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A62382 The royal-pay and pay-master, or, The indigent-officers comfort delivered in a sermon preached before the honorable the military company at St. Pauls Covent-Garden, July 25th, by William Sclater ... ; and now printed at their earnest intreaty. Sclater, William, d. 1690. 1671 (1671) Wing S921; ESTC R34026 17,196 38

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the Conscientious man he knows they are but for a time transient and momentary Neither shall the Israelites live always under the Tyranny of Pharaoh or the Travels of the Wilderness he very well knows the more abundant in sorrows here the more abundant in joys hereafter his tears shall return in smiles his weepings in streams of pleasure Nor Death it self shall quail his Courage For he knows that will be his happiest day and his bridge from woe to Glory This was the Courage that bore up the heads of the Apostles and Martyrs this was it that kept the poor Royallists from sinking they believed above hope that there would come a day wherein the right of Causes would be cleared up and God should judge and plead for his people This made them say with St. Paul I am not only willing to be bound but to die for the Name of the Lord Jesus This made them leap for joy that they were so near their home dying often like Sampson among their Enemies more Victory attending their end than their proceedings And as the Courage of the Conscientious man is great and exemplary so his Fidelity is remarkable True Loyal Christianity knits more sure and more indissoluble than any other relation in the world It ties a knot that Alexander cannot cut in sunder How hath the Fidelity of the Primitive Christians and the Loyal Party been admired who have chosen to embrace the flames and die in silence rather than to reveal their Companions and Fellow-partakers in the same Cause Tyrants will sooner want invention for Tortures than they with Tortures be made Treacherous The League which Heaven hath made Hell wants power to break Oh! invaluable Fidelity Here in this one Conscientious man is met Courage and Constancie the one to withstand an enemy another to entertain a Friend Give me any Foe rather than a Resolved Christian Labour then to keep a good Conscience and this will make thee both Valorous and Faithful I 'll mention no more but this Consider the Motive in my Text The short time that this laborious course is required of us 't is but till death The continuance of this fight is short The Military age among the Romans was from 17 to 46 or in dangerous times till fifty The dayes of our age are threescore years and ten and in all this time there is no truce from War The Christian can never shut up the Temple of Janus Legionum filii nati we are all born in the field and sworn Souldiers in our swadling-Clouts bearing Arms against our common Enemy from our Baptism to our Burial and therefore we must put on the Resolution of valiant men aut sors aut mors either Death or Victory Victory shall begin my joy or Death shall end my misery so a Christian must say Aut cito mors veniet aut victoria laeta Either God will end our danger or our dayes 't is but a little time we have to fight 't is but a point or less and that imployment cannot be long that must end with it for what can be long in that which is not long in its self 'T is but till Death and that is a note of stint as well as of extent Not that our fidelity unto Christ shall not last longer but because that after death there will be no danger of disloyalty All provocations and temptations to the contrary being then utterly abolished 't is but a spurt and who would not for a short brunt endure any hardship to live at hearts ease for ever after Who would not serve even an hard and unkind Master with all Fidelity and diligence for a day or two that hereafter might be a Free-man and an happy one for ever It is not long and it is but light in respect of what is promised to us for this light hardship which is but for a moment shall work for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory Be faithful then unto the death c. Which brings me now to your Pay-master and your Pay Your Pay-master is Christ and I hope you will not distrust him your pay is a Crown of life and I hope you will not grumble at that What if you have been defrauded here Perhaps your Arrears were so great that the whole State was not able to pay them or perhaps that little which was assigned you fell into the hands of them who did deceive you But here 's a Pay-master that is rightly qualified to give every one content Consider the Ability the Fidelity the Liberality of this great Pay-master Ability I will give that have Power to give that have Ability and Authority so to do The Devil told our Saviour he would give all the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them with it but he had no power to make good what he said But he that speaketh here is able to perform what he promiseth All power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth And to him that overcomes will I give to sit in my Throne Fidelity Again I will give who am Amen the Faithful and True witness He that is Faithful to me shall find me Faithful to him I 'll never promise that which I will not perform 'T is at this Pay-master's hands that the Indigent Officer and Loyal Souldier must expect his Arrears This is the Cavaliers Pay-master he will not deceive them of that is their just due They have had but little for their sufferings here But I will give saith Christ I 'll be faithful to you that have been faithful to God and your King though you are not rewarded here you shall be crown'd hereafter though you starve here you shall one day be invited to the Marriage-Supper of the Lamb and drink your fill of those Rivers of pleasures which are at his right hand for evermore Live then the noblest lives of Christians live soberly righteously and godly in this present world hold fast the profession of your Religion and Loyalty till the end For remember he is faithful that hath promised he is not like Antigonus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who said he would give but never did But your Pay-master will not deceive you he will give and he hath given to a thousand of our dead Friends and we tread but in the steps of those that already have inherited the promises Liberality And not like a niggard a little snip or so he will not put you off with a moneths pay for six nor scotch you off with half your wages No he will give liberally and bountifully Though he oweth us not so much as thanks yet he will not for his Honour sake suffer Loyalty unparrall'd Loyalty and renowned Fidelity to beg in the streets and cry with that famous Captain Da obulum Bellizario he will not suffer Families to be undone and their blood to be spilt unrewarded for his sake No he will countenance and cherish such Loyal Souls he will prefer them to be near himself