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A95353 Thanatoktasia. Or, Death disarmed: and the grave swallowed up in victory. A sermon preached at St. Maries in Cambridge, Decemb. 22. 1653. At the publick funerals of Dr. Hill, late Master of Trinity Colledge in that University. With a short account of his life and death. To which are added two sermons more upon the same text, preached afterward in the same place. / By Anthony Tuckney, D.D. Master of St. Johns Colledge in Cambridge. Tuckney, Anthony, 1599-1670. 1654 (1654) Wing T3218; Thomason E1523_2 63,890 147

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on in ●●eir way they have not been so mindful as they should to beg for a smile in their Journeies end which God make's account is a mercy worth asking and therefore we receive not because we ask not Jam. 4. 2. For remedy therefore ask that you may have now seek that you may then finde and all your life time be knocking Matth. 7. 7 hard at the gate of mercy that at your out-gate of this life an abundant entrance 2 Pet. 1. 11. may be administred unto you into the everlasting kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Have you ordinarily known the man who was much in prayer while he lived to be full of fears and anguish when he came die No those sweet and strong breathings blow away such darksome clouds and therby the setting Sunne shineth out brightly For prayer 1. Through mercy procure's it it can get any good thing at a good Gods hand and why not comfort in death nay then especially for then begin's a believers harvest when he re●●'s the fruit of hi● for●●● la●●●● Job 5. 26. Revel 14. 15. and hath oftentimes a ●ost ●ensibl● return of all hi●●●●●er prayers which before i●●●●y be he thought God as well as himself had forgotten 2. As prayer thus impetrate's it so it naturally as it were trains us up to it for by constant acquaintance with prayer we come to more familiar acquaintance with Christ and so come to see and feel how happy it is to be near him which cannot but make us the more ready and desirous of getting out of the body Phil. 1. 23. 2 Cor. 5. 6. that we may be no longer absent from him and besides the happy soul which with the sweet bird is continually soaring upward and keepeth much aloft is so well acquainted with those approaches to Heaven that now when it fitteth on the dying mans lips it is ready on the wing to take its last flight as in that dark night very well knowing its accustomed way thither and having so often sent its prayers those winged messengers thither before-hand now with joy and singing mounteth up it self thither and therefore be much in prayer now if in death you would have an answer of peace 3. False heartednesse is another cause of faint-heartednesse in these animae deliquia the rotten quagmire quakes and sinks when trod on and so fearfulness we read surprizeth hypocrites Isa 33. 14. when death and danger layeth hold on them God then takes away their souls and their hopes together Job 27. 8. as else where their hope is said to be as the giving up of the ghost Miserable cap. 11. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man if thy soul and thy hope goe out with the breath of the same dying groan But on the contrary by way of remedy Hezekiahs walking before God perfectly and with an upright heart Isa 38. 3. was the best stake in his hedge when the newes of death made all crack and so much truth sincerity as we have just so much peace comfort shall we have in dangers death and no more The Heathens under their Fables of Minos Aeacus Rhadamanthus hinted See Plato in Gorgia Hora mortis hora ve●itatis to us that at death there will be a strict Scrutiny and however in our life time we have been judged by our selves and others with our cloths on yet then we shall all be judged naked then all vizards will be laid aside all black patches and beauty spots that covered foul sores will be pluckt off the pure heart only will be able to lift up their face without spot and be stedfast Job 11. 15 and not fear 4. Too much love of the world is another great cause of our as much fear of death when we are to leave it for fear ever presupposeth love and so much as I love any thing so much I am aggrieved afraid to part w th it with what crying is the child pluckt from the breast when it hath tasted of the sweetnesse of it and as yet skill's of no other nourishment things fast glued together are torn broken when violently pluckt asunder if thy cloth cleave to thy skin as it is a signe that there is some sore under it so it will make all smart when pluckt off and answerably if thy portion with them Psal 17. 14. be in this life thou art utterly undone when it is ended Job Cap. 29. 13 some-where speaks of dying in his nest but as Chrysostome observeth Nestlins are wont to be but weaklins and they that have feathered their nests in the world have minde to be on the wing to flie out of it O death how bitter is thy remembrance to him that Ecclus. 41. 1. liveth at ease in his possessions how sad a sight is the hand-writing on the wall to a Belshazzar in his cups and when Dan. 5. the rich man is dreaming of goods laid up for many years how dreadfull a sound in his ears was that Thou fool Luke 12. 12 20. this night c when in prosperity the destroyer cometh upon him Job 15. 21. It was a wise and Christian speech of Charles the 5t to the Duke of Venice who when he had shewn him the glory of his Princely Palace and Earthly Paradise instead of admitting it or him for it onely returned him this grave and serious memento Haec sunt quae faciunt invitos mori these are the things which make us unwilling to die and so sharpen deaths sting and make it more painful it is a double death to him who is alive to the world to part with it Whereas on the contrary again for the remedy if with Paul we were before hand crucified to the world Gal. 6. 14. and had it crucified to us and as Chrysostom descan'ts upon the place lay like two dead bodies one by another as there was no mutual desire or delight in each other when they lay together so there would be as little grief when they are parted asunder the world not caring for us and we as little for it and so by our parting no hurt done were we indeed strangers and pilgrims here we would not go home weeping were we and the world two at our parting there would not be a painful dissolutio continui sitting loose now would prevent such convulsion fits and rentings then 5. On the contrary too much carelesnesse of the things of this world makes some mens deaths more careful and themselves more fearful In particular I mean our neglect of a provident and timely setting our house in order when we are now leaving the world is apt to leave us in heaps and confusion It is expressed in Scripture as the dying mans task but Isa 38. 1. 2 Sam. 17. 17. 23. it would be much better if it were the living mans care that when we have made up our Accounts with men we might be more ready