GENESIS.
Chapt. 1
AT first Iehovah with his word,
did make heauen
2 , earth and light:
The
6 firmament, the moone, and
14 starres,
the glistering Sunne so bright.
BY him, the
11 earth was fruitfull made
and euery
31 creature good:
He maketh
26 man like to himselfe,
and doth
29 appoint his food.
Chapt. 2
CReation ended,
2 God then rests,
and Sabbath day
3 ordaines:
Plants Eden
8 , and the fruit
17 forbids,
for feare of endlesse paines:
DVst of the ground, was man
7 made of:
of rib out of his side
The woman
22 : Adam
20
[...]:
wedlocke is
24 sanctifide.
Chapt. 3
EVe by the serpent is deceiued,
they fall most
6 shamefully:
God them
9 arraignes, doth serpent
14 curse,
and putteth enmitie
FOule Serpent
15 twixt and womans seed,
mans
16 punishment's set downe,
Their first
21 cloathing, their
23 casting out,
The Lord at them did frowne.
Chapt. 4
GIuen are to Adam here two sonnes;
Abel by
1 name, and Cain;
Their trade, and their religion see,
and godly
8 Abel slaine.
HEre Caine is
9 curst, first citie
17 built,
two wiues doth Lamech take:
Here
25 Sheth and Enoch both are borne,
to God
26 men prayers make.
Chapt. 5
IN his likenesse,
1 male and female,
God did at
2 first create,
Then Adam in his owne
3 likenesse
his third sonne Sheth begate.
KNow here the pedigree,
1 age and death
of
21 Patriarchs related:
From
3 Adam to the daies of Noe,
how
29 Enoch
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is translated.
Chapt. 6
LOe
2 mariages for beauty made,
which doth Gods wrath procure;
And fearfull flood to
7 drowne the world,
but Noe is
8 safe and sure.
MArke all the
14 order of the Arke,
the
15 fashion, end and
10 frame;
All that the Lord did bid him doe,
iust
22 Noe perform'd the same,
Chapt. 7
NOe
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with his
7 family: and paires,
repaire into the arke:
The floods
17 doe flow: God shuts them
16 in,
O then his iudgements
21 marke.
Chapt. 8
OBserue how
3 waters doe
13 asswage,
on
14 Arrat rests the arke,
The Doue, and
7 Rauens sending forth,
and Noes out-going
11 marke.
PReparing then an Altar, he
doth
26 praise and God adore:
God doth accept his sacrifice:
will curse the earth no more.
Chapt. 9
QVite freed
1 from feare, God blesseth Noe
mans
2 feare; the
3 meat, the
10 bow:
(Which signifies
13 Gods couenant)
by Noe the world doth grow.
REad how Noe doth a Vineyard
20 plant,
in Tent he
21 drunken lies,
He curseth Cham, for
27 Iaphet prayes;
he
26 blesseth Sem, and
28 dies.
Chapt. 10
SEe
1 here of Noe, and of his
2 sonnes
the mighty
6 generations;
Nimrod first
8 Monarch: here beginns,
diuiding of the
32 nations.
Chapt. 11
THe world one language had at first
confusion
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Babel rent.
Marke Shem
10 and Terahs
27 progenie:
to Haran
31 Terah went.
Chapt. 12
VP Abram
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and thy
1 Country leaue;
I will preserue thy life,
Dearth makes
10 him fly, feare makes him faine,
and say shee's not my
19 wife:
A Plague on Pharoh, and his
17 house
the Lord did send that day
For Abrahams wife: the King
19 reproues,
but sends
20 all safe away.
Chapt. 13
BOth
1 Lot
2 and he richly
5 returne,
but discord parts them both;
Lots lot is sinfull
11 Sodomes soile,
to Hebron
18 Abram go'th.
Chapt. 14
COnquered
1 are fiue Kings by foure,
11 Abraham rescues
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Lot,
Melchisedecke
26 receiueth tithes;
Spoiles
22 Abram taketh not.
Chapt. 15
DIuine
1 blessings are promised,
which
4 he beleeues most true,
But first his seed
14 must seruants be,
and
18 then their foe subdue.
EVen by his
6 faith hee's iustified:
God
7 promiseth againe,
And by a figne
13 confirmes the Land,
wherein he should remaine.
Chapt. 16
FOr issue Sara
2 giues her maide,
she
4 Sara doth disdaine,
Afflicted then, she runnes away,
is bid
9 returne againe.
GReiuing
10 full sore, the Angell cheeres,
saith, she's
11 conceiu'd with child,
Who must be called Ishmael,
a fierce man and a wilde.
Chapt. 17
HEre God renewes the couenant;
their names
15 are chang'd, they
16 blest,
Abraham here
23 is
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circumcised
with Ishmael and the
25 rest.
Chapt. 18
IN louing sort good
1 Abraham,
three Angells entertaines,
At Gods strange promise,
6 Sara laughes
and is checkt for her paines.
KNowing that Abraham his
19 would teach,
the Lord doth here
17 declare
The fall of Sodom; Abraham
23 praies,
for ten iust men to spare.
Chapt. 19
LOt doth two
1 Angells entertaine;
the Sodomites
11 strucke blinde,
Lots
14 sonnes doe mocke, he Zoar craues,
where he doth safetie finde.
MAke hast (saith
15 th'Angell)
17 saue thy life,
marke Sodoms
24 fiery slaughters:
Lots wife a pillar
26 of salt is made,
he
33 drunke, defiles his daughters.
Chapt. 20
NOw Abraham denies his wife:
shee's taken by the King:
The Lord
3 reproues him in a dreame
full sore for that same thing.
OF him , both man and wife's
26 reprou'd;
he Sara doth
14 restore:
The King then
17 and his house are heal'd
when Abram
18 prayd therefore.
Chapt. 21
PAssing great ioy
6 good Sara hath,
for
2 Isaac
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[...]0
[...]0
newly borne.
Hee's
4 circumcised: wyld Ishmael,
at him doth scoffe and scorne.
QVite out of doores Hagar and he,
are cast, and sit forelorne:
Twixt
22 Abraham and Abimelech
a League of peace is sworne.
Chapt. 22
REad
1 here how Abraham tempted is
his Isaac
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deare to kill,
His faith, and how he
3 ready is
to execute Gods will.
STayd is his hand by Gods Angell;
the Ramme
1
[...] for him is slaine,
The place is nam'd
14 : marke Nahors
22 race,
and Abraham blest againe.
Chapt. 23
THe mournings
2 marke which Abraham makes
for death of Sara
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old:
Machpelah
3 bought to
10 burie in,
which Ephron
16 to him sold.
Chapt. 24
VNt'
1 Abram here his seruant sweares,
he
12 prayes: a signe doth
14 craue;
Rebecka
15 meets:
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fulfills the
18 signe,
and iewels doth
22 receiue.
ANd then she
23 shewes her kindred deare,
she home
25 doth him inuite,
Hee's
28 entertain'd; he blesseth
26 God;
and message doth recite.
BOth Laban then and Bethuel
his message well
5
[...] approues;
Rebecca giues
58 consent to goe
Isaac her
62 meets, and loues.
Chapt. 25
CHildren are
2 borne to Abraham:
his goods diuided be:
His
7 age, his death, his
9 buriall;
and Ishm'els
12 pedigree.
DEclared is his
17 age, and death,
Rebecca
21 barren liues:
But Isaac
21 praies, and she conceiues,
two children in her
22 striues.
ESau and Iacob being
24 borne,
their difference
27 Moses tells,
The birthright
30 Esau to Iacob.
for meat
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prophanely sells.
Chapt. 26
FOrc'd by a
1 famine Isaac is
to Gerar for to goe,
His wife he to the King
7 denyes,
hee's blam'd for doing so.
GOd both instructs, and
2 blesseth him,
in wealth he
12 growes and thriues,
He diggeth
18 wells: the King
23 compacts;
obserue
32 here Esaus wiues.
Chapt. 27
HE send; his
3 sonne for Venison;
by
5 mother Iacob's taught,
And of his father then is blest
while Esau ven'son sought
ISaac doth feare and
33 tremble much
when Esau Ven'son brings
Too late;
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yet by his
34 earnestnesse
hee's blest with earthly things.
KIndled full sore is Esaus
41 wrath
against his brother deare,
His mother
42 disappoints his rage,
and bids him
43 flye for feare.
Chapt. 28
L'Oe Isaac blesseth Iacob first
and sends him then away,
To Padan Aram
2 for a wife,
with Laban there to stay.
MArke
9 Esaus wife, and Iacobs
10 ladder;
he stone of Bethel
18 takes
And sets it vp, anoints
18 with oyle,
a
20 vow to God he makes.
Chapt. 29
NOW
1 Iacob comes to Harans well:
doth
11 Rahel kisse, and weepe:
Laban doth entertaine
13 him well,
hee's set to keepe his sheepe.
OF him, for seuen yeares
18 seruice, he
for wife doth Rahel craue,
But Laban full
23 deceitfully,
in her stead
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Lea gaue.
PAtiently for Rahel, he
againe
30 will seuen yeares serue.
Shee's
31 barren: but Leah
32 conceiues
35 foure
34 Patriarchs
35 obserue.
Chapt. 30
QVite out of heart (for
1 barrennesse)
here Rahel
3 giues her maide:
So Leah, who her husband
14 buyes:
good Iacob
27 here is staid.
RAhel conceiues, and Ioseph beares:
Iacob would be releas'd:
By pollicie of straked rods,
his flocks are much increas'd.
Chapt. 31
SEcretly, and
1 vpon mislike,
(the Lord commanding so)
Iacob departing
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with his
17 wiues,
doth from that Country goe.
THen Rahel steales her
19 fathers gods,
her father followes
22 after:
Complaining of the wrong
26 sustain'd
both by his sonne and daughter.
VPon the Idolls
24 Rahel sits,
thereby the same to hide:
Iacob
36 complaines: they
43 couenant both,
in friendship to abide.
Chapt. 32
AT Ma
[...]h
[...]nim Iacob
2 Angells see's:
to Esau he
3 doth send;
Whom he doth
6 feare: he prayes to God
that he would him defend.
BY seruants he a
13 present send
[...]:
by prayer
24 he assaults,
And with an
24 Angell wrasteleth,
preuailes
25 , and after
31 haults.
COmming
4 together both doe kisse,
weepe, Esau gifts
11 doth take,
Doth vse him kindly
9 , home
16 returnes
and doth kinde offers make.
Chapt. 33
DEparting he, to
17 Succoth comes,
at Shalem
19 buyes a field
Of Hamois
19 children, where he doth
to God
2
[...] an Altar build.
Chapt. 34
ENtising Sechem
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doth defloure
good
2 Iacobs gadding daughter.
They yeeld to circumcision
then comes
26 a fearfull slaughter.
FOr Simeon and Leui both,
(when
25 people were full sore)
Doe kill them
25 all, their City
27 spoile
and Iacob grieues
30 therefore.
Chapt. 35
GOd sendeth
1 Iacob to Bethel:
his house he
2 purifies
From Idols all,
2 an Altar
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builds,
and then nurse
8 Deb'ra dies.
HEe's bless'd of God,
10 call'd Israel:
in trauell Rahel dyes:
The sonnes of
23 Iacob: Isaacs
29 death:
Ruben with Bilhah
22 lyes.
Chapt. 36
INto the Country, from
6 Iacob,
Esau to goe intends:
With wiues, and sonnes:
24 mules are first found:
what Dukes from him
15 descends.
Chapt. 37
KInde Ioseph deadly hated is,
for two
11 dreames which he had,
And for
2 complaints of brothers
8 made,
they are exceeding mad.
LEt vs this
20 dreamer stay (say they)
(when father had him
13 sent,
To visit them) to murther him,
they all saue
30 Ruben meant.
MAliciously
26 to Ismalites
they then
36 good Ioseph sell:
Potiphar buyes him;
36 bloody coat
sore grieues old Israel.
Chapt. 38
NOw Iud
[...]h doth
3 three sonnes beget,
call'd
4 Shela,
5 On
[...]n, Er,
Obserue here
8 Onans filthy fact,
Er takes to
6 wife Thamar.
Chapt. 38
OF Iuda
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she
18 conceiues two sonnes,
Zara' and
3
[...] Phares by name:
He wisht her
24 burnt;
25 she sends her pledge;
he cleares her
26 to his shame.
Chapt. 39
POtipher, Ioseph
3 doth aduance:
his Mistris tempts
7 to sinne:
He flat
8 denyes; she falsly lyes;
and shamelesse doth beginne,
QVite void of grace him to accuse
(that she herselfe
14 might cleare)
She is beleeu'd, hees
19 cast
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in ward,
but God is with him there.
Chapt. 40
REad
1 how the Buttler and Baker
by Phar'
3 impris'ned are;
How Ioseph hath the
4 charge of them,
how dreames expounded were.
SAd Butler be not troubled,
thou happy
13 man shalt be:
Haue me
14 in mind, O Baker marke,
the Gallowes
29 groanes for thee.
THus were their dreames interpreted,
and thus
20 they came to passe,
The Buttler
23 Ioseph quite forgate,
and most vnthankfull was.
Chapt. 41
VNto the
24 King is Ioseph brought
his fearfull dreames to tell;
The Butler had him told that he
therein did farre excell.
ALl wizards
8 failing in their skill,
them Ioseph doth
25 expound,
And giues the King
33 most graue aduice,
and counsell wise and sound.
BY Pharoh
4
[...] Ioseph is
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aduanc't
two sonnes
50 begetteth he
Manasseth and
52 Ephraim by name;
great dearth begins
54 to be.
Chapt. 42
COrne for to buy in
3 Egypt land,
his ten sonnes
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Iacob sent,
For spies they
17 are imprisoned,
and by their
7 brother shent.
DOe this (saith Ioseph)
8 and you shall
at liberty be set.
Your brother Ben: (you told me of)
goe all saue one and fet.
Euen then they
21 haue remorse in heart
and say one to another
God plagues vs iustly
22 for our sinne,
in selling of our brother.
FOr pledge, is Simeon
24 kept in ward
with corne they home
25 doe goe,
Tell all to
29 Iacob who will stay
his
20 Ben: he loues him so.
Chapt. 43
GOe buy some
2 food (good Iacob saith)
the sonnes they
3 durst not goe
Except he would send
5 Beniamin,
for Ioseph charg'd them so.
HE very loth yet
11 sends his sonne,
they Presents bring
15 to'th Court
Ioseph
25 confers, his brother
29 calls,
and feasts in
22 wondrous sort.
Chapt. 44
IOseph (to stay his
1 brethren still)
commands that coyne with corne,
Should both in their sackes mouth be put,
with them backe to be borne.
KNow that in sacke of
2 yongest sonne
was Iosephs cup conuay'd;
Which, found, they
12 feare the fathers pledge,
for Ben: would
3 now be stayd.
Chapt. 45
LOe now doth Ioseph make himselfe
knowne to his brethren deare,
Them comforts in Gods
5 prouidence,
and bids them not to feare.
MY father Iacob fetch (quoth he)
and bid him
9 come to me,
For him, and his, I will prouide:
in Goshen
10 dwell shall he.
NOw when the King
26 of this did heare,
he is full well content,
And bids all needfull furniture
for iourney should be sent.
OH how they kisse, and weepe
24 for
25 ioy,
he bids them all
24 agree:
When Iacob heares
27 this ioyfull newes,
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a ioyfull man
8 is he.
Chapt. 46
PAssing great comfort
3 from the Lord
he at
3 Beersheba
4 finds,
Thence he and his
5 to Egypt goe
with all things to their
6 minds.
QVietly
2 all this number goes,
Ioseph doth
28 Iacob meet,
He tells his brethren
31 what to say
when Pharo shall them greet.
Chapt. 47
REporting that his friends were come,
fiue brethren
2 he presents,
With his father
7 before the King,
who giues them
11 their contents.
SEe here how Ioseph
23 gets the coine,
the
16 cattell, and the
18 land,
All that the Egyptians did possesse,
into King Pharaos hand.
THe Priests land was
22 not bought nor sold:
old Iacobs age
28 is here,
To bury him with
19 forefathers,
he maketh
An. Mundi 2255.
Ioseph sweare.
Chapt. 48
VNto his (father being sicke)
he comes and sons doth bring:
Old Iacob lifteth
2 vp himselfe
to giue them his blessing.
ALmighty God appear'd (quoth he)
to me
2 in Canaan land:
And said, I will thee multiply
and make thy seed
4 as land.
BEhold
5 Manasca
An. Mundi 2280.
and Ephraim
as his owne sonnes he takes,
Of mothers
7 graue, of their
22 returne,
old Iacob mention makes.
Chapt. 49
CAlling his sonnes, in blessing them
he
3 doth
5 particularize
8 ,
He chargeth where
23 to burie him,
and then
33 forthwith he dyes.
Chapt. 50
DEath hauing Iacobs dayes dissolu'd,
here read good
1 Ioseph's praise,
Who weepes, and bids
2 he should be balm'd,
they mourne full forty dayes.
EXceeding willing Pharaoh is,
that Ioseph's house should goe,
To bury Iacob (as he sware)
with many Elders moe.
FOrgiuenesse Ioseph's brethren
18 craue,
he grants them their
19 request:
He will maintaine
29 both them and theirs
in quiet peace and
22 rest.
GReat age
22 he liu'd, and of his sonnes
he saw three
2
[...] generations.
He makes them
25 sweare
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his bones to beare,
and foretells their translations.
II CHRONICLES.
Chapt. 1
AT Gibeon king
3 Solomon
doth offer solemnly:
For asking wisdome
7 he is blest
of God
12 exceedingly.
BOth wisedome, honor, wealth and strength
he doth on him bestow;
[...]ike him in dignity
12 was none,
that
15 euer liu'd below.
Chapt.
[...]
COme see the
2 multitude of men,
that he doth
17 here prouide
[...]o build the Temple, some
18 to worke,
and some the worke to guide.
DIspatcht is an Ambassador
to Hiram king of Tyre,
[...]r workmen and prouision,
such as he did desire.
EVen
15 wood and workmen
16 both he grants,
one doth in kill
13 exceed,
[...]e praiseth God that
12 such a sonne
King Dauid did succeed.
Chapt.
[...]
FVlly when all mate
[...]ial
[...]
were gathered in
1 great store,
[...]he Temple lie begins to build,
in Ornans
2 threshing floore.
GOd taught
1 him how and what to doe,
then Solomon
2 begins
[...]o make, and guild
4 porch, beames
7 and house,
with the two
10 Cherubins.
HEe made
15 two pillars, and the
14 vaile,
of precious stuffe and rare;
[...]n right and left side
17 of the house
the pillars reared are.
Chapt. 4
IN like manner Solomon makes
Gods
1 altar all of brasse;
The molten Sea
2 on twelue oxen,
which doth in beauty passe.
KNow here
6 ten lauers,
7 Candlesticks,
and
8 tables all are made
[...]
Courts, instruments
9 of gold and brasse,
euen all as
19 God had said.
Chapt. 5
LOrds house and worke thus finished,
King Solomon did bring
The dedicated treasures all
which Dauid that good King
MOst worthily had put apart,
for seruice
1 of the Lord,
Into his house: and Israel
euen all with one accord,
NOw solemnly bring in the Arke,
into his holy place
They praising God, he
11 shewes to them
a sure signe of his grace.
Chapt. 6
O Marke how all the people here
by Solomon
1 are blest;
And how he praiseth God
4 who built
that house wherein
6 to rest.
PRayer which Solomon did make,
vpon the brasse
12 scoffold.
When as the house was
13 consecrate,
here read thou and behold
Chapt. 7
QVickly then
1 God sends fire from heauen
in token of his grace.
His glory fill'd the house so full
Priest there
2 could haue no place.
REuerently the people then
did bow in
3 humble wise
And worshipt God: then
5 Solomon
did offer sacrifice.
SOlomon hauing kept the feast
of altars dedication;
And Tabernacles, sends all men
to their owne habitation.
THen God appeares to Solomon
by night in heauenly vision;
[...]nd giues him
17 gratious promises,
but all vpon
18 condition.
VNto the
1 Lord, himselfe , his
11 Queene
braue buildings Solomon makes;
[...]nd of those Gentiles which were left,
he tribute money takes.
AS for the Isralites he made
them rulers
10 euery one:
[...] Queene from
11 Salem to her house,
he causeth to be gone.
BVrnt
[...]off
[...]ings, and sacrifice,
he yearely offe
[...]ed;
[...]hew moones, Sabbaths, solemne feasts,
as God had ordered.
CHarg'd were the Priests and Leui
[...]e
[...] all,
to serue at any hand,
[...]ch in his course great store
17 of gold
was fetcht from
18 Oph
[...]
[...]
Chapt.
[...]
DElighting in and wondring at
the wisedome, of this King;
[...]e Queene of She
[...]a brings him gold
and many a precious thing.
EXceeding blest she thought those men
that might with that King liue:
[...]en he to her
[...] she did aske,
or did desire, did g
[...]
[...]Vlly is here set downe his gold▪
his throne
17 of Iuory:
targets, vessls
0 , and the gif
[...]
which Kings
14 brought
[...]arre and nye.
GReat store
28 of horses, chario
[...]s,
great tributes
28
[...]e he hath:
reigned forty yeares as King▪
[...]nd then is call'd by death.
Chapt. 10
HEre Rehoboam rul'd by
6 youths
the peoples
11 suite denies:
Ten tribes
16 reuolt,
18 Hadoram ston'd,
the King in
18 danger flies.
Chapt. 11
ISrael Rehoboam
1 would subdue,
and doth an army raise:
Shemaiah
2 doth forbid, and bids
him make no such assayes.
KIngdome with sorts
5 he strengtheneth,
and great
11 prouision makes:
Good Priests and Leuites
15 (fearing God)
Ieroboam
14 quite forsakes.
LEwd Priests he made for
15 calues, and deuill
[...]
of men of most disgrace:
Good people
16 went and serued God
at Salem three yeares space.
MAde strong so
17 long is Iudah land,
and Rehoboam King:
His many
18 wiues, and children
1
[...] marke,
and their
23 wise dispersing.
Chapt. 12
NOw Reboam
1 the Lord forsakes,
his lawes he did transgresse;
God therefore stirres vp Shishak King,
his land for to oppresse.
OF former sinne when they were told,
and
6 thereof did repent;
God saued King and
9 Princes all
from deadly punishment
8 .
PRoud Shishak yet did beare
9 away
the spoile and treasure all:
Reboam reigned
13 seuenteene yeares,
then death for
7 him doth call.
Chapt. 13
QVickly Abijah
1 then succeeds,
and maketh open
2 warre
Against Ieroboam wicked King
and doth the
4 cause declare.
REligiously he worshipping
and seruing
10 God aright,
Doth vanquish
16 Ieroboams hoast,
and puts them
17 all to flight.
SEe here Abijahs
21 fourteene wiues,
his two and twenty sonnes,
His sixteene daughters; other acts
by Iddo are set downe.
Chapt. 14
THen good king Asa
1 doth succeed,
Idolatry
3 destroyes,
And all false
5 worships: God then gaue
him peace and restfull dayes.
VAlorous armies Asa had,
he fortifies the land:
Zera the
9 Ethiopian King,
comes with a mightie band,
ASsaulting him; he then to God
for helpe and ayde
11 doth call:
He
12 heares: and Asa kills and spoyes
the Ethiopians
13 all.
Chapt. 15
BY Prophesie
1 of Azarie,
Iudah with one
9 accord;
And most of men of Israel,
make
12 couenant with the Lord.
COuragio
[...]sly King
8 Asa spoild
all Idols here and there;
His mother (an
16 Idolatresse
though Queene) he did not spare.
DEdicate and holy things
into Gods
18 house he beares;
And then enioyeth peace and rest
full fiue and thirty yeares.
Chapt. 16
ENtering then
3 into a league,
(for feare of Baash king)
With Benadad, good Hanani
reproues
8 him for that thing.
FRom building Rama (by this meanes)
proud
5 Baash then is stayd:
King Asa turnes him from that worke
[...]o by Syrians
4 helpe and aid.
GOod Hanani is put in
10 ward
for speaking that was meet:
And Asa is exceedingly
tormented in his
12 fret.
HE in his paine sought not to God,
but vnto Physickes aid:
His acts are in
11 the Chronicles,
he
3 dyes, is
14 buried.
Chapt. 17
IEhosaphat
1 doth him succeed,
he ruleth
3 passing well,
In honour and
4 prosperity,
he others did excell.
KIng Iosaphat
7 doth Leuites send,
and Princes all abroad,
All Iudah's people
8 for to teach
how they should serue the Lord.
LIft vp his heart was
6 to the Lord,
he doth abolish quite
High
6 places, groues and Idols all,
out of his peoples sight.
MVch terrified
10 are his foes.
the Lord made them affraid,
Some bring him
11 gifts, and presents in
and some him tribute paide.
NOte here his
12 greatnesse, and his might,
his Captaines
14 stout and strong:
His
12 castles, cities,
17 armies great,
to fence him from all wrong.
Chapt. 18
OBserue Iohosaphat there is ioynd
with Ahab neare in kinne:
Is easily
3 induc'd and drawne
to ioyne with him in sinne.
PErswaded were they both to goe
(by Prophets
4 false seduction)
To fight with Ramath Gilead,
to Ahabs owne
33 destruction.
QVarrelling
7 with good
17 Michai
who spake the thing
16 was right;
They imprison
20 him, and Iosaphat
did hardly scape by flight.
Chapt. 19
REprou'd he was by good Iehu
for his
2 loue, helpe, and aide
To Ahab lent, whom God did hate,
because he disobayd.
SOone after king Iehosaphat,
doth shew his care and paine,
Both in
8 Gods house, and
5 Common-wealth,
good rulers to ordaine.
THe godly good instructions,
which (reading) thou maist find,
To Iudges
5 , Priests and
8 Leuites giuen,
imprint them in thy mind.
Chapt. 20
VNto the
1 Lord Iehosaphat
in feare
5 proclaimes a fast:
And prayes
12 that in their great distresse,
to helpe he would make
1
[...] hast.
ATtend vnto the prophesie,
here called
14 Iazaels:
The ioyfull newes from God which he.
to king and people tels.
BEhold the people
20 then arose,
went forth with one accord.
King them
2
[...] exhorts and fingers sets
to praise, and land the Lord.
COme
22 see the wondrous ouerthrow
of each selfe murthering foe;
And how when they had
20 praised God,
in triumph home they goe.
DOing the will and
1 worke of God,
this King
32 did prosper well:
But God was angry when
35 he ioyn'd
with King of Israel
EVen Ahazia (wicked king)
in their shipping
36 conuoy,
(As Prophet Elieser said)
God did their shippes destroy.
Chapt. 21
FIerce bloody Ioram
1 then succeeds,
six brothers he doth slay:
He raigned wickedly: Edom
and Libna
8 fall away.
GReat plagues, Eliahs prophecies
(in writing sent this king)
Declare; which for
14 his wickednesse,
the Lord on him would bring.
HEre Philistines oppresse him sore,
and the Arabians
16 all;
Marke his incurable disease,
his guts
18 him deadly gall.
IN this distresse he ends his dayes,
an
[...] dyes in great disgrace,
Among the other godly kings,
he had no buriall place.
Chapt. 22
KIng Abaziah
1 then his sonne
Iehoram doth
2 succeed,
As in his throne
3 so in his sinne,
as bad in word and deed.
LEwdly with Ioram Ahabs sonne
he doth
5 confederate,
To fight with Hazel Syriahs king,
whom they did deadly hate.
MArke how Ahazi
6 goes to see
Iehoram wounded sore,
God is displeas'd; and by Iehu
Ahazi's slaine therefore.
NOw doth his mother Athali
destroy the
10 royall seed,
Euen all saue Ioash, hid
11 by's Aunt,
and doth her
12 sonne succeed,
Chapt. 23
OBserue Iehoiadas
1 great care
in ordering
2 all things right:
Yong Ioash then
11 he maketh King,
in all the peoples fight.
PVt then to
12 death is Athali,
and Mattan
7 Priest of Baal;
They vow to worship
16 God aright,
they breake downe Altars all.
Chapt. 24
QVietly all the high-Priests dayes,
and well did
2 Ioash reigne,
He makes the Temple
4 be repair'd,
but after
17 falls amaine.
REad here the death
15 of Ioiada,
(who liued many dayes)
The honor of his funerall,
his sonne (the Priest) he staies.
SPoyl'd then is
23 he of Syrians,
and of his
25 seruants slaine;
His sonne Amazia succeeds,
and in his
27 roome doth reigne.
Chapt. 25
THose traitors that his
4 father slew,
he put to deadly paine;
ANd when
2 he first came to the Crowne,
religiously did reigne.
BVt yet not with
2 a perfect heart,
an Armie of Isralites
He for an
6 hundred talents hires
against the Edomites.
COnuented; he dismisseth them,
at the good Prophets word;
His talents
9 lost, the Edomites
are thousands put to th' sword.
DIsmissed Isralites are vex'd,
and greatly discontent.
As they returne they kill and spoyle,
the Cities as they went.
EXceeding proud is Amazi
of his great
14 victorie;
And with the gods of Edomites
commits Idolatry.
FOr Prophets admonitions,
he careth nought
15 at all,
Ioash he doth
17 prouoke to warre,
which was his vtter fall.
GOd cast him off, when
16 he left him,
hi
[...] death they doe conspire:
He fled to Lachish, there is slaine,
a due deserued hire.
Chapt. 26
HEe yong Vzziah
1 is made king,
his father he succeed
[...]
A while he ruleth very
4 well,
and prospers
5 in his deeds.
IN time he waxed
16 wondrous proud,
and did not
9 serue God right,
But playes the Priest
16 , and after liues
a Leper
21 out of sight.
Chapt. 27
KIng Iothan then (Vzziah's sonne)
raignes in his fathers stead,
Who ruling
1 well was blest of God,
and glorious
7 in his deeds.
LOe how he fights with th' Ammonites,
their wheat
5 and talents takes;
Prepar'd his wayes
6 before the Lord,
a prosperous end then makes.
Chapt. 28
MOst wickedly
1 King Ahaz reignes
the Syrians
5 vex him sore:
He did forsake
6 his fathers God,
and Iuda is plagu'd therefore.
NOw by the Isra'lites, they all
are put to captiues
8 paine;
But Prophet Obed giues
9 aduice
they should goe home againe.
OF the Assyrians Ahaz seekes
for succour
16 and for aide:
But though
21 he brib'd th' Assyrian King,
of helpe he him denide.
PRest and distrest
22 he tresp
[...]st more,
in foule
23 Idolatrous deeds:
He dying,
26 Hezekiah then,
his
27 godly sonne succeeds.
Chapt. 29
QVickly this good
3 King doth repaire
Gods house, and doth restore
The pure and
4 true religion,
as Dauid
5 did before.
REmouing all Idolatry;
he bids the Leuites all
To sanctifie themselues: which
12 done,
they clense
16 Gods houses all.
SEe here the solemne
21 sacrifice,
he offers of fat beasts:
His
77 ioyfull praise, and of Leuites,
more forward
34 are then Priests.
THis note, that
25 all the instruments,
that Hezekia King,
Or Dauid into Gods owne house,
at any time did bring,
VNto Gods worship,
25 were not brought
of their owne minde and will,
But as the Lord by his Prophets,
charg'd
6 and commanded still.
Chapt. 30
A Passouer the King proclaimes
throughout
1 all Iudah land:
All Israel, Ephraim, Manasseh
thereof doe vnderstand.
BVt many
10 mock'd, and
11 many came,
at Salem it was kept
The second moneth, when altars all
the men away had swept.
COnuented all, they
21 fourteene dayes
doe keepe this solemne feast;
And then the people by the Priests
and Leuites all are blest.
Chapt. 31
DEstroy'd is all Idolatry,
the people take great paine,
That Altars, pillars
1 pictures, groues,
should none at all remaine.
EAch Priest and Leuite King appoints
vnto their
3 courses graue:
And both what worke and maintenance
each one
4 of them should haue.
FVll forward are the people all,
in offering to the Lord:
To bring the tithes of oxe and sheepe
they willingly
6 accord:
GOod Ezekiah doth appoint
in euery
11 coast and border,
Officers with charge
12 to see
all things kept in due order.
HE in the seruice of his God
did
20 walke without all blame:
He sought the Lord with all his heart,
and prospered for
28 the same.
Chapt. 32
INuaded by
1 Senacherib,
(who thinkes the same to winne)
Is Iuda: then to fortifie
Hez
[...]kiah
2 doth beginne.
KIngly incouragements
7 he giuer,
vnto his people all;
Tells them that by the
8 power of God
Senacherib should fall.
LEtters are sent, and messages,
full fraught
9 with blasphemies,
Against the which King
20 Hezeki
and Prophet Esay prayes.
MArke how an Angel then destroyes
the whole Assyrians hoast,
By his owne sonnes that king is
21 slaine,
that did so brag and boast.
NOw Hezekiah
24 falleth sicke,
and prayeth feruently;
He then obtaines of God
24 a signe
of his recouery.
OBserue how then he
25 waxed proud,
and God did bring him low:
His treasures to
31 Ambassadors,
he foolishly did show.
PAssing great were his wealth and workes,
God grac'd
32 him for his deeds;
He dyes, and his sonne
33 Manassen,
in kingly th
[...]one s
[...]ceedes.
Chapt. 33
QVickly this wicked king sets vp
Idolatry
3 againe;
He would not be admonished,
but wickedly
2 doth reigne.
ROoting out all Religion,
hee's
11 had to Babylon,
And is releas'd
12 when he to God
made supplication.
STrange worships then he
15 banished,
and all Idolatry:
His acts, and prayer
18 made to God,
the Seers
19 testifie.
THen dyes
20 Manasseh, and Ammon
his wicked sonne doth
22 reigne
Two yeares, he did
21 displease the Lord,
then by his
24 men was slaine.
VIle murtherers
24 the people stew,
and then in Ammons stead
His sonne Iosiah (eight yeares old)
doth happily
25 succeed.
Chapt. 34
A Godly King Iosiah
2 was
reign'd thirty yeares and one,
He quite
5 destroy'd Idolatry
false worships he left
5 none.
BReaking all Baals altars
4 downe,
he taketh order then,
That Gods house
8 should be well repair'd
by godly
9 faithfull men.
CVnni
[...]gest workmen are sought out,
Hilkiah finds
14 Gods booke;
Shaphan did
16 beare it to the King,
that he therein might looke.
DEferring not, Iosiah
20 sends
to Hulda
22 to enquire
And certifie him what she knew
to be the Lords desire.
EVill she prophesieth of,
and dolefull desolation,
Should fall
24 vpon Ierusalem
for their
2
[...] abomination.
FOr that, the King did rend his cloathes,
with melting
27 heart and sad.
From all these plagues (during his life)
he free deliuerance
8 had.
GOds law is read by kings
29 command
before the people all:
They couenant
32 to serue the Lord,
and on him still to call.
Chapt. 35
HEe keepes a
1 solemne Passeouer;
doth charge
4 to serue the Lord,
Whereto the Priests and Leuites all
doe
8 chearfully accord,
IN willing manner Princes, Priests,
and
9 people offer all.
He Pharoh Necho did prouoke,
which was his fatall fall.
Kiss'd at
23 Megiddo was this king,
(a king of commendation)
For
24 whom the men of Iuda make
most grieuous lamentation.
Chapt. 36
LOe now Ieho thaz
2 succeeds
(depos'd by Pharoh king:)
Hee's cari'd into Egypt land,
then reignes Iehoiakim.
MOneths iust
5 eleuen, and then is brought
fast bound to
6 Babylon:
Iehoiakim his sonne succeeds,
an sits
8 vpon the throne.
NOte his short reigne; three
9 months, ten dayes,
his ruling was starke nought:
And therefore he
10 with vessels all
to Babylon was brought.
OBserue bad Zedekiahs
11 reigne,
after his brothers guise,
To God he would not
12 turne: but did
his Prophets all despise.
PErfidiously he did rebell
against proud Babells king:
He and his people
15 mock at them
that did Gods message bring.
QVickly for this Ierusalem,
and all therein
17 they burne:
The people captiue all are kept,
till Cyrus said Returne.
IOB.
Chapt. 1
AN vpright man, whose name was Iob,
in land of Vr did dwell,
Who for his
1 pious patience,
all other did excell.
BEhold the holy care he bad
of all his children deare:
His holinesse and
5 wond ous wealth
are plainly set downe here.
CVrst Sathan came before the Lord,
when other
6 Angells came:
And there for grosse
1
[...] hypocrisie,
doth Iob
11 accuse and blame.
DIstrest he is (by Gods good leaue)
and rob'd of all his wealth:
Which
15 Sabeans and
17 Chaldeans
did driue away by stealth.
EXceeding losses in his goods
this good man did sustaine;
Yet was it greater griefe to him
when children all were slaine.
FVll patiently he beareth all,
and mourning thus doth say,
Blest be the Lord that hath both giuen,
and taken things away.
Chapt. 2
GOd giueth Sathan leaue againe,
good Iob to tempt and try,
From top to toe with sores and boyles,
he plagues him grieuously.
HIs wife that should haue comforted,
and cheered him in griefe,
Of all his vexers (next the Deuill)
she seemes to be the chiefe.
IN tempting him to blasphemy,
and so his God forsake:
But he reprouing her affirmes
that like a foole she spake.
KNowing and hearing of this euill
which did to Iob befall,
Three friends come see him, but seuen dayes
they spake no words at all.
Chapt. 3
LAmenting and complaining sore,
Iob
2 cry'd, and thus did say,
Curst be the
3 night when I was borne,
and cursed be the
4 day.
MOst dolefull mone be maketh still,
and doth desire to dye:
As
[...] that d
[...] did make
[...]n end
of
[...].
NOw is th
[...] thing vpon
[...],
which I did
[...]
[...]
[...]b he sigh'd before his
[...].
[...] did make
[...].
Chapt. 4
O
[...]
[...]
good Iob d
[...]h h
[...]
[...],
As though
1 to punish vpright men,
the Lord doth still
[...].
PI
[...]d with
[...], he saith that Iob,
[...]
1 ou
[...] of
[...],
QV
[...]ing wh
[...] w
[...] his feare,
and wh
[...] his confidence?
RA
[...]ly he doth reproue him here,
for
[...] of true religion:
[...]ob in the
11 might to strighted fore
with
[...] and dreadfull visions.
SVch as may well bring downe the pride,
of men
14 and Angell all;
And make them in humility
before
1
[...] Iehouah fall.
Chapt. 5
THe difference betweene the good
and godesse
1 wicked traine,
Here Eliphaz the Temanite
doth shew and set forth plaine.
VNto the wicked doth befall,
most fearfull desolation
Which light vpon them all for want
of due consideration.
ATtend vnto the power of God,
in all thy heauinesse;
Bad men he plagues, but still defends
his owne
15 in their distresse.
Chapt. 6
BEwailing
[...] his mis
[...],
here Iob declareth plaine
His griefe feare
[...] for to be
then he could well sustaine.
COmplaine he did not without ca
[...]st,
he wisht his sorrowes weigh'd:
And that his
1 great calamity
in ballance might be layd.
DEath is the thing he wisheth for,
that is his chiefe request;
Therein he comfort hopes to finde,
and therein hopes for rest.
EXceeding sharply hee reproues
his friends that were
14 vnkind,
Because from them more griefe of heart
then comfort he did find.
Chapt. 7
FVull miserable is the life
of euery mortall man,
This Iob declares; and that it is
in length much like a span.
GReat anguish he himselfe indur'd,
both in the dayes and nights.
Tossing
4 himselfe vpon his bed,
and seeing
14 fearfull sights.
HE rather
15 chose to dye then liue,
and did confesse
2
[...] his sinne,
To pardon it he asked God
why he
21 would not beginne?
Chapt. 8
IN sharpe tearmes he is blam'd and checkt,
by Bildad in this place:
As if Iob by his
2 speeches had
Gods iustice much disgrac'd.
KNowing that God doth deale with men
according to their deeds:
Byldad here by
8 antiquity
to proue it true pr
[...]oceeds.
LEarne here the bane of Hypocrites
who perish
13 certainly;
The righteous
20 de aling of the Lord
to Iob he doth apply.
MEnacing him with threatening s,
if that he
22 wicked be:
If iust, he promiseth that he
much
21 happinesse shall see.
Chapt. 9
NOw is the iustice of the Lord,
his wisedome
2 and his power,
Acknowledged by patient Iob
for euer to
5 endure.
ONe onely thing of thousand things
(if God against him take)
And call him
3 to a strict account,
what man can answer make?
PLainly good Iob confutes his friends,
and answers their obiections,
He saith that no man
22 should be iudg'd
by temporall afflictions.
Chapt. 10
QVite voyd of outward comforts all,
his plaints he doth repeat,
And doth expostulate with God,
about his griefe so great.
REstlesse he of his life complaines,
loathing to draw
20 in breath,
Some little ease he craues of God,
before his
21 houre of death.
SEe here how Iob doth plainly say,
that if he sinfull be,
God doth him
13 marke, and will not quit
him from iniquity.
Chapt. 11
THe speech of Iob refelled is
by Zophar
2 in this place:
For iustifying
3 of himselfe,
as worthy no disgrace.
VNto the Maiestie of God,
or to his wisedome rare,
Iob will be counted
5 vile and base,
if he himselfe compare.
ALl words and workes God heares and sees
of man with sinne defil'd:
Who would be wise;
12 though borne at first
like yong asse colt so wilde.
BVt Zophar teacheth that the way
to life and sauing grace,
Is by repentance
13 and true faith,
which he bids Iob imbrace.
Chapt. 12
COnfuted are the arguments
of Zophar which he brought;
Iob proueth
6 by experience,
that they are weake and naught.
DAily experience of these things
which God had fram'd and made,
Did testifie those things
7 vntrue,
which Zophar thought and said.
EVen all the speeches of his friends,
as false he
9 doth refuse;
Of iniury against the Lord
he doth them all accuse.
Chapt. 13
FOrgers of Lyes (he saith) they are,
physitions
4 of no skill:
As ignorant and partiall,
he doth accuse them still.
GOds purpose in afflicting him,
to know, Iob
2
[...] doth intreat;
As also his transgressions,
how many
23 and how great.
HIs trust and confidence in God,
he plainly
14 doth professe;
He prayes that his afflictions
he
21 would make somwhat lesse.
IOb here affirmeth that the Lord
shall be his strong saluation:
And that the
16 Hypocryte shall come
to wofull condemnation.
Chapt. 14
KNowing the shortnesse of mans life,
and death to be
1 most sure:
Gods fauour by intreating here,
Iob labours to
6 procure.
LIfe lost can neuer be recall'd,
this Iob affirmeth plaine;
Yet he (still
14 waiting for his change)
in patience will remaine.
MOst miserable is mans life,
and full of
22 woe and paine;
Yet hope of future happinesse,
doth godly men
14 sustaine.
Chapt. 15
NOw Eliphaz reproueth Iob
of great
7 impiety,
Because he tooke vnto himselfe
wisedome
8 and puritie.
OBserue the curse described, that
on wicked men be fall.
Obserue how
16 Iob is reckoned
as one among them all.
PLainly he proues by tradition,
bad mens
17 vnquietnesse;
And by comparing Gods iustice,
he bids
16 him sinne confesse,
Chapt. 16
QVarrelling friends are sharply checkt
of Iob most worthily,
Because they had
2 most falsly charg'd
him with impiety.
RElating then his misery,
and
8 wofull state again
[...]
His iustice
17 and his vprightnesse,
he boldly doth maintaine.
SHewing that though men did condemne
him of hypocrisie:
Yet God
19 was witnesse of his cause,
his record was on high.
Chapt. 17
THus Iob appeales from men to God,
and though he be opprest
By wretched
9 men; yet on the Lord
he doth relye and rest.
VNto repentance he exhorts
his friends
10 that were vnkind:
He saith he had no hope in life,
death still was in
13 his mind.
ALthough mens cruell dealing may
afright good men a space;
Yet are they not
9 discouraged,
for all their foule disgrace.
Chapt. 18
BIldad of great presumption
good Iob doth here accuse;
Because he
2 did his friends aduise,
contemne, reiect, refuse.
COndemning also (as he thought)
Gods iudgements on him laid,
Which he did beare
4 impatiently,
and was too much dismaid.
DEclared by fit allegories
is wicked mens
5 estate,
To be most fearefull; for the Lord
all wicked men doth hate.
Chapt. 19
ENough he hath of misery,
(Iob saith) to fill the mind
Of those his cruell friends, from whom
he could no c
[...]ort find.
FOr pity, twice he cals and cryes
to those familiar
21 friends,
Reciting
17 many miseries,
whereof he saw no ends.
GReat comfort yet at last he takes,
that he shall rise againe;
And haue
25 eternall life in heauen
void of all griefe and paine.
HE then disswades those friends of his
from their rash censures all:
Lest that the
29 iudgements of the Lord
on them for iudging fall.
Chapt. 20
IN ample manner Zophar here
occasion needs
1 will take
From
3 Iob his words, which toucht him neare,
an other speech to make.
KNowest thou not (saith he to Iob)
that ioy of hypocrites,
And
5 triumphs of vngodly men
are short with their delights?
LEarne how he doth confirme the same,
both by the word of
4 God
And by his iustice, also by
examples
29 of his rod,
Chapt. 21
MVch mou'd
1 is Iob with Zophars words,
and troubled
3 at the same,
And therefore him and other friends
more sharply here doth blame.
NOting vnto them all that he
had iust cause of his
6 griefe;
Sith wicked men did flourish still,
and he found no reliefe.
OBserue how some doe prosper so
that they the Lord despise;
Some other come to wofull ends
in theirs and peoples eyes.
POnder this well, that all must dye,
the best and eke the worst.
Both yong
22 and old, both rich and poore,
both happy men and curst.
QVestionlesse the wicked man
to iudgement is reseru'd,
Where God will plague him
31 for his sinne,
as he hath well deseru'd,
Chapt. 22
REad here how Eliphaz affirmes,
that Iob is
4 plagu'd for sinnes,
To charge him with
5 impiety
he boldly then beginnes.
SHewing that no mans righteousnesse,
extendeth to the
2 Lord,
Mans goodnesse doth not profit him,
nor any
3 gaine afford.
THat Iob deny'd Gods prouidence
this Eliphas
13 here saith,
And that he was
6 vnmercifull,
without all fruits of faith.
VNto repentance sound and true,
he then doth
21 Iob recall,
Assuring him that then from God
should store
28 of blessings fall.
Chapt. 23
ASsured of Gods loue to him,
and grieu'd at heart to heare
The chidings
6 of his churlish friends,
Iob wisheth to appeare
BEfore the Lord to be his iudge,
who though not seene with eyes,
Yet doth he
8 see and well obserue
our thoughts, our words, our wayes.
COnfessing in his misery
that he was
11 innocent:
And that he in the lawes of God,
his time
12 , and life had spent.
DOing what euer he doth please,
all Gods decrees are sure,
Immutable
13 without all change,
and doe for aye endure.
Chapt. 24
EXprest is here the wickednesse,
of sinfull
2 worldly wights:
Iob shewes what curse to them belongs
what
18 iudgements on them lights.
FVll oft they goe vnpunished,
from all
1 afflictions free:
Yet wormes must eate them
20 in the graue,
destroy'd they sure must be.
GOds prouidence doth gouerne all,
both when
12 and how he will:
The wicked and their families,
with plagues he doth fulfill.
Chapt. 25
HEre Bildad reprehendeth Iob,
who, in his miserie,
Did stifly stand, and still maintaine,
his owne
4 integrity.
IN fight of God he saith no man
(when he is truly tryde:)
Can be accounted pure and cleane,
or fully iustified.
KNowne are the starres to be impure
in his most
5 glorious sight;
How much more than, a silly worme,
a wofull
6 wretched wight.
Chapt. 26
LOe here how Iob, doth Bildads speech
reiect, disproue
2 , despise;
And doth confesse Gods
5 mighty power,
most holy, iust, and wise.
MOst infinite each kind of way,
his wayes
7 past finding out;
His wondrous workes
12 proclaime the same,
wrought all the world throughout.
NO helpe therefore brings man to God,
nor no defence at all:
He hath no
2 power, nor no strength
to helpe himselfe withall.
Chapt. 27
OBserue how Iob protests againe
his owne
5 integrity:
The hypocrite is without hope
of all
8 prosperity.
PLainly he doth reproue his friends,
for witnesse
2 God doth call:
That while he breath'd his tongue should speake
no wicked words at all.
QVite rooted out shall bad men be,
both they, and all their race:
All mighty
13 tyrants, and all such
as lacke true faith and grace.
Chapt. 28
REad that a man things naturall
may
1 vnderstand, and know,
And giue a
2 reason of such things
as here are done below.
SVch humane wisedome man may haue,
but wisdome from aboue,
It is
12 a gift most excellent,
which God giues of his loue.
THis wisedome is to feare the Lord,
and from all ill to flee
Is vnderstanding
28 : which who hath
a blessed man is he
Chapt. 29
VNto his mind, when Iob doth call
his prosperous life before;
His present
2 great calamitie
with griefe he doth deplore.
A Blessing was vpon his house,
and on his children deare;
Both yong
8 and old, both
10 rich and poore,
did him regard and cheare.
BEcause he was eyes to the blind,
and feet vnto
15 the lame:
He was of great
21 authority,
and had a
20 noble name.
Chapt. 30
COntemned and derided now,
he is of varlets
1 base,
Who (though he
25 fed them all before)
him, now with scoffes disgrace.
DElighting in his misery,
they spitted in
10 his face;
He was the
9 by-word and the song,
of youths that wanted grace.
EXceeding honour which Iob had,
his great prosperity
Is turn'd
5 into extreame contempt,
and great calamity.
Chapt. 31
FVll fraught with vertue's faithfull Iob
in his perplexed state,
Some of the same doth solemnly
here in this place relate.
GIuing no leaue vnto his eyes
to looke for fearest of lust:
He walked not in
5 vanity,
in gold he put
24 no trust.
HE fed and cloath'd the fatherlesse,
the widdowes
16 poore releeu'd;
He kept good
32 hospitalitie,
and eased all were
19 greiu'd.
IN prosperous
26 state he was not proud,
from sinne he did abstaine;
Nor for the
34 feare of mortall men,
Gods feare made him refraine.
Chapt. 32
KIndled it here Elihu's zeale,
gainst Iob
2 , and his three friends,
His silence he by Iobs and theirs,
excuseth
12 and defends.
LEarne this from Elihu, that age
no mortall man
9 makes wise;
All diuine
8 wisedome doth from heauen
and from the Lord arise.
MArke how he (speaking) doth excuse,
his bold and youthfull
6 action:
Marke how he checks for giuing Iob
no better
3 satisfaction.
NEcessity (he saith) compell'd,
Gods spirit did
18 constraine:
His conscience also forc'd him so
that he could not restraine.
Chapt. 33
OFfering with sincerity,
and meeknesse eke of mind,
To reason here with patient Iob
you Elihu shall find.
PErusing and repearing words
which Iob
9 had spoke before;
He doth confute them euery one,
with arguments good store.
QVite freeing, and excusing God
from giuing an account
To man; because his
8 actions
and greatnesse doe surmount.
REpentance
14 God calls man vnto,
by
15 visions in the night;
By dreames, and by
19 afflictions,
and preachers
23 preaching right.
SEe here, how he inciteth Iob,
from speaking to
31 refraine:
To marke his speech, and if he will
to answer him
32 againe.
Chapt. 34
THen Elihu accuseth Iob,
in speech
5 to be too large;
Because he did the Lord most iust,
with some iniustice
6 charge.
VNto the Lord omnipotent,
iniustice to impute,
Who vnto all
10 (as they deserue)
doth iustice execute,
AN heinous wickednesse it is,
God cannot be
12 vniust:
Man therefore
31 must submit to him,
and in him firmly trust.
BEcause Iobs words did seeme vnwise,
Elihu him
35 reproues:
God pulls downe
24 proud and mighty men,
and sets vp whom he loues.
Chapt. 35
COmparison to make with God
were greatly to
1 offend,
Because our goodnesse, or our euill,
to him doth not extend.
DAily men cry vnto the Lord,
(thus Elihu here saith)
[...]et are not
13 heard, because they want
repentance, and true faith.
EXhorted hereunto is Iob,
and that in
14 God he trust:
[...]nd (to auoid his
15 anger) he
must holy be and iust.
Chapt. 36
FVll faithfully doth Elihu
Gods mighty power disclose;
[...]is bountie, goodnesse,
3 mercies great
to Iob he doth propose.
GOod Elihu confirmes them by
examples old and new;
And by the
23 wondrous workes of God
that they are all most true.
HE sheweth wherefore God doth plague,
and punish
11 euery day;
[...] is because that men are
9 proud,
and will him
12 not obey.
[...]Obs disobedience (he saith)
[...] Gods fauours did with-hold;
Or else he
16 should haue had both health
and blessings manifold.
KNow here the guise of hypocrites,
Gods wrath they doe
13 increase:
Their liues are foule: they dye
14 in youth,
they seldome dye in peace.
Chapt. 37
LEarne here that God is to be fear'd,
euen for his workes of wonder:
As for his whirle
9 windes,
11 raine and snow
and mighty claps of
4 thunder.
MOst manifest hereby is made,
euen all the
3 world throughout,
His Maiesty and wisedome great,
which no man
5 can find out.
NOne without
33 cause doth he afflict,
he wills vs sinne to hate,
For he regards not any man,
wise in his
34 owne conceit.
Chapt. 38
OF grosse and sottish ignorance
the Lord doth Iob conuince,
Both by the worlds
4 creation,
and works wrought by him since.
POwerfull and mighty workes of his,
his wisedome and his grace,
Proues Iob to be
12 both ignorant
and feeble, fraile and base.
QVite destitute of might man is,
to get into his heart
Knowledge
36 or vnderstanding sound,
the Lord must them impart.
Chapt. 39
REad here the bounty of the Lord,
who doth
3 yong rauens feed,
Read how the goats and asses wild,
are helped in
1 their need.
SEe in the Vnicorne
12 so strong
Gods power and prouidence;
Which teacheth vs in him to put
our trust and confidence.
TO Peacocks feathers, Ostridge wings,
to th' horse God giueth strength,
By him the Hauke and Eagle flye,
this Iob affirmes at length.
Chapt. 40
VNto the Lord Iob answereth
and
3 humbly doth confesse
That he is
4 vile; and that to speake
he will no
3 longer presse.
ALl power of man is very weake,
if it thou dost
2 compare
With Gods great works which he hath made,
which admirable are.
BEhemoth that huge monstrous beast
which God did
10 make and frame,
Those bones are like to
13 barres of brasse,
doth plainly proue the same.
Chapt. 41
COnsider Leuiathan well
that monster much of might,
Which sheweth forth Gods mighty power
and glory shining bright.
DAre any man (though fierce and stout)
once stirre him vp or moue;
Out of whose
10 mouth goes sparkes of fire,
his strength dare any proue?
ESteeming yron euen as straw,
and laughing
18 at the speare:
Swords, darts,
17 stones, and habergions
this monster doth not feare.
FArre mightier Iehouah is,
who did this monster make,
This answer
2 doth this good man Iob
for satisfaction take.
Chapt. 42
GOd can doe all things (here Iob saith)
his heart doth
2 now relent,
He doth submit
6 himselfe to God,
and from his heart repent.
HE for his friends doth prayers make,
Iobs cause the
7 Lords preferres:
He makes his friends
8 submit to him
who were so full of iarres.
IN mercy he
10 accepteth Iob,
his goods he doth restore,
So that he was
12 made twice as rich
as e're he was before.
KNow his seuen sonnes, and daughters three,
the fairest in that nation
He after liued
16 seuenscore yeares,
and saw foure generations.
PSALMES.
Chapt. 1
A Preface this first Psalme doth seeme
to be of all the rest,
To stirre up all to godly life,
whereby they might be blest.
BEcause that all, who in the word
themselues doe exercise,
The Lord
1 doth blesse exceedingly,
and makes them heauenly wise,
COntemners of God and his word,
although they prosper well
Here for
4 a time, yet they as chaffe
shall all be blowne to hell.
Chapt. 2
DAuid reioyceth in this Psalme,
that though his foes doe rage
[...]
Yet God his kingdome will preserue,
and that from age to age.
EXtolling and aduancing it,
vntill the
7 world shall end:
And therefore he exhorteth Kings
to Christ to
10 bow and bend.
FOr though that wicked rulers rage,
and Gods yoke
11 will not beare;
Yet he disdaines and scornes their spite,
and makes them quake for feare.
Chapt. 3
GOod Dauid from his kingdome driuen,
was greatly grieu'd in mind,
For his great sinne against the Lord,
and could small
1 comfort find.
HE calleth therefore on the Lord,
and after waxeth bold
Against the
4 terrours of his foes,
and railings manifold.
IN hope of helpe, he on the Lord
for succour still relies:
Euen then when
6 nought but cruell death
was set before his eyes.
KNowing the truth of Gods promise,
his faith did much increase:
That God
7 would plague his enemies,
but grant his people peace.
Chapt. 4
LEarne how when Saul did persecute,
good Dauid then did pray;
And on Gods faithfull promises
did firmely trust and stay.
MOst boldly therefore he reproues
his enemies each one.
Who wilfully
2 did still resist
This iust dominion.
NO worldly wealth, nor earthly ioy
doth Dauid seeme to craue,
It is the
7 fauour of the Lord,
that he desires to haue.
Chapt. 5
OPprest with cruell enemies
and of
1 worse plagues afraid,
Dauid did call vpon the Lord,
for succour, helpe, and ayde.
PErswading that it is most iust,
and requisite also,
That he should plague
4 malicious men,
and punish euery foe.
QVickly he then conceiues comfort,
assur'd of good successe;
By comming
6 to his holy house,
his faith he doth expresse.
RElying thus vpon the Lord,
he maketh this conclusion,
That when his
7 cruell foes are brought
to ruine and confusion.
SEtting him free from all their force,
that God will doe no lesse
To other men that feare his name
whom he will likewise blesse.
Chapt. 6
THe Prophet Dauid when he had,
by sinne prouokt Gods wrath:
And felt his
1 hand against him sore,
fearing the second death,
VNto the Lord with troubled soule,
and
3 humble heart he goes,
Desiring pardon for his sinne,
and freedome from his woes.
[...]
AFfirming with an heauy heart
that if in indignation,
[...]e should destroy him, he could not
prayse him in congregation.
BEing perplexed thus in mind,
then suddenly
9 with speed,
[...]od sends him ioy and confidence
in his extreamest need.
COuragiously, and sharply then,
he did rebuke those foes,
[...]hat laughed at his miseries,
reioycing in his woes.
Chapt.
[...]
DAuid most falsly here accus'd,
by Chush kinsman to Saul:
[...]o God to be
1 his fence and aide,
most heartily doth call.
EArnestly then his harmlesse heart
to God he doth
3 commend;
[...]hewing that he against King Saul
no malice did
9 intend.
FOr Gods glory he saith it makes
iust sentence to
10 award
[...]gainst such men as neither God,
nor good men doe regard.
GOds mercies and his promises
then weighing in his mind,
[...]e waxeth
5 bold; and scornes the spite
of furious foes vnkind.
HE threatneth them, that all that euill
shall light vpon their head
Which they for
16 good and godly men
through spite imagined.
[...]N ioyful wise vnto the Lord,
due prayses
17 he will sing:
For keeping promise faithfully,
and granting his wishing.
Chapt. 8
KIng Dauid pondering in mind,
Gods bounty, loue
1 and care,
His prouidence toward mankind,
most wonderfull and rare.
LEading him with his benefits,
making him
7 Lord of all;
To praise and magnifie his name,
be presently doth fall.
MVch wondring at his mercies great
who like God did him frame;
He saith, O Lord
9 how excellent,
is thy most noble name.
Chapt. 9
NOw after Dauid had giuen thanks
for many
1 victories,
Which God had
3 giuen and granted him,
against his enemies.
OFt hauing had experience
of his defence
3 and loue;
Which he in all extremities
did manifestly proue.
PVrsued now againe afresh
by his most cruell foe:
Desireth God to helpe
14 againe,
as he was wont to doe.
QVite to destroy malicious men,
that are on mischiefe set;
And turne the wicked into hell,
which doe the Lord forget.
Chapt. 10
REad how of fraud and tyranny,
and of all kinde
1 of wrongs,
Which worldly men were wont to doe,
with hearts, or hands, or tongues.
SPurning the poore, despising God,
read Dauids sore complaints.
And see the
3 cause why such bad men
admit of no restraints.
THe cause is this, they are so drunke
with
4 worldly wealth and pleasure;
That they despise all feare of God,
and sinne without all measure.
VNto the Lord he therefore calls,
that he some helpe
15 would send
Against these deuillish wicked men,
that had no grace to mend.
AT length he comforteth himselfe
with hope
16 of good successe:
That he will succour and defend
the poore and fatherlesse.
Chapt. 11
BEhold two parts in this same Psalme,
the first it doth containe
The anguish and tentations
that
1 Dauid did sustaine.
COmplaining in how great distresse
he was, and griefe of
2 minde,
When Saul did persecute him sore,
and shew'd himselfe vnkind.
DEclared then is Dauids ioy,
to whom
4 God in his need,
Did alwayes helpe and succour send,
with all conuenient speed.
EXtolling here Gods righteousnesse,
who good and bad
5 doth guide,
Who ruleth all the things that are
within this world so wide.
Chapt. 12
FVll sore the Prophet here laments
the peoples
1 wofull state
When godly men are dead and gone,
and goodnesse
2 all doe hate.
GOds helpe he speedily requires
to succour
3 and releeue
His poore distressed childeren
whom wicked men doe grieue.
HE then doth comfort both himselfe
and godly
5 Christians all:
With full assurance of Gods helpe,
when they on him did call.
IN keeping of his promises,
Dauid doth here commend
Gods constant course and veritie,
his children to defend.
Chapt. 13
KIng Dauid (as it were subdued
with sundry sorts of griefe,
And new
1 assaults) doth flee to God:
for succour and reliefe.
LOng time did his afflictions last,
long did his foes preuaile;
And yet his confidence in God
did neuer faint nor faile.
MAking the mercies of the Lord
the cause
5 of his saluation:
NEw prayses he will sing to God
for his safe preseruation.
Chapt. 14
OBserue mans crooked nature here,
who shew by their behauiour,
That they
1 in heart perswaded are
there is no God nor Sauiour.
PEruerse they are in all their wayes,
corrupt in all their deeds:
They pray not
4 , still one sinfull act
another sinne succeedes.
QVite void of all true feare of God,
This
5 grieued Dauid sore;
[...]et he in heart perswaded is
that God would all restore.
REioycing in his confidence.
himselfe he
7 comforts well,
And prayeth for saluation,
vnto whole Israel.
Chapt. 15
SEe here on what condition
God did the Iewes so grace;
As for his
1 people them to choose,
and Temple with them place.
THe which was to th'intent that they
by liuing
2 godly and well.
Might witnesse to the world that they
were his owne Israel.
VPrightnesse first the Lord requires
for life and conuersation,
Then doing
3 well to other men
with pure communication.
Chapt. 16
ATtend how Dauid vnto God
doth hearty
1 prayers make,
For succour; not for
2 his deserts,
but for his mercies sake.
BY protestation he declares
that he doth deadly hate
All Idols: yea their very names,
his lippes will not rolate.
COnsent in heart, consent in
4 mouth,
he vtterly denyes:
Abhorring all apparent shewes,
of all Idolatries.
An. Mundi Exod. 23.13.
Ephes. 5 3.
DEsiring that the Lord should be
his
5 comfort in distresse:
Who to his
8 Church and chosen folke
his loue he doth expresse.
Chapt. 17
EXceedingly good Dauid here
complaineth
1 to the Lord
Of Sauls great pride and cruelty,
of God and man
2 abhorr'd.
FIerce cruell foes (besides King Saul)
against him rage and throng
Without all cause
3 giuen on his part,
he neuer did them wrong.
GOd to reuenge his righteous cause
he therefore here
13 requires,
And eke to rid him from their rage
he heartily desires.
Chapt. 18
HEre Dauid entring his Kingdome,
doth greatly
1 gratulate,
And prayse the Lord with all his heart
for blessing his estate.
IN his reioycing he extolls
the Lords exceeding grace,
Who from so
4 many perills brought
him to that regall place.
KEeping and still protecting him,
in all his warres and strife:
Preseruing him
5 from all his foes,
who hunted for his life.
LEarne further, that of Christs Kingdome,
the image here is plaine;
Who in despite of all the world
shall conquer
5
[...] still and raigne.
Chapt. 19
MArke how the prophet to th' intent
he might the faithfull moue
To deepe consideration
of Gods great power and loue,
NOw setteth forth before their eyes
the workemanship most rare
Of heau'n, with the proportion
and ornaments so faire.
ORdinances and Gods lawes,
he calleth to their mind:
Wherein he doth reueale himselfe,
to be a God most kind.
PReseruing still his chosen folke
with his peculiar grace,
Which by commending of this law,
is set forth in this place.
Chapt. 20
QVickly the people flee to God,
by prayer and request;
When as the wicked Ammonites
King Dauid did molest.
REquesting him that it would please
his Maiestie to heare
Their King, and take his sacrifice,
which he did offer there;
SAuing him from his cruell foes,
and strengthning him with all,
That he might saue and succour send,
when they for ayd should call.
THen he declares that heathen folke
in horses put their trust.
But they trust onely in his name,
who holy is and iust.
VNto destruction therefore they
most certainly shall fall:
But both the King and his people,
shall stand and prosper all.
Chapt. 21
AGainst the cruell Ammonites,
An. Mundi 1
Sam. 21
(who did full sore
1 assaile,)
King Dauid and his people did
victoriously preuaile.
BY God and not by strength of man,
he saith this
3 conquest came,
In person of the people he,
doth magnifie Gods name.
CHrist is the King to whom we are
by holy Ghost directed;
By him the Kingdome of the Church
is blessedly perfected.
Chapt. 22
DAuid in great extremity,
and neare to desperation,
Hauing
1 no feeling of his faith,
no hope of his saluation.
EXtreamely handled; with great griefe
of heart he doth complaine,
That he was
2 forced night and day,
in anguish to remaine.
FVll long he fainted, yet at last,
in faith and hope he growes:
Christs
1 figure in his person here,
King Dauid
6 plainly showes,
GOd by the spirit of prophesie,
to Dauid had foretold,
That Christs should suffer
8 for our sakes,
afflictions manifold.
Chapt. 23
HAuing Gods mercies and his grace
in sundry
1 manners prou'd;
The Prophet gathers certainly,
that he is dearly lou'd.
IN this assurance fully he
perswades himselfe in heart,
That his great goodnesse, and his loue,
from him should neuer part.
Chapt. 24
KIng Dauid (when the grace of God)
was
1 vtter'd and declar'd,
More
3 glorious in his temple,
then was of old prepar'd
LOng time before in Tabernacle,
which wonder he sets forth,
The price and dignitie thereof,
as thing of precious worth.
MOuing all men to thinke vpon,
and to consider well
Th' eternall mansions in heauen,
where righteous men shall dwell.
NOte that although the temple was
prepar'd for Abrahams seed,
Yet onely
4 they that purely liue
must enter there indeed.
Chapt. 25
OBserue how Dauid being grieu'd
for sinne, and with his foes,
By feruent
1 prayer vnto the Lord,
for helpe and pardon goes.
PArdon he chiefly craues for sinnes,
which in his
6 youthfull dayes
He did commit
7 against the Lord,
he then
22 for Israel praies.
REad how he doth begin each verse
which in this Psalms is set,
(Excepting two or three of them)
with th' Ebrew Alphabet.
Chapt. 26
SAul did good Dauid sore oppresse,
with
1 many miseries;
He finding no helpe in the world,
to God for succour cryes.
THen being well assured of
his owne
7 integrity,
Desireth God to iudge his cause,
and plead his purity.
VPrightly then he promiseth
to liue; and to aduance
The power of God, and praise his name,
for his deliuerance.
A Great desire (he saith) he hath
to be among the Saints:
When
8 he was banished by Saul,
he mournes for his restraints.
Chapt. 27
BEcause the Prophet Dauid was
assur'd of
1 good successe:
He feared not the tyranny,
of foes in his distresse.
COnstant he was and perswaded
by spirit of prophesie,
That he
6 should ouercome them all,
and get the victory.
DEsire he did a longer life,
and Gods
7 safe preseruation,
To this end that he might praise God
in his great congregation.
Chapt. 28
EXceeding pensiue Dauid is,
and in
1 perplexing feare,
To see the Lord by wicked men
dishonor'd euery where.
FOr riddance of them, and for plagues
to light vpon them all,
He cryes,
4 and is at last assur'd
that God hath heard his call.
GOd was his strength (he saith) and shield,
who did him still defend;
To whom he doth his people all
most heartily commend.
Chapt. 29
HEre Dauid wills all gouernors,
occasion iust to take,
To feare the
1 Lord omnipotent,
euen for his thunders sake.
IN all the earth nought is so stout,
but thunders makes
3 afraid;
They breake the Cedars; cause both men
and beasts to be dismaid.
KNowne dreadfull yet although he be,
to make the wicked feare:
Yet is he alwaies mercifull
to all his children deare.
LEading and mouing them thereby,
in praysing to increase,
Because he giues his people strength,
and blesseth them with peace.
Chapt. 30
MArke how the Prophet Dauid here
set free from dangers great;
Doth render
1 thankes to God, who did
so kindly him intreat.
NOt ceasing to exhort all men,
by him the like to learne,
And that the Lord is
4 mercifull,
not rigorous nor stearne.
O Learne how soone his anger slakes,
and yet
6 learne this withall,
That men from ioy, to
7 aduerse state,
full suddenly doe fall.
PErswading this; he turnes to God,
and
10 prayeth heartily,
And promiseth to prayse his name,
and that
12 continually.
Chapt. 31
QVit, and set free from dangers great,
Dauid doth here declare,
What meditations he had,
by sorce of faith and prayer.
ROaring against him, when his foes,
most cruelly did rage;
When nothing but his very death,
their fury could asswage,
SHewing to all that feare the Lord,
and here affirming plaine,
That Gods good fauour and his loue
to such doe still remaine,
THen he exhorts the faithfull all,
the Lord to serue and loue,
Because he keepes them, as they might
by his example proue.
Chapt. 32
VExed with great afflictions,
and lying
1 long therein;
The Prophet counts them blest to whom
the Lord
2 imputes no sinne.
ADdressing then his heart to God,
when he his sinne
5 confest,
God did forgiue his punishment,
and did no more molest.
BIdding the righteous to reioyce,
euen all of vpright heart:
Bidding the wicked turne
6 to God
and from their sinne depart.
Chapt. 33
CHearfully Dauid stirs vp all,
to praise the liuing Lord,
For his creating heauen and earth,
with all things
6 in this world.
DVe praises for his prouidence,
he likewise would haue giuen,
Because
13 he ruleth euery thing
created vnder heauen.
EVer in all his promises,
he faithfull is and true
He
15 vnderstandeth each mans heart,
and makes the proud to rue.
FRustrating all their purposes;
his counsell euer
10 stands;
No strength of man nor creature
can keepe
11 out of his hands.
GOod men that put their confidence
in his kindnesse
18 and loue,
Shall be preserued from their foes,
and all his fauours proue.
Chapt. 34
HEre learne how after Dauid had,
escaped Achish King,
An. Mundi 1
Sam. 21,11.1.
He praiseth God with all his heart
for his deliuering.
IN like sort (as he praiseth God)
so he
3 prouoketh all,
To trust in God; to feare his name,
and still vpon him call.
KNowing that he doth still defend,
the godly and elect
The Angels pitch their tents about,
and safely them protect.
LEwd, wicked, and malicious men,
that righteous men doe hate,
God doth destroy them
16 vtterly,
and ruinates their state.
Chapt. 35
MArke how while Saul, to good Dauid
did beare a deadly spight,
To flatter him
1 his Officers
did take a great delight.
NOt ceasing still to persecute
poore Dauid with disdaine,
Their cruell
4 hate and malice great
they neuer did restraine.
O How he prayeth God to plead
his cause against them all
That in the Snares
8 they laid for him,
in them, themselues might fall.
PAying them home, as they deseru'd,
that so it
9 might appeare,
That he from false aspersions,
was
10 innocent and cleare.
QVite quit likewise that they might be,
who harmlesse tooke their part;
And that they
27 might yeeld praise and thankes
to God with voyce and heart.
REwarding so his seruants true,
he saith that faithfully
It will
28 Gods Iustice and his power
for euer magnifie.
Chapt. 36
SHamefully did malicious men,
their hatefull
1 hearts expresse
Against the Prophet, who complaines
of their great wickednesse.
THen turning to consider well
the goodnesse of the
6 Lord,
Which he to all his creatures,
most largely doth afford;
VEry well weighing in his minde,
the loue that he did beare
To all his children which doe serue
and worship him in feare.
ABundantly he is by faith
confirmed and assur'd,
That his deliuerance from God,
shall safely be procur'd.
BOldly he then
10 praies for the iust,
who in the truth remaine,
[...]nd saith the wicked shall fall downe,
and neuer rise againe.
Chapt.
[...]7
COnsider how the Psalmist bids
the godly not to fret,
[...]hen as they
1 see the wicked men
in highest honour set.
DEclaring comforts for all those,
whose hearts are
3 troubled sore,
[...]o see the godly to be grieu'd,
and vexed
4 more and more.
ENduring griefe, although they seeme
in wofull
7 state to be;
[...]et are they in Gods fauour still,
and lasting ioyes shall see.
FOr he preserueth all such men,
and frees them from the rage
[...]f wicked and blood thirsty men,
and doth their malice swage.
GReat glory though these wicked ones,
and honour here obtaine,
[...]hey doe enioy them but a while,
their ioyes are short and vaine.
HAted they are of God and man,
he will destroy them all;
to the pit of endlesse woe,
they fearfully shall fall.
Chapt.
[...]8
IN bed of sicknesse Dauid laid,
with griefe then doth begin
[...] say that
1 God did him chastise
most iustly for his sinne.
KNowledging it, he prayeth God,
his wrath away to turne,
He vttereth the cause and griefe,
which made him for to mourne.
LAmenting sore, he in these words
doth manifest his woes;
That he was hated of his friends,
abused of
12 his foes.
MArke how the arrowes of Gods wrath
so sore vpon him
2 light
That he complaines he had no rest,
nor ease on day nor night.
NOte yet how he in confidence,
his cause doth here commend
To God; and hopes that he shall haue
with speed an happy end.
Chapt. 39
OH how doth paines, care, griefe of heart,
and great calamities,
Make Dauid
1 vtter sore complaints
of his infirmities.
PVrposing silence with himselfe,
and not a word to speake,
Through griefe
2 into indiscreet words,
he rashly forth doth breake.
QVaint and strange-suits he here doth make
which vttered
4 in hast,
Of humane great infirmities,
most euidently doe tast.
REmarkeable are his requests,
they shew his tribulation,
And that he wondrously did striue
'gainst death and desperation.
Chapt. 40
SEt free from many dangers great,
the Prophet here doth praise
The grace and fauour of the Lord,
which be had found alwayes.
THen he commends his prouidence,
euen ouer mankind all,
And promiseth to serue him still,
and onely on him call.
VNto vs all he then sets downe
what worship God requires,
Not offerings nor sacrifice,
the spirit he desires.
AFter all this he praiseth God,
and doth of soes complaine;
Then with good courage he doth
[...]ll
to God for ayd againe.
Chapt. 41
BEing oppressed grieuously,
and brought in
2 great disgrace
The Psalmist doth pronounce him blest
that doe
2 lament his case.
COmplaining greatly in this Psalme
of his familiar friend,
Who of great friendship made a shew,
but treason did intend
DAuid himselfe had such side
[...]nds,
but yet it may be laid
Of Christ more truely, who with kisse
by Iudas was
[...]aid.
An. Mundi Iohn. 13.1
[...]
EXceeding mercies when
[...] fell
in Gods correcting hand,
Not suffering his enemies
against him still to stand.
FRom humble hear
[...] all laid and praise,
he yeelds to him therefore,
Desiring that he may be blest,
and praised euermore.
Chapt. 42
GReat mo
[...]n
[...] good Dauid maketh here,
and greiuous lamentation,
Because hee was
2 by cruell foes,
kept from the congregation
HE earnestly protesteth that
although he was
6 away,
In body, yet his heart and mind
was with him night and day.
In th' end he sheweth that he was
not so with griefe
7 opprest,
But that his
8 confidence did still
vpon Iehouah rest.
Chapt. 43
KNow that to be deliuered
from all conspiring foes,
By humble prayer to the Lord,
the Prophet Dauid goes.
LOnging that his kind promises
performed he might se
[...]l
That with his
2
[...] and shining light
he might directed bee.
MOst hearvy offerings of praise
then Dauid offer will,
Euen in the congregation,
and will wait on him still.
Chapt. 44
NOw faithfullme
[...] doe here record
Gods loue and mercies great,
With which he
1 did his children deare
most louingly intreat.
OBserue how they with griefe complaine,
because they feele no more
His former
[...]auo
[...] and his loue
which he had shew'd before.
PItifully they doe alledge
the couenant he made
With this
[...] which euermore
should last and neuer fade.
QVite comfortlesse they doe relate
what wrongs they did endure
For keeping of his couenant
with vnright heaten and pure.
REquesting that he would vouchsafe
to take their
22 shame away:
Because that for his sake their foes
did make
23 of them a prey.
SHewing that to the great contempt
of his most holy
26 ha
[...]e,
They did re
[...]ound, they him intreat
not to despise their shame.
Chapt. 45
THe mightie power of Salomon
his strength
2 and maiestie,
His honour, be
[...]ie, and renowne,
Dauid
3 doth magnifie.
VNto King Solomon
[...] wed
King
9 Pharaohs Daughter here,
And she is blest if she forsake
her fathers house so deare.
ATtend how by this mariage,
by Dauid
11 specified,
Christs
17 kingdome and the Gentiles Church
his spouse is tipyfied.
Chapt. 46
BEhold here is a Psa
[...] of ioy,
of triumph, thanketh and praise,
For Salems great deliuerance,
in her distressed dayes.
CArefully still God keepeth her,
he therefore doth exhor
[...]
The godly to reioyce thereat,
to their groache a
[...] comfort.
DEspising all their hatefull feel
because God doth delight,
T'asswage the rage of wicked men
when they the iust affright▪
Chapt. 47
EXhorted by the Prophet here
are all men of the
1 world,
With true and vpright hearts t'adore
the euer-liuing Lord.
FRee fauour which he alwayes had
to Israel
2 extended,
And to his seede the same i
[...] here
exceedingly commended.
GReat thankes and praise he bids them yeeld
vnto the Lord most high;
Of Christs Kingdome in Gospels time
he then doth Prophesie.
Chapt. 48
HEre marke
[...] great deliuerance
Of Salem (Gods owne City)
Against which many, Kings arose
to spoyle without all pity.
IErusalem is praised here,
Church ornaments commended,
The name of God is magnifi'd▪
who had the same defended.
KNowne he
[...] to helpe alwaies,
and succour them in need,
When they did
[...]bly seeke to him
they prosperously did speed.
Chapt. 49
LEarne how all dweller; on the earth
the holy Ghost doth call,
To thinke vpon the life of man
so subiect vnto th
[...]all.
MEn mightie rich
[...] not the men,
whom God
7 doth chiefly blesse;
The godly therefore are to feare
such mightie men the lesse.
NOte how the Prophet Dauid here
this to their minde doth bring,
That Gods good pr
[...]ce doth rule
and gouerne euery thing.
O See how after death he plagues
these men with endlesse paine,
And how he crownes his owne with ioyes
when they shall rise againe.
Chapt. 50
PVre worshipper
[...] are very few,
men thinke th
[...] God delights
With outward worships to he selu'd
and ceremoniall ri
[...]es,
QVite carelesse of the inward heart,
(which was the Iewish guise)
Who thought it was sufficient
to offer sacrifice.
REad how the Prophet Dauid here
that false conceit reproues,
And saith, that it is praise and thankes
that great Iehouah loues:
SHewing that they dishonour great
to God procu
[...]e and get,
Who in their outward ceremonies
such holinesse doe set.
THankes giuing for his benefits,
and worships spirituall,
Obedience to his commands,
for these the Lord doth call.
Chapt. 51
REproued when King Dauid was
for his notorious sinne,
The same to
4 God he doth confesse
and further doth begin
SOre grieuing humbly to protest,
that he in
5 sinne was borne,
Conceiu'd in sinfull mothers wombe
and child of wrath forlorne.
TO all that should liue after him
in future generations,
He leaueth a memoriall
of these his protestations.
VNto the Lord he then doth pray,
his sinne to
7 blot out quite,
And that he would renew in him
a right and
10 humble spirit.
A Promise then he makes to God,
that he
13 will doe his best
To teach all
[...] those good wayes
that lead to blessed rest.
BEing perplexed for the Church,
which he did greatly feare,
The Lord
18 would punish for his faults,
he prayes him to forbeare
CRosses, or punishment to bring
on him, or it, therefore;
But rather that he
19 would increase,
and blesse it more and more.
Chapt. 52
DAuid doth liuely here describe
the cruell Tyranny
Of cursed Doeg (bloody wretch)
and his great enemie.
ESteeming neither God nor m
[...]n,
hee caus'd Gods Priests be slaine;
But Dauid plainely doth foreshew
his ruine and his bane.
FIrme confidence he bids good m
[...]n
in God their Lord to haue,
Whose iudgement
[...]
[...] other foes shall seale,
but them he still will saue.
GReat thankes he lastly giues to God,
that him deliuered;
The Kingdome here of Antichrist
is liuely figured.
Chapt. 53
HOrrible nature of bad men,
their cursed cruelty,
(Who say in heart there is no God)
here Dauid doth discrie.
IN wickednesse they far exceed,
they seeke not God nor pray;
They are corrupt, not one doth good,
nor will the Lord obey.
KIndled against them i
[...] Gods wrath,
before they be aware;
But Dauid prayeth that good men,
for euer well may fare.
Chapt. 54
LEwd Saul molesting, Dauid was
in extreame hazard brought
[...]y Ziphims; also then from God
he ayd and succour sought.
MAking request that all his foes,
he would cut off and slay;
[...]n hopefull confidence whereof
he patiently doth stay.
NEw praises and free offerings,
he promiseth to giue,
[...]or his so great deliuerance,
as long as he shall liue.
Chapt.
[...]5
OBserue how Dauid when he was
in great extremitie,
[...]omplaineth of Sauls wickednesse,
and bloody cruelty.
O Pitifully complaining of
the falshood of his friends,
He vtters strange affections,
to cause the Lord attend,
QVickly to pity his estate,
he after is assur'd,
That from
22 him full deliuerance
shall shortly be procur'd.
REad how (as though he had obtain'd
already his request)
The louing fauour of the Lord
by him is here exprest.
Chapt. 56
SEe here how Dauid being brought
vnto the King of G
[...]th,
An. Mundi 2
Sam. 12.21.
Complaineth, and imploreth aid,
in God sure hope he hath.
THen he sets downe the crueltie,
the malice, enuie, strife
Of those his bloody enemies
that sought to haue his life.
VExing him still he saith that God
his very steps could tell,
His teares had
8 registred and put
them all in his bottell
AS for his great deliuerance
he here doth promise make
That he will pay
13 those vowes to him
which he vndertake.
BRiefe summe whereof, was, that as God
had heard his
12 suites alwaies,
So in his Church he will set forth
his honour power and praise.
Chapt. 57
COme read how Dauid to the Lord
with faith doth cry and call,
When men at Ziph did him betray
into the hands of Saul:
DEsiring mercy earnestly
when he
1 was in Sauls
[...]e;
He hath fullinesse and confidence
that mercy he shall haue.
EVer he trusts that God will shew
his glorie and his power
In
5 heauen and earth, against his foes
that sought him to
[...]
FOr which he promiseth to praise
him in the
9 congregation
He also will exte
[...] his
[...]
among the Heathen nations.
Chapt. 58
GReat hatred in his deadly foes
Dauid doth here set downe,
Who secretly and openly
did alwaies on him f
[...]owne.
HIs bane in bloody wife they sought
from
4 them he doth appeale
Vnto the Lord, who in due time
his iudgments will reaueale.
IN God (saith he) the iust shall ioy
when they doe plainly
[...]e
[...]
That to the glory of the
30 Lord
the wicked plagu
[...] be,
Chapt. 59
KIng Dauid here a p
[...]a
[...] make
[...]
being sore troubeled
By cruell Saul, who seruants sent
to slay him in his bed,
LAmenting first he shewes to God
his owne integritie,
And
3 then of his most furious foes
the bloody cruelty.
MOst earnestly he God intreats
his iudgements to expresse
Vpon all
5 those that sinne commit
of wilfull wickednesse.
NOting that though such men doe liue
a while vpon the earth.
To try his
11 people, yet he will
consume them in his wrath.
OCcasion thereby he will giue
that men may know alwaies
That he
13 the God, of Iacob is,
whom he will alwaie a praise
Chapt. 60
PRosperously how Dauid King
gets many victories;
Still conquering
4 and beating downe
his proudest enemies,
QVelling them all, which thing did shew
from whence his honour came;
He saith, they all shall prosper well,
that doe approue the same.
RIght heartily he praies, that sith
the Lord the thing had done,
He would vouchsafe to finish well
that worke he had begin.
Chapt. 61
SOre danger was the Prophet in,
when he this Psalme indites,
Either of his sonne Absolon,
or of the Ammonites.
THen he for helpe doth call and cry
vnto the
1 Lord most high,
That he would be his strong defence
against his
2 enemy.
VNto the Lord perpetually
he praises then
7 will sing
When he hath foyl'd his enemies,
and made
8 him Iudah's King.
Chapt. 62
A Part of this Psalme doth containe,
the Prophets meditations,
Stirring him vp
2 to trust in God
against his great tentations.
BIdding all people trust
8 in God,
and not in things
9 are vaine:
From robberie,
10 oppression,
he bids all men refraine.
COnfessing that all power is Gods,
mercy
11 from him proceeds,
He saith he will
12 reward all men
according to their deeds.
Chapt. 63
DAuid after that he had beene
in dangerous distresse
By cruell Saul, who him pursued
in desert
2 wildernesse:
EVen then this Psalme he esemes to make,
that all might vnderstand
His thankes to God
4 for sauing him
out of his enemies hand.
FVll confidently did he trust
in mind of his distresse,
In Gods
8 protecting powerfull hand
and in his great goodnesse.
GOod Dauid then doth prophesie
of foes most
5 fearfull fall,
And of the happy state of those
that on the Lord shall call.
Chapt. 64
HEre are most hearty praiers made
by Dauid in this place,
Against the false
7 reports of them
that sought his great disgrace
IN raging out words violent
not fearing God nor man.
Pursuing
2 him with deadly bate,
and all the spight they can;
KNow yet that Dauid in this Psalme
most plainly doth declare
That God will strike them suddenly,
to plague he will not spare.
LAden with prosperitie
shall good men be and iust,
All shall be glad and much reioyce
that in the Lord doe trust.
Chapt. 65
MArke here a Psalme of praise to God,
by faithfull
1 people all
(Who are by Syon signified)
for
2 hearing when they call
NOt plaging them as they deseru'd,
but shewing mercy great,
He did them chuse,
4 p
[...]eserue, and rule,
and fatherly intreat.
O How they praise him for his gifts
vpon the
9 earth bestow'd;
But chiefly for his wondrous loue
which to his Church he showed
Chapt. 66
PRaises to yeeld vnto the Lord,
and to consider well
His workes, the Prophet doth exhort
all that on earth doe dwell.
QVickly the Lords most mightie power
he plainly
6 doth display,
That all stout rebells he thereby
might sore afright and fray
REhearsing how from bondage great,
affliction and thrall,
He of his
10 loue deliuered
his Israell people all.
SVre promise here he makes to God
to offer
13 sacrifice,
And calleth all that feare the Lord
that they should
14 doe likewise.
THen bids all holy ones to come
to him that may heare
What God had
16 done for his poore soule,
what loue he still did beare
Chapt. 67
VNto the Lord the Church doth pray
his fauours still to see,
And that with his
1 sweet countenance
they might enlightned be.
ALl her suites are to this end made
that Gods wayes might be knowne,
And that to Iewes and Gentiles all
his iudgments might he showne
BLest Kingdome he of God, declares,
which should
17 erected be
Throughout the world at his comming,
euen vniuersally.
Chapt. 68
COme see how Dauid setteth forth,
as in a Glasse most cleare,
Th' exceeding
1 mercies of the Lord
shew'd to his people deare
DEclaring how by all good meanes
he doth himselfe expresse
To be a iudge of widowes cause,
father of fatherlesse.
EXcellent and most glorious,
yea without all compare
Of
15 worldly things the Church of God,
and Gods owne people are
FVrnished with his benefits,
adorned with his
16 grace,
Defended
17 from their enemies,
victorious in each place.
GRanting and finding this most true,
Dauid exhorts
34 therefore
All men to praise and magnifie
the Lord for
35 euermore.
Chapt. 69
HEre Dauid as a type of Christ,
we typified find,
Complaining, praying feruently,
with zeale and
2 griefe of mind.
IN cruell sort he vexed was,
they vinegar and gall
Did giue him for
21 his meat and drinke,
and mockt him eke withall.
KNow here
23 their punishments set downe,
where all his foes are durst:
Euen traitors all
6 whereof Iudas,
was chiefest and the worst.
LYing in great affliction;
he gathers heart at last,
And offers prayse
[...] vnto God
for all his goodnesse past.
MVch more regarded is such prayse
then
31 any sacrifice,
Whereof vnto th' afflicted soules,
great comforts may arise.
NOw therefore he prouokes the heauens,
the
54 earth and
[...]ke the Seas,
To laud the Lord, and then of Christ
his Kingdome prophesies.
OF all his Churches he hath eare,
in which who shall liue well,
(Euen all the faithfull and their seed)
for euermore shall dwell.
Chapt. 70
PVt to confusion that his foes
may bee with hast and speed,
The Psalmist prayeth hartily,
and to be helpt at need.
QViet peace that all godly men,
and comfort still may
1 haue,
He of the Lord must
4 earnestly
doth beg, desire, and craue.
Chapt. 71
REspectiuely King Dauid prayes,
establisht by Gods word
And promise, that he in his need,
his helpe would still afford.
SVre trust he had from his yong yeares,
confirmed by his loue;
Which he in his distresse and feares
did alwayes feele and proue.
THe malice of his foes was great,
whereof he doth
10 complaine,
And prayes that Gods good grace and loue,
might still with him remaine.
VNto him then he thanks will giue,
and glorifie his name,
He saith that he
23 in thankfull sort,
will still record the same?
Chapt. 72
A Prayer made for
1 Solomon,
(who was Christs type and figure)
Vnder whom shall be happy peace,
which euer shall endure.
BY iustice shall he rule and raigne,
both Kings and nations all
Shall doe their homage
10 vnto him,
and downe before him fall.
CHrists name and power shall firme endure,
from east vnto the west;
In him all nations of the world
shall euermore be blest.
Chapt. 73
DOubtlesse the flourishing estate
of wicked
1 worldly men:
Nor yet the afflictions of the iust
should dant Gods deare children.
EXpressely Dauid teacheth this
by his example rare
[...]
And that we should consider well
our heauenly Fathers care
FOr his owne folke, which thing should cause
vs reuerence and feare
His iudgement, which are sanctified
to all his children deare.
GIuing vs all to vnderstand;
that wicked workers all
Doe quickly
10 perish, and in pit
most fearfully doe fall.
HIm with his counsell God will guide,
and will good Dauid bring
After a while
24 to glory great,
and ioy euerlasting.
IN hope whereof with full consent
of heart he doth incline
Himselfe into
28 the hands of God
with comfort to resigne.
Chapt. 74
KNow that the faithfull make to God,
most grieuous
[...] plaint and moane
For the destruction of the Church
and true Religion▪
LEwd aduersaries then did roore
amids the congregation.
The Temple and the sanctuary,
came both to desolation.
MVch trust yet all the faithfull haue
both in Gods
11 power and loue,
Which he did after promise
2
[...] them
and they full oft did proue.
NOting this well they succour craue,
for honor of his name:
For the saluation of his Saints,
and for his enemies
23 shame.
Chapt. 75
OBserue how here the faithfull praise
the name of
1 God the Lord,
Who will at his appointed time,
come iudge
2 this wicked world.
PLaguing the wicked workers all
who of his wrathfull cup
Most certainly must drinke each one,
and dregs thereof sup vp.
QVite then abated shall their pride,
and mighty malice be,
But godly men
10 shall be aduanc'd
and plac'd in high degree.
Chapt. 76
REmarke how in defending his,
Gods power is exprest,
When they in Salem by their foes,
were fearfully distrest.
SToutest he then did make to stoope,
he horse and man annoy'd,
All those that rose against his Church,
with plagues he quite destroy'd.
THerefore doth Dauid
11 here exhort,
that they should faithfull be,
And thankfull to this mighty God
whose mercies are so free.
Chapt. 77
VNto the Lord in Churches name
his troubles and tentations,
The Prophet shewes
2 , which makes him thinke
on's former conuersation.
AForetime how he call'd on God
in all his
3 great distresse;
And (being heard) how he did sing
the songs of thankfulnesse.
BY that same constant course of God,
in Churches preseruation
11 ,
His trust in God is strengthened,
in euery great tentation.
Chapt. 78
CHrists Church from out of Abrahams seed
whom he did loue so deare,
Iehouah chose (as Dauid saith)
of his owne mercy meere.
DEepe falshood and hypocrisie,
yet in this seed was
8 found;
Which to their finall ouerthrow,
did at the last redound.
EVill liues of fathers Dauid here
doth much reproach and blame,
That so their children might be drawne
to hate and shun the same.
FOr all that God both led
14 and fed,
and gaue to them his
15 Law:
Yet sires
56 and sonnes did still
57 rebell,
though wonders
32 great they saw.
Chapt. 79
GOds peoples greatly here complaine
of plagues and grieuous woes:
Calamities
2 , oppressions,
sustain'd by cruell foes.
HAstily they then flee to God,
and doe
8 confesse their sinne,
With griefe of heart , and are in hope
full freedome for to winne.
IN this perswasion they are brought
because their griefe and shame
Was ioyned with the great
1
[...] contempt
of his most holy name.
KInd thankfulnesse, obedience
they promise then before,
And that they will performe
13 the same
to him for euermore.
Chapt. 80
LAmenting much, by Dauid is
a dolefull
1 player made,
That God in Churches miseries
would send his helpe and aide.
MAking it like vnto a vine,
which he from Egypt brought,
Which wicked
8 men like cruell boares,
did seeke to bring to nought.
NOw he desires their first estate
that God would haue
14 in minde,
When as his face did shine on them,
and when he was most kinde.
OLd fauour here he prayeth for,
that he would perfect make
That worke he had
18 so well begun,
euen for his owne names sake.
Chapt. 81
PIthily Dauid doth exhort
to praise with voice and heart
The Lord for all his benefits
which he doth still impart.
QVickly come O my people deare,
and worship
8 me alone;
And I will fill you
1
[...] full (saith God)
let all false Gods be gone.
REad here how hee condemnes them all
for their great
11 wickednesse:
And shewes what good things they had lost
through
12 their vnthankfulnesse.
Chapt. 82
SEe here how God is said to be
among the
1 Iudge all;
And
2 magistrates, whom Dauid doth
reproue as partiall.
THen faithfully he bids them deale,
and poore from proud defend:
He stiles them Gods; but plainly sees,
that none of them did mend.
VNto the Lord then Dau
[...]d doth
his hearty prayers make:
That he himselfe
8 would iudge the earth,
and causes vndertake.
Chapt. 83
ATtend how Israel, people prayes
to be deliuered here,
From all their enemies abroad,
and from
1 those foes were neare,
BEcause that they imagined,
nothing in mind nor thought,
But how the people of the Lord
to ruine might
2 be brought.
CRauing most earnestly of God
that all such
9 cruell foes
Might as before he vs'd to doe
be strucke with stormes and woes.
DEaling so that they might well know
that God is
18 most of might,
And that no power can preuaile
against him in his sight.
Chapt. 84
ENuious men had Dauid driuen
out of his
1 Country
[...]eare:
He here desires he might againe
before the
2 Lord appeare.
FOr blest he counts them that may come
and sit amongst the Saints
To serue the Lord; he doth bewaile
his owne vniust restraints.
GReatly he prayseth all them here,
that walke from strength to strength,
And are not weary till they come
to Gods owne house at length.
Chapt. 85
HIs people freed from captiue state,
the Lord corrected still,
Because that they did still transgresse
his law and holy will.
IN humble
6 wise they aske him then
if he would euer frowne,
They pray him for his mercies sake
to shower his fauours downe.
KNowing full well that happinesse
which he had promised,
They rest in hope, reioyce in heart,
and are much comforted.
Chapt. 86
LOaden with
1 great afflictions,
forsaken eke
2 of all,
The Prophet prayeth feruently,
quite to be
3 freed from thrall.
MAking his moane to God, he doth
his miseries
4 relate:
Sometime
5 the mercies he receiu'd
in prosperous estate.
NOt willing to be ignorant,
to
11 glorifie and feare
The name of God, whereto his heart
he would haue ioyned neare:
OF such as
14 sought to slay his soule
and bring him into thrall:
He doth complaine, and prayes to be,
deliuer'd from
17 them all.
Chapt. 87
PRomise is made here to the Church
which was in
1 misery,
That God would her restore againe
to greater
2 dignity.
QVallified and blessed so
an happy
4 man is he,
That there among her members
7 true,
a member true may be.
Chapt. 88
REad here what mone the Prophet makes
and how he doth complaine
Of persecuting
7 enemies,
of anguish, griefe and paine.
SOre troubeled as left of God,
without all consolation:
He cals vpon
1
[...] him, striues by faith
against his desperation.
Chapt. 89
THe Prophet here in many words,
Gods couenant
3 doth praise,
Which he
23 with his elect hath made,
in Christ before all dayes.
VNto the Lord he then complaines
of ruine
34 which befell
To Dauids Kingdome, euen to all
his people Israel.
AS if Gods promise had beene broke,
and
39 disanull'd thereby,
He prayeth therefore to be freed
out of his misery.
BVt at the last he mention makes
of mans
48 fraile life and short;
And by Gods promises confirm'd,
he taketh great comfort.
Chapt. 90
COme heare the prayer Moses makes,
in which the Lords
1 great loue,
Which he hath borne vnto his saints,
and which they daily proue,
DEclared is, yet mans short life
will not prouoke nor
3 make
Him to be thankfull; nor Gods plagues
will cause him sinne forsake.
EArnestly Moses prayes to God,
their hearts to purifie:
And to be
12 mercifull to them,
and their posteritie.
Chapt. 91
FRom hurt protected are th' elect
in euery great
1 tentation:
Who onely put their
2 trust in God,
he is their
3 sure saluation.
GOds promise here is made to all,
that in true
14 loue doe liue;
The Angells must attend them here,
and heauen he will them giue.
HE need not feare the pestilence,
the plague
7 shall not come neere
His house, and when he calls on God,
he promiseth to
15 heare.
Chapt. 92
INspir'd of God
5 the Prophet makes
the Psalme for Sabbath dayes,
To moue the
2 people all day long
the louing Lord to praise.
KIngs Dauid
4 doth reioyce therein,
the wicked haue no wit
To know that
6 when they flourish most
they nearest are
7 the pit.
LEarne here the state
2 of righteous m
[...]n
who walke in godly wayes,
They planted are
13 in Gods owne house,
to celebrate his prayse.
Chapt. 93
MArke how the Prophet prayseth here
the Lords most mighty power
In the
2 creating of this world,
so stable, firme and sure.
NOte how he beateth downe the pride
of all his enemies,
That vp against his Maiesty
rebelliously arise.
OBserue his lawes and test'monies
giuen to his people deare:
Obserue what doth become Gods house,
euen holinesse and feare.
Chapt. 94
PRoud tyrants with great violence
against the iust did rage,
The Prophet
1 prayeth feruently
their
2 malice to asswage.
QVickly that God would punish them
he prayes, and yet
1
[...] before
He warnes them of his plagues, that they
might feare and sinne no more.
REcording Gods good prouidence
the blessednesse he shewes
Of those that are maliciously
afflicted by their foes.
SVre shelter from the Lord they find,
their troubles
16 end in ioy,
Whereas the wicked go to wracke,
the Lord will
23 them destroy.
Chapt. 95
THe Prophet Dauid here exhorts
all men to
1 praise the Lord,
Both for his goodnesse and his power
in
4 gouerning the world.
VNto his name all praises due
because his
6 Church he chose
To be his owne peculiar flocke
which he defends from foes.
AN admonition then he giues
that they should not be bold
To follow the rebellion
of their forefathers old.
BEcause that their rebellion,
and tempting
11 dearly cost
The fruitfull land of Canaan
they thereby loudly lost,
Chapt. 96
CHrists Gospell was to be reueal'd
to Iewes and Gentiles all,
The Prophet therefore stirs them vp
his mercies to extoll,
DEclaring that sith this is done
against their
4 expectation
After his will they should him serue,
not their
5 imagination.
EXceeding vaine all Idols are,
to God all praise is due;
He comes to
15 iudge most righteously
his iudgments all are true.
Chapt. 97
FOr Christ his Kingdome and comming
by Gospell
1 Preachers voyce,
The Prophet bids all sorts of men
to triumph and reioyce.
GReat dread and terror he doth bring
to all the wicked
7 rout,
His furious fire
3 goes him before,
and burnes them round about.
HE ioyfull tidings brings to those
that seeke to
8 doe his will,
Whom he exhorteth earnestly
to loue and
10 feare him still.
IN like sort he exhorts the iust
in God for to reioyce,
To thanke him for his benefits
with hearty cheerfull voyce.
Chapt. 98
KNowing the Lords most mighty power,
and workes of glorious fame▪
Dauid exhorts
1 all creatures
to magnifie his name.
LOuing his Church, in dangers great
he
3 doth it still assist,
He keepeth faith and promise made
to vs in Iesus Christ.
MOst kindly he communicates
his graces
9 and saluation
To all beleeuers in the world,
of euery land
2 and nation.
Chapt. 99
NOte how the power and equity
is praysed here
1 againe
Of Gods Kingdome, by Iesus Christ
our blessed
2 Sauiours raigne
OVer both Iewes and Gentiles all,
whom he doth here prouoke
To praise his name, and to submit
to his most easie yoake.
PErswading them to imitate
their fathers liuing well;
As Moses, Aaron, and the like,
with godly Samuel.
QVestionlesse to call on God
they alwayes had regard,
[...] in the prayers
8 which they made
they graciously were heard.
Chapt. 100
RIght cheerfully to sing and praise,
and serue the liuing
1 Lord,
The Prophet Dauid bids all men
that liue here in this world.
SEeing he did vs make and choose
to be his people deare;
And kept
3 vs from our enemies,
and freed vs from all feare.
THat we into his gates and courts
might enter
4 in alwayes,
And for his lasting
5 mercies might
afford him lasting praise.
Chapt. 101
VNto the Lord good Dauid will
Mercy and Iudgment sing;
Shewing what order he will keepe,
when he shall rule as King.
AN vpright man euen in his house,
he promiseth to be,
All workers of iniquity
he well chastis'd will see.
BVt vpright men that faithfull are,
who godly liue and well,
He will regard and cherish still,
such men with him shall dwell.
Chapt. 102
CAptiues and all afflicted ones,
this Psalme doth reach to
1 pray
That God
2 would helpe them in distresse
[...]
and take their plagues away.
DOwne from the highest heauens he sees
the Churches
19 desolation.
And in due
13 time doth send his folke
both ayde and consolation.
EXcit
[...]d thereby are his saints,
to publish all abroad,
Euen vnto all posteritie
the praises of the Lord
FOr gathering the Gentiles Church
from
22 infidelity.
And for establishing his Chruch
in
28 firme felicity.
Chapt. 103
GOds mercies he doth magnifie
and still prouoketh all
To praise his name who pardons sinne
when men for
2 mercy call.
HIs sinnes (he saith) he pardoned
and sau'd him from
3 destruction;
He gaue him store of
5 earthly things
with
7 soule sauing instruction.
IN louing sort as fathers deare
doe with their
13 children deale,
So God his mercies manifold
to his doth
17 still reueale.
KNow here the
14 frailtie of mans life,
his dayes like
15 grasse and flowers;
But vnto
17 them that feare the Lord
his mercy
18 still endures.
LOe how the Angels are stir'd vp
to praise the
20 liuing Lord,
Marke how his
21 seruants and himselfe
thereto
22 doe all accord.
Chapt. 104
MOst excellently in this Psalme
the Prophet
1 doth set forth
Gods making of this world so wide,
with all his
2 workes of worth.
NOte how he stirreth vp his soule
to
1 magnifie his name,
For his admired
14 prouidence
in gouerning the same,
OBserue how Dauid here doth pray
against the wicked traine,
Who are the cause
33 why God from vs
his blessings doth detaine.
Chapt. 105
PSalmes of thanksgiuing Dauid bids
all people here to sing
Vnto the
1 Lord, and for his loue
to feare him as their King.
QVickly to seek him in his workes,
and to remember well
His loue, his care, and prouidence
ouer all Israel.
REcord his care of
7 Abraham,
and further vnderstand
His loue to
8 Ioseph and Iacob,
declar'd in Aegypt land.
SEe also ouer Moses mild
his
2
[...] prouidence and care,
By whom his people Israell
from bondage freed were:
THen see how through the Wildernesse
they were by Moses led,
And how full forty yeares
40 from heauen
the were with Manna fed.
VNtill they came to Canaan
that fruitfull
44 promis'd land,
These things and more thou in this Psalme
may'st fully vnderstand.
Chapt. 106
ATtend
1 how that the Psalmist doth
exhort all men to prayse
The Lord for all his mercies great,
which doe endure alwayes.
BOuntefully
3 he blest the iust,
who made their supplication
To be againe brought to their land
by his kind visitation.
CAlling to mind the wonders great,
which
7 were in Aegypt wrought'
The peoples
13 great ingratitude
is to rehearsall brought.
DEuoutly they pray to be brought
the Heathens from among,
That they might in their countrey praise
the Lord with heart and tongue.
Chapt. 107
EXhorted by the Prophet here
are all both young
1 and old,
That are redeemed by the Lord,
and
2 brought to his sheepfold,
FOr many mercies to giue thankes
for his
9 good prouidence,
Who ruleth all things; and is still
his Childrens sure defence.
GOod things and ill he sends to men,
that he might winne them so;
Prosperitie,
20 aduersitie,
he sends both wealth and woe.
HEreat as good and vpright men
shall ioy and much reioyce,
Soe shall
42 all ill mens mouthes be stopt,
not muttering any voyce.
Chapt. 108
IN this Psalme these things
1
[...] are contain'd
first Dauid
1 doth accord,
With heart prepared and with tongue,
to praise the
2 liuing Lord.
KNowing his promise to be sure
concerning Israel,
That he should be the King thereof,
and other
8 kingdomes quell.
LEarne that although God for a time
his children
11 seeme to hate,
Yet will he fight
12 against his foes,
and ruinate their state.
Chapt. 109
MAliciously good Dauid was
accused
1 vnto Saul
By flatterers; he prayes that God
would kill such enemies all.
NOw here of Iudas he doth speake,
who Iesus
8 did betray,
And eke of all such traytrous foes
that would Gods people slay.
OBserue that Dauid so desires
to be set free from thrall,
That euen
27 his enemies might know
that God doth worke it all.
PRaises he then will giue to God
not onely priuately,
But euen
30 among the multitude,
and people publikely.
Chapt. 110
QVickned and much inlightned
with sp'rit of Prophecy,
Of Christ, our Prophet, Priest and King
Dauid doth testifie.
REad how Herod of his great power
from Sion
2 forth is sent,
Read how the Lord an oath hath made
and neuer will repent.
SEe how of Leuies Priesthood here
a finall end is
4 made,
See how that Christ our
5 king shall rule,
whole Kingdome shall not fade.
Chapt. 111
THe Psalmist stirreth all men vp
by his
1
[...] example rare,
To praise the Lord for his
2 great workes,
and for his loue and care
VNto his Church and children shew'd
whom he
4 doth still maintaine
With all things fitting for this life,
and which may
5 soules sustaine.
ANd then he doth declare wherein
true wisdome
9 doth consist,
In fearing
10 God, obedience,
and faith in Iesus Christ.
Chapt. 112
BLest is that man (the Psalmist saith)
that doth
1 Iehouah feare,
Who doth delight in Godlinesse,
to whom his
2 lawes are deare.
CVrst is the state of all those men
that doe contemne the same,
They shall be grieued at the good,
and melt away with shame.
DAuid doth here expresly proue
great gaine in godlinesse,
And of this life and that to come
to
9 haue the promises.
Chapt. 113
EXceeding earnest Dauid is
to stirre vp
1 our dull sense
To magnifie the name of God
for his good
2 prouidence.
FOr that he workes quite contrary
to natures course and order,
In sauing of the Church from harme
in euery land and border.
GOD made vs for that very end
that we his name should praise,
Who makes the barren women beare,
and poore mans state doth raise.
Chapt. 114
HEare how the Israelites were brought
from out of Aegypt
1 land;
Obserue the wonders that were wrought
by great Iehouahs hand.
IN that the Sea in Iordan fled,
and
6 Mountaines skipt like Rammes;
The Rocke gaue water, earth did quake,
the Hils did leape like Lambes.
KNow therefore that we are to keepe
Gods loue in memorie,
Who when the course of nature failes
presetues miraculously.
Chapt. 115
LEarne how the Church doth beg of God
for
1 honour of his name
To be preseru'd, and Tyrants all
to be destroy'd
2 with shame.
MOlested by Idolaters
they helpe and succour craue,
And trust in God most constantly
that they his helpe shall haue,
NOt doubting thereof at their need,
sith he hath them redeem'd,
And as adopted sonnes receiu'd,
and fatherly esteem'd.
O How the godly are stir'd vp
to trust in
11 God their shield,
Who gaue the earth to sonnes of men,
and blessings dayly yeeld.
PRomise is made that they will praise
his name for euermore
If he will free
17 them from their foes,
and them to peace restore.
Chapt. 116
QVite freed from danger and distresse
when cruell Saul opprest,
Dauid doth magnifie the Lord,
who gaue him
6 peace and rest.
REsolu'd he is to yeeld to him
the sacrifice
17 of praise,
To walke
9 with him, to pay
14 his vowes,
to worship
13 him alwayes.
SEe here the care Iehouah hath
of all that doe him feare;
Their death is precious
15 in his sight,
as of his Saints most deare.
Chapt. 117
THe Prophet Dauid here exhorts
the Gentiles to accord,
And all the people of the
1 world
to praise the highest Lord.
VNto them all as well as to
his people Israel,
The promise
2 made of life in Christ,
fulfilled is right well.
Chapt. 118
A Long time Dauid (tipe of Christ)
was of King Saul reiected,
As also of his people all,
he was no whit respected.
BVt at the time which God had set,
he was made Isr'els King,
For which he bids all fearing God,
all thankfull praises sing.
CHrist Iesus King, and his kingdome,
is vnder Dauid here
(Who was refused of his owne)
made manifest and cleare.
Chapt. 119
DAuid distressed grieuously,
doth comfort much his minde
With this same Psalme, and shewes wherein
men blessednesse
1 may finde.
EVen in the study of Gods will,
in doing of the same:
In faith and confidence in God,
who saues
6 all such from shame.
FVlly to be inform'd therein,
of God he doth
12 require;
And to be kept from ghostly foes
he humbly doth desire.
GReat hinderance
10
7 he met withall,
his flesh, the world, and sinne,
He prayes for grace whereby he may
no longer liue therein.
HEe being conscious to himselfe,
of life well led before,
And of the goodnesse of his cause,
Gods fauour doth implore.
IN faith he then commends to God
the whole administration
Of future life to Gods glory,
and to his owne saluation.
KNow that the Psalmist here exhorts
all men their
1 liues to frame
According to the Word of God,
and so be safe from shame.
LEarne here wherein his seruice true,
and worship
1
[...]
3 pure doth lye,
When as we serue him as he bids,
not as we fantasie.
Chapt. 120
MArke here the Prayer Dauid makes
when he was vexed sore
By false reports of flatterers,
whereof King Saul had store.
NO small complaint and moane he makes,
that Saul did him compell,
In Mesheck and the Kedar tents
with infidels to dwell.
OBserue what he by Mesheck meanes
whereof he maketh mention,
Euen Israelites who now were full
of
7 hatred and contention.
Chapt. 121
PEruse this Dauids Psalme, for it
doth teach
1 Gods people all,
That onely from the God of power
they ought
2 for helpe
[...]o call.
QVite destitute of bu
[...]nt helpe.
his
4 Church he safely keepes,
And all the members of the same,
he slumbers not nor sleepes.
REad Dauids conflict in distresse,
and how
2 he doth declare
His trust in
8 God, how he commits
himselfe to his good care.
Chapt. 122
SEe here how Dauid comforted
with Churches good estate,
In name of all the faithfull flock
his gladnesse doth relate▪
THe state of City, Kingdome, Church
he highly doth commend,
And
7 prayes, that all prosperity
God to them all would
[...]d
[...]
VNto them all be promiseth
all good things to procure,
As wealth,
9 and peace, and what thing else
should come within his power,
Chapt. 123
A Faithfull praier here is made
by faithfull men opprest
By wicked worldling h
[...]ing them,
and giuing them n
[...]es
[...]
BEhold they lift their eyes to God,
his
2 grace they doe implore,
That he would ease them of their foes,
who did molest them sore:
COntemning, mocking, scorning them,
vsing them
3 spightfully,
This makes them seeke vnto the Lord,
and for his
4 mercy cry.
Chapt. 124
DEliuered from dangers great
Gods people doe confesse
That they were
1 sa
[...]'d not by their force
but by the Lords goodnesse.
EXcept the Lord had saued them,
and stood on their right hand,
They say they
2 had beene quite dispatcht
they had no power to stand.
FOr which deliuerance of theirs
the name of God they praise,
And are
8 assured of his helpe,
and aide in future dayes.
Chapt. 125
GOds loue and care ouer his Church
the Psalmist doth relate,
He sets downe the stabilitie
of their most happy state.
HOw short also their troubles are,
he prayes that
4 God, would giue
All goodnesse and prosperity
to them that purely liue.
IN iustice he desires the Lord
to plague the hypocrites,
Who turne aside from puritie,
and in vaine things delight.
Chapt. 126
KNow that this Psalme King Dauid made
when people had return'd
From Babylon, where seuenty yeares
as Captiues they had mourn'd,
LIke dreamers were these captiues then,
their freedome
1 was most strange.
The heathen were amaz'd thereat
to see so great a change.
MElodious mirth was in their mouthes,
their tongues
2 were fill'd with ioy,
They pray that God would free them still
from thraldome and annoy.
Chapt. 127
NOte that the Psalmist plainly proues
all worldly state's but vaine,
Domesticall,
1 politicall,
except the Lord sustaine.
ON Gods meere prouidence and will
all gouernment depend,
Mens words and purposes are vaine,
if God
1 no blessing send.
PRudent and pious childeren,
the Prophet here
3 doth say
Are Gods inheritance, his gift,
and parents
5 ioyfull stay.
Chapt. 128
QVietnesse, peace and blessednesse
the Lord doth neuer giue
To all men, but
1 to those alone
that doe vprightly liue.
REad how such men are blest of God
in labours of their
2 hand,
In wiues and children which like vines,
about their table
3 stand.
SVch men the Lord spiritually
with graces will encrease,
They shall the wealth of
5 Salem see,
and eke on
6 Isr'ell peace.
Chapt. 129
THe Psalmist here admonisheth
Gods Church and children deare,
Although they be afflicted sore,
yet nought at all to feare.
VNder the crosse the Church hath beene,
euen from most ancient dayes;
Yet by the mighty power of God,
it hath beene sau'd alwayes.
ANd all the enemies thereof,
for all their pompous shew,
Haue all beene suddenly destroy'd
the Lord hath made them rue.
Chapt. 130
BEhold how Dauid doth professe
his hope
1 in his request,
His patience
5 also in his hope
is liuely here exprest.
CRying to God in deepe distresse,
in sorrow, griefe and thrall,
The Lord in mercy heares his sute,
and frees him from them all.
DIstressed Isr'el he bids waite
on God in misery,
He will redeeme his people all,
from all iniquity.
Chapt. 131
ENvious men maliciously,
through hatred and disdaine,
Did say that Dauid proudly sought
ambitiously to
2 raigne:
FOr this cause his humility
to God he doth protest;
And then
2 exhorteth Israel,
in God to hope and rest.
Chapt. 132
GRounded vpon Gods promise made
to Dauid godly
1 King,
The faithfull pray to God that he
the same to passe
2 would bring.
HEre Dauids great and godly zeale
to build
3 Gods Temple marke,
Marke also his religious care
in setting of the Arke.
IN the remouing of the Arke
here Dauids prayer read,
He doth
11 repeat Gods promises
to him and to his seed.
Chapt. 133
KIng Dauid plainly here sets downe
the praise and commendation,
And eke the benefit that comes
by Christian conuersation.
LIkening the loue of Bretheren
to oyntment in this place,
Euen that which signifies to vs,
our head Christ oyle of grace.
MOunt Hermons dew this loue is like
on Sion which did fall,
Who liue in loue and concord thus
the Lord doth blesse them all.
Chapt. 134
NOw Dauid bids the Leuites all
that in Gods house attend
To praise the Lord, because they were
appointed for that end.
OBserue their charge, which was, that they
the Temple well should keepe,
And also should both pray and praise
by night when others sleepe.
POwer they had and charge to praise
the Lord for his goodnesse:
Power they had, and charge likewise
the people for to blesse.
Chapt. 135
QVickned to praise the name of God
all faithfull people are
Of all estates,
2 both for his power,
and
8 for his iudgements
[...] are.
REcorded is his mercy great
to Iacob his elect,
To Israell
4 his people deare,
whom he did most respect.
SEe how the heathenish Idols all
the Prophet in this place
As vanities doth vilifie,
and worthily disgrace.
THen he againe exhorts all men
Gods name to praise and blesse,
Both Israels and Aarons house
for his great bounteousnesse.
Chapt. 136
VNto the Lord all praise to yeeld
for all this
5 worlds creation,
And
9 for the ruling of all things,
read Dauids exhortation.
ACknowledging that we receiue
all things from Gods good hand;
The Prophet proueth that therein
our thankes and praise doe stand.
BY his particular mercies
which Israel
25 well knew;
He saith that euerlasting praise
to him from them is due.
Chapt. 137
COme see the Captiues constancy
destroy'd in
1 Babels land,
Their griefe to see Gods truth decay
here maist thou
2 vnderstand.
DAyly they liu'd in anguish great
the Caldees vext so sore
With taunts, reproaches,
3 mocks and scoffs
and blasphemies great store.
ENduring long these miseries
the Isra'lites desire
That God would plague the
7 Edomites
in his prouoked ire.
FOr ioyning with that Babels brood
in all their
8 cruelties;
Of whose destruction in this Psalme
the Prophet prophesies.
Chapt. 138
GReat courage doth the Prophet vse
in praysing Gods goodnes,
Which he declared vnto him,
and euery day expresse.
HIs goodnesse to him was so great,
that Princes knew the same,
Euen forraine
4 Princes which with him
shall likewise proue the same.
IN time to come he is assur'd
like comforts still to find.
As he
6 had done in former times
from his good God so kind.
Chapt. 139
KIng Dauid for to clense his heart
from all hypocrisie,
Doth shew that nothing can be hid
from Gods all seeing eye.
LYing him
3 downe or rising vp,
his
2 thoughts, each deed and word,
Yea all his pathes, his
4 walkes and wayes
are knowne vnto the Lord.
MAn cannot hide himselfe from God,
his hand will
7 find him out;
The darkest night is as noone day
when
1
[...] Sunne shines cleare about.
NOte how he doth confirme all this
by mans most strange creation,
[...]s zeale and feare of
14 God he shewes,
and his great detestation
OF all that vp against the Lord,
maliciously
21 doe rise,
[...]hom he vnfainedly doth hate
as vtter
22 enemies.
Chapt.
[...]40
PEruse how Dauid doth complaine
of many iniuries,
[...]f falshood and of cruelty
done by his
2 enemies.
QVickly he hath recourse to God
by prayer and
8 request,
[...]d is assured that the Lord
will
12 grant him peace and rest.
RIghteous then he doth prouoke
due pray'rs to God to yeeld,
[...]d to assure themselues that he
will be their fence and shield.
Chapt.
[...]41
SOre persecuted vnder Saul
good Dauid seemes to be,
[...]d then by prayer vnto God
for succour he doth flee.
THen he desireth God, that he
would bridle his affections,
[...]nd giue him patience to endure
his fatherly corrections,
VNtill the time was fully come
when he would vengeance take,
[...]d of his cruell enemies
[...]n vtter riddance make.
Chapt.
[...]42
AN earnest prayer Dauid makes
when he
1 was in the caue,
That from the cruell rage of Saul
the Lord his
2 life would saue.
BEhold that neither mou'd with hate,
nor yet amaz'd
3 with feare
Of present death, nor was he forc'd
by any deepe
4 despaire,
CRuelly then to kill his King,
but with a quiet mind
Directs his prayer vnto God
where he doth comfort find.
Chapt. 143
DAuid doth in this Psalme intreat
the Lord most earnestly,
That all his
1 sinnes he would quite blot
out of his memory.
ENuious men most earnestly
did persecute him
2 still,
Yet he confesseth all was done
Gods iustice to fulfill
FRom all such foes to be set free
he prayeth in this place,
And that the Lord
8 would him restore
to fauour and to grace.
GOds teaching he desires to haue,
and Holy Ghosts direction,
That he may lead a godly
10 life,
safe vnder his protection.
Chapt. 144
HEre Dauid with humility,
and with a heart most sound
Doth prayse the Lord omnipotent
for fauour
2 which he found.
IN being his deliuerer,
his fortresse and his shield;
In granting him the victorie
of all his foes in field.
KEeping him safe, and placing him
in royall dignities,
[...]e craues
5 Gods aid, and that he would
destroy his enemies.
LArge promises to God he makes
that he
9 will still confesse
With Psalmes and fongs, of thankes and praise,
his bountifull goodnesse.
MArke wherein true felicity,
and happinesse doth rest,
Who haue Iehouah for their God
most happy are and blest.
Chapt.
[...]45
NOte that King Dauid then doth make
this worthy Psalme of praise,
When as his Kingdome flourished
in his most happy dayes.
OBserue how herein he describes
Gods prouidence on
2 earth
[...]
[...]uling man, and all things else
that hath or wanteth breath.
PRaising his name, because iustly
he plagues the
17 wicked traine,
[...]ut to the iust doth euermore
a louing God
0 remaine.
QVickned herewith he promised
that he would praise his name,
[...]nd that all flesh for euermore
should likewise doe the same.
Chapt.
[...]46
ROuring vp his affections,
the Prophet
1 doth declare
[...]e zeale he had to prayse the Lord
for his great
2 loue and care.
SIng praises during life he will;
he teacheth
3 not to trust
In Princes nor in sonnes of men,
who quickly
4 turne to dust.
TRust onely in the Lord saith he,
who sets th' oppressed free;
Who
4 comfors widdowes, fatherlesse,
and all in misery.
VNto the blind
7 who giueth sight,
who stroyes the wicked traine;
Who for the sauing of his Church,
for euermore shall raigne.
Chapt. 147
A Psalme of praise here Dauid makes,
wherein he doth declare
Gods wisedome, power and prouidence,
vpon all things that are.
BVt specially vpon his Church,
which cannot be destroy'd;
For he doth build it, though thereof
some members be annoy'd.
COllecting the dispersed ones,
healing the
3 broken hearts;
Feeding the Rauens when they cry,
much more all true conuerts.
DEclaring to his chosen folke
the word of his
19 saluation,
A blessing which he hath not giuen
to men of euery nation.
Chapt. 148
EXhorted are all creatures here,
to prayse the Lord
1 of might,
Angells in heauen, men on the earth,
and starres
2 that shine so bright.
FOr he
5 c
[...]eated them of nought,
but more especially,
The Psalmist doth prouoke his Church
his name to
13 m
[...]gnifie.
GIuing his people Israel,
great power and
14 dignity,
When he had ioyn'd them to himselfe,
in leagues of amity.
Chapt. 149
HEre Dauid doth exhort Gods Church
and children, to prepare
Their hearts to sing new
1 songs to God
for many blessings rare.
IOyfull he bids his saints to be,
and that with one
2 accord,
For conquering their
4 enemies,
they still should praise the Lord.
KIngs being enemies to them,
shall all be bound in
8 chaines,
And Noblemen in Iron bands,
such foes the Lord restraines.
Chapt. 150
LEarne lastly how the Prophet bids
all men the Lord to prayse,
Without all intermission,
and by all meanes and wayes.
MOst mighty acts and wondrous workes
wrought both by sea
2 and land,
In heauen and in the firmament,
doe craue this at our hand.
NOte that with sound of instruments,
(which God of old requir'd)
He bids them praise him, though (since Christ)
such are not so admir'd.
ISAIAH.
Chapt. 1
AH sinfull
4 nation, worse then
3 beasts,
your seruice
12 who requires?
Cease
16 from your sinnes, relieue
17 the poore,
accomplish my desires.
BE godly and your scarlet
18 sinnes
shall cleane be washt away;
But God will curse and kill
20 you all,
if you will not obey.
CRuell, filthy, and treacherous,
21 are they
that once were pure and iust.
But I will purely purge
25 away
thy drosse, thy tinne, thy rust.
DIscerning
26 Iudges I will giue,
they shall thee faithfull call;
But sinners that forsake the Lord
shall
28 be confounded all.
Chapt. 2
EXalt shall God his glorious
2 house,
thereto shall nations flow;
Come let's goe vp, he will
3 vs teach
his waies and paths to know.
FOr out of Sion goes the Law,
from
3 Salem goes his Word,
Of speares shall pruning
4 hookes be made,
and Plow-shares of their swords.
GReat sinnes (as Easterne manners store)
and when man Idols
8 makes;
When great and
9 meane men bow themselues
are
6 cause why God forsakes
HAughtie and poud, God will
11 pull downe,
the Idols
18 cast away:
Men shall for feare fly to the
19 Rocks
in that his
21 dreadfull day.
Chapt. 3
IN Iuda for their grieuous
1 sinnes
the Lord did take away
The staffe of bread, their
3 counsellers,
and all their chiefest stay.
Kings shall be
4 children; babes and base
shall
5 proudly them behaue
Against their Elders, men shall sweare
that they no maint'nance
7 haue.
LEwd tongues and
8 deedes procure this fall;
they shamelesse
9 sinnes declare:
Woe to their soules; but tell the iust
that they
18 full well shall fare.
MY people are by women rul'd;
children oppresse them
12 sore,
Their women are
16 exceeding proud,
woe,
17 woe
24 to them
26 therefore.
Chapt. 4
NOw women seu
[...]n one man desire
to take away their shame:
Gods glorious
2 Branch; the iust
5 are blest
who liue to praise his name.
OF Zion daughters, when the filth
the
4 Lord shall wash away,
And
4 blood; then be will
5 be to his
their shelter,
4 strength and stay.
Chapt. 5
PArable of a vineyard
1 marke,
whereby he
3 doth excuse
His seuere
4 iudgments brought on
5 them,
who did no
6 sinne refuse.
QVaking iudgments are threatened
to greedy misers all,
To drunkards,
12 wantons,
18 ignorants,
in hell fire must
14 they fall.
REnewed woes to them that say
good's
2
[...] ill, and darknesse, light,
Who cleares the wicked for
23 reward
such God will sore affright.
SIth they cast off the
24 law of God,
and did despise his word;
He sends
26 vpon them furious foes,
who slew them with the sword.
Chapt. 6
THe Lord by
1 vision
2 glorious
3
confirmes
4 the
8 Prophet so;
(Though
5 first affraid) that cheerfully
on's
8 message he doth goe.
VPon his mouth the
7 coale was laid,
his sinnes were purg'd away,
God bids him goe then to his folke,
and
9 tels him what to say:
ALl hearts
10 make fat, eares, eyes sout vp
till Cities
11 all be burnt;
Vntill the
12 land be desolate
a tenth
13 yet shall returne▪
Chapt. 7
BRought in great feare is Ahaz King
when Peka 'gainst him rose:
The Prophet Isay comforts him,
and bids him feare not those.
CHrist promised in stead of
14 signe,
which Ahaz had
12 refus'd
Th' Assyrians
17 shall destroy the
18 Land;
by
20 sauing men abus'd.
Chapt. 8
DAmascus
1 and Samaria,
Iudea th' Assyrians spoile.
Sweet Shilo waters were
7 refus'd,
which caus'd their bloody
8 broyle.
ENdeauour (ô Assyrians)
and
9 gather all your rout,
Gird vp your selues, prepare for warre,
but God
10 will root you out.
FEare
12 not their feare, God is
10 with vs
let him be
13 fear'd alone
To vs hee'll be a
14 sanctuary.
to them a
15 stumbling stone.
GOds lawes seale vp amoung
16 his owne
were wonders in
18 his sight;
Who speake not as the
20 word doth speake,
In him there is no light.
Chapt. 9
HEre by
1 the birth and power of
6 Christ
shall be
3 great ioy in
8 woe;
Thou break'st their
4 yoakes, their staues, and rods,
and
6 frees them from their foe.
IEsus Christ here is borne to vs
the mighty God of
9 peace,
With iustice he shall iudge his folke,
no end of his
7 increase.
KIcking
8 against the shining light,
God
9 plagueth
9 Israel sore
For pride and for
13 hypocrisie
increased more and
17 more.
LEwd Leaders make the people
16 sinne,
no man shall
19 spare his brother:
Manasseth Iudah and Ephrim
each one deuour the other.
Chapt. 10
MVch woe to
1 tyrants threatned here
that by their lawes oppresse,
Denying
2 right to widdowes poore,
and
2 robbing fatherlesse.
NO helpe but from the
4 Lord alone,
ô Ashur
5 woe to thee
When thou hast whipt the
6 hypocrites,
thou whipt and burnt shall bee:
OF thy
12 stout hearts and lofty lookes
(who
7 vauntest of thy
8 strength,
As if that thou
11 hadst done the deed)
he'll
12 vengeance take at length.
PVt feares
24 away, ô people deare,
a remnant
21 shall returne:
Thou shalt be freed from
26 all thy foes,
whom
27 he will ouerturne.
Chapt. 11
QVietly then shall Woolfe and Lambe
together
6 lye and dwell
When lesse's
4 branch, euen
5 Christ our King
shall raigne in Israel.
RIghteously will he
4 reproue,
and iudge the poore with right,
The earth with
9 knowledge shall be fild,
he iudgeth
3 not by sight.
SEt vp an ensigne
12 then shall he
for Gentiles all about;
And call together all the Iewes
which
12 were before cast out.
THen
13 Iudah and Ephrim louingly
shall ioyne and
14 enemies quell,
The
15 riuers dried a passage made
for th'rest
16 of Israell.
Chapt. 12
VNto the Lord then shalt thou say,
1 Lord, though thou wast displeasd,
Yet now thy wrath is turnd away,
and I refresh't and ease.
ALL feare expel'd my trust
2 shall be
in God my strength and stay,
My
2 Sauiour, sweet my thankfull song
shall praise
4 his name alway.
BLest be the Lord, let all his workes
of vs exalted be.
O Zion saints exult for ioy
IEHOVAH dwels in thee.
Chapt. 13
CAl'd and
2 commanded
3 of the
4 Lord
are armies
3 huge and stout,
Howle
6 Babylon the mightie Medes
shall root and
17 race the out.
DOlefull creatures (as Satyres
21 owles)
in thee shall daunce and stand,
As
9 Sodome shalt thou be destroyed
thy finall fal's at hand.
Chapt. 14
EXceeding mercy God will
1 shew
in bringing Israell back,
And placing them in their owne
3 land,
no good thing there to lack.
FOr seruants shalt thou take thy
2 soes,
thy captiues they shall bee,
And thou shalt rule th' oppressors all
that once oppressed thee.
GReat
4 triumph
5 ouer Babels
6 King,
whose scepter now is broke,
For
25 pride the Lord giues him and
22 his
a
19 shamefull deadly stroke.
HArd burdens,
25 and Assyrians yoakes
from his the Lord will take,
Howle
31 Palestina, thou must fall,
his, God
22 will not forsake.
Chapt. 15
IN one night, Air, and
2 Kir were foyld;
howle Moab, weepe, and cry,
Thy Cities
4 sack't, greene things confirm'd,
and
6 Nimrim water's drie.
KIlling
5 , robbing
7 , and shriking out
is heard
8 of all thy slaine,
Thy riuers, bloody
9 Lyons kill
the remnant that remaine.
Chapt. 16
LEt lambe be sent
1 to th' worlds ruler;
let out cast dwell in thee,
The throne of Dauid shall in truth,
and mercy
5 stablish'd bee.
MOab must
6 mourne, and howle for pride,
fields languish, Vines
8 breake downe:
Moab shall pray but not
12 preuaile;
God still on Moab frowne.
Chapt. 17
NO man shall fray away the flocks,
in
2 Cities that shall feed
Of Syria, Israel now
3 forlo
[...]e,
as God himselfe decreed.
OF which a remnant shall be
5 left,
that shall false
7 worshp
3 shunne:
A few like gleaned eares of corne
when
6 haruest all is done.
PIously shall these holy
7 ones
vnto their Maker looke,
But Altars
8 , groues, (workes of their hands)
they shall in no case brooke.
Chapt. 18
QVite forgetting
10 their glorious God,
their
9 Cities shall be sack't,
But after he will
12 plague their
13 foes
that did them
14 rob and racke.
ROote out the
1 Aethiopians
God will out of the
6 Land:
Then shall the people Presents bring
to them with plentious hand.
Chapt. 19
SOre
1 plagues for Aegypt God sets downe,
their Idolls
3 cannot saue:
Fierce cruell Kings
4 shall vex them much
they
5 shall no
6 comforts
7 haue.
THeir folly
11 and madnesse here
13 set downe,
of Iudah
17 they're afraid,
Pure language Cities fiue shall
18 speake,
to God an
19 Altar's made.
VNt Egypt and Assyria
24 the Lord
will now his blessings send,
With Israel his
25 inheritance,
these three he will defend.
Chapt. 20
AS nak'd and barefoot Esay
2 goes,
so shall th' Egyptians goe
And Cushites captiues Ashur
4 King
with terror, shame and woe.
Chapt. 21
BEwailing
3 much the Prophet sees
that Babylon
4 must fall:
Edom derides
11 , is bid
12 repent,
th' Arabians
13 foyled all.
Chapt. 22
COmfort me not, the Cities
4 spoyl'd,
the Rulers
3 fled away:
The walls broke downe, the
5 people cry,
O wofull dolefull day.
DIscerning grieuous
8 plagues approach,
they
9 trust to humane
11 strength,
When
12 they should fast,
13 they feast, and ioy
till God did plague
14 at length.
ELiakim
20 (a
22 type of Christ)
is set in Shebnaes
21 place:
Shebna is caried
17 captiue
18 thence,
and dyes in
19 great disgrace.
Chapt. 23
FOr
1 Tyre and
2 Zidon fearefull plagues
are for their
9 pride prepar'd,
Who
12 caried captiues, all their wealth,
among their foes are
11 shar'de.
GOe 'bout the Citie,
16 sing many songs,
God
17 will restore thine heires,
But onely for the good of those
that doe what
18 he desires.
Chapt. 24
HAughtie proud hearts,
4 heard anguish sore
all mirth and
8 musick gone
Here
1 dolefull
2 iudgements threatned are
to old and
4 young each one.
INhabitants defile the land
by
5 changing Gods decree,
His curse therefore
6 deuoures the earth,
much
7 woe they
8 feele and see.
KInde is the
14 Lord (shall some few
15 sing)
the Prophets
16 pin'd with paine,
In iudgements God shall be
17 aduanc'd,
and in mount Zion
23 raigne.
Chapt. 25
LOrd who lai'st
2 leuell lofty towers,
and workest
1 wondrous things:
Thee will I praise and Nations all
shall of thy iudgements
3 sing.
MOst kind thou hast beene to the
4 poore
thou wilt
5 bring downe thy foes,
And make a glorious
6 feast for thine;
wipe teares
8 away from those:
NO death shall hurt his holy ones:
he will vs
9 keepe and saue:
Moab (trod downe as dunghill straw:)
shall sure destruction haue.
Chapt. 26
O Trust yee
4 alwaies in the Lord,
for such haue perfect peace▪
The lofty
5 Citie he layes low:
to his hath giuen increase.
PReuaile with
10 wicked nothing will:
I haue thee early sought:
For vs thou hast ordained
12 peace:
in vs all goodnesse wrought.
QVickly will they Lord seeke to thee,
when
16 thou dost them chastise
Hide
20 thou thy selfe: God will
21 repay:
the dead shall
19 all arise.
Chapt. 27
REd wine
2 vineyard sing yee to her;
Iehouah in that day
Shall with his sword, Leuiathan
and great Sea Dragon slay.
SAfely will he still
3 keepe his vine,
his owne he doth not
7 smite,
As those that are their enemies,
in loue he
8 doth delight.
THE fruit of their chastising
9 is
to purge away their sinne,
Their altars, groues, false worships all,
which they haue liued in.
VNto the people (whom he
11 made)
who would not vnderstand,
No fauour shewed, Iewes,
13 Gentiles
shall serue in holy land.
Chapt. 28
A Fading flower thy beautie is,
ô
1 Ephraim drunke with wine:
Thy pride shall vnder
3 foot be trod,
great
2 woes and plagues are thine.
BEautifull crowne and diadem,
to
5 a remnant he shall be
On Iudges, wisdome; souldiers
6 strength,
of grace bestow will he.
CLeane are no
8 tables, Prophets, Priests,
through
7 wine erre from the way,
In Iudgement stumble; in vision
7 erre,
strong drinke doth make them stray.
DIuine doctrine, whom shall he
9 teach?
euen children drawne from brest;
They would not heare, though they were
12 taught,
the way that led to rest.
EVery one
14 did liue
15 secure,
Christ promised to
16 the iust:
Their secure couenant shall be try'd,
the Plowman
26 taught to trust.
Chapt. 29
FEarfull
1 plagues
2 to
3 Ierusalem
4
for sinne
5 are threatned
6 here,
Their foes
7 shall not be
8 satisfied,
to
9 Seers
10 nothing
11 deare
12 .
GOds woes on all deepe
13 hypocrites,
that serue him not aright,
But after mens commandements
14 ,
such he doth sore affright.
HEre promise made that
18 deafe shall heare,
and eyes full blind shall see:
The meeke and poore in Israels
19 God,
shall then most ioyfull be.
Chapt. 30
INiquitie watchers
29 all cut off,
who snare the iust
21 for naught:
But Abrahams seed shall blesse the Lord
whom he
22 redeem'd and bought.
KNow here the threatned
1 woes to those
that seeke to man for ayde,
That aske not counsell of the Lord,
nor on his strength are stay'd.
LEt this their
8 sinne be written downe,
and how
9 they will not heare
The Prophets preach the word of God,
with lyes they
10 must them cheare.
MOst blest are they that
18 wait for God,
for they shall weepe
19 no more
He will be gracious to them all
they shall haue teachers
20 store.
NO couering of Idols they
shall brooke, but purge and cleanse
And as a menstruous cloath shall hate,
and say fye get thee hence.
O Marke the ioy
29 Gods people haue,
to
31 see th' Assyrians fall,
Marke Tophet large and wide prepar'd,
for wicked liuers all.
Chapt. 31
PRophet Isay here proues them curst
that sought th'Egyptians aid:
Who ware not God,
3 their horses flesh,
God makes them
2 all afraid.
QVite spoyl'd shall they
3 and helpers bee,
God is most strong
2 and wise:
To saue mount
4 Zion from her foes,
like Lyon will he rise.
REturne to God whom
6 Israel left,
all Idols cast
7 away:
The Assyrians
8 shall be vanquished,
Gods fire in Zion stay.
Chapt. 32
SVre blessings
1 learne of Christs
2 Kingdom,
men shall both heare
3 and see:
Mens stammering
4 tongues shall plainly speake
vile persons vile shall be.
TRemble
11 women that are at ease,
all
12 wealth and ioy shall
13 cease;
Vntill the
13 spirit be powr'd on vs,
then shall come
16 rest and
17 peace:
Chapt. 33
VNto the spoylers woes pronounc'd,
for spoyled much they
1 bee;
O Lord be gracious vnto vs,
we
2 waited haue for thee;
ALL; nations scattered when thou stirst,
thou art
5 exalted still,
With
6 wisedome, knowledge, righteousnesse,
mount
5 Zion he doth fill
BItterly shall strong
7 men cry out,
and Zion
14 sinners feare,
The vpright
16 man shall dwell on high;
the King shall see
17 most cleare.
COme looke on
20 Zion thou shalt see
Ierusalem at peace,
Iehouah
22 is our Iudge and King,
to saue he will
24 not cease.
Chapt. 34
DEstroyed shall all nations
2 be:
th' earth drunke with
6 Edoms blood,
God will take vengeance on
8 them all
that wisht not Zions good.
EVen streames shall burning pitch be
9 made,
their dust like brimstone burne,
Which night nor day shall
10 not be quench't,
all topsie
11 turuie turn'd:
FOr
13 Dragons, Owles, and Cormorants,
for
14 Satyrs there to cry,
Shall be their
13 princely palaces,
beleeue it
16 certainly.
Chapt. 35
GOds glorious power
2 th' Elect shall see,
they shall be fill'd with songs:
Weake hands and
3 knees shall be confirm'd,
and birds be
4 stout and strong.
HE will come with a
4 recompence,
and will his people saue;
The deafe shall heare, the
6 lame shall leape,
the
5 blind their sights shall haue.
IN desares shall be water
6 streames;
the tongue of dumbe shall sing:
No sighes, nor sorrowes, shall bee
10 seene,
all comforts God will bring.
Chapt. 36
KIng
1 of Assiria Iudah inuades,
Rasheca bids them
4 yeeld,
Not
7 trust in God, nor in
6 Epypt,
his King would win
9 the field.
LEt not Ezekiah
14 you deceiue,
and say your God shall saue;
Thus is the Lord of Hosts blasphem'd
by this same railing knaue.
MAke knowne thy mind
11 (Eliakim saith)
in speech we
11 vnderstand,
No, let this people
16 heare (quoth he)
and saue their life and land.
NOne make him answer, (so the
21 King
had giuen in charge before)
The Rulers rent their
22 cloathes, and tell
the King, who grieues full sore.
Chapt. 37
O How he
1 mournes! ô Esay
4 pray,
it may be God wil pay
The raylor for his blasphemy,
then he tels what to say.
PVt Ezekiah out of
6 feare,
the Lord will
7 send a blast
Vpon Senacherib and his hoast,
they shall be slaine at last.
QVite ouerthrowne haue I great
11 Kings,
and shall thy God thee free?
King reads the letter,
14 prayes that God
his
16 sure defence
20 would be.
RAging so sore
28 , God hooks his nose,
and brings him
29 backe againe,
The
36 Angell kills his souldiers all,
he by his
38 sonnes are slaine.
Chapt. 38
SEt house in
1 order, dye thou must,
Ez'kiah
2 weepeth
3 sore;
And praying, God addes to his age
of yeares full
15 fifteene more:
THe
7 signe hereof is Sunne
8 gone backe
to God the King
9 complaines
14 ,
God casts his sinnes
17 behind his backe,
his song of prayse
20 remaines.
Chapt. 39
VNt'Ezekiah
1 gifts are sent,
his treasures
2 all they see:
The Prophet then
3 reproues the King,
and tells him what
6 shall be.
ALl these to Babylon
6 shall goe,
thy sonnes shall
7 Eunuches be,
Good is the word of God (saith
8 he)
I peace and truth shall see:
Chapt. 40
BE comfortable to my
1 folke,
Iohn Baptists
4 cry
5 foretold,
Th' Apostles
6 preaching: ALL FLESH GRASSE
and YOVR
10 LORD GOD BEHOLD.
CArry shall he his tender lambes
his
11 folke he well shall feed:
None like
12 the Lord, the earth to him,
is lesse then
17 naught indeed.
DAre any then compare
18 the Lord
to Idols
19 vile and vaine?
Proud Princes be
23 pulls to the ground,
their root shall not
24 remaine.
ETernall God
26 hath all things made,
the young and strong
30 shall fall:
But they that wayt vpon the
31 Lord,
shall be renued all.
Chapt. 41
FRom th'East, who
2 rais'd the righteous man
worme Iacob
14 feare no foes,
Them will I foyle
11 , but
13 helpe thee still,
in drought, well springs disclose.
GIue forth
21 your reasons, tell what's past,
or shew vs what's to
23 come:
Ye 're
24 worse then naught, and curst are
24 they
that choose you all and some.
HEllish confusion are
29 their workes,
there's none that
26 heare their words,
To Zion and Ierusalem,
good tidings
27 God affords:
Chapt. 42
I Haue my spirit
1 put on him,
the gentiles he
6 shall light:
The bruised reed he
3 will not breake,
to th'blind
7 he shall giue sight.
KEepe thee
6 will I: all creatures
10 sing,
and shew his worthy
11 prayse:
Great shame shall light vpon all
17 those
that choose Idolatrous wayes.
LEt deafe and blind
8 now heare and see,
who is so blind as mine?
Who heare and see, but to
20 obserue,
their hearts
25 will not incline.
MY people rob'd and spoyl'd
24 because,
they would not heare my voyce;
His Law he will make honourable
12 ,
in right he doth reioyce.
Chapt. 43
NO riuer
2 shall thee ouerflow,
feare nothing
1 thou art mine;
No fire shall kindle
2 vpon thee,
I
3 am and will be thine.
OVt of my hand no
13 man can saue;
I am your
15 Lord and King:
To Babell
14 for your sake I sent:
forget the former things.
PLead thou
26 with me for my name sake:
I will
25 forget thy sinne:
Yet gaue I Iacob to the
28 curse
for sinnes he liued in.
Chapt. 44
QVite banish
2 feare (ô Iacob deare)
Ile power vpon thy seed
My spirit, and they each one shall say,
I am the
5 Lords indeed.
REdeemer
6 first and last I am;
there is
8 no God but I:
The Image and the maker both
are
11 shamelesse vanitie.
SIng seruant
23 Iacob all thy sinnes
as
22 clouds are blotted out;
I formed thee and all things else,
the
24 heauens and earth about.
THe lyers tokens I frustrate;
the
25 wise men fooles I make:
My seruants words
26 I doe confirme,
and
28 Cyrus shepherd take.
Chapt. 45
VNloose for
1 him the loynes of Kings,
and breake the gates of brasse,
For Iacobs sake I call'd him so
before he euer was.
ALL light and darknesse, peace and
7 euill,
euen I Iehouah made:
No God
6 but I, Ile cause him build
the Citie
1
[...] sore deca
[...]d.
BRing forth
8 saluation, heauens and earth
curst
9 , who with God contends,
All Idoll makers
16 God confounds,
to
17 his great ioy he sends.
COme ne are and know that they are
20 foole
[...]
that set vp wood and stone:
Looke vp to me and saue your soules,
for
22 I am God alone.
Chapt. 46
DOwne fals false Bell: the beasts did bear,
such Idols
2 on their backs,
I cary you
3 from youth to age,
mine no
4 deliuerance lacks.
EQuall to me, whom will you make?
dead Idols cannot
7 moue:
O sinners thinke on former
9 times,
my power and
13 grace yee proue.
Chapt. 47
FOr cruell
1 pride is Babell
3 plagu'd,
g eat sinnes the Lord prouokes,
They shewed no mercy to his folke,
But laid on grieuous yoakes.
GIuen to delights and carelesse
8 life,
she said she was a Queene;
But shee shall haue such plagues for
9 sinne
as seldome haue beene seene.
HElpe of th' Astrologers
13 seeke and craue,
(thou who said
10 none can see
Who trusted in thy wickednesse)
as stubble shalt thou
14 be.
Chapt. 48
ISraell sweares but
1 not in truth;
stifneck't with
4 browes of brasse,
I often taught, and told
5 them things
before they came to passe.
KNowing that they
8 were treacherous;
he saues for his owne sake;
O Israel heare
12 I will thee teach;
mee
17 for thy leader take.
LIke sands of sea thy seed
1 had beene,
thou blest with great increase:
If thou hadst hearkned to my voyce
18 ,
thou hadst had store of peace.
MAke hast
10 goe out of Babylon;
say ye the Lord doth saue
His seruant Iacob; wicked ones
no
22 peace at all shall haue.
Chapt. 49
NAm'd was I
1 from my mothers wombe,
my mouth
2 made like a sword:
I spake, and spent my strength
4 in vaine:
my worke is
4 with the Lord.
O Mountaines sing,
13 th'afflicted he
will comfort and defend:
Th'art giuen to light the
6 Gentiles all,
a Sauiour toth'worlds end.
PRinces shall rise
7 and worship thee,
thou shalt a
8 couenant bee,
To lighten men in darknesse
9 set,
and set the prisoners free.
QVietly then thou shalt them
10 lead,
no hunger, thirst, nor heat,
Shall smite or
10 hurt thy holy ones,
thou canst not them
15 forget.
REstored shall thy people
18 be,
great troupes to
22 thee resort,
Both Kings and
23 Queenes with humble hearts
shall
23 yeeld thee great comfort.
SAue thee, and thine
25 will I from foes,
that had thy death decreed;
With their owne
26 blood they shall be drunke,
and on their flesh shall feed.
Chapt. 50
TO whom haue I your mother sold?
your
1 sinnes haue made you fall:
My power
2 can saue; my tongue doth
4 cheare
the weary sinners all.
VNto the smiters did I giue
6
my backe, and face to shame:
The Lord, doth
7 helpe and iustifie;
who can condemne
8 or blame?
ALl ye that heare, and feare the Lord
trust
10 in his holy name:
Who needs will stay vpon themselues,
shall lye them
11 downe in shame.
Chapt. 51
BEhold your father
2 Abraham,
in Christ belieue, as he:
To Zion he will comfort
3 send,
in her all ioy shall be.
COme heare my law, which is
4 your light,
the heauens
6 and earth behold:
My sauing health endures for aye,
those vanish and wax
6 old.
DEare people who
7 regard my law,
feare not what raylers say;
The moth and worme shall them consume;
my
8 iustice dures for aye.
EVen as of old, stretch out
9 thine arme
thou makst deepe
10 seas be dry:
Then mortall man
12 why shouldst thou feare?
we shall sing
11 ioyfully.
FOrget not God thy Creator,
nor
13 furious foes doe feare;
My word I will put in thy
16 mouth;
thee in mine hand Ile beare.
GReat dregs of dolour
17 hast thou drunke,
and hast no comfort had:
But I that
12 plead my peoples cause,
will make thy foes full sad.
Chapt. 52
HEare
1 Zion, beautifie thy selfe,
th' vncleane shall come no more.
Within thy courts; thou hast beene
3 sold,
but
4 I will thee
5 restore.
IN thee who shall saluation
7 preach,
and ioyfull tydings bring,
Their feet shall be most beautifull,
they shall in
8 Zion sing.
KIngs then shall shut their mouthes at Christ;
14 astonish't all shall be:
Sing ioyfully (
5 Ierusalem)
the Lord hath set thee free.
LOrds vessell bearers be ye
11 cleane:
poluted things abhorre:
Depart from thence, the Lord doth goe
behind
12 you and before.
Chapt. 53
MEn did despise,
3 and Christ reiect:
(the Prophet so
1 complaines)
But as a plant he did
2 grow vp,
induring
3 griefes and paines.
NO fraud was found in him
9 nor sin,
yet was he plagued sore,
And wounded for
5 our wickednesse
increased
6 more and more.
ON him was all our lewdnesse
6 layd;
as lambe to slaughter
7 brought:
So hee to death, by which he hath
our
11 full redemption wrought.
PRosper shall still, the Lords good will,
which he doth take in hand;
He doth triumph, doth iustifie,
as intercessor stand.
Chapt. 54
QViet your
1 selues, ô Gentiles all,
God shall your Church
4 enlarge,
Feare not he is your husband
5 deare,
of you he taketh charge.
REdeemer
8 saith, though I haue seem'd
a
7 while thee to forsake,
Yet with an euerlasting loue
for
8 mine I will thee take.
SWorne haue I that I
9 will thee saue,
(ô thou with
11 tempest tost)
Thy foes shall gather thee against,
but
15 greatly to their cost.
THy children shall be
13 taught of God:
the
1
[...] mountaines then shall moue;
But tongues nor
17 weapons shall thee hurt:
my peace thou still shalt proue.
Chapt. 55
VNto the waters euery one
that thirsteth come and buy,
Drinke freely, heare, beleeue
2 in me,
your soules Ile satisfie.
A Couenant will I make with
3 you
of Dauids mercies sure;
A
4 leader to my folke I haue
giuen, Christ their sinnes to cure.
BE Priest to seeke and call on God,
betime
6 while he is neare;
Forsake your sinnes; returne to
7 him,
then he will helpe and heare.
COnsider that my wayes and
8 thoughts
are nothing like to yours;
My word doth not
10 returne
11 in vaine:
on his
12 all ioy he
13 powres.
Chapt. 56
DOe Justice, keepe the sabbaths
2 pure,
from euill workes abstaine:
My sauing
1 health is neare to
2 those,
that in these workes remaine.
EVen Eunuches, strangers and their
6 sonnes
that doe themselues addresse,
To doe the things that I
6 command,
shall lasting
7 ioyes possesse.
FEild,
9 for
[...]est, beasts come and deuoure,
his watchmen all are
10 blind:
Dumbe
11 greedy dogs, sleepe, gaine and wine
are
12 all that they doe mind.
Chapt. 57
GRieu'd hearts
1 none haue when good men dye
but they are freed from wo:
They rest in peace,
2 yea witches sonnes
against
4 whom raile ye so?
High mountaine hast thou
7 offered on
thy vaine
12 workes Ile decare,
There is no
71 peace to wicked men,
the
15 mourners well shall fare.
Chapt. 58
IAcobs
1 transgressions cry against,
yet they will
3 fast and pray:
And seeme to loue and like my lawes,
but care
4 not to obey.
KNow that the fast that God doth
7 choose,
is to reli
[...]ue the poore:
Yee fast to strife and wickednesse,
and are not heard therefore.
LOdge, cloath, and feed the fatherlesse,
obserue the Sabbath dayes:
Then God will blesse and guide thee
14 still
and heare thee when thou prayes.
Chapt. 59
MVch murther, and such monstrous
3 sinnes
wherein you still remaine,
Hath caus'd the Lord to hide his
2 face,
and from all helpe refraine.
NOne stands for truth, nor calls for
4 right,
they speake and trust in lyes:
I could and would haue help'd and sau'd,
but
8 you did me
9 despise.
OVr sinnes
12 against vs testifie,
like doues we mourne
11 full sore:
We roare like Beares, we looke for ayde,
but thou dost send no more.
PEruerted is all iudgement
11 quite,
truth is falne cleane away;
And who so doth depart from
15 euill
doth make himselfe a prey.
QVickly did his owne arme
16 faile,
when all did him forsake:
And (wondring at their want of zeale)
he made his foes to quake.
REdeemer shall to Zion come
10 ,
to them of humble heart:
My spirit and word shall not from thee
nor from
21 thy seed depart,
Chapt. 60
SHine (glorious
1 Church) the Gentiles all
shall
3 come to see thy light:
Euen royall Kings shall come from far,
to see thy rising bright.
THeir
7 flocks, their siluer and their
9 gold,
they then shall bring to thee:
And who their
17 seruice will not yeeld
shall wholly wasted be.
VIolence shall
18 no more be heard,
the Lord shall be thy
19 light:
A little small one shall be come
a thousand
22 then in sight.
Chapt. 61
ANointed am I for to preach
glad
1 tyding to the meeke:
To Zion mourners
3 bruis'd in
1 heart,
who mee their Sauiour
2 feeke.
BVilding the old
4 wast places all,
Gods Priests they shall
6 be nam'd,
And double ioy they shall possesse,
though they before were sham'd.
COnfirmed couenant will I make,
their
8 workes in truth direct,
Who see them and their seed shall say,
the Lord doth them respect.
DEarely doe I loue righteousnesse,
but robberie deadly hate;
Though for burnt offerings made and done:
beleeuers blessed state.
Chapt. 62
Exceeding zealous will I be
to
1 speake for Zions peace,
Vntill her brightnesse shall breake forth
and righteousnesse increase.
FOr famous shall thy
2 new name be,
a crowne in
3 Gods owne hand;
In thee he doth reioyce, and will
be
4 maryed to thy land.
GIue him no rest vntill hemke
Ierusalem a praise.
Gatherers
8 shall eate in my courts,
and
9 thanke the Lord alwaies
HIgh waies cast vp, a standard set;
the
10 peoples way prepare:
Saluation God proclaimes
11 to his,
they holy called are.
Chapt. 63
I Haue the wine presse
3 trod alone;
Redeeming
4 time is come;
And I will trample vnder foot
my
6 foes both all and some.
KIndled fury did me vphold;
mine
5 arme saluation brought:
When I with wondring did behold
that none my glory sought.
LOrd, of thy loue, and
7 goodnesse great
make mention still will I,
Thou saidst, they are thy people deare,
Children
8 that will not lie.
MVch vex't was he when they rebell'd,
and
10 did against him fight:
Then thought he
11 on his ancient
12 loue,
how
13 Moses rul'd them
14 right.
NOne knew vs (Lord) in heauen but
19 thou,
not Abraham nor his seed:
Looke downe and helpe; what is thy
15 loue
restrain'd in time of need?
O Lord why hast thou made vs
17 erre,
and hearts kept from thy feare;
Thy foes and ours tread downe thy
18 Church,
returne Lord, helpe and heare.
Chapt. 64
POwre
1 down thy plagues
3 vpon thy foes,
no
4 eye did euer see,
Nor eare hath heard, what thou prepar'st
for them that wait on thee.
QVickly thou Lord dost meet the
5 man
that worketh righteousnesse;
But thou art wroth; for wee haue sinn'd,
our best work's
6 filthinesse.
REmember not
9 our sinnes for aye:
afflict not very sore:
Our holy
11 house thy foes haue burnt;
wilt thou not
12 plague therefore?
Chapt. 65
SOught am I of a
1 nation
that did not aske for mee:
I called daily on mine owne
they fell
3 to Idolatrie.
THey walked after their
2 owne thoughts,
the Hypocrites did say;
O come not neere, for
5 I am pure,
these I with
6 plagues will
7 pay.
VNto a remnant that
8 me sought,
a blessing
9 will
10 I giue;
But you forsooke me when I call'd,
and would not godly liue.
ALL things wherein I tooke no ioy,
those did ye still pursue.
My seruants therefore shall be blest,
but ye shall dearly rue.
BEhold new heauens
17 and earth I make,
in which
19 I will reioyce;
No want of blessings
21 there
22 shall be
nor
23 heard
24 a mourners
19 voyce.
CVrst wolfe then with the Lambs
25 shall eate,
they shalt not hurt at all:
I then will heare and answer
24 make
before my people call.
Chapt. 66
DOgges necke cut off: killing a
3 man
I count as worthy praise:
As when you offer Oxe or
3 Lambe,
and follow your owne wayes.
EArth is my footstoole, heauen 'n y th
[...]n
what house will you afford:
To poore and contrite soules I
7 looke,
who tremble at my word.
FOr my name sake who cast you out,
(your
5 brethren full of hate)
Said God be prais'd, but he will
5 bring
them into wofull state.
GReatly reioyce at Churches growth,
and at their blessings
11 store
12 ,
Transgressors worme shall neuer die
4 ,
they burne for euermore.
IEREMIAH.
Chapt. 1
AH Lord I am but
6 as a child,
the people will me scorne:
Goe, I a Prophet thee ordain'd
5 ,
before that thou was borne.
BE not afraid of any
8 thing,
I will deliuer thee:
To pull downe Kingdomes
10 built and plant,
declare what
11 thou dost fee.
COme from the North shall
15 mightie Kings,
they shall not Iudah spare:
But plague them for
16 their false worships,
this rod
11 and
12 pot declare
13 .
DIsmay not at their
17 furious lookes,
lest thou confounded be:
Ile thee defend, and fight
18 with those
that doe contend with thee.
Chapt. 2
EVill shall betide all Israels
3 foes;
the fruits of Gods increase:
What haue I done, that you so
5 soone
to serue mee should surcease.
FRom
6 Aegypt who did you bring out
into a fruitfull
7 land,
You neuer
6 ask't, nor yet your Priests
my
8 law did vnderstand.
GRieuously was their
7 land defil'd;
they
8 prophecied by Baall,
And changed mee for Idoll gods,
and must be plagued all.
HAue thy backslidings
17 not procur'd
that thou thus plagu'd should be?
Thou hast forsaken me thy
1
[...] God:
my feare is not in thee.
I Broke thy yoake, and burst thy bands,
20 thou said'st, Ile not transgresse:
I planted thee a noble
21 vine;
why art thou so fruitlesse?
KNow that your
22 sinne is marked out,
a stocke ye call your fire:
Yet in their trouble they will say,
saue (Lord) we thee desire.
LIke Lyon fierce, your owne sword hath
destroy'd
30 your Prophets all:
Because thou saist I haue
35 not sinn'd,
looke for a woefull fall.
Chapt. 3
MOst filthy haue thy whoredomes
1 beene
yet turne to me againe:
Because thou
2 didst defile the land,
I did deny
3 thee raine.
NOne turn'd to mee with all their
10 heart
in Iudah, though they saw,
The shamefull sinnes of Israell,
they worse did breake my law
O Israell, turne,
12 confesse your sinnes,
repent,
13 and I will saue,
To feed your soules with knowledge
15 pure,
you shall good pastors haue.
PEruerted haue we
25 all our waies,
we
21 weeping come to thee,
Our Fathers
24 children, flocke and heards
for sinne
25 confounded be.
Chapt. 4
QVickly (if thou mind to
1 returne)
repent and sweare by
2 me,
Or else the,
4 land, King,
5 Prophets,
8 Priests
shall
9 desolation see.
RAging and ruthlesse foes
13 draw neare;
O wash thy
14 heart from sinne:
Thus art thou plagu'd, because that
18 thou
rebellious still had beene.
SOunding of trumpets
19 haue I heard:
I cannot but lament:
The souldiers slay, and slaughter
20 all
in euery place they went.
TO Sinne, and serue the deuill, my
22 folke
haue skill and knowledge store:
But to doe
22 good, they're very fooles;
the
27 land laid waste
18 therefore.
Chapt. 5
VPon the Iewes for fearefull sinnes
are
6 fearefull plagues set downe:
They sought not truth; they falsly
2 swore;
this
3 made the Lord to
7 frowne.
ALL men refuse
3 to turne to me,
both poore and
5 men of might
They sweare, and
7 play th'adulterers,
can I
9 endure this sight?
BReake down their
20 walls, th'are not the Lorde,
the Prophets
13 teach them lies:
A nation shall deuoure
15 thy flockes,
and food, before thine
17 eyes.
COme heare (ye blinde
21 and foolish folke)
what? will ye not me feare?
Which rules the roaring seas, and giues
you haruest euery
25 yeare?
DEpriu'd are you of
25 these good things,
by reason of your sinne:
The Prophets lye, the Priests loue
31 gifts:
and people ioy therein.
Chapt. 6
EVery one
1 prepare to flee,
your
3 Citie's
4 spoyled
5 quite;
Her violence
6 and grieuous
7 sinnes
are euer in my sight.
FRom thee (least I depart
8 away)
ô Salem learne and feare:
The Word is a reproach to
10 them
that haue no ioy to heare.
GIuen are they all to couetuousnesse
1
[...]
Priests, Prophets
14 preaching peace:
Without
15 all shame, when
11 wickednesse,
and warres did still
13 increase.
HEarken ye out the old good pathes,
16 heare what your watchmen say,
And you shall find rest to your soules
17 ,
they answered fla
[...]ly nay.
I Therefore will lay
21 stumbling blockes,
both sires and sonnes shall fall:
I care not for
20 your sacrifice
you sure shall
21 perish all.
KIlling is seene on
25 euery side,
in sackcloth sore
26 lament:
[...]hee haue I as a fortresse
27 set,
[...] reuolters
28 shall be shent.
Chapt. 7
LIsten ô Iudah
3 leaue your sinnes,
forsake
6 your hurtfull goes;
[...]oe no man wrong, and you shall liue,
and
7 feele no smarting rods.
MAd people, w
[...]ll you murther,
9 steale,
adultery commit?
[...]alle worships vse, then come to me,
and in my
10 temple sit?
NO profit is in lying words,
nor to your temple trust:
[...]s Shilo
14 will I lay it wast,
sith you liue as you
13 lust.
OBserue
17 their deeds (pray
16 not for them)
for I did neuer
21 speake,
Or such
18 things as they
22 doe to me
[...]nd my
23 Commandements
24 breake.
PRophets were daily
23 sent to them,
who bid obey my will:
But they refusing waxed worse,
and were
26 rebellious still.
QVake and lament, the
29 wrathfull God
will from you all depart:
You burne in Tophet children deare,
which
31 came not in my heart.
REioycing shall in
34 Iudah cease,
no mirth be heard that day,
Their ca
[...]leasses the foules shall eate
33 ,
none shall them fray away.
Chapt. 8
SPread shall thy foes the buried bones,
of Prince and people all;
Before the Sun
2 , which they haue seru'd,
and men for
3 death shall call.
THey held deceit
5 , would not repent,
but worse
6 and worse did grow:
The fowles obseru'd their pointed
7 times,
but me they will not know.
VS hath he giuen waters of gall,
because
14 we haue transgrest:
God will consume 1
3 their grapes and figs:
send serpents
17 on the rest.
AGainst hearts griefe when I
18 would striue,
my heart doth faint and faile,
To heare their cry they
19 me prouok't,
no Physicke
22 could preuaile.
Chapt. 9
BEcause for sinne the most are
1 slaine,
I would shed store of teares;
Like bowes they bend their tongues
3 for lyes,
not one Iehouah feares.
COuragious for the truth
3 none is,
they grow from euill to worse,
Nor neighbour, nor a brother
4 trust,
they taught their tongues
5 to curse.
DEns of foule Dragons
11 desolate,
I will their Cities make:
Of man and beast, for
10 all these sinnes,
my
9 soule shall vengeance take.
EVen for their disobedience
17 ,
and walking after Baal
14 :
I gall and
15 wormewood will them giue,
they
16 shall be scattered all.
FOr cunning mourning
17 women send,
to grieue for
19 great distresse:
As dung
22 on field dead bodies lye,
death kills both
21 more and lesse.
GLorie thou not in wit and wealth,
or any
23 wordly might:
[...]ut that thou knowest me thy
24 God,
in such I doe delight.
HE saith that he will punish
25 sore,
both Iewes and Gentiles all,
Who are not
26 circumcis'd in heart,
[...]or truely on him call.
Chapt.
[...]0
ISraels house learne
2 not the waies
wherein the heathen walke:
O
[...] trees they
3 make them guilded gods,
that cannot speake nor talke.
KIng of all nations
7 thou art great,
and madst the heauens
11 so high:
Thee will we
7 feare, the stockes doe teach
vs naught but vanity.
LIke Idols is
16 not Iacobs God:
in knowledge man's
14 a beast.
By brutish Pastors
20 all are
21 spoyl'd,
for this Gods
22 wrath's encreast.
MAn cannot
23 guide his steps himselfe,
in mercy
24 mee chastise:
On Iacobs foes poure out thy rage
25 ,
those heathenish families.
Chapt. 11
NEglected is the couenant
8 made
with Abraham and his seed,
Which was obey and you
4 shall be
my people deare indeed.
OBeying
8 not but turning
10 backe,
to their forefathers sinne,
To bring vpon them grieuous
12 plagues,
I surely will begin.
PRay not for this sinfull crew
14 ,
for sure I will not heare:
As streetes so altars
13 vnto Baal,
in Salem they doe reare.
QVite broket are thy branches off
16 ,
who wast an Oliue greene:
For thy reioycing in
15 thy sinne,
thou art supplanted cleane.
RIght like an oxe to slaughter
19 brought,
I knew not their intents:
When they said kill and cut him off,
thou
20 Lord my death preuents.
SHew me thy wrath on them that said
preach not on
21 paine of death.
Let sword their sonnes and daughters
22 slay,
or famine stop their breath.
Chapt. 12
THou Lord art iust, yet tell me
1 why
the wicked prosper so?
Thou lett'st them grow and bring forth fruit
they feele no kind of woe.
VNto the Lord, I well am
3 knowne,
for slaughter them prepare
For sinne the Land shall mourne, the beasts,
hearbs, birds consumed are.
A Number
6 of thy fathers
8 house
haue falsly with thee delt:
Beleeue them not, for all their words,
my
7 folke my anger
8 felt.
BEasts of the field
9 , come and deuoure,
Pastors my
10 vineyard spoile:
Yet no
11 man grieues, they reape no wheat,
but thornes
13 for all their toyle.
COmpassion will I haue
15 on them,
and bring them to their land:
If they obey they shall be sure
to haue my helpe at hand.
Chapt.
[...]3
DEstruction
1 is prefigured
by linnen
4 girdle hid,
[...]s it was
9 spoil'd; so God for pride
to his
10 folke dealt, and did.
EVery bottle fill'd with
12 wine,
shewes forth the
13 wofull fall,
[...]f people fill'd with drunkennesse
14
and dash'd in peeces small.
FEare ye the
15 Lord (before he plague)
if not in
16 secret place;
[...]y soule shall weepe, to see you
17 brought
into poore captiues case.
GReatnesse of sin
22 great plagues haue brought
can Blackmoore
23 change his skinne,
[...]o more can you your lewdnesse
27 leaue;
when will ye cease to sinne?
Chapt.
[...]4
HOw grieuous was Ierusalems
2 cry?
there was no water found
[...]o raine did fall vpon the
4 earth
nor grasse grew on the ground.
[...]N places high, wild asses
6 did.
like dragons suffe vp winde:
[...]he Hindes did calues, and in the fields
did leaue their calues behind.
KInde Lord
7 the hope of Israel,
(though
8 we haue sinned sore)
[...]et we are called by thy
9 name,
ô leaue vs not therefore.
LOuing to wander from his
10 wayes,
the Lord doth them reiect:
[...]ay
11 not for them: I will not heare,
nor their requests accept.
MY name
13 false prophets still doe vse
saying yee
14 shall not see:
The sword nor famine; yet by these
they shall
15 consumed be.
NOne shall there be to bury them
16 ,
that hearkened to their lyes:
Their wickednesse I will poure out,
vpon their families.
O Let me weepe for people
18 slaine,
our sinnes we
20 doe confesse:
Be
21 mindfull of thy couenant (Lord)
we
22 waite on thy goodnesse.
Chapt. 15
PEople so gracelesse I will plague
1 ,
though Moses should intreat:
Swords, beasts, and doggs
3 shall stroy them for
Manasses
4 sinnes so great.
QVite backward art thou gone from
6 me,
I can no longer spare:
Of children they
7 shall be
8 bereau'd
their plagues increased are.
RAylers me curse, though
10 vsury
I neither giue nor take:
Woe is me a man of strife,
I still
10 contention make.
SAfe shall thy remnant be, and
11 though
your foe shall vse you well,
Yet for your sinnes to a land vnknowne
with them you shall goe dwell.
THou knowst I suffered for thy sake
15 ,
ô take me not away:
Auenge me on mine enemies all,
thy word was my sweet stay.
VPon me (Lord) why hast thou brought,
perpetuall
18 paine and wound:
With mockers I reioyced
17 not,
I eate thy word I found.
AS mine owne mouth so shalt
9 thou be
a wall I
20 will thee make
Vnto this people; if the vile,
thou from
19 the precious take.
Chapt. 16
BEware thou shalt not take a
2 wife,
nor any children haue:
They shall all dye
4 of grieuous deaths,
not one their
6 life shall saue.
COme not in house where feasting is,
to eate or there abide:
For ioy shall cease, all mirth
9 depart
of bridegroome and of bride.
DEmaunding why they thus are plagu'd,
and what had beene their sinne?
Say that their fathers
11 me forsooke,
and they farre worse haue bin.
EGypts deliuerance not so strange,
as when I shall them saue:
And bring them to their land againe
15 ,
which I their fathers gaue.
FRom euery mountaine, hill and hole,
I will them hunt and call:
And double pay them for their sinnes;
they haue defiled all.
GRacious God the Gentiles all,
shall fathers sinnes confesse:
Once I will cause them know my
21 name,
and will my might expresse.
Chapt. 17
HIgH places,
2 groues, and such great sinnes
ingrauen
1 on their heart:
Haue caus'd the
3 spoile of treasures all,
and
4 endlesse burning smart.
IN man who trusts, and turnes from
5 God,
a cursed man is he:
But who so trusts, and hopes in
7 God,
still blessed shall he be.
KNowne vnto me are all mens
10 hearts,
most wi
[...]ked full of guile:
To giue according to their wayes,
rich
11 misers, fooles the while.
LOrd heale
14 and saue, thou art
13 our hope,
saluation is from
1
[...] thee:
Who thee (the wel of life)
13 forsakes
shall all ashamed be.
MOckers of his Prophecie
he here complaineth of.
And prayeth for their confusion
18 ,
that at Gods word doe scoffe.
NO blessings
21 could, nor
23 curses cause
them keepe
25 the Sabbath day,
Till he set fire
26 vpon their gates,
and pallaces did decay.
Chapt. 18
OF Israels house as potters deale
6
with clay they haue in hand:
So haue
7 I power (as they deserue)
to
8 make or marre
9 a Land.
PEruerse reuolters turne to me,
from
11 your owne wayes depart,
They said they would doe what they
12 list,
and what came in their heart.
QVickly will I spoile their
16 land,
and the man
17 hissing make;
Because that they my ancient
15 pathes
and worships strange vptake.
REgard not what the Prophet
18 saith,
Gods word we shall haue still;
Come let vs smite him with the tongue,
and doe euen what we will.
SAue
19 me (ô Lord) but pay them home,
that pay me
20 euill for good:
[...]a
[...]ue vp their
21 children, pitty
22 non
[...],
nor spare to shed
23 their blood.
Chapt.
[...]9
TAke pot'ers vessell, and the heads
1 ,
of Priests and people all:
[...]oe tell a
[...] Tophet
2 all the
3 plagues,
that shall on them befall.
VNto their Gods they burnt their
4 sonnes,
to Baal they offered,
[...]hich I commanded not, nor
5 spake,
nor came it in my head.
AN hissing shall this
8 place be made,
the beasts
7 shall eate their fill;
[...]nd fowles of their dead carkasses
7 ,
which cruell foes shall k
[...]ll.
BEcause their neckes they hardened,
and car'd not for my word;
They shall their sonnes and daughters care
and be of God abhorr'd.
CHiefe Ruler Pashur hearing
2 this
doth Ieremiah smite:
Puts him i'th stockes, but he is plagu'd;
his friends slaine in his sight.
Chapt. 20
DEliuer will I all the strength,
into the spoilers hand:
Of Iudahs King, both thou and thine,
shall dye in Babels Land.
EVery one derideth
7 me
ô Lord thou hast preuail'd;
I said, I will reproue no more
9 ,
when they so sore assail'd.
FOrbeare I could not, for as fire
thy word
9 did in me burne:
They me defam'd, and frighted sore,
they watch'd when I would turne.
GReatly shall they bee
11 asham'd,
thy vengeance
2 let me see
Vpon my foes: prayse ye the
13 Lord,
the poore deliuereth he:
HEre Ieremiah (sore
14 perplex'd)
his birth doth curse
15 and blame,
Because he griefe and sorrow
18 saw,
and dayes consum'd with shame.
Chapt. 21
I Pray thee know if God will
2 saue
from king of Babels rage?
No, God will smite you all himselfe,
none
6 shall his wrath asswage.
KIng Zedekiah and his
7 men
(who shall not then be slaine)
Shall captiues goe and in great woe,
in Babell still remaine.
LEt people to Chaldeans
9 yeeld
them else the foes will slay:
Who yeeld shall haue their liues bestow'd
vpon them for a prey.
MY face against you haue I
10 set,
and kindled is mine ire:
This City Babels King shall haue,
and burne it all with fire.
NOw turne and iudgement
12 execute,
the poore opprest, set free:
Or else, (for all thy
13 trusty rocke)
I sure will
14 punish thee.
Chapt. 22
O King of Iudah
2 , thou and thine,
be iust, doe
3 no man wrong:
Then
4 will I blesse
5 , if not Ile
6 burne
your City
7 now so strong.
POure forth no teares
10 for those now dead,
but
11 captiues state deplore:
Who must forsake their natiue
12 soile,
and neuer see it more.
QVite quasht shall King
18 Iehoiakim be,
and
19 buried like a beast,
His heart is all for auarice
17 ,
his cruelty's increast.
RIghteously your
15 fathers rul'd,
and they
16 were blest therefore:
But woe to him that builds with wrong
and so augments his store.
SPeaking
21 to thee in prosperous state
thou saidst I will not heare:
Thou and thy Pastors
22 plagu'd shall be
with exile shame and feare.
THough Coniah were most deare
24 to me
yet thus I haue decreed
He shall be banisht; neuer
30 thriue,
nor any of his seed.
Chapt. 23
VNto the Pastors
1 murthering soules,
the
2 Prophet threatneth woe,
Good pastors
3 after he prouides
that will not
4 starue them so:
A Righteous
5 branch the Lord will raise,
THE LORD
6 OVR RIGHTEOVSNESS
By him his people shall be safe,
no
7 end of his
8 godnesse.
BOth Priests and Prophets
11 are prophane,
adulterers
10 abound:
The land laments and mournes for oathes,
all sort
14 of men vnsound.
CAn any hide himselfe from
24 me?
I heauen and earth do fill:
The Prophes feed my folke with lies,
a whirlewind shall them kill.
DOting dreamers let them dreame on,
28 my word teach faithfully;
Like fire and hammer t'is
29 which breaks
the rocke by Prophecy.
Chapt. 24
EVen as some figges are passing
5 good,
and pleasant for to eat:
So will the Lord bring
6 backe his owne,
and
7 kindly them intreat.
FAmine, the sword
9 and pestilence
shall wicked wretches
10 wast;
As naughty, bad and bitter figges,
8 no man can eate, nor tast.
Chapt. 25
GOd hath
3 me sent and many moe,
both
4 early and late to call,
And bid
5 you leaue your false
6 worships
but ye
7 refused all.
HAuing oft heard and not obeyed,
9 they shall be plagued sore:
No milstones
10 mirth, nor candle light,
they shall haue
11 any more.
IN Babylon full seuenty
12 yeares,
the King there shall they serue:
But
13 after I will plague that land
as
14 their sinnes shall deserue.
KIngs cause to drinke
15 of this wine cup,
even Iudah's
18 Princes all:
My sword shall moue
16 and make them mad,
by it shall
2
[...] nation fall.
LOth if strange nations be
28 to take,
the cup, and drinke of it:
Say that my people haue
2
[...] begun
and you shall not goe quite,
MIghtily shall Iehouah
0 roare
vpon his habitation:
Mens carkasses shall be as
33 dung,
in euery land and nation.
NOw shepheards howle
34 ye chiefe of flocks,
wallow in dust turmoyl'd,
The dayes of slaughter are at hand,
their pastures quite are spoyld.
Chapt. 26
OF all the words I bid thee speake,
2 diminish not a word.
If they obey they
3 shall be blest,
if not, Ile plagues afford.
PRiests, Prophets, and the
8 people all
say Ieremy thou shalt dye,
The Princes said no cause of
16 death,
they could in him espie.
QVit then in iudgement Ieremy is
16 by two
18 examples
20 rare,
And is preseru'd from peoples
24 rage
by good Ahikams care.
Chapt. 27
REmaine shall they in their owne
1
[...] land,
that yeeld to Babels King:
But who refuse I will
8 consume,
and plagues vpon them bring.
SVch Prophets false, as tell
16 you lies,
beleeue not what they say:
The treasures
21 which were left behind,
the King
22 shall beare away.
Chapt. 28
THen Hananiah
1 falsly saith
that two
3 yeeres once expired;
Kings, vessels, captiues shall
4 returne,
to their owne land desired.
VNt' Hananiah Ieremie said,
Amen
6 , so may they fare:
Who prophesieth
8 true or false,
the
9 euent will soone declare.
ALL being
11 present Hanani tooke
0 from Ieremie's necke the yoake
Of wood, and said, thus shall the yoke
11 of Babels King be broake.
BRoken they haue the yoke of
13 wood,
but thou for them shalt make:
Strong yron yoakes, they must serue
14 him,
and he their beasts shall take.
CAst off, and cursed
16 shalt thou be
that mak'st them
15 trust a lye:
Vnsent thou taught rebellion,
this yeare thou sure shalt
16 dye.
Chapt. 29
DIrected vnto Babylon,
1 and to the captiues there,
A letter is from Ieremy,
that they
5 should houses reare.
EAte you the fruites of gardens there,
5 which you your selues did plant,
Take wiues
6 , and pray for Babells peace,
then peace
7 ye shall not want.
FAlsly
9 vnsent, they prophecie,
8 but let them not deceiue;
The dreames ye caused them to dreame
in
8 no case doe receiue.
GRaciously I will performe
10
at th'end of seuenty yeares,
My promise
12 made of your returne,
and free you from all feares.
HOme shall ye come, and if you search
for me
13 with all your heart,
I will be found, and heare your pray,
14 and will not from you part.
I Will the sword
17 and famine send
on King that sit, on
16 throne;
And on the people here at home
and those are captiues gone.
KNow now the cause
19 you hearkened not
to that I did command,
But said, the Lord hath Prophets
15 rays'd,
for vs in Babels land.
LYing Prophets here two are slaine,
22 and rosted in the fire:
For villany in Israel
23 a due deserued hire.
MAliciously
25 'gainst Ieremy,
Shemaiah
26 a letter writes,
Which
29 read the Prophet
32 Ieremy
his dolefull doome recites.
Chapt. 30
NOw God bids Ieremiah write
2 the time to be at hand,
That all his people should
3 returne
and dwell in natiue land.
O Iacob I will breake
8 thy yoake,
thou
5 hast beene
7 troubled sore,
Now shalt thou serue
9 me and the King
and shall be
10 plagu'd no more.
PVt feare away, thy spoylers
16 all
shall shortly spoyled be,
Because they thee an out-cast
17 call'd
I will giue health to thee.
QVietly then shall Israel
10 rest,
reioyce, freed from all paine:
A whirlewind from the
23 Lord shall fall
vpon the wicked traine.
Chapt. 31
REstore and build will I
4 againe,
my Virgin Israel:
Reioyce; of old I
3 did thee loue,
and
8 still will loue thee
9 well.
SHew farre and neare that God will
10 call
and as a shepheard keepe
His folke, who shall in Sion
12 sing,
they shall no longer weepe.
THeir Preists with fatnesse,
14 people eke
with goodnesse Ile suffice,
Cease mourning (Rabel) to
16 bring backe
their children, God will raise.
VNto me turne (saith Ephraim
18 )
and turned shall I be:
As vnyok'd bullocke haue
19 I beene,
and thou chastised me.
Asham'd I was, I smote my
20 thigh,
for sinne confounded sore:
Thy bowels yearnd, thou brought
21 me backe,
and angry wast no more.
BEhold how Christ
22 is promis'd here,
how he his Church
27 regards:
As he before afflicted sore,
much more
28 he now rewards.
COuenant now then
31 will I make,
my people
33 shall they be;
I in their hearts will write my lawes,
their sinnes
34 I will not see.
DEuider of the
35 Seas hath built
his Church so
38 large and sure
That it shall fi
[...]me and stable stand,
while
37 Sunne and Moone endure.
Chapt. 32
EScape thou canst
4 not, Babels King
thou shalt see face to face:
For this he
2 was in prison cast,
the King did him
3 disgrace.
FOr rhine owne selfe buy thou my
8 field,
(thus saith Hananeel)
The writings
12 Baruck
13 keepes as
14 signes,
that once they
15 there shall dwell.
GOod Prophet here to God
16 complaines,
and hearty prayers makes;
Here grieuous
28 plagues
29 are threatned them
for
30 great transgressions sake.
HArtily
37 after a while will I
to them my mercies
38 shew:
Ile bring them backe, renew their
40 heart,
they shall me feare and know.
I Will reioyce to doe them
41 good,
Ile free them from
42 annoy:
My couenant
40 will I make with them,
they shall their
44 fields inioy.
Chapt. 33
KIngs houses and the Citie's
4 spoyl'd,
they come to fight in vaine:
To fill themselues with dead
5 coarses
whom I in wrath haue slaine.
LEauing to punish, Ile them
6 blesse
with peace abundant store:
Their sinnes Ile
8 cleanse, they shall reioyce,
and praise me euermore.
MEn shall inioy their flockes and fields,
19 and setled gouernment:
Shall offer sacrifice of praise;
to saue, Christ shall be sent.
NEuer shall Dauid want a
17 man
to sit vpon his throne:
Nor Priests to offer
18 sacrifice;
Iacob shall be
26 mine owne.
Chapt. 34
OF Zedekiah's captiue state,
2 and City set on fire,
See and how seruants freed
8 , are forc'd
to seruice to
11 retire.
PLague, sword and famine for this
17 sinne,
I will for you proclaime:
Your Cities shall be burn'd with fire,
none shall therein remaine.
Chapt. 35
QVickly goe to the
2 Recabites,
and bid them drinke
5 some wine,
From fathers charge (who them forbad)
they
6 would no whit decline.
REturne (said I) and leaue your
13 sinnes,
but you did not regard;
You will I curse
17 : but Rechabites
with
13 blessings
19 will reward.
Chapt. 36
SHut vp
5 I am: ô Beruch write
and in
6 Gods house doe read
These words of God in some (perchance
7 )
they will repentance breed.
THey doe proclaime
9 a solemne fast,
the roule is
10 read to all:
The Princes hearing
14 presently
doe for the writing call.
VNto the King the Princes will,
the things they
16 heard declare,
Goe hide thy selfe and Ieremie.
let
19 none know where you are.
A Part of Gods word King heares
23 read,
he cuts, he burnes the rest;
A new roule Beruch writes wherein
more iudgements
32 are exprest.
BVrning Gods word the King
23 himselfe
Nor seruants once did feare:
Some did intreat him to refraine
25 ,
but he disdain'd to heare.
COmmanding for to take Beruch
the Lord both them
26 doth hide,
For this the King
30 and seruants all,
sore
37 iudgments must abide.
Chapt. 37
DEsparing of the victory,
Chaldeans
5 goe away:
The King here to the prophet sends
that he for them should pray.
ENquirers tell the
7 King (quoth he)
Chaldeans
8 shall returne:
And certainly shall conquer him
and City sacke and burne.
FOr fugitiue he taken
11 is,
they beat
12 him shamefully:
In
8 dungeon long he lyes, yet tells
the Kings
17 capatiuity
GRant liberty ô
18 Lord my King
I doe thee humbly
20 pray.
He
21 yeelds and bids while bread doth last,
he should haue some each day.
Chapt. 38
HE is
1 by
2 false
3 suggestion
into a
4 dungeon
5 cast,
Deepe,
6 darke and myrie,
7 Ebmelech
doth get him
11 out at last.
IF thou wilt saue thy life (ô King
7 )
goe yeeld thee to thy foe:
If not this Citie shall be burn'd,
and thou
23 indure much woe.
KIngs conference with
24 Ieremie
from Princes is kept backe,
And he himselfe in
28 prison kept,
till Citie went to wracke.
Chapt. 39
LOe here they take
1 Ierusalem,
King
4 flies, sonnes
6 slaine in sight:
His eyes put out, to
7 Babylon sent,
chain'd,
8 ruin'd all about.
MAke much of
11 Ieremie (saith the
1
[...] King)
Ebedmelech
16 safe shall be,
From furious
17 foes whom he so feares,
he put his trust
18 in me.
Chapt. 40
NAbuzarad
[...]n setting free,
the
4 Prophet giues him leaue
To goe with him to Babylon
or to Gedaliah cleaue.
OF victualls store a good
5 reward
he had at captiues hand;
And to Gedaliah then hee
6 goes,
and dwells in Iuda Land.
POore men and rich all
7 flocke to him,
he bids them
9 nothing feare;
To serue the King of Babylon,
to them he there doth sweare.
QVietly in your Cities
10 dwell,
and gather fruit and oile:
Then all the
11 Iewes dispers'd abroad
returne
12 to country soyle.
REuealed is by Iohanam,
a
14 foule conspiracie;
That Ishmael will Gedaliah kill
he
16 saith it is a lye.
Chapt. 41
SLaine
2 is
3 Gedaliah and many
4 moe,
by bloody Ishmaels
5 hand,
From him the
11 captaines
13 rescued are,
he scapes
14 into Amonites
15 hand.
THen Iohanam and
14 captiues eke,
with those that
17 rescued were.
To Aegypt purposed to goe:
they Babels
18 King did feare.
Chapt. 42
VNto
1 Ieremiah then they come
2 intreating him to
3 pray,
And know of God what they
5 should doe,
And they will
6 sure obey.
ASsured are they to be safe,
if they in Iudah stay:
but to be slaine in Egypt land,
i
[...] that they goe away.
BEcause of your hypocrisie,
when me to God you sent,
Assuring that ye would obey,
when nothing lesse you meant:
COnsum'd by
19 sword and pestilence,
by famine
2
[...] shall ye bee
In Egypt which
21 you so desire,
that is the
2
[...] Lords decree.
Chapt. 43
DIsgrac'd is
2 Ieremies Prophecie,
they said 'twas
3 Baruchs deed;
That the Chaldeans might them kill,
and into Babell lead.
EVery person
5 Iohanam
takes into Egypt land,
Which Ieremie
10 saith the Lord will
11 giue,
into th'Chaldeans
12 hand.
Chapt. 44
FOr their Idolatries
2 foule and vaine
and great
3 abomination
In Iuda; Ieremie
11 doth declare,
their wofull desolation.
GOd hath done this in
2 your owne sight,
why
7 will ye not obey?
But anger him
8 in Egypt here,
by doing
9 worse then they.
HAue you forgot the
9 wickednesse
of all your fathers old,
That you to doe as bad or
10 werse
will waxe so desperate bold?
IN Aegypt therefore by the
12 sword,
or famine shall ye fall:
None shall returne, you shall be
13 curst,
and perish great and small.
KNowing that they had incense
16 burnt,
they said they would
17 persist,
And offer cakes to th Queene of heauen,
let him say what he list.
LEauing long off t' offer to her,
we haue felt woe and want:
But then we had a merry
19 world,
no kind of food was scant.
MArke therefore all (except a few
27 )
shall perish in this land:
King Pha
[...]'oh also shall be plagu'd,
marke then whose
28 words shall stand.
Chapt. 45
NO rest I find (thus Beruch
3 moanes)
I mourne, I faint with griefe
Now woe is me, I see no hope,
that
3 God will send reliefe.
O Beruch I will quite breakedowne
the things I built before:
And plucke vp plants I planted
4 erst,
the Land Ile plague full sore.
PReparest or expectest thou
great things
5 whereon to stay:
Be glad that I haue granted thee,
thy life for gainfull prey.
Chapt. 46
QVite ouerthrowne at
6 Euphrates,
shall Pharohs armies bee:
His mightie men shall be strucke
10 downe,
and great destruction see.
RIsing much like a raging flood,
they
[...]y they
[...]e conquer all,
[...]ut w th their blood
1
[...] swords shall be drunke,
they d
[...]smally shall fall.
SEruant Iacob be of good
2
[...] cheare
at nothing be dismayd,
[...]e
[...]ring thy seed from
27 captiue state,
none shall make them afraid.
THee for thy sinne I will chastise,
in measure
28 and in loue,
[...]ut thou shalt be at rest and ease,
and still thy kindnesse proue.
Chapt.
[...]7
VPon the Philistines wofull
1 plagues
are said to be at hand:
[...]s ouerflowing floods their
2 foes
doe couer all their land.
AT stamping of their sturdy
3 steeds,
a rushing rumbling wheles;
[...]he fathers look'd not
8 backe vpon
their children at their heeles.
BAldnesse is
5 come vpon Gaza,
all helpers
4 that remaine
[...]f fire
6 Zidon and Askelon
by Gods sword
7 must be slaine.
Chapt.
[...]8
COntempt
6 of God and of his
17 folke
and
7 for thy lofty
9 pride,
[...] Moab howle for all the
3 land
sore iudgements must abide.
DEstroy'd shall all thy Cities be,
for their securitie:
[...]nd cursed shall they be that doe,
Gods works deceitfully.
EVen for their
14 carnall confidence,
being setled
11 on their lees:
Feare pit and snare shall be
44 thy share,
Iehouah so decrees.
FRom bondage and
47 captiuitie
I will in l
[...]tter dayes
Bring Moabs captiues home againe,
to giue them cause of praise.
Chapt. 49
GRieuous plagues ô ye
1 Ammonites
expect ere
3 long to fall,
Vpon your Cries for your sinnes;
yet
5 some God will recall.
HEare Edom let thy fatherlesse,
and
11 widowes trust in me;
Them Ile preserue and keepe a liue;
But Esa
8 woe to thee.
I Also in Damascus
27 wall
will kindle such a fire,
As shall consume their
28 palaces,
Ile plague both sonne and fire.
KEdar and Hazor
20 ; Babels King
doth
30 purpose for to smite;
That of their goods
29 they should be spoyl'd,
and they
33 consumed quite.
LAment thou Elam, God will breake
thy Law, thy might and maine:
Yet after many
39 dayes hee'l bring
thy captiues backe againe.
Chapt. 50
MErodach with her Images
are brake in peeces small:
Bell and Babell are quite destroy'd,
Inhabitants banisht all.
NAtions shall
3 come out of the North,
holding the
4 lance and bow;
[...]d many Kings to make the like
[...]o
40 Sodoms ouerthrow.
O Come let vs now ioyne our
5 selues
in firme league with the Lord,
all Israel then and Iudah say,
with teares, with one accord.
[...]Vnished sore
18 must Babylon be,
of riches all bereft:
[...]estroy her vtterly (saith God)
let
26 nought of her be left.
QVickly get out
8 of Babylon,
partake not of her sins;
[...] plague her as she plagued
8 you,
Iehouah now begins.
Chapt.
[...]1
REuenge will God all Israels
24 wrongs
on bloody Babels Land,
[...] bids his people flee
5 away,
lest they doe feele his hand.
SEarch out and read his
63 prophecie,
and to it bind a stone;
[...]hen cast it into Euphrates,
as
64 signe for Babylon.
Chapt.
[...]2
THen was Ierusalem
7 sackt and spoyl'd,
Zedekiahs
10 sonnes are slaine,
[...]is eyes put out, he's
11 caried
to Babel bound in chaines.
VInedressers
16 Nabuzaradan leaues,
and takes
15 away the rest:
[...]ods house he burnes, and
13 eke the Kings,
the brauest and the best:
ALL vessells of the
17 Sanctuary
he carieth quite away:
The
24 Priests and persons principall
did King
27 of Babell slay.
BY this same King foure thousand
30 Iewes,
and hundred six are led
Poore captiues into Babylon,
by new
34 King Iewes King fed.
EZEKIEL.
Chapt. 1
AT Chebar
1 in Chaldea-land,
(see both the month and yeare)
When to Ezekiel from the north
4 ,
foure Cherubins
5 appeare.
BEhold they had the face of man
10 ,
of Eagle and oxe also:
Of Lyon fierce, these that way went,
the
12 which the spirit did goo.
COnioyned each in other then,
he doth
15 behold foure wheeles:
Which (whither the spirit
20 doth remoue)
doe run, remoue and reele.
DOwne to the ground then did I fall,
29 when I the throne
26 did see:
And him that sate vpon the same,
most like a man to be.
Chapt. 2
EZekiel is by heauenly charge,
to Israels
3 people sent,
To tell what plagues they
5 should indure,
vnlesse they did repent.
FEare not their faces, though
6 thou dost,
among such scorpions dwell,
Who (with their fathers) shamelesse
7 are,
and alwayes did rebell.
GOe speake; whether they heare
7 or no.
(for they are too too bad)
Yet shall they know, that to instruct
5 ,
they once a Prophet had.
HEare what I say, be
8 not like them,
eate thou this rowle also:
In which there was on both sides
10 writ,
great sorrow, griefe and woe.
Chapt. 3
I Eate the booke, and in my mouth
it was
3 exceeding sweet:
Speake not to strangers
5 , they would heare
6 ,
and doe what thing is meet.
KNow that my people will not
7 heare,
yet speake without
9 all feares,
Ile make thy forehead
8 full as hard,
and face as strong as theirs.
LOe I a watchman haue thee
17 made,
if thou shalt warning giue:
And men shall leaue
18 their wickednesse,
then thou and
19 they shall liue.
MEn vpright if they
20 fall, and shall
commit iniquitie,
And thou forewarne
21 not, thou and they,
shall then most surely dye.
NOw when I saw the glory of
23 God,
I fell vpon my face:
Then said the Lord, they will thee
24 bind,
goe shut thee in thy place.
O Sonne of man Ile
26 make thee dumb,
to speake thou shalt forbeare:
But when I speake, then shalt
27 thou say
rebellious people heare.
Chapt. 4
POurtray vpon a tyle (as type)
1 Ierusalem of fame:
Pitch campes against her
2 round about,
as signes
3 or future shame.
QVietly first on lest side lye
4 ,
their sinnes lay on the City:
Then lye on
6 right side, to foreshew,
their spoyle
8 without all pity.
REceiue wheat, barley, lentiles,
9 beanes,
millet and fitches take:
Make bread thereof, and with mans dung,
see that the same thou bake.
SO shall they eate defiled
13 bread,
with great astonishment:
And for their sinne shall pine
17 away,
when all their food is spent.
Chapt. 5
THine haire
1 cut oft, burne some with fire,
some cut
2 about with knife:
Some few bind in thy
3 skirts; rest burne,
as signes
4 of fiery strife.
VPon
8 them
10 will I powre my
11 plagues,
my statutes they haue
6 chang'd,
Refusing
11 my commandements,
from me
7 th'are quite estrang'd.
A Famine sword, and pestilence,
17 them therefore shall deuoure:
All people shall admire the plagues
15
which I on them will powre.
Chapt. 6
BRoke downe shall all your Idols
4 be,
your slaine men shall be cast
Before your
5 Idols, Altars all,
and Cities shall be
6 wast.
CAptiues which are dispers'd
8 abroad,
some few shall scape the sword;
Who shall lament, and loath
9 themselues,
for casting off my word.
DIrefull famine,
11 sword, pestilence,
shall so
12 destroy their dayes:
That they
13 shall know I am the Lord,
that smite for sinfull wayes.
Chapt. 7
ENduring
1 ills, and lasting
2 plagues
3
yea
4 direfull desolation
Ile send vpon
5 the land (saith God)
for their
8 abomination.
FVrious anger shall they feele,
I will no pity
9 take,
But plague
10 them for their sinfull pride;
of
11 all Ile hauocke
12 make.
GReat famine, sword
15 and pestilence
the sinfull sort shall proue;
Those that escape shall for their
16 sinne,
on hills mourne like a doue.
HOrror and shame shall couer
18 them,
in sackcloth shall they goe:
Their siluer shall they cast
19 ith streets,
[...] no wealth shall saue from woe.
[...] glory he his Temple set,
2
[...] there they set Idols vile:
[...]eeues therefore therein enter shall,
[...]to
21 spoyle and to defile.
KIng, Prince and people
27 shall be vex'd,
plague
25 vpon plague
26 Ile raise,
[...] bloody
23 crimes, they shall receiue
[...] according to their
27 wayes.
Chapt.
[...]
LOe here a fiery vision,
is
2 shewed from the Lord:
Image seene of Iealousie,
which makes them all abhorr'd.
MAny foule beasts abominable,
and
10 creeping creatures all:
[...] Isr'els Idols there he sees,
[...] pourtray'd vpon the wall.
NEere them did Isr'els
11 ancients stand,
with censers in their hand:
[...]ense went vp, and then they
12 said,
God doth not vnderstand.
O Turne about, and thou shalt see
13 yet more abomination:
[...]r Tammuz, women weeping
14 sate,
and made great lamentation.
PErceiu'st thou not (thou sonne of
16 man)
how they adore the Sunne?
[...]r these their foule Idolatries,
18 they shall be all vndone.
Chapt.
[...]
QVickly call them that haue the
1 charge
with weapons in their hand:
[...] beside the brasse Al
[...].
[...]
[...]ith
[...] weapons
[...].
RAyment of white, one of them had,
with inkhorne at his side:
Vpon the Cherub (where it
3 was)
Gods glorie did not bide.
SET thou a marke (saith God) on
4 those
that mourne and crie for sinne:
Kill all the rest,
5 man, woman, child,
and at my
6 house begin.
THen did I cry, and say (Ah Lord)
wilt thou
8 such hauock make?
He said their sinnes
9 were wondrous great,
he
10 would no pity take.
VNto the man in linnen
1 cloath'd,
God doth his will discouer,
And bids him fierie coales disperse
euen
2 all Ierusalem ouer.
AGaine he sees the
9 vision
at Chebar which
10 appear'd;
Of
11 Cherubins, and wheeles which
12 stood,
and
17 were together rear'd.
Chapt. 11
BEcause like heathens you haue
12 liu'd,
and vs'd their manners vaine:
Because your princes haue
2 presum'd,
and many people slaine.
COnfounded
8 shall you be with
9 sword,
my plagues on you
[...]le spend?
Downe then I fell, and
13 said (ah Lord)
wilt make a small end.
DEclared then
16 it was to mee
that (though he cast out some)
He would their sanctuary be
in countries where they come.
EStranged long, and scattered,
though they faire off doe dwell;
Hee'l bring them backe, giue them
17 againe
the land of Israel
FRom thence all detestable
18 things
they quite away shall take:
My spirit, all their stony
19 hearts
shalt soft, and fleshy make,
GRacious God to them I'le
10 be,
to me they shall be deare:
But I will surely plague them all,
my name
21 that will not feare.
HEre Israels God the city
22 leaues,
and doth on mountaine stand:
Ezek'el is againe
29 conuai'd
into Chaldea land.
Chapt. 12
IN midst of a rebellious house
thou
2 sonne of man dost dwell;
Who though they haue hoth eyes and eares,
heare and see ne'r a deale.
KNit vp thy stuffe; goe from thy place;
this doe in peoples sight;
So shall the King and
11 people all
goe Captiues
12 in th'twilight.
LIke as thou didst
5 dig through the wall
to
6 beare thy stuffe away
Vpon thy shoulders; in that seige,
tell them that so shall they.
MOreouer, quaking eate thy bread,
and
18 trembling water drink;
It may be (though they
3 trecherous be)
they will themselues bethinke.
NO bread nor drinke shall they receiue,
nor
19 any good thing tast
Without great terrour; for the
20 land
shall spoyled be and wast.
O Trecherous
25 house, because you say
the
22 dayes and visions faile:
Euen in your daies Ile speake
24 the word,
and you shall see't
25 preuaile.
Chapt. 13
PRophesie woes and plagues to
2 light
o
[...] Prophets of Isr'el;
Who (Fox-like) their
4 owne fancies teach,
and vaine false visions tell.
QVite ouerthrowne
9 you
6 shall all be,
you say Thus saith the Lord;
Setting your owne lyes still
7 abroach,
when I spake no such word.
REnt in my rage with stormie
13 showers,
and winds shall be the wall
With your vntemperd morter
11 made,
to th' ground it sure shall fall.
SO shall the daubers
15 also fall
that preach'd to Isr'el peace;
When there was none, but bloody
16 broyles
were threatned to encrease,
TO women Prophetesses eke,
pronounce
17 my curse and woe,
That hunt the soules of my deare
18 Saints,
but let the guilty goe.
VIlely will you pollute
19 my name
for barly and for bread;
Will you make strong the wicked
22 crew,
and make the righteous dread.
AGainst
20 you will I set my selfe,
whom you hunt
21 I will free:
And take them
23 from your cruell hands,
but plagued
18 shall you be.
Chapt. 14
BEfore me certaine Elders
1 sate,
with Idols in their heart,
Should I (saith God) to such
3 as these
my minde and will impart?
COncerning mee, who comes
7 t' enquire,
with sinne before his face,
A signe and Prouerbe shall he be,
I'le
8 cut him from his place.
DEceiued if the Prophet be,
him
9 I the Lord deceiue:
False Prophet and the
10 man deceiu'd
shall both like iudgements haue.
EVen now repent, from Idols
6 turne,
from all abominations:
That I may bee your louing
11 Lord,
and saue from desolations.
FOr when a land shall grieuously.
by wickednesse transgresse,
By famine, sword or pestilence,
my wrath I will expresse.
GOe through the land when my
17 sword shall,
Iob, No'h and Daniel,
Should onely haue their liues
18 preseru'd,
if they therein did dwell.
HOw much more when I send foure
21 plagues,
sword, famine, noisome beast,
And pestilence to cut off all.
the greatest, and the least.
IN it a remnant I'le
22 preserue,
who shall obserue my lawes;
Whom when you see what I haue
13 done,
you'l say I had good cause.
Chapt. 15
KNowne tis to all, the vine
2 branch is
to euery worke vnfit:
No man can make a
3 pinne thereof
to hang a thing on it.
LOe, being cast into the fire,
both
4 ends and midst doe burne;
So fruitlesse
7 Salem shall be burnt
for sinne
8 they sore shall mourne.
Chapt. 16
MOst wretched was thy naturall
4 state,
like infant newly borne,
Cast out, polluted in thy
5 blood,
and vtterly for lorne.
NO man did pittie thine
6 estate,
yet as I passed by
I tooke thee vp, and bad thee liue,
and did thee
7 multiplie.
OF bare and naked breasts, I did
with ornaments thee deck;
I put on
10 bracelets on thy hands,
and chaines
11 vpon thy neck.
PErfectly pure thy beautie
14 was
through my perfection rare:
Then thou on Idols all bestow'd,
and for no
15 cost didst spare.
QVickly hadst thou and quite
16 forgot
thy first estate so
22 vile;
And with strange
6 whoredomes euery where
thy selfe thou didst defile.
ROund thee about, I'le gather
37 them
with whom thou took'st delight;
Thy nakednesse I will
39 disclose
in all that peoples sight
STone thee with stones they
40 shall, and burne
thy houses all with fire;
Thou shalt no longer
41 play the whore,
nor giue thy louers hire.
THy sister Sodom
46 thou exceeds,
Samaria
47 eke in sinne:
Pride, gluttony and idlenesse
did all abound therein.
VNto the poore
49 they shew'd no loue,
yet thou art worse then they,
Thou hast despis'd the
39 oath thou made,
and wouldst not me obey.
AT last I will call into minde
my
6
[...] cou'nant made with thee,
And thou of all thy former wayes
full
61 sore asham'd shalt bee.
Chapt. 17
BY parable
5 of two Eagles
7 here,
and
6 also of a vine,
Gods plagues on Salem are set
12 downe,
because they did decline,
COntrary to their
15 couenant made
with Babels King (before)
From him, to Phar' Egyptian King,
but they are
16 plagu'd therefore.
DOwne will I bring the high
24 greene tree,
it shall dry vp and perish;
The Cedar of the
22 Gospell then
shall wonderfully flourish.
Chapt. 18
EVery soule that sinnes
4 shall dye,
but he that hateth sinne,
(As Vsury, Adulterie)
and will not liue therein.
FRom all
5 iniquitie who flies,
and doth the
6 poore relieve,
Who keepes my lawes, and truely
9 deales,
that man shall surely live.
GOD saith who doth beget a
10 sonne
that hates the thing that's good,
And liues in sinne; that sonne
12 shall dye,
and perish in his blood.
HIs sonne that sees his father sinne,
and
14 will doe no such thing,
He shall not dye: but fathers
18 sinnes
the fathers soule shall sting.
IF wicked men will turne from
21 sinne,
and doe the thing that's right;
Their sinne shall not be
22 mentioned,
nor once come in my sight.
KNow also if a righteous man
reuolt
26 and turne to sinne
(His former goodnesse I'le forget)
he sure shall dye therein.
LIue godly therefore,
31 make your hearts,
and spirits all anew:
I haue no pleasure in your
32 death,
which for your sinne is due.
Chapt. 19
MOurne for the Kings
1 of Israel,
which were like
2 Lyons whelpes,
Deuouring
3 men, but after
8 caught,
and destitute
9 of helpes.
NO vine
1
[...] more fruitfull was then
11 thine,
though baren now it bee:
And
13 fruitlesse (Salem) for thy sinne;
A grieuous
4 thing to see.
Chapt. 20
OF me dare you come to
3 enquire,
(elders of Israel?)
Cause them to know how
4 fearefully
their old forefathers fell.
PEruersely they in Aegypt delt,
in
5 wildernesse
10 likewise:
In Canaan their
27 Idolatry
to me for vengeance cryes.
QVite from among you will I
38 purge
the rebels that transgresse;
And by my gospell
24 gather you,
and so my loue
41 expresse.
REgard (ô Salem) for
46 as God
this forrest burnes with fire;
So for thy
47 sinne hee'll thee destroy
in his hot kindled ire.
Chapt. 21
SIgh sonne of man with
6 bitternesse
in all the peoples sight:
My sword shall cut off
3 good and bad
in that same bloody fight.
THus saith the Lord, a
10 sharpened sword,
a slaughter sore shall make,
It's put into the
11 slayers hand,
should we our pastimes take?
VPon the Princes shall it
12 be,
and people of Israel;
O cry and howle, it spareth none,
where e're they
16 goe or dwell.
APpoint a way, that this my
20 sword,
may come to Iudah land:
Their oathes and
23 other sinnes are knowne,
therefore they
24 cannot stand.
BEhold thou Prince of Israel,
so wicked,
25 stout and strong:
Thy crowne I'le giue to him, to
27 whom
it doth of right belong.
COncerning wicked Ammon
28 say,
that kindled is mine
31 ire:
They shall be
32 slaine, and all be made
fit fuell for the fire.
Chapt. 22
DIuers foule sinnes are here set
3 downe,
which did in Salem raigne:
Blood, muther, and adulterie,
that citie sore
4 did staine.
EVery
6 Prince shed guiltlesse blood,
the
7 children did set light
By Parents deare; the poore were sore
opprest by men of might.
FAtherlesse, and the widdowes eke,
haue vexed beene in thee,
My holy things prophaned
8 are,
and Sabbaths broken be.
GReedily by extortion,
of
12 neighbours hast thou gain'd
By vsurie, and increase also,
but mee thou hast disdain'd.
HEare therefore I haue smit my
13 hands,
at thy dishonest gaine:
I will disperse thee
15 farre from home,
thy sinnes
16 shall be thy bane.
ISraels house is drosse
18 become;
Ile melt them all away;
Prophets conspire, they soules deuoure,
and rauen for the prey,
KNowne are her Priests my law to breake,
and difference none to make
Betweene the holy and prophane,
my sabbaths eke they breake.
LIke rauening Wolues her Princes are,
the Prophets dawbe and lie,
The people vex the need' and poore,
and strangers wrongfully.
MY wrath therefore on them I'le powre,
for not a man did stand
Before mee, to intreat for grace,
that I might spare the land.
Chapt. 23
NAmes of two Sisters here
2 obserue,
and eke their whoredomes vile;
Aholah, and Aholibah,
who
4 did themselues desile.
ONe of them is
5 Samaria,
th' other Ierusalem;
[...]oth doted on
12 th' Assyrians,
and play'd the whores with them:
PLagu'd by
9 th' Assyrians
10 both
25 must be,
the
39 slew their children deare
[...]o Idols, and then in my house
before me did appeare.
QVake (ô ye old
43 adultresses)
for spoyled shall you bee,
[...]hat others may like
48 lewdnesse leaue,
when they your plagues shall see.
Chapt. 24
REport the parable of
3 a pot
with flesh and
5 bones that boyles,
All burnt, so is the Citie of
15 blood,
giuen to remedilesse spoyles:
SHee wearied
2 out her selfe with lyes,
was
13 filth' in all her wayes;
My sutious force
14 she sore shall feele,
for sinne shee dearly payes.
THine eyes desire, thy wife so
17 deare
with deadly stroke shall dye;
Yet neither shalt thou mourne nor
18 weepe,
nor yet walke mournefully.
VNto the house of Israell say,
my Temple I'le prophane,
Which is your eyes and hearts desire,
your Children shall be slaine.
AS I haue done, yet you shall doe,
from mourning see you stay:
But for your sinne, each one of you
shall mourne and pine away.
[...]
[...]
Chapt. 25
BEhold the vengeance of the Lord
vpon the Ammonites,
On Moab, Seir, Philistims,
and eke on Edomites.
CLapping their hands, they did reioyce
at Israels fatall fall;
But they that so laught at their harme,
are here consumed all.
Chapt. 26
DEstroy'd by
3 many nations,
triumphing Tire shall bee,
Because shee said,
2 Aha, the wealth
of Salem's turn'd to me.
ENgines of warre
9 against thy walls
shall
7 King of Babell set;
To plague thee for thy scoffing
12 spite
the Lord will not forget.
FEare, terrour, and
15 astonishment
shall be
16 vpon the nations,
When they
17 shall see thy woefull case,
and dolefull desolations.
Chapt. 27
GLorious
3 was thy state (ô Tire)
for traffick, and
24 for trade
With all the
25 nations of the world,
which
20 thee so rich hath made.
HOwle shall thy Mariners,
31 Merchants eke
most bitterly shall cry,
To see thee cast into the
34 seas,
with all thy company.
Chapt. 28
IN pride puft vp,
2 blasphemously,
thou saist I am a god,
O Prince of Tire, but thou
7 shalt feele
my sore reuenging
10 rod.
KIng, thou wast perfect in thy
15 waies
till sinne was found in thee;
Thou hast defil'd the
18 Sanctuaries,
[...]nd therefore burn'd must be.
LEt Zidon know, that for her
2
[...] sinne,
shee needs must feele my hand,
[...] I my scattered
24 Israell
will bring
25 safe to their land.
Chapt. 29
MArk here thy iudgments (Pharaoh
3 King)
because thou proudly said,
[...]riuer is mine owne, and I
[...]t
3 for my selfe haue made.
NO foot of man, nor beast
11 shall passe
throughout all Egypt land
[...] fortie yeares; that I am God,
well
9 shalt thou vnderstand.
OF beasts thou shalt be
5 eaten vp,
and of the foules also,
cause thou wast to
16 Israel
a false dissembling foe.
PErceiue, that after fortie
13 yeares,
ye shall returne againe
[...] Egypt, but a kingdome
15 poore,
and base thou shalt remaine.
QVick seruice King of
18 Babell did
against the men of Tire,
[...]e shall haue Egypt
19 for his paines,
to
20 pay his armies hire.
Chapt. 30
RElate and say, woe worth the
2 day,
the time is neare at hand,
[...]hen woefull
3 desolation
shall come on Egypt-land.
SOre plagues and paines shall
6 vex, and spoile,
her helpers great and small,
The King of Babell shall
24 be strong
to kill and conquer all.
Chapt. 31
THou Pharaoh King, whom
2 art thou like?
the Assyrian
3 Cedar see,
For all his great
1
[...] magnificence,
for pride cut downe is he.
VPon thy selfe and multitude,
like plagues
8 the Lord will bring,
Downe to the death thou shalt be brought,
O Pharaoh mightie King.
Chapt. 32
A Woefull lamentation make
for Egypts fearfull fall:
Who (though thou bee young Lyon like,
and as a great sea Whale,)
BY many people in my net,
thou
5 shalt be caught at length,
And shalt by King of Babels
11 sword
be spoyl'd for all thy strength.
Chapt. 33
CRie to the people, warne
3 them of
the sword approaching neere:
Who heares and will
4 not warned be,
his sinne and shame shall beare.
DVely, if thou wilt not
8 forewarne
the wicked of his sinne:
Thou shalt be guiltie of his blood,
but he shall dye therein.
EVery wicked man that
19 turnes,
resoluing to l
[...]ue well,
Shall liue: O turne, why will
11 yee dye,
ye house of Israel.
FRom vpright
13 waies, when vpright men
shall
18 turne and sinne commit,
(His former goodnesse quite forgot)
he sure shall dye in it.
GOds wayes are equall, iust and right,
mans
2
[...] wayes peruerse, and naught;
The Land for sinnes
25 abominable
is into ruine
28 brought.
HOe, come and let's goe heare the
36 word,
(thus doe this people say)
[...]hey sit before thee, and they
31 heare,
but they will not obey.
[...]N word they loue, their hearts are naught;
of thee they make their song:
[...]ut they shall say another day,
Prophets was their among.
Chapt. 34
KIlling their flocks (not feeding
2 them)
false pastors are reprou'd,
[...]f whom the fat and fleece much
3 more
then flocks themselues were lou'd.
LOst sheepe they sought
4 not, but like Lords
with rigour rul'd them all;
[...]ut of their power, I will them
10 free,
and them t' account will call.
MY sheepe, I will seeke
13 out my selfe,
and in good pastures
14 feed,
[...]hough now they eat, and drinke of that,
where your foule feete did tread.
NO longer shall they be
22 your prey,
my seruant Dauid he
[...]hall be their
23 Shepheard; they are mine,
and I their God
24 will bee.
OVt of the Land ill beasts
25 shall cease;
a couenant will I make
[...]f peace with them; blest shall they
26 be,
they shall
28 no dammage take.
Chapt. 35
PRophesie thou
1 against Seir
2 mount,
whose cities I'le lay wast:
[...]hey loued blood,
6 blood shall they haue,
sore
7 iudgements they shall
8 taste.
QVite ruinated
9 Seir is,
your malice
12 was so great
Against my people; whom you
10 did,
most
11 cruelly intreat.
REioyce will I to
15 plague you all,
I will reuenge their wrong;
As you with them, so I with you,
15 will deale before 't be long.
Chapt. 36
SPightfully did thy foes then say,
Aha, we
2 now possesse
The ancient places, all is
3 ours,
we swallow more and lesse.
THerefore I in my iealousie,
and
5 in my fury sware,
Your heathenish
7 foes that dwell about,
their sinne and shame shall beare.
VNto my people Israel,
the
8 mountaines fruit shall yeeld;
Ile blesse them more then at the
11 first,
in men, in flockes, in fields.
AS they prophan'd my holy
17 name,
by their owne wayes and deeds:
So I dispers'd them all
15 abroad,
my plague their sinne succeeds.
BVt I had pity for my name,
and
12 not for Israels sake:
Ile bring you
24 home, from Idols
25 clense,
and you my
18 people make.
COrne will I call for, with
29 encrease;
from all your sinnes Ile saue:
All
25 needfull
26 blessings for your
27 soules,
and bodies
35 you shall haue.
Chapt. 37
DEad hope
11 of Israell is reuiu'd,
(though now
12 dispersed ones)
[...]hey shall haue life, and be restor'd
like these drie
2 breathlesse bones.
EPhraims sticke, with
15 Iudah's ioynd,
and put in Prophets hand,
[...]eclare their vnion,
18 calling home,
and placing in their land.
FRom Idols and false worships
23 all,
I will them clense and keepe:
[...]heir God and shepheard I will be,
and they my pasture sheepe.
GRaciously
26 with them Ile dwell,
Dauid shall be their
25 King:
couenant with them will I
27 make,
they shall lacke no good thing.
Chapt. 38
HEre
1 bloody Gog, his army great,
and malice is
8 set downe;
[...]ho sayd he
11 would destroy their land,
and take the vnwalled
12 townes.
[...]N that day God will plead with him,
with
2 brimstone, fire, and sword,
[...]nd will bee knowne
3 in all mens eyes,
to be the mightiest Lord.
Chapt. 39
KNow (Gog) thy
1 iudgments wonderfull,
the foules shall
4 thee deuoure:
My name shall not
7 polluted be,
thou then
6 shalt feele my power.
LEt Isr'els conquest be obseru'd,
who for seuen yeares did burne
Gogs weapons; all that spoiled
10 them,
they spoyle and ouerturne.
MVch ground for graues are giuen to
22 Gog,
and to his mighty traine:
The Israelites for seuen months
2
[...] space
are burying all the staine,
NOte here the feast that God
17 doth make
to euerie foule and beast:
How Isr'el
25 (once plagu'd for their
26 sinne)
with blessings are increast.
Chapt. 40
OBserue the
1 Prophets vision well,
the time,
2 manner, and end:
Hee's bid to see, heare and obserue
that Isr'el might attend.
POrch of the house
48 with pillars, post;
the breadth,
49 length measured be,
The
6 gates,
17 courts,
21 chambers,
4 tables right
I there described see.
Chapt. 41
QVickly then after was I
1 brought
the Temple to behold;
Where I saw measured euery
4 thing,
and ornaments
13 foretold.
ROund about all the
17 wall was made
Cherubins and Palme trees,
The Altar, table of the
22 Lord,
gates
24 , windowes
26 , all he sees.
Chapt. 42
SOuth, East, West, North sides measured are
fiue hundred reedes in space,
To separate the
19 sanctuary
from euery prophane
20 place.
THE chambers where the Priests
13 did eate,
and holy garments laid:
(Putting their other garments
14 on)
when they for people pray'd.
Chapt. 43
VNto the Temple God
4 returnes,
and spake to me the
7 while:
Saying, this people shall no more
my glorious name defile.
AWay with all your whoredomes vile,
your carkasses of Kings;
[...]r posts, and thresholds set by mine,
which your destruction brings.
[...]VT a wall onely was
8 betweene
your thresholds, posts, and mine:
if you will repent hereof,
[...]nd will your hearts encline,
COntinually t' obserue these
11 formes,
and will my lawes fulfill;
[...]ell in the midst
7 of you will I,
[...]nd grant my blessing still.
[...]Vely let
19 Priests and Levites keepe,
(for
13 measures,
22 time, and
21 place)
[...]se ordinances of th'
18 Altar,
[...]nd they shall find my grace.
Chapt. 44
[...]EAst gate for
1 Prince assigned is;
the Priests liue all at large,
[...]ute the
4 temple: Couenant
7 breake,
[...] Gods things keepe
8 no charge.
[...]om Priestly office and holy
9 things
I banish Leuites
10 all,
Priests that mee forsooke, and did
[...] foule Idol'try fall.
[...]Ates of the house yet they may keepe,
and
11 kill the sacrifice;
Zad
[...]cks
15 sonnes shall be my priests,
[...]ey kept my godly
16 guise.
[...]Ere learne how Priests in th'inner
17 cou
[...]
in linnen must appeare,
[...]re the people when they
19 serue
[...]st other garments weare.
[...]ynd they are no wine to
22 drinke,
[...] yet
20 their heads to shaue;
[...]ddowes must they take for
22 wiues,
maidens must they haue.
KEepe his lawes in
24 assemblies all,
and sabbaths sanctifie
They must; and teach the people
25 how
things diuers to descry.
Chapt. 45
LAnds for the
1 sanctuary,
7 Prince,
and city, exprest
6 at large,
And what the other
8 tribes shall haue,
here is the Princes charge.
MY Princes, let this
9 land suffice,
which here ye doe possesse:
My people by exactions
you
8 shall no more oppresse.
NO violence nor vniust
10 weights
see vs'd in any place;
But iustly deale with
9 euery man,
in euery kind of case.
OBlations and burnt offrings,
that Princes must
17 prepare,
And people, at each solemne
22 feast,
here plaine declared are.
Chapt. 46
PRinces, and people
1 both are
2 taugh
[...]
on sabbaths and new
3 moones,
How for to
9 worship, what to doe,
and what to leaue vndone.
QVietly all the Princes
16 land,
the sonne shall still possesse;
The peoples land
18 he shall not take,
nor any more oppresse.
ROund about the Court
23 corners
were places for to bake,
And boyle the sin and meate offrings,
which people then did make.
Chapt. 47
SEE (son of man) how from
6 Gods h
[...]
these holy waters flow:
[...]ey from my
3 ancles, to my
4 loynes,
from loynes to floods did grow.
THese heale the waters of the
8 sea,
giue life to euery land;
them are fish exceeding store,
[...]on bankes the fishers
10 stand.
VIle miry marishes
11 thereof,
in which these riuers runne,
[...]all not be heal'd, but into pits
of salt they then shall turne.
ALL trees for meat vpon the
12 bankes
of them shall grow and spring,
[...]hose fruit endures, whose leaues
12 likewise,
shall health to nations bring.
BY lot the land ye shall diuide
to th'tribes of Israel.
[...]e strangers also lands
23 shall haue,
which doe among you dwell.
Chapt.
[...]8
CAnaan coasts
1 by portions,
to twelue
25 tribes are diuided;
That part the City,
8 sanctuary,
and Prince hath, is decided.
DImensions of the City
30 gates,
and names here read and see:
[...]he Cities name (from that day forth)
IEHOVAH THERE shall bee.
The end of the Prophets.