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A60568 The life and death of Mr. William Moore, late fellow of Caius Colledge, and keeper of the University-Library as it was delivered in a sermon preached at his funeral-solemnity, April 24, 1659, in St Maries Church in Cambridge / by Tho. Smith ... Smith, Thomas, 1623 or 4-1661.; Hammond, Henry, 1605-1660. 1660 (1660) Wing S4231A; ESTC R566 10,541 34

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THE LIFE and DEATH OF Mr WILLIAM MOORE Late fellow of Caius Colledge and Keeper of the University-Library As it was delivered in a Sermon preached at his funeral-solemnity April 24. 1659. In St Maries Church in CAMBRIDGE by THO. SMITH B. D. his successour HINC ◆ LVCEM ◆ ET ◆ POCVLA ◆ SACRA Printed by John Field Printer to the University of Cambridge 1660. To My ever-honoured Friend CHARLES SCARBOROUGH Doctour of Physick and the rest of Mr Moors pupills Most dear friends and fellow-pupils I Here present unto you a description of our Tutour as it was taken in short-hand I beleeve that Mr Smith towards the end of whose Sermon this was inserted would have been persuaded to have printed this whole Sermon if M●Moor's executours had not told him how they observed that in such discourses the onely thing regarded by the Reader is the life of the person especially in these times wherein few minde any thing but news I remember that when our Tutour had read over a book writ by D H. he said That if he had been to write a tract on that subject he would have said the same things with that authour And therefore I here make bold to send you also the last words of Dr Hammond which are newly come to my hands because I have heard some who were intimate with them both say that they knew no men more like in judgement and temper then M Moor and that holy personage So that if you desire our Tutours works you may be pleased to read this Doctours till his shall be published which I hope some of his pupills will do ere long and not leave all the toyl to Mr Smith I have transcribed many of them but am leaving England and so must commend them to you and you to God beseeching you to pray for me and to look upon these not onely as the last words of my Tutour and Dr Hammond but of me also unless you hear further from the unworthiest of your fellow-pupills Charles Bertie Middle-Temple May 8. Anno CAROLI II. 12o THE LIFE and DEATH OF Mr William Moor Reverend and beloved BE pleased to suffer me who never yet commended any man out of the pulpit to say a little of this Mr William Moor newly interred here * before us under that very stone whereon he was wont to kneel down in prayers to Almighty God He was a person who had that of Solomon continually before his eyes Eccles. 9. 10. What ever good thy hand findeth to do do it with all thy might for there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisdome in the grave whither thou goest or rather he had the life of the Blessed Jesus in his daily meditation and practise You can scarce name the good or piece of knowledge or wisdome wherein he was not eminent one of the ablest that ever I met with not onely in the knotty pieces of Divinity Cases of conscience and Chronologie and all ingenuous sciences especially History and all kinde of Antiquity which if any thing must bring the men of this age to their wits again when all is done but also in Anatomy Physick Mathematicks and the like Those who are the most eminent for all these now in England being of his education But above all I must admire his piety to God signified in every particular that I could observe And I think I had more the happiness of his company and so greater opportunities to note his behaviour of late years then any here present except his own family having been with him almost every day for these seven years last past Cardinal Bellarmin in his second book of Dying well and eighth chapter is so ingenuous as to blame those Romanists who begin with their Sacraments when they have done with their Physick and saith Sacramentum conferretur aegrotis quando periculosè aegrotare incipiunt that 't is a very dangerous custome though it is seldome otherwise that men send not for the Priest till the Physician hath given them over This our friend quite contrary to them and such as Asa sought to the LORD first and then to the Physician To the LORD and that after a strict examination of his soul in those two main parts of divine worship Prayer and the Holy Eucharist No sooner had the disease seized upon him in an extraordinary manner but straight he spoke of the sixth chapter of St Johns Gospel and those {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} mysteria and told me and divers others that he was of his good friend Mr Herbert Thorndikes minde concerning that chapter viz. That it must needs be a prediction of the Holy Eucharist which the first Nicene Council thought the most necessary viaticum and after them the whole Christian world not excluding Calvin Zanchy and others of the Reformed till some late novelists arose who would perswade us that Christ had no true Church upon earth before these times And he received the body and bloud of our Saviour with expressions of as much outward reverence as ever I beheld which several here present can witness and doubtless his external deportment was but a necessary consequence of his inward devotion Which also appeared by his zeal and frequency in prayer to Almighty God not omitting to humble himself in a decent {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} dedicate to that purpose as you know the Primitive Christians did through every day of his life even when he was not able to go but crept and was led to it not omitting the very last day of his pilgrimage when he could not without help move his foot over the threshold As he testified his reverence to God in doing so in suffering Though his sickness was very painfull caused by an ulcer in his bladder yet who ever heard him complain in that or any other trouble All that I heard of it from his mouth was this When one told him that he could not but be in great pain he answered My Saviour was in far greater pain for me In his sickness he spent the most of his time in reading and meditating on the passion of Christ desiring to throw aside other learning and to know nothing else but Jesus Christ and him crucified and this knowledge was his ballast kept him steady and couragious for he never abhorred any thing more than the humours of this age simulation and dissimulation so that if ever any man had a window into his heart that all the world might know his most secret thoughts Mr Moor had In these changing times wherein men pride themselves in menstrua fide anniversaria as Tertullian speaks in a religion that alters as oft as the moon or take up with the year at most and then persecute their neighbours for not being as very Protei as themselves who dare whisper that Mr Moor was not constant to that religion which upon a strict rational examination he took up in his younger days sticking close to