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The wonders of the ayre

the trembling of the earth, And the warnings of the world before the Iudgement day. Written by Thomas Churchyard

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The Lords prayer and creede in verse, with the ten Commandements.
 
 
 
 



The Lords prayer and creede in verse, with the ten Commandements.

Ovr Father which art in persons three,
Thy mighty name most hollowed be:
Thy kingdome come, done be thy will,
As well on earth, as ti's in heauen still:
Giue vs this day, our daily bread,
(With which our bodies, and soules are fedde:)
Forgiue vs our trespasse euery way,
As we forgiue them that seeke our decay:
And lead vs not into temptation,
(But for Christs sake our onely saluation:)
Deliuer vs from euils all, That makes vs from thy fauour fall:
For kingdom glory and al is thine, For euer and euer (by powr diuine.)

The Creede.

I beleeue in God the Father of all might,
Made heauen and earth, sent darkenes and light:
And in Iesus Christ, his sonne and our Lord,
Conceiued by the holy Ghost (as scriptures doe record:)
Of the virgine Mary this babe was borne,
To redeeme man that else had beene forlorne:
Suffred vnder Ponce Pilate, crucified and layd in graue,
Descended into hell (the elect soules to saue:)
Rose the third day, such hope I haue,
Was seene aliue here, ascended into heauen than,
Sits on Gods right hand a mediatour for man:
From thence shall he come, to iudge both quicke and dead,
Amyd the cloudes to shew his great Godhead:
I beleeue in the infinite holy Ghost,
The Catholike Church that honors God most:
The communion of Saintes, the forgiuenes of sinnes,
The resurrection of the body, where gladnes begins:
And in the life euerlasting I trust,
To rise at the last day with Iob out of dust.

The ten Commandements.

God spake these words, the Lord thy God I am,
That brought thee home, when thou from Egypt came:
I set thee free from bondage euery way,
Because thou shalt my holy will obay.
Thou shalt not haue any other Gods but me,
Thou shalt not serue strange Gods in any degree:


Vnto thy selfe, no grauen image make,
Like any thing, that is in heauen aboue,
Nor earth belowe, thy pleasure so to take:
Nor vnderneath the earth, my wrath to mooue:
Nor worship them by any kind of meane,
For I thy God loues people pure and cleane.
Thou shalt not bowe downe to any image wrought,
Thy onely Lord a iealous God he is,
That plagues the sinnes of people vaine and nought:
Yea to the third, and fourth generation, note well this,
I visite the Sonnes, and Fathers of them all,
That doe hate me, or to idolatry fall:
And mercies shewes, to thousands when I will,
That loues me, and keepes my commandements still.
Thou shalt not take, thy great Gods name in vaine,
He gilty is, that will mine honour staine.
The sabboth day, looke that thou keepe in feare,
Sixe dayes thou hast, to worke, to trudge, and toyle,
The seuenth is the Sabboth euery where:
Than thou shalt not thy hands with labour foyle,
Thou and thy sonne, thy daughter, mayd, and man,
That serueth thee, shall doe no labour than:
Thy cattell and, the stranger in thy gate,
Shall doe no worke, that day early nor late:
For in sixe dayes, thy Lord that all hath blest,
Made heauen and earth, and in the seuenth did rest.
Thou shalt honour, thy father and mother well,
(That long aliue, on earth safe thou maist dwell.)
Thou shalt not kill, for bloud craues bloud, or vengeance still.
Thou shalt not breake, true wedlockes band no way.
That knot and staffe, is an honourable stay.
Thou shalt not steale, for theeues robe Prince and common weale.
Thou shalt not beare, false witnes in any sorte,
For that may take, from iustice good report.
Thou shalt not wish, thy neighbors house nor wife,
His man seruant, nor mayden for thy life,
His Oxe, his Asse, nor nothing that is his,
Liue with thine owne, as the Lords pleasure is.