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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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out so now rather then in the building of the tabernacle by Moses or the first temple by Salomon which both were finished with great quietnesse and when he hath mused on it long he saith that it fared with this outward Temple as it doeth with euerie particular man that is the spirituall Temple of the Lord. when God made man in his innocencie it had bene easie for him to haue stood ifhe had would but after that he fell it was much harder to restore him againe It is harder to repaire an old rotten house then to build a new And to make an old man strong then a young God made Adam with a word easilie and breathed life into him but after that Adam fell what trouble and miserie fel afore he could be restored Christ Iesus must come downe from heauen vnto the earth nay into Hell to pull vs out of hell he must be accused whipped scourged falslie condemned thrust to the heart with a speare die and be buried ascend vnto his father againe open heauen gates which afore our sinnes had locked vp and abide manie moe sorowes afore we could be restored into Gods fauour againe and folow him where he sitteth on the right hand of his father So it is an easie matter to enter into Gods Church by Baptisme but if thou fall after how hard it is to rise againe daylie experience teacheth We mustrepent fast pray giue almes forsake our selues condemne our selues with bitter teares and trembling worke our saluation stand in continual warr against the deuil the world and our owne affection which thingsto do are more common in our mouthes then in our liues and more doe talke of them then practise them God for his mercies sake forgiue vs and amend vs all It fareth so likewise in the outward Church of God in all ages In the beginning Peter conuertedat one sermon 3000. and at another 2000. Paul filled all the countries from Ierusalem to Illiricum with the Gospell The Apostles and their suc cessors conuerted the whole world vnto the Lord in few yeares but how manie ofthese countries where their successors preached haue fallen backe and how litle hope there is oftheir returning againe vnto the faith the Iewes Turkes and Infidels declare whome God hath giuen vp to their owne lusts and though they inhabited the same countries where true Christians dwelt afore yet they haue hardned their harts that they wil not vnderstand nor open their eies to follow the footsteps of them that went afore that they may see the light How hard a thing it is at this day to turne a Papist and speciallie to see one that knew the trueth once ifhe fall to Poperie or other errours to rise againe and beleeue the gospell we haue to manie examples to teach vs. I feare the saying of the Apostle may be verified on them it is vnpossible for them that were once lightned and knew the trueth if they fall away to be renued by repentance The Lord in his mercie stay vs that we fall not from him for it is horrible to fall into the hands of the liuing God in his Anger 22. And 〈◊〉 that time also Now when Nehemiah had thus perswaded the nobles the rulers the people manfully to stand in defence of their city diligently to follow their worke in building of the walls hadset both the souldiers the 〈◊〉 in order aray like a good captaine master of the workes looked diligentlie to ech of them all the day long that they slipt not away from their charge nor loytered at their worke kept the trampet with himselfe as a thing of great importance trust to giue warning if the enemie did approch lest there might some mischiefe fall out in the night he appointeth awatch for the night season also to preuent al practises that might be deuised against thē A good Captaine will so prouide both for day night in peace warre that the enemie who is euer to be feared euen when he pretendeth most quietnes and friendship and when he seemeth to flee retireth ost on a sodaine to see whether there be anie power remaining to hold him out he will forsee I say that the enemie haue no vantage against him but euerie place be well manned and fensed to withstand him He willeth the people therefore that euery man shall watch in the street afore his owne dorewith his seruants that no mischiefe fell out within the Citie where so manie hipocrites and hollow-hearted people and vnwilling folke of all sorts to further this worke did dwell The outward enemie might do much harme but inward treason might ouerthrow all in a short time For the vtter enemie the watch of the wal would be able to withstand him giue warning to the rest for aide and if any practise were within the Citie the watch in the streetes might suppresse it for a time vntill more aide came He had good cause to prouide for this for experience taught him as is written afore that the tribe of Iuda was wearie and discouragedthe people to worke Semeia and Noadia as though they were Prophets sent from God counselled him to take sanctuary and saue him selfe for they sought his life which was not for anie good will but to discourage him from his worke and diuers of the rulers were ioyned in friendship and marriage with Sanballat and Tobias receiued messengers from them and bewrayed his doings to them againe as appeereth hereafter and therefore not knowing whome he might well trust he could doe no lesse but keepe watch and ward day and night on the walles and in the streetes both against the outward and the inward enemie O worthie wise and stout Nehemiah where is one courtier that hath folowed thy footsteps since thou wast borne God for his mercie raise vp some that though not with that fulnes of spirit yet with such courage and measure of grace as shall please him to giue some one may in ielousie of spirit take in hand the repayring of the olde ruinous walls of Gods Church house and Citie that both the outward and inward enemie which haue wrongfully possessed inuaded and wasted the Lords inheritance may be vanquished and suppressed and Gods Children may in quietnes of minde worship and serue the Lord our God as he hath taught vs. After all this watching and warding he is not wearie but we will to our worke againe saith he as soone as the day peepes Who could or would haue taken these paines but he it would haue discouraged anie man but him But Nehemiah knew well that Sathan neuer ceaseth to trouble the Lords flocke and though slothfull Idlenes be meetest for him to worke by yet he forsaketh not the painfull labouring man and will assault him like wise Let euerie man therefore take heede how he standeth and see that he fall not for Sathan refuseth no sort of men to ouerthrow them no time nor place he disdaineth but is glad if he
goodnes am bold to creepe in at a corner and present my felfe before thy throne of mercie quaking trembling at thy feareful iudgements sharpe iustice against sinne I offer vnto thee this poore soule carkesse the worke of thy owne hands made glorious by thee but foulie defaced by me I Lord I God do most humbly with a heauie hart and troubled mind beseech thee I most earnestlie with bitter teares beg craue of thee to cast me not away out of thy sight but gratiouslie to heare my praier For although thou dwellest in thy highe and holie place in heauen yet thou lookest downe into the earth to heare the sighing of the poore and deliuer the oppressed and though thou be greate and feareful in all thy workes yet I know thou art great in mercie and rich in goodnes For although thou hast punished sharplie yet thou sauest more mercifully Adam was cast out of Paradice in iustice yet had mercy offered vnto him in great plenty The entising of a woman made him to offend thee the blessed seed of the same woman hath bruised the serpents poisonful head deliuered vs. Thou therefore that art a God oftrueth keepest promise and shewest mercie to them that loue thee keepe thy commaundements looke pitifully on vs which forsaking our selues hang vpon thee and though we see thy deserued rod yet we fly to thy promised mercie though we haue not kept our promise made vnto thee in our Baptisme that we should forsake the Deuil world and flesh serue honour and faithfully obey thee our onely Lord God with al our hart strength powre soule yet art thou a true God in keeping thy promise and not casting vs of When we run from thee thou callest vs againe and not destroying vs sodenly tariest for our amendement When we hate thee and become thy open enemies thou remembring thy promise made to Abraham Dauid and our fathers seekest by all meanes to bring vs home againe to thee though we be vnfaithful thou art true though we forget thee thou remembrest vs. Though we deserue to be cast away from thee without al hope of redemption yet when thou fatherlie correctest vs in the midst of thine anger thou rememberest thy mercie and receiuest vs againe to thee We graunt O Lord that we doe not loue thee nor keepe thy commaundements as we ought yet Lord thou that art loue and charitie it selfe and louest all things that thou hast made and in thy deare sonne Christ Iesus doest imbrace vs not looking at our deserts but at his worthines who hath fulfilled the lawe for vs and made vs partakers of thy rightcousnes Lord God heare vs and haue pitie on vs. O thou Lord God of all mercie which neuer didst cast anie awaie that fled vnto thee open they eares heare the praiers of me thy humble suter shal I be the first whom thou wilt not heare Is thy mercie all spent none left in store for vs Open thy eies O god of our saluation behold the miserable state of thy poore people Our citie lieth waste the walles vnbuilt our enemies rush in on euerie side and we are a laughing stocke vnto them thou heardst the crying of Agar being cast out of her house thou lookedst at the oppression of Egipt thou pitiedst the woful sighing of Anna when thy people were oppressed of any enemies round about them thou raisedst vp one Iudge or other to deliuer them Consider O Lord I beseech thee our woful state we are spoiled on euerie side marke and hearken to the praier which I thy poore seruante make vnto thee which seest al secrets this day continually crying night daie with a simple vnfeined hart not for mine owne selfe whom thou hast so well placed in the courte with plentie of all things but for my breethren the children of Israel thy seruants the ofspring of thy deerbeloued Iacob which be in great heauines While they be in miserie I cannot be merrie Their greife is my sorow and their welfare is my reioysing I graunt O Lord we haue gricuouslie offended thee yet haue we not cast thee of nor forsaken thee to be our Lord we be thy seruants though vnthristy vnthankful miserable thou art a God rich in mercie to all that turne vnto thee I confesse O gratious God that the children of Israell haue sinned against thee yea not onely they O Lord but I my fathers house haue haynouslie broken thy commaundements and yet we dispaire not to obtaine thy fauour againe as children that haue offended their louing father There is none of vs free we plead mercie and not iustice we stand not in defence of our doings but yeald your selues into thy merciful hands While thou giuest vs a hart to praie we continually beleeue thou wiit heare vs in the end O Lord correct thou vs after thine owne good will and pleasure but giue vs not vp to the lust of thy enemies which blaspheme thee saying their God hath forsaken them their God cannot nor will not help them they hate vs not so much for our owne sinnes as for that we be called thy seruants O Lord let not thy holie name be ill spoken of through our wickednes rise and defend thine owne cause cast not awaie thy seruants in thy heauie displeasure What vantage canst thou haue in giuing vs ouer to thy foes they shall laugh when we shall weepe they will slaunder thy goodnes for our forgetfulnes of thee Thou promisedst O Lord by the mouth of thy Prophet that in what howre so-ever the sinner did repent thou wodlst no more remember his wickednes nor laie it to his charge We weepe we confesse and acknowledge our manisold wickednes wherewith we our fathers haue offended thee we cal for mercy we praie night and daie not doubting but thou wilt keepe thy promise in deliuering hearing vs in thy duetime Though we haue broken our promise in disobeying thee yet if it please thee thus to try our faith exercise our patience by laying on vs thy heauie hand and sharp correction thy good will be done giue vs strength to beare that thy wisdome will laie vpon vs laie on vs what thou wilt Thou gauest vs thy lawe to be a bridle to rule our wicked desires keepe vs within the compasse of them but we like mad men or rather wilde and vntamed beasts that cannot be tyed in cheines nor holden in anie bands haue outragiouslie broken all thy commaundements No lawes could rule vs no saying compell nor correction could staie vs but wilfullie we followed our owne phantasies There is nothing o Lord that thou canst laie to our charge but we willinglie and franklie confesse our selues guiltie thereof for we haue neither kept thy commaundements which thou gauest vs by Moses thy seruant wherein priuatlie we might learne how to direct our liues both towardes the our God and also toward all men Nor the ceremonies
his God as if he loued or cared more for him then for the rest of the world This is the common vse of the Scripture to call him the God of Abraham Isaac Iacoh Dauid and Daniel because he did both deliuer them out of such troubles as none else could or would or anie hath bene so oft and wonderfullie deliuered as they were and also did so blesse and prosper them and their doings as the common sorte of men were not wont to be So they that see their owne miserie and how litle goodnes but rather punishment they deserue at Gods hand when they see the Lord pitie them remember them help them and blesse them they conceaue by and by such a loue toward God that it would please him to looke vpon them that for ioy they burst out into teares they call him their God because they feele his good will and fauour so much toward them and more then to other yea much more then they could deserue or be bolde to looke for at his hands And as one man vseth to help another by putting forth his hand to raise him that is fallen to giue him such things as he wanteth and to put awaie and defend him from such things as may hurt him so it is called the good hand ofGod when he either bestoweth his blessing and good things vpon vs or when he putteth away such daungers and euils from vs as might hurt vs as it were with his mightie and mercifull hand 9. And I came to the Captaines Nehemiah hath now taken his leaue at the Court and looseth no time but when he had prouided all things necessarie for his iourney he speedeth him selfe for ward and thinketh all time lost that is not bestowed in releeuing his countrie being in such miserie A straunge example to see a courtier leaue that wealth ease and authoritie that he was in go dwel so farr from the court where commonly it falleth out that he which is out of sight is out of minde and sone forgotten in an olde torne and decaied citie a rude people and poore countrie where he should not liue quietly for his enemies but take paines to build him selfe a house and the Citie where he would dwell to toyle and drudge like a poore labouring man that should worke for his liuing yea and many times to be sore assaulted of his enemies both openlie and priuilie to the great daun ger of his life as the rest of the booke following will declare But this is the case of earnest zealous men in religion that they can say with Dauid I haue chosen rather to bee a dore-keeper in the house of God then to dwell in the pallaces of sinners and it is better to bee one day there then a thousand els where God for his mercie sake raise vp some such few courtiers as Nehemiah was which can be content to forsake their owne ease wealth and authoritie and giue them-selues painfullie to traueill for the wealth oftheir countrie And because that is to be wished rather then hoped for good Lord giue vs such as wil be no hinderers and wil be content to liue in compasse quietlie and not seeke to trouble others that would serue the Lord willinglie Amen The king did not onelie deale thus liberallie with Nehemiah at his departure but also honorably sent him away with captaines horsemen safelie to conduct him on his iourney that none should hurt him by the way And where the king vsed him so courteouslie no doubt the rest of the court shewed him much curtesy for courtyers must needes like and mislike whatsoeuer the King seemeth to like or mislike to set vp or pull downe Courtyers commonly when the King speaketh haue lost both sense and witte for if the King seemeth to fauour any thing they all as men without vnderstanding saie it must needes be so If the King will not giue eare to heare a matter they are all deafe and cannot abide to heare speake of it If the King will not see it they all crie out awaie with it So that it is hard to tell whither is in more miserable case the king or such dissemblers for if the King haue no iudgement of him selfe he shall haue no help of such and they like witlesse men dare not speake a trueth Happie is that Prince therefore that hath wise counsellours about him which will duetifullie enforme him of matters vprightlie wiselie debate the matter with him without all double dealing as the other sorts doe When King Assuerus would aduaunce Haman euery man had him in reuerence but when Mardocheus was sett vp then was there crying Crucifige on Hamon But thus mercisullie doeth our Lord God deale with his Church and people that in euerie age he hath some about the Prince that both can and will speake and be heard though not for all generallie in their rage and persecution yet for many as occasion serueth which shalbe deliuered from such tyranny to glorifie their God for his mercy though many willingly spend their liues patiently to the praise of the same God eternallie But no rage shalbe so greate to roote out Gods chosen but the Lord will euer preserue a number euen by help of their enemies openly to worship and serue him in despite of all their foes Plinius the Ruler of a Prouince vnder Traiane the Emperour and appointed to punish the Christians sundrie waies seeing the great nomber of them doubted what he should doe and wrote to the Emperour that he found no wickednesse in them but that they would not worshipp Images and that they would sing psalmes before day-light vnto Christ as a God and did forbid all sinnes to be vsed among them The Emperour hearing this became a great deale more gentle vnto them Salustius tormenting Theodorus a Christian sundrie waies and along time to make him for sake his faith but all in vaine went to Iulianus the Emperour and tould him what he had done from the day breake vntil 10. of the clock and counselled him that he should proue that way no more by crueltie for they gat glory in suffering patiently and he gat shame in punnishing so sharply because they would not yeald vnto him Many moe such examples the ecclesiastical histories are ful of where God deliuered his people by the forespeach of their enemies but these shall suffice at this present God had now raysed vp Nehemiah and had giuen him fauour grace in the Kings sight to aske and obteine comfort for the deliuerance of his Church and people the Iewes which had bene so long in great miserie and slauerie Nehemiah then passeth on his iourney toward I erusalem with great speede and honour passeth the riuer Euphrates and those theeuish and daungerous waies that he was afraid of safely commeth to the rulers of the countrie beyond Euphrates deliuereth them the Kings commission for tymber and a band of new souldiers for his safe conduct into Iewrie that these might
thathe say eth the wounds that a friend giueth are better then the craftie kisses of him that hateth thee This heauenly fire burneth vp al desires in man kindleth all goodnesse in him Ieremie when he saw the word that he preached to be contemned os the people he waxed verie sadde he would preach no more but when he had houlden his tongue but a litle while he said the word within him was like a burning fire it burst out he could not holde it in and he fell to preaching againe he was so greeued to see God dishonored and so earnest to bring the people to knowledge of their dutie that he could not hold his peace but needes must preach againe When Iesabell persecuted Helias because he had killed Baalls priestes for their idolatrie he fled into the wildernsse and the Angel sinding him asked him what he did there Helias said I am earnestly zealous grecued for thee O Lord God of hostes that the children of Israell haue for saken thy couenant c. Moses loued his people so well that when Godwould haue destroyed them he prayed to forgiue them or else to put him out of his booke The holie Ghost tolde Saint Paul that in eueric towne there were chaynes and troubles ready for him but he said he cared not his life was not deare to himso that he might runne his course For his countrie men also he wished to be accursed from Christ so that they might be saued The other Apostles when they were whipt for preaching Christ Iesus went away reioysing that they were thought worthie to suffer any worldlie shame for his names sake Such an earnest loue should euerie one haue both the magistrate to doe iustice and punish sinne and the preacher to roote out euill doctrine and preach Christ purelie that nothing should make them afraid but they should buyld Gods Citie the heauenlie Ierusalem boldie nothing shold wearie them and allabour should be pleasure so that they might serue the Lord. Phinies when he saw whoredome and wickednes abound and none would punish it taketh the sword him-selfe when others would not and killed the man woman being both of great parentage in their open whordome God was so well pleased with this zealous deede of Phinies that could not abide to see sinne vnpunished and Gods glorie so openlie defaced that he blessed him and his issue for it after him Our sauiour Christ when he saw Gods house appointed for prayer misused gat a whippe and draue them out Thus when-soeuer God putteth any thing into mans heart to doe it pricketh him on forward that he cannot rest vntill he haue finished it Nehemiah was heere moued by God to this worke God for his mercies sake enflame many mens hearts with the like earnest desire of buylding Gods spirituall Citie that the workemen may be many strong and couragious for the worke is great and troublesome the enemies manie malicious and stout hinderers in number infinite and true labourers verie few Gregorie saith well there is no such pleasant sacrisice afore God as is the earnest zeale to winne soules vnto the Lord. The men of Iabes Gilead when the Israelits ioyned altogether to punish that wicked adulteryin Beniamin stoode by looked on and wold take part with neyther of them not knowing who should get the victorie thinking to scape best picka thanke in medling on neither parte but for such double-dealing the Israelites set on them afterward and destroied them A iust rewarde to fall on such as will stand by and looke how the world goeth meddle of no side for feare of a change or els ioyne A iust reward to fal on such as will stand by looke how the world goeth medle on no side for feare of a change or els euer ioyne with the stronger parte How full the world is this day of such double faced popish hipocrites that will turne with euerie winde good men lament and God must amend when pleaseth him They be the worst men that liue Such men be of no Religion some call them Neuters because they are earnest on no side Some call them vterques because they be of both sides as the world changeth some call them Omnia because if a Turke or any other should come they would yeald vnto them all They be like free-holders for whosoeuer purchaseth the land they holde of them all though euery yeare come anew master But they say best it is that they be of no religion for as there is but one God so there is but one religion and he that knoweth not the true God and religion knoweth none at all although he make him-selfe euery day a new God and a new religion and the more the worsse 13. And I went forth In these next verses is nothing but the way described by which he went to take the vew of the walls how they were pitifully destroied and how they might best most speedelie be repaired The gates of Cities haue their names on some occasion outwardly giuen as the North-gate the East-gate because it goeth North-ward or East-ward sometimes of them that builded them as Lud-gate and Billings-gate of Lud and Billinus sometimes of things that are brought in or caried out of the Citie by them as the sish-gate the dunghil-gate c. This gate that he goeth out at first is called the vally-gate because the way into the vally of Iosephat which lay afore it East-ward betwixt it Mount oliuet was through it This valley was called Iosephats by reason of a noble victorie that God gaue Iosephat there Diuers people ioyned themselues togither against Iosephat but god so ordered the matter that one of them killed another Iosephat looking on after the slaughter came toke all their riches and spoile he deliuered without anie stroke giuing The Dragons-well had his name of some venemous serpent lyuing there The dunghil-gate because the filth of the citie was caried out thatway The wel-gate kings fish-poolc because there was great plentie of water-ponds watering-places c. The brooke he speaketh of is thought to be Cedron which is spoken of in the gospel Iohn the 18. Nehemiah when he had vewed al the walls returnedin at the same gate that he went out at but in some places he found so great store of rubbish of the broken walls that he could not passe on horsseback so miserably were they torne and ouerthrowne and al the gates that should be shut were burned to ashes Orighteous God and miserable people God of his mercie foretolde them by his Prophets that if they fell from him and serued other Gods these mischiefes should fall on them but they blinded in their owne affections beleeued it not O stony hart learne here how vile a thing sin is in Gods sight for not onely the man thatdoeth sin is punished but the earth the countrie the stones the walls the citie trees corne cattel fish fowle and al
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
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