Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n day_n heart_n soul_n 10,548 5 4.6528 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A79175 A messe of pottage, very well seasoned and crumbd. With bread of life, and easie to be digested. Against the contumelious slanderers of the divine service, terming it porrage. Set forth by Gyles Calfine. Calfine, Giles. 1642 (1642) Wing C295; Thomason E140_21; ESTC R15924 4,515 8

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A Messe of POTTAGE Very well Seasoned and Crumbd With BREAD of LIFE and easie to be digested Against the contumelious slanderers of the Divine Service terming it Porrage Brethren whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoeuer things are pure whatsoever things are lovely whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue if there be any prayse thinke on these things 4. Philippians 8. Set forth by Gyles Calfine LONDON Printed in the yeare 1642. Being a Yeare of disciding A Messe of Porrage very well seasoned and Crumb'd with Bread of Life and easie to be digested I Need not make an Appology to the ensuing Discourse T is well known to all honest and discreet Protestants how basely our Service-Book is tearmed by the name of Porrage a name very frequent in uncivill mouthes and trampled under foot by unreasonable men that have neither Faith nor Charity and although they be now well fed to the full and may go from one Church to another to please their pallat and taste of what pleaseth them best yet there may a time come which I pray God there do not that they may be glad of the crums which fall from theit Masters Table but let them alone awhile the thing that I say is this That our Common Prayer is so abhorred depraved detested and despised of by many as if it were the most vilest thing in the World nay if the Devill himselfe had composed it it could not be more villified then it is T is a shame to speak and I blush to heare it that Men that think themselves such rare Divines that people that think they have such knowledge and zeal to tearme such a good thing and such holy matter as there is to be Porrage oh fie where is your judgment where is your moderation what quite lost is this your zeale turned to hate you are surely of a hot and fiery Spirit contrary to the nature of warme and wholesome Porrage if you knew but the right vertue of Pottage you would not have tearmed the Common Prayer so but your owne Prayers For do ye not know That they were godly men that made them they were not made ex tempore but with deliberation not hand over head as many do in these dayes but seriously considered of and premeditated and do you not know That these good men layd downe their lives for this and the Truth and doe ye not know That they were established and maintained by Acts of Parliament in the Raigne of three Kings and one Queen and is it now made a laughing stock surely you should have more manners then so Indeed is Parliament time and men speak and do what they lyst now and so do ye for ye speak evill of Kings of authority and dignity and despise government contrary to the Apostles rule Oh the great malice that is one against another against Peere and Peasant against Priest and People oh envie thou limbe of the Devill how rulest thou in the hearts of people especially against Bishops oh how odious is that name to many but I counsell you to speake moderately and judge charitably if they be stained let them be pained they have faults as well as we yet they are Gods Embassador his Stewards his Angels disposers of Gods secrets disbursers of his treasuries then revile them not For t is written Thou shalt not speak evill of the Ruler of the People But as for that which you call Porrage who hatcht the name I know not neither is it worth the enquiring after nor the worse for that name nor none the worse that useth it for I hold Porrage good food it is better to a sick man then meat for a sick man will sooner eat Porrage then meat Pottage will digest with him when meat will not Pottage will nourish the bloud filles the vaines runs into every part of a man and makes him warmer so will these prayers do and work more effectually set the body and soule in a heat warme our devotion works fervency in us lifts up our soules to God And many things more it worketh in us if we had but appetite to them and t is well stored with hearbs out of Gods Garden here a little and there a little as appeares in the beginning of the Common Prayer and so forward to the end of it For there is the hearbs of Gods own planting in our Pottage as you call it the ten Commandements dainty hearbs to season any Pottage in the world then there is our Saviours form of prayer that is a most sweet pot-hearbe cannot be denied then there is also Davids hearb his Prayers and Psalmes help to make our Pottage rellish well then S. Pauls precepts also the Creed a very faithfull pot-hearbe and the Song of the blessed Virgin a good pot-hearb so that this porrage hath abundance of choice herbs to season it and those that will eat no such porrage as these so well drest it is pity but they should fast as the proverb is those that will eat no porrage must eat no meat Though they be as some tearm them Cockcrowed porrage yet they are as sweet as good as dainty and as fresh as they were at the first The Sunne hath not made them sowre with its heat neither hath the cold winter taken away their vigour and strength but they are as wholesom and as well rellished as at the first and unlesse you be sick for novelties you cannot eate better then these Compare them with the Scriptures and see if they be not as well seasoned and crumbd if you find any thing in them that is either too salt or too fresh too bitter or too sowre too little or too great that herb shall be taken out and a better put in if it can be got or none at all And as in Kitchin porrage there is many good herbs in it so there is likewise in this Church porrage as you call it For first in Kitchin porrage is good water to make them so on the contrary in the other porrage is the water of life 2. There is salt to season them In the other is a prayer for grace to season our hearts 3. There is Oatmeal to nourish the body in the other is the words of him that is the bread of life which nourisheth our soules and bodies to eternall Life 4. There is Thyme in them to rellish them and it is very wholsom in the other is a wholsome exhortation not to harden our hearts whilest it is called to day this rellisheth well 5. There is a small Onion to give a taste In the other is a good herb called Lord have mercy upon us which gives a sweet taste to the soule 6. There is Rosemary to comfort and refresh the body In the other is comfortable words of Christ Come unto me all yee that are heavie laden and I will refresh your soules 7. There is Marygold leaves to revive the spirits