Trapp - BS2562 T73 1647

Chap,5, according to St Id[ A T T H E vv. : I47 eyed man ,he told him he had loft one of his enemies, a very thief faruiratemju- that would have (told] away his heart : Democrárur (but in that anurbi mini- no wife man) pulled out his eyes. And the Pharifee ( littlewifer) leffom feat- would Phut his eyes when hewalked abroad, to avoid the fight of ertuhtan áxi Y > Apo!oet. women : infomuch that he often dafhed his head againft the Vo!urratem vi walls,that the blond gufhed out, and was therefore called Phari- titre s oíuptas e o axima, nee pas impingens. Howmuch batter, anti with greater commends- t taon hid there men taken our Saviours countel in the following °llaon'a,quám verfes ? ea gilt à cupi- Verfè 29. Andif thy `right eye offend thce,pluch`it out ] That diraribue re'er- is, if it be either fo naturali or habituall to thee to,go after the rur.ypt,de fight of thine eyes (whichSolomon afligneth for the fource of all Lo c thine e e: youthful! outrages, Ecc! a t 9.) that thou hadit as Iieve tole thy look right o'i, righteye, as not look at liberty ; out with filch an eye, (though a and let thine right eye :) pull it out, and rake in the hole where it grew, rather rye-lids look then chat any filch fboule remain there. Pluck it out of theold íheight before Aiam,and let it into the new man. Get that oculurn irretortuws, thee. that may look forth-right upon the mirk, without idle or curious ''rov.4.zs prying into, or poring upon forbidden beauties. A Prxtor fail the Heathen,lhould have còntinent eyes;as well as hands. And the Puetra, e,- j a- Greek Oratour wittily and worthily ubraided a certain woman, piliam ocu!i that he had not pupils but punks in his eyes. And Archefilaus the f ',nit car. Nut. Phi'ofopher, oblervingone tohave wanton eyes, told him,that the in epoph difference was not rear whether he laid the naughty-packwith $dam i a., g P a Y'P there carne a his upperparts or his nether.. Lot might not look towardSodo;n. tr:vell-rtotlie. .And Peter Martyr ob'erveth out of Nathan,. Parable, that luft, ichm'n,gc- .though it once prevailed over David, yet it was but a (±ranger to i`'ysinifi,s him : had enough of that once, for it coft him not water. His eye o:., : n eye ; h:came a fcuntain,he walked his bed which he had defiled ( yea his pale or under-bed) with tears. So did Mary Magd4len, oncea r,;s rit n i s of t hlee n, .ßruin.pet her bauds were bands, her words werecords, her eyes Lt it be of asglafes,whereinto while filly larks gazed, they were taken,as in a ezeim .t?¡dcz 4 ri&ur days -net., She therefore, madethofeeyes .afountaintobathChr-ilts t demur feet in,and had his bloud a fountain co bath her foul in, Zech. t 3. t. fHemur. axis To conclude : the tight is a deceitfull fenfe, thereforebinde,c tW ¡o,érbur l ich, rise. good abearance: call it in from its outftrayes, check it and that Potipbzr.; lay Gods charge upon it for the future. Chaff 7ofeph would not and his ter- once lookOn his immodeft miftref3e : the looked, and caught hold vanes were at : on him, and that when (he was abed : but her temptationfell like a " the was ac honteaafeig: fire...upuo wet tinder, and tooknot. It muff be ourconitant care, ping her felf L 1 that (ick.Pro.a5.z3 C.._..._.

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