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A43453 The importance of religion to young persons represented in a sermon preached at the funeral of Sir Thomas Vinor, Baronet, in St. Hellens Church, London, May the 3d, 1683 / by Hen. Hesketh ... Hesketh, Henry, 1637?-1710. 1683 (1683) Wing H1612; ESTC R12084 11,579 35

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THE IMPORTANCE OF RELIGION TO Young Persons Represented in a SERMON Preached at the Funeral of Sir Thomas Vinor Baronet in St. Hellens Church London May the 3d. 1683. By Hen. Hesketh Vicar of St. Hellens and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty LONDON Printed by H. Hills Jun. for Henry Bonwicke at the Red-Lyon in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1683. To the Honoured Sir John Lawrence Knight and Alderman of London Honoured Sir I here Present you with what you were pleased to call for at my hands a Copy of that Discourse that was made at your Grand-Childs Funeral which you were pleased so kindly to accept at the hearing as to desire a more leisurely perusal of it This is now the Third time that I have been called to do you Service in these sad occasions and Death hath made so many violent Inroads upon your Family in a short space I Pray God Almighty Sanctifie these sad Occurences to you and to all that relate to you and teach you to improve them to those purposes of Wisdom that he intends them If this poor Discourse may do you any Service to this purpose I shall have good cause to rejoyce What ever it is I present it to you in such a hope if you have a design to make it publick as you seem to intimate you must be pleased to stand accountable for the imperfections of it for I have no further concern for it than to have it accepted as Testimony of thankfulness for those great kindnesses you have been pleased upon all occasions to express towards Honoured Sir Your most obliged and most Humble Servant Henry Hesketh May the 8th 1683. Ecclesiastes 11.10 Therefore remove Sorrow from thy Heart and put away Evil from thy Flesh for Child-hood and Youth are Vanity WE are come together Honorable and Beloved at this time to pay our last respects to the Memory of a Young deceased Gentleman in whom Parentage and Honour Estate and Parts Beauty and Comliness Youth and Temper combined to have rendred him a great Man and had God so pleased one that might have done good service in his Generation But it is otherwise determined above and the Thread of his Life is cut off his Relations you see are willing to commit the Earthly remains of him to the Grave with that respect and those Testimonies of Honour and Kindness that the custom of this City hath made becoming Persons of his Rank and Quality And what is Incumbent now on me is to strive to Improve this sad providence to your good to render you more than formal Mourners and customary Spectators of these Funeral Solemnities There can scarce be a time in which we may promise our selves more success in our Ghostly Counsels and Advice than such as this For Death and the apprehensions of it usually render Men serious and make way for those reflections and thoughts which the Hurries of business the entertainments of sense and the gayeties of the world indispose them for and lock up their minds against the entertainment of This is the great reason why the Funerals of the Dead are usually attended with some exhortations to the Living And I think we may take good occasion to magnifie the great care and wisdom of the Church in it in advantaging such very necessary Counsels with such very fair and promising opportunities This is my present Province and the Task imposed on me at this time which that I might discharge with some service and success to you I have been desired to suit my discourse to those especially that stand upon the same Level and in the same great circumstances of Age with this Young departed Gentleman and to address to them in some such way as might be most suitable to their needs and this occasion And I have not been able to find out a place of Scripture that seems to me better to answer these purposes than these words of Solomon now read to you which are directly addressed to Young Persons as is plain in themselves and from the Verse which precedes and that which follows the Text Remove sorrow from thy Heart and put away evil from thy Flesh for Child-hood and Youth are Vanity In which words without spending time in any further recommending the Parentage Honour Estate Parts Beauty or Comliness of the Person Deceased there are two things I shall observe to you 1. An Exhortation and advice in these words Therefore remove sorrow from thy heart and put away evil from thy Flesh 2. An argument or reason to inforce the compliance with it in these for Child-hood and Youth are Vanity 1. The first of these I intend no further to insist upon than only to give you the true sense and meaning of it for the second is that I chiefly purpose to make the Subject of the following discourse The advice seems to consist of three parts remove Sorrow from thy heart and put away Evil from thy Flesh but they are either of the same Import and only doubled like Pharaohs Dream to make the deeper Impression or one is added as an Exegesis and Explication of the other or both are expressed to make the sense of them fully comprehensive of what the Wise Man intended by them The thing plainly intended in them is true Religion and that practice or great instance of it which is most suitable and becoming Youth and the expressions are common Periphrases of both these in the Scriptures For by sorrow here is meant any manner of sin any instance of wickedness by which Men bring evil and sorrow upon themselves the Effect here being put for the Cause as by a Metonymy very common in Scripture it is in other places Most of the Translations that I have seen instead of sorrow read anger Put away anger from thy heart by which they either mean all those irregular sensual Passions to which Youth is so very subject of which anger is the most raging and impetuous and that which commonly betrays and hurries them without great care into many evils and Mischiefs or they mean indifferently any Sin or Vice by which they anger and provoke God and fall under his displeasure and the sad Effects of it And putting away evil from the Flesh is a common expression in Scripture in which the Flesh is almost always used in an ill sense for the depraved part in man and for all those sensual Lusts and Inclinations seated in it that hurry and betray Inconsiderate men into sin and in the irregular indulgence of which most of the prohibited instances of vice consist So that putting away evil from the flesh must signifie what the Apostle means by cleansing our selves from all filthiness of the flesh 2 Cor. 7.1 i. e. freeing our selves from the power of all fleshly Lusts and as our Church in her Catechism very well expresseth it and to the Capacity of those that I am now speaking chiefly unto the keeping our Bodies in Temperance Soberness and Chastity In short by sorrow in the