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cause_n bring_v death_n great_a 1,642 5 3.2072 3 false
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A47613 A summons to the grave, or, The necessity of a timely preparation for death demonstrated in a sermon preached at the funeral of that most eminent and faithful servant of Jesus Christ Mr. John Norcot who departed this life March 24, 1675/6 / by Benjamin Keach. Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704. 1676 (1676) Wing K95; ESTC R29890 33,691 104

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I had dreadful Plague Fire and Sword and what further means could God make use of in an ordinary way for allarming and stirring of us up to prepare for our change aud turning of our souls to himself and fitting of us for Eternity And shall none of these work upon you Shall all means fail Shall the Gospel be preached in vain Shall Ministers spend their study their breath nay their strength to no purpose what will you do then in the end 6. Do you know that you shall have all these helps continued to you Will God still suffer his holy Spirit to strive with you Alass Death may soon have Commission to seize you and carry you into the other world but should you live are you sure God will still wait upon you upon such rebels who have slighted and undervalued his Grace Son and Gospel Sirs I must tell you alluding to that in Genesis 6. which hath often been upon my heart that the blessed Spirit shall not alwayes strive with man Means and advantages are like to be taken away God ere long may say to Conscience Be still reprove that man that woman no more You may be left to commit wickedness without remorse or trouble God may give you up to a hardened and sordid heart to a seared and filthy Conscience yea and refuse in mercy to afflict you any more see Hosea 4. 14. May not he that hath taken away a Minister an able one a sweet and precious Labourer take away ere long a sweet and precious Gospel and what will become of your souls then 7. Do you know for certain the Gospel shall be continued to this Land Be you sure you shall hear the joyful sound Let me tell you my thoughts freely though I pretend not to a spirit of Prophesie yet mark what follows I tremble to think what is coming upon us as a punishment of our sins I fear Beloved the Gospel is a going Ephraim hath grey hairs here and there though he know it not and grey hairs are a sign that our morning or best days are gone secondly they commonly bring a wrinkled face or a decay of Beauty our goodness like Ephraims are even like the morning dew thirdly they bring feebleness or a decay of strength fourthly they shew that death and mortality draws near We have heard some of us that he was grey a great while ago I doubt he is white by this time There are sad symptomes upon us I know not how soon we may have cause to cry Ichabod because the glory is departed Are we not in danger to be over-spread with Popery Confusion and Darkness for if the Gospel should continue and Gods people resolve to do their best by their prayers and prizing of it to hold it fast yet are you sure you shall have Ministers to prcach unto you Many have been taken of late away and one at this time before your eyes is gone a faithful and able one whom now you shall hear no more But should there be Ministers and opportunities yet you may be left to your selves to ripen for Hell and ruin Nay Is not Christ already crying over you as he did over Jerusalem Oh that thou hadst known in this thy day the things that belongeth to thy peace but now they are hid from eyes Luke 19. 42. Oh that these things might take hold and touch your Conscicnces 8. Consider of the shortness and uncertainty of your dayes Alas what is your life you know not how soon death may come and knock at your doors or look in at your windows It may be some of you have had many years but this consider of you know not how few the rest may be behind you have no promise from God no lease or assurance that you have one year more where hath God told you that you shall nay one half year You cannot assure your self you shall have one month no not one week no not one day You may be stricken by death before you return home Boast not thy self of too morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth Pro. 27. 1. Many that are young hope that they may have many years the child thinks to be a youth and the youth to be a man and a man till he is full of dayes But alass they consider not how brittle they are they do not lay to heart the uncertainty of their lives David desired to know his end and the measure of his days that he might know how frail he was Psal 39. 4 5. Many do not take a right measure of their dayes they measure not by a lawful Rule What say some my Father and Grandfather lived to a good old age and I hope to attain to their years Others measure by their present health they are not diseased nor sickly but of a good healthful Constitution but alass this is no sure Rule thou mayest notwithstanding all this be quickly in the grave such sometimes death makes to stoop on a sudden they go many times before sickly persons Others measure their dayes by their present strength they fear not death upon that account yet they die as you have heard though wholly at ease these do not go by the Kings Standard neither Let me tell you what is a right and true measure for your dayes account them then by the morning dew and flower of the field Man that is born of a woman saith holy Job is but of few dayes he cometh forth like a flower and is cut down and flieth away like a shadow and continueth not Job 14. 12. Naturalists tells us of a plant that lasts but for a day this plant thou or I may be The Heathen hath observed that the Rose grows old in its very budding Mankind is like Jonah's Gourd that came up in a night and perished in a night Nothing fades sooner than a flower oh measure thy dayes by that and by the vapour that appeareth for a little while and then vanisheth away the Spiders Web the Swift Post the Weavers Shuttle or a Ship under sail Persons never so rich or great never so beautiful never so weak of strong wise or foolish vertuous or vicious as thou hast heard must die May not the thoughts of this move thee to a preparedness for the grave 9. Consider how you have loytered hitherto and lost much of your precious time which God hath lent you to prepare for the grave Upon the improvement of your present time doth your eternal happiness depend and if it be squandered away what will become of your immortal and never dying souls If a man hath much work to do work of the weightiest concern that must be done or the man undone business that would take up all his day and it should so fall out that he had lost the morning nay above half his day would it not concern him to set about the work with all his might so as if possible to do two hours works in one lest the Sun