Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n endure_v lord_n psalm_n 3,889 5 9.1870 5 true
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
A09052 The barren trees doome a sermon preached at Newbery on the fifth day of August. Beeing the day of his Maiesties most happy deliuerance from the bloudy conspiracie of the Earle of Gowry and his brother Alexander. By Bartholomevv Parsons Batchelour in Diuinitie, and vicar of Collingborne Kingstone in the countie of Wiltes. Parsons, Bartholomew, 1574-1642. 1616 (1616) STC 19344; ESTC S114079 20,572 39

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

Forrest open enemies against whom there might haue beene either defence or hiding ſ Psal 55.12 strangers for Nation or Religion as Egyptians to Hebrewes who held it abhomination to eate bread one with another t Gen. 43.32 as Iewes to Samaritans who meddle not one with another u Iohn 4.9 which yet should not haue touched Gods Annoynted x Psal 105.12.13.14 for was not the Amalekites bloud vpon him for touching of Saul the Lords Annointed though he were a stranger and no Subiect y 2. Sam. 1.16 But euen Trees of the Garden men of the same lip and speech that were in subiection vnder this Cedar owing him a seruice in the Lord with their goods body yea the sacrifice of their deerest bloud men worshipping the same God with him after the same manner to whom there was one Lord one faith one Baptisme with him z Ephes 4.5 who professed as Ruth to Naomi thy God shall bee my God a Ruth 1.16 and who went together into the house of the same God as companions in the same Religion b Psal 55.14 yea Trees so clad in the leaues of an outward seeming zeale that euen this very day the elder of them kept an Ahabs fast when Naboth must die c 1. King 21.12 and with Absolom pretended a vow when he would rebell d 2. Sam. 15.8 came and stood before God in his House * Alexander would haue his Maiesty arriue there whilst the Earle his brother was at Sermon See Gowries conspiracy vouchsafing an care to the Gospell of peace which hath brought and taught all peace when warre and bloud was in his heart when hee purposed to haue mingled his sacrifice with the bloud of his Soueraigne as Pilate did the Galileans bloud with their sacrifices e Luke 13.1 so dangerous so pernicious is the deuill when hee is cloathed in white when he commeth in the shape of an Angell of light f 2. Cor. 11.14 These were the Trees Now for the ill friute that onely blossomed budded forth out of them for the most High blasted it that it could not come to maturity as that of Rechab and Baana who smote King Ishbosheth on his bed and slew him g 2. Sam. 4.7 it was the fruit of sedition of rebellion which is as the sinne of witchcraft h 1. Sam. 13.52 of lifting vp their hands with Absolom against the Father of their Country yea of laying violent bloud-thirsty hands vpon him who was to them and is to vs the light of our Israel i 2. Sam. 21.17 and the breath of our Nosthrils k Lam. 4.20 whom they should haue feared to haue laid hands on l 2. Sam. 1.14 as being their Maister the Lords annointed m 1. Sam. 24.7 26.9 yea as being a righteous person as Dauid aggrauateth the sinne of Rechab and Baana for slaying a righteous person n 2. Sam. 4.11 one cuius virtutes nullo vitiorum confinio laeduntur as Pliny faid of Traian whose vertues are impaired with no neighbour vices who neuer was an Ahab to spoyle any Naboth of his Vineyard o 1. King 21.16 nor a Manasses to defile the streets of his Cities with innocent bloud p 2. King 21.16 so farre is hee from that that hee hath pardoned many railing Shemeis bloudy Ioabs and rebellions Absoloms and would euen with good Theodosius etiam mortuos in vitam reuocare wish them aliue that are dead nor an Herod to take away anothers wife q Math. 14.4 One to whom the Church of God doth euen owe it selfe not onely for being nursed vp with the milke of his Breasts but also for the seruice that hee hath done to Sion in publishing Apologies in her defence and shewing himselfe to be a defender of the faith not onely in a Complementall Title but also in actuall performance One whom the Common-wealth hath found as a Nebuchadnezzars Tree r Dan. 4.9 a King raigning in righteousnesse and being an hiding place from the winde a couer from the tempest as Riuers of water in a dry place as the shadow of a great Rocke in a weary land ſ Esay 32.2 And one of whom all his Subiects do for his walking in and out before them Eadem secretò quae palam loqui t Seneca speake none otherwise in secret then openly This was their naughty detestable fruite Now for the cropping of it in the bud for the hewing downe of such corrupt Trees well spake euen wicked Iesabell Had Zimri peace when hee slew his Maister u 2. King 9.31 Had these men peace when they sought attempted to haue slaine their Maister the Lords Anointed and had so farre gone on in their wickednesse that they had brought him as a bird into the snare of the Fowler and had dealt with their Soueraigne as the euill seruant with his fellow laid hands on him and taken him by the throate x Math. 18.28 No but euen when there was but a step betweene his soule and death the Lord stirred vp the spirit of some of those mighty men whom this our Dauid had y Sir Iohn Ramsey Sir Thomas Ers●ins Sir Hugh Heries and one Wilson a seruant whose hands claue vnto the sword and vnto whom the Lord gaue great victories that day z 2. Sam. 23.9.10 so that they did beate them as small as the dust and tread them flat as the clay of the street a Psal 18.42 And as they thought to haue done not onely to their brother but also to their maister so were they retaliated so was it done to them life for life bloud for bloud b Deut. 19.21 blessed are they for rewarding them as they would haue serued the Lords annoynted although in this case there was great disproportion they seeking his life who was worth ten thousand of the vulgar c 2. Sam. 18.3 yea they found there was no inchantment against Iacob no diuination against Israel d Num. 23.23 Gowries inchanted characters wherein he did trust could not keepe his body from the sword nor his life from destruction e See Gowries corspiracie And for their casting into fire euen into the fire that neuer goeth out f Mark 9.43 although we must be sparing in iudging any who haue a maister of their owne to stand or fall to g Rom. 14.4 although Maior sit dei benignitas as saith S. Austine quam omnium hominum iniquitas the goodnesse of God be greater then the wickednesse of all the men in the world so that a man may bee receiued to mercy inter pontem fontem betweene the bridge and the brooke Yet if rebellion threw Adam out of Paradise cast the Angels downe out of heauen into hell h 2. Pet. 2.4 how shall these rebels these traitors euer escape the condemnation of hell and be saued in the day of the Lord Nay if Iudas in whom there was a kinde of remorse for the Holy Ghost saith of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i Mat. 27.3 He Was sorry that euer he had done the deed and who tooke the deepest revenge of himselfe that could be for he went and hanged himselfe be yet gone into his owne place k Acts 1.25 euen hell prepared of old for him whither are they gone who with Corah Dathan and Abiram died in their trespasse l Num. 16.33 were neuer pricked in heart but stood in defence of the deed died in defence of it and breathed out their last breath with sorrow that they had not the wit m Alas I had not the weight of it said Alexander See Gowries conspiracie to haue imbrued their hands in Maiesties sacred bloud but euen in infernum inferius into the nethermost hell And so euer let his enemies perish let the enemies of our Lord the King and all that rise to doe him harme be as those two brethren but vpon himselfe let his crowne flourish and let the Lord speak of his house for a great while n 2. Sam. 7.19 that there may neuer want a man of his posterity to sit vpon the throne of great Britaine so long as the Sunne and Moone endureth And for our selues let vs praise the name of our God with a song magnifie him with thankesgiuing o Psalm 69.30 who giueth so great deliuerance vnto his King and sheweth mercie vnto his annointed and to his seed for euermore p Psalm 18.50 Yea let vs cry with Ahimaaz blessed be the Lord which hath shut vp the men that lift vp their hands against my Lord the King q 2. Sam. 18.28 blessed and thrice blessed be the name of the Lord that reserued him in meliora tempera for better times that he might set him on the throne of our Israel and make him king to doe equitie and righteousnesse r 2. King 10.9 And let the King himselfe reioyce in the Lords strength euen reioyce greatly in his saluation ſ Psalm 21.1 and praise his God which gaue him not as a prey vnto their teeeh but euen then when there was but a step between his soule and death sent from heauen and saued him from thereproach of them that would haue swallowed him vp t Psam 57.3 redeemed his life from the very brinkes of the graue and crowned him with mercie and compassion u Psalm 103.4 So that God which hitherto hath saued him from the Lyon and the Beare will hereafter also for so he may with Dauid ex antecedentibus colligere consequentia from the by-past experiments of Gods prouidence towards him gather what wil follow hereafter rescue him frō those vncircūcised Philistims that at any time rise vp against him x 1. Sam. 17.36 and which hath crowned him here on earth with a corruptible crowne will crowne him hereafter with a crowne incorruptible and giue him a kingdome that cannot be shaken reserued in Christ Iesus to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory for euer and euer Amen FINIS