Selected quad for the lemma: saint_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
saint_n let_v lord_n zion_n 1,198 5 10.4281 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A05590 The gushing teares of godly sorrovv Containing the causes, conditions, and remedies of sinne, depending mainly upon contrition and confession. And they seconded, with sacred and comfortable passages, under the mourning cannopie of teares, and repentance. By William Lithgovv. Lithgow, William, 1582-1645? 1640 (1640) STC 15709; ESTC S108580 48,504 102

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

a strong excuse He knowes I know enough that can misknow The thing he knowes it s well in knowing so Well said Alphonso knowledge to expone That all what we could learne by sight or show By airts by science by books to study on Was the least part of that we did not know All what we know we know but in a part And that failes oft corruption rules the heart What thou canst know another doth know more And what he knowes is but a glimpsing glance Who perfect is nay none who can deplore His weaknesse ruld by counsell not by chance Mans knowledge like the shade is swallowed soone That hangs between its substance and the Moone He knowes the ill and in that knowledge rude And cleaves to vice as wooll and briers are knit Resolv'd to erre misknowing what is good Rejects his soule then in a frantick fit Neglecting God neglects his owne salvation And quaffing excesse drinks his owne damnation How Lord these faults behelpd teach me to mourne That being humbled I may call for grace Let men presumptuous gainst thy judgements spurne And in the pudle of their labours trace Save thou my soule for now my quivering heart 'Twixt feare and hope stands trembling at sinnes smart A second Jonah from thy voice I flee And with shrunke Peter I thy name deny I Ahab-like keep spoiles of sinne for me And harbour lust in Lots ebrietie These lookes that fell from Sion on a Pond Were not so foule as mine nor halfe so fond Unworthy I to lift mine eyes above Or that the earth should beare me undevour'd Nay nor my friends on me to cast their love Nor saints pray for me hath the truth deflourd Yet what God will it needs must come to passe He looks on what I am not what I was Let grace take roome that mercy soone may follow Renew my sprite O cleanse my heart from ill Thy blood can purge me though my guilt be hollow Faith and repentance have a piercing will Infuse thy power Lord strengthen me to turne Once to rejoyce and never more to mourne As Daniel with thy servants three forsooke To feed on Babels delicates and wine But water and poore pulse they gladly tooke And yet their faces did for beauty shine Lord grant with them all worldly snares I may Forsake and learne to trace thy law thy way That kingly beast or beastly king expos'd Seven yeares to fields nev'r faild so much as I Nor these five kings by Joshua enclos'd Brought forth and foot-neckd shamefully did die Nev'r vex'd him more for they their lands defended Than I am griev'd for having God offended That Goshan flight to a desartuous soile Through uncouth way deep seas laid up in heaps Nev'r reft from Egypt such a swallowed spoile With greater right for now my soule it weeps Then Gods just judgements might on me befall Unlesse his mercy soone prevent my fall These wandrings long which Israel did recoyle Tost to and fro in vast Arabian bounds Full fourty yeares they spent for twelve dayes toyle Starv'd slaine and quell'd still galld by savage wounds This crosse they bore for grieving God so oft But ah my sinnes for plagues do cry aloft Now having seene rude Lybians nak'd and bare Sterne barbrous Arabs savage Sabuncks od Sword-sweying Turkes and faithlesse Jews alwhere Base ruvid Berdoans godlesse of a God Yet when from me on them I cast mine eye My life I finde farre worse then theirs can be The rustick Moorish sterne promiscuous sexe Nor Garolines idolatrizing shame The Turcomans that even the Divell doe vexe In offring up their first-borne to his name Nor Jamnites with their foolish Garlick god Are worse then I nor more deserve thy rod Yet Lord with Thee there 's mercy and its true Thou art not wonne with multitude of words Its force of tears from us thy pitie sue Which thou regards and pardon us afords For words are formed by the tongue but tears Speak from the heart which thou most kindlie heares Use then few words O silly soule but weepe This is the heavenly language and strong voice That calls to God for he our teares shall keep Fast bottled in his pittie Makes the choise Of teares few words let sighs and sobs display Thine inward grief then tears beginne to pray Lord thou wouldst not to Herod speak nor yet Would answer Pilat urgd by humane power But soone thou spoke when weeping women set Their eyes on Thee and streames of teares did powre These Judges sought advantage for thy dittie But Sions daughters weept for Thee in pittie These great mens words did reach but to thine eares But their warme drops did pierce Thee to thine heart Lord thou takes care on them and on their teares Who mourne for others when the righteous smart But farre more pittie on the sinfull soule That mournes for sinne and wailes her errours foule Oh! that my head were waters and mine eyes A source of teares to weep both day and night The peoples sinnes with theirs mine owne disease Which greater growes than I to beare have might Such flouds of teares would then my grief disclose In airie vapours flanck'd with watrie woes This world 's a valley of perpetuall teares And what 's the Scripture but a springing well Of gushing teares flow'd from remorse and feare● For godly sorrow must with Mourners dwell And who can mourne unlesse that grace begin To worke repentance this grief expiats sin All night could David wet with tears his couch And Prophets for the faults of Israel mourne But ah good God when shall mine eyes avouch Such happy teares that may with Thee sojourne If not thy judgements yet thy gracious love Might melt mine eyes and Ponds of sorrow move Thou saidst I will compassion have on all That pleaseth me compassion for to show Be pleas'd thy love may me redeeme from thrall Free will to pardon thine the debt I owe How soone soev'ra sinner should repent him Thou swore in truth thou wouldst no longer shent him Lord grant my minde may second these my words And not invent more then I practice can If I deficient prove good will afords My sacrifice obedience is the man Did not Abraham this point paternize Whose purpose was held for a sacrifice David resolv'd on Sions lower flat To build a Temple for the living Lord A daughter cloure joynd with Jehosophat Benorthd with Moriahs squink devalling bord The Lord accept'd the minde his thought was to it And said Thy sonne but not thy selfe shall do it The widows myte was thankfully receiv'd Good wills a sacrifice this seldome failes The will although the purpose be deceiv'd Is not to blame the good intent prevailes The Lord accepts even of the least desire We have to serve him though we faint or tire When Jacob had twice ten yeares Laban serv'd Yet Laban would have sent him empty gone But he who serves the Lord though he hath swerv'd Shall not misse
glore To thee knee-bowd before thy face I fall Come help O help now I begin to call Most holy mighty high and glorious God! Most mercifull most gracious and kinde Most Ancient righteous patient and good Most wise most just most bountifull of minde Infuse thy grace enlarge thy love in mine Confirme my faith conforme my will to thine Eternall One Beginner unbegunne Thou first and last Heavens founder and Earths ball Container uncontaind Father and Sonne Thou All in All unruld yet ruling All Great Light of lights who moves all things unmovd Hearke help and heare for Christs sake thy belovd Sole Soveraigne Balme come heale my wounded soule Which fainting fals under thine heavie hand Regard my plaints remit mine errours foule Let mercy far above thy justice stand Be thou my Heaven place Heaven within mine heart Thy presence can make Heaven where e're thou art Come challenge me come claime me for thine owne Plead thou thy right take place in my possession Lord square my steps thy goodnesse may be knowne In pard'ning each defect of my transgression Arrest my sinnes but let my soule goe free Baile me from thrall let sinne deaths subject die Lord wing my love with feather'd faith to flee To thy all-burning Throne of endlesse glory Mercie is thine for mercy is with thee Lord write my name in thine eternall story O! help my strength farre weaker than a reed Accept my purpose for the reall deed The good I would alace I can not do The ill I would not that I follow still The more thou citst me I grow stubborn too Preferring base corruption to thy will For when thy Sprite to serve Thee doth perswade me The World the Flesh and Satan they disswade me What should I say no gift in me is left To doe to speak to think one godly motion Lord help my wants for why my soule is reft Twixt feare and hope 'twixt sinne and true devotion Faine would I flighter from this lust-lymd clay But more I strive the more I faster stay Lord with the sonne forlorne bring me againe And cloth me with the favour of thy face The swinish husks of sinne I loath and faine Would be thy childe adopt'd the childe of grace Thy Lambe was kill'd for my conversions sake Of which let me some food and comfort take Thy glorious Hierarchy and Martyres all Rejoyce at the returne of a lost sheep Lord in that number let my portion fall That I with them like melodie may keep So with thy Saints my happynesse shall be One and the same as they are blest in Thee Yet whilst I pause and duely do consider Thy will my wayes thy righteousnesse mine errours I cannot plead to flie I know not whidder So grievous are the mountains of my terrours My sinnes so ugly stand before thy face That I dare hardly claime or call for grace What am I in thine eyes if I could ponder But brickle trash compos'd of slyme and clay A wretch-worne worme erect'd for sinne a wonder Whilst my souls treason is thy judgements prey I have no health nor truth nor divine flashes So wicked is this Masse of dust and ashes Lord stretch thine arme put Satan to the flight Exile the world from me and me from it Curbe thou my flesh beat down my lusts delight Rule thou my heart my will guide with thy Sprit Infuse encrease confirme here from above Thy feare thy law in me thy light thy love So shall I through Heavens merit onely rise And kisse thy soule-sought Sonne thy Lambe thy Dove For whose sweet sake I shall thy sight surprise And lift my hope on his redeeming love Blest be the price of mine exalting good Who payd my ransome with his precious blood In Thee I trust Lord help my wavering faith And with thy merits my demerits cover Dispell my weaknesse strengthen my faint breath Renew my life and my past sinnes passe over Be thou my Pilot guide this barke of clay Safe to the Port of thy coelestiall stay Grant me obedience to thy blest desire Instruct my minde environe me with ruth Cleanse thou my heart with flames of sacred fire Fraught with the fulnesse of thy saving truth Build up mine Altar let mine offerings be Faith feare and hope love praise and thanks to Thee Lord spare me for his sake whom thou not spard For my sake even for him from Thee above Was sent down here and slaine O! what regard Bore thou to Man to send thy Sonne of Love To suffer for my guilt the fault being mine But ah good Lord the punishment was thine Thy love great God from everlasting flowes To everlasting Mans reach onely brings Forth the Creation but thy love forth showes From all eternitie eternall springs Of light unsearchable then praise we Thee That ere time was ordain'd our time to be God made all things and God was made a Man All things he made of nothing but come see Withoutten man all things the truth to scan Had turnd to nothing for from one degree God of himselfe made all things and what more He would not all things without Man restore He was of God begotten all things made And borne of woman all things did renew For without man all things had been a shade So nothing well without a Virgin true Thus God and Man conjoynd in one we feele Life of our life and soule of our souls w●le What was he made and what hath he made us I pause with joy with silence I admire This mystery I adore who can discusse That goodnesse great sprung from so good a Syre Can reason show more reasonable way Than leave to pry where reason can not swey The Sonne of God behold was made a Man To make us men th' adopted sonnes of God By which he made himself our brotherthen For in all kindes he keeps our brotherhood Though Judge save sinne and Intercessour see He brothers us we must his suppliants be With what assurance then may we all hope What feare can force despaire or yet distrust Since our salvation and our endlesse scope Hangs on our elder brother Christ the Just He 'le give us all the good which we desire And pardon all the sinnes on us engyre The burden of our miseries he bore And laid his merits weight on our sick soules A kindnesse beyond reach his goodnesse more Engross'd his name for us in shamefull scroules O! wondrous love that God should humble thus Himself and take Mans shape to rescue us He who in heavens was admirable set Became for us contemptible on earth And from the Towre of his Imperiall state Imbrac'd a Dungeon for angelick mirth And chang'd the name of Majestie in love To shelter us with mercy from above What eyes for grief should not dissolve in floods Whilst our vile sinnes procur'd his wofull paine He sought our well unsought when we in woods Of wickednesse lay wallowing amaine And daily yet by sinne distrust and strife We crucifie
word and they posternall blanks The light here shines with them doth darknesse lye Or shall the truth in foppish relicks rest That were to Britaine an Egyptian pest But stay O stay long have I liv'd and liv'd To see their blindnesse in dejections fall I know their wayes and at their lives have griev'd They pierce our wills and we their projects thrall Is any under Sunne so well acquainted VVith them as I whose body they tormented They wish that Malaga had burnt me quick As doom'd I was so by Spaines Inquisition Whose tortures ah fast to my bones doestick And vexe mesore with pangs of requisition Great God avenge't confound them and restore Me to my health for I le debord no more Lord give me grace of all things to praise Thee Who never leaves thine owne left in distresse Thou first discoverd then deliver'd me A worke of love beyond my hopefulnesse I sought thou wrought then did enlarge my life Free from destruction last from Papall strife Now to observe my method I le returne To square construction with deploring Saints Then here 's my rule I le both rejoyce and mourne For teares bring joy when mercy crownes complaints The just man sinnes seven times a day and I Full seventy seven times may each houre descry Oh! if mine eyes like Arathusean Springs Fled Greece to Syracuse could yeeld three Fonts One to bewaile originall sinne stings The life of nature the other ah amounts To actuall trespasse the last and worst comes in To consuetude a deadly dangerous sinne Yet as the Malefactour when set free From death and pardond his heart is overjoyed Or as the Prisner set at libertie Which long before he never had enjoyed So Man when freed from sinne and Satans clawes His soule triumphs and loves religious lawes A ●hipwrackt man cast on some planke to seeke The safe set land which got how glad is he So shipbroke sinners in some stormie creek Of sinfull seas and sterne iniquitie Beene free to coast the shoare of grace and landed More greater joy than theirs nev'r soule commanded A wandring sonne long forraniz'd abroad In Parents hopes left desolate or slaine Yet when returnd and shaken off the load Of strangers rites how they rejoyce amaine So Saints so Heavens so Angels joy when changd One sinner turnes who long from God hath rangd These teares at Babell spent on Tigris banks Where Euphrates salutes that stately station Sowre-set Hebraick plaints powr'd forth by ranks Of mourning Captives banishd from their Nation And Sions face O sad Judaick songs Wailing for sinne and sterne Chaldean wrongs None of their teares were lost they pierc'd the heavens Whence kinde compassion free deliv'rance sprung God from his deoperculate Cherubins ●mbracd these feares his chosen flock had stung Then Mordecais sackcloth Queene Esthers woes Wrought Hamans death made Israel to rejoise Thus teares and pale repentance brought reliefe Though once exyld see now they 're back-reclaimd The least construction bred from godly griefe Begets like mercy mercy stands proclaimd At Heavens court gate for Christ the trumpet sounds And bids all sinners come he 'le heale their wounds VVho pleads for peace shall mercie finde with God The oyle of grace shall oyle their stinking gores All fatigating soules griev'd with the load Of sinne may come whose case remorse deplores For sanctify'd crosses all just Mens troubles Are not prest sorrows Mercy comfort doubles I never finde affliction fall on me VVithout desert for God is true and just Nor shall it come and without profit be For God is good as mercifull I trust Then welcome all afflictions sent from God He whom he loves he chastens with his rod VVho loves his childe administers correction And keeps him under awe cause of complainers Yet notwithholds kinde Natures best affection But curbes his will to rectifie his manners Much more Gods love abounds cause we are fraile And playes the Jayler then becomes our baile He lets us fall that he may raise us up And though we sinke we can not headlong drowne By gentle stripes he represents the cup VVhich Christ drunk of our patience for to crowne As Peter sunke then shrunke was twice recall'd So if we sinke or slyde we are not thralld The love of God is free his mercy gracious There 's no constraint binds God to pittie man But of free will would make our soules solacious To glorifie his goodnesse if we can But apprehend by faith what he hath done For us through Christ his onely righteous Sonne Man pondring on his momentany dayes May well conceive the brevitie of time From which extract he should contract the praise Of him who hastes to short the sense of slime And if it were not for his owne Elect He would prolong the day and speed neglect What is this age of ours much like a span Yea like the water buble shent as swelld Even as the glyding shade so fadeth Man Or like the morning grasse soone sprung soone quelld Nay like the flowre which falls then rots ere noone So melt our dayes and so our dayes are done And yet what are our dayes the longest liver As one man once I saw seven score yeares old Nay diverse six score health was such a giver Of lengthning time ere they returnd to mould And yet a dreame whose larger halfe of life Was spent in sleep the rest in toile and strife Oh! if ambitious men their ends were showne That like the froth do beat on rocks of death That shadow short from a fled substance flowne Much like a dreame so vanisheth their breath Then would their deeds forbeare to tyranize The Just might live and offer sacrifice But ah their thundring spight liket'a storme thuds And boasting men would thereby God upbraid The light they scorne and in Infernall clouds Would smother vertue with a sanguine spade Is not this Christian world with bloud o'rewhelmde Their swords with strife their heads with hatred helmde See! godlesse Tyrants tyrannizing still And scourging Saints themselves they scourge with shame Like Nimrod they gainst Heaven will have their will Though justice in sad judgements plague the same At last behold where they themselves sojourne Their threatning swords back in their bosome turne When Dionisus for tyranny had fled He kept a schoole in Calabria eight yeares At Montecilion opposite indeed To Sicilie which he at last endeares A king to turnea schoolemaster was strange But back to turne a King a rarer change In this our age what kings have beene dis-thrond Detect'd cast downe last banish'd from their bounds I could recite and where th' injust were crownd And Princes headlong hurled from their grounds Pryde fosterd spight with them the Ulcer brecks Which gored the harmelesse broke ambitious necks Would God mens choler could with patience lurke To blunt the edge of anger and to curbe With Job their passion let forbearance worke The stress'd Athenian suffring Not disturbe Times meek-fac'd calmenesse prosperous in peace With which no