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A65533 Be ye also ready a method and order of practice to be always prepared for death and judgment, through the several stages of life / by the author of The method of private devotion. Wettenhall, Edward, 1636-1713. 1694 (1694) Wing W1488; ESTC R23957 81,107 235

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After this how can I think of neglecting him through any tenderness of face Especially when I am at present in so far better that is easier and more tolerable Circumstances than he was I perhaps am laugh'd at by some Fools or Mad-men for obeying him but I am otherwise at ease and to have Heaven for the reward of overcoming this petty private affront Shall then such inconsiderable Trifles make me wave or forgo my Duty Far be it from me In any other Case whatsoever by like Consultations or Considerations as in these Cases now set down shall we through God's Grace and Blessing upon our honest endeavour find out particular means and by such thought work our hearts to particular resolution for breaking our selves of any other or whatsoever Sins we have found more peculiarly prevalent in us And thus as to the second Step of this Head of Practice The Third will be A particular Resolution or as occasion serves Vow touching the use of those Means which we have found most proper to amend us and touching such instances of our Manners which upon enquiry we have found most to need Reformation All general Resolutions we know must be performed in particular instances of Life and Action and therefore a particular Resolution touching those Means which by consideration we have found proper to each Case will be no less necessary than the general Resolution first proposed as to the main Body of the Work As for example Suppose avoiding ill Company be one Means I have found out to keep me from Intemperance and Excess or from loss of Time c. I 'll immediately resolve not only against loose but against vain Companions I 'll keep home more abandon certain Familiars estrange my self from such and such I 'll set my self certain employment so much for such a time c. Suppose again contenting my self with sufficient Provisions and abandoning a too peremptory Resolution I had taken up to be rich to such a degree be the Means I have discovered proper for the remedying my unjust oppressive dealing I 'll resolve on that and immediately order my Affairs accordingly But in such Cases as these perhaps single resolution will not suffice to hold our unstable Souls sometimes therefore but with much caution and deliberation we may do well to add Vow David or whatever holy Man was the Author of that Psalm did so Psal 119. 51. I have said that is resolved with my self to keep thy Words and lest that should not do ver 106. I have sworn and I will perform it that I will keep thy righteous Judgments Thus as to the first Part of the Method for breaking our selves of Sin by such Acts as are to be done for the present Those which are to be continued are the prosecution of these Resolutions or Vows by a constant study of Mortification and by daily endeavours of proficiency in Holyness through the whole following part of our Life Now the treating hereof belongs not to this first Class of Advices but is to be set down in the second Part. In the mean while we are to proceed with what yet remains for our present making our peace with God § 14. And now after this Practice of Repentance Faith interposes again and that not meerly Faith towards God or a belief of the Being Nature and Providence of God as hitherto most insisted on but Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ or Faith as called by the Apostle Rom. 3. 25. Faith in his Blood For him as bleeding for us upon the Cross as sacrificed upon that Altar hath God set forth to be a propitiation and it is by the Blood of his Cross that he made peace Col. 1. 20. 'T is the Blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God that purges our Consciences from dead Works to serve the living God Heb. 9. 14. 'T is by that one offering he hath perfected forever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. This is that Fountain set open to the House of David and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem for Sin and for Vncleanness Zechar. 13. 1. Hither therefore after all Confessions Contrition Tears Resolutions Vows and endeavours of Reformation the faithful Soul comes Here it exerts new Acts of Faith that is Trust Affiance and Dependance And as the Holy persons Matth. 28. 9. did corporally to our Saviour after his Resurection so must true Penitents as it were catching the Crucified Jesus by the Feet hold him fast after a spiritual sort as their only hope and refuge that only name given under Heaven that Dear Jesus which redeemed us from the Wrath to come and with Christ thus not in their Arms but Heart look up to the Eternal Father for pardon and peace through the Son of his Loves This distinct trust in Christ as sacrificed for our Sins in this Order or thus in conjunction with such practice of Repentance as set down exerted or exercised I conceive of most essential and singular Force to the perfecting our Peace both with God and in our own Consciences § 15. And now I see not any thing which remains speaking as to a certain course of transient Acts ordinarily to compleat a Man's Reconciliation with God except we should say it is requisite to Cloath all these Acts with serious and suitable Prayer Prayer is that Christian Duty which as I may say alone as it were gives a body to all the Acts of Grace in the Soul or as one well observes It is indeed that single Duty wherein Dr. Owen of the Spirit of Prayer every Geace is acted every Sin opposed every good thing obtained or impetrated of God Without it Contrition and Faith and Resolution are after a sort airy and volatil This fixes them and makes them substantial mature and permanent Nay it raises and strengthens or heightens them Prayer is such an Office as not only actuates or draws out into Exercise all Christian Graces but makes the Soul more earnest and zealous in the Actings of them Having therefore proceeded as above directed towards making thy Peace with God cast thy self in secret at the Throne of Grace in earnest and humble supplication confessing and bewailing thy Sin with the Exercise of all the Contrition thou canst excite passing Sentence on thy self acknowledging what thou hast deserved but withall pleading the Sacrifice of the Death of Christ the atonement made by the Blood of his Cross and casting thy self upon God's mercy through that great and alone true Propitiation bringing indeed the heartiest Purposes and making the firmest Resolutions thou can'st endeavouring to the utmost of thy Power to perform all that concerns thee on thy part by the Covenant of Grace but after all acknowledging thy self an unprofitable servant Luke 17. 10. disclaiming therefore any righteousness of thine own and beseeching Pardon for thy very Repentance begging to be sprinkled with the Blood of Jesus and to be found in him For he is the Lord our
pardoned And in the second Instance the poor Jailor having seen a Truth which the Devil spoke against his Will That the Apostles were the Servants of the most high God and shewed Men the way of Salvation v. 17. Confirmed by a Miracle from Heaven v. 26. Intended certainly by that his Question as he expresses it plainly enough What must I do to obtain that Salvation you preach As did also that Ruler Matth. 19. 16. Good Master what good thing shall I do that I may inherit eternal Life But none of these Questions I say primarily or directly proceed upon preparation for Death or express any immediate respect thereto Rather do they inferr an apprehension in the Proposers of them that they had a great part of their days then to come and that they had not an aim at or looked not in those Questions to their Death but at and to the whole remainder of their Life at that time before them so that I may confidently say these two Questions named are no where in Scripture expresly put nor therefore in any one place altogether or intirely and distinctly answered One Reason of their not being answered we may take to have been their not being put But as to the Reason of their not being put it is not easie to assign a better than that perhaps the Conceit of Peoples being able in a few days or as some poor mistaken Wretches are apt to imagine by a few hours Pains and Devotions to prepare themselves for Death and their appearance before the Seat of God's dreadful Judgment had not yet entred into the world or so generally seized and possessed mens minds as now God knows and we poor Ministers find it has This may be one probable cause indeed for which we may conceive this Question no where in Scripture to have been put And that our Lord Jesus and his Apostles should not of their own accord start it there is no wonder For they well knowing and considering that preparation for Death and Judgment needs to be the Work of a whole Life and not of some small part or of the Fagg-end of it as we may so speak would never so far give occasion to such a Surmise as professedly and closely to put together all that is necessary to be said to such a Question but having in general terms first described the Duty they enjoyned its performance and lastly shewn the danger of its neglect they left the Particulars of the Preparation required in a sort scattered through the whole Scriptures as indeed the Duty it self in its full Latitude or Compass runs through all the Parts and Duties of our Lives § 4. In general I say there are Terms which describe express or amply set forth to us the Duty of Preparation for Death and Judgment There are many Commands which directly enjoin and such Warnings given of the danger of neglecting it as lay it most intimately home upon all Peoples Consciences Our Lord and his Apostles seldom or never treat of his coming to Judgment but still the Application as we may call it or the practical part of their Discourse is of this nature Thus in the Whole four and five and twentieth Chapters of St. Matthew's Gospel and in the parallel places of all the other Gospels in St. Paul's first Epistle to the Thessalonians chap. 5. 4 5 6 c. In St. Peter's Second Epistle ch 3. 14 c. In Rev. 3. 2 3 c. Chap. 16. 15. In all these and other Places the Christian World is taught That the coming of our Lord will be as of a Thief in the night and truly it is so very oft by Death as well as to Judgment unawares upon men when they look not for him and therefore all are called upon and conjured to be always ready To watch As faithful and wise Servants to be still doing their Lord's Work To keep Oil in their Vessels with their Lamps To trim their Lamps To have their Loins girded about and their Lights burning and to be as them that look for their Lord To take heed to themselves lest at any time their hearts be overcharged with Surfeiting or Drunkenness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even with the nauseous Qualms of a full Stomach or of the Night's Intemperance or with the Cares of this world To be as Children of the Light Not to sleep that is not to be idle not to be secure flattering themselves in any Sin or suffering Guilt to rest upon their Consciences as do others but to watch unto Prayer To be sober to be vigilant To be diligent that we may be found of him in peace without spot or blemish To strengthen the things that are ready to die that is quicken exercise and by exercising ripen and confirm stir up the Grace of God in us To hold fast till our Lord come To keep our Garments lest we be found naked that is to be careful we maintain a sanctified and justified Estate the Righteousness of Faith which is of God through Christ All these and sundry like Expressions both declare and press the Duty and awaken Conscience thereto but still either in general or in figurative Terms and these also as beforesaid dispersed and in distant places § 5. The Design therefore of this Treatise is to lay them all together disposing them into as easie and natural an Order as may be and representing or offering them in the plainest but together the most effectual manner we can that so no sort of people who shall read or hear read this poor plain practical Discourse may be ignorant either of the Matter or Obligation of their whole Duty in this great and most weighty Case And for the better comprehending the whole body of Directions to be given which must have compass enough to answer the Conditions of people of all sorts or of each age they may most fitly be divided by the several Distances which by course of Nature people may conceive themselves to stand in from Death and so into three Classes or Stages according to those Distances The first shall be of those who by course of Nature are at the longest distance and who therefore now are perfectly to begin their Preparations A Foundation must be laid and a prepared State attained The second of the middle Stage the Foundation must be secured and a prepared State maintained And the third nearest our End For through the Vanity and Self-flattery which attends all Men in this Life at least while Death is at any tolerable distance Men being apt to think they have time enough before them divers desects there will be in all even the most prepared Christians when nearly approaching their End And these perhaps we shall most clearly see when Death being to us as it were above the Horizon and in sight dispels those Mists under which we have formerly lain and frees our Judgments from that partiality wi●h which formerly we used to pass Sentence of things and persons and especially