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cause_n good_a love_n love_v 4,903 5 6.7044 4 true
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A58814 A sermon preached at the funeral of Dr. William Croun on the 23d of October, 1684, at St. Mildred Church in the Poultrey by John Scott ... Scott, John, 1639-1695. 1685 (1685) Wing S2068; ESTC R10207 19,399 34

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that seek him your heart shall live for ever that is rejoice for eve● so also 1 Thes. 3.8 How properly therefore may the 〈◊〉 state of bliss be expressed by Life since 't is the proper scene of happiness where joy and pleasure do for ever abound where there is an inexhau●●●ble spring of pure unmingled delights issuing forth in Rivers of Pleasure from God's Right Hand for evermore So that if there be any thing worthy of the name of life 't is doubtless the blissfull state of those happy Souls who live in a continued sense of all those joys and comforts that an everlasting Heaven imports I now pass on to the next thing proposed which was to shew wherein this everlasting life consists And here I do not pretend to give you a perfect Map of all the Beatitudes of that Heavenly State for that is a Task fit only for an Angel or a glorified Spirit all I aim at is to give you such an imperfect account of it as God hath thought fit to impart to Mortals in the Scripture which though it fall infinitely short of the thing it self yet is doubtless the best and utmost that our narrow Capacities can bear In short therefore concerning this blessed State God hath revealed to us these fix things 1. That it includes a most perfect freedom from evil and misery So Rev. 7.16 17. and hence also it is called a state of Rest Heb. 4.9 11. Rev. 14.13 all which expressions plainly denote this state to be a perfect Sabbath and Jubilee of Redemption from all evil and misery for as soon as the Souls of good Men depart out of this Corporeal State in which they now live they are immediately released from all those bodily passions of hunger and thirst and pain and diseases whereunto they are now liable by reason of their union with the body and having in a great measure conquered their Wills whilst they were in the Body and subdued them to the Will of God they must immediately commense into an high degree of perfection for being freed from the incumbrances of flesh and bloud from the importunities of body passion and appetite and the temptations of sensuality that do now continually solicite them they will be no longer liable to those irregularities of affection that do here disturb the tranquillity of their minds and so their actions and affections being always regulated by their reason their Consciences will be no more bestormed with those terrours and affrightments which nothing but the sense of guilt can suggest to them but enjoy a perpetual calm and serenity so that they being translated into an immortal condition will be released from all the sad accidents of Mortality from pain and sickness hunger and thirst from all corporeal passions and grievances and so no sensitive sorrow can interpose between them and their happiness to disturb their fruition or interrupt the current of their Joys and being translated into a state of perfect purity and goodness they will be also freed from all the sorrowfull appendages of a sinfull condition from dread and anxiety from shame and remorse and from all the corroding anguish of a wounded spirit and so they will be liable neither to sensitive nor rational trouble and having nothing either from within or without to intermeddle with their Joys and disturb the scene of their happiness they will be at perfect rest and for ever enjoy a most undisturbed repose O blessed day when I shall take my leave of sin and misery for ever and go to those calm and blissfull Regions whence sighs and tears and sorrows and pains are banished for evermore 2. That it includes a most intimate enjoyment of God for God being a rational good is no otherwise capable of being enjoyed by reasonable Beings but by knowing loving and resembling him all which ways he hath promised that we shall enjoy him when are are arrived in that blissfull state For as for the knowledge of him St. Paul tells us that whereas we now see through a glass darkly we shall then see him face to face c. 1 Cor. 13.12 and St. John that we shall see him as he is 1 John 3.2 which expressions must needs import such a knowledge of him as is unspeakably more distinct and clear than any we have in this present state For then the Eyes of our Minds shall be so invigourated that we shall be able to look on the Sun without dazeling to contemplate the pure and immaculate glories of the Divinity without being confounded with its brightness and our understanding shall be so exalted that we shall see more at every single view than we do now in volumes of discourse and the most tedious trains of inference and deduction and enjoying a most perfect repose both from within and without we shall have nothing to disturb or divert our greedy contemplations which having such an immense Prospect of Truth and Glory round about them shall still discover farther and farther and so entertain themselves with everlasting wonder and delight for what an infinite pleasure will that All-glorious object afford unto our raised minds which then shall no longer labour under the tedious difficulties of discourse but like transparent Windows shall have nothing to doe but only to receive the light which freely offers it self unto them and shines for ever round about them when every new Discovery of God and of the bottomless secrets and mysteries of his Nature shall inlarge our Capacities to discover more and still new discoveries shall freely offer themselves as fast as our minds are inlarged to receive them This doubtless will be a Recreation to our Souls infinitely transcending all that we can conceive or imagine of it especially considering that all our knowledge shall terminate in love that sweet and gratefull passion that sooths and ravishes the heart and dissolves it into joy and pleasure for God being infinitely good and amiable the more we know the more cause and reason we shall have to love him when therefore we are arrived to that degree of knowledge which the beatifical Vision implies we shall find our hearts inflamed with such a degree of love to him as will issue into unspeakable delight and satisfaction and even overwhelm us with ecstasies of joy and complacency For if those Divine illapses those more immediate touches and sensations of God which good men sometimes experience in this life do so affect and ravish them that they are even forced into Triumphs and Exaltations how will they be rapt and transported in that state of vision when they shall see him so immediately and love him so vehemently and their whole Soul shall be nothing else but one intire globe of light and love all irradiated and inflamed with the vision and beauty of the Fountain of Truth and Goodness But alas as these joys are too big for mortal language to express so are they too strong for mortality to bear and should we but for one day or