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A06500 A commentarie vpon the fiftene Psalmes, called Psalmi graduum, that is, Psalmes of degrees faithfully copied out of the lectures of D. Martin Luther ; very frutefull and comfortable for all Christian afflicted consciences to reade ; translated out of Latine into Englishe by Henry Bull. Luther, Martin, 1483-1546.; Bull, Henry, d. 1575? 1577 (1577) STC 16975.5; ESTC S108926 281,089 318

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were iudged with equitie The celestiall Ierusalem hath the tribunall seate where iudgement is shall be most iustly pronounced vpon the vniuersall world and vppon all men that either haue beene be or shall be The Lord graunt that with an inuincible faith we may mount vp to this celestiall Ierusalem the citie of God where are such ioyes felicitie as neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor tongue can tel nor yet heart can think Verse 6. Pray for the peace of Ierusalem let them prosper that loue thee To pray for the peace of Ierusalem is to pray for the safetie prosperitie and welfare of the Church of God that Satan haue no power to hinder the course and fruite of the word Dauid sawe first in spirit this horrible contempt of the word and ministery moreouer he saw that this glorious gift could not be preserued by mans diligence Therefore he goeth about here to stirre vppe the harts of men to pray for the preseruation of this gift As if he said Here is the Lords owne seate and throne of iudgement notwithstanding how few doe reuerence and regard it as they should doe Yea the greatest part of the world hateth it and wisheth the subuersion therof Wherfore I exhort you ▪ O ye litle flock to honour and reuerence this seate to pray for the peace thereof louingly to salute it and to say The Lord out of Sion blesse thee c. So long as this citie flourisheth ye haue the Lord him self speaking saying giuing victory against all the assaults of Satan against sinne the terrour of conscience c. What cause haue ye then to pray for the prosperitie of this citie wherby ye inioy such heauenly benefites When the church of God doth not prosper it cannot go wel with any perticular member thereof No maruell then why Dauid so earnestly exhorteth all the faithfull to pray for the peace and prosperitie of the Church Wherefore if we will pray as we ought to do we must first and principally commend vnto God the common state of the church For he that seeketh his owne welfare and neglecteth the state and prosperitie of the Church doth not only shew him selfe to be voyd of all sense and zeale of true piety but also the prayers which he maketh for him selfe are in vaine profite him nothing Let them prosper that loue thee He wisheth vnto them which loue the word and reuerence this seat that God would blesse them with all maner of blessing felicitie And this prayer is very necessary For we see dayly howe the true professors of the Gospell are in daunger by the ministers of Satan the enemies of God his truth on euery side which could be content rather to haue the Turke to reigne ouer them yea the deuill him selfe and all the furies of hell then to see vs prosper and the Gospel to flourish least their cursed workes of darknes and infidelitie should appeare vnto the world Verse 7. Peace be within thy walls and prosperitie within thy pallaces Nowe that the Prophet hath exhorted all men to pray for the peace and prosperitie of Ierusalem he turneth vnto the citie and doth not onely wish wel vnto it but also he sheweth vnto other how they should pray for it The summe whereof is that true religion may flourish the ministerie and ministers of the word may be defended against the false prophets that concord may be maintained emongst the pastors and preachers of the word and that the ciuil gouernment may prosper Howe necessary this prayer is experience daily teacheth vs For where these 2. things are namely concord in the Church and peace in the ciuill state there can no good thing be lacking therfore the deuil so busily laboureth to trouble the peace of them both This was the cause why there was such a multitude of false prophets rebells seditious persons emongst this people as the stories do testify Wherfore Dauid being taught by his owne experience prayeth for these 2. thinges without the which the world is nothing els but a wild desert Example hereof may be vnto vs the late times wherein we liued vnder the Pope before this light of the Gospel beganne to shyne For then when the sound doctrine of the word was lacking what could the Pope all his shauelings doe What one verse did they rightly vnderstand throughout the whole psalter Wherby it came to passe that they were not able to resist most manifest impieties which by the strong mighty delusions of the deuil ouerflowed the world as in pilgrimages where they maintained most damnable idolatries and caused the people to adore the works of their owne handes and if any man spake against them he was vp and by taken and burnt as an heretike So true is it that when the word is once lost the world remaineth in most horrible darkenes and can doe nothing else but abuse the giftes of God and so falleth to most detestable impietie or else to desperation This Dauid foreseeth and therefore he prayeth so earnestly for the prosperitie of Ierusalem for faithfull pastors in the Church and godly Princes in the politike state Verse 8. For my brethren and neighbours sakes I will wish thee now prosperitie Here Dauid sheweth the cause as he doth also in the verse following why he prayeth thus for Ierusalem As if he sayd In that I wish that peace may be in thee o Ierusalem in that I desire thy prosperity and welfare I doe it for my brethren and neighbours sakes that is for my fellowes and companions in faith and religion And here in his owne person he sheweth the commō complaint of all those that rule either in the church or in the common weale or in families which is that the greater part of men is euer peruerse and wicked The godly pastour when he goeth about with great care diligence to reforme the corrupt life and wickednes of the people seeth notwithstanding that the more part stil remaineth peruerse intractable The Magistrate traueling with like care and diligence in his calling findeth the people disobedient incorrigible Likewise is it in houshold gouernment What vnfaithfull seruice shalt thou finde euen amongst those whom thou thoughtest to haue found most true and faithfull Hereof it commeth that many are discomforted and vtterly discouraged seeing so litle fruite and successe to ensue of their godly trauels Notwithstanding we see it can not otherwise be For Satan our perpetuall enemy ceaseth neither night nor day to stirre vppe discord and peruerse opinions in the Church in the ciuil state stubborne and disobedient persons in houshold gouernment negligent and vnfaithfull families Here we must looke with Dauid not to the greater part which is euer wicked but to our brethren and neighbours So doth Paule in the 2. Timoth. 3. For the elects sake I susteyne and suffer all things sayth he For if it were not for their sakes who would willingly take vpon him the office of
the same in deede For first these euills which the father of lyes styrreth vppe by wicked doctrine the godly can not beholde without great griefe and sorrowe Besides this they are without all hope of remedie for that the rage of pestilent doctrine is more horrible then the force and violence of fire and water which suddenly consumeth and destroyeth all thinges The heart therefore is on ech side troubled and vexed both with feare of the calamitie that shall followe and also with the sense and feeling of the present euills Nowe if there be ioyned with all these thinges an inward crosse and affliction so that the hearte doe also feele the displeasure of God here it seemeth impossible for a man to pray And doubtlesse a man vnexpert and vnskilfull in these matters and presuming of the worde and his owne knowledge shall gayne nothing thereby but infinite troubles and vexation For to teache to reproue and to conuince is not sufficient but God withall must giue the encrease that not onely we with our brethren may be preserued in sound doctrine but also such as teach the contrary may be rooted out and brought to naught And this by prayer onely is obtayned But howe hard a thing this is we haue alreadie declared To read the word to heare the word and to teach the word are in deede excellent and heauenly works which require the help and aide of the holy Ghost but the inward practise of faith so to conuert vnto the Lord so to pray so to presume of Gods fauour that thy prayer shall please him and that he will heare the same that is a hard matter in deede For fearefull consciences many tymes feele not this certainty and assurance in them selues but are brought to such doubting and mistrust that they can conceaue no hope of helpe or comfort especially such as are touched with the remorse of conscience gilt of sinne and the feeling of their owne vnworthines For in this case it oftentimes commeth to passe that the minde beginneth first to doubt whether prayer will any thing auaile or not They that are brought to this poynt can not pray especially if they measure the same after the sense feeling of their owne vnworthines But here thou must not regard what thou art but rather looke to the promise of God the necessitie of prayer the daunger that followeth the neglecting thereof and the thing it selfe for the which thou oughtest to pray Setting these things before thine eyes albeit thine owne conscience and vnworthines call thee from prayer yet shalt thou be constrayned by prayer to flie to God for help and succour For if a man for examples sake haue committed theft murder or some other notorious crime and in flying away falleth into the water and so into daunger of drowning shall he not pray because his conscience accuseth him that he hath done wickedly Nay how much the more great and grieuous the sinne is and the necessity of praier more vrgent so much the more earnestly ought the mind to be stirred vp and more ready to prayer In like maner must we doe also in this tentation and daunger of wicked doctrine And whatsoeuer we be we must rather consider the great enormities that Satan raiseth vp by lying ministers then whether we be worthie to be heard or no. To this doth the promise also allure vs For we haue a promise in Christ that we shall be heard yea and Christ him selfe also hath prescribed vnto vs the very words syllables letters which we should vse in praier We haue also a commaundemēt to pray so that it is not in our choyse to pray or not to pray but it is a work cōmaunded of God. Now when we remember these thinges and then consider on the one side how necessary a thing it is for vs to pray and on the other side howe great the daunger is if we doe not pray then are our mindes quickned and the tentation or conscience of our owne vnworthines is as it were swallowed vp Like as it hapneth also in sudden daungers as when a man in his iorney falleth into the hands of theeues or is in great perill of drowning here before he can once think of his own vnworthines he bursteth out into these wordes or this cogitation O God be mercifull vnto me And here the saying of the Phisicians is found most true that sharpe sawces prouoke the appetite For there is no better scholemaster to teach vs to pray then necessity But whiles we walke in securitie and are not touched with any feeling of present daungers no maruell is it if our prayer be either no prayer at all or else in dede very faynt and cold For mine owne part I can say by experience that I neuer pray more hartely then in the time of trouble and affliction And this is that sharpe sawce which stirred vp also in Dauid a hunger as it were and an appetite to pray as he sayth I called vnto the Lord in my trouble c. We may learne therefore out of this verse that Dauid vsed this remedy against lying tongues that first by doctrine he stirred vp him selfe and others and then he prayed In like maner ought we to do euē in respect of the cause or necessity which the Lords praier also setteth forth vnto vs For in that the name of the Lord is polluted mens consciences peruerted and the profession of the Gospel hindred we haue in deede great cause to say hallowed be thy name that these abominations and blasphemies may haue an end Thy kingdom come which by the kingdom of Satan is in a manner oppressed He that prayeth after this sort shal fil heauen with his sighes and grones wheras if we liue at ease and feele no trouble our praier is so cold that scarcely our mouthes are filled therwith This cause and necessitie of prayer Dauid expresseth when he sayth I called vnto the Lord in my trouble c. For there must be some great necessitie to constrayne vs to pray as our owne saluation the saluation of our brethren death eternal our sinnes our troubles and afflictions the glory of God the kingdom of God c. all which are set forth in the Lordes prayer and if we consider them as we should doe they will constrayne vs to poure out true and harty prayer vnto God with sighes and grones Let vs consider well these thinges and with our prayer let vs burst through the cloudes which hide from vs the presence of our most gracious God and thinke that prayer is an acceptable sacrifice to God and such a seruice as he him selfe requireth of vs Some seeke a meane helpe and trust to other mens prayers which in deede are not to be neglected for the prayer of many hath a more force and power But thou also must pray as a member of the Church which with one voyce sayth Our Father c. For he will not be the father of
euen the presence mightie protection of the Lord we should patiently endure the beginning of sorrowes that is to say the light short and momentane afflictions of this life beeing sure that euen in death our life is hidden and safely kept with Christ in God and we shall ouercome all the fiery darts and cruel assaults of Satan Verse 7. The Lord shall preserue thee from all euill he shall preserue thy soule That which the verse going before hath expressed by an allegory is here simply set forth and without figure The soule here signifieth the life Albeit therefore thou suffer neuer so greate and greuous afflictions yea euen death it self yet shalt thou not perish because God kepeth thy life In outward appearance and to the iudgement of the flesh thou seemest to dye but in deede it is not so because thy life euen the Lord thy God liueth c. So he saith in an other Psalme The Lorde preserueth the soules of his Sainctes Verse 8. The Lord shall preserue thy going out and thy comming in from hence forth and for euer That is to saye whether so euer thou goest the Lorde will be with thee he will preserue thee he will defende and keepe thee he will neuer forsake thee nor suffer thee to perishe To goe out is to goe to the woorkes of thy vocation To come in againe signifieth to returne from labour and trauell to rest and quietnes What so euer thou shalt goe aboute shall haue good successe and prosper vnder thy hand Thus the Prophet in this Psalme sheweth the nature of faith to be not as it were a deade affection or qualitie of the minde as the Papistes doe dreame but a singular worke and motion of the holy Ghoste whereby we iudge according to the worde contrary to that which we feele whiche we see and by experience doe proue whereby also we ouercome all kindes of tentations Of this faith the Papistes can no better iudge then a blinde man can iudge of colours The 122. Psalme I reioyced when they said vnto me c. This Psalme is a thanks giuing for the excellent gift of the worde of God. Which vertue is therefore the more rare to be found for that the worde is euery where so horribly contemned in the worlde not onely of the rude multitude but also of those that will be counted both learned and wise whose blasphemous tongues are sharpened against this most precious and incomparable benefite not onely in speaking contemptuously and spitefully of the Gospell but also imputing to the holsome worde of life what so euer mischiefe reigneth in the members of Satan as seditious sectes auarice filthy life and such like It is therefore the greate goodnes of the Lord that in this horrible infidelitie there are yet some which reuerence the word which gladly heare the word which delight to talke of the word and workes of the lord This Psalme therefore was not written to those dogges and swine the Papistes heretikes and persecutors of the worde but to the elect soules and holy mindes which exult and reioyce for this heauenly visitation wherby the day spring from on high through the tender mercie of our God hath visited vs lying in the shadowe of death as Zacharie saith For albeit that all men haue the word and all heare the sound of the Gospell yet herein they differ that some haue the word only some acknowledge and feele them selues to haue it and therefore doe reioyce and giue thankes vnto God for the same where as other delite rather in their riches and in the pleasures of this life then in that heauenly word which bringeth euerlasting life and saluation Therefore S. Paule counteth it for a speciall grace of God not onely to haue the giftes of God but also to acknowledge them to delight reioyce in them and to be thankful vnto God for them But amongst all the giftes of God the gift of his holy word is the moste excellent and if we take away the word what doe we else but take away the sunne out of the worlde For what is the world without the word but euen hel and the very kingdome of Satan although there be in it neuer so many wise men learned welthy and mighty For what can all these doe without the word which alone bringeth life and comfort to the soule peace and quietnes to the conscience which alone keepeth vs in the fauour of God without the which there is no religion so no God whereby also the world is preserued For without the word and Christ the world could not stand the twinckling of an eye Albeit therefore there be many and wonderful giftes of God in the world giuen for the vse of man yet the only gift which conteineth and preserueth all the other is the word of God which pronounceth and witnesseth to our consciences that God is our mercifull father which also promiseth vnto vs remission of sinnes and life euerlasting Now if we should lack these comforts what comfort were it I pray you for vs to liue yea this life to vs were no life at all But these thinges are spirituall and the knowledge thereof is so much the more hard for vs to attaine vnto because it springeth not out of our owne hearts but commeth from aboue But now to the Psalme When this Psalme was written the temple was not builded but the tabernacle of Moises yet still remained which allbeit it continued not in one place nor in one tribe for it was also in Silo and Gibion yet had it one certaine promise that where soeuer it were there would the Lord be present heare the prayers of his people accept their sacrifice and shewe him selfe mercifull as the text sheweth VVhere so euer I shall set a memorial of my name c. Therefore so long as it was in Ephraim in the city of Silo the name of God was there called vppon the word of God was there heard and the Lord was there worshipped with faith prayer and sacrifice c vntill at length when impietie and idolatrie began to encrease the arke was caried out of Silo into the host against the Philistines and of them was taken But when the Philistines for this prophanation were diuers wayes plaged the arke was translated to the Gabaonites When it had bene there a while Dauid brought it home into his owne citie as it is written 2. Reg. 6. and there it came into his minde to build a temple vnto the lord For it was not meete thought he that he should dwel in a house made with Cedar trees and that the Lord and King of heauen should dwell in a tabernacle couered with skinnes And this purpose at the first semed good to Nathan the prophet but afterward he was admonished of God by reuelation that Dauid should not build the temple for that was reserued for his sonne Salomon to doe which was a peaceable Prince and not giuen to warre as Dauid was
to hope c. Yea the crosse and oppression of the Christians is the exaltation and triumph of the Church Let the aduersaries then doe what they li●t certaine it is that the more we are cast downe the more we are raised vp For there is no power against the Lorde Christ our captaine and our head hath a power aboue all power whereby he lifteth vp those that are cast downe whereby he raiseth the dead to life and those that are oppressed and ouercome he maketh able with ioyfull victory to ouercome For in that he is God it is his proper office to make all things of nothing and likewise of those thinges which be to make nothing Thus Dauid setteth forth the praise and commendation of Ierusalem For what a great benefite and blessing of God is it not onely to leaue a certain place where the people may come togither to serue and worship God but also a certaine sound of the presence of God by the publishing of his word When he saith This is my rest here will I dwel here will I speake here shall be my word my spirite then all is safe then what worke so euer it be though in outward appearance it seeme neuer so smal it is better then all the treasures of the world then the cutting away of the foreskin of the priuy mēbers is an acceptable worship vnto god To take vp a strawe from the earth if God so commaunded is a greater a more excellent worke and also a worship more pleasing God then all the glittering works of the whole papacy which haue no ground of the word of god This the heathen understood not and therefore they contemned Ierusalem and marueled why the people should resort thether certaine times of the yeare rather then to other cities Like as Naaman Cirus thought at the beginning that the waters of Damascus were no worse then the waters of Iordane but he had no commaundement of the Lord that he shoulde wash him selfe in those waters for the clensing of his leprosie It is the word alone therefore that maketh a difference betwene the Church of God and the Gentiles Papistes and all the Antichristian rable By this word it iudgeth it teacheth it baptiseth it distributeth the Lords supper it comforteth it reproueth it excommunicateth c. Thus I say Dauid extolleth and magnifieth his Ierusalem first in respect of the spirituall building therof because there is the kingdom and priesthood there is the word worship of the Lord then also in respect as wel of the material building as also of those things which pertaine to the good gouernment of a city as peace and vnitie lawes and iudgement but principally he speaketh not of that building and therfore he saith It is edified as a city where all may participate togither that is may come togither to worship the lord For there was no other place in al the world where the people might come togither to celebrate the name of the Lord but Ierusalem alone So that this verse is as an exposition of that place in Exod. VVhere I shall leaue a memoriall of my name there will I come vnto thee c. As if he said that place is Ierusalem in the which the people of God must congregate togither to heare his word to celebrate his name where also the Lord him selfe hath promised to dwell whether the people do flie in all their necessities to call vpon God for help and succoure c. This is the glory of Ierusalem to the which all the glory of the worlde was not able to be compared Therfore in S. Matthew it is called holy is so magnified here of the Prophet Albeit it was afterward horribly prophaned of the Gentiles But why doe the people gather togither in this place Verse 4. VVhereunto the tribes euen the tribes of the Lorde goe vp for a testimony or to testifie to Ierusalem and to praise the name of the Lord. This verse also conteineth in 〈◊〉 the words afore recited out of Exod VVhere I shall put a m●moriall of my name c. For this memoriall signifieth the whol● worship of God togither with the word that is the preaching of the promises and the law with the ministery of the priestes not ●●●ly in the sacrifices of the law but specially in the chiefest sacrifi●es of all that is of the celebrating praysing the name of the lord In the which were set forth spirituall consolations of victory against sinne and death and also temporall concerning the kingdom and political order These benefits he setteth forth when he speaketh of ascending vp and maketh a comparison betwene Ierusalem and other cities As if he said Other cities may flourish with riches and power more then this citie but this is it to the which the tribes doe ascend not as they doe in other nations but the tribes of the Lord which the Lorde him selfe hath chosen to be his people aboue all other nations of the earth and he to be their god And here he doth not exclude the Proselytes which were of the Gentiles and did associate them selues vnto this people for he speaketh simply of those that did ascend vp to heare the word and to inuocate the name of the Lord as the words that followe do declare For a testimony vnto Israel to praise the name of the Lord. Whereby he signifieth no other thing but that there was a place in Ierusalem appointed of the Lord for the preaching of the word and prayer And this is worthy to be noted that Dauid speaketh of no moe kindes of sacrifice but of these two onely He saith not that the temple was appoynted of God that sacrifices should there be slaine incence offered oblations made and euery man shewe him selfe thankfull vnto God with his gifts Of these things he maketh no mention at all albeit they were commaunded to be done no where else but in the temple Onely he speaketh of preaching the word and thanks giuing or prayer And albeit he reproueth not these sacrifices yet he plainly declareth that the summe of true religion is to heare the Lorde when he speaketh vnto vs and to inuocate and praise his holy name This is it for the which Dauid so highly praiseth his temple which we also ought specially to beholde in our temples that the tribes doe ascend vp thether to testifie vnto Ierusalem that is to teach and to heare the worde of god For so he meaneth by this word testifie as the Hebrewes haue many words to signifie the ministery of the word and doctrine To vtter to promise to confesse to sitte to iudge to testifie to teach all these words in effect doe signifie as much as to preach or publish the word The preachers are witnesses to the people of that they knowe whiche is not sene nor felt but beleued They are also witnesses which he are the word For when they heare it they testifie or beare witnesse against the
Here is to be noted also that he sheweth to whom he wisheth euill namely to those which hate Sion And that hatred which they bare against Sion was an hatred against god For in that Satan hateth the Church he doth it not onely in respect of men but because he hateth God him selfe whom the church prayseth and magnifieth Moreouer Sion was a place which God had chosen vnto him self Like as therfore God had chosen that place to shew his great loue towards it so had Satan chosen the same to shewe his malice against it and with all his power to vexe it In like maner not onely Satan but also the malignant Church of the Pope doth persecute vs not because we are euil in the sight of the world For this they could wel suffer yea would be glad if they might heare that we are whoremongers murtherers as they are But the true cause why they so deadly hate and persecute vs is this for that it greeueth them that we in their eyes are innocent as touching the second table and also obedient to the first wherein we are commaunded to honour serue and prayse the Lord to feare him to trust in his mercie c. Verse 6. Let them be as the grasse on the toppes of the houses which withereth afore it commeth forth This is a goodly Psalme for the sundry excellent and most apte similitudes conteyned therein whereby the holy Ghost painteth out those great maiesties principalities of the world which fight against the gospel A litle before he compared them to plowers drawing out furrowes of a maruelous length To whom he so compareth them not in this respect as though it were graunted vnto them so long to abuse their power wealth and riches but in respect of the great tediousnes griefe and anguish of those which suffer the plowers the furrowes the wounds and treading vnder foote For vnto them it seemeth a tedious a long and as it were an infinite plowing Wherefore they desire to be deliuered and neuer so litle tarrying through this tediousnes and anguish of hart seemeth to them intolerable Against this wearines and this tediousnes therefore he comforteth the faithfull with this similitude of grasse in the toppe of the house As if he sayd Why seemeth the time so long and so tedious vnto thee Why doest thou not learne to vnderstand what these plowers thy aduersaries be Diddest thou neuer see grasse growing in the toppes of houses Who did euer complaine that that grasse flourished so long who euer went about to plucke it vp As though it were not wont of it selfe to wither and vanish away Learne therefore that the very same is the state and condition of thine aduersaries Thus with one similitude he fighteth against an other But if a man could effectually beleue that this similitude was made and here set downe by the holy Ghost close vp the same fully in his heart he should feare neither y Turke nor the Pope with all his cruel Prelats nor the tyranny of Princes but should contemne them all and as litle regard them as the grasse on the toppes of the houses But behold the outward shew of this grasse If any child should see it he would esteme it to be better then any barley for to barley it is most like since it groweth not as other thinges doe vpon the earth but in an higher and more notable place lodeth the topps of the houses But take a man that knoweth these thinges and he will say it is nothing else but a goodly shewe resemblance without any fruite Thus hath the holy Ghost chosen this similitude to teach vs not to wish that tyrannes may be like grasse but to knowe that they are in deede most like vnto grasse on the house toppes which withereth away before the haruest time come or any man goe about to cut it downe Senacherib who besieged Ierusalem did flie ouer kingdoms oppressed trode downe all things vnder his feete therefore he could not be counted of Ezechia and others like vnto grasse and yet before he achieued that he went about he was compelled not without great feare and also much slaughter of his souldiers to reise his siege and he him selfe also most miserably perished So Pharao seemed mightely to growe and encrease not vpon the earth but in the ayre vppon the house toppes but the miserable Iewes were oppressed and troden vnder foote like myre in the streetes This is a resemblāce of grasse not withering but freshly flourishing But how quickly did it wither and vanish to nothing For when Pharao did verely thinke to oppresse them he was suddenly oppressed him selfe and perished in the waters Such an image of tyrannes and tyranny the holy Ghost paynteth out vnto vs in this place Why then shouldest thou feare Why shouldest thou tremble Why shouldest thou despayre as though thou haddest neuer seene most flourishing grasse within few dayes to wither away of it owne accord or diddest not know the nature of it to be such as can not long continue Athanasius when Iulianus the Emperour did many wayes afflict both him the whole Church fought not onely with crueltie but also with craft and subteltie against the faithfull in so much that others as it were in a terrible tempest were vtterly discouraged and past all hope of deliuerance sayd that this persecution of Iulian was not a tempest but a litle cloude In deede this heart was full of fayth which could beleue that Iulianus was like not to a terrible and a violent tempest not to a mighty black cloud wrapping all things in darknes but vnto a very litle cloude which the Sunne doth quickly consume In like maner must we also extenuate and diminish the power of our aduersaries set at naught all their proude bragges and all their crueltie not in respect of our owne strength but because they are of them selues nothing else but a buble in the water grasse on the house toppes and a very shadow rather then men besides this that they prouoke God also against them selues whose fury and cruelty compared vnto his power is a thing more vaine then grasse on the house toppes or a bubble in the water for it is nothing else but a bare and a naked shew which semeth to be something when in deede it is nothing So are all the attempts of the aduersaryes full of threatnings but in the ende they come to nothing This is the wisedome of Christians to diminish the power of the aduersaryes contrariwise to amplifie the word the mighty protection of the lord The deuill sinne death and other spiritual tentations are greate but a Christian can make a distinction of greatnes For greatnes is vnderstand two maner of wayes The one is according to the eye which the eye iudgeth after the outward shew the other is according to the trueth which the truth iudgeth after the word The greatnes therfore of sinne death wicked kings Princes
this peace This is in deede a notable promise But doe not we most wickedly contemne this promise Many of purpose seeke occasions to trouble the Churches In the common wealth likewise we see what great contempt of ●awes there is euery where By these enormities we doe as it were constrayne God not to bestow vpon vs this blessing and life This is the cause that we are vexed with sundry calamities for that we doe contemne this blessing so graciously offered vnto vs Notwithstanding the worlde through calamities and scourges will not amende For what did it profite the Iewes to be so often exercised with all kindes of calamities God therfore was constrayned at the length vtterly to destroy them In like maner Loth preached to the Sodomites in vayne as Noah also did to the first world The same daunger hangeth ouer our heades For neither with pestilence warre nor famine can we be brought to amendement or bee any thinge the better Therefore shall destruction followe This Psalme therefore is a commendation of peace and vnitie to the ende we should esteeme of it as a most excellent and holy gift and that we shoulde rather suffer the losse of all thinges else then giue occasion of dissention and discorde For if we must suffer any losse it ought to be borne patiently in this respect that all other thinges through peace are recouered and restored agayne as one sayd very well I neuer bought any thing better chepe then peace For to the byer it bringeth most plentifull fruite We see often times in our priuate affayres that if a man be content to lose tenne or twenty crownes that he may liue in peace and quietnes he wynneth thereby great gayne and commoditie whereas an other neglecting this quietnes and by strife and contention seeking ten crownes loseth many times an hundreth crownes or more If these thinges so fall out in priuate matters what hapneth thinke you in the affaires of common wealths kingdoms Let vs learne therefore highly to esteme of peace to be thankfull vnto God for such a singular gift both in the common wealth and in the Church So shall it come to passe that we shall feele and enioy this blessing and life as the holy Ghost hath promised The .134 Psalme Behold prayse ye the Lord. This is the last of the Psalmes which are called the Psalmes of degrees In the which ye haue heard many weighty and profitable pointes of doctrine as touching all the articles in a maner of Christian doctrine namely of Iustification or remission of sinnes of the crosse of charitie and brotherly loue of matrimony of ciuill gouernment c. as though the Prophet had studied to comprise in these short Psalmes the fumme and effect of all suche thinges as are to be taught vnto the people Nowe therefore he concludeth in this Psalme the whole matter which he tooke in hand to entreat of As we also doe when in the ende of our preachings we pray that God would preserue his word amonges vs and that we may continue in the same vnto the ende For when the word is purely taught all thinges are safe holy pure although the gates of hell rage against vs neuer so much and we lose not only our goods but also our liues For what harme haue we therby so that our soules may be saued It is the word therefore alone that preserueth all good thinges But if that be lost or corrupted then all good thinges are lost For like as if the Sunne and light of the world should be taken away he that walketh walketh in darkenes so if the word be darkned and corrupted in what misery and daunger is the common wealth For then neither Magistrate nor subiect nor seruant knoweth what he ought to doe but all thinges are wrapped vp in error and horrible darknes Wherefore this Psalme exhorteth vs to pray that the Lorde would preserue and continue his word amongest vs and euery one of vs to endeuour with this seruice to helpe the Church For although the Church is neuer without heretikes like as also the common wealth is neuer without seditious persons yet so long as the word remayneth found and vncorrupt it can not be but that many good thinges and many good men also wil remayne I take this Psalme therfore to be as a conclusion of those things whiche were spoken of before In that which he exhorteth vs to giue thanks vnto the Lord for the benefite of his word and to pray for the preseruation and continuance thereof for as much as if it flourish there will alwaies be founde some good men which will leade a godly and a holy life Therefore he saith Verse 1. Behold praise ye the Lord all ye seruants of the Lord ye that by night stand in the house of the Lord. To blesse signifieth not onely priuatly to giue thankes vnto the Lord but also publikely to praise the Lorde to preach and to publish his word And this can not be done without the praise also of the mercie and goodnes of the Lord our Creator our defender and our redeemer which hath prouided for vs and giueth vnto vs all thinges perteining not onely to this our corporall life but also to our euerlasting life felicitie in the kingdom of god And albeit this clause seruaunts of God belongeth here properly to the ministers of the Church yet generally it comprehendeth all those which professe and embrace the true and sincere doctrine of the Gospell For it is the duty euen of those which are not in the ministery of the word to confesse the word to acknowledge and praise the benefites of god Wherefore with one hart and minde saith he ioyne ye all togither continue in the worde confesse preach praise and magnifie the worde that whiles all the worlde befids dishonoreth blasphemeth God ye may blesse him because he is mercifull Then shall it come to passe that ye shall ouercome all your enemies though ye be to them in number farre vnlike But what meaneth he by these wordes which by night stande in the house of the Lorde Did they obserue certaine howers in the night after the maner of the Papistes You must note that it is a kinde of speech proper vnto the Hebrewes and is as much to say as morning euening that is to say continually As he saith also in an other Psalme From the morning watche euen vntill the night Paule expresseth this sentence with other wordes Let the word of Christ dwell in you plenteously saith he And our Sauiour Christ teacheth that we must pray alwaies For wheras the night season is appointed for sleepe he that will blesse in the night will do the same also in the day so he wil be alwaies blessing Verse 2. Lift vp your hands to the Sanctuary praise the Lord. As much to say as when ye pray in the Sanctuary lift vp pure and holy hands For he that prayeth in that
them to destruction And because the Church of God through lying and selaunderous conga●es suffereth now euery where the like tentation the cruell hatred of the worl● and all calamities for the confession of pure and sincere doctrine it is therefore necessary for vs to be feruent in prayer against y like pestilēt tongues in those our dayes that they may haue no power to hurt so much as they would ▪ Verse .1 I called vnto the Lorde in my trouble and he hearde me This verse conteineth not onely an example but also doctrine whereby we may learne what we ought to doe in these tentations of the lying tongue namely when we haue to doe with such peruerse and obstinate heretiks as wil by no meanes be reduced from their false doctrine and errours into the way of truth For by long experience and after many and great conflictes haue we learned that as Paule sayeth they are condemned euen by theyr owne iudgement or the testimony of their owne conscience and therfore after they haue bene once or twise warned they ought to be geuen ouer and auoyded And this haue we found especially in the chiefe defenders and maintayners of wicked doctrine that for all that can be said or deuised they wil neuer be the better It may be that some times they will geue place to the trueth for by the power of Gods word they may be conuinced but they will neuer be conuerted For if you stop their blasphemous mouthes one way yet wil they not so geue ouer but seeke new occasions to fight against the truth This the histories not only of the Arians and other heretikes doe declare but also the examples of these our dayes geue witnes vnto the same It is impossible therefore for vs vtterly to stoppe the mouthes of heretiks To reproue them and to conuince them is all that we can doe Also to preserue others ouer whom God hath giuen vs a charge from their errours and pestilent doctrine For a minister of Gods word ought to be well armed and instructed that he may be able not onely to teache the simple but also to reproue and conuince the peruerse and obstinate Herewith let vs be content that such as are vnder out charge being thus forewarned may stand firme and stedfast But that we shall be able to conuert the peruerse and obstinate let vs neuer hope How often did Christ stoppe the mouthes of the Pharises not onely with manifest Scriptures but also with the finger of God and with miracles and yet remayned they still as obstinate in their impiety and infidelity as they were before Arius was vtterly conuinced and his heresie confounded and yet he set forth his heresie againe with greater audacity successe then he did before What shall we say of our Papistes Doe we not see euen the very same thing in them also Such therefore as wilfully striue against the trueth and will not be conuerted after o●ce or twise warning let vs geue ouer by the example of Dauid let vs with prayer fight against them Like as we must pray also for our brethren that with the deceitfull shew of trueth they be not seduced More then this we can doe nothing For the deuil the father of all heresies is such a Proteus so slippery and full of sleights that we shall neuer knowe howe or which way to lay hold on him For if we stoppe one crest he will finde twenty moe whereby he will wind him selfe out againe and as the winde enclosed by force will seeke and search euery way howe he may get out For against him chiefly we fight when we haue to doe with heretikes Wherefore by disputing and contending we shal not preuaile against him Notwithstanding we must doe herein what we may that the ministers of Satan may be reproued and conuinced for the behoofe of the Church But to the externall word we must ioyne prayer whereby specially the wicked spirit is repressed and bridled This prayer did beate downe Arius Manicheus Sabellius This confounded the Pharises and vnbeleuing Sinagoge This hath subdued the authors of sects in these our dayes And they that will not heare vs exhorting and reprouing them shall feele the force of our prayer crying out vnto God for the sanctifying of his name the cōming of his kingdom This is the only way to obtayne the victory So that these pestilen● tongues although they seeme to preuaile against vs for a time yet shall they at the length be vtterly rooted out We must therefore goe wisely and circumspectly to worke in this daungerous case and cast away all confidence of our owne wisedom yea although we haue the word of God neuer so much on our side For we fight not against flesh and blood but against spirituall wickednes If we had to doe with flesh and blood onely we would so defend and fortifie our cause with matter and force of argument sufficient that nothing shoulde be able to counterueile the same But now we haue experience that when they are with arguments and authority of Scripture vtterly confounded yet do they still with toth and nayle hold fast their errour and labour by all meanes possible to defend the same This sinne therefore I am wont to compare to the sinne of Iudas who coulde not excuse his deuelishe purpose that he went about in betraying of Christ and yet he neuer rested vntill he had brought the same to passe for Satan moued him so to doe Euen so when these authours and maintayners of hereticall doctrine are manifestly conuinced yet Satan will not so geue them ouer nor suffer them to rest Wherefore it is necessary that herewithall we adioyne prayer and with prayer specially we must fight according to the notable and most comfortable example of Dauid here in this place which sayth I called vpon the Lord in my trouble c. As if he shoulde say in this daunger of wicked doctrine whilest I sought the conuersion of the false prophetes and to bring them to the knowledge of their errour all that I did was but in vayne For Satan who had possessed their heartes is so slipperie that it is not possible to take any holde on him Moreouer if ye looke to the number they which set them selues agaynst me were both moe in number and more mightie in power What shoulde I miserable man doe in this distresse Euen thus doe I. After that I haue diligently taught and set forth the worde of the Lorde both warning my brethren of the daunger the other also of their errour I ascende vnto my God by prayer and shewe vnto him myne affliction being vndoubtedly perswaded that he will heare my prayer Thus Dauid setteth forth vnto vs his owne example and sheweth what he himselfe was wont to doe But to talke of these thinges and to teache them vnto others as it is an easie matter so by experience we finde and in our selues we feele howe hard it is to performe
education First therfore we must beleue not doubt that our prayer is heard Secondly this hearing must be thus defined not that God geueth alway that which we pray for but that which is profitable for vs For God in that he is good can geue nothing but that which is good But we many times doctraue that thing which is not good in deede but seemeth so vnto vs. In such cases God euen then heareth our prayer when he graunteth not that which we desire In that prayer therefore which the Lord hath taught vs first we pray for the sanctifying of his name for the comming of his kingdom that his will may be done before we pray for the things which do pertayne to the vse and commoditie of this life so that in such things we desire that the Lord would do not that seemeth good vnto vs but that which is good in deede The difference therfore in asking those things which we pray for is here rightly set forth So that in those things which pertaine to the glory of God our saluatiō we must beleue our praiers to be heard without condition But in those things which pertayne to this life albeit we must hope that the Lord will graunt our petitions yet must we pray with condition resigning our wils to the Lords will to do therein as semeth good vnto him profitable for vs For he knoweth what is good for vs but we do not as a●so S. Paule sayth Thus must we restru● this title to our most faithfull gracious God that he is audito● precum a hearer of prayers as Dauid here speaketh of him Verse 2. Deliuer my soule o Lord from lying lippes and from a deceitfull tongue This verse sheweth the matter or argument wherof Dauid entreateth in this psalme He prayeth for the prosperous successe of the holy word of God and pure doctrine against false and hereticall tongues I sayd in the beginning that this Psalme must not only be taken as an exāple for vs to follow or a doctrine to teach vs what Dauid did in this daungerous case or what we ought to doe in the like but also is set forth to comfort and confirme vs against this great offence and stumbling blocke that wheresoeuer the Gospell beginneth to shine there Satan stirreth vp theeues and robbers enemies of true doctrine to hinder the course thereof and therefore when we see that the Anabaptistes and other Sectaries spring vppe at the preaching of the Gospell we should not thinke it straunge but rather it shoulde be to vs a meanes to stirre vs vp thereby the more diligently to watch and shake of all securitie forasmuch as we see that he which tempteth vs sleepeth not and to fight against spirituall wickednes against the which the children of God haue bene alwayes at continuall warre Abel was persecuted of Cain Isaac of Ismael Iacob of Esau. Of this enmitie Satan is the author which alwayes persecuteth God and his trueth not onely with slaughter but also with lying and falshoode To knowe these thinges it is a singuler consolation in such daungerous cases that we be not discouraged or dismayed but may be strengthened and confirmed thereby and moreouer it keepeth vs from securitie which lying tongues aud deceitfull lippes will not lightly suffer a man to fall into We must be ready therefore not onely with the word of God but also and especially with prayer to fight against false doctrine and deceitful tongues considering as Dauid here sayth that the Lord is our deliuerer who only in this daunger can deliuer vs and destroy our aduersaries For the continuall exercise of the word and prayer must goe togither Deliuer my soule that is deliuer me It is a phrase and kinde of speech proper to the Hebrewes Verse 3. VVhat doth thy deceitfull tongue bring vnto thee or what doth it auaile thee Verse 4. It is as the sharpe arrow of a mightie man and as the coles of Iuniper In demaunding this question he goeth about to stirre vppe him selfe and to finde occasion to accuse the deceitfull tongue as he doth in deede most liuely sette forth by two notable similitudes what a pestilent thing wicked doctrine is and what the godly and such as are spirituall doe iudge thereof First he compareth it to an arrowe that is not blunt but sharpe and moreouer which is cast not of him that is weake and feeble but that is stronge and mightie so that there is daunger on both sides as well of the arrowe that is sharpe and able to pearce as also of him which with great violence hurleth the same The Deuill therefore the father of all heresies is here plainly sette forth vnto vs as an olde exercised souldier strong and mightie who from the beginning hath made warre against the Church of God and albeit he hath bene often ouercome yet will he neuer geue ouer but returneth more fearce and subtill then before and the better armed the more holy and learned they be against whom he fighteth so much the more strongly fearcely he setteth vpon them Therfore the holy Ghost here speaketh according to the sense of man that is according to the cogitations which the godly haue in this daungerous case and he calleth a pestilent teacher an arrowe or dart in the hande of the strong and mighty For if ye beholde the multitude of the aduersaries their stoutnes proud bragges obstinacie and fearcenes with the subtill deceitfull sleights wherby they auoyd or wickedly peruert all thinges that make against them be they neuer so godly spoken it seemeth no otherwise but that they will vtterly oppresse and destroy the Church which appeareth to be in comparison of them but a small number and that also very weake and feeble It seemeth therefore that Satan as a dart which no armour is able to resist must needes preuayle and haue the victory But if you looke to the end you shall see the contrary As the Church when she compareth the multitude of her enemies with her poore litle flocke through her infirmity is troubled and feareth destruction euen so when Satan seeth his practises at the first to proceede as he would he is puffed vp and swelleth at the successe therof For wicked doctrine crepeth like a canker and mightely encreaseth euery hower so that if a teacher of erroneous and hereticall doctrine should be suffered in a reformed congregation he would soone ouerthrow altogither so violently perceth this dart And why because it is hurled of Satan and the common people are as it were the frame house of Satan because they loth and despise that which is dayly taught them Now because the heretikes doe not vse the accustomed and ordinary maner of teaching but fede the people with new straūge thinges therefore as Moises sayth the drunken and the thirsty are mette togither and these arrowes perse through with greater violence Moreouer it is a figure vsed in the Scriptures to call the word of
a complaint Verse 5. VVoe is me that I remaine in Mesech and dwell in the tents of Kedar Hitherto the Prophet hath declared the daungers both of him selfe and of the church with prayer to be deliuered from the same Now he addeth hereunto a complaint for that the church of God being in the middes of her enemies is continually vexed on euery side and true doctrine assailed with power subteltie As though he should say Being in this distresse and daunger this is all that I am able to doe faithfully to teach feruently to pray and paci●ntly to suffer To this ende I teache that the worde may be publikely mainteyned and kept I pray that the word may preuaile and haue the victory and till it shall ouercome I must paciently abide what trouble or affliction soeuer shall happen He that will not thus doe is but a shrinker and his fall will be fearefull In like maner haue we bene troubled in these our dayes with Epicures Libertines Anabaptistes c. We haue sustained the cruel oppression of the word by the power and subtelty of the Papists that cursed seede of Cain amongst vs there is also no smal number which fearing neither God nor deuill doe not onely contemne the ministery but would wish it to be vtterly abolished These are heauy crosses to the godly when they must be compelled both to see them and suffer them and yet can finde no remedie for the same This forceth vs to say with Dauid VVoe is me that I remayne in Mesech c. By Mesech and Kedar he meaneth two sorts of people inhabiting neare vnto the Iewes of which the first came of Iapheth as Moises teacheth and the seconde of Ismael Both of them were barbarous cruel and without all humanity dwelling in tents By these he meaneth such as were of his owne nation being no lesse cruell and spitefull against Gods people then these were like as in an other place the corrupt degenerate Iewes he calleth Gētiles And that he might the more sharpely reprehend Gods enemies and his of purpose he nameth those people which the Iewes knew to be most cruel and barbarous meaning that if he dwelt in Mesech Kedar he could not be amongst more cruel enemies As if he should say I am compelled to comfort my self with hope and pacience and would be glad that the churches were in peace quietnes and the pastors and rulers thereof in a godly vnity but this wil not be Wherfore I wil commit the whole cause of God by prayer teach the word faithfully In the meane season we must beare these offences that by the good we may ouercome the euill Thus we se then that the office of teaching is a miserable kind of life For besides other calamities which the preachers teachers of Gods word must suffer at the hands of the vnfaithful this also must nedes be vnto them a great crosse to see the word of God and true doctrine miserably corrupted and the Church disquieted by false brethren But for the Lords cause these things we suffer and we say with Dauid VVoe is me that I remayne in Mesech and dwell in the tents of Kedar barbarous and cruell people Verse 6. My soule hath too long dwelt with him that hateth peace Here he sheweth plainly whom he meaneth by Me●ech Kedar to wit those wicked Israelites which forsaking the wayes of their godly fathers became spitefull and cruell against the faithfull amongst whom he was compelled to dwell a long season and to suffer great iniuries and cruelty at their hands And this is the subteltie of the malignant spirite that whom he can not ouer come by the multitude and greeuousnes of tentations those he goeth about to weery with tediousnes long continuance therof Wherfore many being unskilful of this spiritual warfare fight valiantly at the beginning but in the ende they faynt and cowardly giue ouer This daunger Dauid did foresee complained therof Long haue I dwelt sayth he amongest those that hate peace that is which continually trouble disquiete the church of God and neuer will be at peace with it thinking by importunitie and long cōtinuance at the length to get the victory So Iob with one kind of calamity was not discouraged but whē one messenger followed an other and one calamitie likewise came vpon an other then his minde by litle and litle began to be troubled And this is the malignity and malice of Satan Wherefore let vs cast away all hope of peace so long as we liue here and let vs assure our selues that if this day we ouercome one kinde of tentation to morrowe Satan will set vpon vs againe with an other And here behold the craft and subtelty of the worlde The holy Ghost calleth them heretikes which are haters of peace and concord and this name they spitefully apply vnto vs Thou say they art he that troublest Israel Thus they which trouble the Church in deede accuse the true Church and call them selues the louers of peace and concord This must we also suffer and so content our selues with the testimony of a good cōscience which shall cleare vs before God that we seeke the peace of the church wherunto they are vtter enemies as followeth Verse 7. I seeke peace when I speake thereof they are bent to warre This is the testimonie of my conscience that I loue peare and seke after it Wherof then commeth all this trouble all this deadly warre of me I graunt but not by my default For if I would suffer these disturbers and haters of all godly peace and concord to say and to doe what they list then would they not so rage then woulde they not seeke my hurt as they doe then would they liue in peace But how can we hide those thinges that we haue seene that we haue heard that we are commaunded to speake and declare not in our chambers but on the house toppes For Christ saith God and preach the Gospel to all creatures And againe No man hideth a light vnder a bushel This is the cause that the word is in our mouth as a burning cole which can not be kept in but compelleth vs to open our mouthes Hereof then come all these troubles because they take away the commaundement of God yet would haue vs to holde our peace And here we see it come to passe that Christ saith in the Gospell when a strong man kepeth the house all things are in peace but when a stronger then he cometh then troubles arise This is then our consolation that what troubles soeuer doe arise we rest vpon the testimony of our owne conscience that we do nothing else but speake and declare that we are commaunded It is not our life therfore which they accuse but our doctrine abideth the blame which is not ours but Christes Wherefore let vs not only contemne all peace and concord but let heauen and earth also perish rather then the
protection of this good keper and watchman whom Dauid here speaketh of Thus doth our diuinitie teach and thus doe the godly beleue For by their owne experience they proue and by experience of the whole Church that Satan wil neuer rest vntill he destroy if he may either soule or body The destruction of the soule he seeketh by lying by corrupt doctrine by wicked false worshipping and seruing The destruction of the body he attempteth by infinite sleights practises wherof we haue experience daily in our selues and other For as much then as these things doe not come to passe either in such sort or so often as Satan would it is the benefite not of Satan but of this our vigilant keeper and watchman Thus we are taught euen by our owne experience taking this for a principle that the kingdom of the deuill is the kingdome of sinne and of death that we are continually and euery moment preserued from death and other daungers both corporally and spiritually by the singular goodnes and grace of Christe into whose kingdom through baptisme and faith we are translated And hereof come these heauenly sayings of the Prophets The earth is full of the mercy of the Lord his mercy endureth for euer c. In deede sometimes Satan so preuaileth and hath such successe in that he goeth aboute that by sudden plagues he bringeth men to horrible destruction Such examples ought to warne vs of those mischeuous practises which he continually goeth about and faine would bring to passe as he might easily doe if he were not letted by the vigilancy of our good watchman in heauen For as for the power of this our aduersary I doe beleeue that he is able in one hower to destroy all the people that are liuing vpon the earth Now if both he be able and also leaueth no practise vnattempted so to doe why then is it not done Because our good keeper watcheth ouer vs But these be matters of faith they muste be beleued and therefore he addeth this word beholde Whereby it may appeare that his purpose is earnestly to commend and set forth the great vigilancie and tender care of God towards vs whereby he keepeth and defendeth vs that we perish not And here note that this care and vigilancie for the safety and preseruation of our life countrey cities familyes peace and tranquillitie amongst vs c. is of the Prophet wholy attributed vnto God when as notwithstanding God vseth to worke the same by other meanes as first by the ministery of Angels and then also of men as of Princes and other inferiour magistrates c. Wherby we are admonished that these inferiour meanes which God vseth as his instrumentes for our preseruation are not able to doe vs any good at all except God him self take vpon him to be our chiefe watchman and defender God therfore vseth the ministery of these for our succour and reliefe euen as he doth bread drinke and other sustenaunce For as bread and drinke doe not preserue our life for then no man should dye and yet because of the ordinance of God and the fraile condition of our nature they are necessary for the sustentation of our life so doe these meane helpes nothing auayle vs except God the keeper of Israel doe watch for our succour and defence This watching this defence the ●orde of God doth reueile but the fleshe can not see it and therefore by a contrary sense thus it expoundeth these wordes The keeper of Israell that is to say the forsaker of Israell doth not sleepe that is he is not onely in a moste deade sleepe but also is without all sense and is in deede nothing For reason iudgeth according to euery pinch and pange that the flesh feeleth and according to the beginning of afflictions or first assaults and not according to the word and the end or deliuerance which God promiseth in the word Verse 5. The Lord is thy keper and he is thy shadowe or protection at thy right hand In this verse he setteth foorth more at large the certainty of Gods ready helpe and protection Wherin speaking to euery one priuatly he sayth The Lord is thy keeper that no man should doubt to apply that vnto him selfe for his owne comforte which pertaineth to al Israel He is called the shadow at thy right hand to teach thee that he is at hand and standeth euen by thy side ready to defend thee Or else the Lord is thy shadow at thy right hand That is he prospereth all thy affaires he giueth successe to all thou takest in hand If thou be a preacher a teacher in the Church of God if thou trauell in thy vocation vprightly and with a good conscience to prouide for thy selfe and thy family thou shalt not lack thy crosses But be of good comfort for the Lord hath promised to be on thy right hand he will ayde thee and succour thee in all things that thou shalt either doe or suffer But here againe we must remember as I said before that these things are spoken and taught in vaine except we first thinke our selues to be as it were vtterly forsaken and destitute of al help and succour Therefore when he speaketh of this tender care that the Lord hath ouer his in keping in shadowing in defēding them that they perish not he meaneth therewithall that they are such as seeme to them selues so to be forsaken and neglected of God as if he had no care of them at all This is therefore a sweete doctrine and full of consolation that the Lord sheweth him selfe to knowe and to pittie our miseries and calamities and commaundeth vs to beleeue that he is our shadowe to couer defend vs against all perils daungers In him therefore let vs assuredly trust with comfortable expectation of most ioyfull deliuerance who hath promised to be with vs with a fatherly care to prouide for vs to defend vs to strengthen to succour and to comfort vs in all our troubles afflictions and calamities Verse 6. The sunne shall not hurt thee by day nor the moone by night The heate of the Sunne maketh mens bodyes weake feeble So doth the Moone also hurt not onely with colde but also with moysture By these speeches he meaneth all maner of tentations and perils and that God will be with vs in the middest of them to succour vs and to deliuer vs albeit we seeme for a litle while to beare all the heate and burden of the day alone that is to be vtterly forsaken and destitute of all helpe and succour But if we were alone then should the tentation haue no ende yea it should presently swallow vs vp for we are not able of our selues to endure the space of one moment Now the Lord suffreth Satan to vomet out his poyson and to practise against vs the beginning of his malice but he will not suffer him to hurt so much as he would doe Therefore because we haue the shadowe to couer vs
vpon vs Thus Dauid vnder these wordes The house of the Lord. comprehendeth God him selfe his name and his word wherevnto the Sabboth is dedicated in the which we should rest from other busines and harken vnto the Lord speaking vnto vs. This is to go into the house of the Lord and for this benefite to reioyce and giue thanks vnto him For this is an inestimable benefite and cannot be comprehended of the wicked But the godly onely doe know the word and what benefite they receiue thereby And this the Lord also requireth of his people when he so often commandeth in the law that they should come togither that they should reioyce before the Lord they should praise and magnifie his name for his benefites and greate mercies so plentifully poured vppon them And to this Dauid also prouoketh vs by his owne example that with reuerence and as it were with an admiration we should exult and reioyce before the Lord. Verse 2. Our feete shall stand in thy gates O Ierusalem The Prophete Dauid reciteth here the common voyce of the godly that they would now abide stedfastly perseuer in the house of the Lord which he had appointed in Ierusalem and would not wander any more from place to place as they had done because the Lord had there stablished his Sanctuary which before was often times remoued had no ceraine resting place This stablishing and continuing of the Sanctuary in one certaine place preuailed much for the confirmation of their faith For like as when the Arke was caried from place to place their faith was alwaies wauering and vnstedfast euen so after that God had chosen vnto him selfe a certaine habitation he gaue thereby vnto them a more sure manifest testimony that he would be their euerlasting defender and protector Whereby their faith was stablished and confirmed for euer It is no maruell then that the people with such great reioycing and thankfulnes vnto God do promise that their feete should now stand sure and stedfast in the gates of Ierusalem which were wont to runne hither thither Truth it is that the arke did long continue in Silo. But because the Lord had made no promise concerning that place there could be no stabilitie of faith in the harts of the people And againe because it was said of the Mount Sion This is my rest for euer here wil I dwel for I haue delight therin the faithfull being surely grounded vpon this word were bolde to say that their feete should neuer remoue againe but stand stedfast sure in the gates of Ierusalem and in the house of the Lord for this standing signifieth a constant a continuall abiding for euer But now for as much as Christ in whom dwelleth the fulnes of the goodhead and which is the true Immanuel dwelleth emongst vs we haue a farre greater cause to reioyce then the Israelites had Wherefore we maye seeme vnthankful yea blockish and senseles if this promise I am with you vnto the end of the worlde do not stirre vp our hearts to great ioy and gladnes especially if we see it thankfully and with publike consent receiued of the people For that which we rehearsed euen now concerning the rest of the Lord is altogether fulfilled in the person of Christ as it appeareth in the 2. chapter of Esay His rest saith he shal be glorious Where he speaketh not of the buriall of Christ as some doe fondly imagine but of the excellency and dignitie of the church which should afterwards follow The glory and bewtie whereof since by the great mercy of God we haue seene Let vs be thankfull therefore and besech him that he will make perfect that he hath begun in vs that our feete may alwayes be standing in the courts of the Lord in the Church and congregation of the faithfull where we may find God where we may heare him calling vs teaching vs comforting vs and succouring vs. Verse 2. Ierusalem is builded as a citie where the people may come togither to worship God. This verse is an exposition or amplication of the verse that goeth before As if he said our fete shall stand in thy gates I say O Ierusalem which flourishest and increasest in all felicitie For where the word of God flourisheth there shall the common welth prosper according to the saying of our sauiour Christ First seeke the kingdom of God all things shal be ministred vnto you and yet so notwithstanding that this saying also of our sauiour remaineth alwaies true answering vnto Paule My power is made perfect through weaknes For albeit the world doth dayly vexe trouble the church many waies yet notwithstanding the more the aduersaries go about to destroy pluck downe the more doth the word of God edifie build vp To pluck downe then to destroy and to ouerthrow the church is nothing else if you consider the counsel purpose of God and the end that followeth thereof but to build vp to plant to water and to encrease the Church The Decians Maximines and Domitians those bloody and mighty tyrannes howe cruelly went they about to abolish for euer the name of Christ But the word and the Church of God as a palme tree the more it was oppressed the more it flourished and encreased maugre their malice and tyranny as the figure of the people of Israell doth declare For so sayth Moises The more the Egyptians did vexe them the more they multiplied and grew To this agreeth also the saying of the olde Church that the Church is watered with the blood of Martyrs The cause of this miraculous building is that where so euer God is beleued and his word had in due reuerence and regard there must needes followe a victorie albeit the Sainctes be destroyed slayne and seeme vtterly to perish yea albeit God him selfe seeme to haue forsaken them and with them to be oppressed and ouercome For so it is with God that when he seemeth most weake then is he most strong when he is oppressed in his Saincts then specially he liueth triumpheth and is exalted in them and in diminishing he most mightely increaseth Of such a maner of building speaketh Dauid also in this place that albeit Ierusalem was compassed about with so many enemies and idolatrous religions notwithstanding there the word of God true religion flourished Who then can preuaile against vs when God is so with vs And this is the true building of Ierusalem To the which the Kings gathered them selues and conspired against it but they were suddenly driuen backe and could not preuaile We also in these our dayes by our owne experience haue proued that the more the aduersaries of the word doe rage the lesse they preuaile against it yea so much the more it flourisheth and encreaseth And what else doth Satan our perpetual aduersary bring to passe by his continuall tentations but driue vs to search the word to learne to pray to beleue
a pastour or preacher in the Church These the elect I meane the Lorde hath here and there sparsed emong the wicked as precious stones in the middes of the earth Therfore thou must not think to preach to these only which were to be wished but that can not be because they are mixed with the vngodly multitude Likewise when thou art called to be a ciuill magistrate or a gouernour of a houshold thou shalt not finde all to be precious stones gold or siluer but let it suffice thee if in a whole multitude as it chaunceth in mynes thou find but one veine of siluer or emongst a great deale of earth but one precious stone For the greatest part in the Church is hereticall godles the least part in the ciuill state obedient louing of vertue Hereof it commeth then that al things are ful of trouble to the godly pastour the Magistrate the housholder because the wicked with such successe contemne and disobey all godly orders Notwithstanding thou man of God stand in thy calling do thy duetie pray for peace exhorte counsel reproue those whom thou hast charge ouer For since that now by the word of God the church is somewhat purged of false religion superstition and idolatrie the Magistrates better instructed of their duety and office Satan rageth as a strong armed man keping his house when a stronger commeth Be strong therefore in these tentations and think that as these things are not begun by the power of Satan so though he rage against the same neuer so much thou must not be discouraged or slacke the Lords busines but first serue the Lord and then thy brethren and neighbours For their sakes the Churches must be instructed the common wealth gouerned not for the worldes sake and the vngodly multitude for it is not worthie that a theefe should be hanged an adulterer or murderer put to death but the Lord in heauen and our brethren neighbours in earth are worthy of this seruice as he addeth in the verse following Thus I expounde this verse to be a consolation for pastours ciuill Magistrates and gouernours of families against the multitude of the wicked and the trobles which by them the godly doe sustayne Verse 9. Because of the house of the Lorde our God I will procure thy wealth This is an other cause why he prayeth for the peace and prosperitie of Ierusalem for that the Sanctuary of the Lord and the feate of true religion being stablished in that citie if it prospered not the worship and seruice of God could not there continue As if he sayd The Lord our God hath stablished his seate in thee O Ierusalem and in the middes of thee hath he set vp his worship For the which cause I loue thee and thinke thee worthy of all prosperitie But why doth hee adde hereunto Our God Because God had chosen this nation to be as his own peculiar people And this also was the cause why Dauid so loued them and was not discomforted with these troubles which he for their sakes susteyned both in the Church and in the ciuill gouernment but being chosen to be a King and a Prophet to this people he constantly endured all troubles and herewithall comforted him selfe that first he serued the Lord his God then his brethren and was not an vnprofitable seruaunt but fruitefull vnto God that he might be glorified and to his neighbour and brother that he might be saued Let vs likewise pray for the welfare of our brethren and for the house of the Lord with Dauid who as this Psalme sheweth did wel vnderstand the power and glory of the word and therefore he neither giueth thankes nor yet reioyceth for the abundance of gold and siluer which notwithstanding he lacked not but for the word and true worship of the lord Where these two are not lacking all other incommodities may easily be borne For if we haue the Lord abiding with vs if we maintaine his word and his true seruice and seeke the saluation of our brethren what can we desire more But where the word true worship of God is not regarded there is no God no mercy no saluation neither doth there any thing else remaine but the cursed multitude which shal be damned in hell Therefore Dauid exhorteth vs in this Psalme aboue all things to reuerence the word and by faithfull prayer to seeke the aduauncement thereof Also to giue thankes vnto God for peace and true preachers which gouerne the Church according to his word for where these things are not there must needes be trouble and vexation vnquietnes of conscience murder adultery such other horrible sinnes which the Lord turne away from our Churches preserue that poore remnant emonges the damnable multitude which serue and worship him according to his word By these two latter verses we are admonished first how euery Christian ought to regard him which is his fellow in faith and religion that is to say as his brother and neighbour Then also why he ought to haue a harty loue and zeale to the Church and congregation of the faithful For my brethren saith Dauid and for my neighbours And againe for the house of the Lord our god These two thinges ought to be considered in the Churche of christ In it are our brethren and neighbours in it is the house of God yea rather it is the house of God it selfe in the which are the children of God and true brethren O happy is he and a right Christian in deede which beeing indued with the true knowledge and faith of Christ and also with that brotherly loue which is according to the spirit of the children of God can vnfainedly and hartely say For my brethren and neighbours and for the house of the Lord our God I both seeke and I wish the prosperitie and welfare of the Church of God. The 123. Psalme I lift vp mine eyes vnto thee c. This Psalme as ye see is but short and therefore a very fitte example to shew the force of prayer not to consist in many words but in feruency of spirit For great and weighty matters may be comprised in few words if they proceede from the spirit the vnspeakeable gronings of the heart especially when our necessity is such as will not suffer any long prayer Euery prayer is long enough if it be feruent proceede from a heart that vnderstandeth the necessitie of the Sainets not in such small matters as y world counteth great and weightie as pouerty losse of goods and such other worldly incommodities but when the Church is oppressed with violence and tyranny when the name of God is prophaned with wicked doctrine or if there be any thing else that either hindreth the glory of God or the saluation of soules These perils can not well be vttered in prayer and therfore the prayer of the faithfull is then most effectuous when with griefe of heart and affliction of spirite they see
they suffer togither so they cry vnto God for helpe and succour as well for other as for them selues Yea the common calamitie of their brethren is to them a greater crosse then their owne Haue mercy vpon vs c. This repetition as it doth declare a great vehemencie and feruentnes of spirite in the afflicted crying vnto God for helpe and deliuerance so it sheweth their affliction and calamitie to be exceeding greeuous For we haue suffered too much contempt He sayd before that the godly being brought to extreme miserie by the tyranny and oppression of the wicked did lift vp their eyes to God for helpe and succour Nowe he sheweth also what despite and reproch they suffred of the proud and scornfull Whereby it appeareth that the vngodly sought not only with crueltie and oppression but also with despite contempt and ignominy to tread as it were vnder foote the children of god He saith not onely we suffer contempt but we are filled with contempt and ignominie vsing a similitude taken of a vessell which is filled so full that it can conteine no more Thus the children of God do not burst out at the first into these gronings and grieuous complaints when so euer they are contemned and despised but patiently suffer in hope that God will at the length ease their miserye vntill they be filled with all maner of despite contempt and scorning of the wicked whereby they are compelled to cry vnto God doubling their complaint as followeth in the next verse Verse 4. Our soule is filled too ful of the mocking of the welthy and of the despitefulnes of the proude When the godly are not onely oppressed with iniuries hated and despised but also mocked and scorned of the wicked there can be to them no greater misery And this is it that they specially here complaine of as of all their calamities the moste greeuous The cause why he saith that the welthy and proud doe so spitefully sette them selues against the Church of God is for that they which are of power and authoritie in the world are alwaies wont to despise and contemne the godly which doe so much esteeme the glory wealth and prosperitie of this worlde that they regard nothing at all the spirituall kingdom of Christ yea the more they rise in wealth and dignitie the more their pride encreaseth This place teacheth then that it is no straunge or newe thing if the children of God be contemned of the children of this worlde which abound in wealth and riches And it is not without good cause that here the wealthy are also called proud for wealth and prosperity maketh men proude the children of this world and worldlinges I meane For Dauid and many other were also riche and yet they were so broken with afflictions and so exercised both within and without that they could haue no such pleasure or delight in their wealth and worldly prosperitie whereby they might waxe proude or fall into securitie But the case of the wicked is farre otherwise for their riches wealth and dignitie is as a rewarde of their securitie and vngodlines Contrariwise the godly are in misery and affliction despised of the world as abiects fooles and idiotes as the example of the auncient Prophets Christ him self and his apostles with all the deare Sainctes of God do teach we by daily experience doe proue For when we goe aboute to draw men from couetousnes blasphemy voluptuousnes and such other vices they laugh vs to scorne and when they heare of the iudgement of God the reward of sinne the punishment of the wicked they count 〈◊〉 this geare to be but a fable suche as Virgill imagineth of hell to make men afeard But if they were exercised with afflictions and calamities as the godly are and had a scholemaster to teach them that they are but men as Dauid prayeth in the ix Psalme they would learne another song The .124 Psalme If the Lord had not bene on our side c. This Psalme is a thankes giuing to God for his great mercy in preseruing his people placed as the stories doe shewe in the middes of the Gentiles and heathen people as a flock of sheepe in a wild forrest or in respect of the multitude as a citie compared to a mighty kingdom being compassed on euery side with the kings of the Assirians the Egyptians the Ammonites the Ismaelites the Moabites whom Satan had stirred vp with deadly hatred to vexe and persecute them seeking by all meanes to roote them out from the earth that thereby he might vtterly deface and abolish the word and worship of the lord This daunger Dauid sawe and thanked God which had preserued his people from the rage of so many lyons and dragons which notwithstanding that they neuer ceased to seeke their destruction yet all that they went about was in vaine And what a miracle was this that this people could so long continue notwithstanding the malice and rage of so many deuils Dauid therefore in this Psalme exhorteth his people to be thankfull to the Lorde their God so mightely preseruing defending and deliuering them from the violence of so many nations and kingdoms hating and persecuting them on euery side Which Psalme we also doe sing not onely against our aduersaries which hate and persecute the word but also against spirituall wickednes For we are taught by the Gospell that there are nowe seuen Deuills which lye in wayte for vs where as we were before in daunger but of one which cease not to styrre vppe the whole worlde against vs Yea our case were more tolerable if we had but onely the worlde and not Satan also with all his angells and the gates of hell wholy bent against vs But yet further to molest and vexe vs besides all these we haue also the third enemie which we cary alwayes about with vs which we nourish also and foster at home with vs and euen with in vs the flesh I meane which giueth vs no rest but continually tempteth vs to sinne fighteth against faith and striueth in our members against the spirite For as much then as the Church of God is neuer free from these daungers let vs also sing to the praise of Christ this psalme that he preserueth vs his members from all these enemies For it were extreme ingratitude not to acknowledge this miracle that notwithstanding all these the Church doth yet continue and that there be some which truely teach and confesse Christ beleue in Christ though Satan rage the world and false brethren conspire against vs and the flesh as an vntamed beast fight against the word and faith neuer so much This is the benefit then that Dauid so highly extolleth and wisheth that his people would vnderstand and giue thankes to God for the same Verse 1. If the Lord had not bene on our side may Israel now say Verse 2. If the Lord had not bene on our side when men rose vp against vs Verse 3. They had
then swallowed vs vppe quicke when their wrath was kindled against vs. Here the Prophet Dauid exhorteth the people to consider how mercifully God had deliuered them from the handes of their enemies and how miraculously he had preserued that kingdom and also to praise God with him for the same Which words are not to be restreyned to Dauids time onely For the heathen people had oftentimes before warred against them with such force and power as was like to the rage of most huge and terrible floodes of wate● whereof he speaketh here ready to ouerflow them Therfore seeing he mencioneth here no one kind of deliuerance it seemeth that he meaneth in these wordes of thankes giuing to set foorth what so euer God had done for the succour and deliuerance of his people at any time before Wherin he sheweth as it were in a glasse the daungerous state of the church from the beginning that the faithfull may learne to knowe that it hath not bene preserued by the strength and pollicie of man but by the miraculous power hand of God and therefore in their troubles and afflictions should alwaies flie to God for helpe and succour Israell signifieth the people of god Let vs acknowledge then that there is no way for Gods people to escape the hands of their enemyes but by the help and power of God and that he wil haue the glory and praise thereof to be giuen to him alone This praise can none giue vnto God but the true Israell hauing experience both of their owne weakenes the force power of their enemyes the daungers past and of the mercifull helpe and protection of the Lord. Verse 2. If the Lorde had not bene on our side when men rose vp against vs. This repetition is not in vaine For whiles we are in daunger our feare is without measure but when it is once past we imagin it to haue bene lesse then it was in deede And this is the delusion of Satan to diminish and obscure the grace of god Dauid therfore with this repetition stirreth vp the people to a more thankfulnes vnto God for his gracious deliuerance amplifieth the daungers which they had passed Wherby we are taught how to think of our troubles and afflictions past least the sense and feeling of Gods grace vanish out of our mindes And here note howe God dealeth with his people in their distresse who suffereth their enemies so farre to preuaile ouer them differreth his help so long till it seeme vnpossible for them to escape so that they are compelled to confesse and acknowledge that they must needes haue perished if the mighty hand of God had not deliuered them These 2. thinges then we see the Israelites here to acknowledge firste that the Lorde was on their side that is succoured and deliuered them then also that it had not bene possible but they must vtterly haue perished if God had not preserued and defended them By men is here vnderstand what so euer is great and mightie in the world As if he said we are counted as abiects outcastes of the world The Princes the rulers the wise the rich of the world rise vp against vs to destroy vs and to roote vs out from the face of the earth If ye beholde with how great and how many kingdoms we are compassed about which beare a deadly hatred against vs we may seeme like to a seely sheepe compassed about with a multitude of cruell wolues euery moment ready to deuoure it That we liue in safetie therefore and that our enemyes preuaile not against vs acknowledge it to be the great mercy of God O Israell whiche so miraculously preserueth and defendeth so small a flocke In like maner we are compelled to say and confesse at this day that if God did not miraculously defend and preserue his church the power of Satan is so great that one of his Angells is able in one moment to destroy vs all that either teache or professe Christe and to fill the world with bloodshed and slaughter We see the Princes the Pope the Prelates the mightie and welthy of the world yea the whole worlde in a maner bent to destroy vs Against whom what haue we to defend vs but that the Lord of hostes hath stretched out his mightie arme ouer vs which as a brasen wall defendeth vs against all the cruell dartes whiche both Satan and the worlde doe dayly cast against as That we liue then that we teache and you heare the worde that we haue place and libertie in the Church so to doe these thinges Satan can not abide and therefore he rayseth the gates of hell against vs notwithstanding he is compelled to suffer all these thinges through the power of Christ our King who sitteth at the right hand of God for by mans strength and power these things could not be retained and defended If Satan then at any time haue his will in troubling the Church in murthering the people of God and such like therefore it is because God would shewe what Satan is able to doe euery moment if he were not resisted by the almightie power of God to the ende that we should walke in the feare of God and acknowledging this inestimable benefite continually pray vnto God for the same Let vs learne then to sing with Dauid If the Lord had not beene on our side c. whose mightie hand hath defended vs whose power alone hath preserued vs And although the worlde rage against vs though Satan vexe vs neuer so sore they can not hurt vs Be of good comfort saith Christ our Sauiour for I haue ouercome the worlde Againe I giue vnto them euerlasting life and none shall take them out of my hand Verse 3. They had then swallowed vs vppe quicke when their wrath was kindled against vs. In these words he expresseth not onely the strength rage and crueltie of the enemies but also how weake and vnable the Israelites were to withstand them And here he vseth a similitude taken of fierce and outragious beastes whose propertie is when they haue taken their prayes to swallow them vp aliue Likewise when we would expresse the crueltie or malice of any towardes vs we are wont to say he hateth me so deadly that he could finde in his heart to eate me or swallow me vppe quicke The Prophet meaneth then that their enemies were so many and so mighty that they neded no armour or weapons to destroy them but were able like fierce and cruell beastes to swallow them vp aliue being so weake and so litle a flocke Verse 4. Then the waters had drowned vs and the streame had gone ouer our soule Terrible is the rage of fire but much more terrible is the violence and rage of water for that no power can resist Nowe sayth Dauid like as huge and mighty floods of water caried with great power and violence doe suddenly ouerthrow beare downe what so euer they meete withall euen such is the rage of the
enemies of Gods Church which no power of man is able to withstande Therefore let vs learne to trust to the Lordes defence and succour For what else is the Church but as a litle boate tyed by a riuer side and by violence of the water soone caried away or as a reede which by force of the streame is easily plucked vppe and caried away Such was the people of Israell in Dauids time being compared to the Gentils round about them Such is the church likewise at this day compared to the aduersaries Such is euery one of vs in respect of the force and power of the malignant spirit We are like a reede which is easily plucked vppe and he like a raging floode which with great might and violence ouerthroweth and carieth away all thinges We are like a withered leafe soone blowne from the tree and he like a mighty winde or tempest not onely blowing downe leaues but plucking vppe and ouerthrowing trees and all What are we then pore wretches able to doe of our owne power and strength for our defence We must learne therefore by fayth wholy to rest vpon the word For what is our victorie but euen our fayth Albeit that armour and munitions haue their place yet can they nothing helpe at all vnlesse we haue a trust and affiance in the Lorde who hath promised to be our God our strength and our defence Whose power is such whose mighty arme also is so stretched out for the defence of his that albeit neuer so great a tempest or violent rage of water should inuade the poorest and simplest cottage that can be if forceth not Let this be then our assured trust let this be the rocke of our safetie helpe and succour that God will be our defender and keeper that the great floodes and mighty waters cary vs not away This sure defence and mighty protection of our God the wicked neither know nor beleue for they attribute all their successe wellfare to their owne strength wisedom and riches But Salomon albeit he was a King aboundantly indued with all these thinges yet sayth he Except the Lord buyld the house the builders labour in vayne Except the Lorde keepe the citie they watch in vayne that keepe it Verse 5. Then had the swelling waters gone ouer our soule He setteth out yet more liuely and as it were before their eyes the great daunger from the which God had deliuered them And this vehement kinde of speech which he vseth here hath as great force to make the faithfull to feele from what terrible destruction they were deliuered by the mightie hand of God as if their daunger had bene present before their eies so to become more thankfull to God for the same For he is thankfull to God in deede for his deliuerance and safetie which doeth acknowledge that before his deliuerance he sawe nothing else but vtter destruction Thus Dauid setteth out the afflictions and calamities of the Church and of the godly whom the world doth not onely hate but cruelly persecute Whereby we may see that it hath not onely a greedy desire but also power to hurt murder and destroy Satan likewise goeth about like a raging lyon seeking whom he may deuoure Besides these there are great and horrible sinnes sticking in our flesh That we fall not therefore euery moment into desperation or otherwise perish it is because he is greater which is in vs then he which is in the world or the whole world besides as Dauid saith If God had not bene with vs our enemies had swallowed vs vp aliue Now he addeth a notable similitude wherwith he amplifieth the daunger of the godly and power of the wicked Verse 6. Praised be the Lord which hath not giuen vs as a pray vnto their teeth He exhorteth the faithfull to be thankfull for their deliuerance and expresseth vnto them how and as it were with what wordes they should declare their thankefulnes Wherein he setteth forth yet further by an other similitude that it coulde not be but they must vtterly haue perished if God had not miraculously defended them For they were sayth he no otherwise preserued then if a man should violently take a pray out of the iawes of a raging and cruell beast As if he sayd We were in deede like seely sheepe and as a pray ready to be deuoured of cruell beasts but praised be the Lorde our God which woulde not suffer vs so to perish He sayth not which hath deliuered vs albeit he did in deede mightely deliuer them but which hath not giuen vs as a pray c. For this is it which specially y holy Ghost here setteth forth that the wicked can not hurt the godly be they neuer so many mightie furious cruell and terrible like to raging and violent waters like to cruell outragious beastes falling vpon them with open mouth except the Lord giue them into their hands Let vs therefore with Dauid sing praises vnto the Lord our God which keepeth and defendeth vs that the raging and cruell beasts which haue sharpned their teeth to deuour vs can not hurt vs Without this mercifull protection of our God there is no way to stande against Satan his cruell members the spare of one moment Verse 7. Our soule is escaped euen as a bird out of the snare of the fouler The snare is broken and we are deliuered He amplifieth yet further by a third similitude the great perils and daungers of the faithfull being in the handes of their enemies as a bird that is taken in the snare is in the handes of the fouler and yet notwithstāding they escaped by the mighty power of God no otherwise then the birde that is deliuered out of the snare of the fouler By the snare is here to be vnderstande as well the fraude and subteltie of the enemies whereby the Israelites were brought into thraldom and captiuitie as also the strength and power wherewith they were long oppressed So that they had not onely to do with bloody and cruell enemies but also were entrapped and snared by fraude and subteltie and with might and power miserably oppressed Thus being vnable both in strength and pollicie to withstand their enemies they were euery way in daunger of death and destruction whereby it appeareth that they were miraculously deliuered And here haue we an image of our spiritual thraldom and captiuitie vnder Satan in whose snares we were once most miserably wrapped Now therefore that we are deliuered by the inestimable benefice of Christ let vs acknowledge both our former calamitie and the libertie of this grace wherein we stand and let vs beware that we cast not our selues into the snares of seruile bondage any more For Satan sleepeth not but lyeth continually in waite for vs ready to draw vs into those snares agayne out of the which by the great mercy of God we were deliuered yea some times is suffred to hurt either our bodies or our soules not only to shew vs
that he is able likewise to destroy both body and soule if God did so permitte but also to stirre vs vp to faith and prayer that we should call vpon him for ayde and succour agaynst these perilous snares and being deliuered should giue him thankes and prayse for the same Moreouer euery tentation is a snare whether it be of the flesh or of the spirite Persecution torments imprisonment sclaunder diseases and infirmities of the body be snares which as they are permitted of God to exercise and strengthen our fayth so by the malice of Satan they are wrought to afflict and to vexe men that he may bring them to infidelitie and desperation and so into the snares of eternall death From the which snares but by the speciall grace of God there is no way to escape Thus our life lyeth alwayes open to the snares of Satan and we as sely birdes are like at euery moment to be caried away Notwithstanding the Lord maketh a way for vs to escape Yea when Satan seemeth to be most sure of vs by the mighty power of God the snares are broken we are deliuered Experience hereof we haue in those which are inwardly afflicted with heauines of spirit greeuously oppressed that when they seeme to be in vtter despaire ready as you would say now to perish yet euen at the last pinch in the vttermost extremitie commeth the sweete comfort of Gods holy spirite and raiseth them vp againe When we are most ready to perish then is God most ready to helpe Except the Lord had holpen me sayth Dauid my soule had almost dwelt in silence Verse 8. Our helpe is in the name of the Lord who hath made both heauen and earth This is the conclusion of thankesgiuing contayning a worthy sentence of great comfort that against sinne the horrour of death and other daungers there is no other helpe or safetie but onely the name of the lord If that were not sayth he we should fall into all maner of sinne blasphemy errours and into all kind of calamities But our helpe is in the name of the Lord which preserueth our faith and our life against the Deuill and the world And as ye heard in the other verses before so he sheweth in this verse also that God suffereth his Sainctes to be tempted and in their tentation to fall into great distresse as euen nowe readie to be drowned and swallowed vp presently with great floodes of water yet notwithstanding this comfort he sheweth them that he will not vtterly forsake them By the which examples we may learne to know the will of the Lord and to seeke our help and safety at his hands which suffereth his people to be exercised in the fornace of Egypt not to their vtter destruction but onely to kill the olde man with his vaine hope and confidence which he hath in his owne strength This is the cause why God suffereth his people so to be exercised For it is not hearing reading talking or teaching nor speculation onely which maketh a Christian man but practise is that which specially is required in a true Christian that is to say the crosse to plucke downe the fleshe and bring it to nothing that man despairing of his owne strength and seeing no succour in himselfe should resigne him selfe wholly vnto the Lord looking with patience and hope for helpe at his hande for this is the will of god Neither must we imagine to our selues any other God then such a one as will helpe the afflicted and oppressed with desperation and other calamities To knowe this doctrine is one peece of the victory For they that know it not when tentation assayleth them either doe dispayre or seeke other helpes Let vs learne then out of this Psalme that it is the will of God to exercise his Sainctes with troubles and afflictions Who suffereth great floodes of water to runne ouer their heades who also permitteth them to fall into the snares of the wicked and tryeth euery way not to destroy them but to shew them what they are of them selues so to teach them to trust in his sauing health But the flesh looketh to the power and multitude of the aduersaries and her owne infirmitie but to looke vnto God and to hope for his helpe and succour it is not able Wherefore this is a necessary conclusion Our helpe is in the name of the Lord. It is a short sentence but it setteth foorth most worthie doctrine and consolation whereof ▪ specially in these latter daies we haue great neede seeing the Pope togither with the greatest part of the Princes rulers of the world so cruelly doe persecute the doctrine of the Gospel In respect of these huge mountains what are we small molehills Yea though there were no force nor power of man for vs to feare how are we able to stand against not onely so many deuills but euen the very gates of hell also And yet this experience we haue of the great mercy and goodnes of the Lord our God that when we are euen in their handes and neuer so much oppressed yet are we not forsakē but are safe through our confidence and trust in his helpe But to this wisedom it is vnpossible for vs to attayne without continuall afflictions whereby it is necessary that the confidence of all worldly succours should be beaten downe For vexation and trouble bringeth vnderstanding as Esay sayth whereby we are compelled to cry Helpe Lorde for else we perish So in the last houre when death approcheth there is nothing wherein mans heart can repose it selfe or finde comfort but his trust and confidence in the helpe of the Lorde There is rest and quietnes there is perfect peace He that can then say My helpe is in the name of the Lord dyeth happely and is out of all daunger Thus we may learne what it is to haue and enioy God euen to rest in the sure trust of his mercifull helpe and succour in all daungers These are the wordes therefore of a victorious and triumphing fayth Our helpe is in the name of the Lord which made heauen and earth As if he sayd The maker of heauen and earth is my God and my helper Shew me a God O ye my aduersaries like vnto him What are your snares and your traynes then compared vnto this God What are your threatnings your power your pollicies c. Thus he setteth the eternall God the maker of heauen and earth against all terrours and daungers against the floodes and ouerflowings of al tentations and swalloweth vp as it were with one breath all the raging furies of the whole world and of hell it selfe euen as a litle droppe of water is swallowed vp of a mightie flaming fire And what is the world with all his force and power in respect of him which made heauen and earth Let the worlde fret then let it rage so that this succour neuer faile vs And if it be the will of
power taketh no place in vs vntill we be vtterly to speake after the maner of the Scripture exinanited that is stript naked of all worldly hope and helpes that man hath in him selfe and brought to nothing like as when he saueth a ship from drowning now ready to perish and past all remedy As the two storyes of the Gospell one of the shippe the other of the daunger of Peter doe testifie Verse 2. As the mountaines are about Ierusalem so is the Lord about his people from henceforth and for euer Where many hundred thousands of men are there are scarsely 7. thousand which knowe God or beleue in God and yet for their sakes the whole multitude is called Gods people .. Euen so was it in Ierusalem Albeit the greater part was wicked and godles yet was Ierusalem called holy not onely in respect of a small number of the godly but also because God had his abiding there So when there was not one iust person in Sodome but Loth with his two daughters yet could not the angell destroy Sodome with fire so long as Loth was in it Likewise where 4 or 5. or 10. godly persons are to be found for their sakes the whole citie is called holy For these are the elect corner stones these are the precious pearles which God so highly estemeth and for whose sakes he spareth the wicked Therefore saith Dauid As Ierusalem is compassed about with mountaines so doth the Lord compasse his people and mightely defend them on euery side In like maner Zachary prophecieth of a citie whose wall is of fire These similitudes doe set forth vnto vs the safetie of Gods people that weake and litle por● flocke against all daungers Upon this promise if we also doe rest which at this day enioy the inestimable benefite of Gods holye word we shall be defended against the rage of Satan the whole worlde not by fiery and brasen walls but by the Lord him selfe These thinges albeit we cannot comprehend yet should we beleue them so certainly as if we did see them with our bodily eyes If we should see our selues compassed about with brasen and fiery walls we would be without all feare and triumph against Satan But it is a matter of faith not to trust vnto that which the eyes see but which the worde offereth and promiseth This one thing therefore is lacking in vs that we haue not the eyes of the spirite but we iudge according to the eyes and sense of the fleshe For else we should be no more afraide then they which beeing closed within the walls of an inuincible castle feare not the force and power of their enemyes be they neuer so terrible We must not doubt therefore but if we beleue we are compassed about with fiery and brasen mountaines that is to say we abide for euer inuincible against the rage of Satan and all the powers of darkenes Blessed therefore is he that beleueth These mountaines are the Angells which compasse vs on euery side that Satan with his angells and ministers can not hurt vs as he would Whose malice and power is such that if they did not continually beholde vs continually defend vs and watch ouer vs he would destroy vs euery moment This can all they testifie which knowe that Satan is a murtherer and a lyer which can not abide to see the godly prosper therefore he seketh by all meanes to roote them out from the face of the earth That we are not then vtterly consumed it is the benefite of these mountaines by whom we are so compassed and defended Some times Satan hurleth his dartes at vs as it were through the window to destroy vs and worketh vs in deede some sorrow but he can not moue vs. This similitude seemeth to be taken out of the story of Helizeus in the 2. boke of the Kinges where the seruaunt of Helizeus saw the hilles about him full of fiery chariotes and horsemen compassing Helizeus round about and mightely defending him This succour which the seruant of Helizeus sawe and the Prophet beleued when he saw nothing is saith the Prophet round about all them which trust in the Lord as also the 34. Psalme witnesseth The Angell of the Lorde pitcheth round aboute them that feare him But our eyes are shut vp and see not these miracles whereof notwithstanding we haue dayly experience This promise then will neuer deceiue vs onely let vs not deceiue our selues If therefore we did beleue no doubt we shoulde sleepe we should liue we should dye yea that more is we should suffer what so euer Satan and the world can doe against vs without all feare For thus should we thinke If I suffer any thing it is not without the will of God nor without good cause well knowne though not ●nto me yet vnto god Therefore although Satan breake through the wall in one place yet shall he neuer be able vtterly to ouerthrowe it altogither Thus should we think in our troubles and afflictions and comfort our selues with the good will of god But we are afraid when any trouble commeth and neuer feele that securitie which faith bringeth Thus doe we worthely suffer the punishment of our incredulitie which we nurrishe within vs although we be called away from it by so many notable places of the Scripture Besides all this it is not enough that we are compassed about with fiery walles that is with the sure custody the continuall watch and warde of the Angells but the Lorde him selfe is our wall so that euery way we are defended by the Lorde against all daungers Aboue vs he is a heauen on both sides he is as a wall vnder vs he is as a strong rocke whereuppon we stand so are we euery way sure and safe Nowe if Satan through these munitions cast his dartes at vs it must needs be that the Lorde him selfe shall be hurt before we take harme But great is our incredulitie which heare all these thinges in vaine Yet must they be taught and learned lest the time come that we be destitute of all counsell and comfort in these matters For certain it is that the hower shal come when we must haue experience of these thinges or else vtterly perish Where he addeth From henceforth for euer By these words he sheweth that this vigilancie of the Lorde our God euer vs is not temporall but eternall according to that which he said before in the first verse of this Psalme They shall remaine for euer Let vs learne therfore out of this Psalme that our constancy and perseuerance consisteth in this that we are defended by the power and prouidence of the Lord on euery side Verse 3. For the rodde of the wicked shall not rest on the lotte of the righteous lest the righteous put forth their hand vnto wickednes Here the Prophet plainly declareth that the people which rest vnder this defence and protection are afflicted and subiecte to all miseryes and calamities as touching the
fleshe although they be compassed about with such high and mightie mountaynes as touching the spirite as Satan can neuer surmount yet touching the flesh and the olde man they lye open on euery side to the dartes of Satan and of the worlde For God by these meanes will afflict and exercise the flesh that sinne the foolishnes of the flesh may be mortified in them and that spirituall wisedome and the inward man may encrease This is the cause why we are according to the flesh as a broken hedge and as a citie whose wals are cast downe and so lyeth open to the enemy on euerie side Wherefore there is no sort of men so vile and abiect which do not thinke that they may doe what they list against the true professors of the Gospell Hereof come such intollerable iniuries horrible blasphemies cruel torments and bloody slaughters of the Saincts of god For the flesh hath no walls no munitions to defend it but the spirite Therfore the flesh is in daunger to al stormes and tempests broken troden downe of the wicked as Esay sayth chap. 51. VVhich haue sayd vnto thy soule Bow downe that we may go ouer Thou hast layed thy body as the ground and as the streete to them that went ouer These afflictions we must needes suffer and by patience ouercome them withall we must beware that by these outward afflictions the inward man be not weakened or ouercome resting in this assured hope and trust that the Lord will neuer forsake vs but that we are in the bosome of the father and are closed within most sure and strong holds So that now although our goodes our wiues our children yea and our liues also be taken from vs yet we shall neuer be spoyled of our Christ by whome we are so surely defended that in the middes of all our tentations he will make away for vs to escape or else geue vs strength to beare them Thus we see what consolations the holy Ghost setteth forth vnto them which beleue the word For vnto such as looke for a better life then this all thinges are here full of calamities and miseries Death followeth death as Paule sayth and we continually dye One tentation followeth an other vntill at the length by the death of the flesh all miseries shall cease and haue an ende This verse therefore maketh much for our comfort admonishing vs that we must suffer many troubles yet so that at the length we shall be safe and sette at libertie from them all though not in this life yet in the life to come and in eternall life And why should we not thus boldely promise vnto our selues remayning vnder this diligent custody of the Angells yea of the Lord him selfe which is alwayes round about his people But here as before I sayd we haue neede of fayth that we may iudge herein not according to our present troubles and tentations but according to the word of promise And what should we neede any promises if there were no tentations which tentations whether they be within in the spirit or without in the fleshe the time shall come when we through Christ shall haue full victory hereof as this verse full of sweete consolation doth promise vnto vs. Notwithstanding this promise seemeth incredible both to vs which suffer and also to them which persecute and afflict vs For if we behold the same with our outward eyes what can be more false yea the contrary seemeth to be most true Behold our Sauiour Christ was he not so forsaken hanging vpon the crosse that the rod or scepter of the wicked rested vpon him Did it not rest likewise vpon the Prophets the Apostles and other holy Martyrs This matter then if we consider it with our outward eyes hath an other meaning then the wordes doe import For they promise that the scepter of the wicked shall haue no power ouer the godly and yet all stories and examples doe testifie the contrary Therefore the holy Ghost calleth vs backe to the purpose counsell of God reueiled in his word and commaundeth vs to wey and consider not what we suffer and with our outward eyes behold but what is decreed with the Lord in heauen And he that can so sequestre him selfe from the beholding of his afflictions and tentations and yeld him selfe wholy ouer to the will of God there rest is a right diuine yea he that is ignorant hereof in true diuinitie knoweth nothing at al. For what knoweth he which is ignorant that God is such a God as will not suffer the godly to be oppressed of the wicked For seeing he hath sayd I am the Lorde thy God he will neuer suffer that which is his owne to be wrested either by the world or by the gates of hell out of his hands If he then abide and continue they shall also continue for euer which are his Thus to beleeue and thus to lay hold on thinges inuisible is true diuinitie and true spirituall wisedom in deede whereupon we may ground this proposition out of the inuisible counsell of God God hateth the wicked loueth the iust ergo he will damne and destroy the wicked and wil deliuer and saue the iust And here we see that which is the chiefest thing in all the Psalmes and Prophets to spring out of the first precept I am the Lorde thy God. Now haue we to learne how we may apply this verse rightly and to our comforte For true diuinitie consisteth in vse and practise We are vexed on euery side with cruell Bishops wicked Princes and others which hate the word of God and the doctrine which we professe But these are very trifles if ye compare them with those vexations which Satan sinne and our owne infirmitie raise vppe in our consciences We must learne therefore thus to iudge of all these thinges that they are the rodde or scepter of the wicked and to set the Lorde against them reueiling his will here in his word and pronouncing that he will not suffer the scepter of the wicked to rest vpon the godly Seeing then the same Prince promiseth thus much vnto vs which hath all thinges in his hand what can we require more For the will of God is certaine that though he suffer vs to be afflicted yet will he not see vs troden vnder foote or perish Thus must we apply these sweete consolations What the rodde signifieth in the scripture it is wel knowne Children when they are yong are corrected with a rodde when they waxe bigger with a wand or a cudgell and if they will not so amende then followeth the yron rodde Hereof it commeth that the rodde signifieth all power and rule whiche is for the amendement and correction of such as doe offende So is it taken in the 110. Psalme The Lord shall send forth the rodd of thy power out of Sion That is to say thy kingdome For there he signifieth such a rodde wherby kingdoms and people are gouerned On this wise the
sure hope of life euerlasting remission of al their sinnes true deliuerance from the deuil hell and eternall death All these thinges haue they and in the things there is no defect but the defect is in me and in thee because we haue not yet fully apprehended these thinges For flesh and bloode and the remnauntes of sinne doe yet liue in vs This forced Paule to cry out and say I see an other lawe in my members fighting against the law of God. And this is the cause why a Christian can not be secure For he seeth that he hath not yet ouercome all perills and daungers which the enemie dayly deuiseth But for so much as pertaineth vnto Christ as is sayd whom by faith he apprehendeth on whom he beleueth true it is that he hath all thinges For in Christ the deuill is ouercome the law fulfilled the wrath of God pacified and death it selfe vanquished In this state we stand if we looke to Christ on whom we beleue But when we looke backe into our selues we are forced to confesse that we are not pure because our fayth is not yet perfect and therefore can not perfectly apprehend perfect thinges as S. Paule sayth Therefore when we come to the combate we giue place to the enemy we suffer our hope to be wrested from vs we are cast into heauines impaciencie c. Thus Christians are warriers Gods true souldiers which stand alwayes in the battaile and can not be secure or voyd of feare Therefore they are feruent in prayer and cry vnto God for succour Contrariwise they that are secure pray not for they thinke that the deuill is farre enough of and so that faith feeling of the good gift of God which they seemed to haue they lose before they be ware and when tentation commeth they are like to a withered leafe Thus we see the great necessitie of prayer and how it ought to be continually vsed among the faithfull if not with the mouth y●● with the hart and harty sighes vnto God according to the wordes of S. Paule Let the word of Christ dwel in you plentifully signifying that they ought to be continually exercised therein not only by teaching the same to other publikely and priuatly but also by earnest meditation and prayer when they sit at home in their houses as Moises teacheth when they walke by the way when they lye downe and when they rise vp For as the Deuill goeth about like a roring lyon strong and mighty seeking whom he may deuoure so are we on euery ●ide infirme and weake pressed downe also with the flesh full of sinne cariyng this treasure in earthen vesselles In the which our fayth is as a tender plant which because it is not yet come to perfect strength may be easily shaken with winds and tempests This know not they which before they haue had some triall of them selues by affliction or wrastling with the enemy thinke them selues to be Christians and sound in faith We must watch therefore and pray as Christ commaundeth that in our daily conflictes we may stand stedfastly against the darts of Satan which would driue vs to the contempt of God and man. So doe I vnderstand this prayer not in the person of the Prophet as though he prayed for the reuelation of the redemption that should come but in the person of the faithful which haue need continually to pray according to this verse say Lord thou hast redemed vs out of captiuitie redeme vs yet more thou hast forgiuen vs our sinnes forgiue vs more thou hast killed the deuill kill him more thou hast taken away the law take it away more For we must pray for that which we haue already vntill we come to the full perfection thereof which shall be after the death of this body in the which sinne here dwelleth The sense and meaning then herof is Lord turne againe our captiuitie that is redeeme vs whiche haue begunne to be the newe creature that as our redemption by Christ is fully and perfectly wrought so we may fully and perfectly apprehend and feele the same For there be many things which in this life fight against this redemption Wherfore it is necessary that we shoulde be well armed against them that we fall not againe into captiuitie On this wise we must alwayes pray that the first fruites of the spirite may continually encrease in vs and that we may be redemed day by day vntill the olde man be wholly put away by death Then shall our captiuitie be perfectly chaunged euen as the riuers or waters in the south which by the mightie worke of God were dryed vppe and vtterly consumed Whether ye vnderstand here the redde sea or else th● riuer of Iordane it forceth little The similitude is this Like as by thy mightie hand thou broughtest to passe miraculously that the waters were dryed vp and consumed so dry vp O Lorde and bring to nothing al our captiuitie Some doe interprete this verse otherwise that is turne our captiuitie O Lorde as the riuers in the South which in the summer are dryed vp in the desert places by the heat of the sunne but in the winter are filled vp againe with plentie of water How necessary the spirit of prayer is they that haue not sought with Satan doe not know Let vs therefore giue our selues wholy to the continuall exercise of prayer and meditation of the holye Scriptures For negligence and securitie encrease by little and litle as rust doth in the iron and the word slippeth as it were out of our handes before we be ware If it so come to passe then hath Satan gotten halfe the victory already who seeketh all opportunitie to see vppon vs and then specially is he wont so to doe when he perceiueth our heartes to be voide of the word of god Here he stirreth vp of a spark as it were a flaming fire in our conscience which before we can quench and apprehend Christ and his worde againe either we are oppressed with anguish and sorrow or vtterly consumed For he is a murtherer and seketh by al meanes how to destroy vs It is necessary then for vs to haue our senses exercised and our mindes occupyed in the meditation of the worde and prayer that the enemy find vs not vnarmed or vnprouided which so busily seeketh to spoyle vs of this redemption I also am a Diuine which by great troubles haue gotten some knowledge and vnderstanding of the holy Scripture and yet am not I so lifted vp through this gift but that I doe dayly exercise my selfe euen ●mongest the children in the Catechisme in secrete meditation I meane of the commaundements the articles of the beliefe and the Lords prayer c. with an earnest and attentiue minde not onely recounting with my selfe the wordes but obseruing and weying also what euery word signifieth And doubtles whē I am not thus exercised but am occupyed with other matters I finde a manifest discommoditie thereby For
body Nowe then shouldest thou be able to gouerne the bodyes and the mindes of other in any one house citie or common wealth As Ieremy sayth The way of man is not in him selfe neither is it in man to walke and to direct his steppes So this body which thou bearest about is not in thine owne handes This is the true maner of teaching as touching ciuill and houshold gouernment namely to shew the efficient and the final cause thereof And this doctrine is so much the more necessary for that we are all vnder the one of these two gouernments For although thou be not a married man yet must thou needes be in some part of the houshold gouernment For either thou art a sonne a daughter a seruaunt or thou hast seruants or neighbours or else thou are in some place and calling in the house or in the societie of men Nowe it cannot be auoyded but that many thinges will happen vnto thee in thy vocation both tedious and greeuous Wherefore thou must learne how to behaue thy selfe in these kindes of life also from whence they come and to what ende they are ordayned But of all others they haue most neede of this knowledge which are placed in authoritie or any kinde of life aboue others to whom it belongeth to rule either in the common wealth or to gouerne a family that they may know what is the end of their rule gouernment This Psalme therefore properly pertaineth to Salomons Ecclesiastes and not only conteineth the same doctrine but in a maner the same wordes also In Ecclesiastes he saith I haue seene vanities that is I haue seene that there hath bene no successe eyther in housholde or in politike gouernment but vexation of spirit was in them both VVherefore there is nothing better for a man then to reioyce in God and to doe good in his life as much as he is able This Psalme therefore seemeth to be as it were a briefe summe of that booke whereby he teacheth both what is the efficient cause of politike and housholde gouernment and also to what ende they must be directed He teacheth that we are but Gods ministers and workmen and are not the efficient but the instrumentall cause wherby God worketh these things As Wisdom it selfe sayth By me kings rule So the father is the instrument of generation But God is the fountaine and author of life Likewise the Magistrate is but the instrumēt wherby God maintaineth peace and politike lawes The husband and wife are the instrumentes whereby both house goods are preserued The knowledge hereof bringeth great consolation For if matters fal out otherwise or if we doe not attaine to the ende whereunto they were appoynted we may sa yt I am but an instrument and these thinges are not in my power but are gouerned of a greater and an higher power Wherfore if my wife dye if my children dye if any other trouble affliction or calamitie happen say These thinges are not in my hand I am but onely as an instrument I doe all that I can I labour and trauel I am carefull and vigilant but the Lord in whose hands all these things are giue good successe or else all my endeuour all my trauell is in vaine For if the first cause be lacking the second cause can doe nothing And thus teacheth this Psalme as touching the efficient cause In like maner it teacheth also concerning the final cause Wherby we may vnderstand that all things are the meere gift of God and perteyne to the glory and the seruice of God not to our own glory and our owne pleasure So that we ought to say thus hath the Lord done ht hath giuen this happy ende To him therefore be praise and glory for euer Amen Verse 1. Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it These are wordes of great force and power whereby he generally condemneth all our labour trauell declaring that it is not the efficieut cause of those commodities for the which we trauell Here view and consider all the histories both holy and prophane of all nations and ye shall see that God gaue such a gift vnto many that they began to rule both common wealthes and families with great commendation But when they sawe that there followed no good successe they were vtterly discouraged often tymes for their great care trauel they gained nothing else but extreme ingratitude Howe many excellent men in the common wealth of Athens howe many emonges the Lacedemonians how many in the common wealth of Rome were condemned cast into exile by vnthankfull citizens Yea this is generally the condition of all men which in their vocation whether it be priuat or publike endeuour to liue vprightly and carefully trauell to doe good in the common weale that they being hindred by the malice deceitful prac●ises of others ran neuer bring to passe that they take in hand For Satan deuiseth so many letts stirreth vp so many enemies such hatred conspiracies against them that either they are ouercome with impacience and so cast away all care of the common wealth or being moued with great indignation they become cruel against those whom they see to withstand their proceedings Thus eyther of a desperate mind they forsake all or with crueltie and tiranny they wil rule all But let vs learne to keepe a meane and if God haue called vs to the gouernment of a familie let vs say O Lorde thou hast giuen me a wife house and children Ouer these by thy authoritie I am made a ruler I will doe therefore what in me lyeth that all thinges may be well gouerned If they haue not such successe as I desire I will write Patience But if they come well to passe and take good successe then wil I say thankes and praise be vnto thee O lord It is not my work● but thy gift alone And euen so must he doe which is called to any office in the common wealth which hath farre more neede of this holy counsell because of the great troubles and trauells which he must susteyne He that is able thus to doe shall liue quietly in matrimony and in the gouernment of the common wealth and shal enioy the comfort and tranquilitie of heart and conscience in the middes of all daungers and calamities Wherefore this I often teach and this counsell I giue that such as enter into any office in the common wealth or into matrimony should begin with inuocation of Gods holy name and prayer So that who so euer would marry a wife should earnestly call vpon God and craue his helpe that he would not onely giue him a good wife but also that he would gouerne and direct the whole course of his life For when this is neglected he marrieth a wife vpon hope that he shall haue such a one as his new loue doth imagine But afterwards when it falleth out otherwise so that
neuer waxe rich Wherfore they exhorted them to winne industrie with their trauell so should they the sooner attaine to that which they so painfully sought For a master of a housholde in whom there is some industrie can doe more with one pe●ee of gold then some other can doe with two A woman skilful of houshold affaires industrious prouident withal can liue with her family a whole yeare of those charges wherwith an other woman not so industrious prouident and discreete is not able to endure halfe a yeare For industrie hath alwaies best successe But they them selues which gaue this counsel to those poore men did not see that industrie is also the gift of god Now the cause why industrie so greatly helpeth and bringeth such successe to our endeuours and labours is for that it obserueth the circumstances of persons places conuenient times other occasions that nothing be done in vaine nor labour lost These thinges he that doth not obserue in houshold and politike gouernment must of necessity be many times deceiued No maruell is it then if great riches are not able to suffice a man in whom this industrie is lacking that is which doth not with discretion obserue consider the circumstances before mentioned These men therefore gaue this counsel that industrie should be ioyned with labour because labour without industrie hath no successe But Salomon speaketh more properly not that industrie but that the Lord him selfe is the cause For euen this also is the gifte of God through industrie to gouerne the common wealth and to doe nothing rashly but to obserue all occasions and to seeke all opportunitie that all thinges may be done in conuenient time place c. Such a wi●●ad that noble Prince Friderike Duke of Saxony Elector He was in deed a man industrious who said not all thinges who did not all thinges vpon a sudden which he was able to say or doe He dissembled many thinges but in conuenient time and place he did more with a word then many other without this industrie could doe with power and great strength Such are they which are not onely painefull and diligent but also industrious which can waite for occasion and time conuenient when one word will strike and pearce more deepely then at an other time many swordes could doe But this is humane and not diuine wisedom Wherfore it is not sufficient to gouerne such high weighty matters but there muste be prayer also ioyned therewith that the Lorde would be present that he would keepe watch and warde or else shall mans industrie be all in vaine be it neuer so greate So teacheth this Psalme as touching the principall cause whereby all the indeuours counsells and policies of men are ruled and directed and keepeth vs that we make no confusion or mixture of causes and that of the first cause we make not the second cause or else in deede no cause at all For he did not create things and so leaue them saith a certaine Philosopher speaking of God and very well He did not so ordaine matrimonie and ciuill gouernment as the shipwright doeth the shippe who after that hee hath finished his worke so leaueth it and committeth it to the mariner to be guided as he will. But God is still present with his creature and gouerneth both the house and the common wealth This men doe not knowe but thinke that God hath no regarde of those thinges which we doe but leaueth them vnto vs Contrary to this prophane and wicked opinion Salomon teacheth vs that we should feare God call vpon him and so take in hand to gouern our families and to serue the common wealth as God hath appointed vs with a cheerefull hart Also he admonisheth vs not to presume vpon our owne wisedome policie power munitions or riches All historyes are ful of examples and our owne experience also doth witnesse that presumption hath neuer good successe and yet the world will still be the worlde and doth not beleue Wherfore these things are profitable for none but for the godly But if the world will not heare and obey let it rage let it vexe and torment it selfe since it seeth and feeleth it selfe to watch to labour to be oppressed with continuall toyle and trauell and all in vaine And this doth it worthely iustly and most iustly suffer For here it is written that except the Lorde keepeth the citie the keeper watcheth in vaine and this doe they reiect Wherefore the Lord also reiecteth them he will not keepe nor builde their citie and so what remaineth but onely in vaine Verse 2. It is in vaine for you to rise earely and to lye downe late and eate the breade of sorrow It is in vaine saith he for a man to rise earely to goe late to bed and with great labour to get his liuing for so signifieth bread in this place The Hebrewes call it the bread of affliction The meaning then of these wordes is this that bothe in houshold and ciuill gouernment all mans endeuour all his care study and trauel is in vaine except it be blessed from aboue For by these kinds of speech to rise earely and to lye downe late he signifieth greate care and paineful trauel As if he saide It is not thy strength thy care thy study and endeuour that can make thee riche but the blessing of God maketh a man rich c. God wil not giue successe vnto thee because of thy labour like as he will not giue riches to such as are idle and carelesse Notwithstanding thou must labour and yet must thou commit and commend al to God which blesseth and giueth successe vnto all But it seemeth as the text soundeth that the Prophet here forbiddeth laboure contrary to that sayinge in Genesis In the sweat of thy face thou shalt eate thy bread Also to these wordes of S. Paule Let him ruleth doe it with diligence Here he seemeth to say the contrary For he pronounceth that to laboure to rise earely and to lye downe late to be carefull and painfull is but in vaine whereas notwithstanding in other places sloth and idlenes are condemned Here ye must make a distinction betwene faith and workes or betwene the spirite and the fleshe With thy hart thou must trust in God and call vppon him but if thou hast maried a wife or bearest any office in the common wealth that perteineth to the olde man to the flesh not to the spirit to works and not to faith Here thou must labour and exercise the outwarde man Thou must rise earely and lye downe late that is thou must be carefull as touching the outwarde man howe thou maist prouide for thy family doe good in the common wealth c but thy minde must be free and voyde of care for care ought to extend no farther then to the outward man onely That is the outwarde man ought not to be idle and slouthfull but diligently to doe that
God as the text saith God created male and female He created them saith the Scripture to signifie that they are not their owne gouerners and creators but both male female are the creatures of god Afterwardes he addeth more ouer and he blessed them saying increase and multiply Out of this place of Genesis is this verse of the Psalme taken For in that God giueth vnto vs children it is no worke of ours but it is the blessing of god Notwithstanding the world although it hath continuall experience of this blessing doth neither vnderstande nor consider the same For the procreation of children because it is a dayly benefite and a continuall blessing is nothing estemed Thus the world walloweth in voluptuousnes filthy lust and pleasure and these inestimable benefites wherein it liueth and walketh it neither knoweth nor regardeth This is moreouer to be noted that God did not so confusely blesse man as he blessed other creatures but he adorned man with a peculiar blessing to the ende we might vnderstand that it is the gift of God to haue sonnes daughters and that neither the husband shoulde attribute to him selfe any thing as though he made his wife friutefull nor the wife should attribute any thing to her selfe as though she conceaued through her owne strength and the benefite of nature but should learne that these are in deede heauenly and diuine workes Therfore some times we see that healthfull and bewtifull women coupled with strong and healthfull husbands and liuing in great wealth and pleasure are barren and fruiteles notwithstanding Whereby God would show that to beget and to bring forth children is the blessing of God commeth not of the power of man or the strength of nature Contrarywise an other man that liueth poorely hardly can get a good meales meate hath a house full of children It is a true saying therefore of the Germanes when they speaking of their children doe say God hath giuen me childrē But although this saying be in euery mans mouth yet are there very few that know what this blessing is or esteme it as they should doe because it is ouerwhelmed and darkened with inordinate lust and other filthines of the flesh with labours and trauells with troubles miseries and calamities These thinges I say doe hide and darken this heauenly benediction so that it seemeth to be now not a benediction but rather a malediction For when parents dye and leaue their children without help and succour when men see their children or their wiues stubborn intractable and disobedient c. it seemeth to them that the malediction far passeth the benediction Wherefore the Scripture calleth vs back to the consideration and beholding of the matter it self and the substance of matrimony which is the blessing of God that in beholding the same we may ouercome what miseryes and calamities so euer we finde in matrimony And here appeareth our infirmitie and incredulitie For this is the nature of vs all that one discommoditie doth greeue vs more then an hundreth commodities can make vs to reioyce We see that he which hath an healthful body is more troubled with a push or a byle in his knee or in his elbow then ioyfull for the health of his whole body besides according to the Dutche prouerbe If thou cary a man to Rome vpon thy shoulders and hurte him neuer so litle when thou settest him down thou losest all thy thankes Example hereof we see also in vnthankfull children that when their parentes haue brought them vp with great charges either they desire the death of their parents or else they are disobedient and forget all the benefites bestowed vpon them So it commeth to passe also in matrimony that the benediction of God is darkened and ouerwhelmed with the malediction as the worlde counteth it The holy Ghost therefore doth here notably set foorth and amplyfie this blessing to the end we should rather behold the author and creator him selfe then those troubles wherewith this holy kinde of life is hid and ouerwhelmed Let vs therefore diligently set forth this word and in that let vs rest which we reade in Genesis And he blessed them With this worde let vs arme and confirme our selues against those troubles and calamities and say If this our calling kind of life be the blessing of God I wil reioyce in the Lord the giuer of this blessing how so euer the matter fall out be it well or euill and I will assuredly perswade my selfe that this worke pleaseth god For I know that my wife my children my house family are the giftes of God that thou maist write this title it is the gift of God vpon all that thou hast and doest possesse and thus wrapping the blessing of God and diuine Maiestie in thy kinde of life thou shalt ouercome all troubles and calamities be they neuer so great They that lack or neglect the worde and are without the feare of God can not be thus perswaded of the state of matrimony but they thinke that man and wife are coupled togither by fortune and that children are begotten and borne of them euen as of swine When they haue them that bring them vppe in wealth and pleasure Some time it commeth to passe also that the children of wise excellent and notable men doe myserably degenerate as many examples doe witnesse both in holy and prophane histories and as commonly we see also at this day Wherefore the holy Ghost calleth vs backe to the word of God that we should learne that our bodyes are not our owne but that if thou be a man thou shouldest thinke that what so euer is in thee pertaining to a man is the gifte of God and euen so that children are Gods blessing and his gifte and not thyne owne Wherefore continue thou the creature of God and perswade thy selfe that thy life and thy body in that thou art a man doe please god Then mayest thou without any great trouble and with a good conscience enioy those thinges which God hath giuen thee namely thy life thy wife thy children and thy goods and if any troubles come thou mayst ouercome them also by comparing the same with the other benefites which thou shalt finde in thy kinde of life to be more much greater then all the troubles and calamities are besides Moreouer by the name of children he signifieth not onely the fruite of the wombe but also what so euer is necessarye for the bringing vp the clothing and the nourishing of the same For he that giueth and createth children giueth and createth also with them necessary sustenance to feede to nourish them or else they can not continue To some therefore God giueth more to some lesse yet so that he suffereth none to perish through famine except it be to shewe his iudgement vpon some Moreouer children doe bring with them generally euē in their birth by a diuine working of God what so euer is needefull for their sustentation that they
First of all here is to be noted that the Prophet doth not by and by enter i●ts the promises of God concerning matrimony as though they were giuen onely in respect of matrimony but he beginneth with the first table calleth him blessed that feareth the lord And this he doth to shew that the world doth not vnderstād what it is to marry a wife and to liue in the state of Christian matrimony Wherefore if any troubles come it can not beare them patiently and therefore it is not blessed but rather miserable and vnhappy But he that feareth the Lord whether he be called to any gouernment in the common weale or marry a wife is blessed what successe so euer follow thereof For it may be that euen they also which feare the Lord shall haue no good successe in matrimony but shall be coupled eyther with wicked or with froward and disobedient wiues or else they shall be otherwise shaken with one tentation or other as with the vntimely death of a good wife or with vntractable and degenerate children or with barennes lacke of fruite Here if a man be godly and fearing God he shall soone ouercome these troubles tentations For thus will he thinke with him selfe I haue mette with such a wife as is vnto me many wayes a great crosse and vexation with whom no man else could quietly liue one day But this gift God hath giuen me that I should know and acknowledge him to be both my creator and father and to learne patiently to endure abide his good will and pleasure c. with this gift are ouercome not onely all the troubles and miseries of matrimony but all calamities besides what so euer The Prophet therfore beginneth this holy hymne or this mariage song after this maner If thou wilt be happy and blessed hast a mind to liue in the state of matrimony this shalt thou finde that the Lord will giue vnto thee a wife house and children with other commodities But aboue all things see that thou feare God and in the name of God begin this kind of life This is a profitable doctrine which here the holy Ghost setteth forth euen at the beginning to the ende that he which can not liue a single life should begin his matrimony with the first commaundement and calling vpon God for his help succour should come forth into the presence of God and say Lord thou sayest vnto me in thy word that thou art and wilt be my Lord and my god Thou hast made me a man or thou hast made me a woman This is thine owne creation and this is thine owne worke I did not so make my selfe neyther was I so made by fortune or chaūce Giue good successe therfore vnto thy creature graunt that I may be a happy husbande or that I may be a happy wife c. that so we may beginne in the feare of God that we be not secure careles or presuming of our owne strength nor rashly enter into this kind of life like sauage brutish people and such as neither know nor feare God but may call vpon him who hath created vs to this kind of life Then shall all thinges come luckely to passe then shall they haue good successe The holy Ghost beginneth his holy hymne after an other maner then other Poetes doe For he exhorteth vs that we shoulde first of al call vppon God and conceiue in our harts a sure trust of his mercy For God will not turne his eare from thee if thou call him thy creator but will againe acknowledge thee to be his creature and will not deny this to be his worke that thou art a man or that thou art a woman But presumption he abhorreth and will not haue thee to beginne this kinde of life trusting in thine owne policie but rather that thou shouldest suspecte the same knowing that God will not prosper thy doings and policies except thou aske counsell of him Therefore sayth hee Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord. For we haue dayly examples before our eyes that at the beginning there is often times vehement and feruent loue betweene man and wife whiche afterwarde is easily quenched so that either they liue miserably and vnquietly togither or else the one forsaketh the other Some times they are so drowned in wealth and pleasure that they liue all togither without the feare of God And this is a farre greater misery But worthely doe these miseryes and calamities fal vppon them For why doe they not ioyne withall the feare of God Here thou muste learne therefore to liue in the feare of God who hath created thee that thou shouldest be a husbande or that thou shouldest be a wife and he will also gouerne blesse and prosper thy mariage But if thou wilt not acknowledge him to be thy gouerner but wilt rule thy wife and thy family after thine owne fantasie without inuocation and prayer vnto God it will followe that either thou shalt ouerthrow all togither or shalt be so blinded with continuall successe that thou shalt fall yet into farre greater euils God wil be feared and serued that is he will haue vs to confesse and acknowledge that what so euer we take in hande can not prosper or haue any good successe without his helpe and assistaunce It is very profitable and necessary with all diligence to teach this doctrine to those which are yet young that they may know it and follow it The cause is this for that matrimony remayneth in the world and in the flesh that is to say euen in the middest of Deuils The husband as touching the fleshe soone lotheth or hateth the wife or the wife her husband What is the cause hereof Euen this is the cause for that matrimony consisteth in the fleshe which is wholy corrupt poysoned with sinne This the flesh I meane Satan inflameth with hatred and euery light offence or else with ielousie Wherefore if thou looke not vnto the wil of God thy matrimony can neuer be vnto thee either stable or comfortable Wherefore youth must be well enstructed as touching matrimony that when any man shall marry a wife he may liue with her in the fauour and blessing of God and say Lord this is thy gift that I am a man This wife also is thy gift We are in the worlde and this fraile flesh and in the middest of deuils the disturbers of matrimoniall loue Giue vnto vs therefore thy blessing that albeit some offences doe rise betwene vs yet thy blessing and the reuerent consideration of thy giftes wherewith thou hast endued vs in this our matrimony may vanquish and ouercome the same c. This is the cause why he beginneth this verse with the feare of God that he may take from vs all presumption lest we shoulde thinke that we shall haue and enioy all thinges as we our selues haue imagined For so shal it not be or if it so come to passe it shal not be
without a greater mischiefe euen the reiecting of the word and knowledge of god The meanes to escape this is to feare God and to trust in him and so in the name of God with humble prayer to begin matrimony committing the successe wholy vnto God. In the Papacie they most wickedly defaced this holy institution For they called it the secular state and marryed folkes were taught to recite in their priuate confession among other sinnes the company betwene man and wife Amongst the blind popish Sophisters and schoolemen there was a disputation as touching veniall and mortall sinne in carnall copulation as contemptuously this carnall Spiritualtie calleth it betwene man and wife But these were both vaine and wicked disputations And hereof Augustine semeth to haue giuen an occasion when he saith speaking of veniall sinne that it is like to the sinne of married folkes for the which saith he men doe pray Forgiue vs our trespasses True it is in deede that this companing of man and wife togither ought to be moderate to suppresse the feruencie of fleshly desire And like as a measure ought to be kept in meats and drinkes so godly married folks ought not to yeelde to much vnto the flesh For this burning desire and foule lust wherewith the flesh is enflamed commeth of sinne Therefore for the punishment of this lust is annexed withall the bitter wormewood of many cares and troubles which men haue for liuing for children for the gouerning of priuate and publike affaires besides the offences of their familyes their neighbours c. All these thinges are cast vppon the flesh as salt to season the wantonnes of the same For whose infirmity God by matrimony would prouide but not encrease the desire and lust thereof This doctrine then must first be taught for else can not matrimony be happy comfortable and pleasing God that such as enter into the state of matrimony should feare God that is to say they should cast away the presumption of their owne deuises and policies and giue them selues to humble prayer desiring of God a good a chast and obedient wife and also good successe in other thinges and that if any thing happen contrary to their expectation they may take it in good part that their hope is deceaued and their policie disapoynted And here the Prophet doth not onely require that whiche is commaunded in the first precept to witt that they should giue vnto God his due worship that is they should feare God and trust in his goodnes and mercy for this is the seruice which we owe vnto God but he addeth moreouer Blessed is the man that walketh in his wayes that is to say which doth the workes also of the first table which yeeldeth obedience vnto his parentes and to the Magistrate which committeth no murther which doth nothing that may be hurtfull vnto others which defileth not him selfe with harlots and whoredome but marrieth a wife to this ende that he may liue chastly and auoyd such wickednes The Papistes were wont to sing and yet doe sing this Psalme but they vnderstande it not For they follow Hierome which vnlearnedly and very vngodly thus reasoneth against matrimony If married folkes be blessed saith he it followeth that Isaac before he was forty yeres olde likewise other holy men whiche had no wiues were not blessed with this maner of blessednes But we know that the psalme speaketh not of those which are priuileged as Ieremy had a commaundement that he should not marry Iohn Baptist for a singular purpose abstained from mariage as our Sauiour Christ also did Let them which haue this gift saile on with their owne winde and keepe the course appoynted vnto them of god But let vs which haue not this gifte are without this priuilege of these excellent men learne this verse that is in the feare of the Lorde let them marry and so walke in the wayes of the lord And let them know that they may so liue in this kind of life that both they may feare the Lord and walke in his wayes contrary to the vaine perswasion and deuilish doctrine of the Pope and the whole Papacye which dreame that matrimony is such a kinde of life as is eyther cleane contrary to religion or not agreeable to the same Verse 2. Thou shalt eate the labour of thy hands thou shalt be blessed and it shall be well with thee This must they learne also which are married that they must labour For the law of nature requireth that the husband should sustaine and nourish his wife and his children For after that man and wife doe know that they ought to feare God their creator who not onely made them but gaue his blessing also vnto his creature this secondly must they know that some thing they muste doe that they consume not their dayes in ease and idlenes Hesiodus the Poet giueth this counsel that first thou shouldest get thee a house then a wife and also an oxe to till thy ground First he would haue thee to prouide an habitation where thou mayest dwell with thy wife and children then a wife but yet so that thou be not without an oxe also to plowe the ground that is thou must haue some thing wherewith thou mayest maynteyne and succour thee and thyne For albeit that our diligence care and trauell is not able to mainteyne our family yet God vseth the same as a meane by the which he will blesse vs So neither to the husband man the sowing of his seede nor to the preacher his trauell in preaching the word is sufficient to mainteyne his liuing yet God by these or rather with these giueth vnto them wherewith they may liue Wherefore the Prophet would haue all married folkes to liue in the sweate of their faces and to be exercised with labour that they may tame the flesh and mortifie the lustes thereof For they that liue in idlenes walke in the wayes not of the Lord but of the deuill For neither are they neyther liue they in the ordinance of God for God hath ordeyned labour And here behold the wisedom of the holy Ghost Labour is one of the discommodities of matrimony But howe wel here doth the holy Ghost hide this discommoditie when first he sheweth that labour is commaunded of God and afterwardes promiseth that although it seeme to be neuer so hard and so greeuous a thing yet by it God will blesse vs This is in deed to mingle wormewood with suger like as also Iesus Sirach adorneth labour with this commendation that he sayth it was ordeyned of God and he hath also a pleasure therein Great neede haue we of this admonition because of our corrupt nature For most true it is that the nature of all men as the Poet sayth is prone and ready to fall from labour to filthy lust and fleshly libertie This holy hymne therfore teacheth the husband with his spouse that in their matrimony they should feare God and put their trust in him and
they will not goe talke eate or drink togither This is a deuilish life Wherefore this exhortation must be diligently learned and exercised that through patience we may endure and ouercome all labours sorowes and vexations beeing contented with this benefite that we knowe this kinde of life to be acceptable vnto the Lord and that in it and by it he will blesse vs Thus with a merry and a cherefull conscience we shall ouercome all troubles and tentations whatsoeuer Verse 3. Thy wife shall be as the fruitefull vine on the sides of thy house thy children like the oliue plantes round about thy table We haue hearde two singular commendations of holy matrimony where the husband the wife doe liue togither in the feare of the Lord walke in his wayes namely that this life is acceptable vnto God and that he will blesse the same Therefore we are here exhorted and encouraged patiently to endure the cares and troubles which God hath allotted to this kind of life to the ende that whiles we are beaten downe humbled and kepte vnder by these troubles the corruption of the fleshe may be mortified and the infirmitie of nature may be healed For where as the idle bellied Monks taught men to sequestre them selues from all labours and trauells and from all worldly busines and to seeke a solitary life where they might liue in all ease and quietnes the Prophet here teacheth that this pleaseth not god But this is it that pleaseth God that we should be tossed with troubles and shaken with tentations knowing that God hath appoynted vs here to suffer labours sorrowes and vexations both actiue and passiue which matrimony bringeth with it He sayth not that we must liue in idlenes and eate the labour of other mens handes as the Popes holy Sainctes those Epicures and delicate Martyrs doe Moreouer I somewhat touched before that Hierome and some other also after him did dispute as touching this Psalme why Dauid commendeth the life of a godly man to be so happy if he haue a wife since that in the holy Scripture there are so many holy men which liued a single life as peraduenture Helias and Helizeus did with other like albeit of these men he can not thus certeynly affirme but Ieremy he may To this I aunswere that the Prophet here meaneth nothing els but to enstruct the godly as touching this kind of life instituted of God and goeth not about to compell all men to marry but teacheth those which are married or entend to marry to know and vnderstand what they haue when they haue wiues so that both the single life and also matrimony may haue their libertie The meaning therfore of the Prophet here is nothing else but to commend and set forth the gift of God and not to compell any man to marry For one and the same spirite hath distributed his gifts to some after one maner and to some after an other We are all in one body and we are all bewtified with one and the same spirite but not after one maner Let them therefore to whome it is giuen to receaue this abyde still in their single life and let them glory in the Lorde On the other side let those that are not so strong but knowe and feele their infirmitie that they can not liue both chast and out of matrimony let these I say consider more their owne infirmitie then the discommodities and troubles that belong vnto matrimony and let them knowe that they haue an excellent remedy created of God for their infirmitie and therefore the Scripture calleth the woman a helper vnto the man Wherefore although we be vnlike in giftes yet let euery one of vs serue God in our gift and calling shewe our selues in all godlines to be the true and faythfull familie of that great and heauenly housholder This is then as I sayde the purpose of the holy Ghost to extoll and magnifie this gift of matrimony since it is so despised in the world and the true prayses thereof are so hid and darkned partly by the corruption of the flesh which can feele nothing but present troubles and partly by the suggestions of the Deuill and sclaunders of the world and yet so notwithstanding that other giftes lose not their commendation Let widowes let virgins abide in their calling The holy Ghost here speaketh nothing of our virgins but of matrimony onely to the ende that they which liue in that state should knowe and acknowledge their gift Now whereas Hierome both vngodly and without all iudgement obiecteth that Abraham Isaac and other Patriarkes married wiues when they were of great yeares and liued many yeres also in matrimony without children and therefore were not blessed according to this Psalme I deny the consequence For Abraham Isaac others were blessed euen before they married wiues or had any children Like as also widowes and virgines which do beleue are baptised are blessed And as touching the Psalme it speaketh of the gift onely compelleth none thereunto but adorneth bewtifieth it with this singular commendation because it is so miserably defaced and contemned in the world The Pope and his Cleargie doe pretend that they eschewe mariage for the loue of chastity But that is false We must beleue S. Paule rather who foretold that they should contemne matrimony being ledde with the spirit of error and not with the loue of chastitie especially seeing they haue made a lawe whereby they forbid matrimony Therefore they speake a lye through hypocrisie when they say that the loue of chastitie is the cause why they abhorre matrimony For neither are they chast neither can they be chast as their abominable life and wicked practises do declare But this doe they that they may liue in ease and securitie and be free from all the cares and troubles of matrimony And againe that through hypocrisie they may winne vnto them selues an opinion of great holines amongst the people and be reuerenced in the worlde as spectacles and very Angells rather then men and so be counted worthy to eate the labour of other mens hands This is the holy that is to say the execrable chastitie of our Papists Munkes Frears Priestes and Nunnes They that after this maner absteyne from matrimony are very Antichristes according to the saying of Daniel who foresheweth that this is a most euident marke of Antichrist that he shall not care for the desire of women The same place doth the ordinary glose also apply vnto Antichrist with these wordes that he shal make a great shewe of chastitie to the ende he may the more easily deceaue We also adde this cause moreouer that they make this glorious pretence of chastity and holines because they would liue in ease and idlenes eschewe the cares and troubles that matrimony bringeth with it which are meete necessary for a godly man if it please God to lay them vpon him Thus ye see that matrimony is a good an
Wherefore these high commendations of matrimony are here set against the venemous tongues both of Satan and of wicked men wherewith they do so maliciously sclaunder this kind of life Also against the corrupt peruerse iudgement of the flesh whereby we are prouoked either to a lothing contemning of this kind of life or else to impaciencie when our eyes are blinded in discerning and iudging the benefites and commodities thereof and are still in beholding of the faults the incommodities or troubles that belong to the same Thus the wiser sort euen emongst the Gentils would not doe For they did se that there is a naturall affection in the man and the wife towards their children and a mutuall loue faithfulnes betwene them selues both these things they praysed and set forth with greate commendation So God by the smal number of the wiser sort euen emong the Gentiles did ouercome the multitude of these viperous tongues which are so venimous spitefull against this kind of life How much more then ought we to defend matrimony we I say whom the holy Ghost moueth stirreth vp so to do by these excellent similituds wherby he sheweth that God is so delited with the life of married folkes that not onely he giueth his blessing for the sustentation of this life but also the blessing of the belly and of the brestes as Moises calleth it This no doubt would not God doe if he hated such as are maryed For he said vnto Adam All that groweth vppon the earth shall be vnto thee for foode and sustenance After the floode also he gaue vnto man the vse of cleane beasts Yea he giueth vnto matrimony what treasures and riches so euer are in the worlde and what so euer in nature is conteyned All these are liuely testimonies that God approueth lyketh and loueth this kinde of life although the holy Scriptures should speake nothing thereof at all Moreouer who seeth not that the propagation of man and woman kind is ordained of God Let vs therefore be mindful of these similitudes therewith arme our selues against the wicked peruerse iudgement of reason against the deuil venimous tongues which magnifie and ertoll vanitie and abhominable filthynes and these inestimable giftes they most wickedly dispraise and despise Verse 4. Lo thus shal the man be blessed that feareth the Lord. Hetherto we haue hearde those excellent commendations of matrimony which the holy Ghost setteth foorth to confirme and comfort such as are appoynted to this kinde of life that they might patiently suffer the incommodities the troubles and tentations of matrimony and not followe the iudgement of the worlde which like vnto the mule and the asse followeth the fence of the fleshe and is ouercome with these troubles and tentations The good giftes of God it vnderstandeth not but some tymes it detesteth and abhorreth them For ye shall finde many to whom it semeth a great misery to haue many childrē as though matrimony were ordayned for beastly pleasures onely and not to this end rather that we might doe acceptable seruice both to God and man in nourishing and bringing vp of children These men are ignorāt of that which is most comfortable in matrimony For what is to be compared vnto the loue of parentes towards their children especially since here thou seest that children are the greatest portion of Gods blessing But here againe we haue nede of faith For the world taketh it not for a blessing when a man getteth his liuing by labour trauel suffereth the troubles and vexations of his wife his children his seruaunts and such like whereof in matrimony there are many These thinges I say the world estemeth not as blessinges but abhorreth them as maledictions But the holy Ghost to confirme the mindes of the godly cōmendeth and setteth forth all that he hath hitherto said by this sweete and comfortable name and calleth them blessinges to the ende he may stirre vs vp to know God and his giftes rightly lest that in the middes of his benefits and blessings we should fall to a lothing thereof as the world is wont to doe which regardeth not those things which it hath presently enioyeth but desireth the things which it hath not Wherefore this vehement kinde of speech is diligently to be noted in that he calleth this life blessed and happy which to the iudgement of reason is miserable and full of calamitie when he saith Loe thus shall the man be blessed c. What canst thou desire more In that thou hast a wife and children and liuest with the labour of thy handes it is in deede the blessing of god Wherfore thou hast not onely great cause not to be offended but also to giue God thankes for his great blessings But how few are there to be found which doe beleue this And if any doe beleue it yet through infirmitie they are led away from this faith and forgetting the blessing they become vnpatient as if they were in the middest of Gods malediction It is therefore to be wished that this saying of the holy Ghost as a singular consolation might be alwayes before the eyes and in the eares of the godly For how shall we finde a more manifest argument that the life of such as are married pleaseth God thē this that their whole life is nothing else but a blessing In deede it so commeth to passe often times that they are vexed with the sinne of impatiency through the offences of their familye their children and some times their neighbours But what then All things cannot be so pure and so perfect in this our infirmitie but that oftentimes we shall feele either some excesse or some lack both within the house and without But this sinne of impatiencie the dayly prayer of the godly doth quench ouercome And thus must the godly comfort them selues that they are placed among Gods blessings and liue a life blessed of god This faith the greater and stronger it is the more ioy it bringeth For albeit some troubles doe happen we some times also are ouertaken with sinnes yet is the worde of God omnipotent Wherefore in all tentations the victory is theirs which stick faithfully thereunto These wordes therefore muste be receiued as the oracles of God and this kinde of life we must adorne with due praise and honour since that God doth so richly poure out his blessing vpon it This must we not onely knowe that we may set it forth and commend it to others but all of vs which liue in this kind of calling must commend and apply the same also vnto our selues that whether pouertie diseases vexations troubles of our familie or any other like tentations doe oppresse vs we may endure the same with patience resting vpon this most plentifull consolation that the holy Ghoste calleth this state a blessed kinde of life And this they finde this they know and this they doe which feare God and serue him truely as he sayth So shall the
man be blessed that feareth the Lord. For the true seruice of God is to feare God to trust in God and to haue thy whole affiance fixed in him Upon these godly motions of the mind afterwards followeth obedience in our vocation and other thinges which are commaunded of god For all these thinges the feare of God doth comprehend They that feare not God vnderstand nothing hereof neither doeth the holy ghost here speake any thing of them Verse 5. The Lord out of Sion blesse thee that thou maiest see the wealth of Ierusalem all the dayes of thy life Now after these high commendations of matrimony the holy ghoste addeth an excellent prayer wherein he desireth that God would blesse more more this kind of life and that for such married persons he would giue peace and tranquilitie to the common weale Nowe all such prayers haue a promise included that all things shall come to passe as they doe pray Moreouer where he addeth The Lord out of Sion c. he doth it because the worship of God was at that time in Sion Therfore not onely in hart they looked towards that place as before we haue declared but they turned their faces also that way when they prayed because God had promised that he would there dwell and there would receaue the prayers and sacryfices of the people Hereof come these sayinges To pray before the Lord To offer before the Lorde To appeare before the Lord that is to say in the tabernacle wherin was the Arke and the mercy seate to the which God had bounde him self that he would there be found Wherefore they called this place the fortitude the kingdom the Maiestie the glory the bewty and the rest of the Lorde as in the Psalmes and the rest of the Prophets is to be seene After the comming of Christ and the publishing of the Gospel this place had an ende Wherefore we say not now God blesse thee out of Sion or out of his holy temple but through Christ our lord For he is our true mercieseat whereof the mercie-seate of the olde Testament was but a shadowe or a figure For in Christ dwelleth the godhead corporally Therefore when we pray vnto God we desire to be heard in the name of Christe and for Christes sake like as by the example of the olde primatiue Churche publike prayers are all finished with this clause Through Christ our lord But hereof somewhat we haue saide before notwithstanding these thinges can not be spoken of enough For this is true Christian knowledge and wisedome that our cogitations shoulde not be wandring and scattered but gathered to one obiect that is to say vnto Christ For like as in the olde Testament the people was gathered togither vnto the Arke or tabernacle and was not suffered to sacrifice in Dan Bethel Gilgal and other places whiche the wicked Idolaters did choose vnto them selues so now to come vnto the Lorde there is no way to be sought by inuocation of Sainetes or any other kind of worship or workes but by Christ and in Christe alone according to that saying VVhatsoeuer ye shall aske the father in my name he will giue it you For God will no where else be founde or worshipped no not in Heauen but onely in this one person which was borne of the virgine Mary that is in Christe iesu He is the true mercieseate and the certaine throne of the Godhead where the godhead dwelleth and is founde corporally as these sentences of the Gospell doe teach No man commeth vnto the father but by me I am the way the trueth and the life Whoso haue not this obiect their mindes doe wander in infinite errours and opinions as in the example of the religious rable of Munkes Frears and such like it appeareth One order chooseth Frances an other Dominicke an other Benedict and others likewise finde out diuerse other for their Patrones by whose rule as a certaine and vnfallible way they might come vnto life And what did all these Examine their heart and they will all say with one concent that they sought god Nowe they thought God to be such a one in Heauen that if they were couered with a Munkes cowle if they abstayned from fleshe if they lyued without wiues if they touched no money c. then God would heare them and be mercifull vnto them Thus forsaking the true and onely way which is Christe they wandered euery man after his owne way no otherwise then did the Iewes who when they had one certaine way sette before them whereby they might finde God namely if they would goe into the Tabernacle and there worship God there offer sacrifice vnto him they forsooke the onely and true way and ranne to woodes valleyes riuers c. Thus whilest they thought to pacifie and please God they more greeuously offended him as in the Prophetes we may plainely see in diuerse places where God saith that he detested the wayes which they did choose vnto them selues and that he would not be founde of them For why did they not keepe the true and infallible way so plainly set forth and taught by the word of God This haue I spoken to the end we may reade with knowledge that which the Prophet saith here The Lorde out of Sion For he is constrained to make mention of this place for the auoyding of Idolatrie For God did reueale vnto them that in this only place he would be worshipped Wherfore vnder the veile and shadowe of the promise they worshipped Christ also who was included in the promise But now that Sion is destroyed and gone the treasure is opened that is to say Christ who then was hidde in the promise as vnder a veile Wherefore let vs remember that all such places must be applyed vnto Christe Like as also we are taught by experience that in tentations there is no consolation whereby afflicted mindes may be comforted and reysed vp no not in God but that onely which is in christ For it is not onely perilous but also horrible to thinke of God without christ For besides that Satan is then able most easily to oppresse vs with the brightnes of Gods Maiestie there is also great daunger euen in this that God will not so be comprehended or found We must therefore rest and dwell in this only obiect in the which God sheweth vnto vs his will euen Christ. But they which seeke any thing without Christ in their tentations shall feele by their owne perill how daungerous a thing that is But you will say howe doth God now blesse out of Sion any more Euen so that thou shalt see the wealth or prosperitie of Ierusalem that is to say God for the loue he beareth to godly married persons and such as feare God wil giue politi●e peace which is a thing most necessary not onely that they may be able the better to prouide for their liuing but also and especially to bring vp their children honestly and in the feare of god And this was
and Bishops is that which is according to the eye onely For God which saith Be of good comfort I haue ouercome the world Also Feare not those which can kill the body but are not able to kill the soule the same God alone I say is the very true greatnes to the which if you compare Satan and al the fury of the whole world what are they else but a bubble what are they else but grasse but light strawe and stubble But when they are considered with out God then doe they terrifie with a false fearefull shew and seeme to be great in deede Wherefore Christians must iudge not according to their opinion but according to the truth For an opinion is that which reason bringeth forth besides the word but truth is grounded vpon the word which iudgeth the fury the crueltie of the world raging against the faithful to be like vnto grasse vpon the house ●ops This promise being setled and surely fixed in the minde confirmeth the godly against the great power as to reason it seemeth of the world Satan Like as on the other side where the word is not that mind deceiued through a terrible shew of truth the iudgement of reason is oppressed with terror These things must not so be takē as though we did vtterly condemne the power of Princes of the world which we count to be the creature of God but their presumption the abuse of their power is it that we condemne because they fight therewith against God and his church Let them be Princes on the earth Let them vse their power and authoritie in the world but when they will needes make warre in heauen and with their power go about to inuade and oppresse the word this is horrible this is execrable and damnable And who so compareth them to bubbles to grasse to stubble yea and to nothing he saith truely he iudgeth rightly For why doe they fight against God Thinke they that we knowe not what God is and what man is what the creature is and what the Creator is Wherefore they are rightly compared to grasse on the house toppes for more contemptuosly the holy Ghost could not speake of them For this grasse is such that it soone withereth away before the sickle be put vnto it Yea no man thinketh it worthy to be cut downe no man regardeth it euery man suffereth it to bragge for a while and to shew it selfe vnto men from the house toppes as though it were somewhat when it is nothing So the wicked persecutors in the worlde which are taken to be mightie and terrible according to the outward shew are of all men most contemptible For Christians doe not once thinke of plucking them vp or cutting them downe they persecute them not they reuenge not their owne iniuries but suffer them to encrease to bragge and glory as much as they list For they know that they can not abide the violence of a vehement wind Yea though all thinges be in quietnes yet as grasse on the house toppes by litle and litle withereth away through the heate of the Sunne so tyrannes vpon small occasions doe perish and soone vanish away The faithfull therefore in suffering doe preuaile and ouercome but the wicked in doing are ouerthrowne and miserably perish as all the historyes of all times and ages doe plainly witnesse Verse 7. VVhereof the mower filleth not his hand neither the glainer his lap Here the holy Ghoste maketh a comparison betweene grasse which yeeldeth no fruite and true corne which is fruitefull that thereby he may the better commend vnto vs the former similitude and withdraw our mindes from the false dreade and terror which that vaine and counterfet shewe bringeth Fruitefull corne sayth he is such that he which moweth it shall fill his hand and he that gathereth the sheaues shall haue plenty to carry into his barne Here ye see is a truth and not a vaine shewe But grasse on the house toppes maketh a shew of that which is not true because it is fruiteles So the Pope and his Prelates with other tyrannes and persecutors haue a resemblance and a counterfet shewe that they are the Church They hold and enioy dignities Prebendes benefices as grasse hath his stalke and ●are but in deede they are none of the Church like as grasse is no corne for it withereth away before it can bring forth fruite For this is the chiefest argument wherwith they fight against vs that for this glorious shew whereof I spake they vsurpe and chalenge to them selues the title of the Church But we are commaunded to take heed that we be not deceiued by outward shewes Yea and we are admonished also that such shewes are often times occasions of great calamities Beware saith our Sauiour Christ of false prophets which come to you in sheepes clothing Also by their fruites ye shall know them Wheras then they chalenge vnto them selues the name of the church for a goodly shew which the grasse also that groweth on the house toppes hath as well as they will be counted good corne this will not we graunt them For if they be good corne let them fill the hand of the mower but this doe they not They are vnprofitable grasse yea worse then grasse For in that filthines of their wicked lustes fleshly pleasures wherewith they are horribly polluted that crueltie which they exercise against the true Church they reteine not so much as the outward shew which they pretend Wherefore since there is nothing to be founde in our aduersaries but a naked and an hypocritical shew and the same also miserably and many wayes deformed and defaced since I say there is nothing else in them but meere hypocrisie we iudge denounce them not to be the Church of Christ but of Satan Wherefore they are prepared as chaffe and stubble to the fire although vnder a shewe and colour of the Church they afflict and persecute vs neuer so much Verse 8. Neither they which goe by say we blesse you in the name of the Lord. This also commendeth and setteth forth vnto vs the similitude of the grasse For true corne hath this commēdation that it is the blessing of god They therefore which see it growe doe wish that God would blesse and prosper it This sayth Dauid shall not be sayd of that grasse that is to say of the tyrannes and the aduersaries of the Church but rather they shall be cursed of all men yea the malediction both of God and man shall be heaped vpon them Like as it hath also hapned to the Church of Rome which before our doctrine and preaching most gloriously flo●rished But nowe that the Gospel hath plucked away her visour and sheweth that she is without fruite all her cursed hypocrisie is bewrayed and her memory is perished from among the godly Thus the Prophet comforteth the faithfull and sheweth that the wicked what glorious bragge and pretence so euer they make are in deede
vnderstanding thereof into a fantasie of their owne imagination For the Prophets did know that the true God although he be of him selfe and of his owne nature infinite and incomprehensible was included notwithstanding in the Mercieseat whereunto he had bound him selfe by his word and promise Wherefore although they called him the God of heauen maker of all thinges yet this had they as a more neere proper token of the true God that they knewe him to haue his dwelling in Sion When they prayed therfore vnto God or talked of God they did it according to that forme and maner wherby God had reueiled him self in his word and promises Albeit therefore the Prophet maketh no mention in this place of that tabernacle or promises but semeth to speak vnto God simply and without all respect thereof yet we must vnderstand that he speaketh no otherwise to God then as he is setts forth in his word worship Like as we ought now no otherwise to thinke or speake of God then as he is in our true Mercieseate christ For so Christ himselfe saith vnto Philip He that seeth me seeth my father No man commeth vnto my father but by me When we haue attained this knowledge then may we safely worship God and call vpon him as he is the maker of heauen and earth and so shall we vndoubtedly find him For although of him selfe and when he is not thus reueiled he is vnsearchable and not to be found yet in his word and promises wherein he wrappeth him selfe he will both be found knowne of them that will there seke after him The Iewes therfore praying before the arke worshipped the true God of heauen and earth For God by his worde had promised that he would be there present there would heare the praiers of his people Euen so we likewise loking vnto Christ worshipping him doe worship the true God for he hath reueiled him selfe in christ Therefore Christ saith VVhat so euer yee shall aske the father in my name he will giue it you They therefore that pray vnto God and fasten not their eyes and minds vpon Christ come not vnto God but worship the imaginations of their owne harts in steed of the true God are plaine idolaters For neither wil god be sought nor found nor heare our praiers but in our mercieseat Christ. Wherfore if we wil find God in deede knowe him as we should do with boldnes come vnto him let vs loke vnto Christ according to y saying of S. Iohn He that seeth me seeth my father Thus y word gathereth togither y wandring cogitations of our harts vnto this only person Christ God man to the end we should know that there is or can be found no God without Christ Dost thou not beleue saith he that the father is in me I in him In like maner did the holy Iewes pray vnto God dwelling in Sion That place who so euer neglected although they vsed one and the same kind of worship the same wordes in prayer which they did notwithstanding they committed idolatrie because they did contrary to this commaundement namely that he would be worshipped in Ierusalem This is then a general rule to be obserued in all the Psalmes in the whole Scriptures that in the olde Testament there was no God but in Sion or in the place of the tabernacle and that all prayers were made vnto God sitting betwene the Cherubins Nowe when this temple was destroyed God set vp an other temple in the which he would be sought serued and worshipped Without this temple there is no God but the deuill in steede of God is there both sought and founde and therefore men fall either into desperation if they haue an euil conscience or else through hypocrisie into presumption as did the Idolatrous Iewes and as our Papistes now doe most arrogantly presuming of their owne righteousnes Hereunto doe these and such like sentences of the Psalmes the Prophets apperteine I lift vp mine eyes vnto the mountaines Again The Lorde out of Sion blesse thee In like maner are all such other sentences also to be vnderstand wherin is added no manifest signification of the place or of the temple as in this place Out of the depth haue I called vnto thee O Lord. He doth not here cal the Lord absolutely the maker of heauen earth as the Turks also do but the same God which dwelleth in Sion whose word promises they had amongs them that he would there receaue heare their prayes The Prophet resteth therefore wholy onely in the assured confidence of y free mercy grace of God but of that God which was in Sion which said vnto Satan I will put enmitie betwene thee and the seede of the woman For God will not be sought by our deuises Which if we shoulde doe what should we need then the word To what end was the law why was Christ reueiled Behold our aduersaries the papists wherunto they are come They pray much They recite Psalmes often They say Pater noster qui es in caelis c. But beca●se they contemne the worde yea and persecute it also with might and maine therefore vnder these good wordes they mainteine plaine idolatrie So hapneth it also to the Turkes euen then when they say they worship the liuing God the maker of heauen and earth For this cause I do so often admonish you that without Christ ye should shut your eyes and stoppe your eares and say ye knowe no God besides him which was in the lappe of the virgine Marie and suckt her breastes Where this God Christ Iesus is there is God wholy there is the whole diuinitie there is the father and the holy Ghost Without this Christ there is no god I haue known many in the kingdom of Antichrist which seeking to comprehend God by mans speculations haue horribly perished and if God through his inestimable mercie had not deliuered me from this tentation I had also fallen headlong into destruction Albeit the Prophet as I sayd maketh here no expresse mention of the temple yet shal ye see how in this psalme he wrappeth the promise concerning christ For this is the whole argument of this Psalme that there is no saluation no grace no iustification but in that God which forgiueth sinnes And is this God any other then the same which sayd vnto the Serpent The seede of the woman shall bruse thy head Therefore he taketh God here as a promise maker and sheweth that Christ was promised of the father to be a sacrifice for the sinnes of the world And here the Prophete setteth foorth vnto vs a principall poynt of doctrine touching Christian righteousnes Christian wisedom and the glory of christ These thinges Dauid treateth of euen then when the law was in his full strength and leapeth ouer the boundes of the law into Paradise or rather into the very heauen of grace mercie For why should I not
call grace heauen it selfe by the which we haue an open passage vnto heauen and the which we can neuer atteyne vnto by the law by workes or by our owne endeuour but rather as a most large heauen it receaueth vs beleuing that by adoption we are made righteous before God through Christ. Hereby we may see what the entent and purpose of the Pr●phet is in this Psalme namely to teach vs the true way to righteousnes life and saluation Againe to shew vs the way how to escape death sinne and the wrath of God that out of this life we may passe to life euerlasting And in teaching of these things he sheweth his owne experience and layeth open vnto vs his owne hart which the holy Ghost had exercised and scholed with many tentations that so he might atteyne to this doctrine wherein he goeth about here to enstruct vs also The summe whereof is that he resteth wholy in the hope of Gods mercie and in the sure trust of the forgiuenes of his sinnes But these thinges shall more clearely appeare hereafter in expounding of the Psalme Verse 1. Out of the depth haue I called vnto thee O Lorde It may seeme that the Prophet vseth here moe wordes then needeth But he that considereth well the cause which forceth him to burst out into these wordes shall see that no plentie of wordes could expresse the sorrow and anguish of his wofull hart nor sufficiently declare his daunger For it was no light or common tentation that vexed him He complained not of the perills that he was in by the rage of Saul by his sonne Absolon by the false Prophets and others nor of any other tentations which proceede of malice and hatred wherewith the world persecuteth the godly but he setteth forth here the griefe of a vexed and wounded conscience the very sorrowes of death when a man feeling his hart as it were oppressed with desperation thinketh him selfe forsaken of God when he seeth his owne vnworthines and desertes accused before God as a terrible iudge yea when it seemeth vnto him that God hath not onely forsaken him but cast him away for euer hateth abhorreth him for his sinnes These tētations are much more terrible then those which men commonly fall into for they are not without daunger of soule eternall saluation Therefore he vseth here this maner of speech saying Out of the depth I call vnto thee c. As if he should say great are the troubles wherewith I am oppressed For I feele mine owne sinnes and the iust wrath of God vpon me for the same neither can I find reliefe or comfort to my restles afflicted soule Against the malice of men wherewith they molest and vexe vs there are remedyes to be found but this wound is vncurable except the Lord send helpe and succour from aboue And in dede such troubles as the godly are commonly exercised withall as the losse of goods wife children such other may yet be ouercome or borne with patience Moreouer in those which are counted inferior sinnes as the offences of youth the deiect broken herted may more easily be raised vp againe But these afflictions seeme to them and are in deed vntollerable when they feele them selues oppressed with such horrible and hellish cogitations that they can see nothing else but that they are caste away from God for euer They therfore that feele such bitter tentations haue here an example that Dauid in him selfe felt and had experience of the like For it maketh the tentation much more greuous when they which are thus afflicted feele that as to them it seemeth which none else doe feele but they alone We must learne therefore that euen the godly haue euer suffered the same afflictions and haue bene beaten downe euen to death with the terrors of the law and sinne as we may see here by the example of Dauid crying euen as it were out of hell and saying Out of the depth doe I cry vnto thee O Lord c. But it is not inough for vs to knowe that we sustaine not these troubles and tentations alone but we muste also learne the way whereby such as haue suffered the like tentations haue beene raysed vp againe And here ye se Dauid what he doth Ye see whither he flyeth in his great distresse He despaireth not but cryeth vnto the Lord as one yet hoping assuredly to find reliefe and comforte Rest thou also in this hope and do as he did Dauid was not tempted to the end he should despaire Thinke not thou therefore that thy tentations are sent vnto thee that thou shouldest be swallowed vp with sorrowe and desperation If thou be brought downe euen to the gates of hell beleue that the Lord will surely raise thee vp againe If thou be brused and broken knowe that it is the Lorde which will heale thee againe If thy hart be ful of sorrow and heauines looke for comfort from him who hath saide that a troubled spirite is a sacrifice vnto him It is expedient also to haue some faithfull brother at hande which may comfort vs in these bitter conflictes For God would that in his Church one should help to comfort an other as mēbers knitte togither in one body and he hath promised that when two are gathered togither in his name he will be the thirde amongest them And doubtles nothing comforteth an afflicted conscience so much as to heare some godly brother declaring out of the word of God that such terrours and afflictions are sent of God not to destroy vs but to humble vs therby to make vs to acknowledge the great mercy of God offred vnto vs and to receiue the same with thankful harts But if in this distresse we be destitute of the helpe of such faithfull brethren we must then doe as Dauid ●id in this place that is we must cry vnto the Lord pray as this Psalme teacheth vs Wherein ye see such sorrowfull and bitter sighes as liuely expresse in Dauid the great anguish of spirite from whence floweth such plentifull matter and yet nothing superfluous as compelleth him not onely to say that out of the deepe depth he cryeth and calleth vnto the Lord but he putteth the Lorde also in minde of his promise thereby to moue him the rather to giue eare vnto his prayer Verse 2. Lorde heare my voice let thine eares attende to the voyce of my prayers He speaketh as I haue saide before to the same God whose seate was in Ierusalem like as we now speake vnto that God and call him father whom we knowe and worship in Christ alone On this God with deepe sighes he calleth that he would with the eye of mercie looke vpon him and gratiously harken vnto his prayer But if we thinke that we can not pray with such a minde or with such feruencie of spirit as these words doe expresse we must consider that Dauid him selfe did not thus pray in his anguish and in the
extremitie of his tentation The minde oppressed with terrour and desperation can not pray so long as such desperate assaultes doe endure but bursteth out rather into blasphemy murmuring against God and can not thinke wel or reuerently of god But when the extremitie of the conflict is past thē beginneth this crying vnto God and this vehement desire which the mind before oppressed with anguish and sorrowe could scarsely once feele It helpeth an afflicted conscience also very much as I haue said to heare some faithfull brother with comfortable exhortation counsel out of the word of God saying on this wise Brother why art thou so heauy harted Doest thou not heare that God will not the death of a sinner hast thou forgotten that God commaundeth thee to beleeue in him to trust in him Looke vpon the first commaundement What is it what requireth it else but that we shoulde worship God in faith and hope Why then shouldest thou not trust in his goo●nes and mercie Why shouldest thou despaire This is to heape sinne vpon sinne and whereas thou wast a sinner before in the second table and in the inferior degre of the commaundements of God now thou settest thy selfe in the firste table also and in the highest degree adding to thy other sinnes desperation and incredulitie c. When the heauy and troubled conscience is thus earnestly stirred vp to a stedfast hope and trust in God and to the consideration of Gods great mercie and goodnes towardes the penitent and afflicted then beginneth to arise some sparke of faith and groning of the harte bursting out into these or the like wordes Oh that I could These vnspeakeable gronings the spirite helpeth and at the length there followeth some feeling of relese comfort For God can not reiect or neglect these gronings Of these gronings we see a shadowe as it were in the first verses But why doest thou grone why art thou heauie Harken what followeth Verse 3. If thou Lorde wilt streitly marke what is done amisse O Lord who may abide it This verse in our diuinitie is well knowne neither doe I seee how either our aduersaries or Satan him selfe can auoyde it For what can they say or what haue we here that may moue vs any way to doubt As for Dauid it is witnessed of him that he was a man after Gods owne hart and in deede he is a singular example to all posteritie in all kind of godlines For although through the murther of Vrias and his adultery with Barsabe he is not with out reproch yet how great was his humilitie when the Prophete reproued him and how feruent was his faith when he raysed him vp againe Beholde moreouer his singular patience in affliction his carefull and continuall trauell for the amplifying and adnauncing of the kingdome of God of the true seruice and worship of god What should I say more Dauid hath not many fellowes whether ye consider his life and his faith or the witnes pronounced of him by the Lorde him selfe and yet he notwithstanding so excellent and so holy a man is compelled plainely to confesse his imperfection saying If thou Lorde wilte straitly marke what is done amisse O Lord who may abide it Is not this then absolutely to deny all the righteousnes puritie holines of men what so euer they be Likewise in the 31. Psalme thus he speaketh euen of those whom he calleth godly and holy For this shal euery one that is godly pray vnto thee that is for pardon and forgiuenes of their sinnes Where are they then that so highly extoll the righteousnes of workes seeing that Dauid him selfe in the sight of God simply renounceth and reiecteth his workes and all manner of righteousnes and onely desireth that the Lord would not streitly marke his iniquities But in deede our aduersaryes talke now somwhat more moderately in this matter then heretofore they haue done For they doe not now deny that faith iustifieth but yet they say that that faith which iustifieth must be furnished with charitie Thus like pies parrets they chatter and prate that they them selues doe not vnderstand But furnish faith how so euer ye list yet is this a general sentence If thou Lord wilt straitly mark what is done amisse O Lord who who may abide it Surely no man liuing For if any man had bene able to abide it then Dauid no doubt had bene able being so holy a man so perfect in the word of the Lorde so often and so many wayes exercised and tryed with afflictions to confirme and stablish him in faith and in the feare of the Lorde For I doe not thinke that emongest all the Papistes there is any one so impudent that will not thinke him selfe farre inferiour to Dauid and yet Dauid saith that righteousnes commeth not by workes For sayth he If thou wilt marke what is done amisse no man shall bee able to abide it or to stande in thy sight O Lorde Wherefore let no man trust that by his owne merites or righteousnes he shall be able to stande against the terror of death and the iudgement of god Neither doe I suppose that emongest our aduersaries there is any suche as dare presume to enter into the iudgement of God trusting vpon his owne righteousnes and yet they teach commaund and exhort other so to doe But we teach a contrary doctrine leading the Church from this false trust to a trust and confidence in the merite and death of Christ and for this cause they condemne vs as heretikes Is not this extreme malice They will not doe them selues that they teach other to doe For when death cōmeth they dare not trust to their owne merits and yet will they force other so to doe or most cruelly condemne them for heretikes Thus we are taught by the experience of all such as are not vtterly voyd of vnderstanding that no man liuing ouercommeth by his owne works or righteousnes in Gods sight and yet the whole nature of man when it is not vnder tentation still looketh vnto workes and seeketh meanes how it may by them please god But here is set forth vnto vs a simple and a plaine doctrine If thou Lord will marke what is done amisse none shall be able to abide it Who would then desire to enter into iudgement that he may be ouercome condemned cast away for euer This is therefore the summe and effect of all togither that we all Dauid Peter Paule c. were borne that we are that we liue and we die sinners But this is our glory our health and safetie that when by the Gospel we be instructed of the mercie of God and merite of Christ we leape ouer the boundes of the lawe and out of our owne workes as it were into an other world and into a newe light and comming vnto God with boldnes we say O Lorde we can not contend with thee in iudgement we can not dispute with thee as touching our
righteousnes or vnrighteousnes but if thou wilt marke our iniquities if thou in iudgement wilt demaunde whether we be righteous then must we needes perish Wherfore we appeale from thy iudgement vnto the throne of thy mercie If we haue done any thing well it was thy free gift alone Looke vpon vs therefore with the eyes of thy mercie and not with the eyes of the iustice of thy iudgement For if thou doe not pardon our iniquities and close thine eyes that thou behold them not we shall not be saued c. This light of doctrine we see that Dauid followed euen in the darkenes of the lawe But our case is nowe much better for as much as we see these thinges clearely sette before our eyes in the newe Testament For what teach we else at this day but that we are saued by fayth alone in the death and blood of Christ that by the merite of Christ onely our sinnes are couered and taken away according to that saying Blessed are they whose sinnes are forgiuen Forgiuenes of sinnes then is that heauen vnder the which we dwell through our trust and confidence in the merite of christ For he that beleueth shall not be condemned but shall passe from death to eternall life Dauid addeth here no expresse mention of Christ and yet because he hopeth for mercie therefore he loketh straight to this mercie seat that afterwards should more clearely be reueiled in the new Testament For ye see that he signifieth no lesse but if God should marke his iniquities he must needes dispayre For without remission of sinnes or knowledge of grace what haue we to rest vppon What safetie may we finde They therefore that put not their trust herein alone that by the death of Christ their sinnes are taken away and Gods eyes closed that he wil not see their sinnes must needes perish For this onely do the Scriptures set forth that our life resteth wholy and alonely in the remission of sinnes and in that the Lord will not see our sinnes but in mercie couereth them and will not remember them or lay them to our charge So that we must acknowledge confesse that we know nothing but the righteousnes of Christ Not that we should not now worke and bring forth the fruites of a holy life not that there is no sinne in vs or that God doth not hate the same but because God sayth and promiseth that he wil not marke our transgressions because we beleue in Christ and put our trust in him This shield whosoeuer holdeth out for his defence and hideth him selfe vnder it them God accepteth as his children because they haue a Sauiour but they that haue not are driuen to despaire For what can all their workes their merites their righteousnes doe seeing Dauid sayth If thou marke our iniquities O Lorde who shall be able to stand in thy sight In this verse therefore consisteth altogither which hereafter followeth Verse 4. But mercy is with thee that thou mayst be feared This mercie thou shalt not find in Moises in the lawe or in the works of the law not in Monkery not in a strait and painful life not in almes deedes c. Briefly this mercie thou shalt finde no where because it is no where but with the lord Mercie therefore is not our merite or our righteousnes but it is the free pardon of our sinnes by Christ alone Which mercy although thou shouldest afflict and punish thy selfe in a Monastery a thousand yeares or doe neuer so many so perfect or so holy workes thou shalt neuer find as the conscience which euen in a most streit and holy life feelleth desperation doth sufficiently witnesse But herein alone the conscience findeth rest and comfort when altogither naked without any addition of her owne worthynes it committeth it self to the naked and bare mercie of God and saith O Lord I haue thy promise that righteousnes commeth of mercie alone whiche righteousnes is nothing else but thy free pardon that is to saye that thou wilt not marke our iniquities I commend therefore vnto you this definition of righteousnes which Dauid here setteth forth that to marke sinne is to condēne Againe not to marke sinne is to iustifie or pronounce a man righteous And this is true righteousnes in deede when sinnes are not marked but pardoned not imputed Likewise in an other place also he defineth a blessed man and Paule allegeth the same defini-nition very aptly Blessed is the man saith he to whom God imputeth not his sinne He saith not blessed is the man which hath no sinne but vnto whom the Lorde doth not impute that sinne which he hath as here also he saith When sinnes are not marked These testimonies must be diligently collected and noted that we may see how that this doctrine is founded vppon the holy Scriptures and that all the confidence and trust that man can haue in the righteousnes of works or of the law is vtterly cut of in the iudgement of God. For this doctrine maketh all men alike and before God leaueth no difference For if by imputation onely we be righteous it followeth that not onely we be all sinners but that also there is no differenee betwene the learned vnlearned the wise and the simple the married and vnmarried the Prince and the plowman c. For this difference of degrees in the iudgement of God auayleth nothing but this onely auaileth before God that our sinnes bee forgiuen Wherfore if this doctriue had bene heretofore diligently taught all Monkry such other mōstrous kinds of life had not bene brought into the Church which the foolish people hath beleued to be more holy then others For what soeuer kinde of life a man be in this is the condition of vs all that we haue neede of forgiuenes of sinnes as Paule teacheth in the Actes where he sheweth that God suffered the manners of our fathers like as a good husband suffereth and beareth with the manners of his wife the maister of his scholers the Prince of his subiects Now if this eiuill life haue neede of such discretion and moderation that men should not be alwayes extreme and rigorous in dealing one towards an other how much more neede haue we that God should beare with vs in this our great weakenes and corruption If God should deale sharply with vs then should our transgressions dayly and continually moue him to marke straitly and sharply to punish vs But he will not marke our iniquityes This he requireth that we beleue in christ Then will he beare with vs then will he winke at our weakenes and pardon our transgressions yea in respect of our faith in Christ he will accept vs as righteous Thus Dauid turned him selfe from desperation to an assured hope and trust in Gods mercie For when we looke to our sinnes it can not be but we must needes be vexed and fall to desperation ▪ But we must not fasten our eyes vppon our sinnes onely
but must looke vnto the mercieseate So that albeit we can not deny but that we are sinners yet the remission of sinnes we may not denye And why is the remission of sinnes promised if sinners may not enioy the same Moreouer in that Dauid speaketh of mercie he con●esseth that he is a sinner and that mercie doeth properly pertaine vnto him But thou wilte say Sinnes make a man vnworthy to receaue mercie at Gods handes therefore let Dauid Paule and Peter hope for mercie as they which are holy and worthy to receaue mercie c. Such cogitations flye th●● euen as a present poyson and destruction of thy soule and thinke rather on this wise Because I am a sinner therefore remission of sinnes pertaineth vnto me Wherefore I will not despaire I will not suffer my selfe to be swallowed vppe with heauynes but I will turne vnto the Lord who hath promised mercie who also hath commaunded that I should trust and beleue in him Thus Dauid setteth forth in this verse the summe and effect of all true Christian doctrine that sunne which giueth light vnto the Church For whiles this doctrine standeth the Church shall stand and flourish But when this doctrine fayleth the Church must needes faile and fall to ruine This doctrine I doe so often and so diligently repeate for that Satan desireth and seeketh nothing so much as to plucke the knowledge thereof out of all mens hartes And this is the speciall cause of all the troubles which he stirreth vp either publikely or priuately We see what mischiefe he hath brought into the Church by Schismes and factions not onely in that men contending and striuing for newe matters haue almost forgotten this article but many also offended through dissentions and discord beginne now to loth and contemne the same It is therefore the part of a faithful Pastor not to suffer him selfe by such offences to be remoued from this article but with an inuincible constancie and continual trauell to set forth and aduance the same Moreouer how often commeth it to passe that in those also which are cast downe with the beholding and consideration of the law and their owne sinnes this article of the forgiuenes of sinnes is either lost or else in great daunger Dauid therefore in this Psalme setteth forth as hereafter we shall heare not onely his owne experience but also exhortations and promises whereby it may appeare that he carefully traueled for the preseruation of this doctrine And in deede the greatnes of the daunger ought to stirre vp a carefull diligence in this behalfe and daily to encrease the same in vs For where this doctrine is lost the mind is ouerwhelmed with all kindes of tentations So when in the Papacie this article was lost what was so monstrous that was not gladly hearde and receiued of all men The impudencie of the Monkes all the religious rable was so great that I am ashamed to speak it there was not in a maner so much as the cracke of their foule panch but they would haue men to reuerence it But contrariwise where this knowledge is reteyned and this doctrine preached all heresies may easily be ouerthrown And hereof the Papacie is a notable example which by the preaching and publishing of this one poynt of doctrine is now vanquished and banished out of mens hartes For although you reproue the life of the Papistes and speake against their whoredom conetousnes tyranny and such like enormities neuer so much and by the euill workes of the law detect their impietie yet shall you nothing preuaile For all this the Pope doth not sticke to confesse as in deede he can neuer deny his manifest abominations But sayth he although our life be defiled with sinne yet our doctrine and our kingdom notwithstanding is holy In like maner the deuill in the lawe and workes can not be conuicted For he can therein so handle him selfe that he will easily breake out as it were through a spyders webbe and lose nothing of all his power But then is he ouercome in deede when the doctrine of fayth is diligently and truely taught aud that the Papistes haue not onely lost but also haue defaced with their filthy doctrine and opinions both Christ and the true maner of iustification If we sticke to this ankerhold both the Pope and Satan shall be put to flight For if their doctrine be once conuicted as false and erroneous they haue nothing to defende them selues withall Wherfore endeuour your selues with all diligēce that this doctrine may be of you both well knowne surely stablished in your harts And let none be so arrogant as to think that he hath atteyned the full perfect knowledge of this heauenly wisedom For so long as Satan the world and our owne reason can do any thing we shall neuer be perfect in this knowledge And because we are as it were souldiers placed in the forefront of the battaile therefore we are in daunger of many perills which to withstand it is not in the power or wisedom of man. The summe and effect therefore of all these wordes Because there is mercie with thee is this that God will not deale with vs according to the lawe because we likewise should not deale with him according to the law but say with the Publicane Lorde be mercifull vnto me a sinner They that goe beyond these boundes of grace and leauing this rich and ample grace wil dispute of the law and works calling to account what they haue done and what they haue left vndone the further they go the deeper they plunge them selues in hell I say not this without good cause I see what hapned to good Bernard whom if you examine wel you shall find him contrary to him selfe For when he treateth of faith with an inward feeling he teacheth Christ purely he stirreth vppe mens hartes to the loue of Christ effectually and setteth forth his benefites sincerely then smelleth he of ●othing else but roses and hony But contrariwise when he disputeth out of the law or of the lawe then reasoneth he no otherwise then if he were some Turke or Iewe which either knoweth not Christ or plainly denieth him So is it likewise with all others that take vpon them the office of teaching and preaching For when they speake with an inward feeling and practise and are not caried away with disputations contentions they teach Christ purely But when they e●ter into the discourse of the law they so dispute as if there were no Christ which had instituted the law yea which with his owne blood had purchased the remission of sinnes This doe we also find to be most true when we fal in matters of the law mens traditions Wherfore we must stand fast in this Paradise or heauen of grace and seeke no further that we may remaine in this simple confession of Dauid VVith thee there is mercie But why doth he adde moreouer That thou mayest be feared
madnes For if patience suffer any thinge it commeth of a certain desperation as when a man thus thinketh with him selfe All that I suffer is but in vaine This patience is turned into fury and is oppressed with desperation But Christian pacience will not suffer it selfe to be oppressed but continually taketh hold vpon hope whereby at length it preuaileth and getteth the victory It is a harde thing not to be discouraged with such trobles as daily happen in matters perteining to the common course of this life But patiently to endure those afflictions which Dauid by his owne example sheweth that Christians which haue already receiued the forgiuenes of sinnes must suffer to haue a stedfast hope in the bitter vexations of sinne and accusations of conscience and patiently to suffer all other aff●ictiōs wherwith Satan vexeth and tormenteth the beleeuing heart this is in deede a diuine and an heauenly vertue and such a conflicte that God hath promised vnto it an incorruptible crowne of glory Now ensueth an exhortation that we should follow this example of Dauid and embrace this doctrine Verse 7. Let Israel waite on the Lord for with the Lord is mercie and with him is plentifull redemption This is in deede a golden verse worthy to be knowne and well vnderstand wherein Dauid wisheth and exhorteth all men by his example wholy to rest and to continue in a sure hope of the mercie of God. For faith is not so lightly to be esteemed as the Papistes teach which dreame that faith is a qualitie remaining in the hart with the which the hart after it can once number these syllables I beleue in God passeth on as it were in a sleepe For they that haue no experience of those conflictes which faith must endure doe but laugh vs to scorne when we say that faith is a principall vertue wherewith onely and alone we are iustified deliuered from sinne hell death and damnation For it is true that the wise man ●aith A foole vnderstandeth not except ye talke of those things which are in his owne hart These things therefore which we attribute vnto faith they ascribe vnto charitie preferre charitie aboue faith But if faith be set forth rightly in her owne colours it farre excelleth charitie For behold the obiects of faith It fighteth alone before God against Satan who neuer resteth but warreth against faith continually and that euen concerning death and life euerlasting concerning sinne and the accusation of the lawe concerning grace and the remission of sinnes Now if with faith you compare charitie whose office is to be exercised in releuing the miseryes and calamities of men whether they haue neede of comfort or succour in minde or in body who seeth not howe farre faith excelleth charitie For howe great a difference is there betwene God man betwene corporall necessities eternal death These are therfore the exercises of faith euen in the greatest dangers to fight continually against Satan in the presence of God For as I said before our ●ruel enemie will giue vs no breathing no time of rest Wherfore albeit the charitie is not onely a goodly vertue but also extendeth farre in comparison of other moral vertues yet is faith without all comparison a farre more excellent heauenly vertue whether ye consider y obiects therof or other causes For this is the fruite of faith when the hart feeleth that death is ouercome by the death of Christ that sinne also is put away the law abolished by grace and mercie These thinges are of them selues most certaine Yet such is our infirmitie that we can noe certeinly apprehend them and therefore we are terrified with the cogitations of death and sinne But if this hope and trust in the mercie of God were perfect no heauines should euer oppresse the beleuing hart Therefore Dauid vseth this exhortation that Israell after it hath once obteyned this mercie should still perseuere in wayting on the Lord and not suffer this trust and confidence in the mercie of the Lord to be wrested from him And here he hath respect to that great conflict wherein the mind oppressed with calamities beginneth to doubt of the mercie of god In this conflict because the mind doth not so soone feele those comforts which the word promiseth and faith beleueth as it would doe it is ready to despayre Against this tentation Dauid armeth vs and warneth vs to be mindfull that we must waite on the Lorde and neuer depart from the word or beleue any thing against the word and he sheweth the cause why For with the Lord sayth he is mercie The flesh in tentations and afflictions thinketh that with the Lorde there is nothing but wrath The holy Ghost therefore comforteth vs and goeth about to plucke this opinion out of our hartes pronounceth that there is mercie and goodnes with the Lord if we can but onely waite on the Lord and put our trust in him This testimonie of conscience and of the holy Ghost we haue great neede of for if we followe our owne sense we shall be deceaued and finde in our selues the contrary But we may not iudge of these matters according to our owne sense or as we feele in our selues but we must stand to the worde and thus thinke with our selues that these are matters of fayth and not of our owne sense and feeling For to beleue is not to feele Not because these thinges shall neuer be felt which we now beleue but because faith must go before feeling and experience And we must beleue the worde although we feele in our owne hartes and iudgement neuer so much to the contrary As when our hartes oppressed with calamities doe thinke God to be angrie with vs not to care for vs but to hate vs then faith cleane contrary must thus assure it selfe that with God there is neither anger nor hatred that he neither thinketh of punishment nor offence but although he suffer vs to be afflicted yet he doth it not to the ende to destroy vs For with him sayeth the Psalme is mercie Therefore he is mindfull of vs to doe vs good to deliuer vs from daungers to mortifie our sinnes and to increase his other good giftes in vs If these thinges happen not to the wicked what maruell is it For either they beleue not or else if they doe they continue not Wherefore let vs that beleue with faith ioyne hope also so that albeit our owne sense and hart shall worke neuer so much against vs and that God shall seeme neuer so sharpe an enemy in punishing vs yet let vs not yeld so much to our owne sense and feeling as to the written word and to the holy Ghost which pronounceth that with the Lord there is mercie who loueth vs seeketh to doe vs good This is the truth of the holy Ghost that we should thinke yea most assuredly beleue that with the Lord there is no anger but if any calamities
pray Let the faithfull rest therefore in this comfort that their oppression and affliction shall neuer be so great but their deliuerance shal be greater And if they thinke otherwise they thinke not well For this is the summe effect of the first precept which Dauid here expresseth with the Lord there is plenteous redemption For this is to be a god in deede euen to redeme and to deliuer yea that with greater maiestie and glory then of any mortall man it can be conceaued Verse 8. And he shall redeme Israel from all his iniquities This promise is a conclusion of the Psalme Wherein againe he sheweth what cause he had to pray what we also in like daunger should hope for And in deede it is a sweete and a ioyfull thing to behold the goodnes of the Lord not onely in that he giueth gouerneth and preserueth this life but much rather in that he sheweth him selfe an enemie to sinne and death and this he doth to saue and to deliuer vs from the daunger thereof For this is it that maketh all other gifts of God more sweete pleasant For although we know that we are the creatures of God yet notwithstanding because we are oppressed with heauines feare death the gilt of conscience and such other calamities we can not enioy the giftes of God with a free and a chereful hart This is then to paynt out God in his owne colours so that this life Gods creatures may be sweete vnto vs when he is sette forth according to this verse namely that he will deliuer his people from their sinnes slay death destroy hel and treade downe Satan vnder his feete Such a God is the God of those that beleue that beleue I say For they that beleue although they be weake and feeble harted and vexed of the deuill and death yet they knowe that God is their deliuerer from all their iniquities Therefore they are reysed vppe with comfort and begin to hope wayting for deliuerance promised in the word Ye shall therefore apply this verse to this ende that it may be as a definition what is the office of God and what his will is properly to doe namely that he will haue to doe with sinners that he will abolish sinne create life righteousnes all good thinges Now the meane whereby God worketh these thinges you know is Christ whom he sent into this world and layed vppon him the punishment of death that they which beleue on him might obteine remission of their sinnes and be made the children of god Thus teacheth and treateth the whole Psalme not of this externall life or good workes but onely of faith and hope towards God through Christ and of the finall victorie ouer sinne and death For these things are not gotten by the workes and power of man but by the worke and power of God alone and they are communicated vnto vs because there is mercie with the Lorde and with him is plentifull redemption This is the onely meanes and the way whereby this victorie is gotten The doctrine of works hath an other end and is so to be taught that the glory of God and the merite of Christ be nothing thereby diminished like as we by the grace of Christ haue sincerely and faithfully euery where handled this doctrine God graunt that the same light may shine also to our posteritie Amen The .131 Psalme Lorde myne hart is not hautie c. This Psalme treateth in a maner of the same matter that the Psalme going before speaketh of sauing that the former Psalme expresseth the contrary more plainely and largely Whereby he most liuely paynteth out an afflicted conscience oppressed with the feeling and burthen of sinne This Psalme hath bene heretofore vsed of the diuines against all maner of pride and presumption a common vice of all mankind and from the which there is not one of vs free neither can it be cured by any other remedy then either by the grace of God or by the wrath of God that is when either the godly by afflictions are corrected with fatherly chastisement or the wicked are plaged with seuere punishment By these meanes presumption the naturall vice of all men is cured Otherwise it is not possible but that man should presume either of his owne wisedom or of his owne power or of his owne righteousnes This pride afterwardes bringeth foorth contention As for example we see how many and sundry wayes men are exercised with such matters as perteyne to the ostentation or to the praise and commendation of the witte wisedome of man For here one man thinketh better of him selfe then of an other one man will be counted wiser and better learned then an other What will such wittes doe thinke you when they shall afterwardes come to the handling of Gods matters Likewise power bewitcheth mens hartes that they can make no ende of proud deuises and counsells The same hapned to the Phariseis hypocrites for that is proper vnto them when they conceiued an opinion of their owne holines and righteousnes To be briefe proud and presumptuous men are troublers not only of them selues but also of the cōmon wealth of the Church of housholds and families of al things else They that are skilful in histories doe see what great euills proud ambitious witts haue alwaies raised vp So in the Church heretiks stirred vp with a perswasion of their owne wisedom are troublers of peace and concord The same commeth to passe also in families houshold matters whereof riseth this prouerbe among the Germanes They which attempt that they can not bring to passe are worthely plagued But who are they I pray you Forsoth euen the whole world For what is he that is contēted with his own gift attempteth not somewhiles to do better more exactly then he is able to accomplish Wherfore the third euill necessarily followeth y like as presumption breaketh quietnes concord alwayes as a fruitful mother breedeth strife dissention so at the last followeth vanitie of vanities the attempts of the wicked are all in vaine This vice reacheth reigneth farre can not be cured by any other remedie as I haue sayd then either by grace or by wrath By grace I meane when by affliction our harts are humbled and we brought to this point that we can thinke modestly of our owne gift By wrath when God oppreseth the wicked with punishments and plagues taketh them away as he take away Pharao whose stubbernes and obstinacie could not be cured but by destruction in the redde sea So the Beniamites did not cease from their furie vntill they were almost consumed In like maner Absolon could neuer be quiet vntill he was hanged vpon a tree Arius also Cerinthus with many authors of newe sectes and errors in these our daies could neuer rest vntil they came to such an end as their acts enterprises did
cōstrained to confesse that we haue many waies offēded against that law it can not be but that certaine desperation must needs follow except Christ as a tender ●ouing mother giue vnto vs that dugge of grace reise vp our oppressed afflicted soules So Iudas was driuen to the halter by the sight of his sinne For there is no remedy wherby the seely conscience tormented with sinne can be healed but this alone to beleue as the former Psalme teacheth that with the Lord there is mercy plentifull redemption This is the voice of the Gospel which must follow the law wherunto also there is a way prepared by the law For like as our sinnes must be reproued accused so the terror which this accusation bringeth hath need of consolation Wherefore the true consolation and the true propitiation which is sette forth in the Gospell perteineth to true sinnes which driue a man downe to hell vnlesse they be cured by the mercie of God set forth vnto vs in christ For mercie pertaineth not to fained sinnes but to true sinnes which kill and condemne the soule This order therefore is to be obserued that when we glorie or presume of our selues and become secure then should the lawe and Moises come with his bright shining face which our weaknes can not abide yet notwithstanding it can not auoyd the same Now after that the lawe and Moises haue done their office in this sort by accusing the conscience and threatening the iudgemence of God for sinne and punishment for the same then is there place and opportunitie for Christ to come with the dugge of grace to comfort and refresh the wayned child crying for sucke and seeking the mothers breast Wherefore this is an excellent similitude which setteth forth vnto vs first our owne weakenes namely that there is in vs no strength at all whereby we may be able to withstande Satan and to heale our wounded conscience then also the mercie of God and power of his word whereby he susteyneth and nourisheth vs as a mother nourisheth her childe with milke stilleth it and kepeth it from crying So the Gospell is both the wombe of God in the which we are caried formed and fashioned by the spirit of Christ and also it is the dugge wherby we are nourished fed Wherfore if we once lose this dugge we are as children wayned from the mothers brest Some thinke them selues highly learned in these matters and that they know them wel enough But take ye heede and beware of this presumption Recken your selues in the number of scholers and learners For Satan is so craftie that he can easily take away this distinction and force vppon vs in steede of the Gospell the law and againe in steede of the lawe the Gospel For how often commeth it to passe that poore and miserable consciences in the agony of death lay hold vpon certain sentences of the Gospel which doe in deede pertaine vnto the lawe and thereby lose the sweete comfort and consolation of the Gospell As for example If thou wilt enter into life keepe the commaundements Again Not euery one that sayth Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of heauen With such sentences poore and seely consciences are so brused and broken that they can see nothing but what they haue done and what they ought to haue done Also what God requireth and what he forbiddeth These things whiles troubled afflicted consciences doe beholde they forget what so euer Christ hath done or God by Christ hath promised to do for our comfort Wherfore let no man presume of the fulnes and perfection of his knowledge in these matters In wordes this distinction is easie to be made but in death and daungers we finde how vnable we are to play the good Logicians when we must dispute of the thinges which we haue done or ought to haue done when the lawe obiecteth in this maner against vs This hath God commaunded thee to do and thou hast not done it but hast done the contrary Wherfore thou shalt be damned according to the sentence of the lawmaker Here he that is a good Logician putteth a difference betwene the law and the Gospel and graunteth that in deede he hath not kept the law Notwithstanding saith he vppon this antecedent or former proposition doth not followe this consequence that I should therefore despaire and be damned For the Gospel commaundeth me to beleue in Christ and to trust vnto the workes the merites and the righteousnes of christ He that vnderstandeth this and taketh holde on this brest or dugge of the Gospel is safe and is sure of the victory but he that apprehendeth it not muste needes perish and despaire In this doctrine therefore touching our righteousnes before God there is great daunger We must not presume therefore but walke in feare humilitie For if presumption in politike worldly matters when men are proude of their riches power or wisedom is not without daunger in diuine matters it is much more dangerous yea most daungerous and damnable and yet notwithstanding there it reigneth most of all For Satan commeth to the children of God and laboureth with all might and subtiltie to bring them to presumption and securitie Wherefore they must fight continually against this hidde and lurking poyson and aboue all thinges they muste beware that they flatter not them selues as though they knew well enough the distinction of the lawe and the Gospell In deede thou mayst knowe it but consider wel whether thou hast sure hold thereof so that it cannot be wrested from thee by Satan thine owne conscience Paule plainely confesseth that he hath not yet attained to this knowledge but followeth it as one running in the race and pressing towards the marke So it goeth with vs all We turne our face vnto the marke and this is the race wee runne that we may attaine vnto the marke But that will not be vntill this flesh be put of and layed in the earth Wherefore in the meane season let vs walke in feare and humblenes of harte with hartie prayer that the light which he hath opened vnto vs he will not suffer to be put out but that he will dayly lighten our mindes and make perfecte the worke which he hath begunne in vs Thus who so doe not shall be ouerwhelmed and oppressed with desperation and shall be like vnto children that are wayned and put a parte from their mothers breastes Verse 3. Let Israell wait on the Lord or trust in the Lord from henceforth and for euer This verse sheweth plainly that the Prophet speaketh here of that presumption which is contrary to faith and is called the presumption of mans owne righteousnes Therefore he exhorteth the faithfull to trust in the Lord and withall to abide in humilitie to mortifie that trust and confidence which man hath in the lawe and in his owne righteousnes This shall ye doe saith he if ye trust in the Lord not onely
a vowe because he had determined with him self thus to declare his thankfulnes and to testifie his faith in the promise of God. Where the interpreters haue translated the God of Iacob it is in the hebrewe the mightie in Iacob Which name is sometimes attributed vnto the Angells and sometimes it is also applied to other thinges wherein is great strength and fortitude as to a lyon an oxe and such like But here it is a singular word of faith signifying that God is the power and strength of his people For onely faith ascribeth this vnto god Reason and the flesh doe attribute more to riches and such other worldly helpes as it seeth and knoweth But all such carnall helpes are very idolls which deceiue men and draw them to perdition But this is the strength and fortitude of the people to haue God present with them This strength and this power preserued the Iewish people as a litle handfull in the middes of all their enemies Moreouer this name is attributed vnto God to this end that we should vnderstand that it is he alone which giueth strength and victorie So the Scripture sayth in an other place Some trust in chariots and some in horses but we will remember the name of the Lorde Likewise Paule sayth Be strong in the Lord in the power of his might For this power is eternall and deceiueth not All other powers are not onely deceitfull but they are also transitorie and continue but a moment Verse 3. I will not enter into the Tabernacle of my house no● come vpon my pallet or bedde Verse 4. Nor suffer myne eyes to sleepe nor myne eye lidde to slumber Verse 5. Vntill I haue found out a place for the Lord an habitation for the God of Iacob This plenty of words is vsed of the Hebrewes when they would expresse any great or earnest desire Notwithstanding all that is herein conteyned we may briefty comprise in these few wordes I will not rest vntill I haue founde out an habitation for the Lorde And here we neede not to answere that childish question how this oth could stand since that Dauid did not him selfe build the temple And againe if he had builded it yet he must needes often times haue gone to his bedde slept before the worke could haue bene finished For he speaketh here of the good will and earnest desire which Dauid had to finish this worke and the good will or minde of the workeman comprehendeth all as if the worke were fully accomplished Therefore where as Dauid as it appeareth in the booke of the Kinges thought it a dishonor vnto the Lord that the Arke shoulde remayne in a Tabernacle couered with skinnes when he him selfe did dwell in a house builded with Cedar trees the maner of speech here vsed doth declare that great desire he had to take away this dishonor and reproche from God. Moreouer ye must here againe note that when he speaketh of the Tabernacle of the mightie in Iacob the holy fathers did not simply seeke or worship God dwelling in heauen but they sought him and worshipped him as he was to be comprehended founde in one certeine place and as ye would say clothed with a certeine person For God of his owne nature is infinite and therefore can not simply be comprehended by mans imaginations Dauid therefore looketh vnto the word whereby God did bind him selfe vnto the Arke when he went about to place the Arke in the temple he called the temple the tabernacle or habitation of the God of Iacob Reason can not see how God which is infinite and vnsearchable should be worshipped rather in this place then in any other But the spirituall eyes of Dauid Salomon and other holy men following the word did seeke and worship God in that place onely where by his word he had reueiled that he would be founde They which offered in that place were sayd to offer before the Lorde They which worshipped there were sayd to worship before the lord So Adam Abraham Iacob had their Altars where God did reueile him selfe and with a signe from heauen did testifie that he was there present with them For seeing that no man can auoyd the sinne of Idolatrie if God him selfe do not shew both the place where and the maner how he will be worshipped therefore there was a certeine place limited vnto the faithfull where God had promised that he woulde be present with them woulde heare them speake vnto them c. We nowe haue no corporall place but all thinges are in christ Vppon him onely must our eyes and hartes be fired He alone is the God of our worship So that we may truely say Without this man Iesus there is no god Who so apprehendeth him by fayth he it is that hath God in deede but he that apprehendeth him not hath no God. Verse 6. Loe we heard of it in Ephrata and founde it in the fieldes of the forest That is to say the vowe of Dauid is nowe accomplished For nowe God is sayd to dwell in this temple builded by Salomon which is such a one as shall not be caried into other places as it was afore Sometimes it was in Gilgal sometymes in Silo and at the last in Gabaa And where so euer the Arke was there was God also for the promise followed the Arke where so euer it was Nowe sayth he the place where the temple is builded and the Arke shall rest is stable and permanent which if it be not verified of this place it shall be verified of no place in the whole world But what meaneth it when he sayth in Ephrata For we doe not any where reade that the house of the Lord was in Ephrata that is in Bethleem Although therefore this figure and maner of speech seemeth to be somewhat hard yet certeyne it is that by Ephrata is vnderstand the kingdom of Iuda whereof Dauid being an Ephratite was King and gouerner So that it is all one to say in Ephrata and in Ierusalem to the which Dauid the Ephratite did translate the seate and throne of the king Of the King therefore which was an Ephratite by a figure called Metonomia Ierusalem is called Ephrata Which maner of speech we likewise in the Dutch tongue doe oftentimes vse As if I shoul● say Saxonie did boldly and freely confesse Christ at August before the Emperour and the whole empire Here by Saxonie is signified the noble Prince and worthy of perpetuall memorie in all Churches Iohn the Elector of Saxonie who was by birth a Saxon This figure the Prophet vseth in this place to the ende we should vnderstand that the temple is exalted magnified not because of Salomon which builded the temple nor because of the people which resorted thither but because of Dauid hauing the promise and to whom the promise was made For as I sayd before the promise is that which principally must be considered in all things This pomise alone therefore
it is which here he beholdeth signifying that the temple is giuen for the promise sake and not in respect of merites or deserts Where he addeth In the fieldes of the forest this is a repetition of that he said before For the fields of the forest he calleth Ierusalem as the Prophets oftentimes call it Libanus because it is builded of the Ceders of Libanus as though the trees tymber of all Libanus were translated to Ierusalem The former appellation therfore where he calleth Ierusalem Ephrata is taken of the person of Dauid and this is taken of the matter wherof the temple was builded Now these kindes of speech serue to this end that we should knowe what an inestimable gift it is to haue a place where the word of God may be taught For there the church that is to say the kingdom of God is preserued and maintained Such a place saith he haue we here where by the promise of God the temple is builded For here we heare the word here God speaketh vnto vs here we pray and here we doe all thinges which pertaine to the seruice and worship of God here the deuill with all his assaults his subtilties his furies and his lyes wherewith he goeth about to trouble and vexe the Church and to hinder the glory of God are ouercome Verse 7. VVe wil enter into his tabernacle and worship before his footestoole These wordes doe plainly shew that he speaketh of Ierusalem For he maketh rehearsall of those thinges which came to passe after Dauids time when the vow was fulfilled which he had vowed This is therefore a voice of gratulation containing also an exhortation As if he should say Since we haue a place for the word of God appointed and as●ured vnto vs by God him self why doe we stay why do we not go thither to heare the word to pray to giue thankes to set forth the mercy and goodnes of the Lord For these are in a maner the things which we must doe in the house of God in the temple To worship signifieth a kind of gesture or motion of y body which we are wont to vse when we pray as to bowe our selues to turne our face and to lift vp our eyes vnto the Lord. Before his footestoole is as much to say as before the mercise at or the Arke where God promised that he would dwell Nowe wheresoeuer the word is there is also the footestoole the habitation the resting place and the altar of god Like as by the worde the Prophetes doe signifie that God is present as contrarywise where the word is not there God is not present and so are we as sheepe in the desert without a shepeheard Verse 8. Arise O Lord to come into thy rest thou and the arke of thy strength Here againe he calleth the place appoynted for the worde the rest the tabernacle the habitation of the Lord according to that saying of our Sauiour Christ VVe will come vnto him will dwell with him And this is a prayer following vppon the former verses As if he said the temple is builded and now we place the Arke therein Arise therefore O Lord and come to thy rest that thou mayst dwell with vs For this is thy rest which wilte be worshipped in a certaine place and after a certaine maner Wherfore diuerse kindes of worship and diuersitie of opinions after the inuentions of men doe not please thee Thou art in deede the God of heauen and heauen is thy throne but yet thou wilte be worshipped of vs Thou wouldest haue vs to knowe that thou dwellest in this place and that we shoulde seeke thee here and not elsewhere It seemeth an absurde and a foolish thinge in the hartes of the worldly wise to bind God to this place and to enclose him in this darke Sanctuary as though he would be worshipped no where else So the Gentiles rounde about to whome the religion of the Iewes was knowne were maruelously offended that the infinite and incomprehensible nature of God should thus be shut vppe in a corner But God doth not onely contemn but also condemne the imaginations of men and commaundeth vs to thinke no otherwise of God then he prescribeth vnto vs in his worde VVhersoeuer saith he I shall put a memoriall of my name there will I be As if he sayde I knowe that this place is to litle to receaue or to holde me whome heauen can not holde Yea in respect of my Maiestie and person I need no place But thou for thy saluation hast neede that such a place there should be where thou maist serue me finde me heare my word receiue my blessing c. This I say thy necessitie requireth lest that if I should not appoynt such a place vnto thee the deuill should deceiue thee when thou thinkest thy selfe to serue and worship me thou shouldest serue and worship Satan him self This daunger moueth me to limit a certeine place wherein may remaine a memoriall of my name The Arke was but a corporall thing like as our temples haue a matter as tymber and stone whereof they are builded But because God by his worde had bound his presence to this corporall place therefore it was nowe the true habitation of god So we know that the word is incarnate and become flesh The bodye of Christ therfore or the flesh of Christ is a true body and true flesh and his humanitie is a true humanitie But in this flesh in this body and in this humanitie God is set forth vnto vs as in a certeine myrrour or a glasse In this flesh God so appeareth vnto vs that out of this flesh he neither will be worshipped nor can be knowne We therfore doe also worship before that Arke which is now before our Mercieseate euen the man Christ and we beleue that they which serue honour God out of this Mercieseate doe sinne and are idolaters as they which at that time sought God would worship him any where else then in the temple did sinne and were Idolaters Wherefore the faithfull euen when they were not at Ierusalem in prayer turned their faces towardes Ierusalem Like as now the Church though it be dispersed throughout the world accordeth in this notwithstanding that it prayeth in the name of Iesus vppon whose passion and merites it wholy resteth and so by faith in Christ it is but one Church Wherfore we must diligently marke those sentences of the Scripture which after this maner binde God to one certeine place for they arme vs against all maner of Idolatrie and teach vs to iudge all kindes of doctrine Like as the Iewes could iudge this doctrine to be true that all maner of worship which was not done in that place of the Tabernacle was Idolatrie So the Patriarkes were able to iudge of the Altars which they made in those places where God appeared vnto them For there might not be one temple erected against an other nor one altar
holy place must offer vp pure and holy prayers So saith S. Paule also lifting vp pure hands c. for else ye shall pray in vaine Pure hands signifie innocencie from blood extortion spoile robbery The Prophet therfore setteth forth here two sortes of men comming to the temple praying Some there be that come and pray in innocencie and holines Some againe pray in hipocrisie hauing their hands defiled with blood The prayer of such is sinne as the Psalme sayth Paul teacheth in like maner concerning prayer Pray saith he without wrath or doubting Also our Sauiour Christ saith If thou bring thy gift to the altar and there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee goe thy way and first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift For this is a common thing that hypocrites when they haue done all the iniury they can against their brethren are not only without all remorse of cōscience but also they make a great shew of religion and holines bragge of the Gospell more then the true Christians doe Against these the psalme speaketh warneth them that when they pray in the holy place they ought to be pure holy For who so euer praieth is possessed with the sinne of couetousnes fleshly lust or any other deuil to him the Lord sayth VVhat hast thou to do to declare mine ordinances that thou shouldest take my couenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest to be reformed and hast cast my words behinde thee For when thou seest a theefe thou runnest with him thou art partaker with the adulterers c. Such was the prayer of the Pharisey which departed out of the temple vniustified For this is a common euil among men that they which are most impure wicked doe glory more of God his word then such as are godly feare God in deede Wherfore the Scripture expresly declareth that such there be as take the name of God in their mouths and yet in hart life are polluted and wicked And in this place the prophet inueyeth against hipocriets whiche thinke that when they pray God seeth not the vncleannes of their hart This is therfore a necessary prayer the first God would giue vnto vs his word defend the same against all vaine spirits heresies and secondly that he would preserue vs in innocēcie keepe vs from hipocrisie Verse 3. The Lord that hath made heauen earth blesse thee out of Sion As touching Sion we haue sayd before that God would haue not only certeine ceremonies certeine persons but also a certein place for his seruice worship lest the people should wander vncerteinly and choose vnto them selues peculiar places to worship God in Now for as much as this thing was not without offence for what can be more absurd and contrary to reason then that the God of heauen and earth should be shut vppe in that darkenes therefore to confirme their mindes herein he sayth that the Lord which dwelleth in Sion is the maker of heauen and earth This haue we often declared and necessary it is that it should be often repeted lest we should chose vnto our selues straunge and peculiar kindes of worship For as in the olde Testament there was a certaine place certeine persons and certeine times to the which God had bound as you would say his seruice so we in the newe Testament do find the father in christ In Christ the father is worshipped but without Christ he can neither be worshipped nor found but what so euer is deuised for the seruice of God without Christ is damnable and accursed The summe and effect therefore of all togither is this O ye Priestes ye Pastors and Ministers of the word to you I speake you I do admonish that ye follow the word faithfully and do your office purely For whiles the word and the ministery are sound vncorrupt there is nothing that can hurt vs For although Satan the world do assaile vs what then If God be with vs who can be against vs Let this be therefore your speciall care and endeuour that the word may remaine pure and vncorrupt and pray that the Lord would assist you herein and blesse your labours for of all the blessinges of God this is the greatest Which might be sayd in moe wordes but let this suffice Now it is our duetie likewise in this light of the worde to endeuour by all meanes to doe the same lest that through our vnthankfulnes the worde be taken from vs againe and to pray for the Churches that God would blesse them for Iesus Christ his sonnes sake our Lord our Redemer Amen THE ENDE The word must be continually exercised because of the continuall tentations whereof we are in daunger The lothīg and fulnes of Gods worde After the lothing of the word commeth contempt and then Gods plague The argumēt of the Psalm The Psalmes pray in two respctes agaynst Satan Satan how he is a murtherer How he is a lyer Our first parents deceiued by lying The authors of wicked doctrine are incorrigible Arius Proteus was one that could chaūge him selfe into diuers formes as nowe into a beast nowe into a tree and now into some other thing else Against heresies we must fight especially with prayer Inward tribulation and affliction of the soule The vse and practise of faith Howe the mindes of men must be stirred vp to prayer Tribulation stirreth men vp to prayer Luther writeth that which he hath proued by experiēce The necessitie of prayer set forth vnto vs in the Lords prayer Prayer is a seruice of God. How poore afflicted consciences are to be comforted which dare not call vnto the Lord. The prayers of the Papistes Nothing more hard then to pray God the hearer of praiers The saying of Bernard God giueth not alwayes that we pray for The prayer of yong children The godly youth in that reformed church being brought vp in the n●rture of the lord cōtinuall catechising may shame al our reformation where the youth is so godles for lacke therof Howe God heareth our prayers Wicked doctrine A liuely picture of the Deuill The commō people are the framehowse or workehowse of the deuill Deut. 29. Coles Iuniper The fire of the heretikes is more swift then the fire of the holy Ghost Luther prophecieth Kedar and Mesech signifie the enemies of the church Luke 11. The argument of the Psalme This Psalme containeth the doctrine of faith A cōparing of contraries The commendation of faith Idolatry prospereth and flourisheth for a time Humane helps and comforts The help of the Lord. Why he sayth to the hills and not to the Lord. Our mountayne Trust affiance in the helpe succour of the Lord. Remedies in afflictions The iudgement of the word in afflictions must onely be followed The history of Iulian and Athanasius The exercise of faith Experience and practise maketh a right Christian The