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. 5.
And them that worship the host of heauen vpon the house tops, and them that worship, and sweare by the Lord, and sweare by Malcham.

* 1.1THe second kinde of most wicked, and most open idolatrie, but yet most ancient, and long since condemned, the which was most vsuall among the Iewes notwithstanding, by imitating or fol∣lowing of prophane or heathen nations, to wit, the seruing & wor∣shipping of the Starres, and heauenly bodies, as appeareth by the place of the Kings alleaged in the former verse, and also Ieremie 44. ver. 17. where the people answer the Prophet, saying: We will do whatsoeuer thing goeth out of our owne mouth, as to burne incense vnto the Queene of heauen, and to powre out drinke offrings vnto her, as we haue done, both we and our fathers, our Kings, and our Princes in the cities of Iudah, and in the streetes of Ierusalem: for then had we plen∣tie of victuals, and were well, and felt none euill.* 1.2 A third kind of ido∣latrie, but more colourable is set downe in the ende of this verse, whereby as if they worshipped the maiestie and power of the true God they did sweare by him: but they ioyned other gods with him also, by whose power and Godhead and name also they did com∣monly sweare. The which honour notwithstanding is to be reser∣ued vnto the alone true God, Exod. 20.

Notes

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