechry fall vpon him and let all the people say Amen And let this suffice for the second obseruation teaching vs by the example of this religious and passionate people praying for their king that who plead or practise the contrarie doe violate the Lords holy ordinance and lay violent
God of the surplusage of his loue towards this English nation had not ended one mercy with the beginning of another I feare our mourning dayes had not beene yet ended But God almightie without whose prouidence nothing proceeds and without whose mercy nothing is saued hath ended one b●essing with the beginning of another euen the blessed raigne of Queene Elizabeth with the thrice happie gouernment of our Liege Lord and King your father in whom the flowers florish and the Kingdomes are vnited Religion prospereth and superstition withereth with a Royall issue euer to liue the onely remaine of our religious hope One is easily ouercome and two will make resistance but this threefold gable is not lightly broken being beautifull as the bands of Zachary wherewith the Church is honoured the State is strengthened the subiect is comforted and our soueraigne Lord the King your father no lesse blessed in his three children then in his three Kingdomes The Lord God of heauen maker of Kings and directer of Crownes giue vnto you all grace in this life and glory in a better Amen Amen Your Graces most humble at commaund WILLIAM LEIGH THE FIRST Sermon PSALME 123. verse 1 Lord remember Dauid with all his affliction verse 2 Who sware vnto the Lord and vowed vnto the mightie God of Iacob saying verse 3 I wil not come within the Tabernacle of mine house nor clymbe vp into my bedde verse 4 I will not suffer mine eyes to sleepe nor mine eye-liddes to slumber vntill I finde out a place for the Lord an habitation for the mightie God of Iacob THE people as you may here see are pas●ionate for their King and they pray for him Againe the King is carefull ouer his people and he prepareth for them The people pray that their King might ●e remembred of God in al his affliction 〈◊〉 King prepareth that the people may haue the Lord propitious in all their deuotiōs And such is or ought to bee the entercourse of loue loyaltie betwixt prince people happie Prince so praied for blessed people so prouided for and Israels Iuda was blessed in both Now the matter of their praier was that God would establish his promise made to Dauid their King concerning his church that he might build a place for his aboade in Sion the mountaine of his holinesse It was his care it was his affliction I say affliction much affecting his royall heart that himselfe with the nobles of Iuda and Israel should haue their solace in seeled houses whilest the Arke of God was couered with skinnes dwelt in tents and had neuer a cottage to shroude in Birds had their neastes foxes had their holes but neither poore CHRIST nor his afflicted Church coulde euer finde rest or repose in this miserable world destitute afflicted and tormented whom the world was not worthie of they wandred in wildernesse and mountaines and caues of the earth Neuer pilgrim●lesse pitied neuer shippe more tossed neuer Tabernacle oftener shifted then that of the Arke and presence of the Lord. Witnesse these two and fortie remoueals in the wildernesse ere Israel came to Canaan besides the small rest it hadde at Shilo in Eli his house at Ashdod with the Philistines at Bethshemesh Kiriath-i●arim Abinadabs house Obed Edoms and neuer at quiet till it came to Sion nor that a Sanctuarie for euer to dwell in but a Sacrament of a better being and Tabernacle in heauen which the Lord hath pight and not man For euen now the stones of Sion lye in the dust and her ruines are vnrepaired the holy people are helplesse piety is a pilgrim vpon the earth the little flocke findeth poore pasture to feed vpō euerin motion neuer at quiet til it come retyre into the bosom of it best beloued like the doue in the deluge who foūd no rest for the soale of her foote till shee returned againe vnto the Arke This Arke thus tossed in the deluge and tyred in the wildernes despised of the heathen much neglected of the true borne Iewe together with Labans much lowring at home when in Iacob it was consumed abroade with heate in the day and with frost in the night weather beaten and weary till Dauid a Type of Christ gaue it rest who eaten vp with the zeale of Gods house deuoured all difficulties for the accomplishment who thought vpon nothing more then of a place and habitation for his holinesse to dwell in his meate went from him so did his sleepe and hee charged his soule with an oath to God for the performance These holy thoughts thus affecting his heart afflicting his soule made the people sensible of his sorrowes and therefore pierced their hearts to prouoke their prayer thus Lord remember Dauid in all his Afflictions Wherein I doe obserue two things of speciall note the first is the peoples passion for their King they are afflicted with him and therfore they pray for him the second is Dauids preparation for the people hee is carefull of them and therefore he prouides for them a place an habitation for the Lord to dwell in So as their feete might now wander no more but stand in the great congregation they loued so wel and by the Altars of their God they held so deare And for the first I meane the peoples passiō for their King ye know the saying of old Componitur orbis Regis ad exemplū And it hath it extent from Court to Country for peoples passions are framed to their Princes affections like Hippocrates twins they weepe together and they laugh together they liue together and they dye together witnesse their ioynt sorrowes after Abners herse the King wept and the people wept though the people would feast yet when they sawe the King would fast it pleased them for as the text saith whatsoeuer the King did pleased the people His passions were theirs his afflictions were theirs to teach vs that peoples actions doe Sympathize with Princes affections the Court is dead if the King bee not cheerefull and subiects sorrowe when their soueraignes are sadde Princes smyles are peoples ioyes like the lustre of the same so are the countenance of Kings with their shine they carie comforts but neuer so little shadowed with clowdes of griefe good Lord how the subiect then mourneth deare is the loue of God in the soules of his Saints but next to that is the sacred band of loue and loyaltie to Princes fathers friendes and families are further off soueraignes are the highest in the rancke If leasure would serue to turne ouer some fewe leaues of sorrowe and search into the records of griefe easily might I finde that peoples passions for their Princes haue beene most piercing great was their care ouer Dauid when they stayed him from the battel least the light of Israel should be extinguished So was it ouer Saul when they mourned his funerals with this dolefull dittie Yee mountaines of
to thinke how the Arke of his God lay in the open fielde tyred in Tents weather-beaten and wearie without shelter to shrowde it other then those worne Curtaines of skinnes and Canuas The vse is good like affliction hath followed the godlie of all Ages in the care and conscience they haue euer had to build vp a Church in the hearts and soules of Gods Sai●ts I am verily perswaded that if all the cares in the world besides might blend in one they could neuer be found so piercing so bleeding so deare so desperate in designes as is and hath beene the care and conscience of our soules in tender whereof good and godlie men haue neither cared for meate drinke sleepe friends life death nor the hazard of their owne solues if I may say so And why may I not when Paule wished himselfe to bee separated from CHRIST for his brethrens sake This affliction cut the heart of Abraham asunder when hee the Father of all the Faithfull should at one blowe cut off all hope in Sacrifycing Isaack his sonne his onely sonne whome hee loued this Affliction battered the heart of Iacob when hee saw the bloody coate of Ioseph and saide with a sorrowfull soule Fera pessima deuorauit eum a cruell Beast hath deuoured him This Affliction rent the heart of Ioseph when the Iron entred into his soule and none was sorrie for his affliction This was the affliction that moulded the hart of milde Moses to such compassion ouer Israel for their Idolatry whē the Lord was angrie with them as hee wished himselfe raced out of the booke of Life that Israel might be saued This Affliction like a sworde pierced through the soule of MARIE that the thoughts of manie hearts might bee opened This Affliction like a dampe stroke the heart of Paule when hee saide I die daylie who is weake and I am not weake who is offended and I burne not This this was the Affliction that melted the heart of CHRIST when as a suter hee stood at the dore and knocked saying Open vnto mee my Loue my Doue myne vndefiled for my Head is full of deaw and my Lockes with the droppes of the Night and yet can haue no entrance Finallie that others might haue a Fellow feeling of the Afflictions and miseries Christ suffered vpon the Crosse for vs his Church hee calleth vpon the Passengers that goe by that they should looke vpon him and pittie him in this paines Haue yee no regard at all ye that passe by this way Beholde and see if there bee any sorrowe like vnto my sorrowe which is done vnto mee and wherewith the Lord hath afflicted mee in his fierce wrath O remember mine Afflictions and my mourning the wormewood and the gail Well I say no more because I see you passionate these are gone before and are all heires euen heires of God and heires annexed with IESVS CHRIST and so shall you be if you suffer with him as they did that yee may bee glorified with him as they are And so againe to Dauid the Seas of whose Afflictions to sounde were to beate backe a Iorden to reckon vp his cares with his cost for the prouision of that Worke which another should perfect were an endles account to expresse with pen or speech the passions hee felt in following the businesse were for a more powerfull spirit then I feele in my selfe I cannot come neere the depth thereof Yet this dare I say as I haue saide that all the ioyes hee had in this worlde either of pleasure or profite hee passed by them with an Abrenuncio leauing off all Princely sportes and Kingly delights till hee had done with the deuotion of his GOD his meate drinke sleepe his house bed and Palate his Courte Crowne and Kingdome These were least and last in his thoughts hee neuer deemed them deere but in the denyall binding his soule to God by vowe and oathe neuer to delight in earthlie solace till hee had fulfilled his heauenly ioyes and found out a place for the Lord an habitation for the mightie God of Iacob The beautie of which house though he might not see for that hee was a man of blood Salomon his Son must perfect the worke yet as Moses from Morijah though hee might not enter that earthly Canaan ioyed in the sight of Canaā as a type of that heauenly being hee was to enioy vpon his death so Dauid though he might not finish the worke hee had in hand yet exceedingly ioyed that hee might prouide for the temple belowe a pregnant type of that heauenly Hierusalem which is aboue Now the building of this house here on earth where his people might more safely rest and render vp their vowes to God in heauen was Dauids holy care and greatest part of his affliction with which if you marke well you shall finde he beganne his raigne continued his rule and ended his princely life for vppon his entrance it is saide that Dauid tooke first the fort of Sion and with thirtie thousand of the chosen men of Israel rose and went from Baal of Iudah which is Kiarathiearim to bring from thence the arke of God to Abinadabs house that was in Gibeah Thence to Nachans threshing Floore and so to the house of Obed-Edom the Gittyte where after it had continued three monethes with a blessing to himselfe and all that hee had then Dauid with gladnesse brought it into his owne citie and set it in his place in the midst of the Tabernacle that Dauid hadde pitched for it where after hee had offered burnt offerings and peace offerings before the Lord he blessed the people in the name of the Lord of hoasts How this care continued his rule it may appeare by the princely preparation hee made as of the place to build vpon so of things necessarie for the building of Algunum wood fyr-trees Caedars from Tyre Sidon and Lebanon of gold from Ophyr of pearle from the Iles of siluer brasse and Iron from all about his kingdome all totalled by Dauid himselfe when he bequeathed it to God as a legacie for Salomon his sonne to bestowe vppon the Temple In these wordes Behold my sonne according to my pouertie haue I prepared for the house of the Lorde an hundred thousand Talents of Golde and a thousand Talents of Siluer and of Brasse and of Iron passing weight I haue also prepared Tymber and Stone and thou mayest prouide more thereunto vp therfore and be doing and the Lord be with thee According to my pouertie that may bee thought straunge I say straunge that there should seeme to be penurie in such plentie want in so much wealth and pouertie in so great aboundance but what is Gold to Grace I tell it from my God and speake it from my soule that who will bee rich in Heauen must be a begger on earth though not in reputation of this world yet in estimation of a better
the Church Dauid put Garisons in Edom and made Siria tributary and the Lord kept Dauid whithersoeuer he went Ireland France and Flaunders haue bin garded with her Garisons paied her tribute and done her homage by land and by sea● haue her colours displayed in their defence to keepe them from the spoile of Popery Dauid with these heauenly had the successe of earthly blessings for he was rich and his kingdome was populous hee was needing to none yet most of his neighbour-nations had neede of him Queene Elizabeth is blessed of God in her bountie toward all her shipping shot men and munition are a wall of defence to her selfe a guard of comfort to her neighbour-bordering friendes and a terror to her frowning enemies What should I say more Dauid is dilectus domini the beloued of God she is Elizabeth Gods rest whose quiet rule and peaceable gouernment in and for her Christ is to all her louing and loyall subiectes as it were a retyring campe after the day of battell Finally Dauids raigne was with the longest and neare the highest of his rancke the dayes of our Elizabeth are faire and full and the Lord lengthen them as the dayes of Iosua which had the fairest creatures at commaund till the battell was ended and the fight finished and thou GOD of time and of all eternitie so determine her dayes as may bee most to thy glory best for the poore Church for Englands good and the saluation of her princely soule Amen Amen and the helpe of heauen be with her THE SECOND Sermon IOSVA 10. 12. Then spake Iosua vnto the Lord in the day when the Lord gaue the Amorites before the children of Israel and saide in the sight of Israel Sunne stand thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon TWo mightie nations did contend in the wombe of Rebecca the one in Esau the other in Iacob but by the prouidence of God the younger preuailed against the elder gained the birthright with the blessing Such wofull contentions haue euer bin in the wombe of the Church betwixt the Israel of God and Esau his brood and pro●eni● yet hath not the Lord failed in mercy to deliuer his Turtle-doue from the violence of the assaulter As we here find in Iosua and feele in our ioyfull experience this day who maugre the spite of Esau Ismael all the Amorites of our State Church and Kingdome hath graced our nation with a birth-right and a blessing a birth-right in our Christ a blessing in our Prince both such as Esau with all his Romish Edomites shall neuer obtaine at Isaacks hands though he begge seeke it with plaints and teares For so good a God so gracious a Prince so happie and desired a peace so great plenty with such aboundance of all things and a time of continuance so long and so bright of all Gods blessings both heauenly and earthly is not for Moab Ammon or mount Seir but for the hill of Gods holinesse Israel England and mount Sion Nor doe I doubt but this blessed day will yet dawn and lengthen like the day of Iosua Gods mercies will yet abound his graces flowe ouer the enemies of our State bee discomfited and the helpe of heauen shall prosper our Prince ●● it did Iosua if wee practise and pray for her preseruation Yea the Lord shall stand for England as hee did for Israel in mount Perazim hee shall bee wrath as in the valley of Gibeon that hee may doe his worke his strange worke and bring to passe his acte his strange acte euen to match the power of Elizabeth with the might of Iosua her prowesse with his puissance a maiden Queene with a manly king to deliuer his Church from the disastrous designes of Adoni-zedeck and all his Romish retinue And first of Iosua as I am guided by my text whose puissance was such as First preuailed with God Secondly with his fairest creatures And lastly with his greatest enemies Hee preuailed with God in the highest heauens He preuailed with his creatures in the firmament of his power He preuailed against his enemies in the vaste valley of Aialon Tendit ad ardua virtus There was neuer King aduentured vpon greater dangers the God with whom he dealt was a consuming fire The creatures hee encountred before that time were neuer backed and the enemies be subdued were fiue mightie Kings of the Amorites with all their retinue like grasse-hoppers vpon the ground for multitude and thus with his heroicall spirit as Siracides saith hee rushed in vpon the nations in battell and in going downe of Betheron hee destroyed the aduersaries that they might knowe his weapons and that he fought in the sight of the Lord that gaue him might and in the shine of the Sun that gaue him light intreating the one and commaunding the other to bee propitious Now for the weapons of this his warfare as you here see they were not carnall but spirituall and mightie in operation to cast downe holds for he sent to God the arrowe of his deliuerance which was his prayer when hee saide Then spake Iosua vnto the Lord hee sacked both Sunne and Moone with the word of his commaunde when he saide Sun stay thou in Gibeon and thou Moone in the valley of Aialon and then hee drewe out his sword to take vengeance of his enemies that rose vp against him when hee set Israel in their possessions Thus honourable Iosua managed the battell like renowned Dauid when he marshalled the field said Let the praise of God be in your mouthes and a sharpe two edged sword in your handes to be auenged of the heathen and to rebuke the people Iacob wept and prayed found God at Bethel Iosua fought and prayed and found God at Gibeon the Sunne Moone obeyed the word of Iosua because the God of heauen heard the prayer of Iosua O piercing word and powerfull prayer so to preuaile when all other succours failed for the day was welneare spent the battel was scarce begun the passages were dāgerous dark night approached Israel knew no way the Amorites were acquainted with euery winding bogges bushes and shady groues rockes hils and derne dales might haue broken the battell and disordered the campe in the darknes silence of the night if God had not lengthened the day and therfore Iosua his issue was but one it was a strange one to dismisse the night and bid it be gone to stay the passage of the Sun to bid it stand and spare no light till the fight were finished that God and Israel might haue the honour of the day by that most miraculous and heauenly station Now tell mee who was there before him like to him that thus fought the battels of the Lord for the Sunne stood still at his command and one day was as long as two Here to determine the certaine howers of that day and minutes
of that heauenly station I dare not for that the Scripture seemes silent of that secret although the authors of the Hebrewe Homilies induced with sharpe and subtile reasons haue written of threescore and six houres standing others of a naturall day which is foure and twentie houres others of an artificiall or diurnall day which is twelue houres mentioned by our Sauiour Christ when he saide are there not twelue houres in the day if a man walke in the day hee stumbleth not c. But in answere to all it shall bee sufficient for vs to knowe that the Sunne stirred not till the battell was ended and Israel had auenged himselfe vppon the heathen the Lord was mercifull to giue them light that they might walke fight in the day not stumble by night in the desert one day was as long as two and it is sufficient for vs to knowe that such a day did neuer dawne such a battell was neuer fought that there was neuer day like that before it nor after it ●herein the Lord heard the voyce of a man and so fought for Israel And here see the power of prayer hee heard the voyce of a man and fought for Israel but the Lord fought not while Iosua prayed not nor was it the voyce of an Angell but the voyce of a man that preuailed with God for Israel nor was it any volly of shot no speare or pike no warlicke stratagem horse or sword could pierce the enemie till the voyce of Iosua had pierced the heauens that shoot of prayer that shiuered the walles of Iericho amazed the hearts of the Amorites weakened their hands and subdued their power in the valley of Aialon Iosua was neuer so puissant in his fight as in his prayer for in his fight he preuailed but with men but in his prayer he preuailed with God his faith his prayer and his loue conquered him that comandeth all according to that Solus amor triumphat à Deo onely loue conquereth God God by the Prophet shewes vs a Sentinel set vpon the walles of Ierusalem a watchman in his tower that wardeth and warneth onely by his praier which all the day and all the night continually should not cease keepe silence or giue God any rest till he should repaire and set vp Ierusalem the praise of the world It s true It s true Orationes Lachrimae sunt arma Ecclesiae praiers and teares are church weapons Oratio deum lenit lachrima cogit haec vngit illa pungit praier softeneth teares in force this melteth that pearceth the sweet soule of thy Sauiour to pittie thy plaints in the daies of thine affliction as in the day of Iosua And hereby the example of Iosua ye that are potentates of the world mightie men and Princes of the people spare me a little to prouoke your praier as more preuailing with God by priuiledge of your spirits then others of lower rancke Are the Amorites abroad are your states indangered is the Church grieued and are your soules afflicted for your selues for your people ye may be bolde with God for ye haue precedencie as Iosua here had euen by the power of your prayer to make him propitious Spare mee while I spare no Creature in Heauen Earth or Hell priuiledged frō the power of your prayer by which they are inforced to yeeld to the necessity of the Saints Moses prayed preuailed with God and had precedencie of the people when hee deuided the red Sea and put backe Iordane when he stroke the Rocke and inforced softe and sweete water to gush out In the height of his hands was the health of Israel for when they were lifted vp Amalek fell but when they shrunke Israe fainted when Eliah prayed the Heauens were as brasse and when he prayed againe the Clowdes dropped downe Fatnes Lyous mouthes were stopped at the prayer of Daniel and the childrens prayer beatte backe the Flame By the wrestling of prayer the Angell yeelded and at the commaund of prayer Diuels were daunted What should I say more By the power of prayer Sheol is shaken Hell is in horror sicknes ceaseth yeares are added winde and Seas obey Such priuiledge prayer hath especiallie in Men of might Princes Patriarches and Prophets which made the Israel of God when carefull of their king to pray that the Lord would be attent vnto his proper praier as more preuailing then theirs when they saide The Lorde heare thee in the day of Trouble the Name of the God of Iacob defende thee beeing well assured of this that the prayers of godly Princes are and euer haue bene powerful with God and profitable for his people Salomon prayed and the Temple was filled with the Clowde and the glorie of the Lord. Dauid prayed and doubly preuailed with God First that himselfe might fall into the handes of God rather then of men Secondly that the people might be spared and himselfe plagued Ezechia prayed and God restored him to health with increase of dayes euen fifteene yeare of the surplusage of his loue assured vnto him by the shadow of Ahaz his dyall vpon the wall brought backe ten degrees to make good the Lords promise vppon his prayer And why might not Iosuah a prince and Sauiour of his people by prayer to God commaund the creature euen the faire Fabricke of Sunne and Moone to none no more till Israel were auenged vpon their enemies Pardon me in your patience a while If to parallel these Princes praiers in their precedencie with God I leaue not out our owne Princes at home the perfume of whose praiers are yet sweete in this our English Eden and like the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed that powerfull praier of Edward the sixt made at his death and in the houre of his dissolution shall neuer die while the state standeth but euer be blessed by it O my God defend this Realme from papistry and maintaine thy true religion that I and thy people may praise thy holy name and therewith all he said I am faint Lord haue mercy vpon me and take my spirit Let me neuer liue to pray more or pray to liue longer if I be not perswaded in my soule and from my God that euen yet the blessing of that prayer is vpon this people as a wall of brasse to beate backe poperie as Iosuas day lengthened til the Amorites were vanquished and as pure mirrhe dropping still vpon the barres and handles of our doores to sweeten England in the maintenance of true religion and pietie Againe at the birth and baptisme of his deare sister Queen Elizabeth our dread Soueraigne who now liueth and long may we say Liue liue the King of Herauldes when the christening and ceremonies were ended proclaimed this praier and with what effect iudge yee God of his infinite goodnes send prosperous life and long to the high and mightie Princesse of England Elizabeth