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A00831 A very fruitfull exposition of the Commaundements by way of questions and answeres for greater plainnesse together with an application of euery one to the soule and conscience of man, profitable for all, and especially for them that (beeing not otherwise furnished) are yet desirous both to see themselues, and to deliuer to others some larger speech of euery point that is but briefly named in the shorter catechismes. By Geruase Babington. Babington, Gervase, 1550-1610. 1583 (1583) STC 1095; ESTC S108401 209,221 568

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●●e shillinges and eight pence In the ●●uentéenth yere of Edward the fourth ●●ey that kept dicing houses were to ●●ue thrée yeares imprisonment and 〈◊〉 pounds fine Players at dice in ●●ose houses two yeares imprisonment ●●d ten pounds fine In the eleuenth ●●are of Henrie the seuenth Dicers ●●oulde be openlie set in the stockes by ●●e space of one whole day and the ●●use kéepers that suffered him to play ●●rfeit a noble and be bounde to their ●●od behauiour In the 33. yeare of ●enrie the eight Dicing houses forfet●d fortie shillings euerie time disers 〈◊〉 s̄.viij d. and bound in recognisance ●●uer to play againe And yet more may 〈◊〉 sée in Pultōs abridgemēt Now it is woonderfull that notwithstanding a● this yet so foule a thing shoulde séem● so faire and that a man should n●● thinke himselfe vsed as a gentleman 〈◊〉 almost as a man vnlesse hee may ha●● libertie in this loosenesse and the larg● reine to so great an euill And yet 〈◊〉 be Christians and that of the bett●● sort too or you doe vs wrong The hea●then hated it and we hatch it vp in ●●uerie house and yet we be Christian The godly writ against it wee wai● for it and yet we be Christians T●● councels haue condemned it in the sp●●rite of Christ and christian lawes ha●● most sharpely punished it wee day a●● night vse it and cannot be reaued of 〈◊〉 and yet we be Christians But alas ●●las the day of vnderstanding or the da● of damnation for our ignoraunce sha● teach vs an other thing We swear● we lie we reuile and wee runne in●● the fielde with murthering mindes 〈◊〉 such anger is murther moued by pla●● and yet we will not leaue it And if doe not thus in shewe yet inwardly frette I chafe I gnash with my téeth ●nd teare the Cardes burne the Dice ●hrow away the Tables and such like ●nd yet I am religious The Lorde ●orbiddeth all appearaunce of euill 1. Thes 5. all ●ccasions of sinne and yet wee are the Lordes and doe neither The Lorde saith If thy right hande cause thée to ●ffend or thy right eye cut it off plucke ●t out and cast it away wee will bee the Lordes and not restrayne a litle ●lay that mine owne soule being witnesse most gréeuouslie maketh mee offende Fie fie what deadnesse is this Where is either loue of God or feare 〈◊〉 vs Loue makes vs burne with desire to doe well feare makes vs shake ●o thinke of anie sinne we continually sinne in our gréedie gaming and yet we be godlie But this either makes vs sée it or we will neuer I feare sée the mischéefe of playing and by name of Dising The Lorde for Christ his sake ●wake vs and so I end Que. What is nowe contayned in the ●ffirmatiue part of this commaundement Ans Euen as al these former branches are forbidden so the contraries of them are commanded as in general al helpe al succor al care and prouidence for th● safetie and benefite of the goods of ou● neighbour that possibly wee can shewe And againe the right vse of our own● goods as to the mainetainance of th● knowledge of God amongest vs to th● defence of the common wealth and th● magistrate to the nourishing of our fa●mily to the reléefe of the poore Lastl● as diffidence and mistrust in Gods pro●uidence for vs the roote of stealth vn●lawfull priuision for our selues was i● the negatiue part forbidden so here con●trariewise is faith and ful perswasion if we séeke his kingdome and the righ●teousnes thereof these outward thing● shall be cast vnto vs commanded Math. 6. Th● punishment of this commaundemen● temporal or worldly was euer diuers 〈◊〉 diuers places somewhere death som●●where but foure fold c. The spiritua● punishment as of all other commau●●dementes was and is euerlasting dam●nation 1. Cor. 6. Zach. 5. The Application NOw now my beloued to the worke of further fruit in our soules let vs lay this rule to them them to it and let vs euen heartilie I beséech you euerie man secretlie betwixt God and vs sée howe wee haue aunswered in obedience this law of our God father mercifull almightie We are bound by it generally to showe all loue carefull regard to our neighbors goods that we possiblie can to doe him with our owne goods what benefite we may In particulars if we will speake we are bound to lend We sée both when and what we may not hurting our selues profite our neighbours withal and to take no recompence vnlesse it be hurt which we lend Now looke I say if you haue euer obserued this thing without anie want Haue you doone it Nay haue you not often refused of a méere pinching an vnneighborly mind euen small matters when you haue béene verie earnestlie intreated adding often a lie to mende the matter withall saying that you either had not that which indéede you had or occupied it your self when indéede you did not And haue you not often contrarie to the lawe of God made in this behalfe taken reward when the thing you lent receyued no harme Surely your monie and manie thinges else doe witnesse against you Pledges For the lawe of pledges and taking of pawnes haue you neuer passed the bonds of loue or the limites of mercy in that respect Haue you neuer gone in to take what you could but stoode at the dore to receiue what he might spare you O that our hastie handes and harde heartes deserued not the wrath which in trueth they doe in this one thing Manie a time doe I greatly feare haue wee litle regarded the case of the partie whose pawne wee tooke so wee might bee safe our selues from our feared losse And if it were so surelie wee wanted loue and wee haue sinned Againe in the thinges commended to our kéeping Custodie let vs looke also a litle howe wee haue satisfied the lawe of God Wée shoulde neither denie for anie feare of harme thereby to kéepe for our neighbour which wee may better than hee defende neither conceile hurt purloyne or conuey away what euer anie trust reposed in vs hath brought into our custodie But manie a dogged nature denyeth the former and manie a couetous heart offendeth in the latter What say you of thinges which you haue founde being lost Haue you euer regarded euen as your owne to kéepe it to chéerishe it and to finde out the owner of it the straying beast of your neighbour and euen of your verie enimie Haue you neuer either of negligence or of malice and spite or by a pinching minde transgressed herein Consider it well And haue you neuer euen in the true testimonie of a good conscience retayned anie thing that euer you founde from the true owner if you knewe him neither euer neglected anie meanes to finde him out if you knewe him not Well were it with you if a priuie witnesse within you did not crie and saie that a gréedie
should we escape and yet God be iust too It is euen the wisedome we extoll in others and that we striue continually to attaine vnto our selues to haue neither ●rue eie true heart nor true tongue but onely to séeme to haue all to euerie one whose worde wealth or authoritie may gaine vs anie thing in this cursed worlde And so man is our strength our pollicie is our GOD flesh is our arme and what Paul so reioyceth in we laugh at as vile and too sily simplicitie Dauid assureth himselfe the Lorde will defende them that are true of heart Psalm 7.11 Psalm 32.11 Psalm 36.10 Psalm 64.10 we verily thinke if we be true of heart wee cannot nor shall not be able to liue in the worlde we must Critisare cum cretensibus that is we must smooth it and sooth it and carie two faces vnder one hoode or else wee are not so wise as we might be Thus sinne we I am sure of it some more and some lesse and the reward of the least sinne is eternall death But it is the Lordes great mercie to moue vs from anie sinne For dull are our heartes to feare any iudgement till it be vpon vs. 1. Iohn 1.7 And therefore to him I commende vs to open our eies that we may euen earnestly sée and consider effectually howe impossible anie feloweshippe is euer to be had for me holowe subtill guilefull hypocriticall and s● foorth with a God all trueth sinceritie simplicitie and open assured faithfulne●● it selfe For the seconde which was telling of tales wee haue heard it before shewed and our owne knowledge doth assure vs it is a branch of the breach of this commandement which shall burne both bodie and soule in the fire of hell And yet sée do we feare it or flie it Alas we knowe I am sure of it we haue béene too too secure in this point and our securitie not séeing and weighing the wickednesse of the vice hath stayned both heart and tongue horriblie Looke about the worlde and veiwe the generall course of all Feareth anie man to discredite his neighbour priuily and to whisper vpon hearesay or his owne imagination what tendeth to the blemish of his name whom he speaketh of Feareth any woman when shee hath mette with her gossippe to tittle tattle to the slander of an other this thing and that thing which yet hath no certaintie and which full both she would haue saide of her selfe vpon like coniectures No ●o we sée to much the cursed course of lawlesse tongues in euerie place though the Lorde in mercie giueth some consciences and a thousande times I begge that we would sée our sinne confesse our sinne and rippe vp our guilt in this respect Why should wee be so dull and without féeling If it be a vertue thus to prittle and prattle of euerie bodie vncertaine tales but most certaine discredites then prooue it so and vse it but if it bee a branch of false witnesse that doth truly witnesse gods wrath to hang ouer vs for it good Lorde shall we still be polluted with it Shall hell haue vs without anie helpe Will not the dread of dolefull day strike such a filthie fault into the waning and by litle and litle cut quite the throte of it and make it bléede to death in vs I hope the best and I wish the best the Lorde in his mercie set a watch before our mouthes and kéepe the dore of our lippes for euer hereafter Next commeth hearing and beléeuing to be considered of faultes in necessitie also if telling false tales hath before béene iustly blamed For there is nothing that so nurceth and nourisheth vp a tale teller as doth the credulous heart and attending willing eare of the hearer And therefore if the one be a vice the other certainely is no vertue Nowe howe guiltie are we in this againe howe stayned howe blotted before our blemishlesse God if he shoulde enter into iudgement with vs For Christ his sake let vs weigh it let vs viewe it and euen earnestly thinke of it and fearing to be damned let vs feare to sléepe soundly in the sinne that ●eadeth to damnation We doe not discountenance the whispering carper we doe not eschewe the reportes of péeuish pratlers but we itch to heare and take pleasure in hearing what true charitie in our heartes towardes our brother ●hould make vs abhorre to heare and wéepe to haue it true And for beléeuing marke and consider if you dwell amongest neighbours whether you haue ●ot gréeuously offended towarde many ●f them in this respect Howe haue you ●uffered a false tongue to fire your ●eartes with beléefe of your neighbour ●hat could neuer yet bee extinguished ●●nce you heard it and yet you doe not ●nowe it Alas is this charitie which who so wanteth wanteth God Is this to loue thy neighbor as thy selfe When full sore it offendeth mee that any man should credite a surmise of me if it be not true O eies O heartes where is their sight and féeling What loue can my neighbour beare me or with what heart can a seruant serue me when he séeth whisperers still about me and findeth my nature so credulous of them as that all his faith and trueth all his traueile and labour all his affection and loue were it neuer so sincere and vpright and euen flowing from the rootes of his heart and the verie bottome of his soule yet is in hazarde euerie houre of vniust condemnation of vnkinde regarde and most vndeserued reproofe Truely as I haue said before it is the verie tried cutthrote of all amitie friendshippe or faithfull louing seruice to haue a listening eare and a credulous heart without maruelous good discretion And I am most assured o● it there is no plague nor infection gréeuous in the worlde comparable to this poyson in estranging alienating and in the end quite driuing awaie from me those heartes that were mine owne with bodie and all worldly abilitie in trueth in honestie in alleadgeance in God in Christ and in all good meaning to the death Who loueth for gaine and serueth for hire he is a slaue to the thing that he gapeth for and to make vp his mouth he will carie any thing but to whome loue is gaine and due regarde of his poore true heart an abundaunt rewarde the deniall of it discourageth his meaning grindeth his soule in sunder and raketh him vp in dust by vntimely death And therefore since it offendeth God hurteth our brother and verie greatly indamageth our selues O that we would sée it consider it and as God by grace shall strengthen our fraile natures scoule vppon the spéeche that practiseth manies harme and couenant with our heartes to knowe before wee credite so would God blesse vs manie report well of vs and true hearts of neighbour friende seruant or whosoeuer neuer leaue vs. Passing then on in this examination further wee may not forgette the publishing of our brethrens priuate offences a displeasing thing vnto the Lorde
knowledge sake of Christ Iesus his Lorde and did iudge them to bee doung that he might win Christ And certainely what heart of man or woman soeuer knoweth God indéede what he is in himselfe and to all men and particularlie to it many thousande wayes as impossible it is it should not loue God againe aboue all and euen grone that it can loue him no more as it is vnpossible fier should want heate or water moysture Que. What braunches hath the loue of God springing out of it Ans Whosoeuer loueth God loueth also his worde Psal 119. vers 103. Luke 10. 1. Thess 5. 1. Iohn 3.17 Psal 15.1 the ministers of the worde the poore and all that feare God for these with such like are the braunches of the loue of God which if they be not in man and woman certainely neither is the other in them it selfe And as these all are commaunded so are the contraries forbidden and condemned ●y this Lawe What the contraries ●re beside that by these they may bée ●nowen they are expressed more fully 〈◊〉 the examination of conscience tou●hing the same annexed at the ende of ●his commaundement Que. What is the second duetie that ●olloweth of the knowledge of God Ans To feare him aboue all Que. What feare is meant here Ans Indéede in the Scripture the ●eare of God doeth vsually signifie all Religion but here it signifieth onely a ●art of the worship we owe vnto God Que. And what is it Ans This feare is a reuerent awe ●f God whereby we are loth to offende ●im both because we loue him and be●ause he is able to punish vs. Que. This seemeth to import some ●ifference of feare Ans Verie true it is For there are ●wo kindes of feare of God one a ser●ile feare dreading punishment ano●her ioyned with loue of God called a ●●nlike feare and this is meant here Que. Howe may we knowe whether this true feare of God be in vs or no Ans Truely as we knowe there is fire by the smoke and that a man liueth by his breathing so we may knowe by the effects that the feare of God doeth bring forth in them in whom it is whether it be in vs or no Que. Why what be the effects Ans As the banke doeth kéepe the water from ouerflowing so doeth the feare of God in man or woman kéepe out sinne that it spred not as otherwise it would We sée it in practise prooued before our eyes For when Pharaoh king of Egypt Exod. 1.17 commaunded them to kill euery male childe that was borne of the Israelites women what kept out this cruell murther both from hand and heart but this banke the feare and awe of God more than man for so saith the text the midwiues feared GOD and therefore did not as the King commanded them The like may we sée in Iob who saith Gods punishment was fearefull to him Iob. 31.32 therefore he oppressed not 〈◊〉 fatherlesse In Ioseph also verie no●●blie whose heart nor bodie filthie a●●lterie with his mistresse could staine Gen. 39. ●●cause this banke of the feare of God ●as so strong and good in him Lastly ●●e scripture prooueth it plainely to vs ●hen in seuerall places it ioyneth to ●●e feare of God a departing from euill 〈◊〉 an inseparable effect thereof Iob. 28. For ●ost assuredly it is so If wee nothing ●●part from our olde sinnes and yet say ●e feare God we lie and there is no ●●ueth in vs. Que. If then in this viewe of the ef●●cts of it we finde that either it is not in 〈◊〉 yet at all or at the most but verie li●● howe may we obtaine it or in●●ease it Ans First a verie good way to bréed 〈◊〉 increase this reuerent awe and ●are of God in our selues Howe the feare of God is gotten is an often ●●d earnest meditation of Gods power 〈◊〉 he is able to deale with vs to pu●●sh vs and plague vs if we doe not ●are him and this we learne by these ●ordes of Christ Feare not them that can kill the bodie Math. 10.16 and then can doe no more but feare him that can cast bodie and soule into eternall fier For they sound vnto me as if Christ had saide thus marke howe farre Gods power excéedeth mans power and howe much more fearefully he is able to punish you than man can and let this great power of the Lorde ouer bodie and soule to ca●● them both into hell for euer make yo● feare the same God aboue all and stan● in awe of his maiestie And assuredl● if we had grace to thinke of his powe● indéede effectually it would maruelou●sly profite our soules to this ende Se●condly another good way and meane● is a due meditation of the great mer●cies of God prooued by the Psalme With thee there is mercie Psal 130. therefore shal● thou be feared And lastlie by diligen● learning the worde of God preached o● read vnto vs. For so we reade in th● Lawe Gather the people together men women and children the straun●ger that is within thy gates that they may heare and learne to feare the Lord Sée howe he saieth by hearing men learne this feare of God and bréede it or increase it Que. When is the feare of God to be learned Ans At all times but especially when oportunitie either of teaching or learning doeth serue vs. For that we ought to take oportunitie of teaching our sauiour Christ himselfe affirmeth saying Yet a litle and the light is with you walk while you haue the light And that we should then learne when we our selues are able and apt to learne the wise man sheweth in these wordes Remember thy creator in the daies of thy youth Ecclesi 12.1 before the euill daies come and thy yeres approche wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Also the often and sodaine losse of hearing and séeing by sundrie occasions doth vehemently admonish vs to take time while time is and learne to feare God while we may For to day we can reade per aduenture our selues if not yet at least heare others but to morow who is sure hee shall eyther haue eies to sée to reade himselfe or sense of hearing to heare others Therefore againe take time when we may Que. What is contrarie to the feare of God Ans Too much to stande in feare of men and their threats so that by them wee are driuen to any vnlawfull things Too much to feare God himselfe and his iudgements as desperate men doe which nourish no hope of his mercie and goodnesse Thirdly securitie and too litle feare of God with many such moe All these are contrarie to that true feare of God which we speake of and are as well forbidden here as the other is commaunded Que. What is the third duetie of this commaundement Ans Thirdly we are here commaunded to make our prayers to none but to God Que. Howe may it bee prooued that onely God
haires 〈◊〉 her head kissed them annointed them ●ith precious ointment and what was 〈◊〉 which that woman thought too much for such a friende True it is therefore that the lesse we sée the goodnesse of our God the lesse we loue him but great is the affection of them to whom many sinnes are forgiuen Knowing this then that remembraunce of hard estate before will stirre the heart vp to him in loue that hath made it happie and that sight of ougly sinne lodging still in mée and cleauing to my soule and flesh will make mee praise his name who yet in mercie imputeth not the same vnto mée Vse indéede often with your selfe and especially when you féele your heart most prone and fit thereunto to viewe your sinnes against euery commaundement howe many and monstrous they are in thought worde and deede sit and thinke with your selfe what is commaunded sometimes in one sometimes in another what woonderfull perfection is required in euerie one what braunches and members euerie one hath what terrible iudgements are due to the breakers therof how far from the full absolute perfourmance of any tittle of any one of them you your selfe are therefore in what case you stand for the same euen sure of eternal destruction both of bodie soule in hel fier Yet notwithstanding how you are released of mercie not of merite that with the preciousest ransom that euer was the heart bloud of Iesus Christ the sonne of God both God man so that heauen earth may perish but you cannot perish Que. The examination of the conscience touching this commaundement Ans As for example I set view this cōmandemēt wherof now we haue spokē Thou shalt haue none other gods but me Considering what things are biddē●r forbidden vnto me in the same And ●s alreadie now hath béene prooued first I sée I am commanded herein to wor●hip the Lord my God and him onely to ●erue not ioyning any fellowes to him ●t all of which worship many points ●here bee but they may bee reduced ●nto a fewe First I sée I am bound to ●oue him aboue all that is in my heart and soule to make more account of him than of all the worlde or any creature in heauen or earth to cleaue faster vnto him and his wil than to any thing to estéeme him and preferre him yea euen aboue mine owne saluation if they could come in comparison together for Hee that loueth father or mother Matth. 10.28 sister or brother wife or childe or any thing more than me is not worthie of me Secondly I am commaunded to feare him aboue all that is with a godly reuerence to stande more in awe of him and his worde than of any thing else whatsoeuer to be more loath not for feare onely but euen for loue to displease him grieue him and offende him than any or all the creatures in heauen or earth beside in respect of that which he is able to lay vpon mee if I forsake him to account nothing of any thing that any man can doe vnto me mindefull euer of this saying Feare not them that can kill the bodie and are not able to kill the soule Matth. 10. but feare him that can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire Thirdly I sée that in this commaundement I am charged to make my prayers to none but to God onely for the reasons aboue in their place alledged Fourthly I sée I am commaunded not to thinke that things goe by fortune and chaunce or that any thing is done which GOD knoweth not of or could not let but that I acknowledge him to be the guider and gouernour of all things and that what good soeuer I receiue I haue it from him and therefore that I trust and stay vpon him alone at all times and in all my matters whatsoeuer And for so much as neither I nor any can either loue him or feare him pray to him or trust in him vnlesse we knowe him therefore I sée also that I am in this commaundement straitely bound ●o long as I liue to labour and trauell by all meanes appointed to knowe the Lorde and his trueth out of his worde and looke howe much I want of knowing any thing that is reueiled in his worde so farre am I guiltie of the breache of this Lawe And if it please the Lorde to blesse me with knowledge of his trueth or any thing else whatsoeuer I sée that in this commandement I am charged to giue thankes to him for it in such full manner and measure of féeling as any way is due to that benefite For if I forget to be thankefull I forget that the Lorde in that thing is my good God And if I ascribe the praise and thankes to any thing else whatsoeuer otherwise than as to the instrument of God I make my selfe another GOD beside the Lorde euen that thing wherevnto I giue the thankes and I breake this commaundement These and many such other things I sée are laide vpon me and al men and women in this first commandement then I thinke or say with my self vnto the Lord O my good God and gratious father O my swéete Lord guide most righteous what doe I sée euen in this but one law of thine against my selfe my soule and bodie why I should neuer come in thy kingdome nor lift vp mine eyes to heauen in hope of any comfort This is but one Lawe of ten and contayneth but a fewe dueties in respect of all that I owe to thée and my brethren yet ah Lorde with wailing woe I speake it so guiltie I sée my selfe so fowle and ouglie before thy face and so full of breaches euerie way euen of this one commandement that I am ashamed and confounded to ●ift vp mine eies vnto thée my God For mine iniquities are increased ouermine ●ead my trespasses are growen vp to ●he heauen to me belongeth nothing but ●hame confusion it is thy mercie that ● am not vtterly destroied yea euē thy ●ercie maruellous that the earth as ●eary of so wicked a burden shrinketh ●ot from vnder my féete and hellish pit 〈◊〉 gulfe of endlesse woe receiueth me ●ot into it For what pleasure is ●ere in that seruaunt that being bid 〈◊〉 his master doe diuers thinges yet ●ot in any one obeyeth or perfourmeth 〈◊〉 maisters will Can hée like him ●ill hee loue him No no full soone euen I my selfe would loath and cast off such a one Ah Lorde then for my selfe what should I say Is there any seruaunt so bound vnto his master as I am bounde to thee Is there any master that can and will so quitte his seruaunts paines as thou in mercie my obedience Or can any mortall man so iustly challenge the obedience of his hireling as thou my God maist challenge the seruice of me thy creature first made of nothing by thy hande and then most dearely bought againe with precious price No no my bodie my life my heart
my soule and whatsoeuer I am within or without of thée I had all and to thée my gratious God I owe them all againe Yet sée ah wretche and wofull plight although thy goodnesse to mee farre passeth all masters their seruaunts and my duetie to thee more due ten thousand times than any mans vnto his master yet is my disobedience greater the sinne of my soule more grieuous and the whole cours● of my wicked life more opposed to thy will than euer was any earthly seruaunts to any hard and euill master For he will doe something that hee is bidden but I haue done nothing as I plainely sée by viewing of my life and as my conscience telleth me being priuie to my pathes For haue I loued thée as I ought Namely euen with all my heart with all my soule with all my strength which is the first thing that is commaunded me in this commaundement If I haue done it then haue I loued thy worde and euery way made that account of it that I ought For Dauid thy déere seruaunt loued ●hée and beholde what he saith Thy worde vnto mee was sweeter than the ●onie and the honie combe Ieremy ●hy Prophet loued thée and sée what ●ollowed Thy wordes were found by ●im and hee did eate them and they were vnto him the ioy and the reioysing of his heart And a number moe such ●xamples haue we whereby we learne ●hat there is no true loue of thée in vs ●nlesse there be ioyned thereunto a syncere and feruent liking of thy worde Now forasmuch as I am guiltie to my selfe that I haue not had that care of thy worde that I ought to reade it to heare it to learne and séeke it and euery way to shewe my loue toward it therefore O deare Father to say I haue loued thée as I ought with all my soule and power alas I dare not alas I cannot For much more occupied might I haue béene in the meditation of thy Lawe than euer I haue béene I confesse it O Lorde I confesse it euen with griefe of heart And therefore if thou werst not a God most mercifull I euen for this one thing were a wretche most miserable The like might I say of that light and little account that I haue made of thy Ministers which béeing another braunche of the loue of thée bewrayeth my want vnto mee But sée yet further howe greatly my heart hath fayled in louing of thée For looking vnto my selfe a litle déeper beholde euen such thinges as flatlie and directly are contrarie to the loue of thée alas I sée them to haue béene and to be at times in mee most horrible To murmure and grudge to repine and be offended with any crosse or griefe whatsoeuer laide vpon mee by thée or not euen willinglie to accept it as the messenger of a gratious friende to seeke any wicked meanes to bee eased of it is contrarie to that loue that wee owe to thée And howe fraile my selfe haue béene herein thou searcher of hearts knowest it well and I wretche most weake with ruing heart beséeche thy pardon Againe to suffer the worlde or any glistering glorie thereof further to creepe into our heartes and to tickle vs with delight and liking than it ought is a thing ●●at contrarie to the loue of thée For so we reade 1. Iohn 2. Loue not this worlde nor any thing that is in the worlde For If any man loue this world the loue of the father is not in him To drawe backe also my helping hand from those that are in néede and not with readie heart and willing minde to comfort their poore estate with whom thou hast dealt more hardely than with mee I knowe it bewrayeth a want of loue to thée 1. Ioh. 3.17 For so I learne Whosoeuer hath this worldes good seeth his brother neede shutteth his compassion from him howe dwelleth the loue of God in him But these O Lord haue taynted somtimes this heart of mine and therefore I haue not loued thée as I ought But what should I say when I viewe in my selfe howe my flesh and my heart runneth backe as it were to hide it selfe when I thinke of any persecution to be abidden for thée and thy trueth and specially when I looke vpon these horrible torments that some of thy Martirs haue suffered oh what want of loue bewrayeth it to me My houshold and familie my children and charge my life and present estate steppe in vnto mee as Peter once did to his master Matth. 16.22 drawe me aside and whisper in mine eare to saue my selfe if that day come and my power fayleth with courage to an●were as then my Sauiour did Come after me Satans your counsell is not good neither sauour you the things that ●re of God so that euery way I sée I ●oue thée not my God as I should Looke ●t my behauiour when I sée or heare ●hy name dishonoured any way and I ●muther it vp I hold my peace I make ●s though I heard it not yea and some●imes I approoue wickednesse with my ●aughter and I breake not out in zeale ●f rebuke No I that hearing as much ●y any worldly friende would readilie ●hallenge the wrong and hotly séeke ●euenge therof in thy cause and for thy ●ake I haue no heate nor courage but ●ither persons place daunger or some ●ircumstance or other quencheth my ●eart tyeth vp my tongue and maketh ●e like a traitour to my Lorde and ●aster What might I say of that se●ret misliking that somtimes wil créepe 〈◊〉 closely into my minde of the poore ●state of Christ in his members here on ●arth Christ liketh me not so well when he lyeth in the stable Luke 2. in the manger when he flyeth into Egypt for his life Matth. 2 13. when he hath not an hole to lay his head in except it be in a colde prison as he doeth when he rideth to the Citie and the people cutting downe bowghes of Palmes strawe them in the way spread their garments and crie O Zanna blessed be he that commeth in the name of the Lorde Matth. 21.8 as when they séeke to make him a King and the worlde doeth séeme his friende No my heart will euen slippe sometimes priuilie into this wish O that the Gospell and the worlde might alwayes be friendes and goe hande in hande So that liking not euerie way so well in trueth of Christ in pouertie as in plentie and feeling not my heart so well contented to begge and suffer with him as to rule raigne with him there is not that loue in me towar● him that ought to be Againe mark ho● I faile in publike assemblies to heare 〈◊〉 word to pray such like when I migh● bee present if I would Marke how● negligent I am in publishing the prayses of my GOD and labouring thereby to drawe others to a greater liking of him with a number such like wantes and O loue of GOD in mée no loue in
with others as you reade them Stand therefore in strength serue with comfort slippe not from your calling for want of rewarde if other abilitie serue to continue The Lords worde is past him his promise is out he wil consider and recompence all true seruants feare it not doubt it not but cleaue to the Lord and when euer anie snubbes and checkes in worde or countenaunce vndeserued arise say in your heart with Dauid chéerefully Psalm 84. O Lord blessed is the man that putteth his trust in thee Que. What say you of parentes in respect of benefites Ans I must néedes say they are greatlie to bee honoured and truely loued agayne whose loue and affection hath broken out in fruites to vs ward· For ingratitude before God and man is hatefull Proueb 17 1● And hee that rewardeth euill for good euill shall neuer depart from his house saith Salomon Que. Howe prooue you that vnder the title of Father and Mother old men and olde women be meant and to bee honoured Ans The wordes of Paul to Timothie teacheth it 1. Tim. 5.2 For rebuke not an elder saith hee but exhort him as a Father and the elder women as mothers Leuit. 19.32 And touching the honouring of them the lawe is plaine Thou shalt rise vp before the horeheade and honour the person of the olde man and dreade thy God I am the Lorde Iob. 32.6 And in Elihu wee sée the practise who stayed his speach that his auncients might speake before him Que. Let all towne officers consider this and become parents not spoilers of the towne Howe then may we conclude this matter Ans Thus for this thing we may note end That if the scripture to Magistrates ministers maisters such like superiors haue giuen the name of parents thē ought they al and euerie one of them in heart affection and action be aunswerable to the same Que. Nowe then to proceede heere is a promise added to the keepers of this commaundement that their dayes shall bee long in the land Ephe. 6. And to the Ephesians it is saide that this is the first commaundement which is a promise yet was there one added to the seconde if you looke on it howe then aunswere wee this Ans We aunswer ethat the promise annexed to the seconde commaundement belonged to all but this belongeth particularlie to this and therefore it is the first with anie speciall promise Que. What might be the reason of this promise Ans This may séeme to bee some reason of it Naturall parentes are the instrumentes of life other parentes as Magistrates Ministers and benefactors are the instrumentes of good and comfortable life Nowe it pleased the Lord to giue them for a blessing long life who duetifullie behaue themselues to the instruments of life Que Why but is long life such a blessing Ans Surely mans life is full of trouble and griefe it can not bee denied Yet I answere first that notwithstanding euen to liue and haue a béeing is of it selfe a mercie of the Lords yet to continue liuing to serue and praise the Lorde to increase his kingdome by anie abilitie in vs is a greater mercie For a good nature reioyceth in oportunitie giuen to shewe himselfe thankefull though it he to his trouble and cost and so must we Secondlie I answere that al these miseries of mans life haue come of man himselfe and not of God and therefore we ought no lesse to accompt of Gods blessing for the thing which we ourselues haue béene cause of Thirdlie it may be answered the god doth not promise barelie long life in this place but good with it also either in respect of outward prosperitie or inwarde comfort Que. Howe prooue you that Ans By hauing recourse to Pauls wordes who repeating this blessing vpon them that honour Father and Mother doth not say onely that thou maist liue long on earth but that it may bee well with thee and thou maist liue long vpon earth Therfore though mans life be full of miseries yet as God promiseth continuance of it it is a blessing a great blessing Que. Howe can this promise respect vs seeing it nameth particularly Canaan saying that thy dayes may be long in the lande which the Lorde thy God giueth thee meaning it Ans Paul againe doth answere this who boldly putteth for those wordes these on the earth therefore by his interpretation it is not to bee restrayned to Canaan onely Que. Doe alwayes they that honour Parentes liue long and contrariwise againe Ans Wée may not say so For all thinges fall out alike to the good and euill iust and vniust saith Salomon meaning of outwarde thinges as life is and it is the wisedome of the Lord it shoulde bee so that good things as wee call them may not be too gréedilie sought for because they are common to the wicked neither euill thinges be vnlawfullie eschewed because they are incident to the good Que. Howe then is God true in his promises Ans So farre as long life may be a benefite to his children so farre hee euer giueth it but if in wisedome he knowe it better for them to be gathered to their fathers then hee taketh them away and recompenceth want of temporall life with eternall Que. Yea but that is not his promise then for his promise is long lyfe heere Ans He that promiseth monie and giueth golde breaketh not his promise hee that promiseth little and giueth much breaketh not his promise but so doeth the Lorde with vs and therefore who is hee that vnthankefully pleadeth against his mercie Que. What fruitfull notes nowe gather you of th●se wordes Ans First wee may note that the Lorde ioyning a promise of mercie to this commaundement and not dealing so with anie thing which he liketh not greatlie pleasing out of question in his sight is the kéeping of this law namelie when euerie man doeth dutie where dutie is due and in loue we allow cherish and maintaine one an other Secondlie if long life bee a blessing promised to such as obey their parents and this obedience procéedeth greatly of good education then they that careleslie and vngodlily neglect the same in their children doe asmuch as lyeth in them shorten the dayes of their poster●tie Lastlie wee also in this promise annexed note that if long life be a gift of God then commeth it not by nature or good constitution of body further or longer than it pleaseth the same GOD to blesse the meanes and graunt it And thus much briefely of this commaundement The Application NOwe remaineth it to applie these thinges to our selues euerie one disclosing his life and inward thoughtes before the Lord and before our selues as néere as we can to the ende that sight of sin if it be foūd in vs may bring foorth sorowe and giuen grace in some strength to stande if wee can finde we haue had it may increase our thankes to the Lord our God who did so assist
obserue his will We nowe knowe not our actes onely but our inwarde thoughtes must euer be holy we now knowe many meanes that leade to offence heerein and that euen the meanes must also be eschewed Nowe then if we liue as in ignorance wee did scorning at counsell cleauing to our pleasures and reiecting the Lorde and his lawe shall we escape He that knoweth his maisters will and doth it not shall hee be vnpunished Marke what I say and pray euer to féele it as the wrath of the king bad heate the furnace seuen times hootter than e●er it was to consume the men that withstoode him to his face for truth so shall the wrath of God that made this lawe cause hell to be hette 70 times 7 times hotter for vs if wilfully after warning and maliciously after knowledge we oppose our life against it That is he shall multiply the paines of hell vppon vs for these pleasures of our fleshe that swéete sinne may haue bitter and sower confusion for euermore Nowe the God of heauen giue vs sense and féeling the Lorde of mercie touch vs with a taste of sinne by the viewing of his lawe For we cannot alwayes liue and thus dally with our owne soules neither standeth it with the nature of our God who is iust finally to forgiue vs though he long forbeare vs vnlesse we amend But he must haue his iudgement and we must haue our torment as sure as we liue Nowe doeth hee wish vs to consider our wayes and to turne our feete into his testimonies his warninges waste and his wrath increaseth if wee settle our selues against him Yet O howe I feare wee will wilfully doe it For it is so swéete and so incident to vs which this lawe forbiddeth that a thousande to one we forsake the Lorde The allurementes I haue named wee will neuer withstande no wee will not heare of it that they cause vs to fall But pleasing this fleshe for the time wee doe vse them wee will neuer espie the paine that will followe them Yet why should I feare since God is of power to pierce anie hart and hath promised to doe it if wee heartily begge it O Lorde I hope thou wilt worke with vs that by this lawe we may sée howe we haue offended thée and what héereafter we must more eschewe the one with sorrowe and true remorse the other with faith and continuall care Then shall thy Christ and our comfort who in our flesh fulfilled the lawe for vs couer with his righteousnesse all our sinnes against it Then shall sinnes past in his bloud be forgiuen and wee by him euer héereafter strengthened Then we shall order our eyes with a carefull heart we shall set a watch before our mouth and keepe the dore of our lippes all false inticementes to forbidden lustes wee shall gladly refraine and so escape the sinne it selfe the better This I say good Lorde we shall doe if thou worke with vs that is thou and thy power and thou and thy mercie shall doe it in vs. Which voutchsafe O father of heauen for thy vnmeasurable vnsearchable goodnesse sake Amen The eight Commaundement Thou shalt not steale Question HOwe can this commaundement possiblie stande with that opinion of communitie Ans Indéede no way for it manifestly ouerthroweth so vile an imagination and sheweth the distinction of dominions propriety in things was and is the ordinance of the Lorde For euerie prohibition sheweth an ordinance before established which should be obserued either in Gods lawes or mans though not alwaies expressely As the forbidding of murther sheweth preseruation of life to be the wil of God and the denyall of adulterie inferreth the liking of chastitie either in mariage or out So the forbidding of stealth which is an alienation of an other mans goods to our selues sheweth that euery thing is not our owne to take at our pleasure but proprietie in possession is the will of the Lorde For if all thinges be common there can be no stealth and so this law friuolous and to no purpose which God forbid we should affirme or thinke Que. Yet many haue bin of this opinion affirming that tyranny not diuinitie maketh this difference amongst men Ans It is verie true Yet I hope you sée how euidētly this law of God which I trow they will account diuinitie doth ouerthrowe them and their folly as do also all other lawes that may héereunto be reduced with many scriptures mo For as there can bee no stealth if all thinges be common and therefore this lawe of God as I saide in vaine giuen so there can be no buying or selling no borowing or lending no letting or leasing or any such thing amongst men if euery man haue like interest to take at his pleasure therfore the Lord God euen in these also greatly ouerséene for that he would troble himselfe to make lawes touching these matters when as no mā hath or ought to haue anie proprietie in anie thing more than an other Againe all the exhortations in the Scripture to almes déedes and to mercie toward the poore is friuolous for they haue as good right to take anie thing they want from anie man as the other haue to giue them But all these you sée are absurde and therefore the opinion and the contrary of it the wil and ordinance of the Lord. Que What is then the verie drift of this commandement Ans The verie end of it is this to bind our loue and care to our neighbors goods as before it hath béene to his life and things déere vnto him as his life For it cannot bee that our heartes shoulde bee right in affections towards our brethren and wee spoylers and wasters or anie way harmers of the commodities which they inioy Loue chéerisheth kéepeth euen euery thing so néere as it can which he accompteth of whome wee loue and especiallie which hee liueth by and maintaineth both himselfe and others by And therefore as I thinke we cannot take a better course to lay before our owne eyes that wants of loue in vs towards the goods of our neighbors and consequently our breaches of this commaundement than diligently to wey some particular dueties specified in the worde wherein the Lord God would haue our loue to show it selfe As for open rapine and plaine stealth no man I thinke wil excuse it or denie it to be sinne and therfore I stand not vpō it your booke hath euident places quoted against it I come rather to those other duties of borowing and lending of hyring and letting of buying and selling and such like Que. First then what is the Lawe of borowing and lending in the worde Ans If a man saith the lawe borow anie thing of his neighbour Exod. 22.14 and it bee hurt or else die the owner of it not being by hee shall surelie make it good If it be an hyred thing he shal not make it good for it came for his hyre In which lawe if wee well wey