The godly mans iourney to heauen containing ten seuerall treatises. Viz. 1. An heauenly chariot the first part. 2. An heauenly chariot the second part. 3. The blessed chariots man. 4. The lanthorne for the chariot. 5. The skilfull chariot driuer. 6. The gard of the chariot. 7. The sixe robbers of the chariot. 8. The three rocks layd in the way. 9. The only inne Gods babes aime at. 10. The guests of the inne. By maister David Lindsey Minister of Gods word at Leith.

About this Item

Title
The godly mans iourney to heauen containing ten seuerall treatises. Viz. 1. An heauenly chariot the first part. 2. An heauenly chariot the second part. 3. The blessed chariots man. 4. The lanthorne for the chariot. 5. The skilfull chariot driuer. 6. The gard of the chariot. 7. The sixe robbers of the chariot. 8. The three rocks layd in the way. 9. The only inne Gods babes aime at. 10. The guests of the inne. By maister David Lindsey Minister of Gods word at Leith.
Author
Lindsay, David, 1566?-1627.
Publication
London :: Printed by R. F[ield] for Robert Bird, and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Bible in Cheapside,
1625.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A05560.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The godly mans iourney to heauen containing ten seuerall treatises. Viz. 1. An heauenly chariot the first part. 2. An heauenly chariot the second part. 3. The blessed chariots man. 4. The lanthorne for the chariot. 5. The skilfull chariot driuer. 6. The gard of the chariot. 7. The sixe robbers of the chariot. 8. The three rocks layd in the way. 9. The only inne Gods babes aime at. 10. The guests of the inne. By maister David Lindsey Minister of Gods word at Leith." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A05560.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 9, 2025.

Pages

7. As man from the earth, maketh God to heare and see: so shall God make man at length to heare, to see, and to feele.

WO is me, wo is me, ô my soule, that I should heare my

Page 218

God thus speaking vnto Moses touching his Israel. Let me alone that my wrath may waxe hot against them, for I will surely con∣sume them. Sure I am, ô my soule, would a man (sensible of God) compare that re∣solution taken by our God against Israel heere, with that resolution taken by his Maiestie about them in the 8. verse of the 3. of Exodus; it will draw some heauie groanes out of his heart, and some bitter teares out of his eyes. Speakes not our God Exodus, 3. 8. thus vnto Moses. I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hands of the Egyptians & to bring them out of that land into a good land and a large: and saith not the same God vnto the same Moses touching the same Israel Exodus 32. 10. I will consume them.* 1.1 O what an alteration, ye, ô what a fearefull change, ô what a fearefull alteration? Surely, surely, could this change be well considered, it would assuredly confound men, and make them to stand amazed. Whereof alwayes comes this, ô my soule? for sure I am with Abraham that the Iudge of the world cannot do but right. Hearken, hearken, ô my soule, I pray thee: there is not a greater difference betwixt that reso∣lution

Page 219

taken by our God concerning Isra∣el, Exodus 3. 8. and that he takes concer∣ning them, Exodus 32. 10. then there is betwixt that sight our God saw when he looked on them, Exodus 3. and that sight he saw when he looked on them, Exodus 32. Yea, sure I am there is not a greater difference betweene the one resolution and the other, then there is betwixt that noyse our God hearkening vnto Israel Exod. 3. heard, and that to one, his Ma∣iestie hearkening vnto him, Exod. 32. heard. In the 3. of Exodus our God looking vpon Israel, sees their oppression and trouble. In the 32. of Exodus our God looking on him sees a molten calfe made by them, worshipped by them, sacrificed vnto, by them. In the third of Exodus our God hearkning to Israel, heares the tune and sound of their bitter cries and groanes, because of their fierce task-ma∣kers, but in the 32. of Exodus he heares his Israel blasphemously crying touching the calfe. These be the Gods ô Israel that brought thee out of the land of Egypt. Yea, he heares the noise of the Israelites licen∣tiously and wantonly pyping and dancing before their calfe. In the 3. of Exodus it is

Page 220

no wonder that the God of pitie and mer∣cie, and power, seeing the trouble, and hearing the groanes of his distressed chil∣dren comes downe to deliuer them▪ and it cannot be thought a wonder that our God who is truth, iustice, and strength it selfe, in the 32. of Exodus seeing the calfe set vp by them, and hearing the pyping about it, resolued to come downe to de∣stroy these he concluded before to saue. Would to God herefore, ô my soule, that all these who dwell beneath here vnder the peofession of the Gospell, could in time learne to make conscience of that which they make their great God from the heauens to see, from the heauens to heare: for as they make his Maiestie to heare and to see; so shall his Maiestie make them to heare, to see, and to find afterwards. Againe, when I reade the 28. verse of the 1. of Genesis, I see and heare our God reioycing in man, and aduan∣cing him aboue all the workes of his hands saying: Bring forth fruite and mul∣tiplie and fill the earth and subdue it, and rule ouer the fish of the sea, and ouer the foules of the heauen, and ouer euerie beast that mo∣ueth vpon the earth. But when I reade the

Page 221

6. verse of the 6. of Genesis, I heare Moses warranted by God, speaking thus touch∣ing man: It repented the Lord that he had made man vpon the earth, and he was sorie in his heart. But wherof came this so great an alteration? When our God looked vp∣pon man in the 1. of Genesis he was cloathed with his image, and therefore with him all the workes of his hands are verie good in his eyes, when he saw him and them. But when he looked on him as Moses speakes of man in the 6. of Exodus, he was depriued of Gods image within, all the imaginations of the thoughts of his heart were onely euill continually; and without he was fearefully and foully co∣uered with that red coate of crueltie, and blacke coate of lecherie; and therefore no wonder that the God of pietie, and po∣uertie, repented that he had made him. In the 17. verse of the 9. Chapter of the 1. of Samuel, I heare God speaking to Sa∣muel touching Saul. This is the man of whom I spake to thee, he shall rule my people. But how speakes our God to the same Samuel touching the same Saul, 1. of Sa∣muel 13. 35. It repentth me that I haue made Saul King ouer Israe. Alwayes no

Page 222

wonder: for did not Saul stubbornely lift vp himselfe against the Lord, disdai∣ning to hearken to his voice, and licenti∣ously following his owne conceites, drea∣ming that his owne foolish imaginations would proue a better rule to serue God by, and to procure peace and wealth to himselfe, then the verie word of God brought to his eares by Samuel. Oh, ô my soule, when shall the presumptuous sin∣ners of this our time, learne to make vse of this? O when shall that sentence be so heard by the eares of men, that it may take some roote in their hearts.* 1.2 I will go downe and see whither they of Sodome and Gomorrha haue done altogether according to that crie which is come to me. For heere I must tell thee, ô my soule, albeit the A∣theist be silent, yet his Atheisme cries to heauen for vengeance; albeit the whore∣maister, and the whore be quiet, yet their whoredome crieth; albeit the drunkard drinke till he can neither go, nor stand, nor speake; yet his drunkennesse fleeth vp to heauen, and standing there before God cries out against him; and so in a word, albeit all the sinners of the earth should couenant and agree among themselues to

Page 223

lay their hands vpon their mouthes, neuer speaking one word of their sinne, and al∣beit they should take themselues to the se∣cretest deepe holes when they commit their sinnes, to the end, that others not seeing them, be not able to speake of them, yet sinne committed by them, in despite of their couenant shall crie out vp∣pon them, and draw downe God against them. The sense of this, ô my soule, mo∣ued Crysostome to say,* 1.3 Peccatum nemine ar∣guente hominem prodit: nemine accusante condemnat. Sinne betrayes a man albeit no man reproue him: sinne condemnes a man al∣beit no man accuse him.

Notes

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.