no other wâ⦠understanding then he hath givenâ⦠Angels they not being able to underâ⦠distinctly by such universal forms aâ⦠Angels could not have had a partâ⦠and distinct knowledge of any thing only a general and confused knowleâ⦠so it is clearly for the better that Huâ⦠Souls be united unto Bodies because iââ¦duceth to the bettering of their uââ¦standing But this reason conceâ⦠the soul of man no longer then whiles it is here on earth whereas it is evident that the desire of Re-union with the body accompanieth the soul also in heaven for though she there understand by a far more excellent and noble way without the Body then she doth here in the Body yet doth she still desire Re-union with the Body and not think her own bliss so compleat till she may have it in and with her old companion her first friend and acquaintance Excellently the same Aquinas 12 ae qu. 4. ar 5. Desiderium Animae separatae totaliter quiescit ex parte Appetibilis quia habet id quod suo appetitui sufficit sed non totaliter requiescit ex parte Appetentis quia illud bonum non possidet secundum omnem modum quo possidere vellet ideo corpore resumpto beatitudo crescit non intensive sed extensive The desire of the separated souls that are in Heaven is fully satisfied as to the object or the thing that they desire for they have all the blessedness that they can wish But not as to the subject or their manner of desireing for they have not their blessedness so as they do wish it because it is not yet communicated to their bodies wherefore after the Resurrection of the Body the blessedness of Glorified Souls is said tâ⦠increase though not intensively as if tâ⦠bliss should be greater in it self for thâ⦠are already admitted to the vision and frââ¦ition of God yet surely extensively bââ¦cause it shall be greater in respect of theâ⦠that enjoy it when it shall be communââ¦cated from their Souls unto their Bodies And therefore the Glorified Souls of meâ⦠do exceedingly desire that their Blessedness should be so communicated becausâ⦠their supernatural Bliss doth not extinguish cannot exclude their natural Desire which is to be united to their Bodies Accordingly Aquinas tells us that to thâ⦠perfect consummation of mans Bliss is required not only a perfect Disposition oâ⦠his Soul but also of his Body and thaâ⦠both antecedently and consequently to hiâ⦠Blessedness Antecedently or before he iâ⦠Blessed for else his Body would clogg hiâ⦠Soul and divert it from the Beatifical vision And Consequently or after he iâ⦠Blessed for the Soul cannot but communicate her Bliss and Glory to the Body 12 ae q. 4. ar 6. Therefore that which was a Natural Body at the separation shall be made a Spiritual Body at the Re-union and being once made a Spiritual body the Soul shall have Power to keep ãâã ââ¦o for ever according to that of Saint Aug. ââ¦am potenti naturâ Deus fecit Animam ut ââ¦x ejus plenissimâ Beatitudine redundit in ââ¦nferiorem Naturam Incorruption is vigor With so powerful a Nature hath God endued the soul of man that when her self ââ¦hall come to be perfectly Blessed she will be able to Transmit her Bliss and Incorruption to the body Wherefore let ââ¦y soul be separated from this natural body by which it is corrupted that it may ââ¦e united to that Spiritual body by which ââ¦t shall be perfected The Second PART OR The Consolation against Death Preface HE that will fully comfâ⦠the Soul of man agaiâ⦠Death must comfort against sickness that coââ¦monly goes before it ãâã against Judgement tâ⦠alwaies follows after it So that thisâ⦠consolation must branch it self into these tâ⦠Chapters The Comforts of the Soul against Sicknâ⦠The Comforts of the Soul against Deathâ⦠The Comforts of the Soul against Judgment It is as easie for those in health to gâ⦠advice to the sick as it is hard for the ãâã to follow it But every one that can gâ⦠Advice to the sick cannot give them câ⦠for t in their sickness The best that any of us can say in this kind is The Lord comort you And yet surely there are some men who are obliged if not enabled by their Calling to speak more comfortably then others no less to body-sick then to sin-sick Persons Those men whose peculiar Duty it is to visit the sick and consequently to comfort them For they may not do as Jobs Friends did come to Grieve with him and then help not to Asswage but to Encrease his Grief For they by so doing are lookt upon not as Gods but as the Devils Instruments though they were of the Posterity of Abraham and therefore undoubtedly instructed in the true Relion according to that Testimony given of Abraham by God himself Gen. 18. 19. For I know him that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord. Yet these men were so faulty in their conferences with holy Job that God himself saith of them they had not spoken right concerning him and that his wrath was kindled against them Job 42. 7. Whereby it Appears that Jobs former exclamations against them proceeded not from the impotency of his Passion but from the justness of his cause when he said ye are forgers of lies ye are all Physitians of no value Job 13. 4. Medici Idoli so Jarchi expounds the word and parallels it with that of Zach. 11. 17. where we tanslate it the Idol shepheard and may here so too The idol Comforters Men that made a shew of Comfort but afforded none at all no more then if they had been but meer Idols Nay that 's not all they afforded him dicomforts instead of comforts wherefore he calls them also miserable comforters Job 16. 2. Hebrew consolatores molestiae troublesome comforters are you all And sick men may in this Brain-sick age of ours quickly have enough if not too much of such comforters Men that scarce can settle others consciences having so much unsettled their own Which made Saint Paul come with a Benedictus in his mouth and surely it was in his heart before it was in his mouth when he considered what a great mercy it was in God towards those in distress to give either true comforts or true comforters saying Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ The Father of mercies and the God of all comfort who comforteth us in all our Tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort where with we our selves are comforted of God 2 Cor. 1. 3 4. The Apostle begins here with thanksgiving according to his accustomed manner in all his Epistles but contrary to his custome doth he apply this thanksgiving wholy to himself The reason was saith Beza Because the Corinthians did begin to despise him for his Afflictions the common course of the world to
is deformed so it is also depraved by ââ¦t Nor may we here alledge as before the necessity of nature for though the deformity of mans flesh may in some sort be ascribed to the condition of his nature yet the depravation of it may not for God may be the Author of a comparative deformity for that is but a lesser good but by no means of a positive depravation for that is in it self an Evill or a Sin and he cannot be the Author of Sin Wherefore it is a dangerous Position which some late Divines have greedily embraced and as violently maintained That there was the same inordinate propensity in the nature of man to the works of the flesh before the Fall as is in it since the Fall Onely then it was restrained and fettered by original justice or righteousness but is now let loose by original sin This opinion is in it self dangerous because it casts a blasphemous aspersion upon God For he is the Author of Nature and therefore the Author oâ⦠the necessary conditions thereof as wâ⦠those that flow from the matter as froâ⦠the Form but in its consequences it iâ⦠no less then damnable For if it be granted that the rebellion of the sensitive Appetite against the dictates of Reason dotâ⦠flow from the very principles and being ãâã the flesh then it must follow that it cannot be a sin for what is natural is no sinfull sin being no less a Monster oâ⦠nature then a Monster is a sin of nature and consequently that a man maâ⦠in and of himself attain to such a perfection of righteousness as to say meerly ouâ⦠of humility not according to the truth forgive us our trespasses A tenent anathematized by the second Milevitane Council in which Alypius and St. Augustinâ⦠were present as appears by the Synodicaâ⦠Epistle in the Canon in these words Sâ⦠quis asserat haec verba dominicae orationis demitte nobis debita nostra à sanctis diâ⦠humiliter non veraciter Anathema sit the very same with the 117. Canon in thâ⦠Council of Carthage as it is set forth bâ⦠Balsamon who thus puts it into Greek ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã And when yoâ⦠see Binius and Balsamon so well agree yoâ⦠may look on the Tenent not as Anathemaââ¦ized by one Council but by the Catholick Church Therefore we must conclude that ââ¦his inordinate desire of the flesh against ââ¦he spirit in man is not a condition but a ââ¦orruption of his nature and entered ââ¦ot into the flesh till sin entered into the spirit Then and not till then did the body refuse to be subject to the soul when the soul refused to be subject unto God then that which before was a body of life was presently made a body of death Rom. 7. 24. Not of Gods but of mans own making God made the body but man made the death The soul in that it is united to the body hath by nature an inclination to the things of the body but it hath onely by sin not by nature an inordinate an unruly inclination to them The desires of the flesh are from nature but it is only from sin there is a depravation and irregularity in any of those desires Thirdly mans flesh is depressed by sin for it cannot be depraved by the guilt of sin and not be depressed by the burden of that guilt Wherefore we may justly complain of a weight that is upon us whiles we cannot but complain of the sin that doth so easily beset us Heb. 12. 1. Man now groaning under a two-fold burden the one of his flesh and the otheâ⦠of his sins which is the heavier of thâ⦠two and makes the burden of the flesâ⦠the more burdensome and unsupportable And as in sin there is macula reatuâ⦠poena The pollution the guilt the punishment So in the flesh because of sin therâ⦠is Deformity Depravation and Depression Deformity from the pollution Depravation from the guilt and Depression from the punishment of sin I will therefore be glad and rejoyce in the wasting of my flesh as I would rejoyce in the deliverance from my blemish that most deforms me from my corruption that most depraveâ⦠me and from my burden that most depresses me It is a sweet contemplation of Aquinas 12 ae q. 42. art 5. That spirituall things the more we consider them the greater they appear so that we may lose our selves in the consideration of them if at least we can be said to lose our selves whiles we seek and finde our God But Corporal things the more we consider them the less they appear and vanish by degrees till at length they are quite losâ⦠in their consideration So is it with my flesh the longer I consider it the more iâ⦠wasts and becomes less in my opinion And therefore it is but reason that the ââ¦onger I wear it the more it should wast ââ¦nd become less in its own substance till ââ¦t length it come to nothing CHAP. II. The Comforts of the Soul against Death THere is nothing more profitable for us then to think of death yet of all our thoughts that is the least welcome and the most terrible for death is the King of Terrors when nothing else will draw us unto God that will frighteâ⦠us to him when nothing else will frighteâ⦠us from our beloved sins that will makâ⦠us affraid of sinning whence it is the wisâ⦠mans advice Remember thy last end anâ⦠sin no more Excellent is the Casuisâ⦠distinction of Articulus mortis verus ãâã Praesumptus That there is one point oâ⦠death in Truth another in Presumption Articulus mortis non intelligitur solus ilâ⦠in quo quis moritur sed etiam ille in quo ââ¦ori probabiliter timetur saith Navar. The point of Death is not only that whereâ⦠a man doth actually die but also that wherein he may probably dye so that any ââ¦mminent danger any dangerous sickness ââ¦s to be looked on as the point of Death Nay yet further according to the Christianity though not the Criticism of Caââ¦uisticall Divinity there being not one moment of our life exempted from the ââ¦anger of Death the point of Death doth ãâã effect pierce through our whole life ââ¦uch more should it pierce through our ââ¦earts As many mischiefs as are in the ââ¦orld so many dangers as many dangers ãâã many Deaths Let this wicked world ââ¦en have this priviledge That though it is ââ¦e worst that ever was to teach a man to ââ¦e because its doctrines are so dubious ââ¦et it is the best that ever was to teach a ââ¦an to die because its practices are so ââ¦ngerous Welcome then all ye mischiefs ââ¦d outrages of ungodly men for their ââ¦es that suffer them though not for ââ¦eir sakes that do them We can easily ââ¦sh the one less sin in their doings ââ¦t we may not wish the other less beneâ⦠in their sufferings See the admirable Providence of God towards his Prophet he
sure that it gives him Christ is my gain whether ãâã live or dye For whiles I live I live unto him the only Author Preserver and Redeemer of my life that when I shall dye I ââ¦ay die unto him the only Joy Comfort ââ¦nd Repairer of my Death that whether I ââ¦ve or dye I may still be his Thus did hoââ¦y Job comfort himself against the miseries ââ¦f his life and the terrors of his death ââ¦aying I know that my Redeemer liveth Job 19. 25. as if he had said I know that I ââ¦m as one forsaken and forlorn yet I ââ¦ave a Redeemer I know that I seem as ââ¦ne ready to be swallowed up by death yet he who swallowed death it self up in victory he liveth I know that my Redeemââ¦r liveth and hereupon do I ground my Faith my Comfort and my Assurance my Assurance is infallible undeniable for ââ¦t proceeds from knowledge I know I am as sure that my Redeemer liveth as that I shall die my faith is firm and immoveable for he is mine none shall ever separate me from him he is my Redeemer my comfort is heavenly and immortal answerable to those Divine fountains of Faith and hope from whence it floweth it is the comfort of eternal life for in that my Redeemer liveth I am most confident that in him and by him I shall also live for when Christ who is our life shall appear then shall we also appear with him in Glory Col. 3. 4. An assured hope a constant faith an immortal comfort these were Jobs only supports in his greatest afflictions and his were so great that we can scarce imagine but sure we cannot endure greater never was his body in worse case never was his soul in better Afflictions in the body then have the right end for which they are sent when they make our souls magnifie the Lord and our spirits rejoyce in God our Saviour The devil intended to have added to Jobs misery by increasing the Torments of his body but he did indeed add to his happiness by increasing the Devotion of his soul Mans extremity is Gods opportunity he then most helps us when we can least help our selves when I am weak then am I strong 2 Cor. 12. 10. and by the Rule of Proportion when weakest then strongest when weakest in my self then strongest in my Saviour yet dare I not venter to stay till the weakness of my body give strength unto my soul. For had not Job been a man perfect and upright in his health he would scarce have shewed so much perfection and uprightness in his sickness What then should be the work of my health but to prepare for sickness what should be work of my sickness but to prepare death Then shall I so live as prepared death then shall I so die as prepared Judgement then shall I so live and die prepared for Christ and his Kingdom Grace in this world of Glory in the ââ¦ld to come Let me snatch away this ââ¦ry from my adversary Kingââ¦odom ââ¦odom say I have made Abraham Rich. ãâã 14. 23. Lest hell and the grave say I ââ¦e thrown this man upon his knees no ââ¦nk to him for his devotion it is bare ââ¦ed and necessity meer extremity and ââ¦r that makes him devout Happy is ââ¦t man whom this worlds Afflictions ââ¦ve driven neerer to his God but much ââ¦ppier is he that hath made this approach his maker by voluntarily Afflicting mself for seldom is there so much sinââ¦rity but never is there so much Glory that Repentance and Devotion which oceeds rather from compulsion then ââ¦om election rather from necessity then ââ¦om choice Let the mercies of God inââ¦te me to Repentance and amendment of ââ¦e in my health and let me not expect his ââ¦dgements in my sickness lest instead of ââ¦eing amended I be confounded For if be afflicted in the flesh and not comforted in the spirit then will death wâ⦠was appointed to the end be but the ginning of my afflictions For what ãâã we say was Jobs body now becomâ⦠most as loathsome as the Dunghil wâ⦠he sate upon a fit embleme of Immoââ¦lity and yet whosoever shall look into own soul with an impartial eye will ãâã there much less hope and comfort of eââ¦nity then Job found in his body ãâã how then can he contentedly compose hââ¦self for Death I answer he must do as did cast but one eye down upon himselâ⦠lift up the other to his Redeemer when looks down upon himself he finds notâ⦠but worms to destroy his body v. 26. ãâã when he looks up to his Redeemâ⦠then in my flesh saith he shall I see Gâ⦠What a strange contrariety is here Woâ⦠and Flesh Death and Life Destructâ⦠and seeing God! The Worms are ãâã loathsome that turn to Flesh The Deatâ⦠not terrible that ends in Life The Dââ¦struction is most welcome that ends in ââ¦ing God but yet still worms in theselves are worms death in it self is deathâ⦠and destruction is destruction and worâ⦠as worms are loathsome death as deatâ⦠terrible destruction as destruction canâ⦠welcome and the body is invaded by ââ¦ms captivated under death and deââ¦ction when the soul is separated from and therefore we cannot but look on ãâã as a violent separation which comââ¦s a Rape upon Nature and conseââ¦ntly must needs be an unwelcome ââ¦est such as we are unable to exclude yet much more unwilling to entertain ââ¦erefore the soul while it is in the state conjunction with the body though it now by reason of sin in a miserable state is that state natural and consequentâ⦠desirable nor is it easie to define how it need be made miserable before it can made not desirable for we may easily ââ¦ern a very great desire of life in most ãâã because the greatest miseries are not ââ¦e of themselves fully to expel that desire ââ¦t the soul whiles it is in the state of sepaââ¦ion from the body is in a state altogether natural or rather contra-natural for ââ¦s as long as she continues so she hath ãâã the perfection of her own nature it beâ⦠as natural for humane spirits to be with ââ¦ies as for Angelical spirits to be withâ⦠them which Aquinas hath excelââ¦tly proved in this manner Ia. p. q. 89. ââ¦all Intellectual Substances the Intellective Virtue or Facultie is from tâ⦠fluence of the Divine Light which ãâã the farther it is diffused from God more it is divided in it self and the nâ⦠is divided the more it must needs ââ¦minished Hence it is that those Intelleâ⦠Substances which are farthest from ãâã such as are Humane spirits having thâ⦠share of the Divine light havâ⦠so the weakest Intellectuals and ââ¦quently are not able to understand ãâã by such universal forms and represeââ¦ons by which the Angels are able tââ¦ââ¦derstand them Therefore it is neceâ⦠that the Souls of men be united untââ¦ââ¦dies thereby to be made capable oâ⦠universal forms and representations such as are imprinted in the Angels had God given unto men
when ââ¦we meet with such Preachers we have reaââ¦on to be afraid of such Doctrine Souldiers can easily teach others to serve them but they can hardly teach themselves much less others to serve God And now you may also if you please see a third Quake more terrible then the other two not a quaking of Earth nor a quaking of bodies but a quaking of souls in the first Sect of Quakers They who before quaked for fear of an Angel now much more quaking for fear of Devils But be not you O Christian Souls afraid of that sight The Angel himself saying Fear not ye for I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified Mat. 28. 5. not seek much less help to crucifie him This reason doth no less concern all other seekers that seek Jesus which was crucified then it did the women They may well seek without fear for they are sure to find with joy They shall find that their Lord is risen and calleth them to rise with him Immediately in their souls Immortally in their bodies Incorruptably both in souls and bodies This will be thâ⦠best exercise of thy hope that Christ thâ⦠Head being risen will make thee his member partaker of his joyfull Resurrection which consideration made our Church compose a choice Hymn of purpose for Easter day to express the joy and exultation oâ⦠true Christian souls for the Resurrection of Christ And I suppose none will condemn her of singularity or novelty concerning that Hymn although it is not to be found entirely either in Greek or Latine Liturgies for there is no doubt of her communicating with the Church of Christ whiles she communicates with the Spirit of Christ And in this Hymn she immediately communicates with the Spirit of Christ because it is all taken out of his Word Rom. 6. 8. and 1 Cor. 15. 20 c. And though the Hymn it self may possibly be taken out of good Christians mouths yet surely the Joy of it can never be taken out of their hearts That Christ Rising again from the dead now dieth not Death from henceforth hath no power upon him and in that it hath no power upon him I am sure it shall not long have a power upon me And that other Christ is risen again the first fruits of them that sleep ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith Theophil He that goes first sure hath some to follow him There cannot be first-fruits but there must be after-fruits This is my Hope the head being risen will not leave his members for ever in the dust My soul and my body cannot be now so unwillingly parted in the Death As they shall hereafter be joyfully United in the Resurrection from the dead Lastly Thy love and charity will best exercise it self about his glorious Ascention Thou wilt there see hin attended on Earth by his Disciples ready to receive his Instructions Thou wilt there see him attended in the Air by a Cloud ready to receive his Person Thou wilt there see him attended in heaven by millions of Angels and glorified Souls ready to congratulate his reception If these considerations will not make thee love the Christan Faith that teacheth such heavenly mysteries it is because thou hast dull affections If they will not make thee love thy Saviour Christ who hath prepared such heavenly mercies it is because thou hast no affections This will be the best exercise of thy love to inflame thy soul with the contemplation of those Unspeakable joyes which cannot more Inflame then they will content it Christ ascended into heaven What hast thou to do but in heart and mind thither to ascend after him that thou maist continually dwell with him He is gone to prepare a place for thee what hast thou left to do but to prepare thy self for that place and beseech him to assist and bless thee in that preparation SECT II. The soul Divided from the body when it dies by a violent separation THE Soul of man had no subsistence before his body and is therefore unwilling to have a subsistence without it Creatio infusio sunt simul respectu animae is the Tenent of the School The soul is not created till the body be fitted to receive it so that in the same instant wherein it is Created it is also received into the Body And that 's the reason That coming cloathed into the world she is so much troubled to think that she must at last go as it were naked out of it Hence it is that though we groan in this tabernacle being burdenââ¦d with the miseries and much more with the sins of our Flesh yet we do not desire to be Uncloathed but cloathââ¦d upon that mortality might be swallowed up of Life 2 Cor. 5. 4. That is we would so lay aside our burden as not to lay aside our Flesh and would have our mortal bodies not by Death put off their mortality but by a change put on Immortality Wherefore the Union of the soul with the body being altogether natural the separation of the soul from the body must needs be against nature Consequently it is not possible that a meer natural man should deliberately desire to die for nature cannot desire its own destruction and therefore a deliberate desire of Death cannot possibly proceed from nature but from grace which alone can make a man both live contentedly and die comfortably where there 's a great measure of grace there is also a great measure of contentment in life and of comfort in death In so much that if we do not wilfully shut our eyes we cannot but see if we do not wilfully shut our hearts we cannot but believe if we do not wilfully shut our mouths against the truth we cannot but confess that Godly and Religââ¦ous men do continually dye with more Pââ¦tience and comfort then we dare live bâ⦠the original of this Patience of this Comfort is not from the man but from thâ⦠Godliness For thereby alone he is able tâ⦠say with Saint Paul For me to live is Christ and to dye is gain Phil. 1. 21. To me tâ⦠live is Christ for I die unto sin to me tâ⦠die is gain for I have lived unto righteousness Or else as Beza expounds that place mihi enim est Christus in vita in morte lucrum Christ is a gain to me both iâ⦠life and death To talk of gain in death to a natural man were to make him mad or to think you so for he loseth his soul he loseth himself but to talk of gain iâ⦠death to the spiritual man is to make him the more sensible of his spiritual comfort and Condition for the less he hath of the Flesh the more he hath of the Spirit So that though death takes from him his Body yet it gives him his Soul though it take from him his Soul yet it gives him his Saviour Be it then that death takes from him all things but his God yet
then to touch it and of a purer heart then to save it Lastly the undutifulness of the flesh hinders him as a Christ to instruct for he will teach none that saith not to him as Samuel did Speak Lord for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3. 10. I will therefore gladly put off my flesh that I may put off my unruliness my uncleanness my undutifulness Thus I will gladly put off my self my unruly my unclean my undutifull self that I may wholly put on my Saviour as Loâ⦠as Jesus and as Christ as Lord to goveâ⦠me as Jesus to save me and as Christ to iââ¦struct and to direct me Christus susceâ⦠fidelem ad curandum docendum tuenduâ⦠dirig endum saith Hugo Christ hath uââ¦dertaken the true Christian to heal him to teach him to defend him to direct him To heal him as Jesus to defend him aâ⦠Lord to teach and to direct him as Christ I know that the Messias cometh which is called Christ when he is come he will teach uâ⦠all things Joh. 4. 25. And all these mercieâ⦠will he most readily bestow on me when ãâã most want them and fly to him to supply my wants when I am most sick he will most heal me when I am most weak he will most defend me when I am least capable of other instructions then will he most teach and instruct me when I am least able to guide my self then will he undertake to direct and lead me in the way everlasting There are some things that he hath to teach me which whiles my strength is in me I am not fit to learn I must therefore be content to lose my strength that I may gain these Instructions There are three impediments in men which either keep them from the knowledge of Gods Truth or hinder them in knowing it saith Aquinas hebetudo ingenii Occupationes Temporales torpor addiscendi Their naturall incapacity Their temporall distractions and their spiritual slothfulness All these proceed from the grossness of the flesh Let that vanish these will vanish with it The natural dulness as to heavenly things decaies with the nature The temporall distractions vanish with the time The spiritual slothfulness is shaken off with the flesh that brought it on the soul. Thus I must confess my flesh needs be much wasted to make me live well but much more to make me die well for whiles that is in its vigour and lustiness it will scarce afford me time to pray much less sincereness and fervency in my prayers I will then rejoyce in the wasting of my flesh because it will promote the working of Gods Spirit Nor is this my onely comfort that whiles I wast in flesh I grow in Grace but I am also comforted in this that whiles I wast in my flesh the shame wasts that deforms me the sin wasts that depraves me the burden wasts that depresseth me For mans flesh is Deformed Depraved and Depressed by the sin that dwelleth in it First Mans flesh is deformed by sin for had there never been sin in the flesh there would never have been deformity iâ⦠it neither deformity from the want noâ⦠from the indisposition of any member sâ⦠brought in both deformities and though at the Resurrection God will take awaâ⦠from the bodies of the wicked the deformity that is in them from want or defect of any of their members for he will justifie his own Creation yet he will not take away the deformity that is in their bodies proceeding from the indisposition or defect of a due proportion in their members for he will not justifie their sin and therefore not abolish that deformity which is in punishment thereof St. Paul tels us There is a natural and there ãâã spiritual Body 1 Cor. 15. 44. And yet he speaks of one and the same body ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã saith Epiphanius Haer. 64. not another but the same body which iâ⦠now natural shall then be spiritual And indeed St. Paul himself speaks of the Individuum Demonstrativum This corruptible this mortall Magis enim expresse non poteraâ⦠loqui nisi eutem suam manibus teneret saith Tertullian He could not have spoken more expresly unless he should have pinched up his flesh with his own fingers to shew it us Accordingly Ruffinus saith the Church did providently profess the Doctrine of the Resurrection in saying Huââ¦us carnis resurrectionem the resurrection of this body or of this flesh to wit this same flesh in Substance but not in Qualities It is now the flesh of a natural body and is accordingly clogged with corruption mortality infirmity and gravity or grossness It shall then be the flesh of a spiritual Body and accordingly Incorruptible Immortal full of Power and full of Activity For these are the four Properties assigned to the body at the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã called by the School Impassibilitas Claritas Agilitas Subtilitas The contraries whereof are in the same body as long as it is a natural body to wit Corruption Dishonour Weakness and Grossness which are all as so many natural Deformities of or in the Body whereby it becomes unamiable to it self and unproportionable to the soul that doth inform and should govern it So that though the body be never so beautiful in outward appearance yet whiles it continues in the state of disobedience to the soul it continues also in the state of deformity And disobedience will not be out of it as long as sin is in it Corpus gloriosum est ex totali subjectionâ⦠ad Animam saith Aquinas The body is not glorious till it hath learned a total subjection to the soul even as the soul is not glorious till it hath learned a total subjection to its God And the same Author asserting That the Body of man hath a most convenient disposition makes it good by this distinction Non simpliciter sed sââ¦cundum comparationem ad finem not simply but in comparison of the end for which it was made that is the operations of the soul Therefore though Heavenly Bodies are much more beautifull then is mans body yet a Heavenly Body had been less convenient for a man then an earthly body because a Heavenly Body had been impassible and consequently incapable of Sense And the soul of man knows nothing naturally but by and from the Senses Wherefore as an Artificer making a File or Saw to cut doth not make it of Glass but oâ⦠Iron for he looks not after the beauty but after the use of it and cares not that it is the less beautifull so he may have it the more usefull So did God in making man not a Coelestial but a Terrestrial Body Wherefore if the necessity of Nature hath ââ¦ut mans body under a comparative deforââ¦ity to make it the less glorious How much more hath the corruption of Nature ââ¦ut the same Body under a positive Deformity to make it the more inglorious Secondly mans flesh is depraved by sin As it
for he tasted it at his own pleasure Death feeds on us for we must tast it against our wills and not only tast it but also eat it down Corruption first seized upon our souls and from thence passed to our bodies It was to our greatest disadvantage that it seized upon our souls But it is to our greatest advantage that it seizeth upon our bodies For unless they should be quite destroyed sin which first caused mortality would in the corrupt remainders and Reliques of our bodies it self have a kind of immortality whereas Righteousness alone is and ought to be immortal And therefore it is very probable that those who shall be found alive at the last day of whom the Apostle hath said We shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed 1 Cor. 15. 51. shall have a change not only Equivalent to a Death but also to a Total Destruction For sin must totally be destroyed And therefore also our bodies that have lodged it and have been defiled by it That there may not be left the least monument of sin in the New World wherein shall dwell nothing but Righteousness 2 Pet. 3. 13. And now me thinks I can find a Paradise in Golgotha ever since my Saviour hath been there and bid hearty welcom to those worms which shall destroy that flesh which would have destroyed me For I can now safely conclude that neither in regard of my soul nor of my body ought I to fear Death which certainly is not so formidable in it self as it is generally in the worlds opinion For if the Rule be true Nomen quasi Novimen The name of every thing is that whereby it is best known and discerned then by the name of death we may best know and discern the nature of it And these are the chief Names whereby the Scripture expresseth it A Sleep A Change A Departure A Dissolution and none of all these Names is terrible and why then should the thing it self be so But if there be any terrour in the thing yet we are sure that in the Text there is a comfort greater then the terrour First Death is called a Sleep Mat. 9. 24. The maid is not dead but sleepeth And though wicked miscreants who believed not the Resurrection laughed at our blessed Saviour for calling death A sleep yet let all good Christians rejoyce that it is so and give him thanks for making it so It is a comfortable Gloss which the third Toletan Council cap. 22. gives upon those words of John 11. 35. Jesus wept For they say Dominus non flevit Lazarum sed ad vitae hujus ploravit Aerumnas resuscitandum Jesus did not weep that Lazarus slept but that he was again to be awakened to see the miseries and feel the mischiefs of this wicked world T was said before verse 11. Our friend Lazarus sleepeth And he that said it having made his death a sleep was troubled that he should awaken him so soon from his sleep In vita vigilant Justi ideo in morte dicuntur Dormire saith St. Augustine The good man when he dieth is said to sleep because he watcheth and waketh all his life but a wicked man sleeps all his life and awakens only at his death Soul take thy rest saith the rich worldling He lulls his soul asleep but what follows Thou fool this night is thy soul taken from thee Thy sleep shall soon be over together with thy life and Vengeance and Death they shall awaken thee For hast thou slept all thy life and wouldest thou also sleep at thy death Hast thou slept all the while thou wert here and wouldest thou also sleep now thou art going hence Hast thou slept when God bad thee awake and wouldest thou also sleep now that he bids thee die No Thou mayest not any longer expect rest ease and tranquillity For thou shalt certainly have disconsolation at thy departure grief in thy passage and shame at thy journeys end when thou shalt appear before Gods Judgement-seat and shalt not be able to give any account at all of thy life no more then the Souldiers could of Christ Mat. 28. for thou wert asleep Thy Death would have been a sleep if thy life had not been so Secondly Death is called A Change Job 14. 14. All the dayes of my appointiâ⦠time will I wait till my Change come Thâ⦠Sept. ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã I wiâ⦠wait till I be made again If death be thy making Tell me what can be thy marring A happy change doubtless which is nothing but a new making of that which is quite out of Order And thus saith St. Chrysostome did Symmachus expound thâ⦠words ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã my holy Nativity or my holy Naturâ⦠come The nature which I now have iâ⦠full of corruption full of unholiness so that my own flesh is not so neer me as iâ⦠my sinfulness O for a regeneration of my body as well as of my soul that I may be born again in my flesh as I am in my spirit Nor is there any thing that can morâ⦠truly sweeten the thought of death theâ⦠this consideration that it is a change For we are already in so bad a condition that we cannot well fear our Change should be for the worse And if we be truly sensible of our own condition it is most sure thaâ⦠our change will be infinitely for the better For so saith the Apostle Phil. 3. 20â⦠21. For our conversation is in Heaven froâ⦠whence we also look for the Saviour thâ⦠Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body as if he had said we find nothing on Earth worth conversing withall therefore our conversation is in Heaven we know that our body is now vile and loathsom and therefore we look for the Lord Jesus Christ to Change and Fashion it like unto his Glorious Body Here are two great changes which the men of this world that are most given to change least care for A change of the soul from being on Earth to be in Heaven for our conversation is in Heaven A change of the body from Vileness to Glory who shall change our vile body that it may be like his glorious body Thirdly Death is called A Departure and so doth Abenezra expound the forenamed word in Job ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Chaliphathi my change that is saith he ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã Halicathi my departure For the Jews express mans Birth as a Coming and his Death as a Going So Eccles. 1. 4. One generation goeth or Passeth away and another cometh Generatio vadens and Generatio Veniens The first is put for the Dying the latter for the living Generation of mankind And the first Council of Nice can 13. speaking of Dying men useth a word that only signifieth going forth ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã De iis qâ⦠exeunt And again ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã ãâã If any man be ready to Depart