The Poor WIDOWS MITE Cast into the LORDS TREASURY.
Where in are contained in short, some reasons in the Justification of the Meetings of the People of God called QUAKERS,
&c.
NO
Prologue, Preface, Frontispice, nor no
Epistle have,
To Usher in this little
Mite, that long hath lain in
Grave.
But now a
Resurrection hath, and from the
Grave is come,
And in the
Holy City walks, though before
deaf and
dumbe.
Nor did it
see at all, for that, in's very
Birth 'twas
blind,
Nor
taste the
goodness of his God, nor could him
feel or
find.
Now
Praises, praises unto him, that
quickned hath
dry Bones,
By
breathing makes the sences
live, to
Abraham's Seed of Stones.
This is the mighty
Power of
God, on us that
blind were
born,
His giving forth his
Light, his
Christ, his
Everlasting
[...]orn
His
Gospel, Grace and
Righteousness, his
Joy, his
Peace, his
Strength,
His
mighty Arm Salvation brings, unto us now at length.
With
Wisdom, Truth and
Holiness, which is to
Sanctifie,
And
cleanse this little
New-born Babe, which long in
sin did
lye.
This is the true
Emanuel, that doth his People
save,
From all the
sins that they have done, that kept their
Souls in
Grav
[...]
This is the
Spirit that
quickens us, this is the
time of
Love,
When in our
Blood we
wallowing were, Oh then!
What did
[...]
Our
Father could not, seeing he, by
birth an
Am'rite was.
Nor
Mother either, cause that she came of the
Hittits
These fleshly, earthly
Canaanites, could not help in that day.
Of the
Souls great
calamity, God
only is its
stay.
For Pitty, pitty no
Eye had, on it, for to help when
It was
cast out, and
loath'd of all,
Love to it God had then.
He then did
purge and
purifie that
Birth that is his own,
The which is
born of the
Spirit, by a
new Name is known.
And
He it is
deliverance brings, from
Satans Power and
Might.
And hath translated us into his
Sons marvelous Light.
Whereby we
wonder and
admire, his
Mercies manifold.
And from his
Truth cannot retire, his
Truth doth make us bold,
And valiant for it upon Earth, for which we
All have lost,
For in our
Building we sate down, and did cast up the
Cost.
And by the same our
Souls have gain'd, let th'
world go as it will,
Let
Life, or
Death, or
Sufferings come, so God
be with us still.
This is the
Test we have for God, in this we
all agree,
That of
our selves no
help we have;
All is of
Grace, and
Free.
For
Obligations we have none wherewith the Lord to
tye.
But the
Free Promises he makes, on them we do
relye.
So those that true
experience have, pray
tell it to each other,
What for their
Souls the Lord hath done, be it
Sister or
Brother.
This is the
Cause that we do
Meet, together, it's Gods
due,
That we may
serve and
witness Him, by his
Word, which is
true.
For in the
mouth of
two or
three, when they witness
Allone,
Gods
Word it is
established, and
Truth prevails upon
The
Hearts and
Souls of them that hear, both
IN and
OƲT also,
Whereby they the same
Spirit know that is in many
MO.
This was the
Order Paul did give the
Co-rin-thi-ans to
That to one place the Church should come, and this also should do.
The
Prophet or to
Prophesie, to
Judge the others were,
By the
same Spirit which they
spoke, that to them
Truths did clear.
And if amongst them there did come, one that
believed not,
Convicted then he is of all, and
Judgement is his Lot.
And thus the
secrets of his
heart, all manifested be,
So
falling down upon his Face, then
worship God will he;
And of a truth report that God it is that
lives in you.
This way th'unlearned come to know the
Way of God that's true.
Here one by one may
Prophesie, that all may hear and learn,
And also may be
comforted that to Gods Spirit
turn.
We
Members of each others are, being
Christs Body dear,
Which
he hath purchas'd with his Blood, and plac'd in us
his Fear.
[Page]
For we be they the which are built on the
Foundation:
Of
Prophets and
Apostles to,
Jesus Christ's Corner-stone;
In whom also the
Building is
fitly fram'd together:
Grown unto an
holy Temple, from which God will not sever;
For being
Built together are, through the
Almighty Spirit,
An
Habitation of God, the which he will
Inherit.
And so the
Head it cannot say to'th
Foot, I need not thee;
Nor eke the
Eye unto the
Ear, O be thou gone from me:
For that the
Body is but
One, yet
Members hath it
Many;
Apeare there would
Deformity, if lack there were of
Any:
This
Body God hath temper'd so, the
Members each with other
That all should have the self same care,
Ʋncomly parts to cover;
Not to
Rejoyce at
Nakedness, as did that cursed
Cham;
But as
Japhet and blessed
Shem, going backwards
cover'd shame.
So what is
wanting in each one, a
supply others have;
To Minister unto each
wants, by it their
Soules to
save.
And this all is by the same
Spirit diversities of
Guifts,
With different
Ministrations, which
Operate as thrifts;
And yet it is but the
same Lord, on whom we
only call,
And the same God that
Operates, and
Worketh all in all.
To own the
Word of
Wisdom's given, the
Word of
Knowledg to,
By the
same Spirit another hath both
Faith and
Power to
do;
And
heal infirmities of
Soules by working
Miracl's many;
And
Prophesie and
Descerning of
Spirits where ther's
any.
All this the one and self-same
Spirit, which doth his
members fill
Dividing unto every man severally as t'will.
If this
Church Figure be too bright for
worldlings for to see,
The use we make of our
Meetings, in one
Body to be,
Take your own
Body-figure-world the Countrys
Members are,
And each
Comodity there
grows, which are brought from on far;
These outward things the
spirit are, of the world that's compleat,
And every place where each doth go, are
members of the great:
And now God he hath plac't things so, in the whole ther's no want;
Neither can any
Country say,
I've all, her's nothing scant.
And so each
Country his
Offring to each other sends;
Then these these
gifts when they receive with others making mends,
This order the worlds
members have their wants for to supply;
By sending their
abounding fruits for things they on rely;
And where most
trading there is us'd, Oh there they
rich do grew,
In gold, silver and pretious stones, this
Babylon doth know.
By
Schism, War, if Trading fail, Oh! then they do grow poor,
By wanting of
Commerce and
Trade when they have spent thir store:
This being true why shall not we, as
Members each of other,
Bring forth our
Offrings to the Lord, these may comfort another.
Object.
Me thinks I hear some Critick say, O this is cunning made;
For to compare Conventicles, to our great World and Trade:
You count your selves so heavenly me thinks that you should not,
So paraphrase on this fowl World lest you receive a blot.
Answer.
My
Answer is, 'tis for thy sake thy hearing being but dull;
That I speak after the manner, of men, to thee in full.
Moreover this Worlds Children are more wiser much by far,
In their own generation, then Lights own Children are.
So to this generation, who mock, and scorn and fain,
And for thy sake I have digrest, but now let me return,
Unto Gods order in his Church, that all may hear and learn.
This favour and incoragment it is held forth to all,
That what of God revealed is to any, other shall
Have liberty to speak it forth, the Prophet which must hold,
Their spirits being subject to the Prophet which is bold.
So it the
bruised reed breaks not, nor
smoking flax doth quench,
Till
Judgment unto
Victory comes, and
Truth sits on the
Bench.
For that the knowledg of the Truth doth bring us all together;
And from this Truth we cannot swerve, nor from each other sever.
For the profession of our
Faith together must hold fast,
For this our
hope, our
stay, our
strength, that must help us at last.
For whether shall we go but there, where words of Life do spring,
And from the roots doth hony drop, that makes poor
Souls to sing?
Oh these Assemblies we may not at all, as some, forsake;
Least fiery indignation upon us God doth take.
For that it is a wilful sin, not to profess Gods Name;
When before men we be brought forth, to suffer for the same.
For where that two or three be come together in his Name,
If the mid'st of them he will be, who can keep from the same?
For that in him the
Treasures be, of
Wisdome Knowledg to;
Which he gives to his Children dear whose hearts to him are true.
In him's the
Oracle of God, who doth his People teach,
In their hearts how to worship him, so they it forth do preach.
And not
Meeting it was the cause of
Hearing some were dull,
Which made things hard for to be
said or
uttered to the full.
For there were some that for their time, ought
Teachers for to be;
And yet have need one
teach again first
Principles to see;
And were become such as had need of
Milk and not strong
Meat;
For every one that useth
Milk unskilful is to
Eat.
Or feed upon the
Righteous Word, for that a
Babe is he;
To him strong
Meat doth not belong, with him t'will not agree.
But those that are of riper age, to them it doth belong;
E'en those that by reason of use, have their sences made strong;
Being exercised do deserne between both
good and evil
So in Gods Truth we are kept from, the
lying, murdering Devil.
Job that was
just and
perfect both, such
Meetings did come to,
With other of the
sons of God, as
Gods sons now do do;
And though
Sathan did also come, 'twas for
advantage sake,
To be
Informer, and
accuse, that he their
goods might take,
And though that he Commission got to take all in his power,
By
Sabins and
Caldeans to, as he doth at this hour,
Perswading God
they him would Curse, if he'll but let him tuch
Their
goods, or
ought else that they have, no
Meetings would be such.
And yet again there was a day when the
Sons of God Came
For to present themselves before the Lord, they are the same,
Who still hold fast
Integrity, although that he doth move
'Gainst him, and us, both to destroy yet we'll not Curse our
Love.
Yea
Skin for
Skin, and all we have, yea
Bone and
Flesh also
We hope we shall to him give up, rather then
Curse him mo.
For how can we commit this sin, not to
walk in
Gods way,
When we such large experience have of him our
strength and
stay
But I shall rather here break forth, it being now the
Spring,
By
Chirping praise our
Gad of
Love, Who can but to him
sing
And in my
song I shall you shew, What these our
Meetings be,
I
figured have in many things, yet all in
Truth agree.
We are the
Tabernacle of the
Con-gre-ga-ti-on,
The which the Lord in Earth reserves to call his
Name upon;
In us the
Ark and
Covenant is and
Mercy-seat we see,
With
Pot of
Heavenly Manna to, to us the
Cher'bims flee;
With us also there is the
Rod, that
buddeth and is
green,
Of the
High Priest from
Judah came, as plainly may be seen:
Here is the
Golden Censer to, in which is
heavenly fire,
And here's the
Table of
Shew-bread, What can you more desire
And here's the
Cap of Blessing to, in our
Communion,
This
Blood our
Souls must also
purge, for
other help we've none.
And if that you
Baptiz'd would be, oh here are
Baptim's many,
Here's
Water, Fire, Suffrings, Death; here you cant miss of any.
With us there is the
Laver of
Re-ge-ne-ra-ti-on.
For
Juda and
Jerusalem, it
cleanseth Mount Sion.
And
Fire-Baptism's also here, the
Holy Ghost, Gods Word,
A
Suffering-Baptism doth appear, proceeding from the
Sword.
A more
secret Baptism there is, cannot be spoke with
breath,
And this is that
Baptism of Christ,
Baptiz'd into his
Death.
This is no
Outward visible Sign, not
signified so,
But
separates man from his
Lusts that always stood his
foe.
Thus in his
flesh Christ he took up, the
Comforts of
Mans Life,
And laid them down at
Gods own Will, to
reconcile the
Strife;
For
God it was
that was in Christ, the World to reconcile,
Now in his stead
Embassadors, hath sent to us the
vile:
Though 'twas not
him did the
Offence, but was the
Offended,
Yet his
Embassadors pray us to be
re-con-ci-led.
Here's
Grace indeed! not only
free, but doth a
begging come,
And
Messengers t'intreat the
World to
accept this
Ransome.
The which none could lay down for it, but
He of's
own accord
Did
purchas't with his
precious Blood, and so of
right is
Lord.
Yet doth not use
Commanding Power, but
Love is his own way;
And those that will not
this shall
Rule, as
Enemies he will
slay.
But this
last Baptisme doth set the
True Baptismes on
The
answer of a good Conscience, by Christs
Resurrection.
For as
Christs flesh it
suffered, the
same mind we must have,
No longer in our
sins to
live, which to our
Soul's a
Grave,
But now the
Gospel it is
preacht, the
dead sleeper's awake,
Yea he is come to
Judgement to, God
Life to him doth make.
For that he would no longer have our
Souls in
Prison lye,
But by his
quickning Spirit preach, and
free-ed us thereby,
Who sometime
disobedient were, yet God did suffer
long,
Waiting as in the dayes of
Noa (who griev'd his
Spirit strong.)
And now unto the
Will of
God he doth
subjection give,
No more unto the
Gentiles Will resolveth he to live.
This is that
Tabernacle which,
down nere shall any take,
Nor
Cord thereof shall
broken be,
removd shall be no
Stake.
For here the
Glorious Lord will be,
Rivers and
Streams whereon,
No
Gally nor no
gallant Ship at all shall pass upon
For that mens
Tacklings loosed are, their strength at
Ours doth fall,
They cannot well strengthen their
Mast, or spread abroad their
Sail,
For tis the
Lord that is our
King, and our
Lawgiver to,
How can we then lack any thing for ought he bids us do.
Oh this also is
Wisdoms Gate, Why he you then so
mad?
If ever that your
Souls be
sav'd, to's
Church God must you add.
Wisdom cryed hath
without, and
uttered voice in street,
Yea in the Market place she calls, where
Pharisees do
greet;
In the
chief Places of
Concorse, the
opening of the Gate,
Yea in their
great Assemblies to, where
multitudes were sate;
How long, ye simple ones will ye, love your simplicity?
Turn ye unto this
Church that ye may
eat and
live thereby.
And
Scorners, Why do ye delight in this your scorning Trade,
You being
Fools, Knowledge do
hate, tis
sin thus hath you
made.
At
Gods reproof if now you'l
turn, he'll
pour on you his
Spirit,
His
words unto you he'll
make known, that you may
Life inherit.
But this much know, if you
refuse, and do not him
regard,
But do his
Councel set at nought, with this he'll you reward;
For
mocking he will
mock again at your
Calamity,
And
laugh when as your
fear doth come, it's
desolation nigh,
Then you may
call, but
God will now to
answer give at all,
Because you did not
answer him, when he to you did
call.
For you none of his
Counsel would,
Reproof's you did despite,
And would not choose the
Fear of
God, but hated
Knowledge wise;
Therefore the
fruit of
your own way is
meat for you to
eat,
Your
own devices you shall fill, who shut out
Wisdom great.
In
Ʋs the
Time is
come to pass, last dayes
pro-phe-si-ed,
That the Mountain of the Lords House should be established;
And on the
Top exalted is, above all
barren Hills,
And many
People to us
flow, thus
God his
House now
fills,
And we his
People bid you
come, to this the
Lords Mountain.
It is the
House of
Jacobs God, tis he o're it doth
Raign.
Here he doth
teach us his
own Way, the
Pathes that we should
walk,
From out of
Sion flowes that
Law whereof we
joy to
talk,
This is the
Word which
God the
Lord sends from
Jerusalem,
That doth among the
Nations Judge, rebuking much of them.
So that they have their
Swords now
beat into
Plow, shares we see.
And their
Spears into
Pruning-Hooks, this
LOVE makes
all agree.
So
Nation doth not lift up
Sword, for
Esau doth embrace
His Brother
Jacob in his
Armes, this makes War cease. 'Tis Grace,
So we with
Isay bid you come, to this house with accord,
Desiring you to walk with us, in the
Light of the
Lord.
We are the
City on a
Hill, there set that all may see,
Therefore alwayes in
Cottages, still this we cannot be;
For that we are not to be hid, but set there to be shown,
And
that through the
Power of
God to others should be known:
Which is the
Light, the
Christ in us, the
Hope of Glory to;
And doth cast out the
Reprobate, this work he is to do,
The
Blind make see, and
Deaf to hear, tho
Mountebancks do rage,
Leapers are cleans'd, &
Dumb do speak,
this throws them
off the stage
And this also is freely to, we witness it truly,
And if that we should hold our peace
stones would against us cry.
For what are we more then wrought
stone, 'tis God that doth us raise
To he the seed of
Abraham, for to shew forth his Praise:
Tho in the
Wilderness we're squard, and now appear but loose,
Yet being brought together all, we do make God a House;
Whereby the
Workemans Worke is seen for that he hath them
tryed,
And made them like the
Corner-stone, to answer every side;
Yea
Judgement to the
Plumet hangs, and
Righteousness to'th
Line,
For to make all
upright and
true, according to his
mine.
These
living stones together set, may plainly see each other
The
Mighty workmanship of God, in
Sister and in
Brother,
Yea tis the
Standard of the
Lord, the
Ensigne he hath ser,
For all
Nations to
flock unto, tho
Small things day is yet.
And though that we be
Quakers call'd, by most people in
scorn,
Yet we the
true Assembly be, and
Church of the First-born.
For in our
heart God he doth
dwell, whose
Spirit is a Sword,
Which was the cause that we were made to
tremble at his Word.
And when the Lord with
Odours sweet doth this his own
House fill,
Oh then all others that
pass by, its
sweetness favour will.
And if that any
Lydia come, that is to God so dear,
Whose
heart the Lord hath
o-pen-ed, she'll
feed upon our
chear.
For in these
publick Mountains God to all will make his
Feast,
And
Messengers to'th
high way send, for to
invite his Guests.
These are the
Feasts of
Charity, made by the
God of
Love,
On
Heavenly Manna here we
feed, which comes from
God above.
We being many are one
Bread, of which we
partake all,
And when we'r
hungry doth us
feed, both now, and ever shall.
This also is Gods
Candlestick, in which his
Candle's set,
And
lighteth those be in the
House, and is for others yet.
The
Woman having lost her piece of
silver, sought with
pain,
And when that she had found it out, t'her
Neighbours cryes amain;
Contented not within her self these favours up to frowl,
But she must tell to others to, what is
done for her Soul.
This was the
Sheep that went
astray into the
Wilderness,
But the good
Shepherd he is come, and brought it to the
rest.
Oh therefore
Neighbours, neighbours come, let us
rejoyce together,
And
praises in his
House let's sing, for
ever, and for
ever.
This is the
HIVE also to which the
BEES do
honey bring,
Which they do gather from God's
Flowers; there they
together sing,
Which is to him a savory thing, and pleasant to his
Heart,
Because 'tis what comes from
himself, in us he doth it
dart:
This is the
Sacrifice of god, which in them doth
arise.
Being from
broken contrite hearts, God will it not despise.
Hither the
Virgins Wise also, are altogether
come,
Each having
Oyl in his
Vessel, tho in their
Lamps burns some.
These
Lamps being altogether
trim'd, they do make a great
Light,
Which is the
brightness of Gods
Love, held forth to
Peoples sight,
To this
bright rising all must come, which is as
Heavens Gate,
And with
Oyl in their
Vessels wait, lest they do
come too late.
This is the place that is
dreadful, in which
Gods presence is,
Were
two or
three together be, to
praise the
Name that's
his.
This needs must be the
House of God, where
Angels do
descend,
And those that
meet in
Gods pure fear, he doubtless will
defend.
This is not any
New thing now, as if't had
never been,
But this hath been in in
Ages past, as plainly hath been seen.
This is the House that
David lov'd, even the
dwelling place,
Wherein Gods
honour still remains, in hearts full fraught with
Grace,
And
David bud all here to come, and that with
one accord.
Who God did
fear, to them
he'll tell, the goodness of the Lord.
What for his Soul the Lord had done, which he for him did
save,
Which was the
Branch of
Jesse Stem, and rais'd him from the
Grave,
Because he would not suffer him, being his
holy One,
That ought to him belonging should, ere
see corruption.
Therefore for this doth
Davids Preach, and to the
living tell,
In the great
Congregation of
Saints that do
excel,
In whom was only his
delight, which
faithful were and
true
And that in
Virtue did
excel, whose
hearts God had made
New.
These are the
Living Waters which, are both the
last and
first,
Therefore must all that seek for
Life come
here to
quench their
thirst.
Without
money, and without
price, Come ye, do
buy, and
eat,
Both
Wine and
Milk, Why do you
spend money for that's
no meat?
And your
Labour also for that which doth not
satisfie,
For it is not the
Bread of Life; therefore you
eat and
dye.
But hark with
diligence to
God, oat ye that
which is good,
And let your
Soul delight it
self in
fatness, its own
food.
Incline your
ear, yea come and
hear, and then your
Souls shall
live.
The
Covenant sure of
Mercy pure, of
David he will
give.
Our
Meetings they do
witness Him, that must the
People lead,
And he is our
Commander to, our
Peace, Light, Life and
Bread.
Thus being
met in
Gods pure fear, we then the
Cysterns are
Which he of
living water clear, doth send to us from
far.
And therefore from this
evil to, when that it doth appear,
All
People we advise to
come, from Cysterns are not
clear:
For these be such,
Men to themselves, who have forsook the Lord,
Hewed, the which no
Water will, of
Life to them afford.
These
Meetings also
Malachy did speak of in his time,
Wherein
they that did fear the Lord, and were
all of one mine
Ʋnto each other oft did speak, to which
the the Lord gave ear,
And then a
Book of remembrance, he wrote, as doth appear;
For that they are and shall be his, for ever he'll them
spare,
As
Man doth
spare his
serving Son, for they are
Jewels rare.
These
Meetings then were also kept in such an
evil time
When none but th'
wicked were set up, for
goodness was a crime:
The
Proud were then
the Happy oalld, wicked workers set up,
Yet then
Gods People they did
Meet, tho
Sufferings were their Cup.
Bethesdas Pool a figure was, of this our
Meeting Place,
Whereas both
Lame and
Blind must
wait, for Gods
descending Grace
And in much
patience wait his
Will, till that the
Angel move,
And the
Waters with
virtue fill, to
heal, this is Gods
Love.
And therefore be not
too hasty, but wait upon
Gods leasure,
For all
Infirmities he
heals, and therein
taketh pleasure.
Samarias Mountain tis likewise, wherein is
Jacobs Well;
Which springs forth to
[...]
Life, of
this many can tell.
Here is the true
Ho-ly Water, of
Life, both
pure and
clear,
This is not that the
Pope doth make, wherewith he men doth
jear;
But this is that that God doth
give, whereof when men do
drink,
Out of their Belly
Rivers flow, much more than they can think.
Here when Gods
People they do
Meet, whose
zeal is as a
flame,
Which maketh oft their
hearts to burn, wh
[...] declares
his Fame.
Of which the
Scripture it is
full, yet is a
Book that's seald,
Which neither
learnt nor
unlearned, to any hath
reveald.
For the
Veil being or'e their heart, when
Moses he is
read,
How then can they know
Christs own day though it be
prophesi'd?
Though
precept upon
precept be, yet they are nere the near,
And
Line upon
line, they
see not, being without
Gods Fear.
Of this
Isaiah did complain and grievd for in his time,
This was the cause of
Ignorance, and
darkness of the
mine,
A
sinful Nation he them call'd, a
seed of evil-doers,
Who had the
Lord forsaken, and in
corrupt wayes were
goers;
So
laden with
iniquity, those things they did not
know,
Which
daily unto them was
read, their
Veil did
blind them so.
For
Rulers they of
Sodom were, which is the
Earthly Power,
Inhabitants of
Gomorrah, which cloggs them every hour.
So all these wicked worldly things that are set in the heart,
Must all with Gods
pure fire be
burnt, though man do feel the
smart;
Yea be moved out of its place, by Gods
Almighty Power,
For this same
power of God alone, will all of it
devour.
And this
Word-fire, the virtue hath, not only for to
burn,
But give
Light, Life, yea
Heat and
Power, to them that of it
learn,
And therefore tho
dark, cold and
dead, without
power or
strength,
Yet come to this
Light, Living-Word, 'twill
raise you all at length.
We therefore in our
Meetings have known this
Refiners fire,
Which is to
take off all the dross; from it do not retire.
For as in outward
fire we see, when
coals abroad be spread,
The
Light, the
Life, and
Heat goes out, and all comes to be
dead;
But when again
together brought, and
kindled fresh anew,
Oh then each
coal rejoyceth much, when
fire is put thereto.
Which is the
end for which they are
created of the Lord,
That
Light, Life, Heat and
Comfort to, each other may afford.
And if our
Candles, being
Light, we can by no means
hide,
But must come to our
Candlestick, what ever doth betide;
Because that we know it is
night, in which many do
grope,
Therefore we do bring forth our
Light, to give to them some
hope:
Which is the
Gospel-power of God, that
Satan can't
abide,
But seeks our
Candle to
put out, that he
Gods power may
hide.
For he the
Prince of
darkness is, and would have all be so,
And if't be asked,
Where Light may shine? He present cryes,
No, no.
Then seen his
wicked works would be, that to them are the
Gate,
Of their
Destruction, therefore he, of all things it doth
hate.
When first in
flesh Christ did appear, though in a
Child young born,
He
musters then up all his
power, for to destroy the
Form;
And led them then to
Bethlehem, with this his
false intent,
By which
dark Power he did
devour many poor
Innocent.
Herod he then troubled full sore, with all
Jerusalem,
Perswading him the
Child was born should
Rule both
him and
them,
But this was then another thing, than
Worldly Rule to have,
For if that he would be a
King, the People he must
save.
But his
Kingdom it is not
here, nor do his
Servants fight,
But in mens
hearts it doth
appear, and
guides them to the
Right:
From whence all
wrath, strife and
envy, are shut out, with all
Wars,
And all in
Peace and
Love do
Live without
hatred or
Jars.
So that the ground and cause of
Fear, we may from men remove,
No other
Principle we have, but unto all men
Love.
And therefore are our
Meetings now, not kept in any
spight,
Of
King, or
Law, or
Parliament, but purely in
Gods sight.
For shall not
Sions Daughter shine, now that her
Light is come,
Or can her
Glory once be
hid, that's
radiant as the
Sun?
For that she hath her
Pride cast off, in this the Lords own
Day,
(Her
haughty Looks, and
stretch'd out Neck, with
wanton Eyes do
stay;
Her
walking, mincing, twinkling Feet, her
Bravery full soon,
Her
Chains, her
Braslets, and
Mufflers, Round tyers like the
Moon;
Her
Bonnets and
Leg-ornaments, her
Head-band and
Ear-rings,
Changable Suits of
Apparel, her
Wimples, Crisping-pins:
Also her
Glasses, Hoods and
Veils, these Burthens God endures,
And all her
Heavenly outward shews, which seen pleasant
Pictures.
These her own
righteous filthy Raggs, her
Covering and
Garment,)
And th'
Meek, and
quiet Spirit hath, took for her
Ornament.
Though Captive she was to those things, she hath
shook off the dust,
And put on beautiful Garments, the which she wore at first.
This is the
Bride that bids you
Come, the
Spirit saith the same,
And whosoever
thirsts, and
will, may
come unto this
Name.
The which we are
gathered unto in all the
Peoples sight,
Being Christs
Bride and
Body too, and for the
World a
Light.]
So under
Bed nor
Bushel nere must we at all be
hid,
But on the
Table must be set, a
Light for the
Blinded.
For this
worlds god mens minds doth
blind, with
riches, cares &
fears,
He would not have this
Gospel shine, that these
foggs all would
clear;
But would have all in
darkness dwell, this is his
Ellement,
For with this
Light he
angry is, and with us
discontent.
Something about SPEAKING, Who is to Speak, or What to be spoken?
Object.
BUT some may say,
You many times sit silent we do see,
And there is no speaking at all, with us this don't agree.
Answ.
My
Answer is, If any have
Gods Oracle we'll hear,
For that is it
expells all
Mists, and makes the
Air clear.
For this doth first the
Vessel cleanse from whence it doth proceed,
That first
believes, and therefore
speaks, to this we're all
agreed.
Faiths work is first to
cleanse the
heart from all
hypocrisies,
Than may it help for to
pluck out, Motes from their
Brothers eyes;
For how the
unconverted shall at all
strengthen his
Brother,
For then they do
condemn themselves, by
teaching of another,
How shall the
Thief at all
exhort another not to
steal,
Or the
diseas'd Physician tell others he will them
heal?
Or how can any teach the
Law, who yet the
Law do
break,
Such
Teachers make Gods Name
blasphemd when they
presume to speak
Or how
blind Guides can lead the
way in which others should
go,
Or any free out of the
Pit, themselves do
stumble so?
So what authority have these at all others to
Teach,
When still the
Law doth them
condemn, how can they
Gospel Preach?
Moreover they say,
None from sin, are free here, thus they tell,
So prove themselves
false-witnesses of True
Emanuel.
And this also doth testifie, their
labour's all in
vain,
So they do give themselves the
lye, yet they must
preach for
gain;
Because they have their
time all spent, and thus been exercis'd,
Yea this
good Doctrine counted was, till
Quakers them surpris'd.
But if there be a
David here, whose
Table's richly spread,
Whose
Cup doth overflow, he may speak with a
holy dread,
The things he hath so learn'd of God, and preach his
holy Word;
But no
Dreamers we can allow, for them's prepard the
Sword.
Their
Father and their
Mother both, the which did them
beget,
While they
prophesie shall run through, this
Sword against them's
set.
Oh this is the
commanding Power doth flesh in
silence keep,
Their glorious
Dreams we'll nor admire which are
products of
sleep.
For now that
blessed hour is come, The dead Gods Voice do hear,
And many that
did sleep awak: For Christ he
doth appear,
Yea from the
dead they
risen are, and Christ hath gi'n them
Light,
And sin reprov'd, in which we walkt in darkness of the
Night;
And unto
Judgement we are come, which
Sion doth
redeem,
With
Righteousness his
Converts he, doth bring unto
esteem.
For that all
Judgement to the
Son, the
Father doth commit,
And now to
Judgement he is come, and in
mens hearts doth sit;
And all his
Enemies that will not have the
Lord to raign,
Before his face they are brought forth, with order
to be slain.
The strong man he doth also
bind, that did his own
House keep,
And
spoil of all his
Goods hath made, now the
Soul's wake from
sleep.
For now our
God he doth
arise, his
enemies to
scatter,
Which are these
dreaming Prophets that, do thus
fawn, lye and
flatter,
And being in his
own House doth his
Oracles speak now,
So this same sence of
Spirit in all, cannot but it allow.
For he that to the Lord is
joynd, is with him
one in Spirit,
And to this Truth he sets his
Seal, This gift is no mans Merit.
So by the mouth of such a man, the Lord this use doth make,
His
holy Word still to
declare, as he by
Prophets spake.
For such a man, he can
declare the things that he hath
seen,
And
ears have
heard, for with his
hands Gods Word hath
handled been.
Yea this is he can truly tell you things of
admiration,
What for his Soul the Lord hath done in his
Regeneration.
So he is gatherd up into the
Cloud of Witnesses,
Which here alone did
serve the Lord, yea him did
fear and
please.
And these are they that do not
preach at any time for
Hire,
But having
Gods Word in their heart, cannot contain;
Tis fire.
And if the
Holy Ghost could not for
money then he bought,
And
Simon Magus was condemn'd for having such a thought,
What is the
Ghost that is in men, that money out do reach,
And what is that which it receives with condition to preach?
It seemeth then, that they have not of God this self-same
Gift,
Sith that they can contain themselves, till we for money shift
For them, their
lips can
knowledge keep, ther's
none that they wil cherish
For if
People no money have, they all are like to
perish:
For
freely they
receiv'd have not, the
Gospel they do
preach.
And therefore
freely can't it
give, so for
rewards do
Teach.
That these men truly you may know, they tell you what was said
By
Prophets, Christ, and
Apostels, these are their only aid.
And thus like to the
wandring Jews, in their Names would
cast out
The
unclean spirit that's in men, but it gives them the
rout;
And so upon them
it doth fall, that they do
quarter crave,
And do return and tell men that,
him out there's none can have:
For that they know they
Power have, both
in and
or'e them to,
Though they use
Paul and
Jesus words, for
money this they do.
For
Satans Kingdom's not so weak, he should himself out cast,
But this same
preaching Pollicy, makes it the longer last.
And so he sets them for to steal, the
Saints and
Prophets Words.
And bids them hear the
Word of God, thus much he them affords:
But yet with this
Proviso to,
That none the same can keep,
Or any now hath the
same Spirit, but that it still doth sleep:
And therefore must not now look for any such
Miracle,
For the
power and
work is lost, this is
Satans Oracle.
For he hath now changed his
Form, to keep from
Peoples sight,
Though he
the Prince of darkness be, yet seems
Angel of Light.
These
Priests and
Curats that do take upon them
Souls to cure,
Physitians are
of no value, that God's fire can't endure.
But here you see they have but what they from their
Neighbours steal
They having not
set Seal to God, he nought to them
reveals.
And though they say,
Hear you Gods Word, spoken to
Jeremy,
Or unto some other
Prophet, yet in their
mouth's a lye.
And so tho they do
say or
swear, that the
Lord he doth
[...]
Yea then they do
false witness bear, this
Test they cannot give.
Whereas those that do
dwell in
God, and
He dwelleth in them,
The
Prophets and
Apostles know, yea
Davids
[...] and
Stone.
B
[...]ing in the
Path they walkt, do see,
their foot-steps every one,
And know their
Light and
Lanthorn to, which unto
them hath shown,
And therefore can in truth
repeat, what they to all do tell,
That God also their
Souls hath brought from the
dark pit of Hell
This
Spirit it may
Preach and
Teach, Gods
wonders manifold,
The which can
speak Gods
Word in truth, being right, a
Lyin bol
[...]
Here you may see we do not
quench Gods
Spirit he affords,
That in the least measure doth
speak, rejoyce we at those
words.
Something about SILENCE.
Object.
BUT some do say,
We marvel much, that you can sit Silent,
We do conceive it no profit, nor are with it content;
For if that we should sit a while, silent from hearing breath,
Our mind a wandring then would be up and down in the Earth:
And so contriving in our hearts, whats to be done, we plot
Till there be someting we know not that on our heart doth smote:
And if this earthly spirit act
[...]n, for which we feel this smart,
Some former evil we have done, lyes gnawing of our heart.
So to this outward Ear we must have Objects that do sound,
That the inward Intelect
may, thereby be wholly drown'd:
For that which doth us thus reprove, and on our hearts doth smite,
Doth silence
make our burthen, 'cause it brings that to our sight:
For this is that to us doth shew, the evils we have done,
In silence
we are made to know, therefore we silence
shun.
And so among the trees do run, our selves there for to hide,
For this same small still Voice,
at all, by no means we abide.
Answer.
All this we must confess also, for we the same have felt,
Gods Loving-kindness we do know, thus he with us have dealt;
For tis the Lord the which doth
wound, and he doth also
heal,
'Tis he doth
kill and make
alive, thus with us he doth
deal:
All the
Satanick thoughts which thus wandred within our hearts,
His
Light and
Power did reprove; he cast at them his
Darts.
For this is the true Prophet which
Ahab cannot abide,
That Prophesies not well of him, that from the Lord doth slide;
And this is the Prophet also, that the
Samarians knew,
Which told them all they ever did; they said 'Twas Christ the true:
Though he at that time was in
Fesh, when he their thoughts did
show,
But now in
Spirit again is come, by these things we him
know.
The
Word which in
beginning was made Fesh, Christ, yesterday,
The
same is now, and
e're shall be, true Soules
Eternal stay.
And this is that must humble all, it is Gods
mighty hand,
Before that ye exalted be his
Power must make you stand.
And therefore now to
Silence come, Chastisement do'nt refuse,
For 'tis Gods
Love unto you all, his Sons hereby doth chuse.
And therefore now with
David pray the Lord your
hearts to search,
To find out all
Iniquity, and in his
fire it parch.
Yea with thy Candle do thou Lord, search thy
Jerusalem,
Tha it thy
Holy City may, be when thou turn'st out them,
That have kept and defil'd thy
House, the
Temple that is thine,
Which unto thee should holy be; Destroy them all in time
That are not
Children of thy
House, but came in by the
Fall:
This Heathen
Babylonish brood, dash them against the
Wall.
This
Enemy which in thy
Field, when men slept there did
Sow,
His
Legions of
Tares, O Lord, let them thy
fire know.
This
Man of sin in thy
Temple, presumptuously doth sit,
Exalting of himself above all that is calld
God yet;
And shewing of himself to be, the
God of all the Earth,
Giving forth Laws of sin and death, to all that here have breath.
And by those Laws in Members war, and doth us captive lead,
Therefore for us,
O mighty God, our Cause now do thou plead.
For in Hea'n we have none but Thee, nor in Earth do we seek;
For any other helper but
Thou Lamb of God, the
Meek.
For this same mighty
Man of sin, sends Ministers to praech,
None can be freed from
sin or
death, this Doctrine they do preach.
Whereby we all our Life-time have, been kept in misery,
They also boldly do affirm, that
Paul he then did lye;
When unto God he did give thanks, which was his
strength and
stay,
For that he had
deliverance, through Jesus Christ,
the Way.
And though
Paul in his Agony, did ask the question so,
From this Body of sin and death, Who shall deliver? Who?
This
question it was only writ 'cause he would
answer make,
Who was the alone
Deliverance, and for whose onely sake.
For none such tender pitty had to the
poor wretched man,
To bind his
wounds, and's wants
supply, but th'
good Samaritan;
Who
poured oyl into his wounds, set him on
his own Beast,
And brought him unto
Christs own Inne, the place of
all Souls Rest;
With
Wounds bound up, and
Charges paid, this
Love the Lord doth send
With
Stock laid in for future time, what the poor
Soul should spend.
Now shall not
Paul when he is
cleans'd, and other
Leapers to,
Return and give to God the
thanks, to whom alone tis due.
With
David also come and tell,
what for his soul is done,
And that
no Condemnation is, in
Jesus Christ, Gods Son.
For they now
walk not after flesh, another
Law they have,
The which of
Spirit is and
Life, that doth
their poor Souls save;
And this doth also
set them free, from
Flesh, Law, Sin and
Death,
And makes
dry Bones together come, for
God sends for his Breath.
Which is the
Gospel-Power of God, which
those Ministers hide,
Whose minds the
God of this World blinds, lest he should be
espide.
Thus they go forth and People tell,
from sin they can't be freed,
Whilst on this side the Grave we are; So their
Lord's Lord indeed.
So making void the
mighty Power, of the
Emanuel,
Who came
to save People from sin, Lyes of him they do tell:
As if
his Hand were shortned, and
weakned were his Power.
Or that the
World the
Divels were, for to
rule every hour.
Whereas
all Power in Heaven and Earth unto the Son is given,
And he must surely
Raign on Earth, though's
Enemies have striven,
Him to oppose; yet, if not
here, Oh where shall Gods Son Raign?
For
all his Enemies, Death and Hell, shall every one be slain:
For he must Rule till these be brought under his feet, then shall,
The Son his Kingdom re-assigne, and God be all in all.
So stop your mouths you
Messengers that are
Satanical,
For the
Lords Christ is come to
Raign, his
Rule must be your
Fall;
And all your
mighty Captains to, which are of
his Empire,
For
Dragon, Beast, False Prophet to, shall be cast in the
fire.
For the
Lords Christ came to destroy
all the works of the Devil,
That
Righteousness E'relasting may, be brought from
all that's evil,
And if he were not to
destroy his works in this
world wrought,
What other
World doth he
work in, that any out
have sought?
When he his
Messengers and
Works, are all
cast in the fire,
What
Works can he, or
they then do, that any can
desire?
'Tis also in
this wicked World, Gods Grace
Salvation brings,
Teaching us
worldly Lusts to shun, and each
ungoly thing.
And in this
present world to live godly and soberly,
And to relieve in
Righteousness the
fatherless thereby.
The
Widow likewise to
visit, this is
Religion pure,
From the
Worlds spots thus to keep clear, the
Devil can't endure.
And if all this you can't
believe, take your own
evidence,
Of your
own Doctrine the
result, and
Catachistick sence.
Whereby this Truth it is confirm'd, 'gainst all to be the same,
Where Children they are taught to say, whats
promis'd in their name
That the Devil and AL his works, they must and will forsake,
And AL the Pomps and Vanities of this world leave to take;
And AL the sinful Lusts also, of the Flesh, which do rise,
ALL these they must be now
forsook, that did their hearts surprize,
And these not only to be left, but
they Gods Word must keep,
And his holy Commandements, all their Life, not in sleep
This
Christian Article of Faith, they must fully
believe,
Though they themselves their
works destroy, yet this to
learn they give
Oh is no here
Babel built now, anon pull'd down again,
This is the
Dialect they speal, of
Sounds this is the
strain.
Object.
But some may say,
For all this yet, Paul
in his flesh did feel,
A Prick Buffeting of Satan, and this God did not heal.
Answ.
All this is true in his
Warfare, Pricks in the flesh he may,
And
Buffetings of
Satan to, who sought him to destroy.
For when that
[...]e a
Souldier was, of Satan, on his side,
He then
with might did Persecute, Christians could not abide.
And like his
Master went about, roaring for to devour,
And Letters had from the
High Priest, to take all in his
Power.
And said himself,
He was e'en mad, 'gainst all on God did call,
He
went from house to house and did, them
unto Prison hall.
Now all this time there was no cause
Satan should buffet Saul,
Till that he had his
Champion lost, and was convert to Paul.
And now who otherwise can think, but
Paul bufft'ed must be,
by his old
Master that he serv'd, now they do not agree.
Moreover must not
Paul now have the
measure he hid give,
And now the
Wheel's upon him turn'd, till the Lord him
relieve.
So this no evil was in
Paul, nor ought that was unjust,
Though to the Lord he three times sought, 'cause he did
on him trust.
This seeking to the Lord did shew, who had the power and might,
And that himself was but weakness, 'twas
God must for him fight.
The
Answer was he should not
Fear, sufficient was his Grace,
Him to defend, and Courage give, his Enemies to face.
He now must be a
Souldier for, his
new Master, tis right,
Therefore with
Pricks and
Buffets to, his
old Master doth fight,
Against him in temptation, in raising of his mind,
To glory in the things he saw, to which before he's blind.
But by the
Shield of
Faith he did defend himself from
evil,
And
quenched hath the
fiery darts, cast at him from the
Devil.
And Gods
Light Armour on he put, with the
Sword of the Spirit,
The
Helmet of Salvation to, all's
Free, here is no
Merit.
So with this
Armour and
Weapon, Paul did
fight a good fight,
Against the
Devil, kept the Faith, by Gods
Pow-er and
Might.
And by this
Faith he did resist the
Devil and made him
fly,
And in this
Faith the
Victory got, also a
Crown thereby.
The which the Righteous God will give unto his
Souldiers all,
That under this his
Banner fight, and on his
Name do call.
So all may see that this was not
an evil then in
Paul,
But
Souldiers marks of
Jesus Christ, the which we must bear all.
And his seeking thus unto God, is as a
sucking Child,
That seeketh for its
Mothers Breast, that is
tender and
mild.
And when the
Child had
suckt its fill, the
Breast likewise is eas'd,
The
Child then it is satisfi'd, and
Mother also pleas'd.
This
figure God made use of when, to
Israel he did say,
Her Child, can a Mother forget, that sucks on her each day?
This is the
Faith that
sucks the
Breast of
Consolation,
By which the
Just shall ever live if they feed thereupon.
For in the World we are but sent, this plainly doth appear,
Which shews our
Father is alive, in whose
House is our chear,
In which is
Bread of Life enough, and
Mansions there are many,
So
Prodigals must come thereto, if they mean to have any.
And this may well observed be, what doth the
Father move,
No sooner sees his
Son to come, but
RƲNS to meet his
Love.
Oh here is
Love, Love, Love indeed, Who can such
Love er'e
shun,
For when
poor Souls begin to
move, the
Father he doth
RƲN;
Yea not
away, but
towards him, as if it were a
Bliss,
With arms spread out doth it receive, and gives to it a
Kiss.
And is not only here content, with joy his House doth sound,
Because the dead is made alive, his lost Son now is found.
And seemeth to be
servile to, beset with
cares and
fears,
Waiting for to be
garcious, on
Israel forty years,
And when that we did
wallow in the blood that was our own,
Ʋnsalted, washt or
pittied, then was his
strong Arm known.
Oh this was Gods own only
Power, that did
Salvation bring,
Oh this was then a time of
Love, which makes us now to sing;
Salvation, Glory and
Power, unto our God for ever,
Who is our present help at hand, his
Promise faild us never.
So all may see the ground-work then that solely doth us move
In our affections to
Love him, 'cause
first he did us Love,
For when that we
ungodly were, then he
his own Son sent,
From
sin and
Satan us to
free, this was his
true intent.
From
Egypts darkness, and
Deaths bonds, poor Souls he did
set free,
This was Gods
Love, and the Sons
Word, in this both did
agree.
This
Truth also in many things, illustrated may be,
That we no
Independants are, alone on God live we.
Though we as strong as
Sampson were, who the
Philistines killd,
And
heaps on heaps of them did bear, yet he to
Death must yeild,
Till the Lord cleave a hollow place, where water did spring out,
In the same
Jaw-bone of the
Asse, wherewith he made the
Rout,
And when that he had drank thereof his Spirit came again,
And he revived also was, though given himself as slain;
So of our selves no
strength we have, 'tis in God we must hoast,
Who is our
Captain, Strength and
Stay, the
only Lord of Hoasts.
Now by
experience David may, (yet in Gods strength alone)
Declare how he by it had killd, the great
Philistian;
The
Lyon, Bear, and through an
Hoast gone by this strength he hath,
And he
over a Wall hath lept, that stood a cross his
Path.
This is the way that he did go, and therefore
Courage took,
'Cause formerly God did him help, and never him forsook.
Though then were some, as there be now, which unto him did say,
That in his God no help there was, whereon his soul to stay.
This plainly then, you now may see, these cause
mens hearts to faint,
Denying of Gods strength, which he doth work in every
Saint.
So putting them quite out of heart, for ever to attain,
Over their
hearts-lusts Victory or
Ground on them to gain
This Spirit you may also see, in
Israel of old,
Which did not the true
Spies believe, though they God;
Truth b
[...] told
For they the Sons of
Anack feard, that
mighty were and
tall,
So did not in
Gods Power trust, but fell a
murmuring all;
And their false
Spies to help forward their
unbelief and
spight,
Said,
They appear'd like Grashoppers in the Anakims
sight.
None doubted then, nor do they now,
but the Land it is good,
But how't could then, or now can be
attaind, the
Question stood?
And notwithstanding God to them such
Miracles did show,
And
wonderfully brought them out of
Egypt, they did know,
Yet those
false Spies did them
perswade, as
Ministers do now,
(Of
Satan which do make a trade against God to avow)
That from their
Masters Kingdom he, poor
Souls cannot
set free,
Or that his
Kingdom in this World,
diminished shall be.
Which is the cause of
Ʋnbelief, amongst us now at length,
But those that
unto Sion come, do grow from strength to strength.
And now, as then, the
true Caleb, do still the People tell,
The Land is good, and to Conquer, they able are full well.
And that the People should not
fear, unto them thus he
sed,
Their Defence doth from them depart, they are to us for Bread:
And that
the Lord he was with them, there was no cause to fear,
Yet they for all this did rebell, for their words did not care.
For many
false Spies still they had, which brought an
ill report,
So that the
Congregation, bad
stone them with stones for't.
Now if there be a
Caleb that, God
follow fully will
With
other Spirit than they do, they cry,
him stone, or kill.
And yet for all this God will bring his
Calebs to this Land,
They and their Seed shall it possess, which to his
Truth do stand,
Who do
believe and so
confess, God by his Power can,
Bring his People out of Egypt,
to heavenly Canaan.
From this it may observed be,
The false spies they are many,
From which the ground of Ʋnbelief doth spring: Truth scarce hath any.
Though in this work it is their share, to
suffer, as men think,
Yet unto us it is our
Joy, of Christs own Cup to drink.
E'en as twas then, so it is now,
Destructions way is wide,
And
many follow in the same, few from it
turn aside.
These men that did
Gods glory see, and
miracles also.
In
Egypt and i'th
Wilderness, do tempt him ten times mo
Than those that never yet did see,
Gods Power, that's
Divine,
More tollerable it shall be, for such who have no
Sign,
These
Miracles and
Wonders great, Advantages should be,
And in our hearts such
Courage raise, that we no
fear should see.
This is the way
David did go with confidence to
Saul,
He took up
Courage in his heart, and told
Israel all,
That in
Gods strength, a
Lyon he had killed, and a
Bear,
And therefore this
Physitian bold knew no such thing as
Fear.
This
Plea we 'gainst all those have that unto
People preach,
Let God or man do what they can, Man Canaan
Land can't reach.
Something of the Cause of DARKNESSE, IGNORANCE and PERSECUTION.
AS the dark Body of the
Moon, which in the Night is
Light,
That it receiveth from the
Sun, by standing in its
sight;
And then again by
Reflection on us this
Light doth
cast,
While it thus governeth the
Night, (no longer doth it last)
For when the
Day-light doth
appear, it
wan doth wax and
fade,
'Cause it retains no
Life, or
Power, nor hath it any
Shade;
For that the
brightness of the Sun with its most
glorious beams,
In its large
Womb hath
swallowed up her
pale and
glimmering Streams
By which he
Body is made
dark, this all may plainly see;
And when it gets before the
Sun, then an
Eclipse will be,
Yea this also may be minded, because it is most clear,
The Sun is ne're Eclipsed but, when th' Moon
is in its Sphere.
And the
Earths Body also is as dark as is the
Moon,
For when it gets before the
Sun, the
Moon's
Eclips'd full soon.
Thus
Nature hath these outward
Signs that in their
Sphears do run,
For the
Earths Body doth
Eclipse the
Moon, and
She the
Sun.
These outward
Signs of
Heaven were discern'd by men of old,
Who yet the
Mystery did not see being all led
blind-fold;
Because the
God of this World had their
minds wholly blinded,
Lest that the
Gospel-Light should shine, and they by it
be led,
And though the
Hypocrites of old
Heavens outward could
discern,
Yet did not know true
Bethlehem, where Gods own
Seed was born,
Of these
Figures the
Prophets did, of old make use, you see,
When they told where the
World was set, in mans heart there to be.
So he that to God is a Friend, must have the World cast out,
From this same place where it is set, else Truth it will not sprout.
And this the cause of the
Eclipse, that man comes not to know,
Neither beginning nor the end, of him God doth not show;
The works that he at all times doth, they being
heavenly,
Because of this total
Eclipse, that on his heart doth lye.
So that the
Moons dark
Body's of, to us, no use at all,
The
Sun reflecting not thereon, by the
Earths Interval,
This made the
Seers which of old, with shame confounded were,
For they no
Answer of God had, because they
Preacht for hire,
Yea for money they did
Devine, and
Judged for reward,
Thus building up
Sion with blood, no sight had of the Lord.
The dark
Moon here is turnd to
BLOOD, tho it pretend to
build,
The
glorious Mountain of the Lord, have hereby
Saints blood spill'd.
And yet for all this seem to lean themselves upon the Lord,
As if no evil she had done, but in heart did accord.
This hard-heart
Earth was still the same, of which the Lord so long
Complain'd of in the
Wilderness, it grieved him so strong.
To day, to day, for forty years, oh this was all the noise,
But their hard hearts they could not hear the sounding of his voyce?
This
Earth, this
Lust, this
Will, this
Fesh, they being of one nature,
Are those that keep the
glorious beams from
shining on the Creature.
But now the
Day of God is come, expel those
Mists he will,
Which do his
Sun-beams over-cast, that shine would on his still.
For though a man have outward eyes, be they never so clear,
Yet if that
Night do him oretake, he is little the neer.
And as it is in outward Earth, this is the cause of Night,
Having a Body
thick and
gross, its self hinders the
Light.
This
Judgement was on th' Prophets which with their
keen Teeth did bite,
'Gainst those that put not in their mouths, in
War prepare to
fight.
Therefore
Night should be unto them, they shall no
Vision have,
Not so much
Light as to
devine how they
themselves may
save,
And down o're them the
Sun shall go, are
Prophets of that day,
Yea
darkness shall oretake them all,
who make not God their stay.
They therefore shall
cover their Lipps, for tho they
call and
cry,
They shall
no answer have from God, 'cause in the earth they
lye.
These were also the
Belly-gods, whose
glory was their shame,
For that they
Earthly things did mind, and therefore were to blame.
And this likewise was that also, which
Demas did embrace,
Who for this
present world did, forsake both
Truth and
Grace.
These were the
false Teachers of which
Peter did so fore-tell,
Should
Heresies damnable bring; that swift destruction fell
Upon them in their
great glory, for that they should
deny,
The
Lord, Light, Life, that thus bought them, so in
dark Death shall lye.
Yea these are they through
Avarice, and
fained words should make
Merchandise of the People too, this
darkness they did take.
And following these
pernitious wayes is the sole reason why
Truths way is evil spoken off, to th'
Light they'l not come nigh.
So this is
Moon Eclips'd you see, the
Earth, and the
hard Heart,
And now before this
Cloud be gone, these things must feel the smart.
For that the
World and things therein must all be burnt with fire,
And be removed from his place, in the
Day of Gods ire.
But what is that which doth
Eclipse the
Sun? The
Moon (I've said)
When it is turned into Blood, then doth it the
Sun shade,
And makes his
Body to look black and
shine, as if it were
For all its
great and
glorious beams, but a
Sack-cloth of
hair.
This was the time that
Joel did prophesie of, and say,
When Sun was dark, then Moon was blood, this should precede Gods day.
And 'twas fulfil'd when the
sixth-Seal was opened, for loe
A
mighty Earth-quake then was seen, which many well do know,
For then the
Stars of
Heaven fell unto the
Earth their place,
Because they were untimely
Figgs, they staid there but a space,
For by this mighty
Wind and
Storm, which God among them sent,
He shook off what untimely was, tho
glorious things were ment.
And now the
Earth not only doth, but also
Heavens, shake,
Because Gods
Day is at the door, they tremble do and quake.
For this first
Earth and
Heaven too, which
Man could not sustain,
Are both together shaken now, their Form doth not remain.
Therefore this
Heaven departed is even as it were a
Scrole,
For all their
glorious fained words, together when tis rowl'd.
And every
Mountain and
Island, which glory in their
graces,
Are by this
Storm and mighty
Wind, remov'd out of their
places.
And they that were
Kings of the
Earth, Great and
Rich Men also,
With chief
Captains and
mighty Men, with
Bond and
Free-Men go,
And hide themselves within the
Dens, yea on the
Mountains call,
And on the
Rocks for to hide them, or upon them to fall.
These are the
Presbyterian Moon, which in the
Night was
Light,
But when to
Persecution fell, then all was
Blood and
spight;
But now their Kingdom shaken is, and they are made to quake,
Having their
Measure measured back, this makes their
own hearts ak
[...].
This makes their
Stars, their
mighty Men, down from their heaven
fall,
Rather than they will
drink this Cup, that is
mixed with gall,
And so what
Antichristian was in
Way and
Form before,
And
Covenanted then
against, the same they now
Adore.
Thus now their
Valiant Captains do from
Heaven daily
slide,
Their
Rich and
mighty Men also, in
Rocks and
Mountains hide,
From the
Light Face of him that sits upon his Fathers Throne,
And from
the Wrath of the Lamb which, they often made to grone.
Object.
But some may now
Object and say,
This is not fairly done,
To rip up this our misery, in the sight of the Sun,
And as it were for to rejoyce, or'e us in this our fall,
Nor do you put a helping hand to any of us all.
Answ.
To this I
Answer, It is just, the
measure is your own,
For the
Saints blood some of you drank, as lately hath been shown;
Your
mighty men but lately were
Merchants of Babylon,
And dealt in
Slaves and
Souls of men, Alas! your
City's gon.
For tho in
Scarlet deckt with Gold, with pretious Stones, and Pearls,
And in
Fine Linnen cloathed were, and lived then like Earls,
Yet now your
Ships and
Companies, of
Sailers which did
Trade.
Within the
Sea of Babylon, did
weep, and
wail, and said,
Alas! alas! that great City, wherein we rich were made,
Is like a Mill-stone cast i'th Sea, thus God doth us degrade.
Wherefore, O
Heaven, or'e her
rejoyce, ye
Prophets also too,
With the
Apostels, for God hath, on
her revenged you.
And your
Crafts men with all their
Craft, no more in her
be found,
Nor yet at all shall there be
heard, a
Mill-stone for to
sound.
Thy
Candle-light for evermore,
exstinguished shall be,
The
voice of Bridegroom and
of Bride, be heard
no more in thee.
For that thy
Merchants they still were, the
Great Men of the Earth
Which by their
Sorceries deceiv'd all
Nations of their
Breath.
For that in her was found
the Blood, of
Prophets and of
Saints,
And all that were
slain on the Earth, which brings on her
heart-faints.
Therefore we which in
Heaven dwell, with
voice, and
one accord,
Continual
Halilujas sing,
Salvation to the
Lord.
With
Glory, Honour, and
Power let's praise the
Lord of Heaven,
Whose
Judgements just and righteous be, he to
the Whore hath
given;
For why, she did
corrupt the Earth with her
vile Fornication,
Gods
Servants blood for Vengeance cryes on her abomination.
Now
blood unto her God hath given, for that it is her
share,
Yea
she is worthy of the same, 'cause
Saints blood she'd not
spare.
Object.
But some may say,
Why do you thus apply these things to them,
When you also now Sufferers are which come of Jesses
Stem?
Answ.
For
Answer, though we may be
slain, for the good
Word of God,
And for the
Testimony held which we have from the
Lord,
As those
Souls under th' Altar which, unto the Lord did cry,
For
Vengance on those dwelt on Earth: and answer'd,
Ye must lye
Ʋntil the rest of your fellow-servants and Brethren to,
Which witnesse bear unto my Name, be kill'd as well as you.
For thus 'twas under the
fifth Seal, the
Angel open'd when
The
Moon was blood, the
Stars did fall, and
Sun was hid from men.
What from the
Earth can we expect, when
Blood's the
light of heaven,
But
Persecution with effect, when
Stars to it fall even.
But by the way Observe,
under the Altar Souls do lye,
The which the
Sacrificer kills, and there he doth them
tye.
And so
Obedience was lost, which was
better than any
Of all the
Sacrifice they made, though offer they did many.
For their
Oblations they were
vain, Incense abomination,
Nor did God this require of them, they being
Sodoms Nation.
When they spread forth their hands to God, he fast did close his eyes,
And though they many Prayers made, God did them all despise.
Their New Moons and their solemn Feasts, Assemblies like a flood,
The Lord had no regard to 'cause their hands were full of Blood.
It was
Jerusalem also, that did the
Prophets kill,
And stoned those to them were sent, and with
blood did fulfil.
And though they said,
they would not be partakers with their Fathers,
In this same
bloody Tragedy, yet Saints blood they still gather.
But desolate there House is left, Gods
Glory from it's gone,
For that they have
contemnd the
Sun which on their
Moon hath
shone.
Wherefore they shall not henceforth see the
true Light till they say,
Blessed is he that cometh in the Lord Gods Name alway.
Object.
But some of these
Objected have against us, saying, we
Have not so much gain-said, oppos'd, those in our places be,
So that we cannot choose but think you very flatterers are,
And as the common Proverb is, Your Friends at Court you spare;
For that it hath observed been, the men most godly were,
Their Congregations you did haunt, and 'gainst them rave and tear.
As then, so now, those that are bad, 'gainst them no word doth spring,
But those that zealous were and good, you made their Churches ring.
So that we cannot but suppose, the Bottom doth design,
Some Machavillian Policy,
to be acted in time.
And if that this be nothing so, why do you not still go
Into those great Assemblies now, the Reason let us know.
Answer.
For
Answer hereunto I say, What man is there so mad
To spend his time in the
threshing of Bushes? They'r as bad.
For if one would go
vilifie, the worst of men there's nought
In them (to use the
Proverb old)
that worth a Rush is thought.
Or who is he that will look for,
Grapes on the thorny Twiggs,
Or is there any one that doth
of Thistles gather Figgs?
So that they have no cause to say,
That we against them were,
When as that we a
threshing went, we did not
rave or
tear.
For certainly, you may suppose, we did judge there was
Corn
Which prompted us to come and
thresh, and
winnow in your
Barn.
And if the
grain it did cling fast, the
chaffe and
straw unto,
The
Threshers do not
discommend, tho they did it
undo.
And though at first the
best Corn's made out of the
Straw to spring
Yet do not you the
Thresher blame, if it to th'rest they
fling.
For good
full Corn it doth rejoyce, when
Threshers come thereto,
'Cause then it knows it shall be put Gods own will for to
do.
And though it be but
Oxen which this
Corn out do
tread,
Yet by the same they
food must have, and not be
muzzelled.
It is because
Corn's hard and tough, that Instruments made be,
With
sharp hard Teeth, because
plain Tools from the
Straw can't it
free
So those that good and godly were, we did them not contemn,
But what was done, was
Gods visit, did you to us commend.
For you were counted
the lost Sheep, of the
House Israel,
Therefore count us not Enemies because
Gods Truth we tell.
And by enquiry you did find, of
Gods Message worthy,
Though still we see you hardned be, and us
reproach daily.
In the time of
Elias though there
Widows were a many,
He to
Sareptha's Widow's sent, of others, not to any.
Also in
Israel there was much
Leprosie on man,
Yet none at all were cleansed but
Naaman the
Syrian.
So that if God did send to cleanse you of your
Leprosie,
Then charge not the
Messenger with
Machivel-Policy.
Nor with the
Prophet do find fault, that doth preserve your store,
When in great
Famine that you were, he shew'd you
where was more.
Moreover you may see those men that zealous were indeed,
At the first
threshing did spring forth, and are reserv'd for
Seed.
The which the
Promise is unto, and it
inherit shall,
Because in him they did
believe, and answered his
Call.
And they will testifie also, the
Threshers they did well,
Though they
sharp Instruments did use, 'twas good to them befel.
For seeing they were
hungry Souls, Heavens
Bread, tho it be
bitter,
Now they were just a coming forth of
Egypt, was the fitter.
And as for being
Flatterers, or that at
Court have
favour,
Our
Sufferings they will testify, in
Court we have no
savour,
Nor ought on
Earth to
appeal to, but that we
lye down still,
And
suffer all for
Christ his sake, for this we know's
Gods will.
Also in this we do rejoyce, that we
with him partake,
Both in his
Sufferings and his
Death, this
Baptim's for his sake.
And as for your
Idol flattring, with us there's no such thing,
As
Cap, or
Knee, or
Worship, which makes
Courts against us
ring.
And cause we can't it to them give, no favour they do show,
Yea unto
us they do not
right, as most of you do know.
And as for our
not going now, oh that would you
disgrace,
Should we cry out on
Anti-christ, who you say's in your
Place.
No, no, if that
Anti-christ doth this your Church now
possess,
Against him then you should
declare, tis your part now, we guess.
And that he might not never more arise, much less to stand,
You made the People
Covenant, against him through the Land,
With
Hands lift up to
Heaven high, that God he would
record,
This
Solemn League and
Covenant, you have made to
the Lord.
And yet are picking upon us to do your
drugery,
Must we fulfill your
Covenant, and for't in
Prison lye?
Then may you say we're
Fools indeed, and
Busie-bodies too,
To meddle in
others matters where, so little thanks is due.
But if that you have
vowd a
Vow, defer it not to
pay,
For God in
Fools no
pleasure takes, tis true what I do say.
But from us this
Proviso take,
With no Weapons contend,
But
Heart and
Tongue, with Gods own
Breath, and
Spirit he doth send.
For
Creature-killing-Weapons they, are
Antichrists own
Arms,
And you will never
overcome by any such like
Charms.
But now with us Gods
Standard's set, and
Goshans Land is known
Where
Light to
Israel doth
shine, as I before have shown.
Sor if
inward Egyptians will, true
Is-ra-el-ites turn,
This
House of
God still open stands for them to come and
Learn.
More than all
Egypts Sorcerers, or her
Magicians,
Can teach, because tis very clear,
Gods Power transcendeth Mans.
Now the Lord hath deliverance sent to his
Daughter SION,
That dwelleth with the
Daughter of
MYSTERY Babylon.
For among
natural bruit Beasts there is no
Mystery,
With
outward Sheep and
inward Wolves, the
Mystery here doth ly.
For
Foxes, Lyons, Wolves and
Bears, there shape doth them discover,
What spirit tis doth lodge in them, so doth their
Voyce, moreover
Shew forth and also warning give to Man and Beast,
beware
Lest on them they do make their
prey, being caught in their
Snare.
These Beasts in their
earthly Nature, act right within their
Sphere,
Though
tyrannizing or'e the rest, keeping them all in
fear.
But when these alter
Voice and
Shape, what
sphere run in they then,
Having
Sheeps-cloathing with
Lambs voice, they then
devour Men.
'Twas the strict Sect of
Pharisees and
Writing Scribes also,
That Jesus Christ call'd
Hypocrites, 'gainst them denounst his
wo.
Calling them
Fools, Serpents, Blind-guides, and
Vipers Children to,
And also
Painted Sepulchers, such names he counts their due.
The reason of't if you would know,
Matthew doth it repeat,
Their
Burdens, Scourgings, Devourings, tho they got
Moses Seat,
Their
C
[...]ing and
Pretences too,
Long Prayers they did make,
And
[...]
Tombes and
Sepulchers, these courses they did take.
[...] Sons and Fathers
Prophets kill'd,
Wise Men and
Christ also,
[...] scourged in their Synagogues, and much
Blood spite from mo.
Something as to the ORDER in our Meetings, wherein we do not Respect Persons, for which the Spirit stirs up to Persecution.
THese
Meetings and
Assemblies are such as
James doth us tell,
Where
Gay-cloathing had no respect, nor did
Gold-rings excel.
For in our
Meeting-Place there's no chief seats kept, but those
That do the
vilest rayment wear, may sit as doth
gay cloathes.
For we dare not commit this sin,
Mens persons to respect,
Lest while before him we appear,
our Service he reject.
Advantages we do not seek, that we may men
admire,
Nor can we
fawn on them for ought, or bid them
sit up higher;
For we be those that do believe, no honour do
receive,
Nor dare we ought to others
give, God never gave us
leave.
But honour do we in the Lord, all men it is their due,
But when men seek it to themselves, we give it not thereto.
For no man hath
that which is good, or ought thats
honourable,
It is no more than
Crumbs that
fall from
Gods Almighty Table.
Why should the
Riv'let boast it self, which by the
Fountain's fed,
And what hath Man
to glory in, who
beggs his daily Bread?
For 'tis of
Grace all that we have, his
Gifts we live upon,
Therefore to him let's
Praises give, yea unto him alone.
Moreover should we
honour give, to men, which they count
civil,
We know'ts a
snare, and we must
shun, appearances of evil.
Did not this vanity help much, to hasten
Herods doom,
When th' People cryed
The voice of God, and not of man, is come?
This honour to himself he took, 'twas a
temptation,
And sought the
glory to himself, the which was
Gods alone.
So with an
Angel he was
smote, God
vengeance on him took,
And with
Worms then
he eaten was, on this to us is spoke.
For he a
Persecutor was, this only doth afford,
With hands stretcht out to
vex the Church, he killd
James with the
Sword,
And because he did see it pleas'd the
Jews; he did proceed
And apprehended
Peter too, all
Truth thus out
[...] weed,
But when to God
Prayer was made for
Peter, God did hear,
And by his
Angel did him from
Blood-sucking Herod clear.
And for his
Pride and
Cruelty in recompence God paid,
And brought his
Judgements upon him, as I before have said.
These are the
Hamonites of old, which in themselves do say,
Who shall the King, or the People honour, but us alway,
But see what he unto himself, as
honour thus did crave,
Was given unto
Mordecay, whom he ordain'd his
Slave.
The
Gallows-measure he had made, for to
hang Mordecay,
Was measured unto himself, for thus the King did say;
For
when the King once knew the thing, h'said,
Hang him thereupon,
Thus on
proud wicked mens Heads fall,
Gods Judgements many a one
This was the man that thought it scorn,
Ones blood to seek alone,
But all his
Brethren the
Jews, must be kill'd every one.
And though but one commit th'
Offence, not to his
Pride to bow,
Yet all the rest must
suffer for't, so it is
decreed now.
So
Hamon is the first of all, that ever yet I've read,
Who got forth such a
cruel Law, yet we find of his
Seed.
Thus also
Nebuchadnezzar, who in his
Pallace walkt,
Said,
Is not this Great Babylon (with much such glorying talkt)
That I have built, for the House of the Kingdom, that is mine,
And by the might of my Power, (thus slighting Gods
Divine)
And also for the honour of alone my Majesty,
As if at all there had not been, a
Power that's on high.
While these words were in the Kings mouth, there fell a voice from heaven,
The Kingdom is departed now, that unto thee was given.
This was the
Image-making man, and
Persecutor too,
That cast i'th
fire who would not to's
Image Worship do.
Therefore let none think that we do't through
peevishness of mind,
For we for it good
Reason have, and
Precepts too Divine,
Examples too, you see we have, recorded in
Scripture.
Of
Gods Judgements, that on men fell, which were both just and sure,
As hard-hearted
Pharaoh did keep
Israel in Bondage great,
And when
Liberty it was sought, with God he would not treat:
But said,
Who is the Lord, that he, at all should him obey?
With such presumptuous words as these from his
proud heart did say,
And in the stead of
Liberty, did make their
Burthens more,
For which upon his Head God did, full many
Judgements poure.
Bloody waters, Froggs, Lice and
Flies, with
Boyles and
Blanches many,
Hail, Locusts, Darkness, and
First-born, were slain, he left not any.
And yet for all those
Judgements which fell on him as his due,
So
hard-hearted he yet still was, that
Israel he'd
pursue.
So Gods People in a great strait, being thus
surrounded,
By standing kill
Salvation saw, of God, and
Pharaoh drounded,
This is for you a
warning then, that follow step by step,
That regard not
Fire, War, or
Plague, but over these things lep,
Tho you count those things
Accidents, which unto you are given,
But that you should no
Covers have,
God shews you signs from heaven:
Yea, and
such signs all your
Wise men, with their
Egyptian Art,
Could tell the coming of the same, which made them all to start.
Nor what th' effect or influence these
Blasing-Stars would be,
That in one year did shew themselves not one, or two, but three.
Thus
Pharaohs drown'd, and
Hamons hang'd,
Nebuchadnezzar's due.
To lose his
Kingdom, and
Herod, eaten with worms was to,
So all
proud persecuting Spirits, Examples here's for you,
For God is now the same, also, his
Judgements just and
true.
For his Hand is not shortned, but can help, 'tis our stay,
Nor is his power now weakend, more than 'twas yesterday.
For all the
Honour and
Glory, of Man is but a lye,
And if there were no
Worshippers of
Idols they would dye.
This
Honour God he will not give to graven
Images,
Nor his
Glory to mortal men, tho they him near so please,
For that the
Kingdom it is his, the
Power and
Glory too,
And
Honour for ever and e're, to him alone tis due.
For if the
Angel which to
John, shewd
Mysteries manifold,
Would not be
bow'd to or
worshipt, how dare man be so bold?
For he our
Fellow-servant was, and of our
Brethren to,
Which
Jesus Testimony had, and
Prophesying Spirit true.
These are the highest
attainments of
Angels and of
Men,
That maketh them
honourable, yet are they but
Brethren.
And so they dare not now to
bow, or
worship give each other,
Or
glory in ought that they have, for't cometh from another.
And now all earthly
Images, you all must now be dumbe,
And speak no more for your glory, now
Gods Kingdom is come.
And his
Almighty Power shall you altogether grind,
And in the
Sea your
Ashes cast, that henceforth none you find.
This is the
little Stone the which out of the
Mountain's cut,
Though without hands, your
Images shall break, as a small
Nut.
These
Idols of
Silver and
Gold, they shall to
Moles be given,
The which
blind Vermin in Earth creep, shut up from th'
Light of heaven.
And the blind
Bats must have a part, that are
Birds of the night,
The which cannot abide the
Day, to fly in peoples
sight.
Therefore alone to God we'l
bow, and
worship him alway,
Who is our
Fountain, Treasure, Stock, our
Light, Life, Bread and
Stay,
And therefore now, Man
speak no more for
to be bow'd unto,
For
Gods Prerogative it is, and he must have his due.
If
Saints and
Angels they would not at all be
bow'd to, then
What spirit have all those that do,
seek worship now from men?
For if Gods
Messengers and
Gifts we must not once
admire,
Oh then! Whose
Messengers are they, that
Glory do desire?
For all the
Gifts and
Graces w
[...]ch God he doth to us send,
That him alone we should
praise, which, is both
Author and
End.
For we the
Israel of God are, while we walk in
this sphere,
So no
Weapon against us formd shall
prosper, Sword or
Spear.
If in the
Fire we are cast, oh there's the
Son of God,
Or through the
Water made to pass, oh there's also the
Lord.
So to be
burnt or
over-flowd, no cause we have to fear,
For
Angels Lyons mouths do stop, of's
Daniels he hath care.
If
Oxen must not
muzzeld be, that do tread out the
Corn,
Oh then what
care will he have of his
Babes that are
new born?
But if that yet we do
please men, Gods
Servants we are not,
And when men worldly honour seek, it signifies a
Blot.
That they from God departed are in whom men
honour have,
And gone into the
World from him, who do its
honour crave.
Saul is a
figure unto such, who
Gods Word disobeyd,
And God from him departed was, oh then he cryd, and said
Before the People honour me, oh this was all his cry,
For those that have
forsaken God, on this alone rely.
But this is sad and desmal to,
Worlds glory for to gain,
Out of Gods presence to be cast into
eternal pain.
In this
Doctrine it is observ'd, the
Persecutors proud,
Which will not to this
Image bow, Life hardly is allow'd.
And God he is so just and true, in
Judgement he'll not act,
Till plainly the
notoriousness appear doth of the Fact.
Cain he cannot at all be cast out of
Gods presence till,
The
Blood of Abel
he hath spilt, then
Judgement on him fell.
So you that
offer unto God, the Sacrifice of Praise,
Which
Offering he doth respect, and also did alwayes.
Thus to the
Will of God you must your selves and all commit,
Tho
Caldees and
Sabeans too, themselves against you set.
For the Chastisements of the Lord, we never must refuse,
'Cause ye no
Bastards are but
Sons, he to himself doth chuse.
And when that you
corrected are,
Obedience thereby learn,
You shall not need to fear but God, the
Rod forthwith will burn.
Now if the ground-work you would know, in fine, of all this evil,
From th'
Dragon and
old Serpent tis, or spirit of the
Devil.
The which, besides Old
Adam, did set on to tempt the Lord,
And in's
temptations offered, what the
World could afford.
The
Kingdom, power, and
glory, to him he would allow,
And said twas his, to give to those, that unto him would
bow.
Though he himself a wandrer were up and down in the Earth,
Our
adversary doth appear, to devour
Spiritual birth.
This Spirit you shall see in them that do worlds glory seek,
And such as
flatter, fawn and
bow, to them they'll appear
meek,
But any one that fears the Lord, and cant to
proud flesh bow,
No
favour, love, or
curtesie, to such he doth allow.
Though his necessities be great, as Christs were also, when,
He
fasted forty nights and dayes, a hungry he was then.
And this the
Devil he did know, to him it did appear,
Because Christ would not bow to him, he therefore did him jear,
To satisfie his own hunger,
Bids him with stones make bread.
His own necessities to help if he meant to be fed.
And further mischiefs he contriv'd, and dangers what he could,
When put upon
the Pinacle himself
cast from he should;
For if thou be Gods Son, he said,
the Angels they have Charge,
And in their hands they should bear up and keep thy feet at large;
Lest thou at any time shouldst dash thy foot against a stone,
These were the
snares, affronts and
jears, our Lord he put upon.
But in
Gods Power he did them bear, of him we are to
learn,
And to
suffer all for his sake, tho brought we are to
burn.
Object.
But some may say,
That thou dost treat, 'gainst Gods Commandement,
Which bids us honour our Parents, this is the true Intent.
Answ.
For
Answer hereunto, I say, This honour do we give,
There wants and their necessities, we always do relieve.
This is the true
Honour the which Christ he himself did say,
Though
Jews Traditions made it void, and
Gods Law disobey.
For what
profit our
Parents do receive from us at all,
Is but returning of their own,
Corban, we don't it call.
If in the Lord our
Parents be, we
honour them also,
And if the Lord do
honour them, How can we then say no?
This is as 'tis in
Marriages, are only in the
Lord,
Where only is the
Ʋnity, and the alone
Accord.
For here's no
caring for the World, the
Husband for to please,
The
Husband being
in the Lord, they both are serv'd with ease.
When
Wife and
Husband both do seek, the
Lord for to obey,
What can the
Wife or
Husband do, that either will
gain-say?
For
please the Lord, the
Wife is pleas'd, if
in the Lord she be,
And
please the Lord, the
Husband's pleas'd,
if in the Lord be he.
And if at all a jar arise, they shall each other heal,
Till the thing plain be signifi'd, and God doth it reveal.
Yea this will be to
Parents to, when
in the Lord they be,
We
honour do and
please them both, when that they do agree.
This is the
double honour too the
Elder is to have,
That in the World and Doctrine both do labour souls to save.
And this is not before People, that we do them
admire,
They being
in the Lord, do not at all such things
desire.
The Grand SCRUPLE and OBJECTION ANSWERED.
Object.
BUT some may say,
You fickle are, and know not where to fix,
And you in many Forms
have been, in seven,
or at least six.
When you from us at first did go, Puritans
you would be,
But when the Scotish-Broiles
began, you cryd, Presbyter
[...]e.
And so in War
you would fight for't, in it some Blood
you spent,
Yet here you could not fix at all, but turn Independent.
And so you several Churches were, with Power severally,
And then you broke up Churches to, and did them all deny.
Because you said, They were not built on the Foundation,
And all the Ordinances lost, for Pope
was Corner-stone.
Oh then did you bethink your selves, what then was best to do,
To Bail these Churches, and to get more Ordinances New.
For that this Anti-christian Pope,
the former he had spoild,
And now they must have all anew, the others being defild.
And then a great Contention
rose, who should this same begin,
And who should John
the Baptist
be, sith none were free from sin.
And all had need to be washed, because that there was none
The which had Gods Word
come to him, as it did come to John.
Neither that Power nor Spirit which could bring such things to pass,
By turning hearts to God as did the Prophet E-li-as.
At last this work it was begun, there's very few know how,
And many this Tradition took, to it did many flow,
And so in many Bodies grew, yet here were not content,
Which shews that you are wavering, being Incontinent.
For here you did not tarry long, but anon presently,
So great was your Ambition
grown, must be a Monarchy
And that not only a small one, (you count your selves to thrive)
The World contains but four great ones, and you must make them five.
So when that this great power came forth, your building that was
[...]igh,
You said your selves, 'twas but rotten, and Foundation sandy,
For that as soon as any storm, on this your house did blow,
Your Monarchy
came tumbling down; into the dust full-
[...]ow.
And then when in the dust you were, not knowing what to do,
When all your heavenly Building fell, you went a seeking to.
And by that name you did confess, still that there is a want,
Your Souls not being satisfied, for that they still do pant.
So what shall we that do stand by, of ye now for to make,
Who Valliant Famous Builders were, but now are made to Quake;
And now for it are Quakers called, your Laborinth is such;
So many means, and ways you've tryed we dare not with you tuch.
Answ.
For
Answer hereunto I say, these things do not dispise,
For when the Lord did
Samuel call, he presently did rise,
And ran forthwith to Old
Ely, and said,
lo here am I,
For that thou now didest call me, and I came by and by:
Then
Ely bid him
go to rest, and ly him down again,
But the Lord called
Samuel before he long had layn;
Then
Samuel rose the second time, and to
Ely did say,
Here I am for thou did'st call me; he Answered,
nay, nay,
But the Lord still calls
Samuel again the third time to,
Who forth with went to
Ely then, to know what he should do;
And that with this great confidence and said
he did him call,
That t'was the Lord
Ely perceived that called these times all:
Samuel did not yet know the Lord, nor ought by him was sed;
Gods Word to him was not showen, nor yet was re-ve-led.
But
Samuel, Samuel cal'd is still, and a fourth time also;
Before he knows it is the Lord, then
here's thy Servant lo.
Then do not you condemn us when 'twas God who still did call,
Though we run to the Outward Priest and Ordinances all,
And second, third, and forth way, God calling of us still,
We could not rest, but we must rise till we did know his will.
If for our zeal you us condemn,
Samuel must stand our Friend,
To speak for us when that God will to
Jesses house him send.
Who there, for us, will make excuse, for this our
Ignorance,
When he did judge
God annointed with his outward eyes glance.
For the Lord said,
he should not look on outward countenance,
Nor on the height of the stature, though it was Jesses
Branch,
For by that way, God doth not look, neither by it doth chuse,
For what accords not with his heart, that still he doth refuse.
Here
Samuel took the
first-born Son, for
Gods Annointed sure,
But
Countenance nor
Stature doth answer to God the pure.
So second, third, and all seven, past before
Samuel,
But no answer from God he had of them as he could tell.
So being at a stand he said,
are here all thy Children?
David unworthy counted was to be with his
Brethren;
Yet by the Lord
annointed is, whatere of him is sed,
For Gods Spirit on him is pourd,
Sure mercies of David.
Thus you see all the seven Sons, disowned by their
Maker,
But this same last
Sheep-keeping lad, because he was a
Quaker.
All here may see that God doth chuse the heart that is upright,
Which tremble doth at his own Word, is pleasant in his sight.
So we can say in truth of heart, when God did first us call,
And we ran in the several wayes (yea, some have run them all)
In something we did answer him, that pleasd him, we do know,
That he never left calling us, till his
Truth us did show.
So the
Last way some did profess was no Form but
Seeking,
By
Babylons fall they all did cease, but now is found the thing.
The
MESSIAH that doth
restore Israel that was lost
The which hath suffered much
Shipwrack is cast upon our coast.
So the
sure Mercies we have found, the
Christ, the
first, the
last,
The
Spirit of the Living God, which was in Ages past.
Christ by the flesh was
Davids Son, he being his
Off-spring,
But yet in Spirit was
Davids Root, for
David calls him
King.
Here answerd is the great
Question that doth with
Truth accord,
How
Jesus Christ not only was
Davids own
Son, but
Lord?
This is the
King that, God hath set upon his holy Hill,
That shall the
Pot-shards of
Earth break, that bow not to his
Will.
God being a
Spirit, his
Son is
so, and so of right is
Lord.
Who
was, and
is, and
ever shall be
King, with one accord,
His Day Christ said,
Abram did see, tho some him for't did scorn,
The
Everlasting Father was, though
Isays Child new-born,
This was the
Scepter which was not from Israel to depart,
The
inward Israel indeed, who're
Circumcis'd in heart.
This
Law giver 'tween Judas feet, yea nearer,
in his womb,
Who never shall from his
depart, until that SHILO come.
This was the
Spiritual meat and
drink, this was the
store the
stock,
Of
Israel, that followed them to drink, tis
Christ the Rock,
Yea this
the Rock of Ages is, it was, and
shall be so,
Generations Foundation, no other shall they know,
So now that former
fickle State, in which we wore wavering
Being wholly unsatisfied, until we had our
King.
But now our
Lord and
King is come, and in our hearts doth
raign,
And hath our
Enemies, Sin and
Death, in
[...]eat measure
slain,
So I again to you do say, do not upbraid us more,
With such a
fickle wavering state, as you have done before.
When in
dead Forms, and
outward Priests, which perish with using,
We neither
handle, touch or
taste with you any such thing.
Wherefore your
outward visible Signs, must all of them give place,
According to your
Liturgy, 'tis
inward spiritual Grace,
The which
now in the
heart doth
raign, of
many in this
Nation,
For
outward Shaddows were but till the time of
Reformation.
But now the good things they are come,
Christ Body is discern'd,
And
Gods Kingdom of
Righteousness, of
Joy and
Peace is learn'd.
The which in
Meats and
Drinks doth not consist as many think,
For in this
Kingdom we afresh with
Christ this fruit do drink.
And therefore all your
Washings then, that divers were and many.
With all your worldly
Elements that doth not perfect any:
For the Body Christ hath prepard, to do thy will, O God,
For that thy People willing be in this days Power, O Lord.
And now may'nt I say,
Glory to (as well as
Englands Form)
The Father, Son, and holy Ghost, in it I see no harm.
And that
in the beginning 'twas (I also say the same)
So it shall be world without end, Praise
to his Holy NAME.
His
Name's but one, and yet to him there many
Names are given,
According as he Ministers to us here under
Heaven,
And here on
Earth Three record bear (tho
Three) in
ONE agree,
And answer
Heavens record to, as
Branches of
ONE Tree.
Some more SCRUPLES clear'd.
NOW for the opening of the
Truth, which is our
strength &c
stay.
In
answering of
Objections to this same some may say.
Object.
Oh! here's a Table richly deckt, Oh here are dishes store,
Oh! is all this but one Small Mite,
and from a Widow poor:
Though here are many good Dishes, they have not the right place,
Nor in good Order Ʋsherd in, oh this doth spoile the Grace;
For there are sometimes Dishes come, the which should last be brought,
And this Course will not it admit, of this some will find fault,
Though we confess the meat be good, and on the Table store,
But Sauce here is not sutable, to sight it is but poor.
Answ.
My
Answer this no
[...]
[...]nquet is, for them full
Stomack have,
But
bitter things for
hungry Soules, which newly come from
grave.
But yet in it ought sweetness find, O this is all my aim,
To praise the goodness of our God, for his
Love in the same.
And seeing meat is on the Board, if it be'nt rightly set,
Let others take the pains that can the Dishes places
[...]it.
Now for my part when I did taste any dish that was good,
I presently brought him to board, to others, for their food.
If in Feasts they first
best Wine bring, and after that that's worst,
Yet Christ when he
makes Water Wine, the last's as good as first.
So these
Traditions we do not, in our minds much admire,
So hungry Souls with
Righthousness be fed, is our desire.
Object.
Tautologies, O some may say, be here, I do them find,
Which are Dishes of one like meat, this doth not please the mind.
Answ.
My
Answer is, 'twas meat I lov'd, that I often did eat,
And so for't should not be reprov'd, for giving of my meat,
This way
Prophets and
Apostles, did use, with
Line on
Line,
Thus putting Saints in remembrance by stirring their pure mine,
And that 'twas not grievous to them the same thing for to write,
Yea those things which they did believe, and had thereof the sight.
Object.
But now again for to return, and wonder at this Mite,
Which is come forth in many words, this Title is
[...]ight.
Answ.
When I at first my
Mite had cast into Gods
Treasury.
The more I cast the more I had, how could this
Miracle be?
My
Sister of
Sareptha was, also a
Widow poor,
A little
meal and
oyl she had, oh this was all her store:
And this was but to serve one time, oh!
Death it was so nigh,
And she was gon to
dress the same, to
eat, and so to
dye,
But when as that the
Prophet came, and first desir'd a
Cake.
Her
Faith was such to give him some, forthwith the same did
bake;
By
giving of the Prophet so
[...]e, her
Meal it did not
waste,
Nor did the
[...] of
Oyl her fail, but
increased as fast.
For where
Gods Word and
Prophet is, there
Mercies do not cease,
And when the
Mite is spent thereon, it doth hold forth
encrease.
For when my
All is given up,
God then is my All still,
Then who can
want that hath this
All, tis He
doth all things fill,
Then tis but
giving unto God that
ALL that we call
our,
In
Faith, and he upon us will for it his
Mercies pour.
King
Solomon the same did see, the
Scatterer did
encrease.
And that which holdeth more thans meet, from
Poverty did not cease,
Yea he that watereth shall be watred himself also,
And that the Liberal shall be
made fat as is a
Doe.
So he
that giveth of his store, oh he shall not be
poor,
But
Truth and
Knowledge shall encrease, and fill him more and more.
POSTSCRIPT.
POET I'm not nor
Poets Son, at all that I should
rhime,
Howe're this same doth come to pass, thus
Eccho did my mind,
Object.
On this way some may evil think because it is in Verse,
And sacred things they solid are, Meeter's not to rehearse.
Answ.
Though for this much may spoken be, yet this I say to those,
That they that do not like the Verse may read the same in Prose.
And yet the
Sacred solid Truth, will be the self-same thing,
Tho
Joyes surround did make me sound
Praises to Sions King.
And though I clap my hands for
Joy, O who will angry be,
Raptures of Love doth my Soul move, Oh tis my Love, 'tis he!
That doth redeem poor Souls from Death, their Feet from falling to,
And makes the Desolate to sing, Praises to him as due.
And why may no
[...] I sing that
New Song, as
David formerly;
And as the
Redeemed of God; that do
Praise him thereby.
And shall not I in
heart rejoyce, in God that is my
strength,
And is become
Salvation unto me now at length.
Object.
But some may say,
Thou crafty art in Verse to bring this thing,
That they that love not solid Truth, may hereby catch feeding.
In this same way thinking there is meat fit for their minds then,
They come to savour this your way, then you have catcht those men.
Answ.
If that the World it be the Sea, and men the Fishes be,
And if this
Bait doth catch them out, they'l
praise the
Bait, and he
Who is the
Founder of this
Love, them from this world to snatch,
By giving forth this mighty Power, that
Fishes Fishes catch.
In
Heavens Net if men be
caught; and from their
element took,
No cause they will have to repent, the
Sea and
World forsook.
When th'
Angler to the
River comes, and doth him there sit down
Minding the
Water and the
Fish, and
Plumbing of the
Ground,
He then considers the
Region, in which the
Fish do
swim,
Where
high, or
low, or
middle way, he may put
Bait therein.
So sitteth still expecting when
some pleasure he shall see,
How that his
Bait doth please the
Fish, that catched they may be,
And though Men may but nibble at this
Bait it is
good meat,
For it is made of
Bread of
Life, and fit for men to eat,
This was the guise that
Paul did use, when he
Corinthians took,
By meeting of them in their way, they swallowed
Bait and
Hook.
And so he to each
Region went with this his
Gospel clear,
Which is the
mighty Power of God, and serveth every where;
From Christ when
Peter had this Power his
Net in Sea to cast,
What multitudes of
Fish were caught, tho none all the
Night past.
Tis this
Days Pawer makes
Fish to come, it multitudes doth bring,
Without it
Peter all night
Fisht, and yet he caught nothing
This is th'encrease that God doth give, with it when
Paul doth plant,
Apollo's watering with the same refresheth many a Saint.
Now for the present to conclude
my Mite, my
Cud thats good,
Whereby
the clean Beasts they were known, that fit were for mans food.
So blessed
Mary she laid up all Christs words in her heart,
And so she
chewd and
ponderd them, lest from her they should start,
So of my
Cud I do give forth,
that others it may chew,
For this may help to
raise their own; Country people thus do,
And as it is with
leaking Pumps, (
loose water, is the
phraise)
To put
water into their Heads, their own water to raise
For if the
dead it doth not
raise, then is my writing vain,
However it doth witness for Gods
Talent, and the
Gain.
Melchisedeck's
our King
and Friend,
His Priesthood
never will have END.
END.