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A13732 The soules alarum-bell Wherein the sicke soule (through the horror of conscience) being awakened from security by the sight of sinne, hath recourse to God by meditation and prayer. By H. Thompson. Thompson, Henry, fl. 1618. 1618 (1618) STC 24024; ESTC S100563 111,521 484

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loue deuoi●● of all ●ypoc●isie from a pur● heart to ●oue our Neighbour● This Honourable Lord i● true Religion whereunto ●● GOD in great mercy hat● called you so g●● cheerefull● forward Beware of thi● vaine World and of tha●●●ine trust that wiched m●● are w●●t to put in it lean●●●t vpon it but stoppe you● eares against the e●e●anting and fawning whispering● of the hollow●esse thereof and the dissolute Professors for there can bee ●● greater trespasse against the L●●● the●to ●●●● vpon Assyria to rest in the strength of Egypt to goe downe into Eth●opia Cursed is that Man that putteth his trust in Man and maketh flesh his ●●●e hee shall be like the Heath that groweth in the Wildernesse But con 〈◊〉 He that trusteth in the Lord mercy shall ●mbrace him on euerie side he shall neuer be confounded hee shall bee ●s Mount 〈◊〉 and shall neuer be remo●ed for the Lord is his secret place is with him therefore who can ●● against him What is a ●●ns ●owe what are his legges what is the swiftnesse of Horses 〈◊〉 the strength of an Hoa●● or the fauour of all th● Princes of the World i● comparison of God i● whom is onely the assurance of that euerlastin● inheritance It is the Go● of Iacob that must be ou● defence our strong Tower and Rock the Chari● and Horsemen of Israe● the testimony of his pr●sence and fauour th●● onely can make vs glad Wherefore againe and ●gaine I most humbly beseech your Honour bewa●● of vaine trust and cons●den● in Men and in things th●● are lesse worth then M●● ●nd as GOD hath in mercy ●estowed vpon your Honour ●reat wisedome so pray that ●ou may haue a discerning ●pirit that the deceiuable ●lory of this World make you ●ot forget your greatest duty ●hat so you may shine in his ●●erlasting Kingdome True Religion Honou●able Lord is effected by ●at diuine and eternall wis●●ome whereby the contem●atiue vertue of man is lif●d vp to the happy know●●dge of the Maiesty of God all other the greatest ver●●e and wherein resteth the ●●iefest contentment in this 〈◊〉 For if there be a Pare●e in this life it is seated in one of these two either in Religious Meditations or i● holy studies and godly spec●lation because whatsoeu●● is not in one of these two 〈◊〉 full of griefe vexation bi●ternesse fearefulnesse ca●● and sorrow But as Christi●● mo●esty Right Honourabl●● hath moued me to giue to e●●rie thing his due in not ce●sing from setting forth a● thing in the praise of th● which of right deserueth 〈◊〉 be commended so Christi●● Iustice and equity would 〈◊〉 suffer mee to let that pa●● without some commenda●●on whereunto I am not ab● sufficiently to giue any B● considering that slightly commend a thing were the next way to dispraise it ex●ept withall it were shr●w●ded under the Patronage of ●ome worthy Person and ●hinking it vnmeete to let ●hat go like an Orphan with●ut a father at home I haue ●resumed to commit it vnto our Honours protection not bare Lawrell which of it ●lfe for the greennesse when ●ther be withered may seem 〈◊〉 bee accepted but the same ●ecked and adorned with ●ost heauenly Meditations 〈◊〉 that as I thinke if your ●onour were presented with materiall Lawrell wherein ●esides naturall greennesse ●ere but this nece●●●ry vse that it could defend you i● your Garden from the heat● of the Sunne you would accept if not of the gift yet o● the good will of the giuer So relying my selfe still vppon your Honours wonte● accustomed fauour and clemency I doubt not but yo● will affoord mee a fauourable and friendly acceptatio● hereof For herein is not th●● greennes which consisting 〈◊〉 naturall qualities must the● wither when all things ha●● their ending according t●● their nature but the flourishing greene promises of th● co●enant of God which 〈◊〉 God himselfe last alwaie● immutable and vnchangeable Here are not the beautifull leaues of a materiall tree which delight onely the outward sight but a most familiar view and patterne of God himselfe in Christ euen to the delight of the soule and inward comfort of the spirit which take pleasure onely in Heauenly things To conclude here you are not shrowded from the heate of the Sunne but shall finde most coole shade from the parching heate of sinne from which as in duety I am bound I will pray that God in this life shield and defend you and in the life to come grant you eu●rlasting rest Thus presuming on your Honors wonted fauours and curtesies shewed vnto mee and crauing pardon for this my bold enterprise I humbly take my leaue Your Honors to be commanded in all duty and seruice HENRY THOMPSON An Admonition to the zealous Reader concerning the most godly exercise of PRAYER MAny are the godly and zealous Treatises which are already extant tending to the encouragement of those that hunger and thirst for the true seruice of the liuing God yet gentle Reader I craue thy Christian patience friendly to accept this small trauell of mine and these my simple Admonitions For among all our godly and deuoute Meditations good Christian Reader there can bee none better more acceptable to GOD more commodious and necessary to Man or more fit for vs to the attaining of a good and happy life then at all times to occupic our selues in the continuall remembrance and meditation of the life and death of our Lord Iesus Christ the which thing is plainly shewed and declared not onely by the example and doctrine of diuers holy and learned Men but also by experience it selfe And if thou wouldest flie from sinne and shunne vice then consider with thy selfe what great things the onely Sonne of God both did and suffered to the end thou mightest deliuered from sinne If thou desire to beautifie thy soule with loue humilitie gentlenes patience obedience ch●rity and other vertues then cast thine eye on the perfect and liuely patterne of all vertue which is thy LORD CHRIST himselfe If thou bee desirous to contemne the world and all worldlie vanities and nothing to care for the same then weigh with thy selfe earnestly what kind of life CHRIST our Lord led when hee was liuing here How full of troubles how full of labour and sorrow and how bitter a death hee sustained for Mans saluation Finall● if thou wouldest st●re vp and inflam● thy mind with the loue of GOD and giue him thankes what can in such a case bee more effectuall then still to call vpon GOD and to remember Christ his life and p●ssion and how many ●nd great benefits we haue receiued thereby ' Wher●upon the Apostle saide for good cause Remember you him who suffered at the hands of sinners that Man should not quaile not bee dismaied in heart and Saint Peter saith That CHRIST suffered that Man should bee also comforted with the remembrance thereof But to the intent that th●● ●ood Christian Reader maiest vse these Meditations to thy great profit thou must obserue this order that at such time as thou mindest to pray thou presently reade ●uer all these chiefe points that are to be thought vpon
vs complaint to him that is the great Shepheard of soules as hee is a Physition he will cure thee as hee is a Shep●eard hee will number thee with his flocke sinnes-saluing plaster is to reueale our wickednesse Well may wee confesse our offences but hide them wee cannot by such our confession the Diuell is preuented of his seuere accusation which ancient malice would cōmence against vs. To anatomize exenterate sinne to poure it forth vpon the Altar of repentance before God will not onely take away the occasion of plea from the accuser but also reconcile vs to the whole fauour of that High Commission Beleeuing Nini●i● wrapt and confounded in sorrow was soone turned out of her mourning gowne of sackecloth and ashes and was girded about with a faire sindon of Gods eternall sauor but harde-hearted Sodome swelling in the pride of her strength is stript of all her beautifull attire and nakedly left in the base ashes of ●er owne destruction Therefore I will confesse with Dauid against my selfe my wic●ednesse Psal 32. vnto the Lord. It is ●ot an vsurpation to turne ●udge to cal an Assise to ex●mine mine owne soule to ●roduce my thoughts as ac●users of my conscience as 〈◊〉 thousand witnesses to a●erre and confound the gilt ●f sinne but these shall pre●ent that latter and fearefull examination how wee haue spent our time how we haue imployed our wealth how we haue ruled our appetites how we haue mortified our desires how wee haue vsed and bestowed all good gifts and graces of the holy Spirit Nay we shall neuer haue cause to feare that dolefull distaste which Abraham cast in Diues teeth Sonne remember Lu. 16. how thou in thy life time receiuedst pleasure disporting thy time in wanton dalliance solacing thy selfe in pleasing pastimes braue in apparell glittering in gold high in honour delicate in fare defending pride to bee but a point of gentry gluttony a part of good fellowship wantonnesse a tricke of youth because thou hast inclosed and taken in all pleasures to thy selfe vpon earth thou shalt now take vp thy ●ents and reape a plentifull haruest in Hell Meete with ●he day of Iudgement saith Augustine before it come ●ooke about before hand ●repare thy selfe to enter an ●ction against thy selfe for ●o presumption will serue ●e that seeth his house run 〈◊〉 ruine and will not at the ●●rst or second breach seeke 〈◊〉 reparations striues to ●ake rubbish of a good ●●ilding And he that tra●●ls in a leaking shippe and ●ill not in the beginning ●oke to empty it sayles for ●ught but to drowne him●●fe To morrow to morrow 〈◊〉 the voice of presumption 〈◊〉 who can tell whether he 〈◊〉 liue till to morrow God saith Augustine hath sealed a pardon to him that truly repents but none to him that deferres and saies he will repent And hee that is not fit for his conuersion to day will bee lesse ready to morrow for on the morrow he will bee the same man againe and sing the same song againe languishing still in delay trifling out the time till God in whose hands only are the moments of times shut and barre him out from all time and leaue him to paines without time for so abusing the precious date of time To morrow to morrow is an vncertaine time though the times bee certaine in themselues ye● are they most vncertaine vnto man as he knew not hi● beginning so he is ignorant of his ending much like to little birds who on their ●earch looke about to flie this way or that way yet before they take their flight they are preuented by the shaft Death is a common ●tate-searcher both of old and young striking as well Dauids young sonne before he was seauen dayes old as 2 Sam. 22. that ancient of dayes Methusalem that liued nine hundred sixtie nine yeeres Lest the Kingdome of Sathan should bee established in vs by frequency of sinning therefore let vs breake off delay putting no trust in old age but as Saint Paul saith Heb. 3. ●uen in this very instant while it is named to day let us repentantly crie to God and call to him to forgiue vs our leude and mispent time and let vs giue our sinnes leaue to die before vs it is good riddance of a painefull pardon for it is little better then desperatiō to giue free liberty to thy youthfull wil to range abroade vpon confidence of repentance in thy last and least part of thy life For alas what can helpelesse old age helpe when all the strength of the body all the faculties of the mind all the parts and passions are not onely daunted and out-dared with sickenesse but also worne out with a multitude of yeeres as age-spent Dauid is not able to retaine heate of himselfe but Abishai the Shunamite must cherish him An old man is halfe deathes man destitute of all good meanes to conuersion vnfit to fast vnable to pray vnapt to watch or to any other exercise What voice is there more lamentable the● that of Milo when seeing the young Champions striuing each with other to obtaine the Conquest he cried out with teares looking on his withered armes My bloud is dead my veines wrinckled my sinewes shrunke to nothing The counsell of the Wise-man may be a present Memorandum to euery man Let vs remember Eccles 12. our Creator in the dayes of our youth while the euill dayes come not That is in our prosperity of strēgth in our hopefull youth in the vigor and lustinesse of our yeeres before forgetfull old age ouertake vs. Let vs betake our selues to him that tooke vs out of the dust and created vs after his own likenesse otherwise it were an euerlasting blemish of ingratitude and a most infamous stampe of iniustice to hope for the receite of eternall glory to receiue at one instance an Angels inheritance to enioy for nothing a place with Christ and not to tender the best of thy selfe to God his Father If it were pol●ution to the Altar to offer the lame and sicke with what face then canst thou present that little short and maimed peece of seruice which limping old age will affoord Hee which is the Childe of many yeeres is no doubt the Father of many sinnes for life the longer it is the more sinfull it is If in the oblation of burnt offerings and peace offerings the young Lambes without Leuit. 1. blemish were elected for the sacrifice if the chiefe fat of the Ramme made the Exod. 29. sweetest sauour vnto the Lord then stands it against the rule of decencie and good manners to serue in Leuit. 3. Gods messe with the bare leane and rotten bones of sinnes that haue lien rotting in the pit of corruption as many s●●re yeeres as did Lazarus dayes in the graue If no man were admitted to stand before Nabuchadnezzar but children that were Dan. 1. 4. most beautifull how dare any man shuffle himselfe into Gods presence disiointed crooked old aged
O let vs call to God that hee out of the riches of his mercie would inspire into our hearts the due and diligent consideration of the vncertaintie shortnes frailtie and other grieuous calamities of mans life All humane pride and the whole glory aboundance of the world hauing mans life for a stay and foundation can certainly no longer endure then the same life abideth so that riches dignities honors offices and such like which men here in earth haue a great regard of they doe many times forsake a man he being yet and doe neuer continue longer with them then to the graue This is a vaine slipperie delightfull pleasure for then when the foundatiō faileth the whole building must needs fall Iob saith these clay Tabernacles Iob. 4. doe daily faile Dauid compareth our life to the fat of Lambes which wasteth away Psal 69. in the roasting and to a new coate which soon waxeth olde and is eaten with Moathes and further compareth man to grasse and to the flowr of the field which to day flourisheth and to morrow is cut downe and withered Iob compares man to the burning of a Candle which in the end annoyeth Iob. 18. and then euery man crieth Put it out What thing else is mans life but a bubble vp with the water and downe with the wind what is then to bee thought of humane pompe and glory which is more transitory and fraile then life it selfe O that man would know himselfe wherby he may know God Iob further saith Man that is borne of a woman is of a short continuance and full of miseries hee shooteth forth as a flower and is cut downe hee vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not This consideration might open our blindnesse to see into our selues and to know our selues and then know God in this description of humane calamities to the end wee might want no knowledge thereof It seemeth Iobs purpose was to beginne with the very matter it selfe of which man was made that he might expresse the basenesse of the matter of which this most proud creature was made He was created and made of the Earth but not of the best of the earth but of the slime of the earth as the Scripture testifieth being the most filthy and abiect part of the Earth among all bodies the most vile element and among all the Elements the basest Among all the parts of the Earth none is more filthy and abiect then the slime of the Earth whereof man was made of that matter then the which there is nothing more vile and base And whereas hee saith that hee was borne of a woman he hath in few words comprehended many miseries of humane condition Our very fashioning and originall is so impure and vncleane that it is not for chaste eares to heare but to be passed ouer in silence as a thing most filthy and horrible to be told Mans conception is so foule that our most mercifull and louing Lord taking vpon him all our sorrowes and calamities for our redemption would in no wise beare this although hee vouchsafed to take vpon him our humane nature and to suffer many reproaches of his enemies as to be mocked blasphemed spit vpon bound whipped and in the end most shamefully crucified yet hee thought it vnseeming his Maiestie to be conceiued in the wombe of the blessed Virgin Mary after the same sinfull manner that other men be After man is once conceiued doth he not endure great calamities in his mothers wombe as it were in a filthy and vncleane prison where euery moment he is in perill of his life And at the last hee is borne naked weake ignorant destitute of all helpe and counsell not able to goe to speake or to helpe himselfe all that hee can doe is to cry and that is to set forth his miseries for he is borne to labour a banished man from his Countrey the enemy of God in possibility to liue but a few dayes and the same few daies full of misery deuoide of all quietnesse and rest O let vs know our selues and then know God The very beginning from whence man hath his first originall is sinne the vanity whereof makes him thinke himselfe borne to an inb●ed pride which pride mingleth and confoundeth all things ouerturneth troubleth and subdueth Kingdomes There is another calamity incident to mans body the building is scarcely finished but it is ready to totter and fall and sure it is ere long to fall Man is scarce entred into the world but he is admonished to remember his departure The dayes of Man saith Dauid are threescore yeeres Psal 90. and ten and though some be so strong that they come to fourescore yet is their strength then but labour and sorrow The summe of our yeeres wherevnto all doe not attaine is threescore yeeres and ten ●he strongest bodies some●imes continue till fourescore from which yeeres if wee deduct those yeeres which infancie and childehood spendeth for all that ●ime wee liue not like men ●either are gouerned with ●eason and counsell but are ●arried with a certaine vio●ent motion li●e vnto brute ●easts which are deuoide of ●eason and vnderstanding 〈◊〉 also wee take away that ●ime which passeth away ●hen wee sleepe for slee●ing wee liue not the life of ●easts when they wake ●●ch lesse of men and that ●●me will rather seeme a li●ing death thē a liuely life If we deduct all the time of childhood and sleepe that which remaineth wil scarcely amount to forty yeeres and of these forty yeeres we● haue not one moment o● time in our power that wee can assuredly say that wee shal not die therein for whether wee eate drinke or sleepe whether we be in labour or in rest wee are in danger of perils It is not without cause our Sauiour Christ crieth in his Gospell Watch because yet know 〈◊〉 the day nor the houre which Mar. ●3 is as much as if he had more plainely said Because yee know not that day watch euery day and because yee know not the moneth and the yeere watch therefore euery moneth and yeere 〈◊〉 thou shouldest be inuited to 〈◊〉 Feast and being set at the Table seeing before thee many and sundry meates of ●ll sorts a friend secretly ●omes admonisheth thee ●hat among so many dainty ●ishes there is one poyso●ed what in this cause woul●est thou do which of them ●arest thou touch or taste 〈◊〉 wouldest not thou sus●ect them all I think thogh ●ou wert extreamely hun●y thou wouldest refraine ●om all for feare of that one ●here the poyson is It is ●ade manifest vnto thee al●eady that in one of thy for●e yeeres thy death lieth ●idden from thee and thou ●rt vtterly ignorant which ●at yeere shall be how then ●n it be but that thou must suspect and feare them all O let vs first know our selues and then know God whereby we shall know to vnderstand the shortnesse of our life O what a great profit and commodity should