Back
Acacia John Bunyan - Online Library
http://acacia.pair.com/Acacia.John.Bunyan/
|
T H E By J O H N.B U N Y A N. 1680. Published two years after Pilgrim's Progress. |
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
The life of Badman is a very interesting description, a true and lively portraiture,
of the demoralized classes of the trading community in the reign of King Charles
II; a subject which naturally led the author to use expressions familiar among such
persons, but which are now either obsolete or considered as vulgar. In fact it is
the only work proceeding from the prolific pen and fertile imagination of Bunyan,
in which he uses terms that, in this delicate and refined age, may give offence.
Note by Judith Bronte: George Offor wrote these words in the 1800's.
So, in the venerable translation of the holy oracles, there are some objectionable
expressions, which, although formerly used in the politest company, now point to
the age in which it was written. The same ideas or facts would now be expressed by
terms which could not give offence; and every reader must feel great pleasure in
the improvement of our language, as seen in the contrast between the two periods,
and especially in the recollection that the facts might be stated with equal precision,
and reflections made with equal force, in terms at which the most delicate mind could
not be offended.
Those who read the writings of Bunyan must feel continually reminded of his ardent
attachment to his Saviour, and his intense love to the souls of sinners. He was as
delicate in his expressions as any writer of his age, who addressed the openly vicious
and profane–calling things by their most forcible and popular appellations. A wilful
untruth is, with him, 'a lie.' To show the wickedness and extreme folly of swearing,
he gives the words and imprecations then commonly in use; but which, happily for
us, we never hear, except among the most degraded classes of society. Swearing was
formerly considered to be a habit of gentility; but now it betrays the blackguard,
even when disguised in genteel attire. Those dangerous diseases which are so surely
engendered by filth and uncleanness, he calls not by Latin but by their plain English
names. In every case, the Editor has not ventured to make the slightest alteration;
but has reprinted the whole in the author's plain and powerful language.
The life of Badman forms a third part to the Pilgrim's Progress, not a delightful
pilgrimage to heaven, but, on the contrary, a wretched downward journey to the infernal
realms. The author's object is to warn poor thoughtless sinners, not with smooth
words, to which they would take no heed; but to thunder upon their consciences the
peril of their souls, and the increasing wretchedness into which they were madly
hurrying. He who is in imminent, but unseen danger, will bless the warning voice
if it reach his ears, however rough and startling the sound may be.
The life of Badman was written in an age when profligacy, vice, and debauchery, marched
like a desolating army through our land, headed by the king, and officered by his
polluted courtiers; led on with all the pomp and splendour which royalty could display.
The king and his ministers well knew that the most formidable enemies to tyranny,
oppression, and misgovernment, were the piety and stern morality of the Puritans,
Nonconformists, and the small classes of virtuous citizens of other denominations;
and therefore every effort was made by allurements and intimidation to debauch and
demoralize their minds. Well does Bunyan say that 'wickedness like a flood is like
to drown our English world. It has almost swallowed up all our youth, our middle
age, old age, and all are almost carried away of this flood. It reels to and fro
like a drunkard, it is like to fall and rise no more.' 'It is the very haunts and
walks of the infernal spirits.' 'England shakes and makes me totter for its transgressions.'
The gradations of a wicked man in that evil age, from his cradle to his grave, are
graphically set before the reader; it is all drawn from reality, and not from efforts
of imagination. Every example is a picture of some real occurrence, either within
the view of the author, or from the narratives of credible witnesses. 'All the things
that here I discourse of, have been acted upon the stage of this world, even many
times before mine eyes.' Badman is represented as having had the very great advantage
of pious parents, and a godly master, but run riot in wickedness from his childhood.
Lying and pilfering mark his early days; followed in after life by swearing, cheating,
drunkenness, hypocrisy, infidelity and atheism. His conscience became hardened to
that awful extent, that he had no bands in his death. The career of wickedness has
often been so pictured, as to encourage and cherish vice and profanity–to excite
the unregenerate mind 'to ride post by other men's sins.'[1] Not so the life of Badman.
The ugly, wretched, miserable consequences that assuredly follow a vicious career,
are here displayed in biting words–alarming the conscience, and awfully warning the
sinner of his destiny, unless happily he finds that repentance that needeth not to
be repented of. No debauchee ever read the life of Badman to gratify or increase
his thirst for sin. The tricks which in those days so generally accompanied trading,
are unsparingly exposed; becoming bankrupt to make money, a species of robbery, which
ought to be punished as felony; double weights, too heavy for buying, and light to
sell by, overcharging those who take credit, and the taking advantage of the necessities
of others, with the abuse of evil gains in debauchery, and its ensuing miseries,
are all faithfully displayed.
In the course of the narrative, a variety of awful examples of divine vengeance are
introduced; some from that singular compilation, Clarke's looking-glass for Saints
and Sinners; others from 'Beard's theatre of God's Judgments' and many that happened
under the author's own immediate knowledge. The faithfulness of his extracts from
books has been fully verified. The awful death of Dorothy Mately, of Ashover, in
Derbyshire, mentioned, I had an opportunity of testing, by the aid of my kind friend,
Thomas Bateman, Esq., of Yolgrave. He sent me the following extract from the Ashover
Register for 1660:– 'Dorothy Mately, supposed wife to John Flint of this parish,
forswore herself; whereupon the ground opened, and she sunk over head, March 23,
and being found dead, she was buried, March 25.' Thus fully confirming the facts,
as stated by Bunyan. Solemn providences, intended, in the inscrutable wisdom of God,
for wise purposes, must not be always called 'divine judgments.' A ship is lost,
and the good with the bad, sink together; a missionary is murdered; a pious Malay
is martyred; still no one can suppose that these are instances of divine vengeance.
But when the atrocious bishop Bonner, in his old age, miserably perishes in prison,
it reminds us of our Lord's saying, 'with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured
to you again.'
Bunyan's pictures, of which the life of Badman is a continued series, are admirably
painted from life. The extraordinary depths of hypocrisy, used in gaining the affections
of a pious wealthy young woman, and entrapping her into a marriage, are admirably
drawn, as is its companion or counterpart, when Badman, in his widower- hood, suffers
an infamous strumpet to inveigle him into a miserable marriage, as he so richly deserved.
The death-bed scene of the pious broken-hearted Mrs. Badman, is a masterpiece. In
fact the whole is a series of pictures drawn by a most admirable artist, and calculated
to warn and attract the sinner from his downward course.
In comparison with the times of Bunyan, England has now become wonderfully reformed
from those grosser pollutions which disgraced her name. Persons of riper age, whose
reminiscences go back to the times of the slave trade, slavery, and war, will call
to mind scenes of vice, brutality, open debauchery and profligacy, which, in these
peaceful and prosperous times, would be instantly repressed and properly punished.
Should peace be preserved, domestic, social, and national purity and happiness must
increase with still greater and more delightful rapidity. Civilization and Christianity
will triumph over despotism, vice, and false religions, and the time be hastened
on, in which the divine art of rendering each other happy will engross the attention
of all mankind. Much yet remains to be done for the conversion of the still numerous
family connections of Mr. Badman; but the leaven of Christianity must, in spite of
all opposition, eventually spread over the whole mass.
Homely proverbs abound in this narrative, all of which are worthy of being treasured
up in our memories. Is nothing so secret but it will be revealed? we are told that
'Hedges have eyes and pitchers have ears.' They who encourage evil propensities are
'nurses to the devil's brats.' It is said of him who hurries on in a career of folly
and sin, 'The devil rides him off his legs.' 'As the devil corrects vice,' refers
to those who pretend to correct bad habits by means intended to promote them. 'The
devil is a cunning schoolmaster.' Satan taking the wicked into his foul embraces
is 'like to like, as the devil said to the collier.'
In two things the times have certainly improved. Bunyan describes all 'pawnbrokers'
to have been 'vile wretches,' and, in extortion, the women to be worse than the men.
Happily for our days, good and even pious pawnbrokers may be found, who are honourable
exceptions to Mr. Bunyan's sweeping rule; nor do our women in any respect appear
to be greater extortioners than our men. The instructions, exhortations, and scriptural
precepts and examples to enforce honest dealing, interspersed as reflections throughout
this narrative, are invaluable, and will, I trust, prove beneficial to every reader.
I have taken the liberty of dividing this long-continued dialogue into chapters,
for the greater facility of reference, and as periods in the history, where the reader
may conveniently rest in his progress through this deeply interesting narrative.
GEO. OFFOR.
THE AUTHOR TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
As I was considering with myself what I had written concerning the Progress of the
Pilgrim from this world to glory, and how it had been acceptable to many in this
nation, it came again into my mind to write, as then, of him that was going to heaven,
so now, of the life and death of the ungodly, and of their travel from this world
to hell. The which in this I have done, and have put it, as thou seest, under the
name and title of Mr. Badman, a name very proper for such a subject. I have also
put it into the form of a dialogue, that I might with more ease to myself, and pleasure
to the reader, perform the work. And although, as I said, I have put it forth in
this method, yet have I as little as may be gone out of the road of mine own observation
of things. Yea, I think I may truly say that to the best of my remembrance, all the
things that here I discourse of, I mean as to matter of fact, have been acted upon
the stage of this world, even many times before mine eyes.
Here therefore, courteous reader, I present thee with the life and death of Mr. Badman
indeed; yea, I do trace him in his life, from his childhood to his death; that thou
mayest, as in a glass, behold with thine own eyes the steps that take hold of hell;
and also discern, while thou art reading of Mr. Badman's death, whether thou thyself
art treading in his path thereto. And let me entreat thee to forbear quirking[2]
and mocking, for that I say Mr. Badman is dead; but rather gravely inquire concerning
thyself by the Word, whether thou art one of his lineage or no; for Mr. Badman has
left many of his relations behind him; yea, the very world is overspread with his
kindred. True, some of his relations, as he, are gone to their place and long home,
but thousands of thousands are left behind; as brothers, sisters, cousins, nephews,
besides innumerable of his friends and associates. I may say, and yet speak nothing
but too much truth in so saying, that there is scarce a fellowship, a community,
or fraternity of men in the world, but some of Mr. Badman's relations are there;
yea, rarely can we find a family or household in a town, where he has not left behind
him either a brother, nephew, or friend.
The butt[3] therefore, that at this time I shoot at, is wide; and it will be as impossible
for this book to go into several families, and not to arrest some, as for the king's
messenger to rush into a house full of traitors, and find none but honest men there.[4]
I cannot but think that this shot will light upon many, since our fields are so full
of this game; but how many it will kill to Mr. Badman's course, and make alive to
the Pilgrim's Progress, that is not in me to determine; this secret is with the Lord
our God only, and he alone knows to whom he will bless it to so good and so blessed
an end. However, I have put fire to the pan,[5] and doubt not but the report will
quickly be heard.
I told you before that Mr. Badman had left many of his friends and relations behind
him, but if I survive them, as that is a great question to me, I may also write of
their lives; however, whether my life be longer or shorter, this is my prayer at
present, that God will stir up witnesses against them, that may either convert or
confound them; for wherever they live, and roll in their wickedness, they are the
pest and plague of that country. England shakes and totters already, by reason of
the burden that Mr. Badman and his friends have wickedly laid upon it. Yea, our earth
reels and staggereth to and fro like a drunkard, the transgression thereof is heavy
upon it.
Courteous reader, I will treat thee now, even at the door and threshold of this house,
but only with this intelligence, that Mr. Badman lies dead within. Be pleased therefore,
if thy leisure will serve thee, to enter in, and behold the state in which he is
laid, betwixt his death-bed and the grave. He is not buried as yet, nor doth he stink,
as is designed he shall, before he lies down in oblivion. Now as others have had
their funerals solemnized, according to their greatness and grandeur in the world,
so likewise Mr. Badman, forasmuch as he deserveth not to go down to his grave with
silence, has his funeral state according to his deserts.
Four things are usual at great men's funerals, which we will take leave, and I hope
without offence, to allude to, in the funeral of Mr. Badman.
First. They are sometimes, when dead, presented to their friends, by their completely
wrought images, as lively as by cunning men's hands they can be; that the remembrance
of them may be renewed to their survivors, the remembrance of them and their deeds;
and this I have endeavoured to answer in my discourse of Mr. Badman, and therefore
I have drawn him forth in his features and actions from his childhood to his grey
hairs. Here therefore, thou hast him lively set forth as in cuts; both as to the
minority, flower, and seniority of his age, together with those actions of his life,
that he was most capable of doing, in and under those present circumstances of time,
place, strength; and the opportunities that did attend him in these.
Second. There is also usual at great men's funerals, those badges and escutcheons
of their honour, that they have received from their ancestors, or have been thought
worthy of for the deeds and exploits they have done in their life; and here Mr. Badman
has his, but such as vary from all men of worth, but so much the more agreeing with
the merit of his doings. They all have descended in state, he only as an abominable
branch. His deserts are the deserts of sin, and therefore the escutcheons of honour
that he has, are only that he died without honour, 'and at his end became a fool.'
'Thou shalt not be joined with them in burial.' 'The seed of evil doers shall never
be renowned' (Isa 14:20).
The funeral pomp therefore of Mr. Badman, is to wear upon his hearse the badges of
a dishonourable and wicked life; since 'his bones are full of the sin of his youth,
which shall lie down,' as Job says, 'with him in the dust.' Nor is it fit that any
should be his attendants, now at his death, but such as with him conspired against
their own souls in their life; persons whose transgressions have made them infamous
to all that have or shall know what they have done.
Some notice therefore I have also here in this little discourse given the reader,
of them who were his confederates in his life, and attendants at his death; with
a hint, either of some high villainy committed by them, as also of those judgments
that have overtaken and fallen upon them from the just and revenging hand of God.
All which are things either fully known by me, as being eye and ear-witness thereto,
or that I have received from such hands, whose relation, as to this, I am bound to
believe. And that the reader may know them from other things and passages herein
contained, I have pointed at them in the margin.
Third. The funerals of persons of quality have been solemnized with some suitable
sermon at the time and place of their burial; but that I am not come to as yet, having
got no further than to Mr. Badman's death; but forasmuch as he must be buried, after
he hath stunk out his time before his beholders, I doubt not but some such that we
read are appointed to be at the burial of Gog, will do this work in my stead; such
as shall leave him neither skin nor bone above ground, but shall set a sign by it
till the buriers have buried it in the valley of Hamon-gog (Eze 39).
Fourth. At funerals there does use to be mourning and lamentation, but here also
Mr. Badman differs from others; his familiars cannot lament his departure, for they
have not sense of his damnable state; they rather ring him, and sing him to hell
in the sleep of death, in which he goes thither. Good men count him no loss to the
world, his place can well be without him, his loss is only his own, and it is too
late for him to recover that damage or loss by a sea of bloody tears, could he shed
them. Yea, God has said he will laugh at his destruction; who then shall lament for
him, saying, Ah! my brother. He was but a stinking weed in his life; nor was he better
at all in his death; such may well be thrown over the wall without sorrow, when once
God has plucked them up by the roots in his wrath.
Reader, if thou art of the race, lineage, stock, or fraternity of Mr. Badman, I tell
thee, before thou readest this book, thou wilt neither brook the author nor it, because
he hath writ of Mr. Badman as he has. For he that condemneth the wicked that die
so, passeth also the sentence upon the wicked that live. I therefore expect neither
credit of, nor countenance from thee, for this narration of thy kinsman's life. For
thy old love to thy friend, his ways, doings, &c., will stir up in thee enmity
rather in thy very heart against me. I shall therefore incline to think of thee,
that thou wilt rend, burn, or throw it away in contempt; yea, and wish also, that
for writing so notorious a truth, some mischief may befal me. I look also to be loaded
by thee with disdain, scorn, and contempt; yea, that thou shouldest railingly and
vilifyingly say I lie, and am a bespatterer of honest men's lives and deaths. For.
Mr. Badman, when himself was alive, could not abide to be counted a knave, though
his actions told all that went by, that indeed he was such an one. How then should
his brethren that survive him, and that tread in his very steps, approve of the sentence
that by this book is pronounced against him? Will they not rather imitate Korah,
Dathan, and Abiram's friends, even rail at me for condemning him, as they did at
Moses for doing execution?
I know it is ill puddling in the cockatrice's den, and that they run hazards that
hunt the wild boar. The man also that writeth Mr. Badman's life had need be fenced
with a coat of mail, and with the staff of a spear, for that his surviving friends
will know what he doth; but I have adventured to do it, and to play, at this time,
at the hole of these asps; if they bite, they bite; if they sting, they sting. Christ
sends his lambs in the midst of wolves, not to do like them, but to suffer by them
for bearing plain testimony against their bad deeds. But had one not need to walk
with a guard, and to have a sentinel stand at one's door for this? Verily, the flesh
would be glad of such help; yea, a spiritual man, could he tell how to get it (Acts
23). But I am stript naked of these, and yet am commanded to be faithful in my service
for Christ. Well then, I have spoken what I have spoken, and now 'come on me what
will' (Job 13:13). True, the text say, Rebuke a scorner and he will hate thee; and
that he that reproveth a wicked man getteth himself a blot and shame. But what then?
Open rebuke is better than secret love, and he that receives it shall find it so
afterwards.
So then, whether Mr. Badman's friends shall rage or laugh at what I have writ, I
know that the better end of the staff[6] is mine. My endeavour is to stop a hellish
course of life, and to 'save a soul from death' (James 5:20). And if for so doing
I meet with envy from them, from whom in reason I should have thanks, I must remember
the man in the dream,[7] that cut his way through his armed enemies, and so got into
the beauteous palace; I must, I say, remember him, and do myself likewise.
Yet four things I will propound to the consideration of Mr. Badman's friends before
I turn my back upon them.
1. Suppose that there be a hell in very deed; not that I do question it any more
than I do whether there be a sun to shine, but I suppose it for argument sake with
Mr. Badman's friends. I say, suppose there be a hell, and that too such an one as
the Scripture speaks of, one at the remotest distance from God and life eternal,
one where the worm of a guilty conscience never dies, and where the fire of the wrath
of God is not quenched. Suppose, I say, that there is such a hell, prepared of God–as
there is indeed– for the body and soul of the ungodly world after this life to be
tormented in; I say, do but with thyself suppose it, and then tell me is it not prepared
for thee, thou being a wicked man? Let thy conscience speak, I say, is it not prepared
for thee, thou being an ungodly man? And dost thou think, wast thou there now, that
thou art able to wrestle with the judgment of God? why then do the fallen angels
tremble there? Thy hands cannot be strong, nor can thy heart endure, in that day
when God shall deal with thee (Eze 22:14).
2. Suppose that some one that is now a soul in hell for sin, was permitted to come
hither again to dwell, and that they had a grant also, that, upon amendment of life,
next time they die, to change that place for heaven and glory. What sayst thou, O
wicked man? Would such an one, thinkest thou, run again into the same course of life
as before, and venture the damnation that for sin he had already been in? Would he
choose again to lead that cursed life that afresh would kindle the flames of hell
upon him, and that would bind him up under the heavy wrath of God? O! he would not,
he would not; Luke 16 insinuates it; yea, reason itself awake would abhor it, and
tremble at such a thought.
3. Suppose again, that thou that livest and rollest in thy sin, and that as yet hast
known nothing but the pleasure thereof, shouldest be by an angel conveyed to some
place, where, with convenience, from thence thou mightest have a view of heaven and
hell, of the joys of the one and the torments of the other; I say, suppose that from
thence thou mightest have such a view thereof as would convince thy reason that both
heaven and hell are such realities as by the Word they are declared to be; wouldest
thou, thinkest thou, when brought to thy home again, choose to thyself thy former
life, to wit, to return to thy folly again? No; if belief of what thou sawest remained
with thee thou wouldest eat fire and brimstone first.
4. I will propound again. Suppose that there was amongst us such a law, and such
a magistrate to inflict the penalty, that for every open wickedness committed by
thee, so much of thy flesh should with burning pincers be plucked from thy bones,
wouldest thou then go on in thy open way of lying, swearing, drinking, and whoring,
as thou with delight doest now? Surely, surely, no. The fear of the punishment would
make thee forbear; yea, would make thee tremble, even then when thy lusts were powerful,
to think what a punishment thou wast sure to sustain so soon as the pleasure was
over. But O! the folly, the madness, the desperate madness that is in the hearts
of Mr. Badman's friends, who, in despite of the threatenings of a holy and sin-revenging
God, and of the outcries and warnings of all good men, yea, that will, in despite
of the groans and torments of those that are now in hell for sin, go on in a sinful
course of life, yea, though every sin is also a step of descent down to that infernal
cave (Luke 16:24,28). O how true is that saying of Solomon, 'The heart of the sons
of men is full of evil, and madness is in their heart while they live, and after
that they go to the dead' (Eccl 9:3). To the dead! that is, to the dead in hell,
to the damned dead, the place to which those that have died bad men are gone, and
that those that live bad men are like to go to, when a little more sin, like stolen
waters, hath been imbibed by their sinful souls.
That which has made me publish this book is,
1. For that wickedness, like a flood, is like to drown our English world. It begins
already to be above the tops of the mountains; it has almost swallowed up all; our
youth, middle age, old age, and all, are almost carried away of this flood. O debauchery,
debauchery, what hast thou done in England! Thou hast corrupted our young men, and
hast made our old men beasts; thou hast deflowered our virgins, and hast made matrons
bawds. Thou hast made our earth 'to reel to and fro like a drunkard'; it is in danger
to 'be removed like a cottage,' yea, it is, because transgression is so heavy upon
it, like to fall and rise no more (Isa 24:20). O! that I could mourn for England,
and for the sins that are committed therein, even while I see that, without repentance,
the men of God's wrath are about to deal with us, each having his 'slaughtering weapon
in his hand' (Eze 9:1,2). Well, I have written, and by God's assistance shall pray
that this flood may abate in England; and could I but see the tops of the mountains
above it, I should think that these waters were abating.
2. It is the duty of those that can to cry out against this deadly plague, yea, to
lift up their voice as with a trumpet against it, that men may be awakened about
it, fly from it, as from that which is the greatest of evils. Sin pulled angels out
of heaven, pulls men down to hell, and overthroweth kingdoms. Who, that sees a house
on fire, will not give the alarm to them that dwell therein? Who, that sees the land
invaded, will not set the beacons on a flame. Who, that sees the devils as roaring
lions, continually devouring souls, will not make an out-cry? But above all, when
we see sin, sinful sin, a swallowing up a nation, sinking of a nation, and bringing
its inhabitants to temporal, spiritual, and eternal ruin, shall we not cry out and
cry, They are drunk, but not with wine; they stagger, but not with strong drink;
they are intoxicated with the deadly poison of sin, which will, if its malignity
be not by wholesome means allayed, bring soul and body, and estate, and country,
and all, to ruin and destruction?
3. In and by this outcry I shall deliver myself from the ruins of them that perish;
for a man can do no more in this matter–I mean a man in my capacity–than to detect
and condemn the wickedness, warn the evil doer of the judgment, and fly therefrom
myself. But O! that I might not only deliver myself! O that many would hear, and
turn at this my cry from sin! that they may be secured from the death and judgment
that attend it.
Why I have handled the matter in this method is best known to myself. And why I have
concealed most of the names of the persons whose sins or punishments I here and there
in this book make relation of is, (1.) For that neither the sins nor judgments were
all alike open; the sins of some were committed, and the judgments executed for them,
only in a corner. Not to say that I could not learn some of their names, for could
I, I should not have made them public, for this reason, (2.) Because I would not
provoke those of their relations that survive them; I would not justly provoke them;
and yet, as I think, I should, should I have entailed their punishment to their sins,
and both to their names, and so have turned them into the world. (3.) Nor would I
lay them under disgrace and contempt, which would, as I think, unavoidably have happened
unto them had I withal inserted their names.
As for those whose names I mention, their crimes or judgments were manifest; public
almost as anything of that nature that happeneth to mortal men. Such therefore have
published their own shame by their sin, and God his anger, by taking of open vengeance.
As Job says, God has struck 'them as wicked men in the open sight of others' (Job
34:26). So that I cannot conceive, since their sin and judgment was so conspicuous,
that my admonishing the world thereof should turn to their detriment. For the publishing
of these things are, so far as relation is concerned, intended for remembrances,
that they may also bethink themselves, repent and turn to God, lest the judgments
for their sins should prove hereditary. For the God of heaven hath threatened to
visit the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, if they hate him, to the third
and fourth generation (Exo 20:5).
Nebuchadnezzar's punishment for his pride being open– for he was for his sin driven
from his kingly dignity, and from among men too, to eat grass like an ox, and to
company with the beasts–Daniel did not stick to tell Belshazzar his son to his face
thereof; nor to publish it that it might be read and remembered by the generations
to come. The same may be said of Judas and Ananias, &c., for their sin and punishment
were known to all the dwellers at Jerusalem (Acts 1:19). Nor is it a sign but of
desperate impenitence and hardness of heart, when the offspring or relations of those
who have fallen by open, fearful, and prodigious judgments, for their sin, shall
overlook, forget, pass by, or take no notice of such high outgoings of God against
them and their house. Thus Daniel aggravates Belshazzar's crime, for that he hardened
his heart in pride, though he knew that for that very sin and transgression his father
was brought down from his height, and made to be a companion for asses. 'And thou
his son, O Belshazzar,' says he, 'hast not humbled thine heart, though thou knewest
all this' (Dan 5:22). A home reproof, indeed, but home [reproof] is most fit for
an open and a continued in transgression.
Let those, then, that are the offspring or relations of such, who by their own sin,
and the dreadful judgments of God, are made to become a sign (Deut 16:9-12), having
been swept as dung from off the face of the earth, beware, lest when judgment knocks
at their door, for their sins, as it did before at the door of their progenitors,
it falls also with as heavy a stroke as on them that went before them (Num 16:38-40).
Lest, I say, they in that day, instead of finding mercy, find for their high, daring,
and judgment-affronting sins, judgment without mercy.
To conclude; let those that would not die Mr. Badman's death, take heed of Mr. Badman's
ways; for his ways bring to his end. Wickedness will not deliver him that is given
to it; though they should cloak all with a profession of religion. If it was a transgression
of old for a man to wear a woman's apparel, surely it is a transgression now for
a sinner to wear a Christian profession for a cloak. Wolves in sheep's clothing swarm
in England this day; wolves both as to doctrine and as to practice too. Some men
make a profession, I doubt, on purpose that they may twist themselves into a trade;
and thence into an estate; yea, and if need be, into an estate knavishly, by the
ruins of their neighbour. Let such take heed, for those that do such things have
the greater damnation. Christian, make thy profession shine by a conversation according
to the gospel; or else thou wilt damnify religion, bring scandal to thy brethren,
and give offence to the enemies; and it would be better that a millstone was hanged
about thy neck, and that thou, as so adorned, was cast into the bottom of the sea,
than so to do. Christian, a profession according to the gospel is, in these days,
a rare thing; seek then after it, put it on, and keep it without spot, and, as becomes
thee, white, and clean, and thou shalt be a rare Christian.
The prophecy of the last times is, that professing men, for so I understand the text,
shall be many of them base (2 Tim 3); but continue thou in the things that thou hast
learned, not of wanton men, nor of licentious times, but of the Word and doctrine
of God, that is, according to godliness; and thou shalt walk with Christ in white.
Now, God Almighty gave his people grace, not to hate or malign sinners, nor yet to
choose any of their ways, but to keep themselves pure from the blood of all men,
by speaking and doing according to that name and those rules that they profess to
know and love; for Jesus Christ's sake.
JOHN BUNYAN.
CONTENTS.
CHAP. I. Badman's death and its awful consequences, This leads to the discourse of
his life.
CHAP. II. Badman's wicked behavior in childhood,
CHAP. III. Badman's apprenticeship to a pious master,
CHAP. IV. He gets a new master bad as himself,
CHAP. V. Badman in business; the tricks of a wicked tradesman,
CHAP. VI. His hypocritical courtship and marriage to a pious, rich, young lady,
CHAP. VII. He throws off the mask and cruelly treats his wife. Bunyan's rules for
such as think of marriage,
CHAP. VIII. Badman is a bankrupt, and gets by it hat-fulls of money,
CHAP. IX. Badman's fraudulent dealings to get money,
CHAP. X. The simple Christian's views of extortion,
CHAP. XI. Instructions for righteous trading,
CHAP. XII. Badman's pride, atheism, infidelity, and envy,
CHAP. XIII. He gets drunk and breaks his leg. God's judgments upon drunkards,
CHAP. XIV. His pretended repentings and promises of reform when death grimly stares
at him,
CHAP. XV. Death leaves him for a season, and he returns to his sins, like a sow that
has been washed to her wallowing in the mire,
CHAP. XVI. His pious wife dies broken-hearted. Her deathbed charge to her family,
CHAP. XVII. He is tricked into a second marriage by a woman as bad as himself,
CHAP. XVIII. He parts from his wife, diseases attack him under Captain Consumption;
he rots away and dies in sinful security,
CHAP. XIX. Future happiness not to be hoped from a quiet, hardened death. Some remarkable
instances,
CHAP. XX. Without godly repentance, the wicked man's hopes and life die together.
THE LIFE AND DEATH OF MR.
BADMAN,
CHAPTER I.
[BADMAN'S DEATH AND ITS AWFUL CONSEQUENCES.]
WISEMAN. Good morrow, my good neighbour, Mr. Attentive; whither are you walking so
early this morning? Methinks you look as if you were concerned about something more
than ordinary. Have you lost any of your cattle, or what is the matter?
ATTENTIVE. Good Sir, good morrow to you, I have not as yet lost aught, but yet you
give a right guess of me, for I am, as you say, concerned in my heart, but it is
because of the badness of the times. And, Sir, you, as all our neighbours know, are
a very observing man, pray, therefore, what do you think of them?
WISE. Why, I think, as you say, to wit, that they are bad times, and bad they will
be, until men are better; for they are bad men that make bad times; if men, therefore,
would mend, so would the times. It is a folly to look for good days so long as sin
is so high, and those that study its nourishment so many. God bring it down, and
those that nourish it, to repentance, and then, my good neighbour, you will be concerned,
not as you are now; now you are concerned because times are so bad, but then you
will be so because times are so good; now you are concerned so as to be perplexed,
but then you will be concerned so as to lift up your voice with shouting, for I dare
say, could you see such days, they would make you shout.
ATTEN. Ay, so they would; such times I have prayed for, such times I have longed
for; but I fear they will be worse before they be better.
WISE. Make no conclusions, man; for he that hath the hearts of men in his hand can
change them from worse to better, and so bad times into good. God give long life
to them that are good, and especially to those of them that are capable of doing
him service in the world. The ornament and beauty of this lower world, next to God
and his wonders, are the men that spangle and shine in godliness.
Now as Mr. Wiseman said this, he gave a great sigh.
ATTEN. Amen, amen. But why, good Sir, do you sigh so deeply; is it for ought else
than that for the which, as you have perceived, I myself am concerned?
WISE. I am concerned, with you, for the badness of the times; but that was not the
cause of that sigh, of the which, as I see, you take notice. I sighed at the remembrance
of the death of that man for whom the bell tolled at our town yesterday.
ATTEN. Why, I trow, Mr. Goodman your neighbour is not dead. Indeed I did hear that
he had been sick.
WISE. No, no, it is not he. Had it been he, I could not but have been concerned,
but yet not as I am concerned now. If he had died, I should only have been concerned
for that the world had lost a light; but the man that I am concerned for now was
one that never was good, therefore such an one who is not dead only, but damned.
He died that he might die, he went from life to death, and then from death to death,
from death natural to death eternal. And as he spake this, the water stood in his
eyes.[8]
ATTEN. Indeed, to go from a deathbed to hell is a fearful thing to think on. But,
good neighbour Wiseman, be pleased to tell me who this man was, and why you conclude
him so miserable in his death?
WISE. Well, if you can stay, I will tell you who he was, and why I conclude thus
concerning him.
ATTEN. My leisure will admit me to stay, and I am willing to hear you out. And I
pray God your discourse may take hold on my heart, that I may be bettered thereby.
So they agreed to sit down under a tree. Then Mr. Wiseman proceeded as followeth:–
WISE. The man that I mean is one Mr. Badman; he has lived in our town a great while,
and now, as I said, he is dead. But the reason of my being so concerned at his death
is, not for that he was at all related to me, or for that any good conditions died
with him, for he was far from them, but for that, as I greatly fear, he hath, as
was hinted before, died two deaths at once.
ATTEN. I perceive what you mean by two deaths at once; and to speak truth, it is
a fearful thing thus to have ground to think of any: for although the death of the
ungodly and sinners is laid to heart but of few, yet to die in such a state is more
dreadful and fearful than any man can imagine. Indeed if a man had no soul, if his
state was not truly immortal, the matter would not be so much; but for a man to be
so disposed of by his Maker, as to be appointed a sensible being for ever, and for
him too to fall into the hands of revenging justice, that will be always, to the
utmost extremity that his sin deserveth, punishing of him in the dismal dungeon of
hell, this must needs be unutterably sad, and lamentable.
WISE. There is no man, I think, that is sensible of the worth of one soul, but must,
when he hears of the death of unconverted men, be stricken with sorrow and grief:
because, as you said well, that man's state is such that he has a sensible being
for ever. For it is sense that makes punishment heavy. But yet sense is not all that
the damned have, they have sense and reason too; so then, as sense receiveth punishment
with sorrow, because it feels, and bleeds under the same, so by reason, and the exercise
thereof, in the midst of torment, all present affliction is aggravated, and that
three manner of ways:–1. Reason will consider thus with himself. For what am I thus
tormented? and will easily find it is for nothing but that base and filthy thing,
sin; and now will vexation be mixed with punishment, and that will greatly heighten
the affliction. 2. Reason will consider thus with himself. How long must this be
my state? And will soon return to himself this answer: This must be my state for
ever and ever. Now this will greatly increase the torment. 3. Reason. will consider
thus with himself. What have I lost more than present ease and quiet by my sins that
I have committed? And will quickly return himself this answer: I have lost communion
with God, Christ, saints, and angels, and a share in heaven and eternal life: and
this also must needs greaten the misery of poor damned souls. And this is the case
of Mr. Badman.
ATTEN. I feel my heart even shake at the thoughts of coming into such a state. Hell!
who knows that is yet alive, what the torments of hell are? This word HELL gives
a very dreadful sound.
WISE. Ay, so it does in the ears of him that has a tender conscience. But if, as
you say, and that truly, the very name of hell is so dreadful, what is the place
itself, and what are the punishments that are there inflicted, and that without the
least intermission, upon the souls of damned men, for ever and ever.
ATTEN. Well, but passing this; my leisure will admit me to stay, and therefore pray
tell me what it is that makes you think that Mr. Badman is gone to hell.
WISE. I will tell you. But first, do you know which of the Badmans I mean?
ATTEN. Why, was there more of them than one?
WISE. O yes, a great many, both brothers and sisters, and yet all of them the children
of a godly parent, the more a great deal is the pity.
ATTEN. Which of them therefore was it that died?
WISE. The eldest, old in years, and old in sin; but the sinner that dies an hundred
years old shall be accursed.
ATTEN. Well, but what makes you think he is gone to hell?
WISE. His wicked life, and fearful death, especially since the manner of his death
was so corresponding with his life.
ATTEN. Pray let me know the manner of his death, if yourself did perfectly know it.
WISE. I was there when he died; but I desire not to see another such man, while I
live, die in such sort as he did.
ATTEN. Pray therefore let me hear it.
WISE. You say you have leisure and can stay, and therefore, if you please, we will
discourse even orderly of him. First, we will begin with his life, and then proceed
to his death: because a relation of the first may the more affect you, when you shall
hear of the second.
ATTEN. Did you then so well know his life?
WISE. I knew him of a child. I was a man, when he was but a boy, and I made special
observation of him from first to last.
ATTEN. Pray then let me hear from you an account of his life; but be as brief as
you can, for I long to hear of the manner of his death.
CHAPTER II.
[BADMAN'S WICKED BEHAVIOUR IN CHILDHOOD.]
WISE. I will endeavour to answer your desires, and first, I will tell you, that from
a child he was very bad; his very beginning was ominous, and presaged that no good
end was, in likelihood, to follow thereupon. There were several sins that he was
given to, when but a little one, that manifested him to be notoriously infected with
original corruption; for I dare say he learned none of them of his father and mother;
nor was he admitted to go much abroad among other children that were vile, to learn
to sin of them: nay, contrariwise, if at any time he did get abroad amongst others,
he would be as the inventor of bad words, and an example in bad actions. To them
all he used to be, as we say, the ringleader, and master-sinner from a child.
ATTEN. This was a bad beginning indeed, and did demonstrate that he was, as you say,
polluted, very much polluted with original corruption. For to speak my mind freely,
I do confess that it is mine opinion that children come polluted with sin into the
world, and that ofttimes the sins of their youth, especially while they are very
young, are rather by virtue of indwelling sin, than by examples that are set before
them by others. Not but that they learn to sin by example too, but example is not
the root, but rather the temptation unto wickedness. The root is sin within; 'for
from within, out of the heart of men,' proceedeth sin (Mark 7:21).
WISE. I am glad to hear that you are of this opinion, and to confirm what you have
said by a few hints from the Word. Man in his birth is compared to an ass, an unclean
beast, and to a wretched infant in its blood (Job 11:12; Eze 16). Besides, all the
first-born of old that were offered unto the Lord, were to be redeemed at the age
of a month, and that was before they were sinners by imitation (Exo 13:13, 34:20).
The scripture also affirmeth, that by the sin of one, judgment came upon all; and
renders this reason, 'for that all have sinned' (Rom 5:12). Nor is that objection
worth a rush, that Christ by his death hath taken away original sin. First. Because
it is scriptureless. Secondly. Because it makes them incapable of salvation by Christ;
for none but those that in their own persons are sinners are to have salvation by
him. Many other things might be added, but between persons so well agreed as you
and I are, these may suffice at present. But when an antagonist comes to deal with
us about this matter, then we have for him often other strong arguments, if he be
an antagonist worth the taking notice of.
ATTEN. But, as was hinted before, he used to be the ring- leading sinner, or the
master of mischief among other children; yet these are but generals; pray therefore
tell me in particular which were the sins of his childhood.
WISE. I will so. When he was but a child, he was so addicted to lying that his parents
scarce knew when to believe he spake true; yea, he would invent, tell, and stand
to the lies that he invented and told, and that with such an audacious face, that
one might even read in his very countenance the symptoms of a hard and desperate
heart this way.
ATTEN. This was an ill beginning indeed, and argueth that he began to harden himself
in sin betimes. For a lie cannot be knowingly told and stood in, and I perceive that
this was his manner of way in lying, but he must as it were force his own heart unto
it. Yea, he must make his heart hard, and bold to do it. Yea, he must be arrived
to an exceeding pitch of wickedness thus to do, since all this he did against that
good education, that before you seemed to hint he had from his father and mother.
WISE. The want of good education, as you have intimated, is many times a cause why
children do so easily, so soon, become bad; especially when there is not only a want
of that, but bad examples enough, as, the more is the pity, there is in many families;
by virtue of which poor children are trained up in sin, and nursed therein for the
devil and hell. But it was otherwise with Mr. Badman, for to my knowledge this his
way of lying was a great grief to his parents, for their hearts were much dejected
at this beginning of their son; nor did there want counsel and correction from them
to him if that would have made him better. He wanted not to be told, in my hearing,
and that over and over and over, that 'all liars shall have their part in the lake
which burneth with fire and brimstone'; and that 'whosoever loveth and maketh a lie,'
should not have any part in the new and heavenly Jerusalem (Rev 21:8,27, 22:15).
But all availed nothing with him; when a fit, or an occasion to lie came upon him,
he would invent, tell, and stand to his lie as steadfastly as if it had been the
biggest of truths that he told, and that with that hardening of his heart and face,
that it would be to those who stood by, a wonder. Nay, and this he would do when
under the rod of correction, which is appointed by God for parents to use, that thereby
they might keep their children from hell (Prov 22:15, 23:13,14).[9]
ATTEN. Truly it was, as I said, a bad beginning, he served the devil betimes; yea,
he became nurse to one of his brats, for a spirit of lying is the devil's brat, 'for
he is a liar and the father of it' (John 8:44).
WISE. Right, he is the father of it indeed. A lie is begot by the devil as the father,
and is brought forth by the wicked heart as the mother; wherefore another scripture
also saith, 'Why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie,' &c. (Acts 5:3,4). Yea,
he calleth the heart that is big with a lie, an heart that hath conceived, that is,
by the devil. 'Why hast thou conceived this thing in thine heart? thou hast not lied
unto men, but unto God.' True, his lie was a lie of the highest nature, but every
lie hath the same father and mother as had the lie last spoken of. 'For he is a liar,
and the father of it.' A lie then is the brat of hell, and it cannot be in the heart
before the person has committed a kind of spiritual adultery with the devil. That
soul therefore that telleth a known lie, has lien with, and conceived it by lying
with the devil, the only father of lies. For a lie has only one father and mother,
the devil and the heart. No marvel therefore if the hearts that hatch and bring forth
lies be so much of complexion with the devil. Yea, no marvel though God and Christ
have so bent their word against liars.[10] A liar is wedded to the devil himself.
ATTEN. It seems a marvellous thing in mine eyes, that since a lie is in the offspring
of the devil, and since a lie brings the soul to the very den of devils, to wit,
the dark dungeon of hell, that men should be so desperately wicked as to accustom
themselves to so horrible a thing.
WISE. It seems also marvellous to me, especially when I observe for how little a
matter some men will study, contrive, make, and tell a lie. You shall have some that
will lie it over and over, and that for a penny profit. Yea, lie and stand in it,
although they know that they lie. Yea, you shall have some men that will not stick
to tell lie after lie, though themselves get nothing thereby. They will tell lies
in their ordinary discourse with their neighbours, also their news, their jests,
and their tales, must needs be adorned with lies; or else they seem to bear no good
sound to the ear, nor show much to the fancy of him to whom they are told. But alas!
what will these liars do, when, for their lies they shall be tumbled down into hell,
to that devil that did beget those lies in their heart, and so be tormented by fire
and brimstone, with him, and that for ever and ever, for their lies?
ATTEN. Can you not give one some example of God's judgments upon liars, that one
may tell them to liars when one hears them lie, if perhaps they may by the hearing
thereof, be made afraid, and ashamed to lie.
WISE. Examples! why Ananias[11] and his wife are examples enough to put a stop, one
would think, to a spirit addicted thereto, for they both were stricken down dead
for telling a lie, and that by God himself, in the midst of a company of people (Acts
5). But if God's threatening of liars with hell-fire, and with the loss of the kingdom
of heaven, will not prevail with them to leave off to lie and make lies, it cannot
be imagined that a relation of temporal judgments that have swept liars out of the
world heretofore, should do it. Now, as I said, this lying was one of the first sins
that Mr. Badman was addicted to, and he could make them and tell them fearfully.
ATTEN. I am sorry to hear this of him, and so much the more, because, as I fear,
this sin did not reign in him alone; for usually one that is accustomed to lying,
is also accustomed to other evils besides; and if it were not so also with Mr. Badman,
it would be indeed a wonder.
WISE. You say true, the liar is a captive slave of more than the spirit of lying;
and therefore this Mr. Badman, as he was a liar from a child, so he was also much
given to pilfer and steal, so that what he could, as we say, handsomely lay his hands
on,[12] that was counted his own, whether they were the things of his fellow-children,
or if he could lay hold of anything at a neighbour's house, he would take it away;
you must understand me of trifles; for being yet but a child, he attempted no great
matter, especially at first. But yet as he grew up in strength and ripeness of wit,
so he attempted to pilfer and steal things still of more value than at first. He
took at last great pleasure in robbing of gardens and orchards; and as he grew up,
to steal pullen[13] from the neighbourhood. Yea, what was his father's could not
escape his fingers, all was fish that came to his net, so hardened, at last, was
he in this mischief also.
ATTEN. You make me wonder more and more. What, play the thief too! What, play the
thief so soon! He could not but know, though he was but a child, that what he took
from others was none of his own. Besides, if his father was a good man, as you say,
it could not be but he must also hear from him that to steal was to transgress the
law of God, and so to run the hazard of eternal damnation.
WISE. His father was not wanting to use the means to reclaim him, often urging, as
I have been told, that saying in the law of Moses, 'Thou shalt not steal' (Exo 20:15).
And also that, 'This is the curse that goeth forth over the face of the whole earth;
for every one that stealeth shall be cut off', &c. (Zech 5:3). The light of nature
also, though he was little, must needs show him that what he took from others was
not his own; and that he would not willingly have been served so himself. But all
was to no purpose, let father and conscience say what they would to him, he would
go on, he was resolved to go on in his wickedness.
ATTEN. But his father would, as you intimate, sometimes rebuke him for his wickedness;
pray how would he carry it then?
WISE. How! why like to a thief that is found. He would stand gloating,[14] and hanging
down his head in a sullen, pouching manner; a body might read, as we used to say,
the picture of ill-luck in his face; and when his father did demand his answer to
such questions concerning his villainy, he would grumble and mutter at him, and that
should be all he could get.
ATTEN. But you said that he would also rob his father, methinks that was an unnatural
thing.
WISE. Natural or unnatural, all is one to a thief. Besides, you must think that he
had likewise companions to whom he was, for the wickedness that he saw in them, more
firmly knit, than either of father or mother. Yea, and what had he cared if father
and mother had died for grief for him. Their death would have been, as he would have
counted, great release and liberty to him; for the truth is, they and their counsel
were his bondage; yea, and if I forget not, I have heard some say that when he was,
at times, among his companions he would greatly rejoice to think that his parents
were old, and could not live long, and then, quoth he, I shall be mine own man, to
do what I list, without their control.
ATTEN. Then it seems he counted that robbing of his parents was no crime.
WISE. None at all; and therefore he fell directly under that sentence, 'Whoso robbeth
his father or his mother, and saith it is no transgression, the same is the companion
of a destroyer' (Prov 28:24). And for that he set so light by them as to their persons
and counsels, it was a sign that at present he was of a very abominable spirit, and
that some judgment waited to take hold of him in time to come (1 Sam 2:25).
ATTEN. But can you imagine what it was, I mean, in his conceit, for I speak not now
of the suggestions of Satan, by which doubtless he was put on to do these things;
I say what it should be in his conceit, that should make him think that this his
manner of pilfering and stealing was no great matter.
WISE. It was for that the things that he stole were small; to rob orchards, and gardens,
and to steal pullen, and the like, these he counted tricks of youth, nor would he
be beat out of it by all that his friends could say. They would tell him that he
must not covet, or desire, and yet to desire is less than to take, even anything,
the least thing that was his neighbour's; and that if he did, it would be a transgression
of the law; but all was one to him; what through the wicked talk of his companions,
and the delusion of his own corrupt heart, he would go on in his pilfering course,
and where he thought himself secure, would talk of, and laugh at it when he had done.
ATTEN. Well I heard a man once, when he was upon the ladder with the rope about his
neck, confess, when ready to be turned off by the hangman, that that which had brought
him to that end was his accustoming of himself, when young, to pilfer and steal small
things. To my best remembrance he told us, that he began the trade of a thief by
stealing of pins and points;[15] and therefore did forewarn all the youth that then
were gathered together to see him die, to take heed of beginning, though but with
little sins; because by tampering at first with little ones, way is made for the
commission of bigger.[16]
WISE. Since you are entered upon stories, I also will tell you one; the which, though
I heard it not with mine own ears, yet my author I dare believe. It is concerning
one old Tod, that was hanged about twenty years ago, or more, at Hertford, for being
a thief. The story is this:–
At a summer assizes holden at Hertford, while the judge was sitting upon the bench,
comes this old Tod into court, clothed in a green suit, with his leathern girdle
in his hand, his bosom open, and all on a dung sweat, as if he had run for his life;
and being come in, he spake aloud as follows:–My lord, saith he, here is the veriest
rogue that breathes upon the face of the earth. I have been a thief from a child.
When I was but a little one, I gave myself to rob orchards, and to do other such
like wicked things, and I have continued a thief ever since. My lord, there has not
been a robbery committed these many years, within so many miles of this place, but
I have either been at it, or privy to it.
The judge thought the fellow was mad, but after some conference with some of the
justices, they agreed to indict him; and so they did of several felonious actions;
to all which he heartily confessed guilty, and so was hanged, with his wife at the
same time.
ATTEN. This is a remarkable story indeed, and you think it is a true one.
WISE. It is not only remarkable, but pat to our purpose. This thief, like Mr. Badman,
began his trade betimes; he began too where Mr. Badman began, even at robbing of
orchards, and other such things, which brought him, as you may perceive, from sin
to sin, till at last it brought him to the public shame of sin, which is the gallows.
As for the truth of this story, the relater told me that he was, at the same time,
himself in the court, and stood within less than two yards of old Tod, when he heard
him aloud to utter the words.
ATTEN. These two sins, of lying and stealing, were a bad sign of an evil end.
WISE. So they were, and yet Mr. Badman came not to his end like old Tod; though I
fear to as bad, nay, worse than was that death of the gallows, though less discerned
by spectators; but more of that by and by. But you talk of these two sins as if these
were all that Mr. Badman was addicted to in his youth. Alas, alas, he swarmed with
sins, even as a beggar does with vermin, and that when he was but a boy.
ATTEN. Why, what other sins was he addicted to, I mean while he was but a child?
WISE. You need not ask to what other sins was he, but to what other sins was he not
addicted; that is, of such as suited with his age; for a man may safely say that
nothing that was vile came amiss to him, if he was but capable to do it. Indeed,
some sins there be that childhood knows not how to be tampering with; but I speak
of sins that he was capable of committing, of which I will nominate two or three
more. And, First, He could not endure the Lord's day, because of the holiness that
did attend it; the beginning of that day was to him as if he was going to prison,
except he could get out from his father and mother, and lurk in by- holes among his
companions, until holy duties were over. Reading the Scriptures, hearing sermons,
godly conference, repeating of sermons and prayers, were things that he could not
away with; and, therefore, if his father on such days, as often he did, though sometimes,
notwithstanding his diligence, he would be sure to give him the slip, did keep him
strictly to the observation of the day, he would plainly show, by all carriages,
that he was highly discontent therewith. He would sleep at duties, would talk vainly
with his brothers, and, as it were, think every godly opportunity seven times as
long as it was, grudging till it was over.
ATTEN. This his abhorring of that day, was not, I think, for the sake of the day
itself; for as it is a day, it is nothing else but as other days of the week. But
I suppose that the reason of his loathing of it was for that God hath put sanctity
and holiness upon it; also, because it is the day above all the days of the week
that ought to be spent in holy devotion, in remembrance of our Lord's resurrection
from the dead.
WISE. Yes, it was therefore that he was such an enemy to it; even because more restraint
was laid upon him on that day, from his own ways, than were possible should be laid
upon him on all others.
ATTEN. Doth not God, by instituting of a day unto holy duties, make great proof how
the hearts and inclinations of poor people do stand to holiness of heart, and a conversation
in holy duties?
WISE. Yes, doubtless; and a man shall show his heart and his life what they are,
more by one Lord's day than by all the days of the week besides. And the reason is,
because on the Lord's day there is a special restraint laid upon men as to thoughts
and life, more than upon other days of the week besides. Also, men are enjoined on
that day to a stricter performance of holy duties, and restraint of worldly business,
than upon other days they are; wherefore, if their hearts incline not naturally to
good, now they will show it, now they will appear what they are. The Lord's day is
a kind of an emblem of the heavenly Sabbath above, and it makes manifest how the
heart stands to the perpetuity of holiness, more than to be found in a transient
duty does.
On other days, a man may be in and out of holy duties, and all in a quarter of an
hour; but now, the Lord's day is, as it were, a day that enjoins to one perpetual
duty of holiness. 'Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day'; which, by Christ,
is not abrogated, but changed, into the first of the week, not as it was given in
particular to the Jews, but as it was sanctified by him from the beginning of the
world (Gen 2:2; Exo 31:13-17; Mark 16:1; Acts 20:7; 1 Cor 16:1,2; Mark 2:27,28; Rev
1:10); and therefore is a greater proof of the frame and temper of a man's heart,
and does more make manifest to what he is inclined, than doth his other performance
of duties. Therefore, God puts great difference between them that truly call, and
walk in, this day as holy, and count it honourable, upon the account that now they
have an opportunity to show how they delight to honour him; in that they have not
only an hour, but a whole day, to show it in (Isa 58:13). I say, he puts great difference
between these, and that other sort that say, When will the Sabbath be gone, that
we may be at our worldly business? (Amos 8:5). The first he calleth a blessed man,
but brandeth the other for an unsanctified worldling. And, indeed, to delight ourselves
in God's service upon his holy days, gives a better proof of a sanctified nature
than to grudge at the coming, and to be weary of the holy duties of such days, as
Mr. Badman did.[17]
ATTEN. There may be something in what you say, for he that cannot abide to keep one
day holy to God, to be sure he hath given a sufficient proof that he is an unsanctified
man; and, as such, what should he do in heaven? That being the place where a perpetual
Sabbath is to be kept to God; I say, to be kept for ever and ever (Heb 4:9). And,
for ought I know, one reason why one day in seven hath been by our Lord set apart
unto holy duties for men, may be to give them conviction that there is enmity in
the hearts of sinners to the God of heaven, for he that hateth holiness, hateth God
himself. They pretend to love God, and yet love not a holy day, and yet love not
to spend that day in one continued act of holiness to the Lord. They had as good
say nothing as to call him Lord, Lord, and yet not do the things that he says. And
this Mr. Badman was such a one, he could not abide this day, nor any of the duties
of it. Indeed, when he could get from his friends, and so spend it in all manner
of idleness and profaneness, then he would be pleased well enough; but what was this
but a turning the day into night, or other than taking an opportunity at God's forbidding,
to follow our callings, to solace and satisfy our lusts and delights of the flesh?
I take the liberty to speak thus of Mr. Badman, upon a confidence of what you, Sir,
have said of him is true.
WISE. You needed not to have made that apology for your censoring of Mr. Badman,
for all that knew him will confirm what you say of him to be true. He could not abide
either that day, or anything else that had the stamp or image of God upon it. Sin,
sin, and to do the thing that was naught, was that which he delighted in, and that
from a little child.
ATTEN. I must say again I am sorry to hear it, and that for his own sake, and also
for the sake of his relations, who must needs be broken to pieces with such doings
as these. For, for these things' sake comes the wrath of God upon the children of
disobedience (Eph 5:6). And, doubtless, he must be gone to hell, if he died without
repentance; and to beget a child for hell is sad for parents to think on.
WISE. Of his dying, as I told you, I will give you a relation anon; but now we are
upon his life, and upon the manner of his life in his childhood, even of the sins
that attended him then, some of which I have mentioned already; and, indeed, I have
mentioned but some, for yet there are more to follow, and those not at all inferior
to what you have already heard.
ATTEN. Pray what were they?
WISE. Why he was greatly given, and that while a lad, to grievous swearing and cursing;
yea, he then made no more of swearing and cursing than I do of telling my fingers.
Yea, he would do it without provocation thereto. He counted it a glory to swear and
curse, and it was as natural to him as to eat, and drink, and sleep.
ATTEN. O what a young villain was this! Here is, as the apostle says, a yielding
of 'members, as instruments of righteousness unto sin,' indeed! (Rom 6:13). This
is proceeding from evil to evil with a witness. This argueth that he was a black-mouthed
young wretch indeed.
WISE. He was so; and yet, as I told you, he counted above all this kind of sinning
to be a badge of his honour; he reckoned himself a man's fellow when he had learned
to swear and curse boldly.
ATTEN. I am persuaded that many do think as you have said, that to swear is a thing
that does bravely become them, and that it is the best way for a man, when he would
put authority or terror into his words, to stuff them full of the sin of swearing.
WISE. You say right, else, as I am persuaded, men would not so usually belch out
their blasphemous oaths as they do; they take a pride in it; they think that to swear
is gentleman-like; and, having once accustomed themselves unto it, they hardly leave
it all the days of their lives.[18]
ATTEN. Well, but now we are upon it, pray show me the difference between swearing
and cursing; for there is a difference, is there not?
WISE. Yes; there is a difference between swearing and cursing. Swearing, vain swearing,
such as young Badman accustomed himself unto. Now, vain and sinful swearing is a
light and wicked calling of God, &c., to witness to our vain and foolish attesting
of things, and those things are of two sorts. 1. Things that we swear, are or shall
be done. 2. Things so sworn to, true or false.
1. Things that we swear, are or shall be done. Thou swearest thou hast done such
a thing, that such a thing is so, or shall be so; for it is no matter which of these
it is that men swear about, if it be done lightly, and wickedly, and groundlessly,
it is vain, because it is a sin against the third commandment, which says, 'Thou
shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain' (Exo 20:7). For this is a vain
using of that holy and sacred name, and so a sin for which, without sound repentance,
there is not, nor can be rightly expected, forgiveness.
ATTEN. Then it seems, though as to the matter of fact, a man swears truly, yet if
he sweareth lightly and groundlessly, his oath is evil, and he by it under sin.
WISE. Yes, a man may say, 'The Lord liveth,' and that is true, and yet in so saying
'swear falsely'; because he sweareth vainly, needlessly, and without a ground (Jer
5:2). To swear groundedly and necessarily, which then a man does when he swears as
being called thereto of God, that is tolerated by the Word.[19] But this was none
of Mr. Badman's swearing, and therefore that which now we are not concerned about.
ATTEN. I perceive by the prophet that a man may sin in swearing to a truth. They
therefore must needs most horribly sin that swear to confirm their jests and lies;
and, as they think, the better to beautify their foolish talking.
WISE. They sin with a high hand; for they presume to imagine that God is as wicked
as themselves, to wit, that he is an avoucher of lies to be true. For, as I said
before, to swear is to call God to witness; and to swear to a lie is to call God
to witness that that lie is true. This, therefore, must needs offend; for it puts
the highest affront upon the holiness and righteousness of God, therefore his wrath
must sweep them away (Zech 5:3). This kind of swearing is put in with lying, and
killing, and stealing, and committing adultery; and therefore must not go unpunished
(Jer 7:9; Hosea 4:2,3). For if God 'will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name
in vain,' which a man may do when he swears to a truth, as I have showed before,
how can it be imagined that he should hold such guiltless, who, by swearing, will
appeal to God for lies that be not true, or that swear out of their frantic and bedlam
madness. It would grieve and provoke a sober man to wrath, if one should swear to
a notorious lie, and avouch that that man would attest it for a truth; and yet thus
do men deal with the holy God. They tell their jestings, tales, and lies, and then
swear by God that they are true. Now, this kind of swearing was as common with young
Badman, as it was to eat when he was an hungered, or to go to bed when it was night.
ATTEN. I have often mused in my mind, what it should be that should make men so common
in the use of the sin of swearing, since those that be wise will believe them never
the sooner for that.
WISE. It cannot be anything that is good, you may be sure; because the thing itself
is abominable. 1. Therefore it must be from the promptings of the spirit of the devil
within them. 2. Also it flows sometimes from hellish rage, when the tongue hath set
on fire of hell even the whole course of nature (James 3:6-9). 3. But commonly, swearing
flows from that daring boldness that biddeth defiance to the law that forbids it.
4. Swearers think, also, that by their belching of their blasphemous oaths out of
their black and polluted mouths, they show themselves the more valiant men. 5. And
imagine also, that by these outrageous kind of villainies, they shall conquer those
that at such a time they have to do with, and make them believe their lies to be
true. 6. They also swear frequently to get gain thereby, and when they meet with
fools they overcome them this way. But if I might give advice in this matter, no
buyer should lay out one farthing with him that is a common swearer in his calling;
especially with such an oath-master that endeavoureth to swear away his commodity
to another, and that would swear his chapman's money into his own pocket.
ATTEN. All these causes of swearing, so far as I can perceive, flow from the same
root as do the oaths themselves, even from a hardened and desperate heart. But, pray,
show me now how wicked cursing is to be distinguished from this kind of swearing.
WISE. Swearing, as I said, hath immediately to do with the name of God, and it calls
upon him to be witness to the truth of what is said; that is, if they that swear,
swear by him. Some, indeed, swear by idols, as by the mass, by our lady, by saints,
beasts, birds, and other creatures;[20] but the usual way of our profane ones in
England is to swear by God, Christ, faith, and the like. But, however, or by whatever
they swear, cursing is distinguished from swearing thus.
To curse, to curse profanely, it is to sentence another or ourself, for or to evil;
or to wish that some evil might happen to the person or thing under the curse unjustly.
It is to sentence for or to evil, that is, without a cause. Thus Shimei cursed David;
he sentenced him for and to evil unjustly, when he said to him, 'Come out, come out,
thou bloody man, and thou man of Belial. The Lord hath returned upon thee all the
blood of the house of Saul, in whose stead thou hast reigned, and the Lord hath delivered
the kingdom into the hand of Absalom thy son; and, behold, thou art taken in thy
mischief, because thou art a bloody man' (2 Sam 16:7,8).
This David calls 'a grievous curse.' 'And behold,' saith he to Solomon his son, 'thou
hast with thee Shimei, - a Benjamite, - which cursed me with a grievous curse in
the day when I went to Mahanaim' (1 Kings 2:8).
But what was this curse? Why, First, It was a wrong sentence past upon David; Shimei
called him bloody man, man of Belial, when he was not. Secondly, He sentenced him
to the evil that at present was upon him for being a bloody man, that is, against
the house of Saul, when that present evil overtook David for quite another thing.
And we may thus apply it to the profane ones of our times, who in their rage and
envy have little else in their youths but a sentence against their neighbour for
and to evil unjustly. How common is it with many, when they are but a little offended
with one, to cry, Hang him, Damn him, Rogue! This is both a sentencing of him for
and to evil, and is in itself a grievous curse.
2. The other kind of cursing is to wish that some evil might happen to, and overtake
this or that person or thing. And this kind of cursing Job counted a grievous sin.
'Neither have I suffered [says he] my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soul';
or consequently to body or estate (Job 31:30). This then is a wicked cursing, to
wish that evil might either befall another or ourselves. And this kind of cursing
young Badman accustom himself unto. 1. He would wish that evil might befall others;
he would wish their necks broken, or that their brains were out, or that the pox
or plague was upon them, and the like; all which is a devilish kind of cursing, and
is become one of the common sins of our age. 2. He would also as often wish a curse
to himself, saying, Would I might be hanged, or burned, or that the devil might fetch
me, if it be not so, or the like. We count the Damn-me-blades to be great swearers,
but when in their hellish fury they say, God damn me, God perish me, or the like,
they rather curse than swear; yea, curse themselves, and that with a wish that damnation
might light upon themselves; which wish and curse of theirs in a little time they
will see accomplished upon them, even in hell fire, if they repent them not of their
sins.
ATTEN. But did this young Badman accustom himself to such filthy kind of language?
WISE. I think I may say that nothing was more frequent in his mouth, and that upon
the least provocation. Yea, he was so versed in such kind of language, that neither
father, nor mother, nor brother, nor sister, nor servant, no, nor the very cattle
that his father had, could escape these curses of his. I say that even the brute
beasts, when he drove them or rid upon them, if they pleased not his humour, they
must be sure to partake of his curse. He would wish their necks broke, their legs
broke, their guts out, or that the devil might fetch them, or the like; and no marvel,
for he that is so hardy to wish damnation or other bad curses to himself, or dearest
relations, will not stick to wish evil to the silly beast in his madness.
ATTEN. Well, I see still that this Badman was a desperate villain. But pray, Sir,
since you have gone thus far, now show me whence this evil of cursing ariseth, and
also what dishonour it bringeth to God; for I easily discern that it doth bring damnation
to the soul.
WISE. This evil of cursing ariseth in general from the desperate wickedness of the
heart, but particularly from, 1. Envy, which is, as I apprehend, the leading sin
to witchcraft. 2. It also ariseth from pride, which was the sin of the fallen angels.
3. It ariseth too, from scorn and contempt of others. 4. But for a man to curse himself,
must needs arise from desperate madness (Job 15; Eccl 7:22).
The dishonour that it bringeth to God is this. It taketh away from him his authority,
in whose power it is only to bless and curse; not to curse wickedly, as Mr. Badman,
but justly and righteously, giving by his curse, to those that are wicked, the due
reward of their deeds.
Besides, these wicked men, in their wicked cursing of their neighbour, &c., do
even curse God himself in his handiwork (James 3:9). Man is God's image, and to curse
wickedly the image of God is to curse God himself. Therefore as when men wickedly
swear, they rend, and tear God's name, and make him, as much as in them lies, the
avoucher and approver of all their wickedness; so he that curseth and condemneth
in this sort his neighbour, or that wisheth him evil, curseth, condemneth, and wisheth
evil to the image of God, and, consequently judgeth and condemneth God himself. Suppose
that a man should say with his mouth, I wish that the king's picture was burned;
would not this man's so saying render him as an enemy to the person of the king?
Even so it is with them that, by cursing, wish evil to their neighbour, or to themselves,
they contemn the image, even the image of God himself.
ATTEN. But do you think that the men that do thus, do think that they do so vilely,
so abominably?
WISE. The question is not what men do believe concerning their sin, but what God's
Word says of it. If God's Word says that swearing and cursing are sins, though men
should count them for virtues, their reward will be a reward for sin, to wit, the
damnation of the soul. To curse another, and to swear vainly and falsely, are sins
against the light of nature. 1. To curse is so, because whoso curseth another, knows
that at the same time he would not be so served himself. 2. To swear also is a sin
against he same law; for nature will tell me that I should not lie, and therefore
much less swear to confirm it. Yea, the heathens have looked upon swearing to be
a solemn ordinance of God, and therefore not to be lightly or vainly used by men,
though to confirm a matter of truth (Gen 31:43-55).
ATTEN. But I wonder, since cursing and swearing are such evils in the eyes of God,
that he doth not make some examples to others, for their committing such wickedness.
WISE. Alas! so he has, a thousand times twice told, as may be easily gathered by
any observing people in every age and country. I could present you with several myself;
but waving the abundance that might be mentioned, I will here present you with two.
One was that dreadful judgment of God upon one N. P. at Wimbleton in Surrey; who,
after a horrible fit of swearing at and cursing of some persons that did not please
him, suddenly fell sick, and in little time died raving, cursing, and swearing.
But above all, take that dreadful story of Dorothy Mately, an inhabitant of Ashover,
in the county of Derby. This Dorothy Mately, saith the relater, was noted by the
people of the town to be a great swearer, and curser, and liar, and thief; just like
Mr. Badman. And the labour that she did usually follow was to wash the rubbish that
came forth of the lead mines, and there to get sparks of lead ore; and her usual
way of asserting of things was with these kind of imprecations: I would I might sink
into the earth if it be not so; or, I would God would make the earth open and swallow
me up. Now upon the 23d of March, 1660, this Dorothy was washing of ore upon the
top of a steep hill, about a quarter of a mile from Ashover, and was there taxed
by a lad for taking of two single pence out of his pocket, for he had laid his breeches
by, and was at work in his drawers; but she violently denied it; wishing that the
ground might swallow her up if she had them: she also used the same wicked words
on several other occasions that day.
Now one George Hodgkinson, of Ashover, a man of good report there, came accidentally
by where this Dorothy was, and stood still awhile to talk with her, as she was washing
her ore; there stood also a little child by her tub-side, and another a distance
form her, calling aloud to her to come away; wherefore the said George took the girl
by the hand to lead her away to her that called her: but behold, they had not gone
above ten yards from Dorothy, but they heard her crying out for help; so looking
back, he saw the woman, and her tub, and sieve twirling round, and sinking into the
ground. Then said the man, Pray to God to pardon thy sin, for thou are never like
to be seen alive any longer. So she and her tub twirled round and round, till they
sunk about three yards into the earth, and then for a while staid. Then she called
for help again; thinking, as she said, she should stay there. Now the man, though
greatly amazed, did begin to think which way to help her; but immediately a great
stone which appeared in the earth, fell upon her head, and broke her skull, and then
the earth fell in upon her, and covered her. She was afterwards digged up, and found
about four yards within ground, with the boy's two single pence in her pocket, but
her tub and sieve could not be found.
ATTEN. You bring to my mind a sad story, the while I will relate unto you. The thing
is this:–About a bow-shot from where I once dwelt, there was a blind ale-house,[21]
and the man that kept it had a son, whose name was Edward. This Edward was, as it
were, a half fool, both in his words and manner of behaviour. To this blind ale-house
certain jovial companions would once or twice a week come, and this Ned, for so they
called him, his father would entertain his guests withal; to wit, by calling for
him to make them sport by his foolish words and gestures. So when these boon blades
came to this man's house, the father would call for Ned. Ned, therefore, would come
forth; and the villain was devilishly addicted to cursing, yea, to cursing his father
and mother, and any one else that did cross him. And because, though he was a half
fool, he saw that his practice was pleasing, he would do it with the more audaciousness.
Well, when these brave fellows did come at their times to this tippling-house, as
they cal lit, to fuddle and make merry, then must Ned be called out; and because
his father was best acquainted with Ned, and best knew how to provoke him, therefore
he would usually ask him such questions, or command him such business, as would be
sure to provoke him indeed. Then would he, after his foolish manner, curse his father
most bitterly; at which the old man would laugh, and so would the rest of the guests,
as at that which pleased them best, still continuing to ask that Ned still might
be provoked to curse, that they might still be provoked to laugh. This was the mirth
with which the old man did use to entertain his guests.
The curses wherewith this Ned did use to curse his father, and at which the old man
would laugh, were these, and such like; the devil take you–the devil fetch you; he
would also wish him plagues and destructions many. Well, so it came to pass, through
the righteous judgment of God, that Ned's wishes and curses were in a little time
fulfilled upon his father; for not many months passed between them after this manner,
but the devil did indeed take him, possess him, and also in a few days carried him
out of this world by death; I say Satan did take him and possess him; I mean, so
it was judged by those that knew him, and had to do with him in that his lamentable
condition. He could feel him like a live thing go up and down in his body; but when
tormenting time was come, as he had often tormenting fits, then he would lie like
an hard bump in the soft place of his chest, I mean I saw it so, and so would rent
and tear him, and make him roar till he died away.
I told you before that I was an ear and eye-witness of what I here say; and so I
was. I have heard Ned in his roguery cursing his father, and his father laughing
thereat most heartily; still provoking of Ned to curse, that his mirth might be increased.
I saw his father also, when he was possessed, I saw him in one of his fits, and saw
his flesh, as it was thought, by the devil gathered up on a heap, about the bigness
of half an egg, to the unutterable torture and affliction of the old man. There was
also one Freeman, who was more than an ordinary doctor, sent for, to cast out this
devil; and I was there when he attempted to do it; the manner thereof was this:–They
had the possessed into an out-room, and laid him on his belly upon a form, with his
head hanging over the form's end. Then they bound him down thereto; which done, they
set a pan of coals under his mouth, and put something therein which made a great
smoke; by this means, as it was said, to fetch out the devil. There, therefore, they
kept the man till he was almost smothered in the smoke, but no devil came out of
him; at which Freeman was somewhat abashed, the man greatly afflicted, and I made
to go away wondering and fearing.[22] In a little time, therefore, that which possessed
the man, carried him out of the world, according to the cursed wishes of his son.
And this was the end of this hellish mirth.
WISE. These were all sad judgments.
ATTEN. These were dreadful judgments indeed.
WISE. Ay, and they look like the threatening of that text, though chiefly it concerned
Judas, 'As he loved cursing, so let it come unto him; as he delighteth not in blessing,
so let it be far from him. As he clothed himself with cursing, like as with a garment,
so let it come into his bowels like water, and like oil into his bones' (Psa 109:17,18).
ATTEN. It is a fearful thing for youth to be trained up in a way of cursing and swearing.
WISE. Trained up in them! that I cannot say Mr. Badman was, for his father hath ofttimes
in my hearing bewailed the badness of his children, and of this naughty boy in particular.
I believe that the wickedness of his children made him, in the thoughts of it, go
many a night with heavy heart to bed, and with as heavy a one to rise in the morning.
But all was one to his graceless son, neither wholesome counsel, nor fatherly sorrow,
would make him mend his manners.
There are some indeed that do train up their children to swear, curse, lie, and steal,
and great is the misery of such poor children whose hard hap it is to be ushered
into the world by, and to be under the tuition too of such ungodly parents. It had
been better for such parents had they not begat them, and better for such children
had they not been born. O! methinks for a father or a mother to train up a child
in that very way that leadeth to hell and damnation, what things so horrible! But
Mr. Badman was not by his parents so brought up.
ATTEN. But methinks, since this young Badman would not be ruled at home, his father
should have tried what good could have been done of him abroad, by putting him out
to some man of his acquaintance, that he knew to be able to command him, and to keep
him pretty hard to some employ; so should he, at least, have been prevented of time
to do those wickednesses that could not be done without time to do them in.
CHAPTER III.
[BADMAN'S APPRENTICESHIP TO A PIOUS MASTER.]
WISE. Alas! his father did so; he put him out betimes to one of his own acquaintance,
and entreated him of all love that he would take care of his son, and keep him for
extravagant ways. His trade also was honest and commodious; he had besides a full
employ therein, so that this young Badman had no vacant seasons nor idle hours yielded
him by his calling, therein to take opportunities to do badly; but all was one to
him, as he had begun to be vile in his father's house, even so he continued to be
when he was in the house of his master.
ATTEN. I have known some children, who, though they have been very bad at home, yet
have altered much when they have been put out abroad; especially when they have fallen
into a family where the governors thereof have made conscience of maintaining of
the worship and service of God therein; but perhaps that might be wanting in Mr.
Badman's master's house.
WISE. Indeed some children do greatly mend when put under other men's roofs; but,
as I said, this naughty boy did not so; nor did his badness continue because he wanted
a master that both could and did correct it. For his master was a very good man,
a very devout person; one that frequented the best soul means, that set up the worship
of God in his family, and also that walked himself thereafter. He was also a man
very meek and merciful, one that did never over- drive young Badman in business,
nor that kept him at it at unseasonable hours.
ATTEN. Say you so! This is rare. I for my part can see but few that can parallel,
in these things, with Mr. Badman's master.
WISE. Nor I neither, yet Mr. Badman had such an one; for, for the most part, masters
are now-a-days such as mind nothing but their worldly concerns, and if apprentices
do but answer their commands therein, soul and religion may go whither they will.
Yea, I much fear that there have been many towardly lads put out by their parents
to such masters, that have quite undone them as to the next world.
ATTEN. The more is the pity. But, pray, now you have touched upon this subject, show
me how many ways a master may be the ruin of his poor apprentice.
WISE. Nay, I cannot tell you of all the ways, yet some of them I will mention. Suppose,
then, that a towardly lad be put to be an apprentice with one that is reputed to
be a godly man, yet that lad may be ruined many ways; that is, if his master be not
circumspect in all things that respect both God and man, and that before his apprentice.
1. If he be not moderate in the use of his apprentice; if he drives him beyond his
strength; if he holds him to work at unseasonable hours; if he will not allow him
convenient time to read the Word, to pray, &c. This is the way to destroy him;
that is, in those tender beginning of good thoughts, and good beginnings about spiritual
things.
2. If he suffers his house to be scattered with profane and wicked books, such as
stir up to lust, to wantonness, such as teach idle, wanton, lascivious discourse,
and such as have a tendency to provoke to profane drollery and jesting; and lastly,
such as tend to corrupt and pervert the doctrine of faith and holiness. All these
things will eat as doth a canker, and will quickly spoil, in youth, &c. those
good beginnings that may be putting forth themselves in them.
3. If there be a mixture of servants, that is, if some very bad be in the same place,
that is a way also to undo such tender lads; for they that are bad and sordid servants
will be often, and they have an opportunity too, to be distilling and fomenting of
their profane and wicked words and tricks before them, and these will easily stick
in the flesh and minds of youth, to the corrupting of them.
4. If the master have one guise for abroad, and another for home; that is, if his
religion hangs by in his house as his cloak does, and he be seldom in it, except
he be abroad; this young beginners will take notice of, and stumble at. We say, hedges
have eyes, and little pitchers have ears;[23] and, indeed, children make a greater
inspection into the lives of fathers, masters, &c., than ofttimes they are aware
of. And therefore should masters be careful, else they may so destroy good beginnings
in their servants.
5. If the master be unconscionable in his dealing, and trades with lying words; or
if bad commodities be avouched to be good, or if he seeks after unreasonable gain,
or the like; his servant sees it, and it is enough to undo him. Eli's sons being
bad before the congregation, made men despise the sacrifices of the Lord (1 Sam 2).
But these things, by the by, only they may serve for a hint to masters to take heed
that they take not apprentices to destroy their souls. But young Badman had none
of these hindrances; his father took care, and provided well for him, as to this.
He had a good master, he wanted not good books, nor good instruction, nor good sermons,
nor good examples, no nor good fellow-servants neither; but all would not do.
ATTEN. It is a wonder that in such a family, amidst so many spiritual helps, nothing
should take hold of his heart! What! not good books, nor good instructions, nor good
sermons, nor good examples, nor good fellow-servants, nor nothing do him good!
WISE. You talk, he minded none of these things; nay, all these were abominable to
him. 1. For good books, they might lie in his master's house till they rotted from
him, he would not regard to look into them; but contrariwise, would get all the bad
and abominable books that he could, as beastly romances, and books full of ribaldry,
even such as immediately tended to set all fleshly lusts on fire.[24] True, he durst
not be known to have any of these to his master; therefore would he never let them
be seen by him, but would keep them in close places, and peruse them at such times
as yielded him fit opportunities thereto.
2. For good instruction, he liked that much as he liked good books; his care was
to hear but little thereof, and to forget what he heard as soon as it was spoken.
Yea, I have heard some that knew him then say, that one might evidently discern by
the show of his countenance and gestures that good counsel was to him like little
ease, even a continual torment to him; nor did he ever count himself at liberty but
when farthest off of wholesome words (Prov 15:12). He would hate them that rebuked
him, and count them his deadly enemies (Prov 9:8).
3. For good example, which was frequently set him by his master, both in religious
and civil matters, these young Badman would laugh at, and would also make a by-word
of them when he came in place where he with safety could.
4. His master indeed would make him go with him to sermons, and that here he thought
the best preachers were, but this ungodly young man, what shall I say, was, I think,
a master of art in all mischief, he had these wicked ways to hinder himself of hearing,
let the preacher thunder never so loud. 1. His way was, when come into the place
of hearing, to sit down in some corner and then to fall fast asleep. 2. Or else to
fix his adulterous eyes upon some beautiful object that was in the place, and so
all sermon-while therewith to be feeding of his fleshly lusts. 3. Or, if he could
get near to some that he had observed would fit his humour, he would be whispering,
giggling, and playing with them till such time as sermon was done.
ATTEN. Why! he was grown to a prodigious height of wickedness.
WISE. He was so, and that which aggravates all was, this was his practice as soon
as he was come to his master–he was as ready at all these things as if he had, before
he came to his master, served an apprenticeship to learn them.
ATTEN. There could not but be added, as you relate them, rebellion to his sin. Methinks
it is as if he had said, I will not hear, I will not regard, I will not mind good,
I will not mend, I will not turn, I will not be converted.
WISE. You say true, and I know not to whom more fitly to compare him than to that
man who, when I myself rebuked him or his wickedness, in this great huff replied,
What would the devil do for company if it was not for such as I?
ATTEN. Why, did you ever hear any man say so?
WISE. Yes, that I did, and this young Badman was as like him as an egg is like an
egg. Alas! the Scripture makes mention of many that by their actions speak the same,
'They say unto God, Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways'
(Job 21:14). Again, 'They refused to hearken, and pulled away the shoulder, and stopped
their ears. Yea, they make their hearts' hard 'as an adamant- stone, lest they should
hear the law, and the words which the Lord of hosts hath sent' (Zech 7:11,12). What
are all these but such as Badman, and such as the young man but now mentioned? That
young man was my play-fellow when I was solacing myself in my sins; I may make mention
of him to my shame, but he has a great many fellows.
ATTEN. Young Badman was like him indeed, and he trod his steps as if his wickedness
had been his very copy: I mean as to his desperateness, for had he not been a desperate
one he would never have made you such a reply when you was rebuking of him for his
sin. But when did you give him such a rebuke?
WISE. A while after God had parted him and I, by calling of me, as I hope, by his
grace, still leaving him in his sins; and so far as I could ever gather, as he lived,
so he died, even as Mr. Badman did; but we will leave him and return again to our
discourse.
ATTEN. Ha! poor obstinate sinners! Do they think that God cannot be even with them?
WISE. I do not know what they think, but I know that God hath said, 'That as he cried,
and they would not hear; so they cried and I would not hear, saith the Lord' (Zech
7:13). Doubtless there is a time coming when Mr. Badman will cry for this.
ATTEN. But I wonder that he should be so expert in wickedness so soon! Alas, he was
but a stripling, I suppose he was as yet not twenty.
WISE. No, nor eighteen either; but, as with Ishmael, and with the children that mocked
the prophet, the seeds of sin did put forth themselves betimes in him (Gen 21:9,10;
2 Kings 2:23,24).
ATTEN. Well, he was as wicked a young man as commonly one shall hear of.
WISE. You will say so when you know all.
ATTEN. All, I think, here is a great all; but if there is more behind, pray let us
hear it.
WISE. Why then, I will tell you, that he had not been with his master much above
a year and a half, but he came acquainted with three young villains, who here shall
be nameless, that taught him to add to his sin much of like kind, and he as aptly
received their instructions. One of them was chiefly given to uncleanness, another
to drunkenness, and the third to purloining, or stealing from his master.
ATTEN. Alas! poor wretch, he was bad enough before, but these, I suppose, made him
much worse.
WISE. That they made him worse you may be sure of, for they taught him to be an arch,
a chief one in all their ways.
ATTEN. It was an ill hap that he ever came acquainted with them.
WISE. You must rather word it thus–it was the judgment of God that he did, that is,
he came acquainted with them through the anger of God. He had a good master, and
before him a good father; by these he had good counsel given him for months and years
together, but his heart was set upon mischief, he loved wickedness more than to do
good, even until his iniquity came to be hateful, therefore, from the anger of God
it was that these companions of his and he did at last so acquaint together. Says
Paul, 'They did not like to retain God in their knowledge'; and what follows? wherefore
'God gave them over,' or up to their own hearts' lusts (Rom 1:28). And again, 'As
for such as turn aside unto their crooked ways, the Lord shall lead them forth with
the workers of iniquity' (Psa 125:5). This therefore was God's hand upon him, that
he might be destroyed, be damned, 'because he received not the love of the truth
that he might be saved' (2 Thess 2:10). He chose his delusions and deluders for him,
even the company of base men, of fools, that he might be destroyed (Prov 12:20).
ATTEN. I cannot but think indeed that it is a great judgment of God for a man to
be given up to the company of vile men; for what are such but the devil's decoys,
even those by whom he draws the simple into his net? A whoremaster, a drunkard, a
thief, what are they but the devil's baits by which he catcheth others?
WISE. You say right; but this young Badman was no simple one, if by simple you mean
one uninstructed; for he had often good counsel given him; but, if by simple you
mean him that is a fool as to the true knowledge of, and faith in Christ, then he
was a simple one indeed; for he chose death rather than life, and to live in continual
opposition to God, rather than to be reconciled unto him; according to that saying
of the wise man, 'The fools hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of the Lord'
(Prov 1:29). And what judgment more dreadful can a fool be given up to, than to be
delivered into the hands of such men, that have skill to do nothing but to ripen
sin, and hasten its finishing unto damnation? And, therefore, men should be afraid
of offending God, because he can in this manner punish them for their sins. I knew
a man that once was, as I though, hopefully awakened about his condition; yea, I
knew two that were so awakened, but in time they began to draw back, and to incline
again to their lusts; wherefore, God gave them up to the company of three or four
men, that in less than three years' time, brought them roundly to the gallows, where
they were hanged like dogs, because they refused to live like honest men.
ATTEN. But such men do not believe that thus to be given up of God is in judgment
and anger; they rather take it to be their liberty, and do count it their happiness;
they are glad that their cord is loosed, and that the reins are on their neck; they
are glad that they may sin without control, and that they may choose such company
as can make them more expert in an evil way.
WISE. Their judgment is, therefore, so much the greater, because thereto is added
blindness of mind, and hardness of heart in a wicked way. They are turned up to the
way of death, but must not see to what place they are going. They must go as the
ox to the slaughter, 'and as a fool to the correction of the stocks, till a dart
strike through his liver,' not knowing 'that it is for his life' (Prov 7:22,23).
This, I say, makes their judgment double; they are given up of God for a while, to
sport themselves with that which will assuredly make them 'mourn at the last, when
their flesh and their body are consumed' (Prov 5:11). These are those that Peter
speaks, that shall utterly perish in their own corruptions; these, I say, who 'count
it pleasure to riot in the day-time,' and that sport 'themselves with their own deceivings,'
are 'as natural brute beasts, made to be taken and destroyed' (2 Peter 2:12,13).
ATTEN. Well, but I pray now concerning these three villains that were young Badman's
companions; tell me more particularly how he carried it then.
WISE. How he carried it? why, he did as they. I intimated so much before, when I
said they made him an arch,[25] a chief one in their ways.
First, he became a frequenter of taverns and tippling- houses, and would stay there
until he was even as drunk as a beast. And if it was so that he could not get out
by day, he would, be sure, get out by night. Yea, he became so common a drunkard
at last, that he was taken notice of to be a drunkard even by all.
ATTEN. This was swinish, for drunkenness is so beastly a sin, a sin so much against
nature, that I wonder that any that have but the appearance of men can give up themselves
to so beastly, yea, worse than beastly, a thing.
WISE. It is a swinish vanity indeed. I will tell you another story. There was a gentleman
that had a drunkard to be his groom, and coming home one night very much abused with
beer, his master saw it. Well, quoth his master within himself, I will let thee alone
to night, but to-morrow morning I will convince thee that thou art worse than a beast
by the behaviour of my horse. So, when morning was come, he bids his man go and water
his horse, and so he did; but, coming up to his master, he commands him to water
him again; so the fellow rode into the water the second time, but his master's horse
would now drink no more, so the fellow came up and told his master. Then, said his
master, thou drunken sot, thou art far worse than my horse; he will drink but to
satisfy nature, but thou wilt drink to the abuse of nature; he will drink but to
refresh himself, but thou to thy hurt and damage; he will drink that he may be more
serviceable to his master, but thou till thou art incapable of serving either God
or man. O thou beast, how much art thou worse than the horse that thou ridest on!
ATTEN. Truly, I think that his master served him right; for, in doing as he did,
he showed him plainly, as he said, that he had not so much government of himself
as his horse had of himself; and, consequently, that his beast did live more according
to the law of his nature by far than did his man. But, pray, go on with what you
have further to say.
WISE. Why, I say, that there are four things, which, if they were well considered,
would make drunkenness to be abhorred in the thoughts of the children of men. 1.
It greatly tendeth to impoverish and beggar a man. 'The drunkard,' says Solomon,
'shall come to poverty' (Prov 23:21). Many that have begun the world with plenty,
have gone out of it in rags, through drunkenness. Yea, many children that have been
born to good estates, have yet been brought to a flail and a rake, through this beastly
sin of their parents. 2. This sin of drunkenness it bringeth upon the body many,
great, and incurable diseases, by which men do, in little time, come to their end,
and none can help them. So, because they are overmuch wicked, therefore they die
before their time (Eccl 7:17). 3. Drunkenness is a sin that is oftentimes attended
with abundance of other evils. 'Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who hath contentions?
Who hath babbling? Who hath wounds without cause? Who hath redness of eyes? They
that tarry long at the wine, they that go to seek mixed wine'; that is, the drunkard
(Prov 23:29,30). 4. By drunkenness, men do oftentimes shorten their days; go out
of the ale-house drunk, and break their necks before they come home. Instances, not
a few, might be given of this, but this is so manifest a man need say nothing.
ATTEN. But that which is worse than all is, it also prepares men for everlasting
burnings (1 Cor 6:10).
WISE. Yea, and it so stupefies and besots the soul, that a man that is far gone in
drunkenness is hardly ever recovered to God. Tell me, when did you see an old drunkard
converted? No, no, such an one will sleep till he dies, though he sleeps on the top
of a mast; let his dangers be never so great, and death and damnation never so near,
he will not be awaked out of his sleep (Prov 23:34,35). So that if a man have any
respect either to credit, health, life, or salvation, he will not be a drunken man.
But the truth is, where this sin gets the upper hand, men are, as I said before,
so intoxicated and bewitched with the seeming pleasures and sweetness thereof, that
they have neither heart nor mind to think of that which is better in itself; and
would, if embraced, do them good.
ATTEN. You said that drunkenness tends to poverty, yet some make themselves rich
by drunken bargains.
WISE. I said so, because the Word says so. And as to some men's getting thereby,
that is indeed but rare and base; yea, and base will be the end of such gettings.
The Word of God is against such ways, and the curse of God will be the end of such
doings. An inheritance may sometimes thus be hastily gotten at the beginning, but
the end thereof shall not be blessed. Hark what the prophet saith, 'Woe to him that
coveteth an evil covetousness, that he may set his nest on high' (Hab 2:5,9-12,15).
Whether he makes drunkenness, or ought else, the engine and decoy to get it; for
that man doth but consult the shame of his own house, the spoiling of his family,
and the damnation of his soul; for that which he getteth by working of iniquity is
but a getting by the devices of hell; therefore he can be no gainer neither for himself
or family, that gains by an evil course. But this was one of the sins that Mr. Badman
was addicted to after he came acquainted with these three fellows, nor could all
that his master could do break him off this beastly sin.
ATTEN. But where, since he was but an apprentice, could he get money to follow this
practice; for drunkenness, as you have intimated, is a very costly sin.
WISE. His master paid for all. For, as I told you before, as he learned of these
three villains to be a beastly drunkard, so he learned of them to pilfer and steal
from his master. Sometimes he would sell off his master's goods, but keep the money,
that is, when he could; also, sometimes he would beguile his master by taking out
of his cash box; and when he could do neither of these, he would convey away of his
master's wares, what he thought would be least missed, and send or carry them to
such and such houses, where he knew they would be laid up to his use; and then appoint
set times there, to meet and make merry with these fellows.
ATTEN. This was as bad, nay, I think, worse than the former; for by thus doing he
did not only run himself under the wrath of God, but has endangered the undoing of
his master and his family.
WISE. Sins go not alone, but follow one the other as do the links of a chain; he
that will be a drunkard, must have money, either of his own or of some other man's;
either of his father's, mother's, master's, or at the highway, or some way.
ATTEN. I fear that many an honest man is undone by such kind of servants.
WISE. I am of the same mind with you, but this should make the dealer the more wary
what kind of servants he keeps, and what kind of apprentices he takes. It should
also teach him to look well to his shop himself; also to take strict account of all
things that are bought and sold by his servants. The master's neglect herein may
embolden his servant to be bad, and may bring him too in short time to rags and a
morsel of bread.
ATTEN. I am afraid that there is much of this kind of pilfering among servants in
these bad days of ours.
WISE. Now while it is in my mind, I will tell you a story. When I was in prison,
there came a woman to me that was under a great deal of trouble.[26] So I asked her,
she being a stranger to me, what she had to say to me. She said she was afraid she
should be damned. I asked her the cause of those fears. She told me that she had,
some time since, lived with a shopkeeper at Wellingborough, and had robbed his box
in the shop several times of money, to the value of more than now I will say; and
pray, says she, tell me what I shall do. I told her I would have her go to her master,
and make him satisfaction. She said she was afraid; I asked her, why? She said, she
doubted he would hang her. I told her that I would intercede for her life, and would
make use of other friends too to do the like; but she told me she durst not venture
that. Well, said I, shall I send to your master, while you abide out of sight, and
make your peace with him, before he sees you; and with that I asked her her master's
name. But all that she said, in answer to this, was, Pray let it alone till I come
to you again. So away she went, and neither told me her master's name nor her own.
This is about ten or twelve years since, and I never saw her again. I tell you this
story for this cause; to confirm your fears that such kind of servants too many there
be; and that God makes them sometimes like old Tod, of whom mention was made before,
through the terrors that he lays upon them, to betray themselves.
I could tell you of another, that came to me with a like relation concerning herself,
and the robbing of her mistress; but at this time let this suffice.
ATTEN. But what was that other villain addicted to; I mean young Badman's third companion.
WISE. Uncleanness; I told you before, but it seems you forgot.
ATTEN. Right, it was uncleanness. Uncleanness is also a filthy sin.
WISE. It is so; and yet it is one of the most reigning sins in our day.[27]
ATTEN. So they say, and that too among those that one would think had more wit, even
among the great ones.
WISE. The more is the pity; for usually examples that are set by them that are great
and chief, spread sooner, and more universally, than do the sins of other men; yea,
and when such men are at the head in transgressing, sin walks with a bold face through
the land. As Jeremiah saith of the prophets, so may it be said of such, 'From them
is profaneness gone forth into all the land': that is, with bold and audacious face
(Jer 23:15).
ATTEN. But pray let us return again to Mr. Badman and his companions. You say one
of them was very vile in the commission of uncleanness.
WISE. Yes, so I say; not but that he was a drunkard and also thievish, but he was
most arch in this sin of uncleanness: this roguery was his masterpiece, for he was
a ringleader to them all in the beastly sin of whoredom. He was also best acquainted
with such houses where they were, and so could readily lead the rest of his gang
unto them. The strumpets also, because they knew this young villain, would at first
discover themselves in all their whorish pranks to those that he brought with him.
ATTEN. That is a deadly thing: I mean, it is a deadly thing to young men, when such
beastly queens shall, with words and carriages that are openly tempting, discover
themselves unto them; it is hard for such to escape their snare.
WISE. That is true, therefore the wise man's counsel is the best: 'Come not nigh
the door of her house' (Prov 5:8). For they are, as you say, very tempting, as is
seen by her in the Proverbs. 'I looked,' says the wise man, 'through my casement,
and behold among the simple ones I discerned a young man void of understanding, passing
through the street near her corner, and he went the way to her house, in the twilight,
in the evening, in the black and dark night. And, behold, there met him a women with
the attire of an harlot, and subtle of heart; she is loud and stubborn; her feet
abide not in her house; now is she without, now in the streets, and lieth in wait
at every corner. So she caught him, and kissed him, and, with an impudent face, said
unto him, I have peace-offerings with me; this day have I paid my vows. Therefore
came I forth to meet thee diligently to seek thy face, and I have found thee. I have
decked my bed with coverings of tapestry, with carved works, with fine linen of Egypt.
I have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon. Come, let us take our fill
of love until the morning; let us solace ourselves with loves' (Prov 7:6-18). Here
was a bold beast. And, indeed, the very eyes, hands, words, and ways of such, are
all snares and bands to youthful, lustful fellows. And with these was young Badman
greatly snared.
ATTEN. This sin of uncleanness is mightily cried out against both by Moses, the prophets,
Christ, and his apostles; and yet, as we see, for all that, how men run headlong
to it!
WISE. You have said the truth, and I will add, that God, to hold men back from so
filthy a sin, has set such a stamp of his indignation upon it, and commanded such
evil effects to follow it, that, were not they that use it bereft of all fear of
God, and love to their own health, they could not but stop and be afraid to commit
it. For besides the eternal damnation that doth attend such in the next world, for
these have no 'inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God' (Eph 5:5), the evil
effects thereof in this world are dreadful.
ATTEN. Pray show me some of them, that as occasion offereth itself, I may show them
to others for their good.
WISE. So I will. 1. It bringeth a man, as was said of the sin before, to want and
poverty; 'For by means of a whorish woman, a man is brought to a piece of bread'
(Prov 6:26). The reason is, for that a whore will not yield without hire; and men,
when the devil and lust is in them, and God and his fear far away from them, will
not stick, so they may accomplish their desire, to lay their signet, their bracelets,
and their staff to pledge, rather than miss of the fulfilling of their lusts (Gen
38:18). 2. Again, by this sin men diminish their strength, and bring upon themselves,
even upon the body a multitude of diseases. This King Lemuels' mother warned him
of. 'What, my son?' said she, 'and what the son of my womb? And what the son of my
vows? Give not thy strength unto women, nor thy ways to that which destroyeth kings'
(Prov 31:2,3). This sin is destructive to the body. Give me leave to tell you another
story. I have heard of a great man that was a very unclean person, and he had lived
so long in that sin that he had almost lost his sight. So his physicians were sent
for, to whom he told his disease; but they told him that they could do him no good,
unless he would forbear his women. Nay then, said he, farewell sweet sight. Whence
observe, that this sin, as I said, is destructive to the body; and also, that some
men be so in love therewith, that they will have it, though it destroy their body.[28]
ATTEN. Paul says also, that he that sins this sin, sins against his own body. But
what of that? He that will run the hazard of eternal damnation of his soul, but he
will commit this sin, will for it run the hazard of destroying his body. If young
Badman feared not the damnation of his soul, do you think that the consideration
of impairing of his body would have deterred him therefrom?
WISE. You say true. But yet, methinks, there are still such bad effects follow, often
upon the commission of it, that if men would consider them, it would put, at least,
a stop to their career therein.
ATTEN. What other evil effects attend this sin?
WISE. Outward shame and disgrace, and that in these particulars:–
First, There often follows this foul sin the foul disease, now called by us the pox.
A disease so nauseous and stinking, so infectious to the whole body, and so entailed
to this sin, that hardly are any common with unclean women, but they have more or
less a touch of it to their shame.
ATTEN. That is a foul disease indeed! I knew a man once that rotted away with it;
and another that had his nose eaten off, and his mouth almost quite sewed up thereby.
WISE. It is a disease, that where it is it commonly declares that the cause thereof
is uncleanness. It declares to all that behold such a man, that he is an odious,
a beastly, unclean person. This is that strange punishment that Job speaks of, that
is appointed to seize on these workers of iniquity (Job 31:1-3).
ATTEN. Then it seems you think, that the strange punishment that Job there speaks
of should be the foul disease.
WISE. I have thought so indeed, and that for this reason. We see that this disease
is entailed, as I may say, to this most beastly sin, nor is there any disease so
entailed to any other sin as this to this. That this is the sin to which the strange
punishment is entailed, you will easily perceive when you read the text. 'I made
a covenant with mine eyes,' said Job, 'why then should I think upon a maid? For what
portion of God is there,' for that sin, 'from above, and what inheritance of the
Almighty from on high?' And then he answers himself: 'Is not destruction to the wicked,
and a strange punishment to the workers of iniquity?' This strange punishment is
the pox. Also, I think that this foul disease is that which Solomon intends when
he saith, speaking of this unclean and beastly creature, 'A wound and dishonour shall
he get, and his reproach shall not be wiped away' (Prov 6:33). A punishment Job calls
it; a wound and dishonour Solomon calls it; and they both do set it as a remark upon
this sin; Job calling it a 'strange punishment,' and Solomon a 'reproach that shall
not be wiped away,' from them that are common in it.
ATTEN. What other things follow upon the commission of this beastly sin?
WISE. Why, oftentimes it is attended with murder, with the murder of the babe begotten
on the defiled bed. How common it is for the bastard-getter and bastard-bearer to
consent together to murder their children, will be better known at the day of judgment,
yet something is manifest now.
I will tell you another story. An ancient man, one of mine acquaintance, a man of
good credit in our country, had a mother that was a midwife, who was mostly employed
in laying great persons. To this woman's house, upon a time, comes a brave young
gallant on horseback, to fetch her to lay a young lady. So she addresses herself
to go with him, wherefore he takes her up behind him, and away they ride in the night.
Now they had not rid far, but the gentleman lit of his horse, and, taking the old
midwife in his arms from the horse, turned round with her several times, and then
set her up again, then he got up and away they went till they came at a stately house,
into which he had her, and so into a chamber where the young lady was in her pains.
He then bid the midwife do her office, and she demanded help, but he drew out his
sword, and told her if she did not make speed to do her office without, she must
look for nothing but death. Well, to be short, this old midwife laid the young lady,
and a fine sweet babe she had. Now there was made in a room hard by a very great
fire; so the gentleman took up the babe, went and drew the coals from the stock,
cast the child in and covered it up, and there was an end of that. So when the midwife
had done her work he paid her well for her pains, but shut her up in a dark room
all day, and when night came took her up behind him again, and carried her away till
she came almost at home, then he turned her round and round as he did before, and
had her to her house, set her down, bid her farewell, and away he went, and she could
never tell who it was. This story the midwife's son, who was a minister, told me,
and also protested that his mother told it him for a truth.
ATTEN. Murder doth often follow indeed, as that which is the fruit of this sin. But
sometimes God brings even these adulterers and adulteresses to shameful ends. I heard
of one, I think a doctor of physic, and his whore, who had three or four bastards
betwixt them and had murdered them all, but at last themselves were hanged for it,
in or near to Colchester. It came out after this manner,–the whore was so afflicted
in her conscience about it that she could not be quiet until she had made it known.
Thus God many times makes the actors of wickedness their own accusers, and brings
them, by their own tongues, to condign punishment for their own sins.
WISE. There has been many such instances, but we will let that pass. I was once in
the presence of a woman, a married woman, that lay sick of the sickness whereof she
died, and being smitten in her conscience for the sin of uncleanness, which she had
often committed with other men, I heard her, as she lay upon her bed, cry out thus,
I am a whore, and all my children are bastards, and I must go to hell for my sin,
and look, there stands the devil at my bed's feet to receive my soul when I die.
ATTEN. These are sad stories, tell no more of them now, but if you please show me
yet some other of the evil effects of this beastly sin.
WISE. This sin is such a snare to the soul, that, unless a miracle of grace prevents,
it unavoidably perishes in the enchanting and bewitching pleasures of it. This is
manifest by these and such like texts–'The adulteress will hunt for the precious
life' (Prov 6:26). 'Whoso committeth adultery with a woman lacketh understanding.
He that d