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A67746 A counterpoyson, or Soverain antidote against all griefe as also, the benefit of affliction and how to husband it so that the weakest Christian (with blessing from above) may be able to support himself in his most miserable exigents : together with the victory of patience : extracted out of the choicest authors, ancient and modern, both holy and humane : necessary to be read of all that any way suffer tribulation. Younge, Richard. 1641 (1641) Wing Y148; ESTC R15238 252,343 448

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the indignities offered to God then of our owne dangers And certainly no ingenuous disposition can be so tender of his owne disgrace as the true Christian is at the reproach of his God as we see in Moses who when Aaron and Miriam offered him a private injury it is said his meeknesse was such that he gave them not a word Numb 12. But when the people had fallen to idolatry and he heard them murmure against their Maker hee spares neither Aaron nor the people but in a godly ●it of zeale takes on at them yea breakes the Tables in peeces Exod. 32. A meeke Lambe in his owne cause a fierce Lyon in Gods Yea it was alwayes his manner to plead the peoples cause to God with prayers and teares but Gods cause against the people with sword and revenge And thus it fared with David who was a man deafe and dumb and wholly senselesse at Shemei● private reproach when he cursed him cast stones at him called him murtherer and wicked man 〈◊〉 Sam. 16. But not so at Goliahs publick revilings of God and his Church no not at Michols despising his holy zeale in the publike service of God 2 Sam. 6. In these cases how full of life and spirit and holy impatiency did he shew himselfe to be And our Saviour Christ who suffered himselfe to bee spit upon buffe●ed crowned with Thornes c. without giveing an angry word s but when hee saw the Temple abused hee burned in a zealous anger against them tooke a s 〈…〉 rge and whipt the buyers and sellers ou● saying Yee have made my Fathers house a den of theeves Matth. 21. 12 13. 3. Touching our actions whether it be in thine owne cause or in the cause of God and Religion thou m●ist not be a revenger All that private persons can doe is either to lift up their hands to Heaven for redresse of sinne or to lift up their tongues against the sinne not their hands against the person Who made thee a Judge is a lawfull question if it meet with a person unwarranted True Phin●as in the case of Zimry and Cozby lift up his hand and thrust them both through with a Speare And when Moses saw the Aegyptian smiting the Hebrew hee smoate the Aegyptian but they had peculiar warrants signed from Heaven either by instinct or speciall command which we shall expect in vaine Well may we flee from danger as Jacob fled from Esau Moses from Pharoah David from King Saul Elias from Jesabel Paul from the Damascens and Christ himselfe from the Jewes And expect to finde comfort in our flight even a City of refuge as Jacob found favour in Labans house Moses a rich Father-in-Law Elias an Angel to feed him Paul spirituall brethren to comfort him besides the Holy Ghost the true Comforter But the weapons of a Christian in adversity ought onely to be patience and prayer f●r as Theodoret saith if Muentius and Maximinian in the heat of zeale shall rayle on wicked Julian at a Feast justly may their deaths be cast upon their petulancy but not upon their Religion Yea the Counsell of Eleberis decreed that if any man did take upon him to breake downe the Heathens Idolls and were slaine in the place that hee should not bee reckoned among the Martyrs Indeed God so loves this heat of zeale in all the carriages of his servants that if it transport us too farre hee pardoneth the errours of our fervency rather than the indifferences of lukewarmenesse as may be seene in that act of Moses when being wroth with the people about the malten Calfe hee brake the Tables in peeces Exod. 32. Neverthelesse if we shall either out of superstition or presumption doe that we have neither calling nor warrant for out of the word such our workes be our intention what it will are but the blinde whelpes of an ignorant zeale and an unadvized zeale when knowledge is not made the Pilot of devotion may bee more prejudiciall than a cold r●misnesse Swift horses without a skilfull waggon●● and full sayles without a good Pilot endanger more Objection Every base nature will be ready to offer injuries where they thinke they will not be repaid he will many times beat a Coward that would not dare to strike him if he thought him valiant as a Cur that goes through a Village if hee clap his tayle betweene the legs and runne away every Cur will insult over him but if he bristell up himselfe and stand to it give but a counter-snarle there 's not a Dog dares meddle with him Answer Neverthelesse avenge not thy selfe but give place unto wrath and that for conscience sake Rom. 12. 19. If thou receivest wrong in thy person goods or good name it is the Magistrates office to see thee righted and For this cause yee pay also tribute He is the Minister of God for thy wealth to take vengeance on him that doth evill and for the praise of them that doe well neither doth hee beare the sword for nought Rom. 13. 4 5 6. 1 Peter 2. 14. Now in this case he that hath endammaged me much as you have some that will deprive men of their possessions and then perswade them to be content cannot plead breach of charity in my see●ing his Restitution and because patience without discretion wrongs a good cause I will so mit wrongs as I may not encourage others to offer them and so retaine them that I may not induce God to retaine mine to him Have you not seene a Crow stand upon a Sheepes backe pulling off wooll from her side even creatures reasonlesse know well whom they may be bold with that Crow durst not doe this to a Wolfe or a Mastiffe the knowne simplicity of this innocent beast gives advantage to this presumption meeknesse of spirit commonly drawes on injuries and the cruelty of ill natures usually seekes out those not who deserve worst but who will beare most Wherefore patience and mildnesse of spirit is ill bestowed where it exposes a man to wrong and insultation Sheepish dispositions are best to others worst to themselves I could be willing to take injuries but I will not be guilty of provoking them by lenity for harmelesnesse let me goe for a Sheep but whosoever will be tearing my fleece let him looke to himselfe Diogenes the Stoicke teaching his auditors how they should refraine anger and being earnest in pressing them to patience a waggish boy spit in his face to see whether he would practise that which he taught others but Diogenes was not a whit moved at it yet said withall I feare I shall commit a greater fault in letting this boy goe unpunished than in being angry In some cases for reason to take the rod out of the hands of wrath and chastise may be both lawfull and expedient The same which Aristotle affirmed in Philosophy viz. That choller doth sometime serve as a whetstone to vertue is made good Divinity by Saint Paul Be angry but sinne not Ephes. 4.
26. that is be angry with sin onely For Cautions and Rules to be observed when we appeale to the Magistrate 1. First let it be in a matter of weight and not for trifles True thou canst not be more forward to cast away thy money then some Lawyers are to catch it but the Physition and Lawyer are for necessity not for wantonnesse What said one to a Lawyer offering to right his wrongs and revenge him of his adversary by Law I am resolved rather to beare with patience an hayleshower of injuries than seeke shelter at such a thicket where the brambles shall pluck off my fleece and doe me more hurt by scratching than the storme would have done by hayling I care not for that Physicke where the remedy is worse than the disease 2. Secondly let it be in case of necessity after we have assayed all good meanes of peace and agreement using Law as a Father doth the Rod full sore against his will As whatever our wrongs be true wisedome of the spirit will send the Apostle lenity as admonitions harbinger with offers of peace before she takes out prosses 2 Tim. 2. 25. 3. Thirdly let not our ayme and end be the hurt of our enemy but first the glory of God secondly the reformation of the party himselfe that so he which is overcome may also overcome and if it may be others by his example whereby more than one Devill shall be subdued And thirdly to procure a further peace and quiet afterwards as Princes make warre to avoid warre yea in case we see a storme inevitably falling 't is good to meet it and break the force Fourthly let us not be transported either with heat or hate but begin and follow our suits without anger or using the least bitternesse or extremity against the person of our adversary as Tilters break their Speares on each others breasts yet without wrath or imention of hurt or as Charles the French King made warre against Henry the seventh King of England rather with an Olive-branch than a Lawrell-branch in his hand more desiring peace than victory not using bribery or any other meanes to corrupt or hinder justice but to seeke our owne right Fifthly and lastly having used this ordinary meanes that the Lord hath given us for the righting of our selves in case we finde no redresse let us rest with quietnesse and meeknesse therein without fretting or desire to right our selves by private revenge knowing assuredly that the Lord hath thus ordered the whole matter either for our correction or for the exercise of our patience and charity or that he will take the matter into his owne hand and revenge our cause of such an enemy farre more severely or for that he meanes to deale farre better with us if wee commit our cause to him than either our selves or any Magistrate could ha●e done To conclude this argument in a word If thou goe to Law Make Conscience thy Chauncery Make Charity thy Judge Make Patience thy Councellor Make Truth thy At●urn●y Make Peace thy Soliciton And so doing thou shalt be sure to finde two friends in thy suit that will more bestead thee than any 〈◊〉 Judges namely God and thy Conscience God who being Chiefe Justice of the whole world can doe for thee whatsoever he will and will doe for thee whatsoever is best thy Conscience which is instead of a thousand good Witnesses a thousand good Advocates a thousand good Juries a thousand Clarkes of the Peace and Guardians of the Peace to plead procure pronounce record and assure to thee that peace which passeth all understanding But I feare I have incited your impatiency by standing so long upon patience CHAP. XXXIII Vse and Application of the ●●rmer Reason 1. Use. THese latter Reasons being dispatcht returne wee to make use of the former for I may seeme to have left them and be gone quite out of sight though indeed it cannot properly bee called a digression seeing the last point proved was That God suffers his children to be persecuted and afflicted for the increase of their patience First if God sends these afflictions either for our Instruction or Reformation to scowre away the rust of corruption or to try the truth of our sanctification either for the increase of our patience or the exercise of our faith or the improvement of our zeale or to provoke our importunity or for the doubling of our Obligation seeing true gold flyes not the touch-stone let us examine whether we have thus husbanded our afflictions to his glory and our owne spirituall and everlasting good I know Gods fatherly chastisements for the time seeme grievous to the best of his Children Yea at first they come upon us like Samps●●s Lyon looke terrible in shew as if they would devoure us and as Children are affraid of their friends when they see them masked so are we But tell me hath not this roaring Lyon prevailed against thy best part hast thou kept thy head whole I meane thy soule free For as Fencers will seeme to fetch a blow at the legge when they intended it at the head so doth the Devill though he strike at thy name his ayme is to slay thy soule Now instead of being overcome dost thou overcome Hath this Lyon yeelded thee any honey of Instruction or Reformation Hath thy sinne dyed with thy fame or with thy health or with thy peace or with thy outward estate D●est thou perceive the graces of Gods Spirit to come up and flourish so much the more in the spring of thy recovery by how much the more hard and bitter thy winter of adversity hath beene Then thou hast approved thy selfe Christs faithfull Souldier and a Citize● of that Ierusalem which is above 〈…〉 a I dare boldly say of thee as Saint Paul of himselfe That nothing shall be able to seperate thee from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 8. 39. To ●in ●e this honey in the Lyon more than makes amends for all former feare and griese and in case any man by his humiliation under the hand of God is growne more faithfull and conscion●ble there is honey out of the Lyon or is any man by his temptation or fall become more circumspect after it there also is honey out of the Lyon c. For there is no Sampson to whom every Lyon doth not yeeld some honey for as affliction sanctified ever leaves some blessing behinde it like the River Nilus which by overflowing the Land of Aegypt fattens and ●ils it with flowers and fruits so a sine wit and a Christian will makes use of any thing like the little Bee which will not off the meanest flower till she hath made somewhat of it Even Sauls malice shall serve to enhaunce Davids zeale and the likelihood of losing Isaac shall both evidence and improve Abrahams love to God or hath the Lord made Hannah barren and doth her adversary vex her sore yeare by yeare and grievously upbraid her for