Classic Audiobook Collection - Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford ~ Full Audiobook [religion]
Episode Date: January 12, 2024Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford audiobook. Genre: religion Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford gathers the devotional writings of one of the English Reformation's most compelling voices.... Written in a plain, urgent style shaped by pastoral care and personal suffering, these meditations lead the listener through confession, repentance, gratitude, and steadfast trust in God's mercy. Bradford speaks as both teacher and fellow pilgrim, addressing the restless conscience, the fear of judgment, and the daily struggle to live faithfully amid uncertainty. The prayers are practical and intimate: petitions for humility, patience, purity of heart, and courage to endure hardship without bitterness. Interwoven throughout is Bradford's deep reliance on Scripture and his conviction that true comfort comes not from self-reliance, but from grace received and returned in worship. Whether approached as a daily companion, a guide for private prayer, or a historical window into persecuted Protestant devotion, this book offers a disciplined rhythm of self-examination and hope. Its central conflict is spiritual rather than external: the battle to surrender pride and anxiety, and to cultivate a life ordered toward God. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:08:31) Chapter 02 (00:10:10) Chapter 03 (00:14:46) Chapter 04 (00:21:47) Chapter 05 (00:29:41) Chapter 06 (00:36:12) Chapter 07 (00:42:25) Chapter 08 (00:49:00) Chapter 09 (01:04:43) Chapter 10 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Meditations and prayers by John Bradford
Meditation on the Lord's Supper
Jesus Emmanuel
This heavenly banquet wherewith thou dost witness thyself o sweet saviour
To be the bread of life,
Wherewith our souls are fed unto true and eternal life and immortality,
Grant me grace, so now to receive,
As may be to my singular joy and comfort.
The signs and symbols be bread and wine,
which are sanctified in thy body and blood to represent the invisible communion and fellowship of the same.
For as in baptism, thou, O God, dost regenerate us, and as it were, engraft us into the fellowship of thy church,
and by adoption make us thy children. So, as a good householder and father, thou dost afterwards minister meet
to nourish and continue us in that life whereunto thou, by thy word, has begotten us.
and truly, O Christ, thou art the food of the soul, and therefore our heavenly Father
giveth thee unto us, that we being refreshed in communicating of thee might be received into
immortality.
Now, because this mystery is of itself incomprehensible, thou dost exhibit and give unto us
a figure and image hereof in visible signs, yea, as though thou paitest down present earnest,
thou makest us so certain hereof as if with our eyes we saw it and this is the end wherefore thou didst institute this thy supper and banquet namely that it might confirm us as of thy body once so offered for us that we may feed on it and in feeding feel in us the efficacy and strength of thy one alone sacrifice so of thy blood once so shed for us that it is unto us a continual potion and drink according to the words of thy promise added
there, take eat, this is my body which is given for you. So that the body which was once offered
for our salvation, we are commanded to take and eat, that whilst we are partakers thereof,
we might be most assured the virtue of thy lively death is of force in us, whereof it cometh
that thou callest the cup, the testament or covenant in thy blood, for the covenant which thou once
has stricken with us in thy blood, thou dost, as it were, renew the same as concerning the confirmation
of our faith, so often as thou reach unto us this holy cup to drink of.
O wonderful consolation which cometh to the godly hearts by reason of this sacrament!
For here we have assured witness that thou, Christ, art so coupled unto us, and we so engrafted
in thee, that we are one body with thee, and whatsoever thou hast we may call it our own.
Boldly, therefore, we may boast that everlasting life, thine inheritance is ours, that the kingdom
of heaven, wherein too thou art entered, can no more be taken away from us or we from it,
than from thee or we from it, than from thee or thou from it. Again our sins can no more condemn
us than thee, for thou would they should be laid to thy charge as though they were thine.
This is a wonderful change which thou makest with us of thy unspeakable mercy. Thou wast made
the son of man with us, that we with thee might be made the sons of God. Thou came
us down from heaven unto earth to bring us from the earth into heaven. Thou tookest upon thee our
mortality, that thou mightest give us thy immortality. Thou tookest upon thee our weakness,
that thou mightest make us strong with thy strength, thou tookest on thee our poverty
to pour upon us thy plenty, thou tookest upon thee our unrighteousness, that thou mightest cloak us
with thy righteousness. O comfort of comforts, of all these things we have so assured a witness
in this sacrament that we ought without all wavering to be so sure that they are exhibit and given unto us,
as if with our corporal eyes we did see thee, O sweet Christ, present in visible form,
and with our very hands touched and handled thee, for this word cannot lure or beguile us,
take, eat, drink, this is my body which is given for you, this is my blood which is shed for the
forgiveness of your sins. In that thou biddest us take, thou would signify unto us that,
it is ours. In that thou biddest us eat, thou wouldst we should know that it is made one flesh with us.
In that thou sayest it is thy body given for us, thy blood shed for us, thou wouldst that we should
learn both to be not only thine now but also ours, for thou tookest and gave us both,
not for thy commodity but for ours. Grant therefore, good lord, that we may as be thankful to
thee forever, so diligently always to mark that the chiefest and almost the whole pith of the
sacrament consisteth in these words, which is given for you, which is shed for you.
For else it would little help us to have thy body and blood distributed now, except they had
been given for our redemption and salvation. By the bread and wine, therefore, they are
represented, that we might learn that they are not only ours, but also that they are
and appointed unto us for the seal of spiritual life.
Thus, good Lord, grant us thy grace to consider this sacrament, that we stick not in the
corporal things, and things which are object to our eyes, hands, taste, and feeling, as the
papists teach the people, whose eyes open and turn their hearts according to thy goodwill,
but that we may arise to the consideration of spiritual things hereby accordingly.
that is grant that we may deeply consider as bread nourisheth sustaineth and conserveth the life of this our body so thy body o christ is the only and alone food to quicken and make strong the soul as wine nourisheth refresheth confirmeth and cheereth the heart
so doth thy blood shed for us on the cross to the souls of all faithful receivers and users of this most holy sacrament grant good lord therefore
that I may truly consider and know the principal parts of the sacrament,
not to exhibit and give the body simply and without further consideration,
but rather to obsign and confirm that promise,
wherein as thou doth witness thy flesh to be food indeed,
and thy blood to be drink indeed,
by which we are fed unto everlasting life,
so thou affirmest thyself to be the bread of life,
whereof whoso eateth shall live forever.
And that this thing might be brought to pass,
thy sacrament doth send us to thy cross,
O Christ, where this promise indeed was performed, and most fully on all sides accomplished,
for we cannot to salvation feed on thee or eat thee, O Christ, except thou hast been crucified,
and this we do when, with lively sense, we apprehend and catch hold on the efficacy of thy death,
for though thou thou call thyself the bread of life, yet doth thou it not by reason of the
sacrament, but because there was such a one given to us from the father, and because thou didst give thyself
to such a one by taking part with us in our mortal nature, to make us partakers of thy divine
immortality, by offering thyself a sacrifice for us, to take thyself our malediction, and pitifully to pour
on us thy blessing, by swallowing up death by thy death, and by raising up to glory and
incorruption, this our corruptible flesh, which thou tookest on thee through thy resurrection.
So then it remaineth that we should apply all this unto us, and this we do as by thy gospel,
so no less but rather more clearly by thy holy supper where as thou offerest thyself unto us with all thy benefits
so we by faith receive the same grant me therefore to mark well that this sacrament is not the thing that maketh thee to begin to be the bread of life
but that this maketh thee so to us by making us to call to mind that thou wast made the bread of life
for us continually to feed on and by giving to us a taste and savour of that bread that we might feel the virtue of
same bread.
End of Section 1.
Section 2 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
A brief admonition written by Master Bradford in a New Testament of a friend of his.
This book is called Cermocrosis, the word of the cross, because the cross doth always
accompany it, so that, if you will be a student hereof, you must needs prepare your
to the cross, which you began to learn before you learned your alphabet. Footnote, the figure of a cross
was then and afterward prefixed to the alphabet for young persons. See, for instance, the primer in English
most necessary for the education of children. Wayland, no date, approximately 1539,
signature A8, copy British Museum, and Vr de Nare's Glossary, 5, Christ Cross, end footnote.
And Christ requires it of everyone that will be his disciple,
therein not swerving from the common trade of callings or vocations,
for no profession or kind of life wanteth his cross,
so that they are far overseen which think that the profession of the gospel,
which the devil most envieth, the world most hateeth, and the flesh most repineth at,
can be without a cross.
Let us therefore pray that God would enable us to take up our cross by denying ourselves,
A. Casere, from prison, 18th February 1555, John Bradford.
End of Section 2.
Section 3 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Prayer for the presence of God.
With white garments of innocency and righteousness and palms of victory in their hands.
O happy is he that may have but a sight of the immortal and incorruptible inheritance
Which these thy people shall enjoy forever
O, that it please thee O Father, as of thy mercy thou hast called me into thy company and communion of thy saints,
So of the same thy goodness thou wouldst give me to become likewise affected,
That in my heart I might cry as they do, and desire to be with thee,
not simply because of this prison and exile that I am in presently, but rather only because of thee,
and of love to thee.
Which love, I humbly pray thee, that art love itself, that thou wast right in my heart,
and graciously open thine eyes to the words of my mouth at this present, which I have
borrowed out of thy mouth by thy servants, saying, remember me, O Lord, according to the favor that thou
bearest unto thy people, O visit me with thy salvation, that I may see thee felicity of thy chosen,
and rejoice in the gladness of thy people and give thanks with thine inheritance.
O, give me the spirit of wisdom and revelation by the knowledge of thyself.
O, lighten the eyes of my mind, that I may know what the hope is whereunto thou
has called me, and how rich the glory is of thine inheritance upon thy saints,
and what is the exceeding greatness of thy power to thy people would which believe.
O, make me able to comprehend with thy saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height
of thy sweet mercy. That is that I may know the excellent love of the knowledge of Christ,
that I may be fulfilled with all fullness that cometh of thee.
O light in mine eyes that I sleep not into death, but send thy light unto me,
to lead and bring me into thy tabernacle, that I may believe to see the goodness of thee
in the land of the living. Or give me the spirit not of the world, but which is of thee,
that I may know the things which are given to us of God, which are such as the eye hath not
seen nor the ear have heard, nor the heart is able to conceive, for the light of the moon shall
be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold, even as the light of
seven days, in thy blessed kingdom, and when thou wilt bind up the wounds of thy people and heal
their plagues, or that I might have some lively sight hereof?
When shall I rejoice of an exchange for the immortal, the undefiled, and the inaccessible
inheritance, whereto thou hast called me, and dost keep for me?
me in heaven. When shall I hear the sweet songs of thy saved people, crying, salvation be to him
that sitteth in the throne of our God and to the Lamb? When shall I with the elders and the angels
sing and say, lords and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honour and power and might, be to thee
our God forever and ever? When shall I be covered with a white stowl and have a palm in my hand,
to stand before the throne, day and night, to serve thee in the temple, and to have thee to dwell in me?
when shall i hear thy great voice saying from heaven behold the tabernacle of god is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and god himself will be with them their god
O happy were they that now might have a little show of thine holy city New Jerusalem,
descending from heaven, prepared of the gracious God as a bride decked for her husband,
which thou showed us thy servant St. John.
This should I see if I were with him in the spirit, but this cannot be so long as I am in the flesh.
Or that the time will come that I might then put off this tavernacle in thy mercy,
that I might see this great sight which is felicity itself,
but herein I must do and will tarry thy good pleasure,
as I came not hither into this world when I would, but when thou wouldst,
even so, not when I will, but when thou wilt, take me hence in thy mercy.
In the mean season, as thy child conserve and keep me,
and further grant to me that being in this body, yet I may live not in the flesh but in the
spirit, now and then to have some little true taste of the pleasant dainties of thy house and
sanctuary, that all worldly pleasures may be unpleasant and unsavory to my eternal comfort
through Christ our Lord. Amen. End of Section 3. Section 4 of Meditations and Prayers by
John Bradford. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. A sweet contemplation of heaven
and heavenly things. O my soul, lift up thyself above thyself. Fly away in the
contemplation of heaven and heavenly things. Make not thy further abode in this inferior region,
where is nothing but travail and trials, and sorrow and woe, and wretchedness, and sin, and trouble,
and fear, and all deceiving and destroying vanities. Bend all thine affections upward,
unto the superior places where thy Redeemer liveth and reigneth, and where thy joys are laid up
in the treasury of his merits, which shall be made thy merits, his perfection, thy perfection,
and his death thy life eternal and his resurrection thy salvation.
Esteem not the trifling pleasures of this life to be the way to this wealth,
nor thy ignominious estate here to be any bar to prevent thee from the full use and joyful
fruition of the glory there prepared for thee.
I am assured that though I want here I have riches there, though I hunger here,
I have fullness there, though I faint here, I shall be refreshed there,
and though I be accounted here, and though I be accounted here,
a dead man, I shall there live in perpetual glory. That is the city promised to the captives
whom Christ shall make free. That is the kingdom assured to them whom Christ shall crown.
There are the joys prepared for them that mourn. There is the light that shall never go out.
There is the health that shall never be impaired. There is the glory that shall never be defaced.
There is the life that shall taste no death, and there is the portion that passeth all the world's
performant. There is the world that never shall wax worse. There is every want supplied freely
without money. There is no danger, but happiness and honour and singing and praise and thanksgiving
unto the heavenly Jehovah, to him that sitteth on the throne, to the lamb, that here was led to the
slaughter, that now reigneth, with whom I shall reign after I have run this comfortless race through
this miserable earthly veil. The honour in this earth is baseness, the riches of this world is poverty,
fullness of this life is want. The joys of this world's kingdom are sorrow and woe and misery
and sadness and grief. And yet the fool saith in his heart, there is no other heaven,
but this harmful deceiving world's happiness. No other hell, but this world's bitterness,
no better comfort than this world's cares, no further help than this world's wealth.
Thus is man's wisdom made foolishness and man's glory turned into shame, and man's power made of no
force, and the faithful poor that are here despised, they are advanced. The sorrowful are comforted,
and the castaways in this world are received to this blessed being, that cannot be expressed
with the tongues of man, nor conceived with the heart of man. Oh, that I had wings, sayeth heavenly-hearted
David, that I might fly away from this world's vanities, and possess heaven's happiness. Oh,
that I were dissolved, saith blessed Paul, that I might be with Christ. Oh, that I were in this place
of such wished happiness, where I might rest from these worldly labours and earthly miseries and
transitory vanities. But be not heavy, O my soul, though thou must yet wade under the burden of
these earthly troubles. For these heavenly mysteries are not seen of carnal eyes, nor can be
obtained by carnal means, but through troubles and afflictions and dangers and persecutions they must
be achieved, and none that our gods elected shall be free from this world's hatred. For such
difference is there between earth and heaven, and between earthly and heavenly things,
that whoso delighteth in the first shall be deprived of the latter.
For we cannot have this world's heaven, and the heaven of heavens, the heaven of saints
and angels and cherubim and seraphim, where are all unspotted and all glorious,
and all in white robes of sanctity, and where Christ the sacrificed lamb is unto them all in all.
O blessed are all they that are thus assured, blessed are the poor, that shall have this,
heaven's riches, blessed are the base that shall be thus advanced, blessed are the low that shall
be thus raised, and blessed are the world's despised that shall have this heaven's happiness,
yea, happy as this wretched world's unhappy man, for he shall be happy.
I will daily meditate of the greatness and majesty of this high heaven's blessed estate,
where I shall one day bless my God with the company of his saints, and where I shall one day
sit secure and free from the dangers and perils and crosses and afflictions, and crosses and
afflictions that now do assail me on the right hand and on the left within me and without me,
and am never free from one calamity or another. But it is good for me to be here humbled,
that I may be there advanced where I wish speedily to come. It is good that I were in want here,
that I might seek heavenly necessaries. It is good that the world did discourage me, that I might
fly to God that comforteth me. It is good that I am daily killed here, that I might live continually.
now therefore, O my soul, stand up, fear not, faint not at this world's crosses, but give glory to this great God, praise this high and helping God, seek him while it is day, drive not off to pray to this God, notwithstanding any hope thou hast in mortal men, but reject not his gracious means, who in favour infinite and mercy endless, moveeth the hearts of men in this life, to do good unto such as he seeth distressed. He can find out and afford infinite means to
succour then that are his and will not leave them forsaken in danger. For he even here giveth me
his blessings as pledges of his never-failing love, that being visited in his great mercy with timely
comforts here, I may assure me of greater blessings in heaven, where they are prepared beyond all
that I can ask or think. O Lord God of hosts, who is like unto thee, who hast established thy
kingdom with truth and equity, with mercy and judgment. Thou hast a mighty arm, strong and
is thine hand and high is thy right hand.
Whoso is under thy protection, he is safe, and he that trusteth in thee,
Mosy embraceth him on every side.
O blessed art thou, O my soul, if thou canst rejoice in the Lord, he is thy father,
he is thy helper.
Walk, therefore, in the light of his countenance, and be patient.
Wait in hope till these storms be past, and then shall thou have that quiet rest that he
hath prepared in heaven.
Lord, increase my faith.
Our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look for the Savior, even the Lord Jesus.
If He be risen with Christ, seek the things which are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God.
Set your affections on things which are above, and not on things which are on the earth.
End of Section 4.
Section 5 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
of the life everlasting, the place where it is and the incomparable joys thereof.
That there is an everlasting life, none will deny but such as will deny God, for if he be
true and just, which he must needs be, or else he is not God, then can there not be but
an eternal life? That he hath both spoken it and promised it, in Matthew 25, 1 Corinthians 15,
Hebrews 4, 11, and 12, 1 Peter 1, it plainly appeareth and elsewhere in very many places.
So that to deny an everlasting life is to deny God, to deny Christ and all that ever he did.
Also, to deny all piety and religion, to condemn of foolishness, all good men, martyrs,
confesses, evangelists, prophets, patriarchs.
Finally, the denial of eternal life is nothing else but a denial of the immortality of this soul,
and so a plain making of man nothing better than beasts. If it be so, let us then eat and drink,
for tomorrow we shall die. Lord, preserve us from this Sadducile and Epicurial impiety,
and grant us for thy mercy's sake, dear God, that we may be assuredly persuaded that there is indeed
an eternal life and bliss with thee, for them that put their trust in thee, amongst whom
account me for thy mercy's sake. Again, this eternal life and the place appointed for,
them that be thy servants, all men do grant to be with thee, albeit they do not think that,
because thou art everywhere, therefore eternal life is everywhere, for they, by thy word,
do know that inasmuch as no man can see thee and live, this eternal life and thy blessed
presence is most pleasant, and had in fruition after, in another world, whereunto, by corporal
death they do depart, and are translated to a place above them, where thou dwellest in a light,
whereunto no man can approach.
Abraham's bosom, they read, was above,
as the place for the wicked was aloe and beneath.
Elias was caught up into heaven,
and thy son, our dear Saviour, prayed,
that where he is those also might be,
which thou hadst given him, and might see his glory.
Now he, dear father, we learn by thy spirit,
was ascended and taken up in his very body into heaven,
with her Stephen looked up and saw thy Christ,
standing on thy right hand,
to whom he prayed, O Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.
Grant, I beseech thee, gracious God and Father,
that I may have a clean heart more and more to see thee,
and so in spirit to see and look often upon this place.
With her bring me at the length in body also, I humbly pray thee.
Now what a thing this everlasting life is,
no man is able to conceive, much less able to utter,
for the peace of God, which is eternal life,
passeth all understanding.
eye hath not seen, the ear hath not heard, neither can man's heart conceive those things which thou,
dear God, has prepared for them that love thee. Whatsoever therefore can be spoken or imagined of
thy kingdom, of the clearness, joy and felicity of the same, is nothing in comparison,
as we may see by thy prophets, which, because they could not otherwise, under corporal things,
have shadowed the same, so that the confidence of eternal life, what a thing it is, can in no wise
be told. Howbeit, somewhat, we may be brought into some sight of it by earthly things to think on
this sort. If God hath given here so many things in a strange place, how many are the great good
things that be at home? If in a prison are so many mercies, how many are they in the palace?
If the wicked have so many benefits, what is the store prepared for thy servants, O Lord?
If thy children find such comforts in the day of tears and mourning, what shall they find?
in the day of the marriage. If with beasts, men being have the use of so innumerable blessings,
O how many other blessings which they shall enjoy with thy angels and with thyself, O dear God,
when they shall see thee, and have the fruition of thee, in whom is fullness without loathing of all good
and fair things, so that nothing can be more desired, and that forever more.
This thy children do not so see as they now believe it. I say that even in their bodies they
shall see it forever, as Job said. They believe that they shall see thee, and their own eyes behold
thee, when these our corporal eyes, our bodies being raised, shall do their duties. Such a knowledge
of thee they believe to have, as shall not be only intellectual and by faith, as now it is,
but even a full sight and fruition, yea, a conjunction and fellowship with thee. Now they see but
as in a glass, even in a dark speaking, but then they shall see thee, faith, and then they shall see
thee face to face. For faith, though it be the substance of things hoped for and a certain
dark sight of thee, yet may not be compared to the reward of faith and glorious sight which we shall
see in the life to come, when faith and hope shall cease. Now thy children know that they be
thy sons, though it yet appear not what they shall be. We know, say they, that when our Christ,
God and man shall appear, then shall we be like unto him, for we shall see him, even as he is.
O great prerogative to see Christ as he is, which is not to be considered so much for the manhood as for the Godhead itself.
As Paul doth also write that when all things are subject unto the Son, then shall he be subject unto thee, dear Father, also that God may be all in all.
And therefore Christ our Savior prayed for us that we might know thee the only true God, not that our Christ thy son is not with thee the true co-equal and substantial God, but that we might
now know how that after the judgment such a mystery of his mediatorship shall not be in heaven as is now on earth
then thou blessed trinity god the father god the son and god the holy ghost shalt be all in all thou shalt be the end of our desires
thou shalt be looked upon without end thou shalt be loved without loathing thou shalt be praised without weariness
although loathsomeness be want to follow fullness yet our fullness in the contemplation of thy pleasures
shall bring with it no kind at all of loathsomeness. Society of joys shall be in the beholding of
thee. Pleasures are on thy right hand forever. We shall be satisfied when we arise after thine
image, I mean in the resurrection. O dear father, show thyself unto us, and we ask no more.
O grant us with thy saints in everlasting life to praise with perpetual praises thy holy name.
Happy then and happy again were we, if that day were come, that we might sing with
thy angels, elders, and innumerable thousands, a new song, and say, thou Christ Jesus,
which was slain, art worthy to receive power and riches and wisdom and strength, and honor,
and glory and blessing. In this blessed life, all kinds of maladies, griefs, sorrows, and evils
be far away, and all full of all kind of mirth, joy and pleasure. Oh, that we might
see now a little with St. John, that holy city new Jerusalem, descending from heaven,
prepared of God as a bride trimmed for her husband.
O that we might now something hear the great voice speaking out of the throne.
Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people,
and he shall be under them their God.
He will wipe away all tears from their eyes, and death shall be no more, nor weeping,
nor crying, nor sorrow, for the former things are gone.
John Bradford
End of Section 5
Section 6 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevolk's recording is in the public domain.
Meditation of the Blessed State and Felicity of the Life to Come.
This body is but a prison wherein the soul is kept,
and that verily, not beautiful nor bright but most foul and dark,
disquiet, frail and filled up with much vermin and venomous vipers,
I mean it concerning our affections, standing in an air most unwholesome and prospect most loathsome,
if a man consider the excrements of it by the eyes, nose, mouth, ears, hands, feet, and all other parts,
so that no bucardo, no little ease, no dungeon, no bishop's prison, no gatehouse, no sink, no pit,
may be compared in any point to be so evil a prison for the body, as the body is for and of the soul,
where through the children of God have been occasioned to cry and lament their long being in it.
O, saith David, how long shall I lie in this prison?
O wretch that I am, saith Paul, who shall deliver me out of this body of sin,
which is an heavy burden to the soul, as the wise man saith,
and therefore the godly cry, now let thy servant depart in peace.
O, that I were dissolved and had put off this earthly and frail tabernacle!
take me unto thee and bring my soul out of this prison that it may give thanks unto thee o lord for so long as we be in this body we cannot see the lord yea it is as an heavy habitation and depresseth down soar the spirit from the familiarity which it else should have with god
The world and life is an exile, a veil of misery, a wilderness, of itself being void of all virtues and necessaries for eternal life, full of enemies, sorrows, sighings, sobbings, groanings, miseries, etc.
in danger to hunger, cold, heat, thirst, sores, sickness, temptations, trouble, death, and innumerable calamities,
being momentary, short, unstable, and nothing but vain, and therefore is compared to a warfare,
a woman's travail, a shadow, a smoke, a vapour, a word, a storm, a tempest,
in the which God's people feel great molestations, griefs and troubles,
now of Satan himself, now of the world, now of their own flesh, and that so wonderfully,
diversely, dangerously, and contrarily, that they are enforced to cry,
O Lord, when shall we come and appear before thee?
When shall this misery end?
When shall we be delivered out of this veil of misery, out of these continual afflictions
and most perilous seas?
But where thou art, Lord, and dear Father of Mercy, there is not only no prison, no dollars,
no sorrow, no sighings, no tears, no sickness, no hunger, no heat, no cold, no pain,
no temptations, no displeasure, no malice, no pride, no uncleanness, no-condension, noments,
no horror, no sin, no filth, no stench, noor, noirth, no death, noeping, no tears, no misery,
no mischiefs. There is, I say, not only no such thing, or any evil, noisome, or
displeasant thing, but all liberty, all light, all pleasantness, all joy, rejoicing,
moor, pleasure, health, wealth, riches, glory, power, treasure, honour, triumph, comfort,
solace, love, unity, peace, concord, wisdom, virtue, melody, meekness, felicity, beatitude,
and all that ever can be wished or desired, in most security, eternity, and perpetuity,
that may be thought not only of man, but of angels and archangels, yea, above all thoughts.
The eye hath not seen the like, the ear hath not heard, nor no heart is able to conceive
in any point any part of the blissful beatitude which is with thee,
Most dear Lord and Savior, most gracious God and comforter.
Where thou art, O blessed God, the archangels, angels, angels, thrones, powers, dominions, cherubim, seraphim, patriarchs, prophets, apostles, martyrs, virgins, confessors, and righteous spirits, cease not to sing, night and day.
Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts.
Honor, majesty, glory, power, empire, and dominion be unto thee.
O God the Creator, O Lord Jesus the Redeemer, O Holy Spirit, the Comforter.
In recordation of this, O how thy children rejoice, how contemn they the pleasures of this world,
how little esteem they any corporal grief or shame, how desire they to be with thee.
How amiable are thy tabernacles, O Lord God of hosts, say they.
My soul hath a desire to enter into the courts of the Lord,
my heart and my soul rejoiceth in the living God.
Blessed are they that dwell in thy house, that they may be always praising thee,
for one day in thy courts is better than a thousand elsewhere.
I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God
than to dwell in the tense of ungodliness.
For the Lord God is a light and defence.
And again, like as the heart desireth thee water-brooks,
so longeth my soul after thee, O God.
My soul is a thirst for God,
yea, even for the living God.
When shall I come to appear before the presence of God?
My soul thirsteth for thee,
my flesh also longeth after thee
in a barren and dry land
where no water is.
They, thy children, I mean, O Lord,
desire the day of that, thy redemption.
Still, they cry,
Let thy kingdom come.
They cry, come, Lord Jesus.
They lift up their heads,
looking for thy appearing,
O Lord, which will make their vile body
like to thine own glorious and immortal body,
for when thou shalt appear,
they shall be like unto thee.
Thy angels will gather them together,
and they shall meet thee in the clouds and be always with thee.
They shall hear this joyful voice.
Come, ye blessed of my father, possess the kingdom prepared for you from the beginning.
Then shall they be like to thy angels.
Then shall they be like unto the sun in thy kingdom.
Then shall they have crowns of glory and be endued with white garments of innocency and righteousness,
having palms of victory in their hands.
Oh, happy is he that may but see that immortal and incorruptible inheritance,
which they shall enjoy forever more.
Amen.
J. Bradford.
End of Section 6.
Section 7 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Prayer for deliverance from trouble, being a godly prayer made by John Bradford.
O eternal, almighty and most merciful God, which hast revealed thyself unto mankind,
not only by the handiwork of this world, and deliverance out of Egypt.
but also, which is the greatest of all by the sending of thy only begotten Son,
our Lord Jesus Christ, into this veil of misery,
and by the gifts of thy Holy Spirit, wherewith thou hast adorn thy church,
we humbly beseech thee by thy dear Son, Jesus Christ,
that thou wouldst meekly open thy gracious ears to our complaints,
and send down thy help and aid,
not so much for our sakes as for the glory of thy holy name.
For, whereas man did lie,
as thou knowest altogether so overwhelmed in sin, that not only he was destitute of that righteousness
he had of thy creation, but also in no wise could by any of his powers or merits rise up to
recover the same righteousness, and therefore of necessity the inheritor of eternal punishment.
Yet thou, most merciful God, hadst mercy upon that our marvellous great misery, and therefore
its promise, and at length send unto us thine only begotten son,
that he might pay the ransom for our sins, and obtained by his obedience unto thee, his dear father,
that so many as believed in him might be endued with his righteousness,
to be reputed as just for his sake before thy tribunal seat,
that although they want righteousness of their own,
yet they might have the fruition of the righteousness of another,
namely of the Lord Jesus Christ,
whereby as they might be made able to stand in thy judgment,
so to be kindled in thy holy spirit to the rendering of obedience to thee,
truly and from the very heart. This is the doctrine of thy gospel which thou at the first
showeds to the fathers, which thy prophets taught, which thy son Jesus Christ declared unto us,
which thy Holy Spirit by the apostles have published throughout the whole world,
which doctrine in these our days thou hast notably set forth by thy servant, King Edward,
in the book of homilies appointed in his reign to be read in the churches.
By this doctrine thou keepest thy church, not only in afflictions of this life, but also in the
torment of death itself. Now, dear and most meek father, we humbly beseech thee to
consider with thyself what wicked and cruel men think of this thy great benefit. Behold,
we open before thy majesty the articles of our bishops in their visitations, the statutes,
laws and ordinances, and injunctions of our parliaments and magistrates, and working of sophisters,
wherewith the doctrine of thy son, our saviour Jesus Christ, concerning the righteousness
of faith, is so condemned that it is plainly accused of devilishness.
yea lord so far forth do thy enemies now proceed that as to fall by slaughter they made havoc of thy sheep and church even so now by all kinds of violence cruelty and injustice they go about their impiety
therefore arise o lord our god defend thou thine own cause forget not the blasphemies where with the wicked blaspheme thee deliver thy christ from their presumption which they by all means and especially this parliament seek utterly to condemn
Keep thy church which thine enemies desire to oppress and utterly to destroy.
Defend thy prisoned servants, which at this present are in bonds for the defence of thy verity.
Indeed, we confess frankly that we are grievous sinners, and in no point have been
thankful unto thee for thy wonderful great benefits, which hitherto thou hast plentifully poured out
upon us.
But now, good Lord, we desire to repent, and something lament our miserable and sinful life.
We desire to embrace and heartily to believe the gospel of thy son.
that because we are sinners and cannot make amends for our sins in any point by any means or merits of our own,
we may obtain free remission of our sins for and through Christ thy son,
and we pray thee further that henceforth thou wilt govern our whole life by thy Holy Spirit,
where through the remnants of our flesh may be mortified and we may serve and sanctify thy holy name forever.
As concerning thy adversaries, Lord, thou knowest that, although they would seem nothing less than persecute,
of thy name and church, yet the thing itself declares that they do persecute the true doctrine
of the gospel of thy son, and not only do not acknowledge their impiety, but also do defend it,
and undertake so to do by all means they can. This is not their mind that they might promote the
glory of thy holy name, but that they might, without blame, live lordlike, after their lusts
and beastly pleasures, satisfying their cruel and covetous desires and concupiscences.
And will thou, O Lord our God, approve this?
their purpose? Will thou help this their hope? No, no, thou wilt never do it, for thou art not God
that will iniquity. The wicked shall not dwell with thee. Thou hateest all workers of wickedness.
Thou wilt destroy all that speak lies. We indeed are unworthy to see thy glory, but yet
thou art worthy that thy glory might be showed to all the whole world. Wherefore we pray and earnestly
beseech thee in Christ's name that thou wouldst witness publicly in the
these are days, how that thy will is such as hateeth iniquity, and abhorrethes
these crafty and bloodthirsty men.
For if thou shalt leave us, dear father, will not the world say, where is their gospel,
where is their Christ?
Could Christ keep them in prison, preserve them in death?
These blasphemies, even now, dear Lord, we hear to water out their hearts and lips.
This thou knowest, O Lord, the atria of the heart and reigns.
Let therefore, O good God, thy strength be maxima.
magnified, and as thou has said, call upon me in the day of thy trouble, and I will deliver
thee, and thou shalt honour me. Even so now, hear us, calling upon thy name, through thy only
begotten son, our saviour and Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen. End of Section 7. Section 8 of Meditations
and Prayers by John Bradford. This Librevonk's recording is in the public domain. Prayer in the
time of persecution. Jesus Emmanuel. O Almighty, everlasting and most merciful Lord God,
the dear Father of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, and through him our most gracious
good Father whose providence is over us, whose wisdom and righteousness is seen over all
as thy mercy, even in the midst of most miseries is tasted of all. Indeed we have
deserved most horrible plagues by reason of our unthankfulness, contempt and slanderous
abusing thy most holy gospel, which most plentifully and purely thou didst give us with such a
prince to propagate the same, as never since England was christened was known the like.
We, I say, have deserved not only the taking away of this our dear prince, and the benefit of the
ministry of thy pure gospel, but also all other most terrible plagues that can be devised, for great
and heinous are our offences, and therefore just thou art and righteous are thy judgments, if, as thou
has begun, thou shalt continue to pour out upon us, thy fearful plagues and indignation.
But, gracious Lord, remit thine anger, because thou art accustomed to remember mercy,
and full will knowest whereof we are made, and what we are able to bear.
We beseech thee which art rich in mercy and plentiful to all them that call upon thee,
that, for thy namesake, through Christ, thou wouldst correct us according to thy sweet mercy,
and not in thy sour favour and indignation.
much better it is for us, dear Father, and more tolerable,
that we should yield ourselves into thy hands to be chastised of thee,
than to fall into the hands of thy enemies, as David prayed,
for great is thy mercy.
Against thee, against thee only have we sinned,
and broken thy holy commandments.
But, loving God and Almighty God and Father,
well thou knowest we have not sinned against the devil, the world,
the pope, and his prelates,
neither against the Queen's highness and politic magistrates of the realm,
so that justly have they no right or power to punish us.
Howbeit thou mayest justly use them as thy fierce rod against us.
But good God and heavenly dear father against them
have we not so behaved ourselves
that rightly and justly they can be thought to punish us.
Yea, rather they wish that with them horribly
we would displease and sin against thee,
for nothing should it grieve them
if we were horrible rebels against thee,
blasphemers of thy name,
idolaters, worshippers of stocks and stones, false servers of thee, adulterers, thieves,
drunkards, murderers, glutton, oppressors, and altogether overwhelmed in mischief.
But this is our sin and offence against them, because we preach, believe, and confess thee,
God the Father, to be the true and only God, and Jesus Christ, thy dear Son, to be the only
Lord, saviour, bishop, priest, and mediator, and the Holy Spirit to be the only comforter,
vivificator, counsellor and master of all truth, and thy written word to be the lantern to our feet,
the sufficient doctrine to our salvation. This dear Lord is a sin against them, because we will not serve
thee after the traditions of men, but as in thy word by thy son and apostles thou hast taught us.
Therefore are they much wrath and persecute us.
If we would worship bread instead of Christ, cast off our hope and creed of the satisfactory and
propitiatory sacrifice which thy son our lord did make in his own body himself once for all to the perfect sanctifying
forever of all that shall be saved and come and buy their propitory sacrifices in that abominable idol the mass
if we would cast off thy commandments to follow good in tents to serve thee in a tongue we know not to pray unto saints to buy pardons
to run a pilgrimage gate going to offer candles and tapers to images to buy trentals dirages to say as they say
and do as they do, submitting ourselves to the faith of the anti-Christian, popish, and devilish
church, clean contrary from the faith of thy Catholic and true church, which is grounded and
builded upon thy dear child, Jesus Christ, whom, as he is the foundation, so is he the fullness of all,
whereof we all receive, and the very sinew which coupleth and kniteth together, every one of us
to grow and go forwards into a perfect man, being made of thee unto wisdom and righteousness and
sanctifying and redemption, that our rejoicing might be in him, which also is our head,
from whom cometh our life by the working of his spirit, which is kept always alive in us,
so long as we suck of the blood and natural juice which descendeth from our head into the
members, that is to say, so long as we stick and abide by his written word and gospel,
not suffering the same to putrify and corrupt by admitting false glosses and expositions of men's
brains and devices, not contained in thy book of the Bible. If I say, dear Lord, we would do thus,
leaving the water in the well of life, and drink of their dirty digged pits and cisterns,
then should we have peace with them? Then would not the devil rage? Then would the world
wrestle no more against us? Then would the Pope and his prelates promote us? Then would the
queen be merciful and the magistrates our good masters, even as thy dear child saith,
if you are of the world the world would love his own.
Here, therefore, look down a merciful father towards us,
and a fierce judge towards all such our enemies,
as are not to be converted,
for they are no less thine enemies than ours,
so that in persecuting us and punishing us,
they persecute thee and punish thee.
For this word which we preach, believe,
and confess is not our word but thy word,
and not our expositions or construings,
but the exposition's and construings of thy Holy Spirit,
This gear the devil cannot abide, but would have thy place, and be to us a God.
The Pope and his prelates would reign in men's consciences, and for God's word,
they would have us to believe their stinking traditions, counsels, decrees, and lies.
The queen and the magistrates, in place that thy son Jesus Christ,
would place their abominable idol of bread.
In place of our priest after the order of Melchizedek,
they would place priests after the order of Baal and Antichrist.
Instead of Christ's sacrifice, they would thrust out unto us an horrible sacrilege.
End of Section 8.
Section 9 of Meditations and Prayers by John Bradford.
This Librevolk's recording is in the public domain.
Paraphrase of Psalm 79.
Jesus Emmanuel
O God, the Father of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,
which of thine own mere goodness,
hast vouchsafe to make an everlasting covenant with us, namely that thou wilt be our God, and we shall be
thy people and inheritance. Behold, as in times past, the heathen came into thine inheritance of Israel,
and polluted thy holy temple and Jerusalem, and also made the goodly city of Jerusalem itself
a heap of stones, devastating it. Even so now very many heathen and limbs of Antichrist,
though outwardly they profess Christ, are come into thine inheritance and church, which
thou hast with us in this realm of England, and have defiled thy holy temple, that is, the souls and
bodies of many which have professed thee, in whom, as in thy temple, thou shouldst dwell. They have,
I say, defiled them by enforcing them through tyrannical precepts and threats, to resort to idol-elatrical
and anti-Christian service, which thou, by thy word, didst never allow, but rather and utterly forbid.
as is Latin service to them that understand not Latin, invocation to saints, adoration with godly
honour of thy creatures of bread and wine, as though they were God, being but the sacraments of the
body and blood of thy son, our Saviour Jesus Christ, which they utterly corrupt and horribly profane
by presuming to offer up the same unto thy majesty, without any calling of them to that office by thee,
in which doing they do as much as in them is to crucify Christ again, utterly denying his one and a lone sacrifice offered up by himself to be omnisufficient, contrary to all thy holy scriptures.
That thy people should allow this kind of religion, dear father, thou seest how these wicked heathen have prevailed and have defiled thy temple, making the face at thy church, once with us in the time of thy dear servant, King Edward V, 6th, no less beautiful in thy sultan.
sight by reason of pure doctrine and the godly administration of thy sacraments,
then was the city of Jerusalem which was a figure of thy church,
utterly defaced, devastated, and now nothing but a heap of stones,
the congregation of the faithful, thy true church being scattered abroad,
driven into exile and cast into prisons, temples of stones yet still remaining.
As once the heathen gave the carcasses of thy servants to be meet for the birds of the air,
and as they gave the flesh of thy holy ones to a prey for the beasts of the earth,
when Antiochus and other tyrants oppress the country of Jewry.
Even so now these limbs of Antichrist with their parasites and sworn shavlings,
except thou for thy mercy and truth's sake do let them,
are purposed and fully determined to hang up and burn the bodies, flesh and bones,
of all that will persevere to worship thee after the verity and truth.
In demonstration whereof they have cast of thy flesh,
dearest saints no small number into exile and prison, utterly taking from them with all injustice,
all kind of comfort and equity. As in times past, the heathen poured out the blood of thy people
like water round about Jerusalem, so that there was none to bury the dead. Even so these hellhounds,
limbs of Antichrist, have done in times past in the slaughter of frith, barns, garret, Jerome, Lambert,
LaSells, etc., and now lately have done by the cruel,
destroying of the good and innocent Lady Jane, as they thirstily gape to drink up more blood of
thy slaughter-sheep which they have in prison, and keep for a soil and cooling of their heat,
which will not be slaked until they have destroyed all thy seely souls, or driven them out
of England, except thou good lord, wilt for thy namesake prevent them.
As once thy people complained to thee that they were made a reproach and byword unto their
neighbors, a laughing stock and scorn to such as dwelt about them. Even so now, dear father,
we, thy people at this present here in England, cannot but complain, that we are become a byword
to our neighbours, a mock and mowing, to those that dwell about us, for everywhere now it is
tauntingly spoken, where are our Protestants, where are these new gospers, where is the new
doctrine they taught? Therefore, with thy people we are in force to cry out how long are
Lord, wilt thou be angry, the punishments we do not so much complain of, although they be painful,
as do we thy displeasure which daily increaseth. But how long, O Lord, shall thy wrath, which we have
wrought to work our woe, dear Lord, burn forever? As now it beginneth even corporally to bring us into
a servitude and captivity, to demonstrate the heinous captivity of soul, many are caught in by
idolatry and horrible abomination. Where too very many do consent against their conscience,
outwardly allowing that which inwardly they detest for fear of loss of life, lands, goods, liberty, friends, etc.
Shall, I say, this wrath burn and waste all forever?
Alas, O Lord, who is able to bear thy wrath? O Lord, which art a consuming fire, wilt not thou in thine anger remember thy mercy?
Willst not thou remember that we are as hay, dust, stubble and straw, and cannot but consume in thy displeasure?
O, pour out thy wrath and vengeance, rather, upon the wicked, which have not, nor will not,
know thee, and upon the countries which call not and will not call upon thy name, but upon
their avowaries, or trust in their own policy and power, and go about as they have done and will
do, if thou let not, to devour Jacob, thy church and poor people, and so also, have not, do not,
nor will not cease to destroy thy tabernacle, temple, worship, true religion, and service,
with all them love the same.
To the Lord these caterpillars and Philistines are known.
If there be any of them to be converted,
those do thou convert, O father.
Upon the residue which are not to be converted,
pour out thy wrath and heavy indignation,
that we might praise thy holy name,
and others might tremble at thy power
and sing praises unto thee in the day of thy visitation.
But methinks we hear the object unto us
our monstrous ingratitude for thy word so plentifully preached, for thy sacraments so sincerely
ministered, and forsooth for the good ministers, ecclesiastical and civil, especially for our
good and most holy king, and for our carnal and sinful life, not knowing the time of our visitation.
These things and many other our misdeeds and evil life, methinks, that thou dost object against us,
as though we were not entreated otherwise now than we have deserved.
yea, that great mercy thou show us to us in not dealing with us as we have deserved, being as we be yet, so far from true repentance, flattering ourselves in many evils, so that thou knowest not what to do with us or strike us any further, as Isaiah witnesseth.
O Lord God, we are ashamed to lift up our faces, for indeed these are most true.
We have sinned in heaven and against thee, and are no more worthy to be called thy children.
The reason why thou becameest our God and madeest us thy people was thine own goodness and mercy in Christ.
In that these still remain we cannot but take some comfort that thou now wilt in thine anger,
remember thy mercy, for if it was to the
glory and praise of thy name so to adopt us. How should it be, but to the glory of thy name,
now to look upon us and help us. The more we are now unworthy, the more it shall be to the praise
of thy grace and glory, for unto none other we come but to thee. Help we look not for elsewhere,
but only from thee, and that not of our deserts or anything we can do, but only of thy mercy.
the witch in that thine enemies begin to limit as though it would not care for us and therefore say where is their god dear father accordingly considerate
they say not where is god but where is their god that is the god whom we have taught and preached as though thou lord were not the true god
as though we had swerved from thy word in teaching and profession indeed o lord we have swerved from thee in living but yet not in teaching as thou knowest
even as the Israelites, which were put to a flight before I, departed not from thee in profession and doctrine, but only in living.
As Joshua thereon said, So say we, what wilt thou do, good Lord, to thy holy name?
As when thy ark was taken of the Philistines, they did not attribute the cause why the Israelites were overcome to their sins,
and the cause of their victory to thee, the true God, but to their own Dagon, and the Israelites'clock.
and the Israelites contempt of him.
Even so, our Philistines and enemies do not attribute this thy vengeance fallen upon us to our
carnal life, because they are as evil therein, I will not say worse, for then we could and would
acknowledge no less, most humbly and thankfully.
Neither do acknowledge their victory and upper hand over us to thy working, but to their
popery, false religion, mass, god of bread, etc.
For the which, as they have shed, much innocent blood, as of Tyndale,
Frith, Barnes, Garrett, Jerome, the cells, Lambert, etc.
And are more purposed to do, if thou let not,
as therefore thou didst amongst the Philistines declare thy power and glory
by taking vengeance on them and their false God.
So, dear Lord, in thy good time, do now the like.
Let the vengeance of thy servant's blood that is already shed,
and the tyrannical handling of thy people at the present,
being of these Philistines cast into prison and into miserable exes,
exile, be openly showed upon them, which are not to be converted, whom thou only dost know,
and so many of them, as are to be converted, we beseech thee to show thy mercy upon them,
and to convert them, if it be thy good will. So shalt thou be known to be the defender of the
church, and such as would serve thee after thy word, which now thine enemies tread under foot,
and would have us full with swillings and draught, utterly hailing and persecuting all them that
would return from keeping pigs to serve thee and thy house,
which they detest and abhor,
seeking what means possible they can,
it should never rise and be builded again.
How many have they driven into exile?
How many have they perverted by their promises and promotions?
How many by terror and threats do they draw deadly to displease thee
by doing outwardly against their consciences?
How many have they cast into prison
and taken all they have most unjustly from them,
lest by any means thy house and temple might be builted thou knowest.
How miserably they handle thy bond servants,
keeping from them all worldly consolations,
as company, pen, paper, ink, books, etc.,
the prisons of the king's bench,
Marshall C, fleet, Newgate,
and in many other places, at Oxford and elsewhere,
doth presently to all the world cry out.
O let their groans and sorrowful sighs come up into thy sight,
according to the greatness of thy power,
which our enemies, by reason of their success, puffed up,
do think thou wantest,
as Pharaoh did when he said, what fellow is God?
According, I say, to the greatness of thy power,
preserve thou them that are appointed to die,
and become thy slaughter sheep.
Thou disappointedest Herod of Peter,
the sworn conspirators of Paul,
King Joas of Eleseus,
Ahab and Jezeus of Eli and Micahus,
Heyman of Mordecai. Even so, dear Lord, break the dream of thy combined enemies with us and save thy servants, Latimer, Cranmer, Ridley, Hooper, Chrome, Rogers, Saunders, Bradford, Philpot, Coverdale, Barlow, Cardmaker, Taylor, etc., which are appointed to die, if thou, by thy mighty power, deliver them not. It is the glory of thy name, O Lord, which moveth us thus to make our moan, for thou knowest how thine enemies
take part against thee, thy verity and truth. Thou forbiddest the making and worshipping of images,
they command it as a worship. Thou forbiddest prayer in a tongue that is not to the edifying of the
hearers, they straightly enjoin and command it. Thou forbiddest us all kinds of idolatry and spiritual
fornication. They utterly enforce men thereto, even to commit fornication with bread, wine, gold,
silver, stocks and stones. Thou wots the remembrance of thy death by the using of thy holy
supper. They take away not only all remembrance of thy death, but even the place thereof by their mass,
transubstantiation and popish pilth. Thou commandest the lay as the clergy to drink of thy cup,
but they forbid it utterly. Thou wouldst have the people brought up in knowledge, not as infants,
and they seek by all means that none should have any true knowledge of thee,
and therefore they chase out scriptures, out of all places, and may not abide thy holy testament
to be had for thy people to look upon,
and therefore they persecute many a one,
and wet their tongues against not men only, but also.
Here there is a lacuna in the text,
making indeed thy Christ and all that confess him,
and here there is a lacuna in the text.
And who doeth this, O Lord,
not foreigners and strangers, but such as are our neighbours,
and profess thee, such as thou hast given the regiment unto,
as Silaset do it in both the states in this poor and wretched realm of England,
especially the clergy and such as would be counted pillars of thy church.
Therefore, in thy time, reward them, this their blasphemy,
wherewith they have blasphemed, and do still blaspheme thee,
and that sevenfold into their bosom,
that is, most plentifully and abundantly recompense thy tarrying with good measure,
and plentifully upheaving thy measure.
And we poor might,
which are yet thy people and sheep of thy pasture, having none other help nor hope, but only thee,
our God and pastor, we, I say, shall praise thy name forever. We shall, with thy people,
delivered out of the hands of Pharaoh, Sinacarib, Holoferns, Haman, etc. Give thanks to thy lovely name.
We will always, day and night, be telling out thy praises from generation to generation.
This is the end why we crave thy help. This is the end why we do.
desire to live that, as we have been negligent, we might become diligent to serve, love, Lord,
and magnify thy holy name in all our thoughts, words, and deeds, publicly and privately,
when we shall perceive and feel how good thou our God art,
when we shall see how thou art merciful and mindful of goodness towards them that put their
trust in thee.
O dear father, so be it, so be it, so be it, so be it.
of section 9. Section 10 of meditations and prayers by John Bradford, this Librevalch's recording,
is in the public domain. A very godly prayer of one standing at the stake ready to be burned for
Christ's gospel's sake. Merciful God and Father to whom our Savior Christ approached in his fear
and need by reason of death, and found comfort, gracious God and most bounteous Christ,
on whom Stephen called in his extreme need and received strength.
Most benign Holy Spirit, which in the midst of all crosses and deaths,
did comfort the Apostle St. Paul, with more consolations in Christ than he felt sorrows and terrors.
Have mercy upon me, a miserable, most vile and wretched sinner,
which now draw nigh the gates of death,
deserved both in soul and body eternally by reason of my manifold,
horrible, old and new transgressions, which to thine unytheirmed,
eyes, O Lord God, are open and known.
O be merciful unto me and forgive me, for the bitter death and bloodshedding of thy only son,
Jesus Christ, and though thy justice do require in respect of my sins, that now thou shouldst not
hear me, measuring me with the same measure that I have measured thy majesty in contemming
thy daily calls.
Yet let thy mercy, I say, prevail towards me, which is above all thy works, and wherewith
the earth is filled, through and for the mediations.
of Christ our saviour, for whose sake, in that it pleaseth thee to bring me forth now as one of his
witnesses and a record-bearer of thy verity and truth, for whose sake, in that it pleaseth thee
to bring me forth now as one of his witnesses and a record-bearer of thy verity and truth,
taught by him to give my life, therefore, to which dignity I do acknowledge, dear God,
that there was never any so unworthy and unmeat, no, not the thief that hanged with him on the cross,
I humbly therefore pray thee that thou wouldst accordingly aid, help, and assist me, with thy strength and heavenly grace,
that with Christ thy son I may find comfort, with Stephen, I may see thy presence and gracious power,
with St. Paul and all others, which for thy namesake have suffered afflictions and death,
I may find so present with me thy gracious consolation that I may by my death glorify thy holy name,
propagate and ratify thy verity,
comfort the hearts of the heavy,
confirm thy church in truth,
convert some that are to be converted,
and so depart out of this miserable world,
where I do nothing but heap daily sin upon sin,
and enter into the fruition of thy blessed mercy.
Whereof now give, and increase in me
a lively trust, sense, and feeling,
where through the terrors of death,
the torments of fire, the pangs of sin,
the darts of Satan and the dollars of hell,
may never depress me, but may be driven away through the working of that most gracious spirit,
which now plenteously endow me with all, that through the same spirit I may offer, as now I desire to do
in Christ and by him, myself, holy soul and body, to be a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable
in thy sight, dear father, whose I am, and always have been, even from my mother's womb,
yea, even before the world was made. To whom I commend myself a soul and
body, faith and name, family and friends, country, and all thy whole church, yea, even my very
enemies, according to thy good pleasure, beseeching thee entirely to give once more to this realm
of England the blessing of thy word again, with godly peace, to the teaching and setting forth of the
same. O dear father, give me now to come unto thee, purge me and so purify me by this fire in
Christ's death and passion through thy spirit, that I may be a burnt offering of sweet smell,
in thy sight which livest and reignest with thy son and the Holy Ghost,
now and evermore world without end.
Amen.
John Bradford
End of Section 10.
End of Meditations and prayers by John Bradford.
