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A13878 A learned and a very profitable exposition made vpon the CXI. psalme Travers, Robert, fl. 1561-1572. 1579 (1579) STC 24180; ESTC S120253 54,089 124

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lesse earnest to sing this thankes giuing vnto him than Dauid was and seeing the benefites be common to ioyne with him praysing God for them Further we may learne here what lyeth vppon it if we take vppon vs to call other to the prayse of God it is that we our selues first giue example euen as Dauid who as he called others so he leadeth first and sheweth the way to them For if we call others and are deafe our selues if we bid other goe and we si●● still if we pipe and singe to our neighbours and we be not our selues therewith delighted what doe woe but mocke God and condemne our selues Therefore in the 12. of Esaye the faythefull doe not onely exhorte other but they beginne the songe of prayse and thankes giuing them selues I will prayse the Lorde with my whole harte c. Here the Prophet teachethe vs a notable doctrine if we ascribe not to nature as the prophane Philosophers or to starres as vayne men or to fortune as the blinde and couetous or to any other thinge then to the Lorde alone this excellent order which we see in all the worlde or that redemption and these benefites which were bestowed vppon Israell at his departinge out of Egypt but that in bothe we acknowledge onely the wisedome and mercye of our God whose hande and power brought all these thinges to passe Yea let other prayse their Idolls which they fayne vnto them selues with the dishonour of God we will O Lorde acknowledge thee and make mention onely of thy wisedome and louing kindnes and truth that hath wrought this goodly order in all the worlde suche mercies and benefites for thy Churche and suche iudgementes againste the wicked and them that knowe not thy name I will prayse the Lorde with my whole harte Here the Prophet declareth what kinde of thankes giuing and songe this shall be that he purposeth to singe vnto the Lorde not an outwarde and hipocriticall prayse not in wordes onely to come neare vnto him not onely in tongue and mouthe but an hartie an earnest a true songe a songe and Psalme wherein all the partes and powers of his minde and vnderstandinge shall bee ioyned together in as muche as a man is able For he meaneth not that thi● songe of prayse shall aunswer to the exactnes of the Lawe wherein we are commaunded with all our harte and soule to serue the Lorde But the whole harte in this place is opposed to a dissembling and hipocriticall harte and as he speaketh in an other place to a harte and a harte that is a double harte So that here is no holde for anye to take that man is able to fulfill the Lawe if we admitte the Holye Ghoste Interpreter of him selfe But alas what should I dispute that man is not able to fulfill that commaundement of the full loue of God which is required wh● is he that dare dispute for it I aske no other witnesse agaynst himselfe then his owne conscience if he vouchsafe to looke into it Shall he not there see a sea of wicked thoughtes a world of vayne deuises a hell of blasphemies and foule imaginations shall he not see a slaue and seruaunt of the body or rather an infinite number euen so many bonde men to sinne and ministers to Satan as he hath partes and members O the depth length and breadth of that wickednesse that remayneth and dwelleth in vs Well the Prophet teacheth vs that knowe our selues that we come not before the Lorde before whose eyes all our hartes are open and manifest with a face only and shew of godlines but that together with our tongue our spirite and soule be ioyned and so to come to sing or pray vnto the Lorde For if we come before the Lorde eyther hipocritically or negligently let vs be assured that he whose honor we staine by our boldnesse and impudencie will require it of vs to the vttermost It followeth In the congregation and assembly of the iust that is openly and in the face of the Church For that inwarde and darke godlinesse that yet men loue so muche that they will prayse God in their chambers in their studies in their hartes that can not suffice Naye that is no godlinesse whiche in tyme and place will not openly shewe it selfe to the prayse and glory of god But yet this profession and declaration of our seruice that is required of vs is not so muche for the Lordes cause as for our owne certayntie touching our election and for the furtheraunce of the children of God to the lyke by our example And if we consider who this is and what a man he was that speaketh this we will easilye graunte that I woulde proue For who was more diligent earnest and often in priuate prayers then Dauid Howe many nightes are witnesses of his godlynesse in the wildernesse in the mountaynes and caues of the earth in his priuie chamber and in his bedde howe was he accustomed to powre out his spirite before the Lorde Yet we se● this godly and great Prophet exempteth not him selfe from publike and common assemblies where the children of God were according to the appoyntmente of God gathered to prayse him and confesse vnto him their sinnes and to heare his worde with other exercises for the encrease of hys fayth and godlynesse But what do I saye that he did not exempt him selfe whiche thought it the greatest benefite vnder heauen to haue a parte and portion in the Churche and communion of Sainctes Therefore in banishment he so be wayleth and lamenteth his state being as it were by tyrannie excommunicated from that Paradise from that earthly heauen I meane the temple when were manyfest signes of the presence of god Not that Dauid knewe not but that he moued and liued and had his beeing in God or that the Lorde would not heare his prayers out of the temple but for the same causes that euery one of vs ought to be so affected to the common places of prayer and hearing the worde and receyuing the Sacramentes was this earnest desire in Dauids heart because there the Lorde had appoynted to be worshipped there the sacrifices to be offred there the ministerie of the Priestes there was the fellowship of Gods children there was a Sacrament of the presence of God which all more fully and clearely and liuely now in euery faythfull congregation gathered according to the worde of God do appeare to vs then they did in the temple And yet who accompteth it as the least parte of his crosse when he is sicke or otherwise hindered from the seruice of God who considereth the happinesse of their feete that treade in the temple of God Who wisheth for his appearance before the Lorde as the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water in the congregation O the wonderfull contempt of the benefites of God and the singuler patience of the Lorde Moyses when the people were kepte with Pharaos hande as with a chayne
Amen It followeth in the 7. verse The workes of his hande are veritie and iudgement all his fla●●●es are true I haue heretofore declared the wonderfull and notable workes which the Lorde executed in the placing of the people of Israell in the land of the Cananits Hitits Heresits c. and shewed by it that which the Prophete speaketh of the strength of God which benefit as hath appeared was to be accounted of aboue the other of the deliueraunce and pray of Egypt which notwithstanding were as I haue shewed wondrous maruelous workes In this verse the Prophet rendreth a reason of this wonderfull counsell of god And first he declareth that it was so be●●● by God appoynted For he calleth the performance of it ●●●eth And because as fleshe and and sinne is prowde and quickely leapeth into the throne of iudgement euen ouer God him selfe his doings such vile and abhominable deuills are we The Prophet giueth a further reason when as he saith the works of his hands are iudgement He saith not ●●ger least any shoulde thinke crueltie in god The workes of his hands are truth The Hebrewes vse this worde when they speake of a sure and certaine performance of that which is promised Therefore they ioyne these two words mercy and truth together whether they speake of God or man Dauid praiseth God for mercie and truth that is for his mercifull promise and faithfull and true performance And Iacob sweareth Ioseph to do this mercy truth to him that he be caried to be buried in the land of promise These examples shall suffise although I might bring almost infinit But this is enough to vnderstande the meaning of Dauid Nowe that the worke was truth we shall vnderstand if we remēber the notable promise which the Lorde made vnto Abraham and confirmed it vnto Isaac and afterward to Iacob that he woulde geue to them and to their seede after them the lande of these seuen nations For the Lord after that Lot was departed from Abraham cōmaunded Abraham dwelling in the lande of Canaan to lift vp his eyes and looke from the place he stoode in to the East the West the North Sowth promised to giue it vnto his sede after him for euer This was done fiue times to Abraham And Abraham died and was buried in the land of Canaan In the xxvj chap. the Lord promiseth Isaac to kepe the same oth that he sware to his father Abraham And in the xxviij chap. the Lorde appeared to Iacob in the way to Mesopotamia in a dreame promised to make his seede also to florishe and to spread euen to the North and Sowth East West although he was then a straunger and alone And the same also is in the xxxv chap. with this addition that euen Kings should come out of him These are the promises other which the Lord made bound him selfe to kepe to this people which as we haue seene after 400. yeares the Lorde accomplished This truth which Dauid speaketh of shal be more excellēt famous if we cōsider those hinderaunces which seemed to haue bene able to haue made all these promises vaine First consider what daungers perills that Abraham was often in being but one man and d●iuen from country to countrie And as Dauid saith both of him and of Isaac and Iacob they were driuen from one kingdom to an other people And this came to Abraham what time he had no feede So that by the enmity of the Philistians by the daunger he was in for his wife the promise of God concerning his posteritie was in great daunger Consider the barennesse of Sara● and so many yeares after this first promise so that it might haue bene thought he had forgotten his promise After this what was the condition of Isaac in whom now all the hope of the promise rested howe farre of from death was he when his father had already stretched out his hande for his death and that at the Lordes commaundement where then seemed any hope of this promise or of this trueth that Dauid commendeth in this place After this the barennes of Rebecca which when it was taken away behold a newe hinderaunce The children fought in her wombe together that she was in great feare that th one woulde haue destroyed thother Then the feare of daunger that Iacob was in of his brother Esaw who had vowed his death And after that he was returned out of Siria when Simion and Leui destroyed the Shecamites what hope was there then that one of all the ●●●cke shoulde haue bene left aliue Which Iacob also feared and had not that God of trueth who to bring to passe his promise had before so miraculously preserued his father from his enemies as it were holden him vnder his arme and kept him in his bosome they had at that time beene all destroyed But the feare of them fell vppon the nations about them and they escaped daunger Then followed also an other enemie for the hinderaunce of his promise euen the famine which was in the lande of Canaan nowe risen as it were against the trueth of god After that the bondage of Egypt in whiche fornace muche more hotte then the fornace of Nebucadnesar yet neuerthelesse they were not consumed These circumstaunces considered which were as so many contrarie windes against this purpose of God or like so many red seas to their entrance into this lande or so many walls of iron gates of brasse thorowe which they must breake before they coulde come into this promised city These circūstances of hinderāce I say considered which notwithstanding the great mighty God for his promise sake remoued doe make the arme of the glory power of God so much more famous and glorious more greatly to be praised neither that onely but comfortable also vnto all that waite for his promises in faith and pacience For here we see an exāple drawn before vs by the finger of God to looke vpon for the confirmation of our faith and hope if we waite also for those thinges which the Lord of his mercie hath promised to vs We see that the Lorde hath promised that he will giue the Gospell free passage in the kingdom of Christ And this we looke for all they whose harts are touched with the loue of the glorie of God waite looke for it till their eyes dasell in their heads For we see mountaines hills seas waters kingdoms peoples Kings Princes and Counselers of the earth lift vp them selues stand against it yet we may cōfort our selues with these words that the Lord of mercie is the God of truth and will bring this promise to passe as we see it begun this day For we see these kingdoms of England Scotland Denmarke Germany Polonia and diuers other kingdoms which together with Italy Fraunce Spayne were as a Scepter or mace in the hand of the deuill of Rome
in Egypt asketh their deliueraunce of the king that they might serue the Lorde in the wildernesse at the day appoynted least the Lorde should slea them And who is he that this daye feareth the hande of the Lorde if he omitte the seruice of God I say not holden from it by Pharaoh but tyed with his owne linkes and chaynes which he hath made vnto himselfe eyther busines or ydlenes ▪ But a day wil come when these deriders and contemners of his worde and the felowship of his children shall account it most extreme myserie to be secluded from them whom yet heere they contemned This doctrine is as playne as iustificatiō by fayth or no merits of works and yet how few authors approuers hath it But herein appeareth our religion that it is in imagination not in fayth or opinion not in iudgement in the braynd not in the heart in worde not in deede and effect It followeth In the assembly of the iust This is a title whiche Dauid giueth to the Church of God therby declaring who they are that haue in deede a place in the temple For although all come both good and badde both the swearer and he that feareth God both the adulterer and he that made a couenaunt with his eyes both the vayne and idle person they that walke in their vocation diligently yet Dauid did see in the worde of God who were right witnesses of the prayse of God and therefore as with a rodde he standeth and seuereth the wicked from this company So in the xv Psalme he asketh of God seeing all go thither who they be that shall dwell and abide for euer in his tabernacle that haue their names as it were written in heauen and belong vnto that companie and he aunswereth himselfe that suche as are pure and cleane in their workes he that is no extortioner no vserer he that feareth God and loueth and maketh muche of them that feare the Lorde And in the xxiiij Psalme This is that generation of Iacob of them that seeke thy face The rest are bastardes and not the true generation of Iacob And in the 50. Psalme the Lorde doth as it were muster his true children from amongst all Israell and seuereth the wicked and forbiddeth them to sacrifice or to do any thing whereby they professed that they serued God seeing they hated to be refourmed and were fellowes and companions of the wicked All which places teache vs how we ought to labour dayly by prayer and those meanes that God hath lefte to profite vs that we maye be counted before God of the number of his true children he meaneth not that those onely whiche are without sinne are of the Churche of God but as it is taken in the Scripture in other places for suche as to their power serue God. So Iob is called a iuste man one that feared God Elizabeth and Zachary are called iust and Noah a iuste man whiche all yet had their great and many sinnes but those he calleth heere iuste who propounded to them selues the feare of God to lyue after it who walked before God in the wayes of righteousnesse and holynesse althoughe they sometime fell so that vnlesse we haue this before our eyes to lyue according to the worde of God to come to the temple or congregation to profite to putte off dayly some peece of our olde man 〈◊〉 to bee enriched and decked with Iesus Christe in Wisedome Iustice Redemption Sanctification more and more by our comming to the Churche we pollute the congregation and infect the verye place and make it a witnesse against vs in the day of iudgemente and we despise the holy company of Angelles who are together present with the children of God witnessers of all their behauiour and we moche and prouoke the Lorde agaynst vs It were better neuer to see the Church neuer to sette foote within the doores then thus proudly presumptuously to breake into the temple of God with so great dishonour to his name For what do we make of God or how do we accompt of him otherwise then of an Idoll who neyther seeth heareth nor knoweth vs when thus impudently we dare take place among the Sainctes of God Therefore lette euery one that is wicked and purposed to remayne in his wickednesse heare what I saye vnto him in the message of the Lord ▪ These gates are the gates of righteousnesse as sayth the Prophet the righteousse shall enter into thē this house is the house of mine honor the contemners and despisers of God haue no inche of roome therein This companie is the Church of Gods Sainctes and children there are no dogges or swine in this number Knowe therefore that the verie steppes of the Church dore are holie grounde and therefore not to be prophaned knowe that there standeth at the dore the Angell of the Lorde with a sword in his hand to hinder thy entraunce into this earthly paradise who will surely smite thee at the last for all this dispite against the Lord. As for vs that by Gods grace are not giltie of this contempt let vs still feare God and worshippe him in spirit and truth let vs be diligent sincere earnest true and faithfull in our duties to God who will in the day appoynted set vs with his Angells for euer to praise him and will cast out the polluted and vncleane out of his Church He will put their names out of the booke of life where they seeme to haue bene wrytten he will cast out with Ismaell all mockers and geue them their portion with the goates This great God righteous iudge saue vs keepe vs from the temptations of Sathan that we may euer sticke vnto him in truth faith Amen Great are the workes of God sought out of all that delight therein This is the first verse of the Psalme of praise which Dauid singeth to the Lorde For the former verse which I haue spoken of is but a preface and a preparing vnto the Psalme whereby he stirreth vp him selfe other to singe and heare this songe In the beginning therefore of the Psalme let vs examine and search the whole purpose and parts of it that th end being vnderstood we may see what causes reasons arguments are the grounds therof which be the parts the strings vpon which he playeth singeth this song that if they be common to vs with him if they be now as mouing as euer they were we ioyne our selues also vnto this fellowship with him First therefore he beginneth at the generall and common workes which are in the whole worlde to praise god After these two verses he beginneth the remembraunce of their deliuerance with those benefits which togither the Lorde shewed them as the spoyle of Egypt the possession of the land of Canaan the benefits of the knowledge of God by his worde and in these pointes consisteth this Psalme We see therefore as I haue
in the congregation of the iust meaning in the temple whe● the children of God were gathered together to teach them whom God hath called out of darknes into light that they are called euen to his feare to his seruice to iustice to godlines to sobernes to modestie to all partes of holynes Thus the Prophet Dauid in the 50. Psal. in the person of God calling all the Iewes together before who● the Lord would reproue the wicked vngodly men that notwithstanding their vngodly liues yet tooke the name of God 〈◊〉 their mouthes calleth them Sainctes And thApostle S. Paule writing to the Romane● sayth Beloued of God called Saincts vnto the Church of Corinth Saincts by calling And to the Ephes he exhorteth them to pray with watching and perseuerance for all Sainctes And in the end of his Epistles the Saincts salute you Euen as the Scripture speaking of the reprobate describeth them by those frutes and practises to the which the deuill hath framed them My sonne if sinners doe entise thee say come let vs lay in wayte for blood and 1. Psalme Happie is he that is not conuersaunt with the wicked with sinners with mockers of al godly and profitable instructions so that by those names which the Scripture geueth vnto vs we see our calling we see the ende of Gods mercies and benefites bestowed vpon vs Not as they which know not God to feare no godly maiestie to serue no diuine power to lead a carelesse and dissolute life to walke in licence and wantonnes to geue our mindes and bodies as seruauntes to sinne and vanities but in feare and reuerence of him who hath powred his benefits vpon vs in his seruice and will to walke all the dayes of our life This we learne by this title of the faithfull which the Prophet geueth to them and because it commeth to be spoken of againe in this Psalme I referre it till then Onely beseching you that we lay our owne hartes in this balance see whether we answere to them or no. Alas I know before we be put in what waight we haue● how light we should be found although we shoulde take euen any of the least of Gods benefites to be wayed withall Let vs onely remember this pray which the Lorde hath geuen vs and wrong it out of the handes and teeth of the Epicures and Papistes which enioyed these liuings before vs our knowledge of the Gospel is somthing more our light greater our conuersation no do● somethinge better But howe litle is ou● knowledge howe obscure is our light ho● farre is our godlinesse from that we migh● haue knowne and attayned to if we had loued the Gospell of God with all ou● soules and all our desires Who is not g●tie to him selfe that in fewe yeares within the yeares of a Maister of arte he might haue gotten as much learning as we commonly get in seuen yeares more added vnto them that in foure or fewer yeares might not get all the artes that we attayne to commonlie in eight or nine yeares tha● might not in a yeares studie get such knowledge of the Scriptures as we get not i● seauen yeares For we spende the good tyme God geueth vs in feasting often in the countrie in bedde in walkinge in gaminge in idle and vnprofitable exercises that oftentimes a whole moneth together some thinke not of any thinge but cunninge and rehearsinge of partes to play and God knowes the least time is geuen to our studies our profitable and frutefull our godlye and honest studies In playing we are of labour pacient whole nightes and dayes In godly exercises for the encrease of our faith and knowledge too too vnpacient to tarie a litle time earnest in vanities slacke and slowe in prayers and wearie in sermon time carefull wise and swift in attayning th end of our deuises but negligent foolish and slowe to any good thinge quicke in vnderstanding euill but deafe and doltishe and not able at twise telling to perceiue a godly instruction As Hasael or as the Roe of the fielde to ouer take a vayne man whome we propounde to vs to followe but heauie as the sande and slowe as the wormes or messengers of euill newes to followe a good and vertuous and learned example And yet we say wherein are we to be reproued It is but for fashions sake or because we find a fitte phrase in the Scripture yet we may haue grace commendacions An idle belly ah prophane hart ah Epicure ah the depth and bottom of sinne my hart telleth me there be such euill beasts in the Colledge Nay my eyes and my eares are witnesses of this my minde telleth me a great deale more which the iust God will to the shame of these idle beasts bring vppon their heades as he hath done vppon some already Wel these be the frutes of the Egyptians whose spoyle the Lord hath giuē to vs to feare and serue him which he will if we hinder him not by our securitie and carelesnes make more plentifull with new blessings or els as to this people will giue these and more too but to our condemnation onely for his promise sake For it followeth he wil alway remember his couenaunt Here the Prophet noteth the cause of this benefit which the Lord bestowed vpon the Israelits not their fathers deseruings For Abraham Isaac and Iacob had their many infirmities as appeareth in the Scriptures much lesse their owne being now as it were Egyptians Idolaters worshippers of oxen and calues and serpents and hauing forgot the God of their fathers but for the mercifull couenant and promise which he made to Abraham their father that after their bondage in a straunge land foure ages he would bring them forth with great substāce Here is the ground of the ioy and comfort of the Sainctes euen the Lordes mercie in promising truth in performing We haue no other title to the least of Gods benefites but euen his truth to clame them by that the worlde shall be no more destroyed with water what assurance haue we that deserue euery momēt to be ouerwhelmed with waters but onely his couenaunt that according to his mercie he wil alway remember What certainty haue we for our resurrectiō to life but only the truth of Gods promise Seeing we haue deserued euen the best of vs to lye and rotte in the earth for euer But O Lorde thy faith endureth for euer Thou wilt for thy promise sake haue mercie vpon vs although our sinnes the bondes and chaines of our sinnes are able to kepe vs in hell without redemption It followeth in the next verse He hath declared the power of his workes vnto his people c. As the Lorde presenteth stil his blessings vpon his people so the Prophet followeth the commendation of them And as the Lord riseth in mercie and fauour so Dauid acco●ding to th●● degree speaketh of them The benefit of their deliuerance was as we haue seene wonderfully
miraculously brought to passe These enriching more wonderfully this which the Prophet now remembreth is more then the other And therfore he sayth the Lord shewed the strēgth power of his workes in giuing vnto them the heritage of the Heathen As if he shoulde say although thus wonderfully and miraculously thy hande O Lorde deliuered thy children although so mercifullie thou broughtest them forth in great substaunce yet these were litle in thine eies thine hand thine arme prouided for them besides all these a perpetual heritage Let vs therefore examine this miracle see whether it so excedeth as the Prophet speaketh For therby seing the loue the tēder excedīg loue that the Lorde beareth to his Church we may draw receaue great comfort if we also be of the same body For the Lord did nothing then which now he will not do for his people or rather in more excellent notable manner First therefore consider the murmurings of this people their idolatrie their euill lustes their many and sundrie tentations wherewith forty yeares together they prouoked the Lord their redeemer by their vnfaithfulnes their rebellion to their Captaines last of al their feare of these natiōs whom the Lord had already discomfited destroied in heauē their desire to returne into Egypt that was to hell againe where so cruelly they had bene handled Consider all these sinnes and many more which the Lord sawe in their harts And aboue all the miracles that we yet see we shall wonder at this miracle of their bringing into the lād of promise Surely God is omnipotēt yet sinne is able to close his hand I speake in reuerence feare able to tye his armes that he geue nothing His face is seuen times more fauourable gracious then the Sunne yet vnfaithfulnes is able to hide couet it His loue is fire in dede but the waters of vngodlines are able to quenche it His strength is wonderfull for the destruction of our enemies but our sinne our vnfaithfulnes our wickednes our rebelliō maketh him weaker then water The Lord is a mighty Sāpson in dede but our sins are sharper thē any ra●er wherby we weakē the strēgth if I may so speake shaue the head of this great Sāpson our Iudge and defender The Lord is inuincible yet our vngodlines hath made him bin takē prisoner His nature is invulnerable yet by our sin we pearse him He is life yet by our vngodlines I speake an horrible thing we slea him Here is therefore the strength of the Lord reuealed that notwithstanding all these rocks and cragges as the Prophet Amos speaketh the course of the Lords benefits was not hindred his hands not boūd his light not darkened his loue not quenched his strength not weakened his wil nothing chaunged it repented him not of his promise as in the dayes of Noah that he made not an vtter cōsumption of this sinnefull people This may be well noted for the setting forth of this great benefit Besides this we may also remember the vnfitnes of this people for battle They had bene brought vp in kilnes among the bricks they were accustomed to bearing of burthens for the building of the Egyptian piramides not instituted or instructed in feates of warre not armed not politike yet in this infirmity the Lordes strength appeared they were straungers in the countrie and therefore easely ouerthrowne in vnknowne places they were but one people their enemies cunning in the countrie and seuen greater and mightier nations then they they remained in tents their enemies in strong walled townes whose walls reached vnto the heauens these were footemen their enemies on horses and iron chariots these without weapons of warre without any other outward help which all their enemies had in great abundance yet for all these the hande of God brought them vnto the lande that he had promised and sworne to their fathers So that the miracles in Egypt and their spoyle may be forgotten in respect of this great and wonderfull worke Moises not spoken of in comparison of Iehosua by whose hande the Lorde brought this worke to passe In their deliueraunce he shooke the earth but in their placing he moued the heauens The day was turned into night in Egypt But here the whole course and order of the worlde both in the heauens earth was chaunged at the standing of the Sunne which as astonished at this worke at this great worke stoode and forgot to runne his course The first borne were but destroyed in Egypt but all their children from the first borne to the childe in the wombe were here destroyed There they were spoyled onely of their richesse and iewells but here of their richesse and inheritaunce There one Kinge was destroyed here the Lorde scattered many Kinges for their sake and made Iehosuah to treade vpon their Kings neckes and prophane all their crownes This did the wonderfull zeale of the Lorde of hostes bring to passe for his promise sake and shewed as the Prophet sayth euen his power and his strēgth in this worke to giue his people the heritage of the Heathen Seeing then the hand of the Lord brought all these thinges to passe for them not only to bring thē out of the iron furnace but to place them in a paradice not to begin to be mercifull but to bring it to an end and as the Prophet Ezechiel cōpareth it not only to cut the nauell of this woman child to wash it to salt it to say vnto it liue euen in blood to say vnto it liue but to bring it vp to forme her to fashion her to decke her with ornaments and to geue her an heritage so large and goodly an heritage What feare what obedience what reuerence is there that she ought not to geue to God her redemer that tooke her out of the iawes of death to be a peculiar a deare and beloued people aboue all the nations of the earth vnto him He passed that Ladie of all the worlde the Monarchis of Assiria so great in power so excellent in glorie so famous in victories or what other nation or Kingdome so euer was fayre and excellent he passed by them all to take vnto him out of Egypt straungers seruauntes and slaues of Pharao vpon whom he woulde showe his loue and mercies Therefore let them and vs together with them magnifie the Lorde of heauen and earth the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob whose trueth remayneth for euer and praye that as to them he gaue suche benefites to serue him to keepe his statutes and obserue his lawes as Dauid sayth making this the ende of these wonders and benefites so the power of his workes which he hath also shewed towardes vs in infinite and innumerable benefites may worke an excellent kind of seruice in the which the power and the excellencie of the feare and worship of God may appeare to his glorie and our comfort
as we se in tragedies in the hands of furies we haue seene this mace although for a time faire bewtifull with crownes gold in his hande yet now almost burnt out of his hande The fire of the Gospell brake forth first one peece of his mace in Germany then it cracked of this side and then of that side the sea and nowe it cracketh in Fraunce and what is left in his hande but a stumpe of Italie and Spayne which the Lorde for his trueth and promise sake will burne also out of his hande Neither will 〈◊〉 thus leaue But I doubt not but as the other Antichrist of the East the Turke began together with him so he shall end together and hope that when the man of sinne is consumed the Lord wil also take his people out of his hand accomplish the number of the elect In Barbarie Grece and else where And when Lord how long shall thy foes triumphe ouer thee and make a mock of thy sonne Iesus our Sauiour whome we looke and waite for for the destruction of these Tirants that haue lift vp them selues against him and for the refreshing of thy wearye and faintye children Doubt ye not but the Lord numbreth the yeares of their captiuitie of their appoynted time for saluation when our Redemer will come and fulfill all thinges which haue bene spoken and determined by the Lorde of truth Thus may we 〈◊〉 comfort our selues in 〈◊〉 Gods promises which because it were 〈◊〉 to folow I wil rest on this one exāple Which for all other may be a patterne to vs of the truth of god For in this verse is bec●●● offred againe to speake of it The workes of 〈◊〉 hands are truth iudgement c. This second word which the Prophet vsed I haue already said is added to correct our wicked iudgements against God because such so great is our corruption so venimous poysenfull we are of nature that we cōtent not our selues with equal enmities but our sinne breaketh out falleth vpon the iust and great god Therfore the Prophet attributeth this title to the Lords works that they are no lesse righteous iust then they are true sure Now he meaneth in this place that the punishments which he executed for his people vpon the Cananits Egyptians were most righteous iudgements as we haue seene therefore the truth of God in these workes so let vs consider now therin his righteousnes And first for the Egyptians I dispure not of the secret hid causes which are only knowne to the lord Why he set this people the other of Canaan aboue all other nations as it were vpon a stage in whose persons this traged● should be seene which can not be vniustly 〈◊〉 by the Iudge of heauen and earth the 〈◊〉 of all the world as Abraham saith but I will onely remember those manifest re●a●ed reasons by the scripture which were the occasion of al their punishments wher●● we may remember that Egypt most tyrannously cruelly handled this people Knowest thou not oh vnthākful Egypt how to deale with thy patrons and benefactors was the benefite thou haddest by Ioseph forgottē in whose hand was thy life in his wisdome thy glory in whose wil was thy destruction in his pleasure thy shame had ye forgottē the law of nature oh Pharao al thy Senators al the people of the land of Egypt so vncurteously and vngently to handle straungers Came they to be your seruants bōdmen or felows cōpaniōs yet saide Come let vs take counsell against thē Knew you not last of al that they were gods people his heritage his childrē his priests kings whō whosoeuer blessed he had promised he would blesse agayne curse thē that cursed them had not their God threatned smittē euen kings for their fathers sakes Abrahā Isaac euē Pharao Abimelech had not Egipt a singuler benefit aboue all natiōs to be the hosts of thē that were so deare to the Lord Were not they more thē Nilus in her highest deepest inundations profitable to the encrease of the fruites of the land The heate of the sunne the influence of the starres all other benefites that are required for the ryping of their fruites came out of no other heauen then euen this very people For as the Prophet describing the returne of the children of Israell out of Babilon for whom the Lorde would digge fountaynes euen in the wildernes turneth to the serpēts exhorteth them to prayse God that had giuen waters in the wildernes because through the blessing of this people it was also common to them So these serpents tygers of Egypt receiue these blessings of God as by occasion that is for his peoples sake their corne their wine encrease of all things and yet they take counsell to slay some of them and to kepe the rest in perpetuall bondage Iust therefore were these thy iudgementes oh Lord and righteous was all thy counsell agaynst this cruel vnnatural people Tho● turnedst their waters into blood because they were a bloody people thy hand strok● thē with darknes because they were blind and ignorant of the benefites They hande brought botches sores vpon thē because they were full of ve●●n poyson frogges and hee vermin were sent amōgst them because they were a proud generatiō they ●●re depriued of their substance and ornaments because they were gotten by cruelty and extortion their first borne slayne because they were the beginning of their wicked strength the king his hosts drowned in the sea because they were all malicious and obstinate The works therefore of thy hands in this people were iustice iudgement Nowe I will consider the Cananites and declare the Lord my God to haue bin in their destruction also most iust and most righteous This is oftē declared in the prophets when they shew Israel of their Idolatrie diuinations crueltie and such like for they say the lande is full of abhominations as it was in the dayes when the Amorites ●ittits dwelled in it And Ezechiel declaring all their wickednes in two words saying Abrahā was not their father nor Saray their mother but some Amorreā begat thē and some Hittite surely bare thē Whereby the sinne abominatiōs of this people are manifest And if we looke for the lord in his owne person to giue sentēce of thē behold he appoynteth 400. yeres to passe ere the seede of Abrahā should enioy this land because the measure of the sinne of the Amorites was not then full their fruites 〈◊〉 ripe the waters of wickednes not yet o●● their heads but thē very neare ripe though not fitte for the haruest For the mercyfull and gracious God doth so long beare with the wickednes of the world till it reache to the very heauens that his long patience as thapostle teacheth the Romans might driue them to the consideration of it