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A09659 A godlie exposition vpon certeine chapters of Nehemiah, written by that worthie byshop and faithfull pastor of the Church of Durham Master James Pilkington. And now newly published. In the latter end, because the author could not finish that treatise of oppression which he had begonne, there is added that for a supplie, which of late was published by Robert Some, D. in Diuinitie Pilkington, James, 1520?-1576.; Foxe, John, 1516-1587.; Some, Robert, 1542-1609. Godlie treatise of the church. In the ende .. a treatise against oppression. 1585 (1585) STC 19929; ESTC S114273 162,441 172

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When Belsazar King of Babilon made his drunken feast to his great men and called for the vessels and Iewels which Nebuchadnezer hrought from Ierusalem that he and his harlots might eate and drinke in them in despite of the liuing God of Israell A hand appeared writing on the wall which Daniell expounded when none of his sowthsayers could doe it and said his Kingdom should be taken from him and so it came to passe For the same night Belsazar was slaine and Darius King of the Medes possessed his Kingdome A iust rewarde for al such drunken mockers of God his people Religion and Ministers and yet our merrie tossepots will take no heede Sara saw I smaell playing with Isaac her sonne and said to Abraham cast out the handmaid and her sonne for he shall not be heire with my sonne But S. Paul alledging the same text calleth this playing persecution saith as he that was borne after the flesh didpersecute him that was borne after the spirit so it is now but the scripture saieth cast out the handmaide and her sonne for he shall not be heire with tbe sonne of the free-woman so shal all scornefull mockers Iesters and Railers on God his worde Religion and People be cast out into vtter darknes and not be heires of gods Kingdome with his children This playing and mocking is bitter persecution and therefore not to be vsed of good men nor against good men and louers of Religion yet at this day he is counted a merie companion and welcome to great mens tables that can raile bitterlie or iest merely on the ministers Such is our loue towards God his worde and ministers but sure he that loueth God and the worde in deede cannot abide to heare the Preachers ill spoken of vndeseruedly I cannot tell whither is worsse the scoffer or the glad hearer If the one had no pleasure in hearing such lewd talke the other would not tell it The other thing they charge the Iewes with all is Rebellton falling from the King and setting vp a Kingdome amongst themselues When Elias rebuked Achab and the people to returne vnto the Lord Achab saith vnto him art thou he that troubleth Israeli nay said the Prophet it is thou and thy fathers house rebuking him and teaching trueth was counted troubling of the common wealth and the King What was the cause that King Saul and his flatterers hated poore Dauid so much and so cruellie sought his death but that the people songe after that Goliah was slaine that Saul had killed a thousand and Dauid his ten thousand which was as much to saie as they thought that Dauid was a mightier man then Saul and meeter to be King Daniel set open his windowes and contrary to the Kings commandement prayed thrise a day vnto the liuing Lord and therefore was accused of disobedience to the King and cast to the Lions den to be deuoured of them The Israelits in Egipt when God blessed them and encreased them to a great people were accused that they waxed so many wealthie that they would rebell against the King and therefore to keep them vnder were oppressed by the taskemasters and set to make Bricke for their buildings When our Lord master Christ Iesus was borne the wisemen asked where the King of the Iewes was Herod was mad and killed all the children of two yeares olde and vnder lest any of them should come to be King and put him downe When our sauiour Christ said his kingdome was not of this world then said Pilate thou art a King then Whereupon the Iewes tooke occasion to accuse him of treason and said eueryone that maketh him selfe a King speaketh against the Emperour for we haue no King but the Emperour The Apostles were accused that they had troubled the common-wealth by preaching Christ and filled Ierusalem with their doctrine contrarie to the commaundement of the Priests and Elders Iason was drawen out of his owne house for lodging Paul being accused that he had troubled the world and disobeyed the Emperour When Saint Paul had preached Christ in Athens he was accused for troubling the state by teaching his new doctrine thus euer the building of Gods house by preaching of the Gospell hath bene charged with rebellion disobedience to Princes and troubling of the common-wealth and peace But good men haue not bene dismaied at such bigge wordes but with good courage haue proceeded in their worke hauing the testimonie of a good conscience that they be not guiltie of anie such thing 20. And I answered This was the first push but not the worst that they had to discourage them for proceeding in this building and not vnlike but it made some afraid to heare such bigg wordes and so great matters laide to their charge by men of such authoritie as they were But as they were not ashamed so vniustlie to accuse Gods people so Nehemiah steppeth forth as boldly aunswereth for them all and defendeth their doings A worthie example for al those that be in authoritie to follow they haue not the sword committed vnto them in vaine they ought to defend both by word and deede in their well doings those that be committed vnto them Their duetie is not to suffer Gods enemies to inuade or hurt sclaunder or blaspheme those that they haue charge ouer but draw the sword if neede be to driue awaie such wolues and punish such wicked tongues It is not as we commonlie say when any daunger or persecution ariseth for the doctrine or that the ministers are vntruely reported of let the preachers defend it it is their duetie and vocation we are not learned it belongeth not to vs our care is for the common-wealth onely Religious magistrates will neyther doe so nor saie so they will not suffer as much as in them lieth the Church Religion doctrine nor the ministers to be ill spoken of reuiled defaced nor ouerrunne They be mouthes to speake for Gods people as Moyses was vnto Pharao they be hands to fight for them they be Rulers to defend the good and punish the euil Iephthe when the Ammonites fought against Israel defended the cause in disputation by words and after in battaile with sword The good King Ezechias when he receiued the blasphemous message and letters from Rabshakeh against God his Temple people and Religion he seeketh by all meanes to defend them all and encourage the people not to fall awaie from their God in that great daunger When Holophernes railed on God and his people Achior and Iudeth defend them and shee cutteth of his head When the great Giant Golias reuiled the people of God and prouoked them to fight with him hand to hand if they durst for the victorie none we found that durst doe it but poore Dauid with no strong weapons but his sling and a few stones killed that lustie champion and deliuered his people When Dathan Chorah and Abiram with 〈◊〉 fellowes railed against
of men be infected withall Manie lustie yonkers thinke not them-selues braue inough except they can looke bigge speake stoutlie and picke a quarrell against euerie simple man dealing hardlie with all sorts that they can come by they thinke all is well gotten How common this kinde of dealing hath bene I leaue it to the consideration of others And for that diuers haue fallen to a great sobrietie and liued orderlie since they learned Religion God is to be praised and God encrease the number They be not made Souldiers to doe wrong but to correct them that offer wrong they enter not that trade to liue without law but to bring them in obedience that offend the law They may not thinke the Princes coffers to be at their disposition but must content them-selues with wages and that portion that is alotted to them He that dealeth other waies getteth it vniustlie though he thinketh he dealeth so cunninglie that it cannot be espied yet the righteous Lord wil punish it in this world to his shame if he be not more merciful most greeuouslie in the world to come Thus praier and pollicy ioyned togither make a perfect worke and the one halteth if it want the other Dauid when he fought with Goliah though he refused King Sauls Armour yet he tooke his Sling and stones in his shepheards bagge and calling vppon the Lord ouerthrew that Giant mightelie So shall it be in Gods Church when the ministers and people pray earnestlie the Preachers speake boldlie beat downe sinne mightelie and watch night and day that Sathan by his members creepe not in subtilly disturbe the flocke of Christ. God graunt vs so to watch and praie that the Lords name maie be worthelie praised in vs for so S. Paul teacheth be diligent in prayer watching in it with thankes giuing And S. Luke saith watch pray at al times that ye may scape all the euils which are to come This kinde of fighting against all fierie assaults of Sathan is as necessarie in Gods Church as open warr is against the enemies of the cōmon wealth 10. And Iudas said This gappe was not so soone stopt but there bursteth forth another worsse then that Open enemies can doe litle harme if the other parties within be true amongst them-selues But if the souldiers within the Citie fall at a Mutinie among themselues disobey their captaine discourage their fellowes or worke anie treason drawing parties togither then the daunger within is greater then anie can be without The greatest parte of the tribe of Iuda now waxe faint-hearted drawe backe discourage their fellowes murmure against the Captaines and would gladlie leaue working A perilous practise in such a daungerous time and able to ouerthrow all One coward in an armie breaking the aray running awaie or discouraging the rest maie easelie discomfet the whole armie But here come now a great companie not of the meanest sort but of the Kings tribe of Iuda and they murmure they discourage they disswade and hinder the worke as much as they maie The Israchtes in Egipt when Pharaoh encreased their labour because Moses and Aaron would haue them deliuered they crie out on Moses Aaron for their weldoing When they were come out of Egipt and wanted their fleshpottes they crie out of Moses and Aaron which brought them out and would returne againe into Egipt The spies that were sent afore to bring word what a people and countrie they should come vnto were faint-hearted and discouraged the rest saying the men were great Giants their Cities stronger then they could conquere though the ground was fruitfull and pleasant of it selse Thus Sathan neuer ceaseth to deuise something to ouerthrow Gods building The reasons that Iudas alledgeth were great and able to perswade any man first the workmen were wearie say they their shoulders aked with bearing so manie heauie burthens their strength was gone they were not able to beare anie more Secondlie there was much morter to carie awaie both of the olde rubbish of thebroken walls and also new morter to be brought in for the new building The Hebrew word will serue for both which I had rather follow though some learned applie it onelie to the olde rubbish of the olde walls and some to the new morter to be caried for the new building This troubled Nehemiah more then anie bragges of his enemies abroade For of these he looked for help and of the others none These should haue comforted him and now they discomfort Now he must first pacifie and please the men then he must comfort them and also stirre them vp to their worke lest others should faint and fall awaie as well as they It is an easie matter to begin a good worke but a speciall gift to stand in all stormes and continue to the end The proud Papist at this daie at whose hands no goodnes is to be looked for neyther toward God nor good man doeth not hinder the building of Gods Church and preferring of his gospell so much as these faint-hearted Protestants white liuered Hipocrites double dissemblers and seruers of time When they set them downe and looke into the world what saie they we haue wrought our selues wearie these fiftie yeares and profited litle our showlders ake the more Popish rubbish we carie a waie the more we see remaine behind Our open enemies are so many and so cruell that they wil not let vs worke our friends are so weake that they are not able to help them-selues and vs manie of those that seeme to be friendes are saint hearted waxe colde and deale cunninglie against a new day and a chaunge doe come and 〈◊〉 we shall be left in the bryers So much olde Popish rubbish is left behinde in the Church that it will neuer be caried out so much new good order and discipline is to be brought in that it is hard to tell whether it be a harder matter to carie out the olde dreggs or to bring in new morter to build new walls How manie haue they burned how greedelie doe they gape to be broyling againe S. Peter in the Actes of the Apostles asketh why they would goe about to lay that yoke of Moses Ceremonies on the necke of the disciples which neyther they nor their fathers were able to beare And if that might be trulie said then of those ceremonies which came from God himselfe how much more may it be verified now on those which come from the Pope the father of all superstition The double dealing of wyly wordlings is such that it is to be feared this popish rubbish will neuer be cleane rubbed of For we euer keepe some Romish roume in store to turne our selues on so oft as the world shall turne And this olde Iudas may well be a figure of the latter Iudas that betraied our master Christ and al other such hipocrits which being faint hearted would betraie the building and builders that Gods Citie should not be finished There is great
same king learned al the wisdome of the Egiptians and deliuered all the people from the slauerie that they liuedin Abdias hid and fed a hundreth Prophets in caues by fiftie in a companie whose liues Iesabel sought for him selfe being in the wicked courte of Achab and Iesabel Dassid feared the Lord in the courte of Saul though he escaped oft not without manie great daungers Daniel an auncient courtier in three kings daies kept the law of God his Lord diligently and being in great authoritie with the king had the charge of diuers countries committed vnto him which he ruled faithfullie and releeued gods people mightelic So did his three companions Sidrach Misach and Abednago Mardocheus in the courte of Assuerus saued the kings life whom his Chamberlaines wold haue murthered and deliuered al the Iewes which were appointed al by Haman on one daie to be slaine Ierome in his epistle commendeth one Nebridius who living in the courte and being Nephew to the Empresse behaued him selfe so vertuouslie that all his sutes were for the Reliefe of the poore The place therefore maketh no man ill but his illnes commeth of his owne wicked and crooked mind The daungerous life of courtiers if they will rebuke sinne and not sing Placebo the example of Iohn Baptist who lost his head for telling the trueth maie suffise to teach But let not good men be afraid for God hath the hart of Princes in his hand to turne as pleaseth him Doe thou thy duetie in the feare of God and he will defend the as he thinketh best 5. And I said I be seech thee O Lord God of heauen thou great and fearefull God which keepest couenant and mercie for them that loue thee and keepe thy commaundements 6. Let thy eares hearken I be seech thee thy eies be open to heare the praier of thy seruant which I praie before thee this day night daie for the children of Israell thy seruantes and knowledge for the sinnes of the children of Israell which they haue sinned against the yea I and my fathers house haue sinned 7. We haue outragiouslie sinned against thee and haue not keapt thy commaundements and thy ceremoneis and Iudgements which thou commaundest Moses thy seruant AS a man that is earnestly bent to praier hath commonly these outward things ioined with all that were spoken of afore as sitting or kneeling weeping a greeued minde sad countenance fasting and abstinence so necessarilie he muste haue a charitable minde and pitiful towards his breethren and an earnest and liuelie faith towards God which bothe appeare in Nehemiah for without these tow his praier cannnot be heard His louing mind towards his breethren appeareth in that he leauing all other pastimes so diligentlie inquireth of their estate and their countrie and disdaineth not to heare them but it is seene more euidently when he weepeth and mourneth fasteth and forbeareth dainties as though he were in miserie with them but speciallie when he taketh so great paines and trauaile to doe them good as appeareth hereafter throughout this booke His earnest faith appeareth in that he praieth and that onelie to the GOD of heauen and with such vehement and meete words as doe declare his full minde that he doubted not but God both could and would help them In trouble no man asketh help but ofhim whom he thinketh will doe him good And because there is none so merciful to heare and so willing to help as god him-selfe is in al our greifes we must turne vnto the Lord of heauen alone for other saynte there is none that wil help or can help The Apostle saith that he which wil come to the Lord must not onely beleeue that there is a God but also that he is a rewarder of them that seake him This faith therefore let vs bring with vs when we praie This faith did continue in Nehemiah though he had liued so manie yeares amongst the vnbeleeuing Persians which was a special gift of God to him in such troublesome times In praier let vs aske onely such thinges as may stand with Gods good pleasure For where many times folishly we aske things to our owne hurt God of his wisdome and fatherly goodnes doth not graunt them as S. Iames teacheth vs saying Ye aske and receiue not because ye aske euilly to spend it vppon your lusts I am afraid to enter into the opening of this praier because it is so parfect of it selfe that it cannot be amended yet for the helpe of the vnlearned for whose cause onely I take these paines I shal in fewe words open it more plainlie O thou Lord God of heauen earth which of thy meere loue towards man madestheauen earth the sea with al the furniture in them as the Sonne Moone and Starres fish fowle hearbs trees corne fruit and cattel and appointed them to serue him that he might serue honour and obeie thee which not onlie rulest feedest gouernest guidest thē all according to thy good pleasure but hast made heauen thy seat and the earth thy footstole that from hence out of this vale of miserie we should looke vp vnto thee our onelie God where thou reignest in thy Maiestie aboue all the heauens from whence we should looke for our deliuerance out of all troubles O thou greate feareful God whose creatures passe all powres of Princes against whom to striue is meere follie and with whom to wrastle is extreame madnesse whose might wisdom iustice is infinit whose mercie goodnesse and pitie hath no end which art so great that thou fillest all places not concluded in anie but art present euerie where seest all things whose maiestie surmounteth all creatures so farre that it cannot be conteined or ruled of any Thou great fearful God which in thy anger threwest thy angelsthat offended the out of thy glorious presence in heauen into euerlasting darknes ofhell who in thy rage drownedst all the world except eight persons which burnedst vp Sodom and Gomorah with fire brimstone from heauen which didst cast Adam and vs all out of Paradice for eating the forbidden Apple who causedst the man to be stoned to death for gathering a few sticks on the Sabbath daie which man would iudge to be but small faultes yet were great because they were contrarie to thy commaundements who killed Vzzah for vpholding the Arke being readie to fall which plauged Pharao with froges flies hailestones which made Nabuchadnezer of a mightie king a vile beast to eate grasse made Herod to be wiried with lice O thou great and feareful God at whose beck the deuils do tremble the earth doth quake the heauens shoote out hotte fierie thunderbolts the clouds powre out great stormes and tempests to destroie thine enimies O thou God of heauen thou great and feareful God I thy poore wretch vile worme and miserable creature voide of all goodnes and ful of all wretchednes I forsaking my selfe and trusting on thy
that be hid in it is to be reuerenced of all sorts of men and with diligence and prayer is to be searched out as far as we may The new building of this olde destroyed Citie by Gods enemies putteth vs in remembrance how Sathan by his members had ouerthrowne Gods Citie and chosen people and where now all sortes of men lay on hands Iustelie to repaire it againe it teacheth vs our duetie how diligent euerie one should be in his degree to the restauring of Gods Citie his Church to his olde beautie and strength againe This Citie Ierusalem was first called Salem or Solyma where Melchisedech was king and met Abraham returning with the spoile which he recouered from the king of Sodom and his fellowes Melchisedech by interpretation of his name is first called the King of righteousnes and after the King of Salem that is of peace who representeth vnto vs Christ Iesus as the Epistle to the Hebrewes saith which is the King of all righteousnes and by whome all we are made righteous as the Apostle saith and is a Priest for euer after the order of Melchisedech and offered vp that sweete and sauing sacrifice of his owne bodie and hearts blood to pacifie the wrath of God against man and make peace betwixt them both as it is written to the Eph. 2. This citie afterwards was called Iebus where the Iebusits one of the nations did dwel whose land god gaue to his people of Israel these Iebusits came of the cursed seede of Canaan whome Noe his father cursed for mocking him in his drunkennes and inhabited this countrie vntill that worthie king Dauid recouered the strongest parte of it from them called Sion named it the Citie of Dauid after himselfe That noble captaine Iosue in deede conquered the whole land and deuided it among the Israelites but these Iebusits were partlie so strong dwelling in the mountaines that they could not be vanquished in short time partly the people so negligent that they wold not driue them out or destroy them as they were commaunded but suffered them to dwel among them to their great shame harme for they were euer like thornes in their sides to prick hurt them as it is written Iosue 23. Whereby we learne that as the Iebusites Gods enemies could not fully be conquered vntil Dauid came no more could the kingdome of Sathan be cleane ouerthrown vntill Christ Iesus the King of glory was borne of the seede of Dauid who conquered sin hel the deuil and possessed the holy hill Sion and made his people citizens of the heauenlie Ierusalem And like as they suffered the Iebusits to dwell amongst them to their great harme so sinne remaineth in our mortall bodies conquered in deede that it doeth not reigne ouer those that serue the Lord yet not cleane taken away but left for our exercise who hauing our mortal enemie dwelling within vs should fight against sinne vnder the banner of faith in Christ Iesus who onelie hath can and will continuallie defend his people subdue their enemies and giue his children the victorie How King Dauid wanne this Citie from the Iebusits is fullie declared in the 2. of Sam. 5. chapter And how Christ Iesus the Sonne of God conquered the whole kingdome of Sathan sinne death and hell the whole historie of the gospell declareth And as king Dauid when he had reigned 33. yeares noblie in Ierusalem died with great victorie so Christ Iesus our Lord and graundcaptaine after he had preached the kingdome of his father gat this noble victorie against death and all his enemies in the 33. yeare of his age by suffering death and triumphantlie ascending into heauen where he reigneth a glorious King for euer After that Dauid had recouered this Citie from the Iebusites it was continually called Ierusalem which is by interpretation the Lord he will see Salem alluding to both the olde names ioyned togither Iebus Salem chaunging one letter onelie In the gospel it is called the holie citie as when the deuil tempted Christ he tooke him into the holie Citie and set him on a pinacle of the temple which name it gate rather of the holie law word and Sacrifices that were taught there and offered then of that wicked and vnholie people that denied the Lord of life and required Barrabas to be deliuered But when it was destroied by the Romanes and not one stone left standing on another as Christ foretold it should be Elius Adrianus the Emperour for vaine glorie builded a new Citie and called it after his owne name Elia or Capitolina And when the heathen had gotten it from the Christians Pope Vrbane the second kept a councell in Fraunce and by his flattering friers stirred vp all Princes to recouer the holie land againe more like a superstitious Iewe putting holinesse in the place which then was inhabited with wicked people then like a true preacher of true holinesse But it cost manie Princes their liues lands and goods and yet not recouered wherof England felt his parte when King Richard the first went thither and was taken prisoner paid a great Raunsome to the impouerishing of the Realme As God gaue this Citie and people falling from him into his enemies hands so will he cast vs vp if we frowardly forsake him This Citie Ierusalem aster that it was recouered from the Iebusites was inlarged and fortified by Dauid Salomon Ozias and Ezechias and other good kings and had within it two chiefe hils Sion where the Kings Palace was built Moria where the temple was And after when the people encreased other two hils were taken into it Acra and Bethera as Iosephus writeth It had three wardes and walles within it Within the Innermost wall was the Kings Palace and Temple and the Preists lodging in the midle ward were the Prophets noble-men their schooles Leuits and Doctors By which we are taught how to place and esteeme learning and learned men schooles vniuersities and preachers which are not now much regarded In the vttermost dwell the Citizens marchants and artificers It was then 4. miles about and after enlarged to 6. It was most glorious in the time of our sauiour Christ for Herod and Agrippa had made great cost on it and Christ wept for it Dauid in the 48. Psalme describeth the beautie and strength of this Citie and biddeth them goe round about it marke and behold it and count the towers of it that were manie that the Lord might be praised for it The vttermost wall had towres 90. The midle wall had towres 14. And the innermost wall had towres 60. In the whole 164. towres as Iosephus and others doe write But I take it that it was so rather in the time of Christ then of Dauid or of this building now for as it increased in wealth beautie and strength so it did in pride riotousnes superstition contempt ofGod al wickednes so that this last and vtter destruction was at hand for refusing
neyther sleepeth nor slumbereth which can neyther be ouercome by strength hauing all things at his commandement nor deceiued by treason practise nor pollicie hauing al wisedome to fore-see mischiefs pretended cunning great good wil to preuent them al wherein standeth the comfort ofall good men that they haue such a Graund-captaine By the right vse of this discipline and doctrine is heauen gates set open to al penitent beleeuers and lockt vp against all obstinate and double-faced hipocrits And what-socuerthe true and faithful Porters of these dores doe binde in earth it is bound in heauen and what-soeuer they loose in earth is forgiuen in heauen who-soeuer they let in are welcome and whom they keepe out are cast awaie Such commission and authoritie hath god giuen to his word and ministerie for the comfort and correction of his people that al dissolute behauiour may be banished from amongst his and all good order peace and quietnes mainteyned The Lord for his mercie sake graunt his Church faithfull Porters to open the dores to the sheepe and shut them fast against the wolues and driue from this chargeable office of trust all picklockes and conspirers to betraie this Citie and Citizens of the spirituall Ierusalem For this is the duetie of all good builders not onelie to set vp the walls and house leauing the doores and windowes open but to make it strong with doores Lockes Boltes Barrs and set true faithful Porters and ouerseers of the house and all in it The building of this old gate is the preaching of the old commandements of faith and loue which S. Ihon writeth of as Beda noteth well 7. The men of Gibeon and Mizpah builded vnto the Throne of the Duke beyond the Riuor NOw this worke goeth forward the townes in the Countrie come and helpe to worke lustelie Such goodnesse commeth when God sendeth such a faithful Ruler as Nehemiah was God encrease the number Whoe this Duke was it is vncertaine whether he was a Iew or a stranger but God is to be praised that stirred vp such to set forward this worke Some thinke him to be Daniel that was set in great Authoritie by King Darius and not vnlike to be lie if he liued so long for he was as zealous towards his countrie as any other Diuers Iewes were in great authoritie in their captiuitie troblesome times who euerhelped them in their great neede So God prouideth for his Church that when any doeth trouble them he rayseth vp some to domfort them 〈◊〉 about this time was in great fauour with Assuerus Sidrach Misach and Abednego Daniels companions were much accounted of in their time The Riuer that he speaketh of here is Euphrates which was a great notable Riuer in the borders of Persia and is ouer signified by this kinde of speech amongst the people as Nalus was called the Riuer in Egipt and vnderstood by that name in that countrie as they be both called by that name in one sentence Gen. 15. Some translate vnto the Throne and some for the Throne as Munster and others both may stand well and not vnlike but this Duke though he was out of the countrie yet bare his portion of the charges and builded his part What cause is there to name him here If he did nothing to this biulding In the. 8. verse come in the Goldsmythes and Apothecaries for so the Hobrew words signifie they leaue their fine worke sweete Spices and fall to worke in rough stones morter None must be to daintie to file his fingers in working at Gods building al sorts as they he the Lords so they must serue the Lord and the Lord looketh for it of duetie But in the 〈◊〉 the Moabits which is most maruell for they were most 〈◊〉 enemies to the Iewes 〈◊〉 and help to build Thus God who hath the hearts of all men in his hands of 〈◊〉 maketh friendes and where great hatred was afore much loue to ensud And though the greatest parte of the Moabites were euer vtter enemies vnto the Iewes as the Iewes be vnto the Christians yet some Iewes be turned vnto the faith now as some Moabites were then And in the 12. verse Sallum an Inchaunters sonne for so the hebrew worde signifieth commeth with his daughters and falleth to worke Wherein I cannot tell Whither I should maruell at the father or the daughters more The father was a great man of authoritie in Ierusalem and therefore no doubt the daughters were as nice and fine as their calling required and therefore great maruel that they would humble them-selues to worke in mire and clay No lesse maruell that Sallum hauing a wicked coniurer to his father should for sake that science which manie great men delite in to their owne destruction and fall to worke at such rough worke But thus God calleth whome pleaseth him and those that be truely called are neither wearie nor ashamed to serue the Lord in the lowest kinde of seruice Thus Dauid promised that the Kings of Tharsis and the Iles of Arabia and Saba should bring gifts and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord Christ which all then were heathen people and knew not God Coniuring was a common thing among the Iewes in so much that some of the high Priests were infected with it as appeereth Act. 16. yet at Pauls preaching they came and brought in their coniuring Bookes and burnt them A comfortable example is this to all those that haue illmen to their fathers that the ilnes of the father shall not hurt the 〈◊〉 if he turne to the Lord leauing his fathers steps And all daintid dames may here learne of these gentle women to set more by working at Gods house then by trimming of them-selues Would God they would spend that on the poore members of Christ Citizens of this spiritual Ierusalem that they wastfully bestow on them-selues and would pitie their pouertie something like as they pamper them-selues S. Peter biddeth them leue their gold and friesled heare their costly apparrell so modestly behaure them solues that their husbands seeing their honest behauiour may be wonne to the Lord by 〈◊〉 for so Sara and other holie 〈◊〉 did attire them-selues 〈◊〉 But it is to be feared that manie desire rather to be like dalying 〈◊〉 then sober Sara And if the husband will not mainteinc it though he sel a peace of land breake vp house borow on Interest raise rents or make like hard shifts little obedience wilbe shewed 〈◊〉 the Empresse the 〈◊〉 wife of 〈◊〉 the Emperour would visit the sick folkes in their houses her selfe and help them would taste of their brothes how 〈◊〉 were made bring them dishes to lay their meat in and wash their cupps and if any would forbid her shee said she offered her labour for the Empire to God that gaue it And she would oft say to her husband Remember what ye were and who yo be now and so shall ye alwaies be thankefull vnto God It
the worke went forward as though that had benethe greatest fault that they could haue committed Wisdome would haue tried whither such tales had bene true afore they had beleeued them but anger is so hotte an affection that it cannot abide to be ruled by reason There is no difference 〈◊〉 an angrie man a mad man but that anger lasteth but for a time and continueth not still as madnes doeth 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 est Anger is a short madnes saieth the Poet and againe Anger letteth the minde that it cannot see the trueth Saint Iames therefore biddeth let euery man be swift to he are but slow to speake and slow to anger for the anger of man worketh not the righteousnes of God And though anger ought to be suppressed in all things that it grow not to any extremitie yet is it most chieflie to be holden downe when any correction is to be executed Tullie teacheth well Qui iratus accedit ad poenam nunquam mediocritatem illam tenebit quae est inter nimium and parum He that punisheth when he is angrie cannot keepe that meane which is betwixt too much and too little Theodosius the Emperour when he had caused a great number to be slaine in his anger at Thessalonica and for his rashnes in so doing was excommunicated by Ambrose Bishop of Millanne after that he knew his fault openly confessedit made a law that no execution should be done on any offender whome he iudged to die afore 30. daies were expired that he might haue so long time to consider in whether he had iudged rightfully God graunt euerie man a diligent care to foresee that he doe nothing in hisanger vnaduisedlie but with patient modestie maie doe all things in the feare ofGod Tobias was an Ammonite of the seed of Ammon whom Lot begat of his owne daughter in his drunkennesse and as they were euer vtter enemies to the Iewes though they were neere kinsemen the one being come of Abraham the other of Lot his Nephew so now hauing such a man of Authoritie their countriman to be their Captaine as Tobias was they were more easelie drawne to ioyne with them that by this occasion they might more easelie reuenge olde quarrels against the Iewes more bitterlie The Arabians were their next neighboures a wilde Mountaine people liuing much by robberie and therefore easelie brought to such a mischiefe The Azdodits were one corner of the Philistines their old enemies and would rather runne to such a mischiefe vnbidden then tary for any calling for So we may see how readilie one wicked man wil be drawne to help another and how the wickednes of one will infect another that will giue eare vnto it But good men are oft lest to them-selues without help or comfort at mans hand as the Iewes were here now and the Church ofGod hath bene from the beginning subiect to such dangers and shalbe to the end that Gods glorie may more euidentlie shine in defending ofit in despite of all their foes The Metaphor or kind of speech that is vsed here when he faith a salue was come on the walls of Ierusalē is taken frō Chirurgions who when they heale wounds ioyne the flesh togither againe which afore was cut in sunder so the new breaches of the walls which afore lay gaping open were now ioyned togither and made sound as though it were one whole sound wall And as it was such a griefe to these wicked men to heare tell onelie that the walls went well forward in repairing so is it at this daie the greatest griefe that Gods enemies can haue when they heare tell that religion goeth forward in anie countrie then they conspire both by them-selues and their friends and speciallie by that bastard Tobias their Pope so much as in them lieth though it be with fire and sword or anie other cruel deuice to ouerthrow it 8. And they conspired When they perceiued that mocking taunts high lookes nor prowd words could not driue them from their building they wil now make open warre against them to dash them out of countenance put them to their shifts scatter them a sunder that being amazed at such a company cōming on them sodenly they should not assemble anie more to worke there Thus the wicked neuer cease by all meanes to hinder Gods building but as Sathan their Father goeth continuallie about like a roaring Lion to deuour the Lords slocke so doe they but our God is as diligent tosaue vs that they doe no hurt and watcheth vs when we doe sleepe that they ouercome vs not Pilate and Herod were not friends afore but to condemne our Lord Christ Iesus they soone agreeed and were friendes afterward So thus manie kinde of people which agree not well manie times among them-selues yet now to ouerthrow Ierusalem they all put on armoure ioyne them-selues togither become friends and agree all in one mischiefe Dauid marueileth to see how all sortes of people and Princes conspire togither against the Lord Christ crieth out why doe the heathen so fret and the people deuise vaine things the Kings of the earth haue risen togither and the Princes haue assembled togither against the lord his anointed But when Dauid had considered al their raging madnes he cōforteth him-selfe and saith he that dwelleth in the heauens shall mocke them the Lordshal laugh them to scorne c. So shall gods faithful litle flock be defended comforted in al their troubles vnto the end their prowd enemies shalbe confounded But this is all our froward nature bent vnto that we be so ready to mischiefe slow to do good 9. But we praied As Nehemiah declareth the manifold troubles that fel on them for this building so also he setteh forth their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Gods fauour towards them For if 〈◊〉 should continuallie assault vs and the Lord leaue vs to our selues mans weaknes were not able to stand so strong and subtill is he so vnable and wretched are we They forsake them-selues therefore and by humble praier submit themselues to their God who neuer failed them in all assaies Praier is a sure anker in all stormes and they neuer perish that humbly flie vnto it faithfullie cleaue vnto it Praier is a salue for all sores yea it healeth not onelie bodie and soule but euen hard stony walles No kinde of carthly phisicke that God hath made is good for all kinde of folke at all times all kinde of diseases but this heauenlie phisicke of praier in wealth woe in plentie and pouertie in prosperitie and aduersitie in sicknes and in health in warre and peace in youth and age in life and death in mirth and sadnes yea in all things times in the beginning middest ending praier is most necessarie comfortable Happy is that man that diligently vseth it at al times But he that will so effectuallie pray that he may obteyne the thing he desireth must first prostrate him-selfe in
that the Iewes went forward with this building they prepare them selues to fight with them and when they heard tell that they were readie to defend themselues they runne a waie Such rashe heades haue wicked men alwaies vnconstant and changing with euerie winde but Nehemiah is euer one man constant and bolde in well doing and goeth forward in building Gods Citie notwithstanding all their braggs Here appeereth how true it is that Dauid saieth the Lord bringeth to nought the counsell of the heathen and disapointeth the deuises of the people but the counsell of the Lord endureth for euer and the thoughts of his heart throughout all ages The Scribes Pharisies and the high priest gathered a councel against the Lord Christ thinking to haue ouerthrowne him and his doctrine that it should neuer haue bene heard off more but Dauid said truelie of them why did the heathen fret the people imagine a vaine thing the Kings of the earth stood vp togither and the Princes assembled against the Lord and against his anoynted but all in vaine for the Lord raysed vp his sonne Christ from death destroyed them Iudas with a band of Souldiers thought he should haue bene able cunninglie to haue wrought his pleasure against his master Christ Iesus But as sone as Christ asked them that came to take him whom they sought they all fell flat to the ground were not able to stand at the hearing of his word Achitophell thought by his wicked counsell to haue ouerthrowne his Lord and King Dauid but God ouerthrew his deuise he went and hanged him selfe and so did Iudas too when he saw the matter fall out otherwise then he looked for These and such other terrible examples may teach men to be wise and that they take nothing in hand against the Lord though it be neuer so wiselie deuised for it shall proue true that the Prophet saith there is no wisdome no foresight no counsel against the Lord. All shal be ouerthrowne and the more cunning it is the sooner it shall be cast downe none can stand against him he onely is wise and all other that haue it not from him be fooles Good men may also learne here not negligentlie to looke to them-selues nor to goe nakedlie without weapon to yeald them selues into their enemies hands for soe they may be guiltie of their owne death A weapon boods peace as the common saying is for God hath made the weapon to defend the bodie as he made the meat to feede the bodie and these braggers like theues will set on no man that they see weaponed and wil stand against them but on those that be naked or faint harted they will be cruel God requireth not such peakishnesse in a man that he suffer him-felfe to be wounded that by the law of nature aloweth euery man to defend him-selfe with weapons against such theeues if peace cannot otherwaies be had Now that their enemies were vanquished and fled away they brag not of their strength and courage they goe not to the Tauern to tosse potts and boast of their great victorie but in the feare of god returne to the walls euerie man falleth to his worke againe Thus we learne here both in the spirituall battell against Sathan his members to put on the spirituall armour that S. Paul armeth the christian souldier withall and they will flie away as these braggers did if we stand boldlie prepared to fight against them as Nehemiah his fellowes did It is true that the common verse teacheth Hostis non laedit nisi cum tentatus obedit Est leo si cedis sistas quasi musca recedit S. Iames agreeth to the same saying withstand the deuill and he will flie from you And S. Peter teacheth how to withstand him saying stand against him being strong in faith c. And also we learne not to be idle vnprofitable or vnthankful after the victory our deliuerance but to returne to our worke againe and sleepe not nor be negligent for our mortall enemie neuer sleepeth and if he preuaile not one waie he attempteth another he is not ashamed to take a foile but he wil assault vs againe some other way he is not wearie for he hopeth to speede at length and take thee napping All histories declare that the greatest Kingdomes which came to great powre and authoritie by taking paines by painfull battells by suffering hunger and cold euen the same when they fell to idlenes wallowing in wealth and riotous feasting daintines they lost their former glory faster then they wonne it Such be those time-seruers which the Gospel speaketh of that for a time make a shew in seruing thé Lord but in the tyme of triall they fall away their hollow hearts declare plainly that they neuer feared the Lord vprightlie Thus must the men of God neither be rash in attempting things vnaduisedlie nor negligent in prouiding things necessary for their defense or desperatly feare the brags and powre of the enemie but in the feare of god stand to their lawfull defense committing the successe to the almightie whose wisdome ruleth al things at his pleasure who defendeth his people no power can withstand him 16. And it fell forth from that daie forward that the halfe parte of the yong men did worke and the other parte of them held their Speares Shields Bowes and brestplates and the rulers were behind the whole house of Iuda 17. They that builded the wall and those that bare burdens and those that laied on the burdens with the one hand wrought their worke and with the other held their dartes 18. And euery one of the builders girded their Swords vppon their loynes and so they built but he that blew the Trumpet was by me 19. And I said to the Nobles and to the rulers and to the rest of the people this worke is great and large and we are scattered on the walls farre euery one from other 20. In what place soeuer ye shall heare the sound of the Trumpet thither come togither to vs our God will fight for vs. 21. And we will labour at the worke the halfe of them held their Speares from the day spring vntill the starres did rise 22. And at that time also I saied vnto the people let euerie one with his seruant lodge in the middest of Ierusalem that in the night we may haue watch and in the day labour 23. As for me my breethren my seruants and the watch-men that followed me we put not of our cloathes any of vs but onely to wash them in water ALthough Sanballat and his fellows were fled and retired back yet Nehemiah like a wise Captaine fearing some new practise and lest they might hide them-selues for a time and come againe on the sodaine and ouerthrow them deuideth all the yong men into 2. partes the one half followeth their worke and the other standeth readie in armour to defend thē if any sodaine
it neuer so small be in paine the rest of his body is greeued also euery member seeketh to ease it as they may so they be naturallie linked together So should all Christians being members of Christs mistical body one beare the griefe of another help to releeue him when Nehemiah had bene thus long sad weeping fasting praying he was now cast into a verie greate feare by reason of the kings earnest re quiring the cause of his sadnesse Thus one sorow followeth a nother and a Christian mans faith and patience is continually e xercised when one griefe is ended it hath another streight-wayes following The king said this sorow must needs come from a heauy heart seing thy body is not sick This toucheth a man neere when he must needes open the secrets of his heart to a king whom he cannot tell how he wil take it or what opinion he hath of him Many thoughts and suspitions rise in good mens hearts as wel as ill mens and cast them into great feare for euery man is subiect to affection of his owne nature Nehemiah might feare lest the king had heard some accusation against him or had taken some displeasure with him or would not graunt his request or some other would hinder his sute or might lose his office c. and therefore no marueil if he were sore afraid but a strong faith will boldly passe through all such cares and trusting in God will continue his good purpose The troubles of the righteous be many saith Dauid but the Lord will deliuer him out of them all 3. And I said After that he had something ouercome his feare and recouered his spirits he declareth vnto the king the cause of his sadnes The Maiestie of a king wil make anie good nature afraid to speake vnreuerentlie though they be daylie in company with him and fauour as Nehemiah was And though the curtesie of a Princebe such that he will abase and humble him selfe familiarly to vse his subiect yet the subiect should not ouer boldely nor saucely behaue him selfe toward his Prince Diogenes said Aman should vse his Prince or peere as he would doe the fire The fire if he stand to neere it will burne him and if he be to far of he will be a colde so to be ouer-bold without blushing or reuerence bringeth in contempt of both syds For the King will thinke him tosaucie the subiect will forget his duety And to be ouerstrange and afraid will cause the King to thinke him to be of an ill nature and not bearing a good heart towards him Therefore Nehemtah not ouer-bold with his Prince with most humble obeysaunce wisheth the king good life as the common phrase of the scripture vseth to speake plainly telleth the true cause of his sorow and sad countenance Here we may learne the duetie of Christians that liue vnder heathen Princes That is they may not onely serue them but ought humbly to obey reuerence them For surely this kinde of salutation in Nehemiah to pray for the kings life was not holy-water of the court from the teeth outward Saluta libenter but from an vnfeyned heart desiring it S. Paul who liued vnder Th'emperour Nero as wicked a man as euer the earth bare biddeth to pray for all kings them that be in authoritie which then were all infidels that vnder them we may liue a quiet life with godlines honestie And if thou thinkest such ill men ar not to be praied for yet for the quietnes of gods Church thou must pray for them that God would so rule their hearts that vnder them we may liue a peaceable and godlie life For that is the reason that Saint Paul yealdeth though such wicked men will not learne their owne saluation them-selues After that Nehemiah had thus dutifullie behaued him-selfe to the king so that there could be thought no iust cause of any euil suspicion in him toward the king then he boldly declareth the cause of his sadnes and saith the Citie where his fathers lay buried lay waste the gates were burned And is this so greate a cause why Nehemiah should be so sad weepe faste and pray so long had he not seene nor heard of greater Cities and countries then it was which were destroyed as miserably as it was Babylon which was much bigger then Ierusalem was conquered not long afore by Cyrus Samaria their neighbour by Senacharib and Salmanasser c. But this Citie had a greater cause to belamented for then others For it was taken from wicked men by gods mightie hand giuen to gods people It was increased with many benefites from God beautified with religion Priests a Temple to worship the liuing God in strengthned by manie worthie Princes and lawes and was a wonder of the world It was the holy Citie because it was dedicated to the Lords seruice though the people were euill that dwelt in it and misused it The gospel saith the Deuill tempting Christ our sauiour tooke him into the holy Citie set him on a pinacle of the temple and Christ our lord foreseeing the destruction of it to be at hand wept for it This was then the cause of Nehemiahs sorrowe that God was dishonoured for that this Citie which was dedicated to his name and giuen to his people to serue him in was now defaced by heathen Princes his religion decayed people subiect to straungers Azelous man cannot abide anything without great griefe that seemeth to deface the glorie of his God But if these causes were not yet the natural loue to his countrie had beene sufficient to moue him to teares For as it is a pitifull sight to see a Prince or Noble man to be cast from his dignitie to be spoyled of his honour landes and goods and become a carter and driue the plowe or lie tyed in prison so surelie it must needes moue any heathen man to see the Citie where he and his elders were borne and buried to be ouerthrowne lie open to all enemies vnfenced with walles or gates and be inhabited with a few cottegers and no better then the poorest ragged hamlet in a countrie much more Nehemiah must needs be touched for this citie wich was so famous through out the world There may be good reasons alledged beside these why he should weepe for his Citie and countrie as because it was a great reliefe and succour in all needes to all that liued in it from time to time and a greate strength to the countrie about it But what is that to be sad for the place where his elders were buried Is there any holynes in the ground that it is better to be buried there then els where Or the deade men aniething the worsse if they be pulled out of their graues What is the cause In deed it was called holie in diuers places of the Scriptures as other outward things be that are appointed and consecrated to a holie vse S.
may not at any tyme require a safe conduct of Princes to whom it belongeth to prouide in daungerous times that passage by the hie way may be safe and quiet Paul as we reed when the Iewes had sworne that they would neither eat nor drinke vntil they had killed him desyred an vnder Captaine to bring his Nephew who tolde him of that conspiracie to the high Captaine to declare so much to him and desyred that he would prouide some safetie for him that he were not murthered by the way and in this doing Paul neither offended man nor distrusted of Gods prouidence and care toward him Againe in that great and long storme that Paul his fellowes were in on the sea where they looked for nothing but to be drowned the Angell of God tolde Paul that god had giuen him the liues of all that were with him in the ship none of them should perish yet afterward when the maryners would haue cunningly conueied them-selues out of the ship vnder pretence to haue cast anker Paul tolde the high Captaine that if he suffered them to goe out of the ship they should all perish this he did not saie as doubting of the Angels true message nor of gods good will and mightie hand able to deliuer them but to teach vs that although god haue made vs promisse of his mercy we may not tempt him lie downe and sleepe carelesly but diligently to looke for vse such helps meanes as god hath apointed vs to worke by god worketh al goodnes in vs him selfe yet hath appointed means for vs to vse doe such things the which we may in no case neglect yet al praise is due to him whatsoeuer we doe for it is he that both ordeyneth the end of all things how they shal come to passe and also the meanes how they shal be brought to passe prospereth al them that forsaking them-selues vse such meanes hang on him knowing the beginning middest end to be ruled com to passe as he appointed God inspired the Apostles with all knowledge of the scriptures sodenly which were vnlearned neuer went to the schoole yet male not we thinke that we will be learned after the same sorte without studie and praier for then we tempt God refusing such helps as he hath appointed for vs to come to learning by And though we studie and pray neuer so much yet we shal vnderstand nothing vntil he giue vs his holy spirit the schoolmaster of all trueth to lighten our mindes and giue vnderstanding of his holie will We be like an axe in the carpenters hand which though it be a good one yet the praise of the good worke that is done with it is to be giuen to the man and not to the axe Such things be we in gods hand by whom he worketh his will and glory though not vnsensible as dead things be yet as vnable to worke any good thing without him as the axe is without the carpenter for of our selues we are not able to thinke a good thought as the Apostle saith that all praise may be his that blesseth and prospereth both vs and the meanes that he hath appointed for vs to worke by and bringeth it to a good end We must thinke likewise of Gods doings and our selues in all other things sinne except that he worketh all in all yet not without vs that all maie saie with Dauid Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy name giue all praise and glorie Thus we see that some man maie at some times doe that another maie not yea one man him-selfe cannot doe at all times that he maie well doe at sometimes But this general rule being kept that Gods glorie be not defaced by doing of it it maie be done of all men at all times Paul wrought for his liuing when he preached which others did not nor are bound to doe and he might haue liued of his preaching as well as others did yet the time was such and the people so peeuishlie bent to sclaunder the Gospel of God that Paul forbare to vse that libertie which God gaue him and would not be thought to preach for gaines but wrought for his liuing would not be chargeable to any man Such was the case here that Ezra might not aske help and Nehemiah might 8. And letters also Nehemiah wiselie considering what he wanted yet to the finishing of such a worke as he went about perceiued he should neede timber and therefore desired the Kings letters of warrantie to Asaph keeper of his woodes that he might deliuer him such trees and so manie as would serue his purpose both for the building of the gates the towres of the Pallace neere to the Temple the Citie walles and the house that he should dwel in him selfe And here we shall see the King worthie great praise though he was but barbarous that for pollicies sake and wealth of his countrie both preserued his woods and set a keeper ouer them that they should not be wilfully wasted A good example for Princes to foresee the like in their countries in all ages for common-wealths cannot stand without the vse of woods in manie kind of things Nehemiah is also much to be commended that although he was in so great authoritie and fauour with the King yet he would not take of his woods without his licence and warrant as manie doe If these tow things were kept in this land that both the Princes woods and others to should be preserued faithful keepers set ouer them and none deliuered without sufficient warrant we should not finde the great lacke that we generally doe What spoile hath bene made of woods in our remembraunce wise men haue noted but few gone about to amend it though manie haue lamented it What common dealing hath bene practised to get such lands of the Prince and other men as were well woodded into their hands and when they had spoiled the woods rackt the rents deepely fined the tenants then to returne the same land into the Princes hand againe or sel it ouer to others and get as much it is to well knowne throughout the Realme and to the hurt of manie at this daie Nehemiah could aske nothing so much but the King did graunt it speedelie God did so mooue the Kings heart and prospered Nehemiahs doings in so much that he giueth all the praise to God alone and saith the hand of his God was good toward him to set forward his good purpose of building Ierulem Nehemiah knew well that God was the common God of all people and nations both by creation and gouernement of them but because he seemed to fauour him more then he did other in giuing him boldnes to open his griefe vnto the king wisdome to make his humble sute without offence vnto the King and so good successe to haue all things graunted that he required of the King so vnlooked for he calleth him
well good men lament it iustice crieth vengeance and God will reuenge it 11. And I came to Ierusalem and I was there three dayes 12. And I rose in the night I and a few men with me and tould no man what God had put in my heart to doe in Ierusalem and there was no beast with me but the beast which I satte vppon 13. And I went forth at the valley gate in the night and before the dragons-well to the dung hill-gate considered the walls of Ierusalem which were broken downe and the gates which were consumed with fire 14. And I passed ouer to the well-gate and to the Kings fish-poole and there was no roume for the beast vnder me to passe 15. And I went vp in the night by the brooke and I considered the well and comming back I came by the vally-gate and returned Nehemiah hath now done with the court and is come to Ierusalem which he so much desyred he was wearie of the noyse and solemnitie of the court and thought he should liue more quietly in his countrie but it falleth out cleane contrary for his trouble and daunger is double to that it was a fore and he commeth from the Court to the cart from a plesaunt life to a carefull After his long Iourney he resteth him-selfe and his companie three dayes knowing the weaknes of mans bodie to be such that it cannot continually endure labour but must be refreshed with ease and rest Thus must good men in authoritie not ouerlay their seruants with continuall labour but let them haue reasonable time of rest for God made the Sabboth day that both man and beast might rest and not be opressed with continuall toyling such a consideration he had of mans weaknes we do not reed of any great solemnitie that the Iewes vsed to wel-come him with all being their countriman and comming from the court so honorably with such a band of men to conduct him and being in so great fauour with the King it is like if that there had bene any such thing itwould haue beene declared as well as his estate was in the Court afore It was but a hard beginning to haue Sanballat and Tobias two of the greatest men in the countrie to lowre so at his commyng and no greater reioycing made of his countriemen for whose sake he tooke all those paynes but nothing can discourage him on forwarde he goeth with his purpose These three dayes though he rested with his body his minde was not yet quiet he was still deuising how he might best and speedely goe about his buylding how he might open to his countriemen the cause of his commyng how he might persuade them to ioyne with him in that worke and to declare vnto them the Kings commission and good will towarde him and what fauour he found in the court For they might well doubte if they should enterprise so great a worke without the Kinges licence they might runne into great displeasure seeing they had so manie enemies in the countrie about them that with all their might had sought the hinderaunce of that buylding so many yeares They them-selues had lien so long in dispaire followed their owne busines sought their owne gaines and cared not for building their owne Citie nor sought any waies how to doe it they had almost so farre forgotten their God oppressed the poore and fallen to so great wickednes as appeereth hereafter that they had no care ofReligion in the most parte of them 12. And I rose in the night After that Nehemiah had thus long debated with him selfe how this worke should be taken in hand he could not sleep but riseth in the night taketh a few of his men with him on foote and he him selfe on his Mule and rideth round about Ierusalem veweth the walles in what place they were worst destroyed and how they might most speedelie be repayred If he had taken his vew in the daie time euerie man would haue stood gazing on him wondering what he went about haue hundered it and not vnlike some would haue bene offended at him and his enemies round abut would as much as they durst or could haue stopped his enterprise The night therefore was thought to be the quietest time to do this in and he is content to breake his sleepe for the furtherance of this great good worke A good example for al men especially for those that be in authoritie in the common-wealth as Nehemiah was now and for those that haue the charge of Gods Church committed vnto them not to be idle euen in the night season to break a sleepe yea watch all night if neede be to set forward the building of Gods house and Citie The phisitian will watch with his patient all night if neede be The good Captaine will not sleepe all the night long though he haue sett his watch afore but he will some-times at the second watch some-times at the third arise and see whither his watch-men be fallen on sleepe and what they doe or whither any enemies drawe neere or no so should euerie Christian priuatlie for him selfe breake his sleepe lift vp his minde vnto the Lord call vpon him by faithfull praier call for mercie at his fatherlie goodnes commend him selfe al gods people to his gratious protection desiring that all stumbling blockes which be hinderers of his glory may be taken away but speciallie those that be negligent to watch a whole night in praier deuising what waies Gods glorious name gospel and Religion may best be increased his kingdome enlarged Christ glorified and Antechrist confounded Dauid saith he rose at midnight to giue praise vnto the lords blessed name Our mortall enemie Sathan neuer sleepeth night nor daie but continuallie goeth about like a roaring lion seeking whom he maie deuoure and if we had not as good a watch-man to watch for our safety when we sleepe we should be swallowed vp euery houre Behold sayeth Dauid he neyther slumbereth nor sleepeth that is the watch man of Israell All praise be to that mercisull God which taketh such care for his miserable people and watcheth when we sleepe that our enemie deuoure vs not sodenlie Our sauiour Christ to giue vs example of this diligent watching to pray in the night prayeth the whole night him selfe in the mount afore he chose his Apostles to preach Iosue marched forward all the night long to fight with the Amorites and ouercame them Gedion in the night season pulled downe the Alter of Baall that his father had made and the groue of wood that was neere vnto it being afraid to doe it in the day time for feare of his fathers house and people thereby and in the night also set on the Madianits and vanquished them So good men let no time passe wherin occasion is giuen them to further Gods glory night or day but earnestly follow it vntill they haue brought their purpose to effect And that this vewing of the walls might
be more secretly done he chooseth the night season rather then the day to doe it in a few men to wait on him rather then many no moe horsse then his owne all the rest on foote for making noise many men and horsses would sone haue bene espied one troubled another made a great noise haue bewrayed his counsell which he kept so secret to him selfe that he tould it not to any man what he went about and ifhe had gone alone he might haue fallen into some daunger oflife hauing none to help him The night is the quietest tyme to deuise things in for then all things be quiet euery man keepeth his house and draweth to rest no noyse is made abroade the eies are not troubled with looking at many things the senses are not drawne away with phantasies and the mynde is quiet Many men would haue committed the doings of such things to other men and would haue trusted them to haue vewed the walls and after to haue certified him of their doings in what case they were and how they might most speedelie be repayred but Nehemiah lest he should haue wrong information giuen him though he was a man of great authoritie did not disdaine to take the paines him-selfe breake his sleepe and rode about the walls him-selfe to teach vs that nothing should be thought painfull at any time nor disdainfull to anie man of what estate so-euer he were to set forthe the building of Gods Citie and dwelling place which euerie man ought to doe in his calling Dauid when the Arke of God was brought out of Abinadabs house played on instruments and after cast of his Kinglie apparell for reioysing daunced afore the Arke in his poore Ephod to glorifie his God withall Michol his wife looking forth at a window and seeing him daunce laught him to scorne asked him if he were not ashamed to daunce so nakedlie afore such a companie of women as though he had bene but some light scoffing fellow But Dauid was so zealous a man earnest to glorify God by al meanes that he forgat him-selfe to be a King abasedhim-selfe with the lowest and simplest said to Michol that he would yet more lowelie cast downe him selfe so that his God might be glorisied in his doings Michol for mocking of him was barren all her life had no children but Dauid for this humbling of him-selfe was blessed of the Lord. Moses for sooke to liue in pleasure in Pharaos court tobe called his daughters sonne chose to liue in trouble with his Breethren the Iewes to keepe lethros sheepe so that he might serue the Lord. Our sauiour the perfect Paterne of all humblenesse did not disdaine to washe the Myrie feete of his disciples and wype them and last of all as though that had not bene base enough he humbleth him-selfe to the sclanderous death of the Crosse and to hang on a Crosse betwene two theeues for vs being his enemies as though he had bene a third he loued vs so tenderly that he would goe to hell that we might goe to heauen he would die so vilde a death to purchase vs so glorious a life and suffer the paines due to our sinnes that we might enioy the pleasures of heauen God graunt al estates this humblenes of mind that for his cause that forsooke al worldly honour they may be content to abase them-selues to suffer al paines reprochfull things in the world for the furtherance of the building of Gods Citie such humble abasing of them-selues is the greatest honor that euer they shall get all worldly pompe without this vilde shameful In that he telleth no man what he went about that God had put it in hismind to doe it he declareth that it was not his owne deuice nor came from any man but God him-selfe was the mouer of it therefore was more earnestlie to be followed He that will learne to keepe counsell in deede let him learne of Nehemiah here to tell no man not to his dearest friend Manie will come to his friend and say I can tell you a secret matter but ye must keepe in counsell and tell no body what folishnes is this that thou wouldst haue another to keepe thy counsell secret to him selfe thou thy selfe canst not keepe it secret to thy selfe wouldst thou haue another man to doe that for thee which thou wilt not do for thy selfe Keepe thine owne counsel and then thou shalt not neede to feare lest other men bewray thee And if thou wouldst haue another mā to keepe thy counsel he wil thinke thou shouldst not haue told it thy selfe and then it had bene safe enough but in telling him he telleth another friend he sayeth to him as thou saidst to thy friendafore I can tel you a thing that was told me secretly but you must keepe counsel tell no body so with going from friend to friend it will be knowne to al men Therefore the surest onely way to haue counsell kept secret is to follow Nehemiah here and tel it to no man though he be thy deare freind for he hath other friends to tell it to as thou didst tell it him If any doe marueil why Nehemiah was thus earnest in this building and refused no paines nor ieoperdy but with courage went through them all he telleth a sufficient cause here him selfe and sayeth his God had put it in his heart to doe it He taketh not the glorie of it to himselfe but giueth all the praise to God alone as we must doe in all good things Whensoeuer God putteth any good thing into mans heart to doe he driueth him so forward that he cannot eat sleepe nor rest quietly vntill it be done he thinketh all time long and lost that is not bestowed on it therefore they that be so colde in their worke that they care not whither it goe forward or not are not moued by God The holy gost which worketh this great desire in vs is called fire Iohn Baptist said he baptized in water but he that came after him should baptize them with the holy ghost fire The holy ghost fel on the apostles in firie tongues and our sauiour Christ said he came to set fire on the earth and what would he els but that it should burne These be spoken to teach vs that those which are moued of God are earnest in their doings God loueth not those that be luke warme he wil spew them out of his mouth you must be either an earnest friend or an open enemie he loueth no dissemblers you must be eyther hotte or cold he that is not with him is against him double-dealers are the worst people that be they are good neither afore God nor man an open enemie is better then a flattering friend all which sayings doe teach vs to be earnest in gods worke or els he putteth it not into our hart Salomon commendeth plaine dealing so much
fruits other things that god made for mans necessitie are perished punished turned into an other nature for the sinne of m an yea not onely worldlie things but his holy Temple law word religion the arke of God the Cherubins the pot with Manna the mercy seate Aarons rod with all therest of his holy Iewels were giuen vnto the wicked Nabuchadnezzers hand for the disobedience of the people God will rather suffer his opē enemies to enioy his wonderful benefits then his flattering friends When Adam had sinned the earth which afore was decked with al good fruits brought forth weeds to punish thē withal For the wickednes of Sodom God not onely cruellie destroied the people in it but to this day that pleasant ground which afore was like paradise is now barren full of filthie mire slitche tarre c. and the aire of it so pestilent as diuers doe write that if any birdes slie ouer it it killeth them The whole countrie of Iewrie a plentifull land flowing with milke and honie of his owne nature by the disobedience of the people became a barren land as Dauid teacheth in his psalme The lord turneth a fruit full ground into a barren for the wickednes of the dwellers in it Ierusalem was not onely destroyed now thus pitiously by the Babilonians but after ward by Vespasian the Emperour and had not one stone left standing on another and the Iewes driuen out ofit who now liue scattered through the world abhorred of all good men and vnder Gods heauie rodde for crucifying the Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of God and their continual despising of him Let euerie man therefore learne reuerently in the feare of God to liue for sinne will not onely be punished with euerlasting death in the world to come but euen in this life man him-selfe is plagued and all things that should serue or pleasure him shalbe turned to his destruction because he would not serue his God as he ought to do What can be a more righteous iudgement of God then so to order things that no creature of God shal serue a wretched man which will not serue not feare the Lord his God and creator Sinne is so vile in Gods sight that ne will punish those innocent vnsensible and vnreasonable creatures as the stones in the wall the house wherein thou dwellest the earth whereby thou liuest which neuer sinned for the sinne of thee wretched man O consider how God abhorreth sinne and disobedience of his word that he could neuer be pacified but by the death of his owne deare sonne Christ Iesus for thy sinnes O miserable man consider thy wretched state thy sinnes pulled thy Lord Christ from heauen to hell from ioy to paine thou causedst him to be whipped and hanged on a tree thrust to the heart with a speare by his blood to saue the thou causedst him to die that thou mighst liue If thou shouldest deale thus with another man thy fellow what wouldest thou thinke thou hadst deserued And when thou hast thus misused thy Lord and Christ the sonne of God crucifiing him againe and yet continuest in sinne contemning his commaundements treading the sonne of God vnder thy feete and esteeming the blood of his eternall Testament as a prophane thing how canst thou looke vp vnto him how canst thou hope for mercie Wicked men are so horrible in Gods sight that the Angels in heauen abhorre them the creatures on earth disobey them good men flie their companie and diuels in hel pull them vnto them and yet malice hath so blinded them that they cannot turne vnto the Lord. But whatsoeuer there is in vs O God forget not thou thy selfe shew thy selfe a God stil though we forget thee As thou louedst vs when we were thine enemies so loue vs still now whom thou hast made thy freinds and bought so dearely and turne vs good God that we may loue thee Remember O Lord wherof we be made from the earth we came on the earth we liue and delightin earthly things vnto the earth we shall returne thou canst not looke for heauenly things to come from so vile a matter this earthly nature cannot be chaunged but by thy heauenly spirit deale not with vs therefore O Lord in iustice as we deserue but in thy great mercie which is our sure saluation and let thy manifold mercie deuoure our manifold miserie that our manifold sinnes be not laid to our charge Gratious God forgiue vs as our miserie is endlesse so is thy mercie much more large then we can thinke As we see God deale in his anger with this Citie for the sinne of the people that dwelled in it so he will deale with all obstinate breakers of his law in all ages and places without respect of persons The walls of the citie may well be compared to the Magistrats which both defend the people from their enemies and also gouern the Citizens within as the walls keepe out other from inuading so they keepe in the inhabitants from straying abroade the gates of the Citie may well be compared vnto the ministers which open the dore of life to all penitent persons by the comfortable preaching of mercie promised in Christ shut heauen gates against al reprobate and impenitent sinners by terrible thundring of his vengeance threatned to such in his worde The walls are destroied and the gates burned when the rulers and ministers doe not their duetie but care for other things And as this wretched people had iustly for their disobedience neither walls left to keepe out the enemie nor gates to let in their friends but all were destroied so shall all godles people be left without godly Magistrats to gouerne them and liue in slauerie vnder tyrants that oppresse them and also without comfortable Ministers to teach them and be led by blinde guides that deceiue them and so the blinde lead the blinde both fall in to the ditch to their vtter and endles destruction They be not worthie to haue either Magistrate or preacher that will not obey lawes nor beleeue the worde This Osee the Prophet foretold them should fall on them saying The people of Israell should sit manie daies without a Prince without sacrifice and Image without the Ephod and Teraphin and yet in the end they should returne vnto their God But they feared not these threatnings then no more then we doe now yet as they fell on them then so will they fall on vs now After that Nehemiah had thus diligentlie vewed the walls and the breaches of them he was more able to render a reason and talke with the rulers how they might be repaired A good rule for all those that haue anie charge commited to them that they should first priuatlie consider the things they haue to doe them-selues and then shal they be more able to consider who giueth best counsel for the doing of it Rashely to enter on it a wise man will not nor open his minde to
many tymes turneth them to hatred That preacher therefore which will winne most vnto God shal rather doe it by gentelnes then by sharpnes by promise then by threatnings by the gospel then by the law by loue then by feare though the law must be enterlaced to throw downe the malice of mans hart the flesh must be bridled by feare and the spirit comforced with louing kindnes promised Nehemiah vseth both the law and the Gospel to persuade them withal The 17. verse laieth afore them the misery they were in to liue vnder heathen strange Princes the pitiful sight of their broken wal their gates burned wherby they liued in continual danger of the enemy round about them to be spoyled murthered the shame was no lesse them the losse that they could not repaire and recouer by their wel doing that their fathers lost they had dwelled so many yeares in it since king Cyrus gaue them licence to goe home againe all which were the heauie burthens cursse of the law But this verse setteth afore them the gratious goodnes of God and the King which had giuen great tokens of their good wil fauour toward the worke of their meere mercie so both the lawe and the gospel laide afore them the miserie taken awaie and mercie offered vnto them they should most thankfully receaue the goodnesse promised auoid the great burthen of miserie that they so long had borne This kinde of teaching is verie meete to be followed of all preachers and those that shall speake vnto a people where all sorts of states ar to be perswaded sor these kinds of reasons touch all sorts of men and if it be done in the feare of God it wil worke as it did then Those be the best schollers that wil learne withont the rod yet none so good but at times he needeth the rod and a wise schoolemaster wil make such choyse of his schollers whom he wil haue learned that he shall profit more with gentlenesse then crueltie and such asses as must continuallie haue the whip are meeter to be driuen from the schoole to the Cart then by their loytring to hurt others 19. Sanballat the Horronite and Tobias the seruant an Ammonite and Gesem the Arabian heardit and they mocked vs said what is this thing that ye doe doe ye fall awaie from the King 20. And I aunswered them said vnto them the God of heauen is he that hath graunted vs prosperitie and we his seruants wil rise vp and build and as for you there is no portion and right nor remembrance in Ierusalem These men as they were sad at Nehemiahs first comming when they see that any man had founde such fauour with the King to doe good to Ierusalem so now were they almost mad for anger when they heard that they went about to build the walls of Ierusalem Openlie to withstand them or forbid them to worke they durst not because they had the Kings Commission to doe so but so much as they durst they discourage them they mocke them thei threaten to accuse them of that which would make any man afraid they lay rebellion to their charge and say they would build that City for no other cause but that they would make them-selues strong aginst the King fall away from him set vp a King amongst them selues obey none but vse their olde libertie rule all about them as they did afore These men beare some authoritie in the countrie and like proud braggers dissembling malitious enemies to God his word they would hinder so much as thy could this building The world is to full at this day of such like dissembling hipocrites The one soite if they come vp of nought get a badge pricked on their sleeue though they haue litle yet they looke so bigg speake so stoutly that they kepe the poore vnder their feete that they dare not route All must be as they say though it be neyther true nor honest none dare say the contrarie But the dungeon dissembling Papist is more like vnto them for he careth not by what meanes to get it by feare or by flatterie so that he can obteine his purpose These men first mocke the Iewes and scornefully despise them for enterprising this building thinking by this meanes to discourage poore soules that they should not goe forward in this worke After that they charge them with rebellion These two be the old practises of Sathan in his members to hinder the building of Gods howse in al ages Iudas in his epistle saith that in the last daies there shal come mockers which shal walke after their owne wicked lusts Peter Paul foretold the same Our sauiour Christ though he was most spitefullie misused many waies yet neuer worsse then when they mocked him both Herod Pilate the Priests and the Iewes It is thought but a smale matter to mocke simple soules so withdraw them from God but Salomon saith he that mocketh shalbe mocked And Dauid he that dwelleth in the heauens shall mocke them the Lord will laugh them to scorne This shal be the iust rewarde of such scorners It is iustlie to be feared that as the Iewes were giuen vp to Nebuchad-nezzer for mocking the Prophets and Preachers of their time as it is writen so we for our bitter taunting scoffing reuiling disdaining and dispising of Gods true ministers at these daies shalbe giuen into our mortall enemies hands What is more common in these daies then when such hickscorners wilbe merie at their drunken bankets to fall in talke of some one Minister or other Nay they spare none but goe from one to another and can spie a mote in other men but cannot spie their owne abhominations Christ was neuer more spitefully and disdainfully scoft at then these Lustie Russians open there mouths against his Preachers but the same lord Christ saith of his disciples that he which despiseth them dcspiseth him What rewarde the mockers of Christ shal haue I think euery man knoweth Good men with heauie harts commit them-selues and their cause vnto the Lord and pray with Dauid Lord deliuer my soule from wicked lipes aud from a deceitfull tongue Salomon saith God will laugh when such shall perish Michol wife to Dauid was barren all her life for mocking her husband when he plaied on his harpe and daunced afore the arke of God The children that mocked Elizeus and saied come vp thou baldepate come vp were all deuoured sodenly of wilde beares that came out of the wood hard by Dauid amongst many miseries that he complaineth of saieth that the scorners made their songes of him when they were at their drunken feasts and when he seeth no remedie how to scape their poysonfull tongues he paciently turneth him vnto the Lord committeth all to him in the latter end of the Psalme God comforteth him and telleth him what sundrie mischiefes shall fall on them for their despitefull dealing
Moses and Aaron Gods true ministers Moses committing the reuenge of it to the Lord warned the people to depart from their companie lest they perished with them by that straunge death and streight waies the earth opened swallowed vp them their goods and tents where they 〈◊〉 quicke into hell Nay weomen were not spared for Marie Moses sister was smitten with a leprosie for railing on Moses her brother Gods liefetenant ouer them As the magistrate therefore both with word and sword must defend Gods cause his Religion temple people ministers and doctrine so must the preacher and those that be learned with their paine praier preaching and all other meanes that they can yea if our goods or liues were required for the defence of it no state of man ought to refuse it For this end are we borne and liue to glorifie our God and set forth his praise for this purpose are all things giuen vs and therefore must not be spared but spent and bestowed when his glorie requireth For this cause Esaias the Prophet gaue his bodie to be sawen in sunder with a sawe of yron For this cause Ieremio was cast into a dungeon of Mire and filth Daniel into the Lions denne Saint Paul pleadeth his cause oft in chaines at Ierusalem at Rome afore Festus Felix and Agrippa and our Lord and master Christ Iesus afore Annas Caiphas Pilate and Herod Iohn Baptist lost this head for this quarrel no good man wil thinke any thing to deere to spend in Christ his masters cause For this cause Tertullian Ireneus Iustinus Athanasius Chrisostons Nazianzenus haue written great bookes against the heathens which railed on our Religion What infinite number of Martirs haue stoode stoutly and giuen their liues in the same quarell he that hath seene anie learning can better tell where to begin then where to make an end of reckoning the number is so infinit and our late daies haue giuen sufficient proofe there of vnder that bloody butcher Bonner that the most ignoraunt yf he will open his eares and eies might heare and see great plentie But alas the fierie fagots of those daies were not so greeuous then as the slandrous tongues be now in our daies Nebuchadnezzer made a law that if anie did blaspheme the God of Sidrach Misach and Abednego he should be slaine and his house made a dunghill Moses made a lawe that euerie blasphemer should be stoned to death Seeing God and Princes haue made such straight lawes against such lewd railers good Rulers should see some correction done and not with silence to suffer ill men to talke their pleasure on Gods citie Religion ministerie While others possibly made courtesie to speake and aunswere these busie braggers and quarrelers Nehemiah steppeth forth boldely defendeth this cause stoutly answereth their false accusation truelie incourageth the people manfullie to goe forward with their worke despiseth their brags telleth them plainly that they haue no parte nor right nor are worthie to be remembred in Ierusalem The effect of Nehemiahs answere was that the God of heauen had giuen them good successe hitherto in mouing the harts of king Cirus Darius first to the building of the temple now of Artaxerxes to restore the citie they were his seruants worshiped him end he stirred them vp to this worke for of them selues they were not able to do such things They serued no Idoles nor false gods they needed not to be ashamed of their master the God of heauen was their Lord and they his people he was their master and they his seruants he their King and they his subiects they would goe forward with their worke they must haue a Citie to dwell in to serue their God who would defend them in this their well doing these men had no authoritie to stoppe or forbid them to worke they had nothing a do in Ierusalem nor any authoritie they would not obey them but with all diligence applie this worke vntill it be finished The Apostles when they were forbidden preached and would not obey but said they must obey God that bad them Thus must all they that take Gods worke in hand confesse it to come from God and that he blesseth their doings that all the praise may be his and that they of them-selues be weake vnable to doe such things without his special grace and assistance All good men in such enterprises will saie with Dauid Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy name giue all the glorie If these wicked men had had anie worldy shame or feare of God in them they would haue quaked trembled as the good men reioiced to haue God on their side to further them so they whē they heard the god of heauen named to be against them and that it was his doing they would haue forsaken their Idoles and haue furthered this building or at lest haue sitten still and not hindered it For who is able to withstand his will or hinder that he will haue forward The Deuils in hell quake and tremble at the naming and considering of Gods Maiestie but these wicked Imps not onelie now but sundrie times as appeereth hereafter in this booke most cruellie spitefullie and craftelie goe forward in their olde malice and by all meanes seeke the ouerthrow of this building So farre worse is a Deuil incarnate in an ill man then by him-selfe in his owne nature When the Deuill will worke anie great mischiefe he taketh commonlie one man or other Angel or creature to doe it by knowing that he shall doe it more easily that waie then if he should attempt it by himselfe Howe is euerie murther false witnesse whoredome robberic c committed but when the Deuill stirreth vp one man against another Let euerie good man therefore take heed vnto him-selfe how he yoaldeth vnto sinne For in that doing he maketh him-selfe a slaue to the Deuill and his instrument to worke by One Deuill will not offer that villany to another Diuell to make him his slaue but if he canne bring man vnto it there is his reioycing Take heede therefore O man In that they confesse them selues to be the seruants of the God of heauen it is as much to say as they wrought not for them-selues nor at their owne appointment nor for their owne profit they wrought for their masters cause and for his glorie Good seruants in al their doings will seeke their masters profit and praise not their owne they liue not for them-selues but al the profit of their doings returneth to their masters If they take any thing to them-selues more then their master giueth them they be theeues vnto him they doe him no true seruice Let all the builders of Gods house therefore whether they be rulers in the common wealth as Nehemiah was now or of the learned sort in the ministrie or els where not onely confesse in words that they be seruants to the God of heauen but most
them that were freelie giuen vnto the Lord and all this people from that time forth as long as the common wealth stood serued the lord as faithfullie as any Iewes euē in their captiuitie neuer grudging that they were not called to no higher estate nor disdayned not at their drudging neuer 〈◊〉 awaie in anie troublesome time as they might casely haue don nor claymed any liberty nor wrought any displeasure to the 〈◊〉 where they might haue oft betrayed them and now most earnestlie fall to building and serue the Lord. A strange example that such a people continued faithfull in the house of God so many yeares and stood so stoutly in all stormes but when God calleth he blesseth and nothing is painful so they may serue the Lord as Dauid saith I had rather 〈◊〉 a doore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the house of God then to dwel in the Pallaces of sinners Saul would haue destroyed this people but god saued them and plagued him If we looke vnto our selues without 〈◊〉 we shall castly perceiue how vnlike we be vnto them how colde in seruing the Lord how soone wearie of our estate how desirous to climbe higher how chaungeable in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how 〈◊〉 to professe our Religion how flattering to men and how caried away with euery blast of newe doctrine God graunt vs to 〈◊〉 to be ashamed of it and to amend it Our owne daies haue giuen vs to many examples of such wauering worldlings And I feare our sinnes will shortly plucke the saine plagues on our heads againe so litle tokens of repentanee appeare amongst vs. We be the right Nethanims made free from sinne and seruants to the Lord. God graunt we be not found worsse being called Christians and liuing in tho time of grace vnder the bright light of Christ Iesus declared vnto vs in his gospel and by whom we be saued made free then these heathen people the 〈◊〉 were liuing in bondage vndershadowes of Moses law 〈◊〉 the fixt fanire of Salech wanteth not his praise here who being a yonger brother falleth to 〈◊〉 and no mention made of the elder There must be no curtesie making who shall begin God hath oft called the yonger to serue him before the elder as Iacob Dauid c. Thus the holy ghost hath Registred vnto vs the names and diligence of the builders of this earthlie Citie Ierusalem by the penne of his faithfull seruant Nehemiah for our comfort and to teach vs that much more he hath registred the names of the builders of the spirituall Ierusalem in the booke of life where no deuil can scrape them out but shalbe the deare Children of the Lord God defended by him from all ill Let vs therefore cast away this slothfull sluggishnes wherein we haue lyen so long rise vp quickly worke lustely spit on our hands and take good holde that we fall not backe againe from our Lord God It is more honor to be a workeman in this house then to liue the easiest life that the world can giue A PRAIER AS thou didst choose vnto thy selfe here in earth O mightie Lord a certeyne place and Citie Ierusalem whether thy people should resort to worship thee to offer their Sacrifices make their supplications vnto the as long as they did it faithfully thou didst blesse and prosper their doings when they offended and fel away from thee thou laidst thy heauie hand and sharpe scourge vppon them so graunt vnto vs O gracious God whome thou hast made free by thy deare sonne Christ Iesus and not bound vs to any one place but hast left vs free in libertie of conscience to assemble our selues call vppon thee in euery place corner of the earth to preach thy word learne our duetie and set forth thy maiestie to receiue thy sacraments offer our selues our soules bodies a sweet sacrifice to thee graunt vs we besech thee O mercifull father thy louing countenance to continue thy blessings amongst vs and deale not with vs in thine anger as we iustly haue deserued to be cast away from thee but as thou in thine anger greeuously punishedst thy people the Iewes burnedst their Citie destroiedst their Temple Spoiledst the countrie leddest a great number into Captiuity killedst moe and broughtst them all into bondage and slauery vnder heathen Princes So louing Lord we confesse our horrible sinnes haue deserued no lesse in iustice at thy hands but thy mercie O God triumpheth against iustice for as after a few yeares correction thou mouedst diuers heathen Princes to send home thy people with great gifts to repaire the broken walls build the Temple inhabit the Countrie and restore thy Religion and stirredst vp also thy people Preists Princes Nobles worshipfull Ruelers and Priuate men Artificers Women and of all sorts some earnestly to worke at the building of thy citie So heauenly King let vs not be cast away in thy heauie displeasure and be the first that cannot finde fauour in thy sight but turne the heartes of Christian Princes to giue sree course and libertie to thy word of saluation and raise vp faithfull workmen of all sortes and degrees to build thy spirituall Ierusalem thrust forth true labourers into thy haruest roote out all slothfull slugishnes from amongst vs that we be not vnprofitable members of the Church and commonwealth and let all magistrates know that by thee they rule that thou settest them in authoritie and mainteinest them that feare thee and make them not onely to offer vnto thee their bounden duety and seruice in building and working them-selues to the good example of others but also in encouraging and defending the faithfull labourers in thy vineyeard and compelling the froward diligently to set forward thy building graunt vs strong walls and bulwarkes to kepe out Turke Pope Tyrantes Atheists Anabaptists and libertines with al other hinderers of thy building that thy simple people may liue quietly serue thee without Inuasions or persecution as of thy great mercie thou hast left to vs in writing the names of al such as were the chiefest doers in this worke for our comfort example to follow so we beseech thee louing Lord to stirre vp those whose names thou haste written in the booke of life that manfully they may stand in the defence of thy trueth to the confusiō of thy foes thy immortall praise for thy Christs sake Amen CHAP. 4. 1. It came to passe when Sanballat heard that we builded the wall he was verie angrie in him-selfe and disdeined greatly and mocked the Iewes 2. And he spake afore his breethren and the Souldyers of Samaria and saied what doe these Impotent Iewes will they make them-selues strong Shall they offer Sacrifice Shall they finish it in a day Shall they reare vp the stones out of the dust where they were brent 3. And Tobias the Ammonite was beside him saied yea that which they doe build if a fox come vp he shall breake downe their wall of stone THe last Chapter declared vnto vs
the forwardnes of al sorts of men from the highest to the lowest both of the laitie and the Ministerie Straungers and Citizens to build and repaire the broken walls of Ierusalem and this Chapter and diuers others following describe the manifold lets subtil deuises bold enterprises both of the outward enemie and hipocrites amongst them-selues to ouerthrow all this building so that if God had not contrary to reason assisted encouraged and defended his faithfull seruants this worke had neuer bene finished Such hath bene is and shallbe vnto the end the state of Gods people and Church that in noe age it hath wanted or can want many sore assaults to ouerthrow it if it were possible But let vs trust his faithfull promisse that saied he would be with vs vnto the end of the world we shall not be ouercome Let no man maruell therefore in these our daies because he seeth the like troubles fall among vs nor blame the doctrine that is taught as though that were the cause of all mischiefes for God is not so gratious to anie Countrie in any age to set vp his Kingdome there but the deuil is as busie and malitious to ouerthrow it as much as he maie Let euerie man also that will faithfully serue the Lord thinke this to be most true and looke into this state of the Iewes as it were in a glasse and he shal finde that by many troubles we must enter into the kingdome of heauen and that it is a narrow waie that leadeth thither as it is written Mathew the 7. onely take thou heede that thou deserue not to be persecuted and the Lord will confound them The rich glotton went to hell with all his bellie cheare and the poore begger Lazarus to heauen and all his sorow was no hinderance Looke at the foote-steps of all our forefathers the Patriarches and Prophets Christ Iesus and his Apostles with all other Martirs and good men and we shal finde none but his whole life was aperpetuall warrefare subiect to infinite sorowes and the ending of one was the begining of a new but he that continued to the end was saued Let vs not looke to come into heauen if we walke another way and be of good cheere for the end shalbe happie These be spoken and written for our learning not to discourage vs but rather to encourage vs that we be not found vnlike to our forefathers but manfullie to stand in all trialls knowing that we haue the same God that they had that he is as able now and as willing to defend his chosen congregation as he was in the beginning and will neuer forsake his deere children In the second Chapter verse 10. Sanballat and Tobias hearing that Nehemiah was come with commission from the King to build Ierusalem they were greeued verie sore within them-selues cast into a dumpish sadde heauines almost amazed for sorow that any man should come to doe the Iewes any good at al but now that they heard say they did worke so iustily at this building 〈◊〉 first burst out into anger he stampes he stares he frets he fumes he rageth he raileth taketh on like a mad man and cannot tell how to stay them after that he falleth on mocing and mowing potting and smyling at them and flocking and flouting scorning scoffing of them in fingring flecring and girning at them to try them whether they by this meanes would be dismaied or afraid to worke any more A shrewd triall for a sort of poore people which were but lately restored to their countrie and yet not well setled in it to see the greatest ruler in the countrie to be so angrie to ward them to scorne and mocke them If God had not strengthned them it would haue made them to leaue their worke for feare runne away Looke round about you in these our daies and ye shall see that if but a meane man in authoritie or his man with a badge on his sleeue doe but looke sowrelie speake roughly or behaue him selfe any thing stoutly al about them stoope make lowe curtesie runne when they are bidden and dare not whisper nor mutter one word no not in their good iust cause yet where gods holie spirit giueth comfort al these braggs are nothing regarded but in their well doings they will on forwards with their iust cause and seruing the Lord. Let euery man take hced how he falleth into wickednesse for he cannot get out when he would These men encrease in mischiefe and amend not so shall all they that yeald vnto it and stay not in the beginning 2. And he spake afore his breethren The malice that the wicked men beare against the Godly is so great that it cannot be forgiuen nor forgotten whatsoeuer falleth out well to the good man they are sory for it and they thinke all the posteritie of the Godlie to be their disgracing and ouerthrow Cain enuied Abell because God accepted his sacrifice better Saul enuied Dauid because he was more esteemed of the people The Pharisies disdained Christ our Lord because they see their doctrine decay and his receiued And what maketh such a stur this day in the Church but that the Pope and his partakers see their Kingdome decay and the trueth appeare These be written for our learning that we should not discourage our selues in these miserable times but boldlie stand continue to the end Sanballat after that he had thus chafte in him-selfe and also had scorned and scoft at their doings he is so sore vexed in his minde that he cannot hold in but bursteth out into blustring bigge words and saith openlie before his fellowes country men which were of the same mind superstition that he was it might be more fearfull to the Iewes to discourage them he speaketh and braggeth it out before the Souldrers which were set there to represse all mischieu ous attempts and enterprises that any should take in hand As who should saie that if anie went forward with his building the souldiers should ouerthrow it and destroy them for they were as readie to do such a mischiefe as he was to bid them And thus he saieth what doe these beggerlie Iewes these slaues Pesantes and villanes what goe they about what meane they will they take in hand such a building as no mightie Prince is able to finish and that manie noble Kings afore them could scarse in many yeares performe will they on a sudden bring it to perfection But if they be so foolish to thinke that they can finish it themselues are the heathen people so mad to stand by looke on and laugh and suffer them to goe forward with this building which hath beene of old tyme a great enemy vnto them and may be now againe if they be suffered to worke still Doe they thinke the Gentiles so foolish that they foresee not their meaning or doe they think them such Cowards that they dare not or so impotent vnable that they cannot
continue as in the beginning But ynough was said of this matter afore in the 2. Chap. 19. verse This is then the remedie that Dauid vseth in all these griefes fall to prayer commend thy cause vnto the Lord fall not from him for any storme tarie the Lords leisure and plaie the man comforte thy heart looke for the Lords comming and sate vnto him with Dauid haue mercy on vs O Lord haue mercie on vs for we are vtterlie dispised Our soule is full of the sclaunders of these wealthie worldlings dispising of the proud No doubt the Lord wil comfort thee confound thē as our daies haue well declared 4. Harken thou O our God for we are dispised turne their shame vpon their owne head and make them dispised in the land of their captiuitie 5. Couer not their wickednes and let not their sinne be put out of thy sight for they haue prouoked the builders 6. Then we builded the wall and the whole was ioyned togither vnto the halfe hight and the people had a minde to worke AFter that he had described the mockings and threatnings that they had for their bold enterprise in building to discourage driue them from it if they could if it had bene possible he now declareth what remedie and comfort he found by praier at the Lords hand Nehemiah seeing their great daunger turneth him to the Lord the people praying with him and saieth Our God that hast chosen vs onelie though most vnworthie for thy people amongst the whole world and whom onelie we worship and at whom we seeke for help and deliuerance in all our trouble hearken we beseech thee O Lord bow downe thine eare and heare our praiers for thou art a righteous iudge and mightie reuenger of all thy faithful seruants we thy poore people are in a miserable case we looked for aide at our neighbours hands they are our vtter enemies we hoped for comfort of them and they vtterlie dispise mocke and contemne vs but thou art a God that neuer for sakest any that come vnto thee nor castest anie awaie that faithfullie trust in thee heare vs O gratious God and turne their owne shame that they would lay on vs for building thy citie on their owne heades that villany that they would doe to vs let it fall on them-selues If thou let this crueltie scape vnpunished thou shalt be thought negligent and careles of thy people these Samaritanes that be so cruell against vs be straungers in the countrie where they dwel as we were in Babilon they were brought out of their owne countrie and placed here by Ezer-haddon King of Assiria make them O Lord to be dispised in this land of their captiuitie as well as they dispised vs in our miserie O Lord let not their wickednes be hid but make it knowen to all the world and all ages to come how dispitefully they deale with vs for thy sake others will attempt the like if this scape vnpunished Forgiue not their sinnes but euer keepe them in thy remembrance thou shalt not be thought arighteous iudge if thou wincke at such wickednes they hinder not our owne buildings but they prouoke the builders of thy house and Citie They dispise vs because we serue thee They hate vs not for any of our wickednes but for the hatred that they beare to thy house Religion and Citie which they would haue lie wast ouerthrowen and troden downe We grant we haue deserued to be cast awaie from thee if thou deale with vs in iustice and yet after thy fatherlie correction we obedientlie returne and submit our selues vnto thee whereas they contemptuously still rebell against thee and hate vs because we loue thee If they did persecute vs for our owne deserts we wold beare it but to see thy maiestie defaced we cannot abide it they would haue thy Citie to lie vnbuilt that men might speake ill of thee that thou were a weake God not able to defend thy people that call on thy name so mightelie as their Idols do them that know not thee The shame that they would lay on vs shall turne vnto thee O Lord for it is done vnto vs for thy sake and hatred of thee and thy word Auenge thy owne quarell O God and looke not at our owne deserts for though we haue grieuously offended thee yet we repent and they obstinately stand in defence of their owne wickednes O Lord forget not this malicious dealing of them toward vs for thy sake abate their pride assuage their malice and confound their deuises that they intend against vs comfort and encourage thy poore woorkemen builders whom they prouoke to anger and graunt vs that we may by thy aide with good successe finish that which we haue through thy goodnes so well begonne Amen Out of his praier may arise two doubts one whether it be godlie good men may vse the like that he praieth for here that is that the same ill may fall on them that they would doe vnto the Iewes The other that their sinne should not be forgiuen them The Scripture teacheth both to praie for our enemies and to forgiue them and also that God would reuenge their cause him-selfe in his iustice Our sauiour Christ praieth for them that crucified him saiyng Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe S. Steuen likewise But Dauid manie times praieth the contrarie as Let his sorow be turned on his owne head and let his wickednes fall vpon his owne pate Againe let them be confounded and ashamed that seeke for my life and let them be driuen backe and ashamed that seeke to 〈◊〉 me euill These Psalmes and others are full of such like speeches And where some expound such places to be a prophecie and fore-telling ofsuch mischiefes as should fal on them rather then a wishing or praing that they should fall it is not ill that they saie but it maie be doubted whither it be most agreeing to the text but howsoeuer it be this must be most taken heede of that in all such praiers nothing be asked of mallice against the partie which is hard for our froward nature to do but only for the glorie of God which is to be sought in all our doings and praiers which maie be in shewing his iustice In the Lords praier we saie halowed be thy name we desire not God onelie that he would direct both euerie man in his doings to set forth his glorie that his name may be hallowed but also that he would staie confound and take away all hinderers of the same with all their deuices and subtill practises that all stumbling blockes being taken awaie his name may be sanctified in all nations So praied ` Dauid O my God make the counsell of Achitophel to seeme foolish so in the commaundements the affirmatiue is included in the negatiue and the negatiue in the affirmatiue as thou shalt not kill wherein we are not onelie forbidden all crueltie but are
commaunded to releeue succour and help by al meanes that we may Nehemiah hateth not the men but their wickednes so we learne to put a difference betwixt the man and the sinne of man and pray for mercie to the one and iustice to the other Man is Gods good creature and to be beloued of all sortes Sinne is of the deuill and to be fled of all sorts And it is a great difference whether we pray for reuenging our owne priuate quarell which may not be in any case or it be for Gods cause and glorie which we would seeke the furtherance of by all meanes we may 6. Then we builded the wall This verse declareth what they got by this short prayer The peoples heart was incouraged to go forward with this worke in so much that they repaired all the breaches of the wall ioyned it all together as though it were one whole sound wall neuer had bene defaced afore Praier is a souereigne Salue for all sores for it will heale not onely the wounds of the bodie and soule but also hard stonie walls This is the common practise of all good men when they be scorned for the Lords sake to turne themselues vnto humble prayer commit the cause vnto the lord who will iustlie reuenge his owne quarell when he thinkerh good Dauid when he had complayned vnto God how the Iudges did mocke him and the drunkerds and minstrels sang their songes against him to make them merie withall and could finde no remedie he saith thus after that he was sore greeued at them but I O Lord made my prayer vnto thee and then the Lord comforted him Likewise King Ezechias getteth him to the Temple when Rabsachis had railed against the liuing Lord and written blasphemous letters he read the letters in the sight of God falleth to praier and desireth the Lord to help him in that extremitie and his God deliuered him This prayer of Nehemiah is not long for God regardeth not so much the length of our prayer as the earnest hartie desire of the minde with an humble submission of him-selfe to the Lords good will and pleasure repenting earnestly for his offences and faithfullie hoping without mistrust for the Lords comfortable assistance when and as he shall thinke good by this praier they obteine at the Lords mercifull hand boldenes to goe forward with their building and to contemne their prowd mockes and brags they finish the whole length and the height of the wall in dispite of their enemies and the people were not wearie of working but the more they wrought the more desirous they were to worke stil for the good successe that they had in building hitherto did encourage them to go forward with it and they doubted not but that god was with them therfore feared no other Let vs learne therefore at these good mens examples to be bolde and constant in wel doing and not to feare euery bragge and blast of winde Let vs be as a lustie horsse that goeth through the streete and careth not for the barking of euery curre that leapeth forth as though he would bite him so let vs not be afraid of the barking curres nor looke backward but goe on forth not changing with euerie tide and the mightie Lord will strengthen our weakenes with good successe to finish his building for so haue all good men done from the beginning 7. It came to passe that when Sanballat and Tobias the Arabians the Ammonites and the Azdodites heard tell that a Salue was come on the wall of Ierusalem and that the breaches of it began to be stopt vp they were verie wroth 8. And they conspired altogither to goe and besiege Ierusalem to make a scattering in it 9. But we prayed vnto our God and set a watch by them day and night in their sight 10. And Iudas said the strength of the bearers is decaied and there is much morter and we are not able to build on the wall 11. And our enemies said they shall not know nor see till we come into the midle of them and we shall slay them and make the worke to cease AS good men goe forward with Gods worke so the wicked swell for anger encrease in mallice against them and by all meanes possible not onely by them-selues go about to ouerthrow all their good enterprises but they seeke all the partakers that they can get and will refuse no kinde of man be he neuer so ill to ioyne with them so they may obteine their purpose hinder the Lords building Sanballut and Tobias afore thought with their bitter scoffes bigge words hautie lookes to haue dashed these poore soules out of countenance and made them to leaue building but now when they see they were not afraied but wrought more lustilie they make other deuices they will fight for it they gather a great company of neigbours as ill as them-selues and will set vppon them kill them and ouerthrow their building Such a thing is malice once earnestly in mans mynde conceiued and specially for religion that it so blyndeth a man that he seeth not what he doeth nor what will follow of his doings He that falleth from God wandereth in darkenes and cannot tell what he doeth where he is nor whither he goeth but the farther he stirreth the farther he is out of the way and the more darkenes he is in for God is light the way trueth and life and he that hath not God for his guid cannot finde the true way to euerlasting life Let euery man therefore that will walke vprightly in the feare ofGod take heede how he once giue place to any wickednes for if the deuill get a little entrance into thee he will drawe the cleane away with him if God be not more mercifull to holde thee When the deuil tempted Eue he appeered in likenes of a serpent to teach vs that as the head of the Serpent is the greatest parte of the bodie and wheresoeuer the head getteth in the whole bodie followeth easilie So the deuill if he once enter into mans heart he will creepe into all partes neuer cease vntill he possesse the whole man and bring him to euerlasting death with him and destruction in this world as he did with Iudas entring into him first by little and little but after that Iesus Christ had giuen him the soppe he did so fullie possesse him that straight waies he betrated his master the Lord of life into the hands of wicked men to be put to most vile death and all for greedines of a little monie Sanballat by the help of Tobias had now gotten a great band of Souldyers of others and specially of Arabians Ammonites and Azdodites to fight for him against these seelie soules for no other quarrell but because they heard say that they had repaired al the breaches of the walls of Ierusalem Their foolish madnes appeereth the more because they rage so fiersly for onely hearing how well
the sight of his God as this people did for so the Hebrew word here signifieth forsaking him-selfe as vnable to help him-selfe condemning him selfe as vnworthle to receiue such a blessing at the Lords hand and yet nothing doubting but that his God that neuer forsaketh them that vnfeinedlie flie vnto him will deale with him in mercie and not in iustice deliuer him and comfort him not for anie goodnes that he findeth in him but of his owne meere pitie loue grace and mercie whereby he maie shew him selfe a glorious God a present help and succour to all afflicted and oppressed mindes He that findeth any thing in himselfe to help and comfort him selfe withall needeth not to praie but he that seeth and feeleth his present want necessitie he will beg earnestlie craue egerlie confessing where his reliefe is to be had No man will praie for that thing which he hath or thinketh him selfe to haue but we euer aske desire beg pray for that we want Let vs therefore in all our supplications and praiers vnto the Lord first confesse our beggerlie pouertie and vnablenes to help our selues the want of his heauenlie grace and fatherlie assistance then our gratious God wil plenteously powre his blessings into our empty soules fill them with his grace If we be full alreadie there is no rowme left to take any more therefore we must know our selues to be emptie and hungrie or else we shal not earnestlie desire this heauenlie comfort from aboue which is requisite in all praier For he that asketh coldlie getteth nothing And the more that we confesse our owne weaknes our want and vnablenes the more we confesse our God to be almightie rich in mercie possessing all things in his owne hands and dealing them abroad to his poore people where he seeth them neede and sending the rich emptie away And as we must thus cast downe our selues in our selues by faith to our God to praie to no other but vuto the liuing Lord that made heauen and earth as this people doeth and therefore call him their God For if we seeke help at any other we mistrust him we doe not faithfully beleeue on him then we shall not be heard of him Call on me in the daie of thy trouble saith thy God and I will deliuer thee I aske no other reward but to glorifie praise thanke me knowing thy safety deliueraunce to come from me But these men did not onely pray to their God but according to their duetie they put them-selues in a readines to defend themselues against their enemies which is lawfull for all men to doe It is not sufficient to pray and then to neglect such meanes as God hath appointed vs to vse for our defence and comfort no more then it is to saie when he hath praied I will liue without meat and drinke and God him-selfe shall feede me For as the Lord hath taught vs to pray giue vs this day our daily bread so he hath comman ded vs to worke for it and saieth he that doeth not labour let him not eat So here it was not sufficient to call vpon their God though he was most mightie and louing vnto them but they keepe watch and ward put on Armour take their weapons not cowardlie creeping into corners but stand forth stoutly on the toppe of the walls by the workemens elboes in the sight of their enemies that they might see that they were not afraied of them but would manfullie defend them selues the workemen against al assaults they could deuise They had a stronger God to defend them then any deuill could be to hurt them or ouerthrow their worke So praier and Gods prouidence destroyeth not pollicie but maintayneth it and when they be ioyned togither god blesseth them both as his owne ordinance They knew well how true it was that Dauid said Except the Lord defend the Citie the watch-men watch in vaine that keepe it But when the Lord defendeth it and the wacth-men doe their dueties faithfullie trusting in the Lord and not foolishlie bragging of their owne strength and powre then is that citie wel and stronglie kept The Childrē of Ruben Gad and the halfe tribe of Manasse as it is written when they fought against the Agarens gat the victory and all because they ioyned praier with their powre not trusting in them-selues but in the mightie Lord of hostes who heard them and ouerthrew their enemies Thus must good Captains learne to ioyne praier with pollicie if they looke to obteine the victorie and not trust in horsse Speare shield or other kinde of weapons God ruleth those that feare him in battaile as well as in peace and those that trust in their owne strength he will ouerthrow Constantine the great that worthie Emperour our countrie man taught his souldiers dailie to pray thus We knowledge thee O Lord we know thee for a King we call on thee for our help from thee we haue the victorie and by thee we are conquerours we giue thee thankes for this present prosperity and by thee we hope for things to come we all are humble suters vnto thee that our Emperour and his Godlie Children may be preserued safe long to liue and we humblie be seech thee that he may be a valiant conquerour c. And that Captaines may not doe what they list but must learne to defend good causes onelie Theodosius the good Emperour teacheth in his praier that he maketh for him selfe saying O almightie God thou knowest that I haue taken these warres in hand in the name of Christ thy sonne for a iust reuenge if it be otherwise reuenge thou it on me but if I come hither in a good quarrell trust in thee then reach forth thy right hand vnto thy people lest peraduenture the heathen people will say where is their god By Moses law the priests should goe to the sield with the armie to encourage teach and comfort them euen when they should ioyne battell The papist wil haue his morow masse Priest with him and yet such negligence is in those that call them-selues Protestants that they thinke the companie worsse if a learned minister be among them and if he will rebuke their spoile gaming swearing whooring they are wearie of him and if he touch anie of the better sort then awaie with him or else worke him some displeasure So rashlie we cast of the Lords yoke so folishlie we enter into warres as though the victorie laic in our owne hands and God did not bestowe it on whom he thinketh best Iohn Baptist when the souldiers came to him to be baptized as other sorts of men did he taught euerie one how to amend their liues and to the souldiers he saith doe violence to no man accuse none falselie and be content with your wages God graunt all good souldiers to follow these lessons vnfeinedlie for the holie Ghost noteth these as common faults that such kinde
knew wel that Dauid had written long afore Except the Lord defend the Citie the watchmen watch in vaine which defend it And he knew also that Dauid had saied Blessed be the Lord my God which teacheth my handes to fight and my fingers to the battell yet he ceaseth not to keepe watch and warde night and day to search the watch him-self to teach the Souldiers how to vse their weapon to set them in aray to encourage them to teach them to vnderstand what the Trumpet meaneth and how in all things to obey their Captaines and to be louing and true one to another And all this is to let vs see that allthough God do worke all things himselfe as he hath appointed so they fall out yet he worketh them not without vs we must not be idle we must shew our diligence and due obedience to our God that hath made vs and commaunded vs to exercise our selues in these things and yet when we haue done allwe can all the praise must be giuen to him and we must say we be vnprofitable seruants We be as an axe in the Carpenters hand where the axe may not claime the praise of well doing from his Master that worketh with it and though the axe be a dead instrument without life or feeling and man hath life witt and reason giuen him to doe things withall yet is man as vnable to worke his owne saluation without the free mercie and speciall grace of God as the axe is vnable to build the house without the direction and ruling of the Carpenter Crearis sanaris saluaris quid horum tibi ex te homo saieth Bernard Let euery man be diligentand a painfull labourer in his vocation and worke his owne saluation as farr as an instrument may not loytering nor liuing vnprofitably thinking that God wil bring such things to passe if we lie downe and sleepe but the chiefe praise effect must be'giuen in all good things to God alone The Lord hath promised nothing to idle bellies and vnto him that laboreth to serue his god faithfully he hath promised his sure aide will surely performe it Adam in paradise was not suffred to be idle euen in his innocencie afore he sinned and shal we misers that haue so oft greeuously offended our mercifull God thinks to liue as we list at our ease Iosue at his death putteth the people in rememberaunce how the Lord had fought for them and driuen out their enemies and to encourage them still to serue their God faithfullie and forsake strange Gods he promiseth them that if they will so doe the Lord will fight for them still so did Moses afore him Gods bare promise by his word is surer then any promise made by man though you haue neuer so manie good sureties and bonds with forfetures and it be sealed and deliuered and deuised as cunninglie as law can thinke God is trueth it selfe and therefore cannot lie and what so euer he promiseth he performeth for else he should be vntrue like a miserable man which cannot be God graunt vs such Captaines as Moses Iosue and Nehemiah were that with like persuasions they may encourage their Souldiers For surely if they went to the field with like minde faith reuerence due obedience vnto the Lord that these Godlie men did the same God liueth still and would blesse their enterprises as he did the other for he is not wearie of well doing and releeuing his people 21. And we will labour Among all these great troubles he forgat not his principal work in building of the wals but went on forward still like a faithful seruant to his Lord and God Such earnest Zeale the Lord powreth into his seruants when he will declare his maiestie and mercie to the world For as the greedie marchant for loue of him selfe runneth by sea and land so far as sea or land will carie him to encrease his worldlie goods so he that is inflamed with this spirit of iealousy toward gods house wil go through thick and thinne with wisdome feareth no daungers and wil suffer neyther open enemie to inuade nor flattering friend to deceiue the deare Spouse of his Lord and master but manfullie wil stand in defence against all sorts deale they neuer so cunningly I cannot tel whether is more diligent praise worthy the souldiers or the workemen They be both at their businesse from the day spring vnto the late in the euening that the starres did rise A rare example to be found at this day for the labouring man will take his rest long in the morning a good peece of the day is spent afore he come at his worke then must he haue his breakfast though he haue not earned it at his accustomed houre or els there is grudging murmuring when the clocke smiteth he wil cast downe his burthen in the mid-waie and what-soeuer he is in hand with he will leaue it as it is though manie times it is marred afore he come againe he may not loose his meat what daunger soeuer the worke is in At noone he must haue his sleeping time then his beuer in the after-noone which spendeth a great parte of the day and when his houre commeth at night at the first stroke of the clock hecasteth downe his tooles leaueth his worke in what need or case soeuer the worke standeth The common souldier thinketh long while his course is to watch warde it is colde standing on the walls he must to the Ale-house refresh him-selfe with gaming swearing whooring or elsse he thinketh him-selfe no bodie he thinketh it shame to liue honestlie in order Thus all sorts are out of order and though Abbeyes be gone yet the Abbey-lubbers which will worke vntill they be cold eate vntill their bellie ake and sleepe vntill their bones ake are too common in euerie house A lither daies worke is thought with manie no sinne but a pastime and yet is it theeuerie to take the daies wages and doe not a good daies worke for it Saint Paul biddeth seruants obey their Masters not onely when they stand by and looke on but in their absence and where they see them not What is more hard in these daies then to finde a faithfull true seruant Good masters complaine and finde great lack though manie be better rewarded then they deserue It is lamentable to see the stones in the wall many times beare witnes of the murmuring of the one ag ainst the other The seruanthe will write on the wall Fidelis seruus perpetuus Asinus The master wil answere deserue and then desire and both misliking the one and the other when the seruant cannot haue that he gapeth for then he taketh bribes and the master must winck at it because he will not otherwaies preferr him so both being to blame both procure Gods anger towards them Beda considering the great troublesthat fell on the building of this second Temple wals asketh why it should fall
can deuour the poorest simple sheepe of the Lords if he cannot meete with a better pray The people are worthie no lesse praise then the rulers for they are as readie to obey as the other to commaund and so ioyning to gither in the feare of God brotherlie loue and due obedience to their rulers this worke goeth forward and God blesseth their labour As for me and my breethren Now lest Nehemiah should seeme to busie and impious to commaund all other and to doe nothing himselfe which were a point of oppression or tyrannie as Pharaoh did to the Israelits in Egipt he saith both he his breethren seruants and watch-men tooke as much paines as the worst of them which is the propertie of a good Captaine to doe for they wrought and watched so diligentlie that they put not of their cloathes to sleepe or take rest but onelie when they were foule and must needes be washed O worthie example God graunt vs manie such rulers and Captaines both in Gods Church and common-wealth When the people and souldiers shall see the rulers Captaines take paines as well as they doe it maketh them both ashamed if they draw back and also encourageth them to be with the foremost Iulius Cesar to encourage his souldiers would not take paines himselfe but the rather to stirre them more willinglie to labour he calleth them not souldiers nor commaundeth like a Captaine but gentlie speaketh vnto them calleth them fellowe-Souldiers as though he were no better then one of them So in great workes the chiefe master when it commeth to a dead lift or some daunger like to folow he will lay to his hand him felfe he will climbe he wil lift as busilie as anie of his seruants and say to them now good fellowes spitt on your hands lift once againe and we haue wonne it now play the men and we shall be past the worst streight waie Such examples of the better sort with gentle perswasions in words will make the common sort to refuse no paines be the danger neuer so great Abimelech when he would smother the men that fled into the towre of Sichem and could not get them out he gat first him selfe boughes of greene Trees and bad euery one of his Souldiers doe as they saw him doe When euerie man had loden him self with greene boughes Abimelech goeth first and setteth his boughes on fire the rest of the Souldiers seeing him so bold and forward they set their boughes on fire too and so easilie they killed them that were within with smoke So much can the example of a Captaine or good master doe God graunt manie such foregoers in Gods Church and then the people will follow fast ynough What maketh the people draw back so much at this day but that gentlemen preists goe not afore Want of good example and due correction maketh manie to doe ill without feare of God and man Dauid when he would stirr vp the people earnestlie to serue the Lord and diligentlie to resort to the Tabernacle of prayer saith O come let vs sing vnto the Lord let vs reioice in the strength of our saluation He biddeth them not goe pray and he will goe play but he will be foremost him selfe in praysing the Lord call on them to follow When they were thus to watch and ward night and day to forgoe their pleasures take infinit paines in building this earthlie Citie and walls of Ierusalem it teacheth vs how diligent we ought to be in building the spirituall Ierusalem Christ his deare Spouse and Church by prayer preaching watching fasting and all other Godlie exercises A PRAIER AS thou O Lord of thy infinit and vndeserued goodnesse stirredst vp thy faithfull seruant Nehemiah to pitie the lamentable state of Ierusalem and gauest him such fauour in the sight of King Artaxerxes procuredst licence and liberty great rewards liberalitie to all them that would repaire the broken walles of the Citie mouedst his heart to leaue the wanton pleasures of the Court aud madest him willing to toile at thy worke not onelie prosperedst their doings but defendedst them from their mortal enemies manie and sundrie times being cruellie assaulted both by inward hypocrites and outward force so we beseech thee most mercifull father for thine owne mercies sake looke pitifullie at thy ragged and torne church the contēned spouse of thy deerely beloued son Christ Iesus raise vp some faithful seruants in euerie countrie that may obteyne such fauour in the sight of Chistian Princes that with freedome of conscience and quietnesse of the countrie the Kingdome of thy sonne and our sauiour may be truelie preached obedientlie receiued faithfullie beleeued and diligentlie followed to the ouerthrow of Antechrist and all his members and the endlesse comfort of thy poore afflicted people Confound O gratious God Sanballat Tobias and all their partakers which laugh to scorne the simplicitie of the Gospell and builders of the Church make them to be scorned that the world may see what foolish wickednes it is to rebell against thy holie will and how litle all such shall preuaile in the end Turne awaie all open violence that shall be deuised against vs outwardlie Keepe vs from ciuill warre and sedition inwardlie Confound all wicked counsells and conspiracies of Ahitophell with his fellowes and ouerthrow the subtill practises of Iudas and such hypocrits Encourage the people that they feare not their braggs nor bigge lookes but manfullie may stand in defence of thy trueth and boldlie confesse thee in all dangers knowing thee to be the onelie Lord and giuer of all victorie that none shalbe ashamed nor left succourles that flie vnto thee in their great necessitie Giue vs grace to pray and put our trust in thee as this people haue done afore vs that we may finde the like grace fauour and deliuer aunce that they did Giue vs we most humblie beseech thee O gratious God such guids and Rulers in the common-wealth as will worke with the one hand and fight with the other keepe watch and ward night and day to driue awaie the outward enemie and will defend thy poore sheepe from the Rebellious practises of Sathan among our selues Thurst forth such faithfull preachers for the adauncement of thy glory only which without any worldly respect of profit or pleasure may purely teach thy holy will declared in thy blessed word roote out all errours in doctrine and deformities in life and may by the powre of thy holie spirit bring home all those that be runne astray confirme and strengthen those that doe stand and raise vp those that be fallen that in vnity of minde brotherlie loue and Christian faith we may be liuelie stones in the spirituall building of thy house may acknowledge thee our onelie God and thou of thy accustomed goodnes and free mercy maist take vs to thy children and defend vs as our Lord Teach vs as a Schoolemaster feed vs as a Shepherd make vs partakers of thy glorious