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A00935 The diamond of deuotion cut and squared into sixe seuerall points: namelie, 1 The footpath to felicitie. 1 2 A guide to godlines. 81 3 The schoole of skill. 181 4 A swarme of bees. 209 5 A plant of pleasure. 245 6 A groue of graces. 283 Full of manie fruitfull lessons, auaileable to the leading of a godlie and reformed life: by Abraham Fleming. Fleming, Abraham, 1552?-1607.; Fleming, Abraham, 1552?-1607. Footepath of faith, leading the highwaie to heaven. Selections. 1581 (1581) STC 11041; ESTC S102282 82,454 300

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that thereby they might amend their inordinate trade of life he professed himselfe a teacher in this Schoole to the end that others as well as he might perceiue what aduantage a well disposed life affordeth This Schoolemaister we must presuppose to be such a one whose hart the finger of the Lord had touched and into whose vnderstanding the sunne of sanctification had shined He was not one that walked in carnall libertie neither in the concupiscence of the eie neither in the vanitie of the mind for then should there be a repugnancie and dissention betweene his conuersation and profession which ought to agree like musicall concords Take him therefore to be such a one as being renewed in the spirit of the inner man is able to teach to instruct to rebuke and to informe that the man of God might be made perfect in all righteousnesse But now entering into this Schoole of Skill let vs like good scholers with full purpose Gods grace being our gouernour to profit and go forward in that we professe learne by hart our A B C in this Schoole and according to our lessons frame the course of our life Abraham Fleming To the Reader The starkest foole if well he marke This skilfull Schoole prooues greatest clarke Come therefore you that wise would be And learne anew this A B C. The Schoole of Skill or The rule of a reformed life The first sententious sequence of the A B C deliuering diuers doctrines of vertue and vice to be folowed and auoided A Wife man shal heare and increase in learning and a man of vnderstanding shall atteine vnto wise counsels Be not wise in thine owne eies but feare the Lord and depart from euill Commit thy works vnto the Lord and thy thoughts shall be directed Death and life are in the power of the tong and they that loue it shall eat the fruit therof Euen a foole when he holdeth his peace is counted wise and he that stoppeth his lips prudent Fauour is deceiptfull and beutie is vanitie but a woman that feareth the Lord she shall be praised Giue ye strong drinke vnto him that is readie to perish and wine vnto them that haue gréefe of heart He that turneth awaie his eare from hearing the lawe euen his praier shall be abhominable In the transgression of an euill man is his snare but the righteous doth sing reioice Kéepe thine hart with all diligence for thereout commeth life Let thine eies behold the right and let thine eielids direct thy waie before thée Manie reuerence the face of the prince and euerie man is a friend to him that giueth gifts Northerne windes driue awaie the raine so doth an angrie countenance the slandering tongue Obey thy father that hath begotten thee and despise not thy mother when she is old Pride goeth before destruction and an high minde before the fall Quietnes in a poore cottage is better than strife in a princes pallace Riches gather manie friends but the poore is separated from his neighbour Smite a scorner and the foolish will beware reprooue the prudent and he will vnderstand knowledge The foolishnes of a man peruerteth his waie and his heart fretteth against the Lord. Ualiantnes in a King is like the strength of a Lion his lookes shall sraie his foes Wisedome is high to a foole therefore he cannot open his mouth in the gate Youth is worthie to be reuerenced if it be adorned with discretion and continencie Zeale without knowledge is foolishnes loue without honestie is lewdenes and friendship without faith is flatterie The second sententious sequence of the A B C deliuering diuers doctrines of vertue and vice to be followed and auoided APplie thine heart to instruction and thine eares to the words of knowledge A man that wandereth out of the waie of wisedome shall remaine in the congregation of the dead Be not light of credit but lay thine eare open to truth and honestie so shalt thou be worshipfull Be thou not enuious against euill men neither desire to be with them Count nothing thine owne whiles thou liuest in this world for euerie man hath his talent but lent Cast out the scorner and the seditious man so shall contention and reproch ceasse Do good to thine enimie to the vttermost of thy might so shalt thou fulfill the law of charitie Drawe towards the wise to learne wisedome so shalt thou be had in reputation Eate thou not the bread of him that hath an euill eie neither desire his deintie meates Euen in laughing the hart is sorowfull and the end of that mirth is heauinesse Foolishnes is ioie to him that is destitute of vnderstanding but a man of vnderstanding walketh vprightlie Flatterie is like vnto the wéeping of a Crocodile and when he talketh most friendlie he meaneth least honestie God ouerthroweth the wicked and they are not but the house of the righteous shall stand Giue no eare to the report of a slanderer for in his tongue lieth deadlie poison He that keepeth his tongue kéepeth his life but he that openeth his lippes destruction shall be to him He shall be sore vexed that is suretie for a stranger and he that hateth suertiship is sure Intend nothing that may turne to the harme of thy neibour for he is as thine owne selfe Iustice and truth are in such as feare God as for the wicked they abhorre vertue Kéepe not companie with dronkards nor with gluttons for the féete of such go to death Knowe him well whom thou makest of thy counsell least he bewraie thy secrets Looke not vpon the wine when it is redde and when it sheweth his colour in the cup or goeth downe pleasantlie Let not thine heart be enuious against sinners but let it be in the feare of the Lord continuallie Mercie and truth do preserue the King for his throne shall be established with mercie Make no friendship with an angrie man neither go with the furious man Notorious liers flée from as from a Scorpion for they are the verie frie of Sathan Neuer giue thy consent in a thing that is wicked for God rewardeth both with shame Opprobrious words defile the scule of him from whome they proceede and wound to the death Of thine increase spare somewhat to the poore that God may blesse thy store Pitie the case of such as be succourlesse and shut not thine eies against the naked Patience is a souereigne vertue and bringeth the soule of the iust to euerlasting comfort Quicken thy heart with honest mirth least too much heauines ouerthrowe thy health Quietlie tarrie the Lordes leasure in the tune of thy trouble for so to do is wisedome Rob not the poore because he is poore neither oppresse the afflicted in iudgement Righteous lips are the kings delight and he loueth them that speake right things Set not thy mind vpon vanitie for therein consisteth nothing that is sound Submit thy neeke to the yoke of obedience so shalt thou be praised among the people The wrath of a King is as
out of his reckoning booke Why then should I hang downe my head as though confusion were the portion of mine inheritance To them that loue God all things turne to good This his visitation is but a preparatiue to further felicitie which in due time he will reueale to me his seruant when he hath taken sufficient proofe and experience of my patience which I beséech him to establish and confirme that the possession of eternitie may be the reward of my sufferance Wherefore O most mercifull father if it be thine appointment as thy determinations are secret and hidden from the heart of man that this my sicknes and trouble be vnto death O then gratiouslie heare my supplication and let the voice of my crie enter into thine cares Giue me not ouer in my distresse and weakenesse when Sathan is most busie to spoile me but stand thou like an inuincible Giant on my right hand let the wings of thine almightines ouershadowe me euen vntill my last gaspe Moreouer graunt most mercifull father that at the separation and dissolution of my soule and bodie I may still continue thine my bodie turning into dust whence it tooke first substance and my soule possessing heauen whence it receiued bring O Lord send me a toifull resurrection at the date of iudgement and let me be numbred among the lambes whome thou hast chosen to be ioint-heires with thée of thine owne happines in heauenlie ioies O Lord heare my praier and let my crie come vnto thee Lord haue mercie vpon me Christ haue mercie vpon me O holie Ghost be my comforter O blessed Trinitie receiue my soule into the place of glorie Amen The twelfe Blossome conteining A petition to be said at the houre of death ouer the partie visited and lieng speechlesse O Eternall God the welspring of life and the treasure of true and euerlasting riches thou God of the quicke and the dead thou which hast appointed euerie man a mansion in this earthlie pilgrimage and placed vs here as tenants at thy pleasure to remoue and depart when it is thy will to call vs. thou euen thou which ridest vpon the wings of the winde whose seate is the heauen of heauens whose footstoole is the earth whose messengers are the Angels and celestiall hoast O bow downe thine cies of pitie looke vpon vs. O thou glorie of Sion thou beautie of Hierusalem thou Alpha and Omega thou which art incomprehensible the first person of the holie Trinitie open thy gratious eares and heare the petitions of vs thy seruants O heare vs and that betimes thou sauer of soules whiles breath is in the nostrels of this thy diseased and sicke creature for after this life it is too late to make intercession Thou hast chastened him O Lord inwardlie and outwardlie his strength is turned into weakenes his health into sicknes his flesh consumeth his limines are lame his eiesight waxeth dimme his spéech is stopped all his senses are numined his hart panteth life and death struggle within him and wrestle for superioritie He lieth in pangs he is past hope of recouerie to our iudgement he refuseth sustenance he can take no rest O looke vpon him thou comfort of Israell and deliuer Ioseph out of this prison O Lord haue mercie vpon him O God make him strong to endure this sharpe and bitter conflict Let not the terrour of death the torinent of his sicknes the losse of life or departing from anie transitorie pleasure withdrawe his heart from thée but as thou didst create it and powredst it into his bodie so vouchsafe to reserue it for thy selfe that thou maist be glorifiedin it both now and héereafter when it shall please thee to raise it vp with the rest of the bodie in the last resurrection Behold Lord he is not able to praie for himselfe thy hand is so heauie vpon him at this present he can not so much as lift vp a limme thou hast whipped him so sore he is past hope of health in the eies of man thou hast made such déepe furrowes vpon his backe he is spéechlesse because thou hast taken awaie the vse of his tongue lo Lord he lifteth vp his eies vnto heauen notwithstanding all these infirmities weakenesses O remember him forgiue him his sins remit and blot out of thy reckoning booke the ten thousand talents which he oweth thée He is not able to testifie the inward sorowe of his heart conceiued for sinne so sharpe and seueare is thy present visitation which iustlie and deseruedlie thou hast laid vpon him and surelie though thou didst punish him more rigorouslie yet thou art not accusable of iniustice For iust art thou O Lord in all thy workes and righteous in all thy iudgements But yet Lord we beséech thée to asswage the heate of thy wrath which if it burne still and continue vnquenched alas who shall be able to abide it Behold Lord how lowe he is brought all his bones are out of course which waie so euer he is turned he féeleth nothing but anguish no rest no ease no quietnes can he take such is the weight of thine anger against him for the instruction of vs that are aliue and here present at his visitation that we may learne thereby to detest sinne which is the cause of thy displeasure and to amend least a worse thing happen vnto vs. O Lord we beséech thée to consider our supplications and to accept the praiers which we powre out in thy presence in the behalfe of this our diseased brother And louing Lord if it be thy will to take him hence O then we beséech thee to shorten his time to end his lingering sicknes and so to deliuer him from all earthlie trouble But if it be thy pleasure to raise him vp being thus cast downe and to quicken strengthen him whome thy hand hath driuen almost to deathes dore then at the intercession of vs thy seruants hasten his time of recouerie and restore him vnto health and soundnes We praie for him O Lord not knowing the secrets of thy counsell which is vnchangeable deale with him as it pleaseth thée thine he is to order and dispose For thou art the potter and he but a lumpe of claie vnto thée we commit his soule and bodie thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen for thine is the kingdome the power and the glorie for euer and euer Amen The thirteenth Blossome conteining 1 Gods vniuersall gouernement 2 That he annointeth Kings and Queenes and why 3 A petition vnto him in the behalfe of our gratious Queene Elizabeth 4 His mercie in preseruing her in time of tribulation 5 A praier for the continuance of her good estate 6 Against the enimies of the truth either to be conuerted or confounded 7 The Church of God and the Commonwealth two sisters 8 The death of Christ a full ransome for all our sinnes 9 Requestes to be dailie made of euerie true Christian. 1 O Gratious Lord and most mercifull father we acknowledge
Lord when I am cited to appeare before the Sathanicall synagogue which presumptuouslie call the professours of thy Gospell to a reckoning of their religion O be thou mine assistant Make them ashamed of their malicious imaginations and in their owne snares let them be intangled ouerwhelme them in the pit which they haue prepared for others so shall I magnifie thy heauenlie power Increase in them the spirit of wilfull blindnesse because they haue not béene harbourers of thy faithfull ministers and because they haue contemptuoustie withstoode thy word which is the liquor of life Neuerthelesse if it be thy pleasure such as féele anie remorse of conscience and be sorie for their obstinacie vouchsafe to receiue them into thy fauour that they may be witnesses of thine vnspeakeable mercie God the father God the sonne and God the holie Ghost heare my praier and let my crie be considered for thine owne sake and for thy sonnes sake O God looke downe from aloft and shew thy louing kindnesse to all people The eight Flowre called a spirituall Song conteining 1 The chiefest comfort in this life 2 The meanes whereby to obteine blessednesse 3 The cause of a quiet conscience and how it is come by 4 An exhortation to glorifie GOD. F. 1 AMid so manie miseries depending on our life Behold a comfort namelie this with sinne to be at strife 2 Resisting of concupiscence subduing fleshlie lust Are meanes to come to blessednesse enioied of the iust 3 Hereof the true tranquillitie remaining in the minde According to her qualitie doth flourish in her kind Most mightie Ioue be praisd whose grace doth compasse this For no deserts of ours whose liues are dailie lead amis 4 Land we his holie name as doth vs best become Exalt him in his holinesse O nations all and some Make all your mirth and glee on him alone to rest In him reioice and clap your hands oblations such are best Nothing so much becoms a Christian than deth this Grant vs the same O gratious God that liuest aloft in blis The ninth Flowre called a holie Hymne conteining 1 A petition for repentance and remission of finnes 2 A deliuerance from our enimies 3 An inuocation vpon God for present help 4 A dep●ecation against the aduersaries of Gods truth L. 1 A Penitent heart O God thou wilt not despise O teach me thy statutes that I may sée my sinne Be fauourable vnto me whose iniquities are gone ouer my head O heale my sores and vlcers which stinke in thy sight 2 Rise vp thou holie one of Israell like a Giant in triumph and rescue me from the irruptions and inrushings of mine enimies According to thy greatnesse deliuer me O set me frée from the furiousnesse of my foes from the furiousnesse of my mortall and deadlie foes Horrible are the mischéefes which they haue imagined against me but thou which art omnipotent wilt ouerwhelme them in their maliciousnesse 3 As for me I will be confident vpon thy prouidence will I depend vpon an assured hope of thy heauenlie helpe will I attend O Lord. Make no long tarieng O my King and my God for vpon thée onlie doth the anchor of my saluation rest thou art my health and my safetie Forsake me not in the time of néede least mine enimies taking courage against me scorne at me in their pride and saie where is thy God 4 Let not the enimies of thy truth beare vp their bristles against thée and contemptuouslie cast thy glorie to the ground O Lord destroie both them and their deuises Euen as the Sunne consumeth snowe and as waxe wasteth in the fornace so let them be put to silence in the rigour of thy wrath and iudgement Make them like vnto Sodom and like vnto Gomorrha make them like vnto Pentapolis and Babylon that they may knowe thou liuest which art Lord ouer all Inlarge their torments far aboue the torments wherwith they haue persecuted thy people deale with them according to thine own pleasure Not my will but thy will be fulfilled O father according to thine owne decrée deale with them either in mercie or in iudgement Giue them proofes of thine omnipotencie that they may knowe thée which sittest aboue whose eies sée their deuises and art able to reuenge thine owne cause The tenth Flowre called a spirituall Song conteining 1 An exhortation to praise the Lord. 2 That all states and degrees ought to stoope before him and do him reuerence 3 Wherein our mirth and melodie should consist 4 That all creatures must magnifie Gods Maiestie E. 1 ATtend ye nations giue eare O learne to laud the Lord Behold his wondrous works and praise his name with one accord 2 Rich poore weake strong old folke yong approch and praises sing All people dwelling in the world to God oblations bring High potentates and all estates the king that crowne doth weare And subiects sworne to loialtie the Prince of Princes feare 3 Make all your mirth aud melodie his honour to resound Feare him in truth and faithfulnesse whose blessings do abound Let euerie thing lift vp their voice and laud his holie name 4 Each creature drawing vital breth extoll and praise the same Magnificent and wonderfull yea onlie God is hee In these his works before our eies his puissance we may see No time therefore let vs omit in publishing his praise Giue glorie oh heauen oh earth and sea to him which liues alwaies The eleuenth Flowre called a holie Hymne conteining 1 A petition to God vnder a continued allegorie for a renewed life 2 The weedes of the heart 3 The good and wholesome hearbes of the soule M. 1 AS siluer is purged from drosse by the force of the fire so by thy mercie O Lord GOD let me be purged from mine offences and sinnes Be fauourable vnto me an vnfruitefull bough of old Adams rotten and putrified stocke O water thou me with thy sanctifieng spirit Raine downe from heauen vpon me I beséech thee O let the drops of thy grace fall vpon me that I may bud and beare blossoms As for the wéedes of wickednesse and sinne let them wither and die in me that I may leade an vpright life in thy sight and glorious presence Husband me in such wise O Lord that I may fructifie and increase abundantlie that I may bring foorth thirtie sixtie and an hundred fold according to thy good pleasure A riuer of pleasantnesse be thou vnto me whereby I may be filled full of sap and flourish continuallie like the gréene Baie trée Make my leaues neuer to wither or vade let not the Sunne scortch or drie them to the losse of their beautifull colour and séemelinesse From all stormes and tempests shéeld and ouershadowe me that my roote may be replenished with pith and my branches spread abroade Let not the blustering blasts of winter do me anie harme but as my lips and my tongue gratte in me a desire and delight to speake the truth iustlie vprightlie and Christianlie Lighten thou my waies and