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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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it neuer so small be in paine the rest of his body is greeued also euery member seeketh to ease it as they may so they be naturallie linked together So should all Christians being members of Christs mistical body one beare the griefe of another help to releeue him when Nehemiah had bene thus long sad weeping fasting praying he was now cast into a verie greate feare by reason of the kings earnest re quiring the cause of his sadnesse Thus one sorow followeth a nother and a Christian mans faith and patience is continually e xercised when one griefe is ended it hath another streight-wayes following The king said this sorow must needs come from a heauy heart seing thy body is not sick This toucheth a man neere when he must needes open the secrets of his heart to a king whom he cannot tell how he wil take it or what opinion he hath of him Many thoughts and suspitions rise in good mens hearts as wel as ill mens and cast them into great feare for euery man is subiect to affection of his owne nature Nehemiah might feare lest the king had heard some accusation against him or had taken some displeasure with him or would not graunt his request or some other would hinder his sute or might lose his office c. and therefore no marueil if he were sore afraid but a strong faith will boldly passe through all such cares and trusting in God will continue his good purpose The troubles of the righteous be many saith Dauid but the Lord will deliuer him out of them all 3. And I said After that he had something ouercome his feare and recouered his spirits he declareth vnto the king the cause of his sadnes The Maiestie of a king wil make anie good nature afraid to speake vnreuerentlie though they be daylie in company with him and fauour as Nehemiah was And though the curtesie of a Princebe such that he will abase and humble him selfe familiarly to vse his subiect yet the subiect should not ouer boldely nor saucely behaue him selfe toward his Prince Diogenes said Aman should vse his Prince or peere as he would doe the fire The fire if he stand to neere it will burne him and if he be to far of he will be a colde so to be ouer-bold without blushing or reuerence bringeth in contempt of both syds For the King will thinke him tosaucie the subiect will forget his duety And to be ouerstrange and afraid will cause the King to thinke him to be of an ill nature and not bearing a good heart towards him Therefore Nehemtah not ouer-bold with his Prince with most humble obeysaunce wisheth the king good life as the common phrase of the scripture vseth to speake plainly telleth the true cause of his sorow and sad countenance Here we may learne the duetie of Christians that liue vnder heathen Princes That is they may not onely serue them but ought humbly to obey reuerence them For surely this kinde of salutation in Nehemiah to pray for the kings life was not holy-water of the court from the teeth outward Saluta libenter but from an vnfeyned heart desiring it S. Paul who liued vnder Th'emperour Nero as wicked a man as euer the earth bare biddeth to pray for all kings them that be in authoritie which then were all infidels that vnder them we may liue a quiet life with godlines honestie And if thou thinkest such ill men ar not to be praied for yet for the quietnes of gods Church thou must pray for them that God would so rule their hearts that vnder them we may liue a peaceable and godlie life For that is the reason that Saint Paul yealdeth though such wicked men will not learne their owne saluation them-selues After that Nehemiah had thus dutifullie behaued him-selfe to the king so that there could be thought no iust cause of any euil suspicion in him toward the king then he boldly declareth the cause of his sadnes and saith the Citie where his fathers lay buried lay waste the gates were burned And is this so greate a cause why Nehemiah should be so sad weepe faste and pray so long had he not seene nor heard of greater Cities and countries then it was which were destroyed as miserably as it was Babylon which was much bigger then Ierusalem was conquered not long afore by Cyrus Samaria their neighbour by Senacharib and Salmanasser c. But this Citie had a greater cause to belamented for then others For it was taken from wicked men by gods mightie hand giuen to gods people It was increased with many benefites from God beautified with religion Priests a Temple to worship the liuing God in strengthned by manie worthie Princes and lawes and was a wonder of the world It was the holy Citie because it was dedicated to the Lords seruice though the people were euill that dwelt in it and misused it The gospel saith the Deuill tempting Christ our sauiour tooke him into the holy Citie set him on a pinacle of the temple and Christ our lord foreseeing the destruction of it to be at hand wept for it This was then the cause of Nehemiahs sorrowe that God was dishonoured for that this Citie which was dedicated to his name and giuen to his people to serue him in was now defaced by heathen Princes his religion decayed people subiect to straungers Azelous man cannot abide anything without great griefe that seemeth to deface the glorie of his God But if these causes were not yet the natural loue to his countrie had beene sufficient to moue him to teares For as it is a pitifull sight to see a Prince or Noble man to be cast from his dignitie to be spoyled of his honour landes and goods and become a carter and driue the plowe or lie tyed in prison so surelie it must needes moue any heathen man to see the Citie where he and his elders were borne and buried to be ouerthrowne lie open to all enemies vnfenced with walles or gates and be inhabited with a few cottegers and no better then the poorest ragged hamlet in a countrie much more Nehemiah must needs be touched for this citie wich was so famous through out the world There may be good reasons alledged beside these why he should weepe for his Citie and countrie as because it was a great reliefe and succour in all needes to all that liued in it from time to time and a greate strength to the countrie about it But what is that to be sad for the place where his elders were buried Is there any holynes in the ground that it is better to be buried there then els where Or the deade men aniething the worsse if they be pulled out of their graues What is the cause In deed it was called holie in diuers places of the Scriptures as other outward things be that are appointed and consecrated to a holie vse S.
Argument was finished and no more thereof found AN EXPOSITION VPPON PART OF THE BOOKE OF NEHEMIAH BY MASTER Iames Pilkinton late Byshoppe of Durrham CHAP. 1. The word of Nehemiah the sonne of Hachalia ALthough there be diuers opinions whether Ezra or Nehemiah wrote this booke yet for my parte I rather beleeue all reasons considered that Nehemiah wrote it as Wolphius well prooueth it But whether so-euer the one or the other wrote it if the authoritie of the writer may giue any strength to the writing or mans worthines adde anything to the credit of Gods holie Scripture it skilleth not much for they were both the true learned and faithful seruants of God Yet surelie this worthie man Nehemiah which in English is to saie a comforte sent from God to comfort his people in those troublesome times should not be robbed of his well deserued thankes but first God should be chieslie praised that raised vp so worthie a man whose pedegree is vnknowne his fathers to in so ill a time to do not onely so great things both in the commonwealth Religion in peace and warre and then shold Nehemiah also be worthelie next commended that so faithfullie obeied the Lord his God so painfullie traueiled for the wealth of his countrie also attained such learning that he could and was so diligent in studie among all his great affaires that he would to the greate glorie of God comforte of all his Church vnto the worlds end put these his owne doings in writing A worthie example for all that loue religion be seruitours in the courte attend on the Prince beare office in the common-wealth or captaines in the warres to followe For in all these things was Nehemiah famous in religion earnest in great fauour with his Prince with all vprightnesse of life towards all in warre skilful curragious painful and with his penne so learned that he could so clerkelie put it in writing Gentelmen therefore and men of the world are not borne to liue in pastime and pleasure as they list and manie doc no more then poore men but first to serue the Lord promote his word and religion earnestlie minister iustice seuerelie mainteine peace quietlie defend the common-wealth stoutlie releeue the oppressed mightilie followe learning and studie diligentlie that so they maieincrease in vertue and honestie as Nehemiah did and after all these great trauailes refresh themselues with honest pastimes measurablie Among the heathen Princes such a one was Iulius Cesar in the warres cunning and happie in gouernment of the common-wealth commendable and in learning so excellent that no man hath written more eloquentlie Such like were Alexander Seuerus and Marcus Aurelius Emperours But I will not perswade much in Gods cause with prophane examples And to returne to our purpose I would not haue men thinke that the scripture taketh his authoritie credit of the man that writeth it but the writer is to be credited for the holie Ghosts sake who inspired him with such heauenlie knowledg and whose instrument he is for God to speake by Scripture commeth not first from man but from God and therefore God is to be taken for the author of it not man The Gospel saith It is not you that speake but the Spirit of your father that speaketh in you And. S. Petersaith Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moued by the holie Ghoste Augustine saith well The Scripture is a letter sent from God the creator vnto man his creature Therefore when thou readest this booke or other parts of the Scripture doe it as gladlie and reuerentlie yea and much more to then thou wouldst vse and read the Princes or thy friends letters seeing it is a letter sent to the from thy God for thy saluation God then is the cheifest author of this booke as he is of the rest of the Scripture Nehemiah the penne or writer of all these misteries Dauid said of himselfe my tongue is the pen of a writer that writeth swiftly meaning the holy Ghost to be the writer his tongue the penne So Nehemiah was the author of this booke as Dauid of the Psalmes And because they should know which Nehemiah he was he saith he was the sonne of Hachalia For there were diuers others of that name but not his sonnes V. 1. It came to passe in the moneth of Nouember and in the 20. yeare that I was in the castle of Susan 2. And there came Chanani one of my breethren he men of Iuda and I asked them for the Iewes which scaped and remained of the captiuitie and for Ierusalem 3. And they said to me the remnante which remained of the captiuitie there in the countrie be in greate miserie and reproche and the wall of Ierusalem is broken downe and the gates of it are burned with fire 4. And it came to passe when I heard these wordes I sate downe and wept and being sad certeine daies I fasted and praied before the Lord of heauen THe Scriptures vse not to reckon their monethes after the order of our calenders but by the exchange of the moone for our callenders are not of that auncientie that the Scriptures be by many yeares The first moneth in the yeare with them began at the next change of the moone whensoeuer it fell after the 22. daie of March when the daies and nights be both of one length And then was March called the first moone of the yeare whereas we make Ianuarie our first moone So this moone here which is called Casleu was the 9. moneth from it and fell in the latter end of Nouember what daie soeuer the moone then chaunged The 20. yeare that he speaketh of here was of the reigne of King Artaxerxes as appeereth in the beginning of the 2. Chapter of whom ye shall heare more there Susan was the cheif Citie of all the kingdom of Persia where the king had both his pallace aud a strong castle also of the same name where his treasure was kept this Citie as Strabo writeth was long and in compasse 15. myles about Who this Chanani was it appeereth not but beelike some honest man of good credit and more earnest in religion and loue to his countrie then others because his name is put downe in writing the others are not And where Nehemiah calleth him brother it is not necessarie to thinke that he was of the same father and mothere that Nehemiah was but either further of in kinred or els of the same countrie and religion For this word brother in the Scripture signifieth all those sorts of brotherhod that be any waies kinsmen or els of anie countrie and religion S. Paul saieth I wish to be accursed from Christ for my breethren kinsmen after the flesh which be the Israelites Where he calleth al the children of Israel his breethrē because they came all of one father Iacob long agoe and now were of
one country and professed one God What occasion these men had to come to the courte it appeereth not therefore not necessary to be searched but belike some greate sute for their coūtrie because they tooke so long a iourny in the winter and so vnseasonable a time of the yeare which men commonlie vse not to doe for smale causes And by this we maie learne a good lesson that no time is so troublesome no iournie so long but good men will not refuse it to serue God their countrie And where Nehemiah walking abroade about the 〈◊〉 beginneth to examin thē of the estate of the Iewes how they did and of the Citie of Ierusalem in what case it was it declareth the great loue that he had to his people countrie and religion O worthie example for all courtiers to follow sometimes to walke abroad to see what suters there be learne the state of the countrie from whence they came help to further their good causes The contrarie is to commonlie vsed they locke them-selues vp will not be spoken with their doores must be opened with siluer keyes many meanes and freendes must be made and a long time of attendance afore ye be heard except some seruant about them haue some gentle remembrance to help you to their speach And this is more cōmon in the meaner sorte then the higher yet I saie not that all walkers abroad and talking with suters be euer good men For Absalon walked afore the courte gate tooke them by the hand and imbraced them asked what sutes they had pitied their causes but for an ill purpose to bring the King his father in hatred with the people saying there was none about him that would heare and help them and to bring him-selfe in fauor with the people saying if he were King he would do them iustice heare their causes and they shold not waite so long but be quicklie dispatched God diliuer vs from such courtiers for by this meanes he robbed the harts of the people from their natural leige Prince and by flatterie wanne the people so to him-selfe that they rebelled against their King and set vp Absalon We need not at these daies to complaine of all courtiers that they be so hard to speake to and thatmanie times the master is not at leysure vntil the seruant be pleased with something though the master bid the contrary For there be too many that when suters do come they will learne too diligentlie what sute they haue out of what countrie they come then if they will faithfullie declare vnto them what office is there voide in the countrie or what good farmeholde is to be had there at the Princes hand or rather at anie Church they promise they will help to further his sute diligently but when they haue learned all that they can then they know him not when they meete him againe the next daie or els giue him faire wordes with strange lookes and manie delayes By these meanes and such like they are so cunning in all corners of the realm that they can perfectlie tell what the Prince or anie man in the countrie hath and if it be not presentlie voide they are content with a reuersion though it be manie yeares to come yea and often sue for the same thing that the poore man came for saying another would haue had it if he had not staied it and so vnder a cloake of freindship make him paic more then he needed We seeke what should be the cause of such needelesse dearthes as the realme is full of surely though manie be giuen yet I thinke none greater then this For when these leases be graunted the landlord hath but his olde rent and the tennante no more but his olde fermeholde but the leasemonger that is crept in betwixt the landlord and the tennant goeth awaie with the sweet from them both For first he racks the rent and sacks the tennante so that he is not so able to sell his things so reasonablie as els he might nor serue the Prince nor his landlord as he should nor the landlord paying so deere for all thinges is able to liue as his Elders did before This vndermining micher liueth better then they both taketh no paines at all for it that they both shoulde liue on and the one releeue the other Haman walked afore the courte gates to see who would reuerence him as he passed by and who would not poore Mardocheus because he would not was brought in great daunger of his life and al the Iewes with him but God that ouerthroweth such courtiers diliuer vs from the like and raise vs vp some godlic Nehemiah to fauour the common-wealth religion as he did The miscrable end of Absalon Haman and such as we haue seene in our dayes maketh wise men to take heede how they liue and behaue them selues in the courte for none is so high but by like offending of God they maie haue as great a fall As this toucheth not the honest sorte of courtiers so the good ones will not be offended and those that be guiltie God graunte them to amend it 3. And they said After that Nehemiah had of good will towards his people countrie so diligenlie inquired how they did and in what case they were Chanani and the other Iewes that came with him declard in what miserable case the people were in hatred despised of all people about them that Ierusalē their citie where God was cheifly worshiped lay waste burned vnbuilt Thus God bringeth goodmen togither one to comfort another things are not ruled by chance for both Nehemiah these Iewes lamented the miserable state of their people and countrie and by their talke God prouided a remedy Nehemiah was in good state to liue in great fauour whith the King and needed not to trouble him selfe with the cares of his countrie if God had not otherwise mooued his mind to pitie with talking with his countrie men This good then courtiers lawiers and great men may haue by talking with poore suters that if there be anie sparke of grace in them they wilbe mooued with the lamentable complainte of poore suters Surely thou that art in authoritie or hast learning oughtest to thinke that the poore suter commeth not to the by chaunce but the same God that gaue thee thy authorite and learning hath sent this poore man to thee to be releiued by thee Looke therfore vpon him heare him as Salomon teacheth saying the good man heaereth the cause of the poore Hide not thy selfe from him consider his complainte pitie and help him and not so much for monie as for charities sake for so did good Nehemiah What can be a greater greife to an honest hart then to haue all things that he doeth or saith be they neuer so good to be taken in ill parte to be hated ill spoken ofby all his neighbours to be slaundered and beelied
which might iustlie offend the king also that he would so moue the Kings heart that his request might be graunted A worthie example for all Christians to follow in their sutes making to the Prince He goeth not to anie great man nor to anie other which was in fauour with the king to desire him to speake for him to commend his cause to perswade the King to graunt his request which he might lawfullie haue done Also he offereth no rewardes nor like pleasure to any man but turneth him to the God of heauen as the cheifest gouernour of all goodnes which setteth vp rulers putteth downe Kings and is King of Kings and praieth him to prosper his sute He praieth to no Idols nor saintes though he liued among that Idolotrous nation for he knew they could not help him but faithfully called on the liuing God which his good fathers had worshiped of olde time This prayer was not so much in speaking or kneeling but a lifting vp of his minde towards God and desiring him to further his sute Anna made like prayer when she powred out her sorow before the Lord mouing her lippes but speaking neuer a word In so much that the hie Priest thought she had bene dronken For it falleth out oft that in great sorow a man cannot let a teare fall the heart being oppressed with griefe and yet he at another time will weepe tenderlie So in prayer oft times the more earnestlie that a man prayeth the lesse he can speake his heart being so earnestlie giuen to call on the Lord. As when Moses was in great heauines and prayed for the children of Israell being in that great distresse God sayd vnto him why criest thou vnto me and yet there is not one worde written that he cried or said It is the praying and crying of the heart that God is so much delighted withal and yet neuer the worse if it burst out into words and shew it selfe Let no man then excuse him selfe say he cannot pray except he were in the Church or in his Chamber alone for in all places he may lift vp his minde to God though he were in the market or Mountaine and with hartie prayer though he speake not at all desire the Lord to heare him as Nehemiah doeth here in the presence of the King and manie others and no doubt if he pray in faith and for such things as further the glorie of God the Lord will heare him Let vs learne here to begin all our doings with prayer vnto the Lord we shall speede so much the better 5. And I said When Nehemiah had made his short prayer in so earnest a faith and perceiued the Kings good will towards him then with all humblenes not appointing the King what he should doe but referring all to his consideration and wisdome desireth him that if he thought it good if Nehemiah him selfe were thought a fit man for the purpose or his seruice had bene acceptable to the King that it would please him to send him to Iury to the city where he was borne and his Elders lay buried that he might build it vp againe No marueil that Nehemiah was afraid and prayed earnestlie for good successe in his sute for he knew well that the Iewes were counted a rebellious people and hated of all countries about them and the King might thinke him to make his sute for building of Ierusalem that they might settle aud strengthen them-selues against him other Kings and claime their olde liberties that they had a fore But God so mooued the Kings heart that he had no suspition of any such enterprise by Nehemiah his faithfull and trustie seruant With such modestie Princes would be dealt withal and not roughly nor vnreuerentlie for so Nehemiah doeth here most dutifullie Yf many men had their choise at the Kings hand now adaies to aske what they would as Nehemiah might haue done here would they not haue asked Castles Lands Offices and authority for them and their issue that they might haue bene great men in the world and not the building of a Citie which would haue bene a trouble and cost vnto them rather then any profit and when they had finished it it had not bene their owne but other should haue enioyed it and they little the better for it But such is the zeale of them that loue the Lord that they will seeke to build and not to pull downe as many doe and will preferre all things that may further the glorie of God though it be with their owne losse rather then seeke their owne profitte with the hinderaunce of it Terentius a noble-man Captaine vnder the Emperour Valens when he had bene in warres and sped well the Emperour liking well of his good seruice bad him aduise him-selfe what he would make sute for and he would reward him liberally Terentius being a zealous man in Religion and perceiuing the greate herisie of the Arrians to be much fauored and the Emperour himselfe being thought to be infected there-with could not abide such blasphemie against Iesus Christ our Sauiour put this supplication in writing and with most humble reuerence and earnest desire required the Emperour to graunt him his request he would think his seruice fully recompensed The effect of his supplication was that it would please th'emperour to graunt the true christians a Church to serue worship the Lord Iesus in seperatlie from the Arrians which disnoured him for it was not fit among the Christians to heare such blasphemie against the lord Christ as they spewed out The emperour reading his supplication and considering the effect of it was very angrie pulled it in peeces and threwe it away chyd with Terentius that he could deuise nothing to aske but that Terentius gathered vp the peeces of paper curteously and said If he could not be heard in Gods cause he would not make further sute for his owne profit O noble Captaine where is thy fellow who hath done the like but Nehemiah here Ester and some few other God increase the number of such religious men about Princes and then they will not gape so fast as they doe to pluck and pull away from god and his ministers al that they may scratch or scrape to the dishonour of God defacing of his glory decay of the ministery Religion al good learning thinking most highly of them-selues that they be worthie to haue all things where in deed they deserue least and the more they get the lesse ar they satisfied It is a full contentation to all good men when they see God glorified in his Church word and ministery for then they know if they dutifully seeke that the Lord wil not see them lacke that which shalbe necessarie for them and they wil content themselues with that portion that God giueth them and will not greedely seeke for other mens things wrongfully to the dishonour of the high God 6. And the king said When the King
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
few words Standstil saith Moses behold and marke the end when ye are not able the Lord him selfe will sight for you these cruell enemies whom ye see this day ye shall neuer see any more And so it came to passe for by Gods mighty hand the Israelites passed through the Sea safe and Pharao with his people were drowned The scripture teacheth that the fearfull vnfaithfull murtherers adulterers inchaunters Idolaters and liers shal haue their parts in the burning lake of fire and brimstone If ye will not sticke vnto this God and feare him as children ought to loue and reuerence their father yet feare him as seruants doe their masters and as ill men doe which are afraid of punishment and forbeare ill doing for feare rather then for loue The greeuous punishment which is threatned to fearefull men is the second and euerlasting death bothe ofbodie and soule which whosoeuer hath any true feare of God in him will tremble quake when he thinketh on it be not therefore afraid of them but plucke vp your stomaches and boldlie stand in the defence of that Citie which the Lord God hath giuen you to serue him in To fight for sonnes daughters wiues and houses I thinke it were an easie matter to perswade anie man for they be our flesh and bones and we be readie ynough to such matters and surelie not without a cause for both the law of god the law ofnature bindeth vs to defend them in their wel doings Moses in his law saieth that if thou traueyling by the way doe sinde thine enemies asse fallen in the mire vnder his load thou shalt not passe by but help him vp surelie the meaning of this law was not for the asse but as Saint Paul alledging the like law thou shalt not mussle the mouth of the oxe that treadeth out the corne sayed Had God care for the Oxe Nay verely but for you it is writen that ye should feede your painful teachers which labour for you as the Oxe So I say this law was not made for the Asse his sake but euen for thy enemie who is ouerloden as the Asse was and speciallie those to whom thou art bound by nature for else thou art worsse then an infidel But in this matter men are sone resolued what to doe there is a harder matter in mens minds that is whether we should fight for Religion as these men did or no. We see great troubles in manie countries against their Princes in our days for religion and many doubt what they may do herein Let the case stand as these mens did it is sone answered These Samaritans Sanballat and his fellowes were no Princes but subiect to Artaxerxes as the Iewes were nor had anie authoritie ouer them they were Gods enemies and did the Iewes wrong that would not suffer them to goe forward with that building which the King had giuen them licence and commission to do Therefore they might iustlie defend them selues against such theeues Further here is to be noted also that they defend thē selues onelie doe not inuade the other offering anie violence to them but would quietlie enioy their owne if they might And this is a greate difference in the warrs whether a man stand to defense of him selfe his people in any cause or doe inuade others and offer them wrong Defending a mans selfe is alowed by all lawes in manie causes and yet in religion by flying and not by drawing the sword against his Prince but to rebell and draw the sword against thy lawfull Prince for religion I haue not yet learned nor cannot alow off it nor I cannot see how so manie martirs in all ages would haue submitted them selues to death willinglie if they might haue fought for it Peter drew his sword to cut of Malchus eare and would haue fought for his master but Christ Iesus bad him put vp his Sword for if the matter stoode by fighting he could aske his heauenlie father and he would giue many thousands of Angels to fight for him The Prophet biddeth the Israelites in their captiuitie in Babilon pray for the life of Nebucadnezar Balthasar his sonne seeke for the peace of the Citie in which they were prisoners and not trouble them S. Paul biddeth pray for all them that were in authoritie and then was Nero Emperour a beast in condition rather then a man yet he must be prayed for Dauid would neuer hurt King Saul though he might and had him in his daunger sundrie times might haue killed him if he would Therefore as Christ ouercame his enemies by suffring so they that be Christes shall get the victorie by patientnes bearing the crosse not by rebelling drawing the sword As Nehemiah therefore here encourageth the Nobles Rulers and people manfullie to stand in defence of their countrie Citie wiues children breethren and howses against their enemies so in the spirituall kingdome of Christ must the Preachers Pastors encourage all sorts from the highest to the lowest manfully to stand to that wholsome doctrine of saluation which they haue bene taught out of Gods holie booke and not be afraid nor chaunge with euerie blast of winde and turne with the world as all sorts in this land haue done to the offence of Gods maiestie and their great reproch and specially ofthose that were the heades and should haue bene staies to others Religion is not a thing at the pleasure of Princes to chaunge as they list though the outward circumstances in it may be chaunged by them but it is the vnchaungeable will and determinate pleasure of the almightie Lord of heauen and earth decreed by high Court of parlament in heauen afore the world was made and declared vnto man by his Prophets and Apostles in such times as his infinite wisdome thought meete and cannot be altered by anie man nor authoritie in anie age I am God and am not chaunged saith the Lord my thoughts and my waies are not like your thoughts and waies which are euer changeable and vncertaine but I am euer one and chaunge not Stick therfore fast vnto that Lord which shrinketh not a waie from his people but manfully deliuereth them by suffering we shall haue the victory as our Captaine Christ Iesus had for if we suffer with him Saint Paul saith we shall reigne with him In bearing his crosse and sufferance then standeth our conquest not in Rebelling in dying to him and not liuing to our selues Marke now the mightie hand of God fighting for his people and the cowardly harts ofthese boasting braggers how sone they come to nought they but hard tell that the Iewes vnderstoode their conspiracie how they thought to haue come sodenlie murthered them that they were readie in armoure to withstand and defend them-selues against them their harts faile them they runne away lay downe their weapons and the Lord defeated their whole purpose and deuises Thus lightheads they had that when they heard tell
and countrie-men that they shall be compelled willinglie though against their wills to sell their children for slaues or else die for hunger At straungers hands and speciallie if they be of another religion no man looketh for anie fauour and if anie doe come it is more then looked for and so much the more welcome when it commeth but at a friend and countrie-mans hand where all courtesie is to be looked for and to finde none but all extremitie is a griefe aboue all griefes and mans hart can neuer digest it It is against God against nature and common reason which teacheth all gentlenes to such nay it is worsse then beastlines for one beast will not deale so cruellie with another of his owne kinde and one theefe will not robbe another therefore to be spoiled and robbed by them of whom they should be defended releeued it is a griefe that passeth all sorowes But if these sorowes could haue an end or there were anie hope to haue release of them in time we could take it the better and haue some comfort but all hope is taken away for we haue no powre left we haue nothing to help our selues withall we haue wrastled as long as we might and made shift as long as it would be but now we are able to beare it no more we haue nothing left all is spent and gone and we cannot deuise where to get anie more our houses our lands and vineyeards other men haue cruellie gotten from vs and vnmercifullie doe keepe them haue no regard to help vs in this our great and extreame necessitie We can doe nothing but crie out on heauen and earth but they hardned their harts and stopt their eares that they will not heare nor pitie vs. Mercie is gone crueltie oppression and greedines carie them away that both forget God and themselues This was the miserable state of that time a man would haue thought that the miserie slauerie and bondage that they them-selues were in oflate vnder heathen princes in strange coun tries and so late being restored through Gods free and vndeserued goodnes to their owne countrie with libertie great gifts and liberalitie to build their temple and Citie should not haue bene so sone forgotten but as they then would haue bene glad of some releefe succor courtesie to be shewed vnto them at straungers hands so they should now shew the like vnto their breethren and countrimen But such is the wickednes of mans hart that the more mercies we receiue at Gods hand the more vnthankefull we be and such is the malice of Sathan against God his Church and people that when the Lord of his owne free will and vndeserued goodnes bestoweth his mercie vpon his seruants the Deuill by his membres and all deuises possible goeth about to ouerthrow and withdraw all sorts of men so much as in him is to a forgetfulnes of such merciful goodnes bestowed vpon them and maketh them vnmercifull to their breethren which haue receiued so great mercie at the Lords hand Religion is the chiefest help that God hath giuen vs to knowe him by to bridle our ill affections and desires withall to make vs loue one another and set forth his glorie aud yet if we looke into our selues in these daies we shall finde that there was neuer greater crueltie oppression of the poore Hypocrisie and dissembling in Gods cause and vnmercifulnes amongst men in this land then hath bene since the beginning of the reforming of Religion amongst vs yea and that is more wonderful of such as would pretend to be fauourers of Religion Hypocrites as they vse nothing well so they misuse Religion for a cloake to worke their owne wil and pleasure by to the defacing of all good Religion Things be fresh in memorie and cannot be forgotten of them that will not willinglie be blind but they that list to reede may see in that worthie Father master Latimers Sermons manie such things opened that then were preached would to God they were now reformed or not fallen to worsse and more shameful dealings without hope of amendment As for begging or buiyng good things at the Kings hand then selling the woods surueying the land to the vttermost acre or roods of land inhaunsing of rents to the highest from twentie pounds to an hundreth racking the Tenants by intollerable fines and Incomes Sine fine euerie 5. or 7. yeare commonlie laying load on them to carie and recarie whatsoeuer is to be done paying neuer a pennie for their labour ride and runne when he is commaunded c. Then turne it into the Princes hand againe get as much and vse it as ill or worsse This practise hath bene so common and declared by diuers that few can be ignorant of it and manie crie out on it at this day but remediles Yet this is not the worst if there be anie broken title of the land that maie make question in the Law or if there be anie daunger of waters or extraordinarie charges reparations c. then it is meete for the Prince by exchaunge When it is rackt to the highest and a good thing gotten in steede of it yet that the Prince shall not be thought to haue an ill bargaine he will desire to be fermer of it him selfe after the same rate to stop mens mouthes for a time As it is reason honorable and Godlie that the Prince should liberallie reward and encourage the good seruitor so is it reason againe that the Princes goodnesse nor the subiect be misused Master Latimer did freelie speake of these things not without blame as peraduenture this wil be to but would to god this had bene vsed only in the Princes state but he that will looke abroade and see shal finde the like to common in meane mens doings As for pulling downe of Townes turning tillage to pasture and turning out the tennants as Achab did to Naboth for his vineyeard that they maie haue elbow roume make them large demeans or set a shepheard and his dogg where so manie haue dwelt and that a poore man may not dwel so neere a man of worship these be so common among the meanest sort of Purchasers that men neede not to studie where to finde them Raising of Rents taking vnreasonable fines gressans is thought no faulte it is so common but some are waxen so cunning that it is straunge to thinke of A land-lord is hungrie and needes must haue fines euen of the poorest sort and because he wil be thought to deale mercifullie this waie is deuised The poore man hath no money and yet he must pay his goods and speciallie his sheepe though they be few shall be preised and according to the rate out of those goods the fine shalbe raised And that some pitie shalbe thought to be shewed the poore man shall haue his goods againe by the price to pay his fine withall and for occupying of those his owne goods he shall pay a yearlie rent or interest as it were