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A Song declaring that a Christian may finde tru Love only where tru Grace is.
No Knot of Friendship long can hold Save that which Grace hath ty’d, For other causes prove but cold VVhen their effects are try’d; For God who loveth unity Doth cause the onely union, Which makes them of one Family Of one mind and communion. |
Commocions will be in that place, VVhere are such contraries, As is inniquity and grace, The greatest enimies, Whom sin doth rule shee doth command To hold stiff opposicion Gainst grace and all the faithfull band Which are in her tuision. |
This is the cause of home debates, And much domestick woes, That one may find his houshold mates To be his greatest foes, That with the Wolfe the Lamb may ’bide As free from molestacion, As Saints with sinners, who reside In the same habitacion. |
By reason of the Enmity Between the womans Seed And mans infernall enimy, The Serpent and his breed, The link of consanguinity Could hold true friendship never, Neither hath neare affinity United freinds for ever. |
For scoffing Ishmael will scorn His onely true born brother: Rebeckahs sonns together born Contend with one another, No bond of nature is so strong To cause their hearts to tarry In unity, who do belong To masters so contrary. |
The wicked ordinarily Gods dearest children hate, And therfore seek (though groundlesly) Their credits to abate, And though their words and works do show No colour of offences Yet are their hearts most (they trow) For all their good pretences. |
And those that strongest grace attain, Whereby sin is vanquished, By Sathan and his cursed train Are most contraried; Because by such the Serpent feeles, His head to be most bruised, He turnes and catches at their heeles, By whom he is so used. |
His agents he doth instigate, To vex, oppose, and fret, To slander and calumniate, Those that have scap’t his net, Who servants are so diligent, That like to Kain their father They whose works are most excellent They mischiefe will the rather. |
Yet there are of the gracelesse crew Who for some private ends Have sided with prefessors tru As trusty pious friends, But to the times of worldly peace Their friendship was confined. Which when some crosses caus’d to cease The thred of league untwined. |
Such friends unto the Swallow may Be fitly likened, Who all the plesant Summer stay But are in Winter fled: They cannot ’bide their freind to see, In any kind of trouble, So pittyfull (forsooth) they bee That have the art to double. |
Such will be any thing for one Who hath of nothing need, Their freindship stands in word alone, And none at all in deed, How open mouth’d so e’re they are, They bee as closely handed, Who will (they know) their service spare, They’re his to be commanded. |
Therefore let no true hearted one Reliefe at need expect, From opposits to vertue known, Who can him not afect: For his internall ornaments, Will ever lovely make him Though all things pleasing outward sence Should utterly forsake him. |
In choise of Freinds let such therefore Prefer the godly wise, To whom he may impart the store That in his bosome lies: And let him not perniciously Communicate his favours, To all alike indifferently, Which shewes a mind that wavers. |
Gods children to each other should Most open hearted bee; Who by the same precepts are rul’d, And in one Faith agree, VVho shall in true felicity, Where nothing shall offend them Together dwell eternally, To which I do commend them. |
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