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A59770 Practical meditations upon the four last things viz. I. Death, II. Judgment, III. Hell, IV. Heaven / by R. Sherlock ... Sherlock, R. (Richard), 1612-1689. 1692 (1692) Wing S3245; ESTC R9873 61,623 132

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standeth right fixed in my affections to cleave unto thee and I will praise the Lord in the congregations in the assemblies of the Lord's people in the house where his Honour dwelleth and so shall I hope to be hereafter admitted into the blissfull company of Angels and Saints to praise the Lord for ever saying Glory be to the Father c. As it was in the beginning c. The XLIII Psalm PARAPHRASED Verse 1. GIve sentence with me O God when I stand before thee to be judged according to my works done in the body whether good or evil O then defend my cause against the ungodly people Plead for me against all the accusations of men women devils in whose company or by whose temptations I have done any evil O deliver me from the deceitful and wicked man that I be not ranked amongst such upon the left hand of unrighteousness and infelicity For thou art the God of my strength By whom I am enabled to resist all my ghostly enemies why hast thou put me from thee leaving me to mine own weak frail and sinful self And this is the reason why I go so heavily in the ways of thy service and of mine own salvation whilst the enemy oppresseth me being destitute of thy help the grand enemy of God and Man over-powers me with his temptations and assaults But that I may manfully resist and overcome O send out thy light and thy truth the light of thy Grace and the truth of thy righteousness which discerns the cause of the righteous from the ungodly that they may lead me out of all the errours of this sinful life that being separated from the allurements and society of the ungodly they may bring me to thy holy hill where thy Temple is situate and to thy dwelling the place where thine honour dwelleth And that I may go to the Altar of God both Sacramental and Mystical upon the Altar of my heart to offer up my whole self to be a living Sacrifice Holy acceptable unto God even the God of my joy and gladness who makes glad my heart by the consolations of his Holy Spirit when I approach his Altar and upon the Harp which is an instrument of a Triangular figure and represents the heart of man wherewithal I will give thanks unto thee O holy and ever blessed Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost one God over all blessed for ever and my God even the God of my joy and worship my Glory and my Crown O then Why art thou so heavy O my soul There is no sorrow but for sin because this alone separateth the Soul from the God of all consolation and why art thou so disquieted within me 'T is thy unquiet passions and unruly lusts which disturb thy reason and withdraw thee thus disquieted from a sincere dependance upon thy God but return return unto thy rest O my Soul O put thy trust in God all thy sorrows and distempers are from thy self thy health and joy is from the Lord and for this I will yet give him thanks who is to be praised in both the seasons of sadness and joy for in both He is the help of my countenance the lightsome gladness of my heart and my God both of my Being and Well-being even the God of all that I am and all that I have and all that I hope to be which is to enjoy the beatifical vision of his divine Majesty for ever to sing Glory be to the Father c. As it was in the beginning c. THE Third General Meditation UPON THE PAINS of HELL MAny are the opinions and disputes and too curious also the disquisitions touching the place and nature matter manner and duration of the pains of Hell But it would be more Christian prudence strictly to search and find out those crooked deceitful and polluted paths which lead to that dismal place of torments that we may decline and avoid them 'T is surely better by much not to feel by woful experience the miseries of the damned than exactly to know and accurately to discourse of them And may this be ever my study blessed Lord my continual care and fear and constant endeavour not in the least particular to sin against thee for thy wrath and indignation which resteth upon sinners is a fierce wrath and a terrible 't is not in the power of frail man to sustain the fury of it MEDITAT I. Of the Pain of Loss AS there are two general parts of every sin in this life committed 1. An aversion from the Creator 2. A conversion to the Creature So there are two general kinds of punishment for Sin in the Life to come 1. The Punishment of Loss 2. The Pain of Sense The first and 't is esteemed by many holy Fathers the greatest of Hell-Torments is that which is call'd by Divines The Pain of Loss whereunto the wicked of the world are sentenced in these several expressions Mat. 22.13 25.30.41 Luke 13.27 S. Chrys Hom. 28. Take him away Cast him out I know you not depart from me ye cursed The Pains of Sense in Hell are intolerable saith Chrys yet for a man to suffer a thousand Hells is less irksome than to be banish'd from Heaven to be driven from the presence of God to be exil'd out of the Regions of Light and Joy to be rejected of the Lord and to hear from him I know you not Depart from me The Loss of Heaven must needs be the greatest of Evils because 't is the Loss of the greatest and most perfect good and of all that is truly good To lose the good things we do now enjoy in the world may be recompenced with advantage by the gain of Heaven but to lose Heaven it self to forfeit the right and title we once had happily obtained to be inheritors of the Kingdom of Heaven is a Loss irreparable Id. Serm. Aug. Enchir ad Laurent c. 112. Nothing can compensate nothing can equal nothing to be compared to this Loss 't is Hell enough it self if there were no other In this life the most wise and holy understand not throughly the fulness of Heavenly joys and so cannot be sensible of the Torment of their Loss but in the next life our eyes shall be opened and the veil upon our hearts removed and then shall the ungodly see to their unspeakable grief and anguish of spirit the vast difference betwixt the never fading pleasures of the right hand of God and the empty transitory pleasures of sin betwixt that fulness of joy in the presence of God and the deplorable sorrow of its loss and absence It is very probable that this Torment of Hell is meant by the Worm that dieth not For nothing can more corrode and eat so deeply even into the inmost recesses of damned Souls as to see and consider for what poor beggarly trifling things of the Earth here below they have lost those blissful Joys and ravishing Felicities of Heaven above when they shall