A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge.

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Title
A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge.
Author
Daneau, Lambert, ca. 1530-1595?
Publication
[Cambridge] :: Printed by Iohn Legate, printer to the Vniversitie of Cambridge [and at London, by J. Orwin] 1594. And are to be sold [by R. Bankworth] at the signe of the Sunne in Paules Church-yard in London,
[1594]
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Subject terms
Bible. -- O.T -- Commentaries -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19799.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A fruitfull commentarie vpon the twelue small prophets briefe, plaine, and easie, going ouer the same verse by verse, and shewing every where the method, points of doctrine, and figures of rhetoricke, to the no small profit of all godly and well disposed readers, with very necessarie fore-notes for the vnderstanding of both of these, and also all other the prophets. The text of these prophets together with that of the quotations omitted by the author, faithfully supplied by the translatour, and purged of faults in the Latine coppie almost innumerable, with a table of all the chiefe matters herein handled, and marginall notes very plentifull and profitable; so that it may in manner be counted a new booke in regard of these additions. VVritten in Latin by Lambertus Danæus, and newly turned into English by Iohn Stockwood minister and preacher at Tunbridge." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19799.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

Vers. 15.
Thou shalt sowe, but not reape: thou shalt treade the oliues, but thou shalt not anoynt thee with the oyle, and make sweete wine, but shalt not drinke wine.

* 1.1A Third kind of punishment, and the same also contained in the law of God Deut. 28. To wit, when as all our labours are vtterly in vaine, not of themselues I confesse, but are vnprofitable vnto vs which haue laboured, as namely when as others, and those our ene∣mies, haue them vnto themselues, and we receiue not the fruites of

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them. And the feeling of this punishment is the more grieuous, be∣cause that it doth wonderfully vexe vs, and cause vs to fret, when as we seeing and knowing of it, others doe inioy our labours, yea our continual and long labours, and that in spite of our teeth, and whe∣ther we wil or no. Which kind of punishment falleth out vnto those on whom God is auenged, and punisheth for the contempt or de∣spising of his name. Further, there are three examples of this pu∣nishment set downe, to wit, in the Haruest, Oliue, and Vine,* 1.2 the which are tilled with most great labour, and the fruits whereof are most desired, and verie necessarie for the life of men that till the fields, and yet notwithstanding shall these be disappointed and be∣guiled of them.

Notes

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