The Mount of Calvarie . rcdcerac all the world, why doeft thou notIcauc fo much as one drop in thy veines ? O how well the Prophetdid fay , AfuddoynwummiferieordiaOcofioptafHieum rehm^tioySc^ng that on the Altar of the croflc thi* day , there doth oblati-otfe abcund,there doth griefeab©und,and loue abound,and facri-ficcs abound,and worlds doe want, merits doe abound and finncsdoc want, ^Miavbiahundamt dele^fimfnperabundauit(^ not difcomfort thy ^Ifc , O comfordcflc mother, for al-though the facrificc whic^is offered vp this day on ilie Mount oPCaluarie,be grceuous vnto thee, and vnto


The Mount of Calvarie . rcdcerac all the world, why doeft thou notIcauc fo much as one drop in thy veines ? O how well the Prophetdid fay , AfuddoynwummiferieordiaOcofioptafHieum rehm^tioySc^ng that on the Altar of the croflc thi* day , there doth oblati-otfe abcund,there doth griefeab©und,and loue abound,and facri-ficcs abound,and worlds doe want, merits doe abound and finncsdoc want, ^Miavbiahundamt dele^fimfnperabundauit(^ not difcomfort thy ^Ifc , O comfordcflc mother, for al-though the facrificc whic^is offered vp this day on ilie Mount oPCaluarie,be grceuous vnto thee, and vnto thy fonne coftly, yet itis vnto the father gratcfull, and vnto the world moft thy fclfe faith Vhertinus, and part thy fclfc in two, O myfoulc, and with one hand gather vp the bloud which runneth byjthe crofTcjand with the other, hclpc the mother to rife againc: forif hispaflion was acceptable to the ftth?r,thy paffion ftiall be likc-wifc graceful! vnto the of Mount Caluarie. 21. CHAP. XXXHII. How that vfQ/i one of(^hriJ} htsgarmentSy they did cafi lottes, a»dthe»t her ihij did cut in peeces, andhorv Herettkes doe rent in peeces thecote mthout feamCiWhich the rormentoHrs durfi not meddle with, OjiqiiA autemcrucijixerttnt eHm^deHiferunt /fu^i^ 7^vejlimenta eius fortem mtttentes^ faith the / Euangelift ^ as if he would that the torturers had left Chnrtcrucified , they agreed to deuide the praybetwixt them,v\hich pray was a loofe vp-per garment, fo that ail Chrift his wealthdid reach no farther the to two garments.^//^«7?/«tffeemethto thinkc, that one ofthe garments was of olde rough cloath, and the other wool-len yarnc,not woucn in a loomc, but knit like vnto gloues,whichhjs mother was thought to hauc made him when hcewasbutachiide, and that itgrew withhimby myraclc. \sofopinion, that the coatc without fcame was firft made of many • fmallragges andpeeces ofcourfecloath, and then with a fmallthrcd k


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Keywords: ., bookdecade1590, bookidmountofcalvarie00guev, booksubjectpuritans