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A15393 Eliah's vvish a prayer for death. A sermon preached at the funerall of the Right Honourable Viscount Sudbury, Lord Bayning. By Ro: Willan D.D. Chaplaine to his Maiesty. Willan, Robert, d. 1630.; Spencer, John, d. 1680. 1630 (1630) STC 25670; ESTC S120043 16,811 52

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his naturall corruptions neuer to haue truce with Sathans Temptations and to see and suffer nay sometimes to bee infected with the sinnes of others And this is our in euitable condition till with Elias we haue cast off the mantle of mortality As for Misery as a Center in a Circle meetes with euery line in the Circumference So Man receiues punishment from God from Angels Deuils and euery single creature the very Gnat hauing a sting to torment him Oh blessed Lord are all our liues in the seuerall Ages so variable in the Callings so troublesome in the Companions so intollerable what remaines but with Elias to thinke of another life and with Nazianzen to bury the Miseries of this life in the hope of future Felicity which is the second Corollary and last point It must bee so that there is another life for here they liue many times the longest liues who were not worthy to liue at all Here the Israelites make the brickes and the Aegyptians dwell in the howses Dauid is in want and Nabal abounds Sion is Babylons captiue Hath God nothing in store for Joseph but the stocks for Esay but a saw will not Elias adorne the charriot better then the Iuniper tree will not Iohn Baptists head become a Crowne as well as a Platter Surely there is great Retribution for the Iust there is fruite for the Righteous God hath Palmes for their hands Coronets for their heads white Robes for their bodyes hee will wipe all teares from their eyes and shew them his goodnesse in the land of the liuing Of the infinite happines in that celestiall life how should I speake Earthly Ierusalem was portrayed by Ezechiel vppon a Tile so cannot the Heauenly bee St Austin wrote two and twenty bookes of the City of God how can I bring into the last gasp of an howre the vnity the plenty the Beauty the holynesse the felicity thereof when he himselfe confessed after all his endeauour all that can be said is but a drop to the Sea and a sparke to a fire This for your comfort St. John found twelue gates in it open day and night to entertaine departing soules repairing thither in the true faith accompanied with an holy conuersation The blessed Angels standing Sentinels for their guard and conduct A Grecian at his death thus cheered vp himselfe I shall goe among Philosophers to Pythagoras among Musitians to Olympus among Historians to Hecateus among Poets to Homer a poore Heathenish and Pagan comfort like Polyphemus whistle hanging about his necke when his eyes were boared out Meere morall vertue may finde great reward on earth and lesse torment in hell but true good is from Christ His precious blood opened Heauen for them onely which beleeue in his sauing name And they are sure to goe among the Patriarks to Abraham Isaacke and Jacob among the Prophets to Moses and Elias among the Kings to Dauid Hezekiah and Josias among the Apostles to S. Peter and S. Paul amongst the Martyrs to S. Stephen and to the innumerable society of Saints and Angels whither as wee ought piously to beleeue hee is transported to whom wee performe these sad Obsequies I hope there is no Auditor in this high Assembly so vnequall as to suppose this Text chosen as a iust paralell to the Honourable party deceased for alasse they agree onely in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that as Elias so he was a man subiect to many infirmities of which if any curious eare desire to heare he will be deceiued I do not remember when Dauid made Sauls Epitaph proclaiming his vertues that he touched any of his errors those hee washed away with his teares and the God of mercy hath pardoned what God hath put out of his memory ought not to remaine in ours Yet I say confidently because truely malice it selfe could fasten no funereous crime vpon his life As when a tree is sallen you may coniecture what breadth it bare and how farre it spread by the vacuity emptinesse of the place where it stood So if wee consider him hewen downe by death as a Christian as a Subiect and as the Father of a Family he will appeare a Cedar and no Shrub The light of Starres and glittering of Diamonds is borrowed from the Sunne all humane titles are nothing which receiue not their lustre from Piety and Religion For his Religion he was neither superstitious nor factious but hee serued God in that Way which Papists call Heresie and Nouellists formality a true member of the English Church hee thought of our Church as Dauid of the Tabernacle that it was very amiable he embraced her holy doctrine reuerenced her comely Orders loued her painfull Preachers If due obseruation of Gods Sabath if frequentation of Gods house attention in hearing deuotion in prayer if an eare open to Reproofe and a mind willing to Reforme what hee did amisse if strong paines in sicknesse meekely borne bee outward signes to know a good Christian such was hee I adde if workes of Charity and Almesdeedes which Daniel held a meanes to redeeme sinne and St. Paul accounted an acceptable Sacrifice these wanted not Hee hath to the bullding of an Hospitall in the place of his birth giuen competent maintenance for the releefe of tenne poore people to the worlds end That Noble Act of his I remember with ioy He was the first Benefactor to the Library of Syon Colledge Samuel his Ramath where by the pious care and zealous industry of that graue and Reuerend Diuine M. John Symson who as Camillus was called a second Romulus merits the title of a second Founder maugre the opposition of an enuious Sanballat a most Stately roome is erected for the benefit of the worthy Preachers of this Honourable City of London but wants the Furniture of bookes Bookes are the Riuers of Paradise watering the earth The deaw of Hermon making the vallies fertile The Arke preseruing the Manna pot and Moses Tables the Monuments of ancient labours the Baskets keeping the d●posited Reliques of time so as nothing ●s lost The Magazine of Piety and Arts. A Souldier without Armes may bee valiant but not victorious an Artisan without his instruments may bee skilfull but not famous Archimedes is knowne by his Spheare and Cylinder A Preacher without bookes may haue some zeale but little knowledge to guide it S. Paul himselfe although so inspired found as much want of his bookes as of his cloake in winter To ayme at Learning without bookes is with the Danaides to draw water in a siue What were it for this wealthy City to reare vp a Library equall to that of Pisistratus at Athens of Eumenes at Pergamus of Ptolomey at Alexandria Were the meanes of your industrious Preachers answerable to their mindes this good and great worke needed no other supply for they like Plato would giue 3000. Graecian pence for three small volumes of Pythagoras and with Hieronime emptie their purses by