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A15992 The Song of Songs, which was Salomons metaphrased in English heroiks by way of dialogue. With certayne of the brides ornaments, viz. poeticall essayes vpon a diuine subiect. Whereunto is added a funerall elegie, consecrate to the memorie of that euer honoured Lord, Iohn, late Bishop of London. By R.A. Aylett, Robert, 1583-1655? 1621 (1621) STC 2774; ESTC S104589 110,486 224

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Faiths plerophorie 24 The Subiect of true Faith is a pure heart Her Obiects are Christs sufferings sanctitie Fulfilling of the Law in eu'ry part If these three by true Faith we can apply They are against all ill the remedie These are the Balme a wounded soule can heale And not the Churches store Romes trumperie These onely can to vs our Pardon seale Merits Mens fancies are these Scripture doth reueale 25 Eu'n as three ills inherent be in sin Originall vice Sinne actuall condemnation So Faith three parallel benefits le ts in Whereby effected is Iustification Christ's sufferings pay the price of our damnation His perfectest Obedience satisfies For actuall sinnes th'exquisite Sanctification Of 's humane Nature in vs all destroies Originall sinne This threefold way Faith iustifies 26 He that is able out of stones to raise Vp children vnto Abram He I say Can onely make our hearts melt at the rayes Of his Sunne beames He to a heart of clay Can turne a stony heart And though this may Seeme very hard and strange to flesh and blood Yet he that feeles his heart melt with the ray Of spirituall Grace Faith there doth proue this good By those whose hearts world blinds th●s is not vnderstood 27 Three qualities true Faith accompany Which shee doth vse in eu'ry worke well wrought First shee doth good not for to please Mans eye But for his sake whose blood her dearely bought Next by Gods Law each action word and thought Shee squareth For shee knowes Obedience Then Sacrifice is better by her wrought All to Gods glorie last hath reference To these we guided are by Spirit not by Sense 28 Shee 's swift to heare The holy Sacrament Of Baptisme once The Eucharist oft receaues Releeues the Poore in Prayer diligent In which shee still persists and neuer leaues Lastly shee to some lawfull Calling cleaues To be ●fore God and Man without offence If these faile in her shee herselfe deceaues Shee 's temporary and a false pretence To walke licentiously without Obedience 29 Other Companions are of Faith likewise As grieuous manifold and great tentation With these sound Faith herselfe must exercise These part not from her till soules separation For Satan prosecutes with infestation His hatred to our head continually Vpon his Members to their great vexation Besides Tentations true Faith purge and trie Preparing hearts for Grace by sweet Humilitie 30 These often come of diffident distrust When sight of sinne makes vs faint stagger reele Or when by our vnworthinesse and lust We of this precious Faith a coldnesse feele These for a while our spirituall eyes vp seele So as true inward comfort life and loue As in times past in him we cannot feele Who is our Head and hereby doth vs proue And make vs when we feele his want the more to loue 31 Behold two other Deepes on either hand On right Presumption proud on left Despaire Which like two red-Sea walls of waues doe stand And for the Faithfull a faire way prepare That through the Deepe they may eu'n drie-shod fare But loe the miscreant and presumptuous Wight They drowne in ouer-weening and much care Here God against th' Egyptians seemes to fight Out of the fiery Pillar that to Faith giues light 32 These two are like the Cities of the Plaine Gomorrha proud and Sodom base in lust On which God fire and brimstone downe did raine The first is Pharisaicall ouer-iust The other doth Gods promises distrust But Faith like little Zoar Lot doth saue Though vnbeliefe doe turne his Wife to dust These three be they that seeke Faith to depraue These three so hinder Faith shee nothing right can craue 33 Presumption proud on her owne merits stands Despaire lookes downe on her vile wretchednesse But neuer Gods great goodnesse vnderstands Nor his great power free grace and willingnesse To ease all those whose sinnes doe them oppresse But Infidelitie seekes to entise To Atheisme and all vngodlinesse And make Faith folly seeme to worldly wise Who nought beleeue but Sense and Reason must deuise 34 Despaire to great Goliah I resemble But Faith doth like to little Dauid fare At whom though Saul and all his Host doe tremble Yet all his threats bold Dauid cannot scare He that hath giu'n the Lion and the Beare Into his hands he surely doth beleeue This rayling Philistim will neuer spare But will him vnto like destruction leaue Thus off with his owne sword Dauid his head doth cleaue 35 Oft haue I seene some grieued patient Languishing of some desp'rate disease Not fe●ling it till Natures helps were spent Then thinks his graue onely can's griefe appease Yet if he hopes of skilfull Leech some ease He him intreates to vse his vtmost skill To cure his maladie and sore disease Himselfe referring wholly to his will Till he such Balme apply that cures him of that ill 36 All men are 〈◊〉 of the disease of sinne Which till 't is past mans cure they not perceaue But when of helpe they to despaire beginne If by true Faith they vnto Christ can cleaue Their soules Physician and vnto him leaue The cure alone of his most precious Blood A plaister they to cure their sore receaue This onely is the Balme can doe them good And not Saints m●nts Pardons Dirges woodden Rood 37 Faith to the blind man may be well compar'd That feeles the heate but cannot see the flame Of fire which in the winter is prepar'd The tyra●nizing cold thereof to tame Faith Hope are like two Men one blind one lame Blind Hope weake Faith on shoulders doth sustaine Faith Hope directs her steps aright to frame Both labour top of Zions mount to gaine And both by mutuall aide their wished end attaine 38 Our hearts are like vnto the parched Land That three yeares drought endur'd in Ahabs dayes Faith like the Cloud is little as mans hand That in the end great stormes and wind doth raise And many showers abundantly displayes Loe then the Land that earst was drie and waste Abundantly her fruit and grasse repayes So Faith though small at first yet at her last Growes wondrous great poures down heau'nly showres ful fast 39 Faith is like to a graine of Mustard seede Which of all graines at sowing time is least But growes so high that Birds therein may breede Yea Fowles of th' aire therein doe make their nest Shee 's like an O●en plant that winds infest Which more 't is shak'd rootes faster in the ground So more tentations haue true Faith opprest Shee stands more resolute secure and sound And as her rootes hold fast her leaues and fruit abound 40 We are on earth like Wind-mills all whose grist Are workes of Pietie and Charitie Our Faith like Sailes which if the wind be whist And aire calme doe stand vnprofitably But when tentations rise shee instantly Swayes all the inward powers by her commotion To all the workes of Loue and Pietie Loue to our Neighbours to our God deuotion But if Faiths
of Weights and Measures but one s●ze And Standard which true right to all doth part And Weight and Measure iustly doth comprise Eu'n so in this Worlds Market men deuise One Law to mete out eu'ry Man his due And by that Law the Iudges ought assise All their Decrees and Iudgements iust and trew And not in stead of Lawes to ●roach Opinions new 46 But as in Man we soule and body find So Lawes consist of Letter and true Sense And as the body place giues to the mind So the Lawes Letter with Obedience To the true Sense and Soule of Law consents Who Letter of the Law seeke to maintayne And leaue her mind and meanings excellence Are like them that their bodies good to gayne Both Soule and Body hazard to eternall payne 47 Some Painters Iustice without eyes describe That shee might know no Man in doing right Some without hands that shee may take no Bribe Some without pockets that may gifts inuite For gifts of wisest men doe blind the sight And words eu'n of the Righteous doe peruert Making them wrest the Law and take delight In base rewards which doe corrupt the Heart Which being once amisse doth all the rest diuert 48 But vaine it is to thinke by likelinesse Of earthly things to type out things Diuine Since none her heau'nly Nature can expresse But who the God-head can aright define O let the Sunne of Righteousnesse then shine Vpon my blinded heart with his bright rayes Which may direct my Muse aright to line And leuell out this heau'nly Ladies wayes That searching I may learne and follow Right all wayes 49 No earthly subiect now my Muse contaynes Behold of Righteousnesse Diuine I sing That Righteous Iudge that searcheth Heart and Reynes Most gracious God and yet most righteous King Who on his owne deare righteous Sonne did bring The bitter cup of wrath and indignation Due to Mankind for their dire trespassing Thus satisfying Iustice by his Passion And shewing wondrous Loue in working Mans saluation 50 This Righteousnesse in vs may be defin'd A sanctifying holy Qualitie By Gods owne Spirit vpon our Hearts consign'd To shew to Gods Law true conformitie And square our words and actions all thereby Loe thus we giue to euery one their due To God and Man for by Gods Law we trie And vnderstand what to them both is due So that conformitie thereto is Iustice true 51 To this most perfect Iustice can attayne None but our Head surnamed THAT IVST ON● Indeed God made Man righteous and againe In Heau'n we iust and perfect shall become But amongst Men so righteous there are none Yet reade we of a two-fold Vprightnesse One Legall which the Law to vs hath showne The other which the Gospell doth expresse Where Grace ac●epts our will by Faith for Righteousnesse 52 The Law requires perfect Obedience Eu'n in that Man that seekes to liue thereby The Gospell Faith and a good Conscience By Faith Christs Righteousnesse especially Imputed is which rightly we apply That of the Conscience doth the whole Man frame Willing in all things to liue honestly This of Gods Spirit a powerfull worke I name And none but the regenerate obtayne the same 53 For Righteousnesse that thus from Faith doth runne Let me referre you to that Meditation Which I of Faith haue formerly begunne Whereas Christs Merits ours by Imputation Stand before God for our Iustification And thus Christ is of the whole Law the end For what the Law exacts for our Saluation Christ hath fulfilled for vs as a Friend And by the Gospell to Beleeuers doth extend 54 The Righteousnesse of a good Conscience In two things doth consist especially First to abstayne from ill with diligence Next to doe good willing and constantly To doe good and auoid iniquitie Are two essentiall parts of Righteousnesse Except they both concurre they both doe die Loe thus old Za●hary and Elizabesse Were righteous before God and walkt with men blamelesse 55 We Righteousnesse of Faith from Christ receaue That of the Conscience is a worke of Grace The Righteousnesse of Faith will not there cleaue Where Righteousnesse of Conscience hath not place This right of Conscience rightly we embrace When true Repentance working change of mind Doth the old Man of sinne in vs deface With resolute purpose in a holy kind Henceforth to frame our liues as Gods Law hath assign'd 56 If thus the mind be truely altered And change of resolution throughly wrought Then the whole Man is fitly furnished To put Faiths Righteousnesse on as he ought Without true change of mind we soone are brought Like Dogge vnto his vomit to retire By sinne corrupted Nature's easily caught Againe like Sow to wallow in the mire High God doth first this inward Righteousnesse require 57 Thus by true Faith and a good Conscience With true Repentance we our selues doe presse And arme to proofe for sure and firme defence With brest-plate spirituall of Righteousnesse Which gards vs from all mortall sinfulnesse For as the brest-plate hides each vitall part So that no mortall wound can them oppresse Eu'n so this Righteousnesse defends the Heart And Conscience that no mortall sinne can thorough dart 58 Thus strongly arm'd we most assured stand Of our effectuall calling and saluation For as we God most righteous vnderstand So know we that the righteous Generation Are borne of him which brings true exultation Cladding our Names with happy memorie Makes much for true religious confirmation Doth it with Infidels much dignifie Who seeing our good workes our Maker glorifie 59 As are the windings of slie Errours trayne So are the ●y-paths of Iniquitie Yet in two Heads we may them all contayne To Neighbours wrong to God impietie Here I some ouer-iust Ones passe not by Such as must haue all Bowes by their owne bent Who by pretence of Christian libertie Allow nought but what their owne braines inuent Correctors curious of things indifferent 60 Two other Gulfes here I will onely sound One is of Pharisaicall Righteousnesse The other with false Libertines is found Who doe abuse Gods grace to wantonnesse The last Faith onely with their tongue professe But let their conscience wind at libertie The other make great boast of Vprightnesse And Merits trusting to be sau'd thereby Both put asunder those God doth together tie 61 Thus Hymeneus did and Alexander Who first did put away good Conscience And then in Schismes and Heresies did wander Till they made shipwracke of Faiths firme defence Thus some giu'n ouer to a reprobate sense Doe fall to senselesse base Idolatrie Putting in stocks and stones their confidence And in the mysterie of Iniquitie Who boasts himselfe to haue of Heau'n and Hell the Key 62 Not but Christ's immense Coate of Righteousnesse Sufficient is to cloath all that beleeue But we our Faith by good workes must expresse If of his Fulnesse we hope to receaue Yet let Presumption no Man so deceaue The rags of his inherent Righteousnesse With Christs in our Redemption for to weaue