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A29696 London's lamentation, or, A serious discourse concerning the late fiery dispensation that turned our (once renowned) city into a ruinous heap also the several lessons that are incumbent upon those whose houses have escaped the consuming flames / by Thomas Brooks. Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1670 (1670) Wing B4950; ESTC R24240 405,825 482

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light matter that I may escape eternal torments ● can endure the stinging of Gnats that I might not endure the stinging of conscience and the gnawing of that Worm that never dies this heat thou think●st gri●vous I can easily endure when I think of the eternal fire of Hell these sufferings are but short but the sufferings of h●ll are eternal Certainly infernal fire is neither tolerable nor terminable The extremity and eternity of hellish torments is set forth by the Worm that never dieth Christ at the close of his Sermon makes a threefold repetition of this Worm Mark 9. 44. Where their Worm dieth not And again ver 46. Where their Worm dieth not And again ver 40. Where their Worm dieth not and their fire goeth not out Certainly those punishments are beyond all conception and expression which our Lord Jesus doth so often inculcate within so small a pace In Hell there 's nothing heard but yells and cryes A Pentelogia dolor inferni In Hell the Fire never slacks nor Worm never dyes But where this Hell is plac'd my Muse stop there Lord shew me what it is but never where To Worm and Fire to torments there No term he gave they cannot wear Prudentius the Poet. If after so many millions of years as there be drops in the Ocean there might be a deliverance out of hell This would yield a little case a little comfort to the damned O but this word Eternity Eternity Eternity this word Everlasting Everlasting Everlasting will even break the hearts of the damned in ten thousand pieces There is scarce any pain or torment here on earth but there is ever some hope of ease mitigation or intermission there is some hope of relief or delivery but in hell the torments there are all easeless remediless and endless Here if one fall into the fire he may like a brand be pulled out of it and saved but out of that fiery Lake there is no redemption That Majesty that the sinner hath offended and provoked is an infinite Majesty Now there must be some proportion betwixt the sinners sin and his punishment and torment Now the sinner being a finite creature he is not capable of bearing the weight of that punishment or torment that is intensively infinite because it would be his abolishing or annihilating and therefore he must bear the weight of that punishment or torment that is extensively infinite namely duratione infinita infinite in the continuance and endurance What is wanting in torment must be made up in time Everlasting Fire and everlasting punishment in the New Testament Matth. 25. 2 Thess 1. 7 8 9 10 c. Vide August l. 21. c. 23. c. 24. de civitate Dei is directly opposed to eternal life to that blessed state of the righteous which will never have an end And therefore according to the Rules and Maximes of right reason doth necessarily import a punishment of the same duration that the reward is Now the Reward of the Saints in that other world is granted on all hands to be everlasting to be eternal and therefore the punishment of the damned can't be but everlasting and eternal too The Rewards of the Elect shall never be ended therefore the punishment of the damned shall never be ended because as the mercy of God is infinite towards the elect so the Justice of God is infinite towards the Reprobate in hell The Reprobate shall have punishment Drexel without pity misery without mercy sorrow without succour crying without compassion mischief without measure and torment without end All men in misery comfort themselves with hope of an end The Prisoner with hope of a Gaol-delivery the Marriner with the hope of his arrival in a safe harbour the Souldier with hope of victory the Prentice with hope of liberty the Gally-slave with the hope of ransome only the impenitent sinner hath no hope in hell He shall have end without end death without death night without day mourning without mirth sorrow without solace and bondage without liberty The damned shall live as long in hell as God himself There is not a Christian which doth not believe the fire of he●l to be everlasting Dr. Jackson on the Creed l. 11. c. 23. shall live in heaven their imprisonment in that Land of darkness in that bottomless pit is not an imprisonment during the Kings pleasure but an imprisonment during the everlasting displeasure of the King of Kings Suppose say some that the whole world were turned to a Mountain of Sand and that a little Wren should come every thousandth year and carry away from that heap one grain of sand what an infinite number of years not to be numbred by all finite beings would be spent and expired before this supposed Mountain could be fetcht away Now if a man should lye in everlasting burnings so long a time and then have an end of his wo it would administer some ease refreshment and comfort to him But when that immortal Bird shall have carried away this supposed Mountain a thousand If the fire of Hell were terminable it might then be tolerable but being endless it must needs be easeless and ●emediless We may well say of it as one doth O killing life Oh immortal death Bellar. de arte moriendi l. 2. c. 3. times over and over alas alas man shall be as far from the end of his anguish and torment as ever he was He shall be no nearer coming out of hell than he was the very first moment that he entered into hell Suppose say others that a man were to endure the torments of hell as many years and no more as there be sands on the Sea-shore drops of water in the Sea Stars in heaven leaves on the trees piles of grass on the ground hairs on his head yea upon the heads of all the sons of Adam that ever were or are or shall be in the world from the beginning of it to the end of it yet he would comfort himself with this poor thought Well there will come a day when my misery and torment shall certainly have an end But wo and alas this word Never Never Never will fill the hearts of the damned with the greatest horror and terror wrath and rage amazement and astonishment Suppose say others that the torments of hell were to end after a little Bird should have emptied the Sea and only carry out her Bill full once in a thousand years Suppose say others that the whole world from the lowest earth to the highest heavens were filled with grains of sand and once in a thousand years an Angel should come and fetch away one grain and so continue till the whole heap were spent Suppose say others if one of the damned in hell should weep after this manner viz That he should only let fall one tear in a hundred years and thes● should be kept together till such time as they should equ●l the drops of water in the
finding out this subtilty punished them both together Now so shall it be with those two sinful companions the 2 Cor. 5. 10. 2 Thess 1. 7 8 9 10. soul and the body in the great day of our Lord. With Simeon and Levi they have been brethren in iniquity and so shall be in eternal misery As body and soul have been one in sinning so they shall be one in suffering only remember this that as the soul has been chief in sin so it shall be chief in suffering But O Sirs if a consumable body b● not able to endure burning flames for a day how will an unconsumable soul and body be able to endure the scorching flames of Hell for ever But Fifthly Our fire wasteth and consumeth whatsoever is cast into it It turns flesh into ashes it turns all combustibles into ashes but the fire of Hell is not of that nature the fire of Hell consumes nothing that is cast into it it rages but it dos not waste either bodies or souls Look as the Salamander liveth in the fire so shall the wicked live in the fire of Hell for ever They shall seek for death but they Rev. 9. 6. shall not find it They shall desire to die and death shall fly from them They shall cry to the Mountains to fall upon Rev. 6. 16 17. them and to crush them to nothing They sh●ll desire that the fire that burns them would consume them to nothing That the Worm that feeds on them would gnaw them to Ma●k 9. 44 46 48. nothing that the Devils which torment them would tear them to nothing They shall cry to God who first made Gen. 1. 26. ●hem out of nothing to reduce them to that first nothing from whence th●y cam● But he that made them will not have mercy on them he that f●rmed them will not shew them so much Isa 27. 11. favour Semper comburentur nunqu●m consumentur they shall alway●s be burned but never consumed Ah how well Aug. This fire is poena inconsumpta Jerom. would it be with the damned if in the fire of Hell they might be consumed to ashes But this is their misery they shall be ever dying and yet never dye their bodies shall be alwayes a burning but never a consuming 'T is dreadful to be perpetual fuel to the flames of Hell What misery to this For infernal fire to be st●ll a preying upon damned sinners and yet never making an end of them The two hundred and fifty men that usurped the Priests Office were Numb 16. 35. consumed by that fire that came out armed from the Lord against them And the fire that Elijah by an extraordinary 2 Kings 1. 10. 12. spirit of prayer brought down from heaven upon the two Captains and their fifties consumed them The fierce and furious fl●mes of hell shall burn but never annihilate the bodies of the damned In hell there is no c●ssation of fire burning nor of matter burned Neither flames nor smoak Hell torments punish but not finish the bodies of men Prosper shall consume or choak the impenitent both the infernal fire and the burning of the bodies of Reprobates in tha● fire shall be preserved by the miraculous power and providence of God The soul through pain and corruption will lose its beate vivere its happy being but it will not lose its essentiàliter vivere its essential life or being But Sixthly and lastly Our fire may be quenched and extinguished The hottest flames the greatest confl●grations have been quenched and extinguish●d by water Fires on our hearths and in our chimneys are sometimes put out by the Suns b●ams and often they die and go out of themselves Our fire is maintained with wood and put out with water but the fire of hell never goes out it can never be quenched It is an everlasting fire an eternal fire an Jerom was out when he said I●fe●num nihil esse nisi conscie●tiae horror●m And 〈◊〉 was ou● who held that the●e are no other Hell furies than the stings of conscience unquenchable fire In Mark 9. from v. 43. to v. 49. this fire is no less than five times said to be unquenchable as i● the Lord could never speak enough of it Beloved the Holy Ghost is never guilty of idle repeti●ions but by these frequent repetitions the Holy Ghost w●uld teach men to lo●k about them and to look upon it as a real thing and as a serious thing and not sport themselves with unquenchable flames nor go to Hell in a dream Certainly the fire into which the damned shall be cast shall be without all intermission of time or pun●shment No tear● nor blood nor time can extinguish the fire of hell Could every damned sinner weep a whole Ocean yet all those Oceans together would never extinguish one spark of inf●rnal fire The damned are in everlasting chains of darkness they are under the vengeance of eternal fire they are in blackness of darkness for Jude 7. 6. ever The smoke of their torment ascend●d for ever and ever and they shall have no rest day nor night The damned in hell Rev. 14. 11. O that word Never said a poor despairing creature on his death-bed breaks my heart They are lying Histories that ●ell us that Trajan was delivered out of Hell by the prayers of Gregory and Falconella by the prayers of Teclaes would fain die but they cannot Mors sine mor●e they shall be alwayes dying yet never dead they shall be alwayes a consuming yet never consumed The smoak of their Furnace asc●nds for ever and ever Aeternis puni●ntur poenis They shall be everlastingly punished saith Mollerus on Psal 9. 17. And Musculus on the same Text saith Animi impiorum cruciatibus d●bitis apud inferos punientur The souls of the ●ngodly shall be punished in hell with deserved torments Vbi per mi lia millia annorum cruciandi nec in seculo seculorum liberandi saith August Myriades of years shall not determine or put a period to their sufferings Plato could say that who ever are not expiated but prophane shall go into hell to be tormented for their wickedness with the greatest the most bitter and terrible punishments for ever in that prison of hell And Trismegistus could say That souls going out of the body defiled were tost to and fro with eternal punishments Yea the very Turks speaking of the house of perdition do affirm That they who have turned Gods Grace Alcoran Mahom c. 14. p. 160. c. 20. p. 198. into wantonness shall abide eternally in the fire of hell and there be eternally tormented A certain Religious man going to visit Olympius who lived cloistered up in a Monastery near Jordan and finding him cloistered up in a dark Cell which he thought uninhabitable by reason of heat and swarms of Gnats and Flyes and asking him how he could endure to live in such a place he answered All this is but a
Babylon roasted in the fire Jer. 29. 21 22. of them 't is said shall be taken up a curse when any imprecated sore vengeance from the Lord upon any one 't is said The Lord make thee like Ahab and Zedekiah whom the Kings of Babylon roasted in the fire 'T is very dreadful and terrible for a man to have the least member of his body frying in the fire but how terrible and dreadful must it be for a mans whole body to be roasted in the fire so are the Judgments of the Lord very terrible and dreadful to the children of men My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I Psal 119. 120. am afraid of thy Judgments Hab. 3. 16. When I heard my belly trembled my lips quivered at the voice rottenness entred into my bones and I trembled in my self that I might rest in the day of trouble But Secondly Fire is very painful and tormenting in which respects Hell-torments are compared to fire so are great Afflictions and Judgments they are very painful and tormenting Isa 26. 17 18. they put a Land into sore travel next to the pangs of Conscience and the pangs of Hell there are none to those pangs that are bred and fed by terrible Judgments But Thirdly Fire is of a discovering nature it enlightens mens eyes to see those things that they did not see before so do the terrible Judgments of God enlighten mens minds and Rev. 15. 4. Ezek. 21. 3 4 5 6 7. understandings sometimes to know the Lord. Hence 't is that after Judgments threatned God doth so often tell them that they shal● know the Lord Sometimes God by his Judgments enlightens mens minds to see such an evil in sin that they never saw before and to see such a vanity mutability imporency and uncertainty in the Creature that they never saw before and to see such a need of free-grace of ●ich mercy and of infinite favour and goodness that they never saw before and to see such Majesty and terribleness Psal 66. 3. 5. in God which they never saw before Job 37. 22. With God is terrible Majesty But Fourthly Fire is probatory and refining and so are the Judgments of God they will try what metal men are made of they will try whether men are sound and sincere or hypocritical Isa 1. 25. Mal. 3. 1 2 3. Acts 26. 28 29. and hollow whether men are real Christians or nominal Christians whether they are throughout Christians or almost Christians whether their graces are true or counterfeit and whether they have much or but a litt●e grace Isa 31. 9. The Lords fire is in Zion and his furnace in Jerusalem Zacha. 13. 9. And I will bring the third part through the fire and will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tryed 1 Pet. 4. 12. Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal which is to try you Stars shine brightest in the darkest night Torches are the better for beating Grapes come not to the proof till they come to the press Spices smell sweetest when pounded young Trees root the faster for shaking Vines are the better for bleeding Gold looks the brighter for scouring and Juniper smells sweetest in the fire The Application is easie But Fifthly Fire is of a consuming and devouring nature as we have lately found by woful Experience Psal 18. 8. There went out a smoak out of his nostrils and fire out of his Isa 66. 15 16. Psal 21 9. Jer. 17. 4. Ezek. 38. 19 20. nouth devoured Jer. 15. 14. A fire is kindled in my anger which shall burn upon you Ezek. 22. 31. Therefore have I poured out my indignation upon them I have consumed them with the fire of my wrath Natural fire is a great devourer but mystical fire the fire of divine wrath is infinitely a greater devourer men may stand before a natural fire but no man has ever bin able to stand before the devouring fire of divine wrath The anger and wrath of God against wicked men is exceeding hot 't is a burning fiery flaming wrath against which they are never able to stand Isa 27. 4. Who would set the bryars and thorns against me in battel I would go through them I would burn them together Bryars and thorns are as well able to stand before a devouring fire as wicked men are able to stand before the smoaking wrath of that God which is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Sixthly Fire breaks out suddenly and unexpectedly in an hour in a moment when no man thinks of it when no man looks for it as you see by that late dreadful fire that in a few days turn'd a glorious City into a ruinous heap So the Judgments of God they come suddenly and unexpectedly upon the sons of men witness the Judgments of God that came upon the old world Sodom and Gomorrah Nadab and Math. 24. 37 38 39. Gen. 19. Abihu Corah Dathon and Abiram 1 Thes 5. 3. For when they shall say peace and safety then sudden destruction cometh upon them as travel upon a woman with child and they shall not escape Security is a certain fore-runner of desolation and destruction The Apostle by the similitude he uses shews that the destruction of the wicked is 1. certain 2. sudden 3. inevitable But Seventhly Fire is impartial it makes no difference between rich and poor high and low honourable and base bond and free male and fema●e c. So the Judgments of God are impartial they reach all sorts and ranks of persons But Eighthly and lastly Fire is violent and irresistable we have had as dreadful a proof of this in the late dreadful Conflagration of London as ever any people have had since the Lord Jesus was on earth So are the Judgments of God violent and irresistable witness the raging Pestilence and the bloody Sword that in 1665. and 1666. has sent many score thousands to their long homes And thus you see how that Metaphorically or Typically great and sore Judgments do resemble fire But Secondly Premi●e this with me fire is sometimes attributed unto God Heb. 12. 29. Our God is a consuming fire sometimes fire is attributed to Christ Mal. 3. 2. But who ray abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like a refiners fire and like fullers sope And sometimes fire is attributed to the Holy Ghost Mat. 3. 11. I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance but he that cometh after me is mightier then I whose shoes I am not worthy to bear he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire that is with that fiery Holy Ghost that Spirit of Judgment and of burning wherewith the filth of the Daughter of Zion is washed away Isa 4. 4. But Thirdly Premise this with me the word Fire in Scripture is sometimes used by the Holy Ghost to set forth sin by Isa 9. 18. For wickedness burneth as the fire it
declares made by the Heathen the reproach of Christ himself Quomodo bonus magister cujus tam pravos videmus discipulos How can we think the Master to be good whose Disci●les we see to be so bad Epiphanius saith that in his days many shu●'d the society of the Christians because of the loosness and luxuriousness of their lives And Augustin confesseth that August de moribus Ecclesiae cap. 34. in his time the loose and luxurious lives of many who profest the Christian Religion gave a great advantage to the Manichees to reproach the whole Church of God and the ways of God The Manichees were a sort of people who affirmed that there were two principles or beginnings of things viz. a summum bonum and a summum malum A summum bonum from whence sprang all good and a summum malum from whence issued forth all evil Now the loose and luxurious lives of such as had a profession upon them hardned these in their errours and caused them with open mouth greatly to reproach and deeply to censure the sincerest Saints And Chrysostom preferred brute beasts before luxurious persons for they go from belly to labour when the luxurious person goes from belly to bed or from belly to Cards or Dice if not to something that is worse And Augustine well observes that God hath not given to man talons and claws to rent and tear in pieces as to Bears and Leopards nor horns to push as to Bulls and Unicorns nor a sting to prick as to Wasps and Bees and Serpents nor a bill to strike as to Eagles and Ostriches nor a wide mouth to devour as to Dogs and Lyons but a little mouth to shew that man should be very temperate both in his eating and drinking How applicable these things are to the luxurious persons that lived within and without the Walls of London before it was turned into ashes I shall leave the wise in heart to judge But Thirdly Those great and horrid sins that were to be found in ma●y mens Calling● viz. excessive worldliness Prov. 28. 20. 22. See Josh 7. 15. 21. 24. 25. extortion deceit bribery c. these brought the sore Judgment of Fire upon us When men are so greedy and mad upon the world that they make haste to be rich by all sinful devices and cursed practices no wonder if God burns up their substance and turns their persons out of house and home The coal the Eagle got from the Altar the Sacrifice and carried it to her nest set all on fire So that Estate that men get by sinful ways and unwarrantable courses first or last will set all they have on fire He that resolves to be evil may soon be rich when the spring of conscience is screwed up to the highest pin that it is ready to crack when Religion is lock'd up in an out-room and forbidden upon pain of death to look into the Shop or Ware-house no wonder such men thrive and grow great in the world but all the riches such men store up is but fuel for the fire Hab. 2 9. Wo to him that coveteth an evil covetousn●ss to his house that he He saith Chrysostom that locks up ill-gotten riches in his counting-house locks up a Thief in his countenance which will carry all away and if he look not the bette● to it his precious Soul also may set his nest on high that h● may be delivered from the power of evil Verse 11. For the stone shall cry out of the wall the beam out of the timber shall answer it Verse 13. Behold is it not of the Lord of H●sts that the people shall labour in the very fire and the people shall weary themselves for very vanity They had got great Estates by an evil covetousness and God was resolved that he would make a bon-fire of all their ill gotten goods and though they should venture their lives to save ●heir goods and quench the flames yet all should be but labour in vain according to that word Jer. 51. 58. Thus saith the Lord of Hosts the broad walls of Babylon shall be utterly broken and her high gates shall be burnt with fire and the people shall labour in vain and the folk in the fire and they shall be weary Though Babylon was a City of great same and state and riches and deservedly accounted one of the worlds nine wonders though the compass of the Walls was 365 furlongs or 46 miles according to the number of the days in the year and the heighth 50 cubits and of so great a bredth that Carts and Carriages might meet on the top of them yea though it was so great and vast a City that Aristotle saith that it ought rather to be called a Country then a City adding withal that when the City was taken it was three days before the furthest part of the City could take notice of it Yet at last according to the Word of the Lord it was set on fire and though the Inhabitants did weary and tire out themselves to quench the flames and to save their stately houses and ill-gotten riches yet all was labour in vain and to no purpose In the days of Pliny it was an utter desolation and in the time of Hierom it was turned into a Park in which the King of Persia did use to hunt So Ezek. 28. 18. Thou hast defiled thy Sanctuaries by the multitude of thine iniquities by the iniquity of thy traffick therefore will I bring forth a fire from the midst of thee it shall devour thee and I will bring thee to ashes upon the earth in the sight of all them that behold thee Verse 19. All they that know thee among the people shall be astonished at thee thou shalt be a terrour and never shalt thou be any more Tyru● among the Sea-bordering Cities was most famous and renowned for Merchandise and Trade for thither resorted the Merchants of all Countries for Traffick of Palestina Syria Egypt Persia and Assyria They of Tarshis brought thither Iron Lead Brass and Silver The Syrians brought thither Carbuncles Purple broidered Work fine Linnen Coral and Pearl The Jews brought thither their Honey Oyl Treacle Cassia and Calamu● The Arabians brought thither Lambs Muttons and Goats The Sabeans brought thither their exquisite Spices and Apothecary-stuff with Gold and precious Stones Now by fraud and deceit they grew exceeding rich and wealthy which in the close issued in their total ruine according to that of the Prophet Zacha. 9. 3 4. And Tyrus did build her self a strong hold and heaped up silver as the dust and fine gold as the mire of the streets Behold the Lord will cast her out and he will smite her power in the sea and she shall be devoured with fire The Tyri●ns did hold themselves invincible because of their si●uation being round about environed by the Sea but yet the Prophet tells them that though they were compassed about with deep waters yet they should be destroyed by
sudden death and of Haman who slandering Mordecai and the Jews and by his lyes plotting their ruine was taken in the same snare that he had laid for them and both he and his Sons hanged upon the same Gallows which he had made for innocent Mordecai The same Chap. 7. 9. And Chap. 9. 13 14. Lyar that was feasting with the King one day was made a feast for Crows the next day Dreadful are the threatnings that the great God has given out against lyars Psal 5. 6. Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing Such as lye in jest will without repentance go to Hell in earnest Psal 12. 3. The Lord shall cut off all flattering lips and the tongue that speaketh proud things God by one Judgment or another in one way or another will cut off all flattering lying lips as a rotten member is cut off from the body or as a barren tree that is stocked up that it may cumber the ground no more Psal 120. 2 3 4. Deliver my soul O Lord from lying lips and from a deceitful tongue What shall be given unto thee or what shall be done unto thee thou false tongue sharp arrows of the Mighty God will retaliate sharp for sharp with coals of juniper The coals of Juniper burn hot and last long some say a month and more and smell sweet Now upon these coals will God broil lying lips and a deceitful tongue pleasing himself and others in the execution of his wrath upon a lying tongue Prov. 19. 5. A false witness shall not be unpunished and he that speaketh lyes shall not escape Though men sometimes by lying may escape the displeasure of men yet they shall never by lying escape the wrath and displeasure of God Wrath is for that man and that man is for wrath who hath taught his tongue the trade of lying Hos 12. 1. Ephraim daily increaseth lyes and desolation Desolation is the fruit and consequent of lying sin and punishment are inseparable companions they who heap up lyes hasten desolation both upon themselves and the places where they live Now if lying be a sin so hateful and odious to God no wonder if God appears in flaming fire against it But Fourthly and lastly Lying is a sin against the Light and Law of Nature it is a sin against natural Conscience and therefore 't is that a little child will blush many times when he tells a lye It was observed of Pomponius Atticus Ciceroes great Friend that he never used lying neither could he with patience lend his ear to a Lyar. Tennes the Son of Cyrnus who was worshipped as a God was so strict in judgment that he caused an Ax to be held over the witnesses head to execute them out of hand if they were taken with fa●shood or a lye Among the Scythians when their Priests foretold an untruth they were carried along upon hurdles full of heath and dry wood drawn by oxen and manacled hand and foot and burnt to death Aristotle saith by the Arist Ethic. lib. 4. cap. 7. light of natural Reason that a lye is evil in in self and cannot be dispensed withal it being contrary to the Order of Nature For saith he we have tongues given us to express our minds and meanings one to another by Now if our tongues tell more or less then our minds conceive it is against Nature It is said of Epaminondas a Heathen that he abhorred mendacium jocosum a jefting lye Plutarch calls Lying a Tinkerly sin a sin that is both hateful and shameful Euripedes saith that he is unhappy who rather useth lyes though seemingly good then truths when he judgeth them evil To think the truth saith Plato is honest but a filthy and dishonest thing to lye I could saith my Author both sigh and smile at the simplicity of some Pagan people in America who having told a lye used to let their tongues blood in expiation thereof A good cure for the Squinancy but no satisfaction for lying These Heathens will one day rise in Judgment against such amongst us as make no conscience of lying To bring things close those that lived within and without the Walls of London that were given up to a trade a course of lying those persons sinned with a high hand not only against the Light of Nature but also against as clear as glorious a Gospel-light as ever shined round a people since Christ was upon the Earth and therefore no wonder if God hath laid their City in ashes He that s●all seriously dwell upon these four things viz. 1. That lying is a very great sin 2. That Lyes and Lyars are very destructive to all humane Societies Kingdoms and Common-wealths 3. That Lying is a sin most hateful and odious to God 4. That Lying is a sin against the Light and Law of Nature he will see cause enough to justifie the Lord in that late dreadful Fire that has thus been amongst us But before I close up this Particular give me leave to say That this trade this course of Lying that brings that sore Judgment of Fire upon Cities and Countries I cannot charge with any clear evidence upon those that did truly fear the Lord whose habitations were once within or without the Walls of London before it was turned into a ruinous heap and that upon these grounds First Because a trade a course of Lying is not consistent with the truth or state of Grace A trade a course of drunkennes● Psal 139. 23 24. 1 Joh. 3. 6 7 8 9 10. of whoring of swearing of cursing is as inconsistent with a state of Grace as a trade a course of Lying is I know Jacob lyed and David lyed and Peter lyed but none of these were ever given up to a trade of lying to a course of lying The best Saints have had their extravagant motions and have sadly miscarried as to particular actions but he Vna actio no● denominat that shall judge of a Christians estate by particular acts though notorious bad will certainly condemn where God ●cquits We must always distinguish between some single evil actions and a serious course of evil actions It is not this or that particular evil action but a continued course of evil actions that denominates a man wicked As it is not this or that particular good act but a continued course of holy actions that denominates a man holy Every man is as his course is if his course be holy the man is holy if his course be wicked the man is wicked There is a Maxime in Logick viz. That no general Rule can be established upon a particular Instance And there is another Maxime in Logick viz. That no particular Instance can overthrow a general Rule So here look as no man can safely and groundedly conclude from no better premises then from some few particular actions though in themselves materially and substantially good that this or that mans spiritual estate is good so on the other hand no man ought
and they provoked to avoid them and secure themselves against them Doubtless the serious thoughts of hellish pain while men live is one bless●d way to keep them from those torments when they come to die Another gives this pious counsel Let us earnestly importune the Lord that this knowledge whether the fire of Hell be material or not be never manifested to us by experience 'T is infinitely better to endeavour the avoiding Hell fire than curiously to dispute about it Look as there is nothing more grievous than Hell So there is nothing more profitable than the fear of it But what difference is there between our common fire and Hell Obj. fire I answer a mighty difference a vast difference Take it Answ in these six particulars First They differ in their heat no heart can conceive nor no tongue can express the exquisite heat of infernal fire were all the fires under Heaven contracted into one fire yea were all the Coles Wood Oyle Hemp Flax Pitch Tarr Brimstone and all other combustibles in the world contracted into one flame into one fire yet one spark of infernal fire would be more hot violent dreadful amazing astonishing raging and tormenting than all that fire that is supposedly made up of all the combustibles the earth affords To mans sense there is nothing more terrible and afflictive than fire and of all fires there is none so scalding and tormenting as that of brimstone Now into that lake Rev. 14. 10. Chap. 21. 8. The fire in a Lantskip is but ignis pictus a painted fire and the fire of Purgatory is but ignis fictus feigned fire Now what are these to Hell fire which burns with fire and brimstone for ever and ever shall the wicked of the earth be cast Infernal fire far exceeds ours that are on our Hearths and in our Chimneyes in degree of heat and fierceness of burning Our fire hath not that terrible power to scorch burn torment as the fire of Hell hath Our fire as Polycarpus and others say compared to Hell fire is but like painted fire upon the Wall Now you know a painted fire upon the Wall will not hurt you nor burn nor affright you not torment you but the fire of Hell will beyond all your conception and expression hurt burn affright and torment you The fire of Hell for degrees of heat and fierceness of burning must wonderfully surpass our most furious fires because it is purposely created by God to torment the creature whereas our ordinary fire was created by God only for the comfort of the creature The greatest and the hottest fires that ever were on earth are Alsted but Ice in comparison of the fire of Hell Secondly There are unexpressible torments in Hell as well as unspeakable joyes in Heaven Some who write of Purgatory tell us that the pains thereof are more exquisite though of shorter continuance than the united torments B●llarm de Parg. l. 2. c. 14 B●ll●rm de Ae●●r Faeli Sa●●● l. 1. c. 11. that the earth can invent though of longer duration If the Popes Kitchin be so warm how hot is the Devils Furnace A Poetical Fiction is but a Meiosis when brought to shew the nature of these real torments the lashes of Furies are but petty scourgings when compared to the stripes of a wounded conscience Tytius his Vulture though feeding on his Liver is but a Flea-biting to that Worm whick gnaweth their hearts and dieth not Ixion his Wheel is a place of rest if compared with those Billows of Wrath and tha● Wheel of Justice which is in H●ll brought over the ungodly the task of Danaus his Daughter is but a sport compared to the tortures of those whose souls are filled with bitterness and within whom are the arrows of the Al●ighry the poison whereof doth drink up their spirits Hell is called a Furnace of fire which speaketh intolerable heat a Matth. 13. 42. Luke 16. 28. Matth. 5. 25. 5. 22. place of torment which speaketh a total privation of ease A Prison which speaketh restraint Gehenna from the valley of Hinnom where the unnatural Parents did sacrifice the fruit o● their bodies for the sin of their souls to their merciless Idols the which word by a neighbour Nation is retained to signifie a Rock than the torture of which what more exquisite It is called a Lake of Fire and Brimstone than the torment of the former what more acute than the smell of the latter what more noisome But Secondly Our fire is made by the hand of man and must be maintained by continual supplies of fuel take away the Coals the Wood the combustible matter and the fire goes out but the infernal fire is created and tempered and blown by the hand of an angry sin revenging God Isa 30. 33. For Tophet is ordained of old yea for the King it is prepared he hath made it deep and large the pile thereof is A River of Brimstone is never consumed by burning fire and much wood and the breath of the Lord like a stream of Brimstone doth kindle it and therefore the breath of all the Reprobates in Hell shall never be able to blow it out Our fire is blown by an aiery breath but the infernal fire is blown by the angry breath of the great God which burns far hotter than ten thousand thousand Rivers of Brimstone The breath of Gods mouth shall be both Bellows and fuel to the infernal fire and therefore Oh how terrible and torturing how fierce and raging will that fire be If but three drops of Brimstone should fall upon any part of the flesh of a man it would fill him so full of torment that he would not be able to forbear roaring out for pain and anguish Oh how dreadful and painful will it be then for damned sinners to swimm up and down in a Lake or River of Fire and Brimstone for ever and ever There is no proportion between the heat of our breath and the fire that it blows O then what a dreadful what an amazing what an astonishing fire must that needs be which is blown by a breath dissolved into brimstone Gods wrath and indignation shall be an everlasting supply to Hells conflagration Ah Sinners how fearful how formidable how unconceivable will this infernal fire prove Surely there is no misery no torment to that of lying in a torrent of burning Brimstone for ever and ever Mark this infernal fire is a fire prepared by God himself to punish and torment all impenitent persons and reprobate rebels who scorned to submit to the Scepter of Christ Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared Matth. 25. 41. for the Devil and his Angels The wisdom of God hath been much exercised in preparing and devising the most tormenting temper for that formidable fire in which the Devil and his Angels shall be punished for ever and ever Not as if it were not prepared also for wicked and ungodly men but it
of the tongue Now if these last have hit the mark how highly doth at concern us all to set a watch before the door of our lips at all times but especially on the Lords day Now considering how wonderful apt and prone Christians are to be speaking their own words Yea foolish vain worldly and unprofitable words on the Lords day Give me leave ●o offer to your serious consideration these four things First Where the Lord hath commanded the whole man to rest from servile works there he commands the hand to rest from working the foot from walking and the tongue from talking But in the fourth Commandment Thou shalt do no manner of work the Lord hath commanded the whole Exod. 4. 10. man to rest from servile works And therefore the tongue from talking of this or that worldly business But Secondly Those things which as lets hinder the duties of the Lords day are forbidden But worldly words as lets hinder the duties of the Lords day therefore worldly words are forbidden But Thirdly Where bodily works are forbidden there those things are forbidden which hinder the sanctifying of the Sabbath as much or more than bodily works do but bodily works are forbidden in the fourth Commandment therefore worldly words which hinder more the sanctifying of the Sabbath than bodily works do are forbidden in the same Commandment That worldly words do hinder the sanctifying of the Sabbath as much or more than bodily works is evident by this among other arguments that might be produced that a man may work alone but he cannot talk alone But Fourthly That Commandment which tyes the outward man from the deed done that Commandment ties the tongue from talking of the same But the fourth Commandment ties the outward man from worldly works and therefore that Command ties the tongue from worldly words Certainly all those persons that make the Lords day a reckoning-day with workmen as some do or a directing-day what shall be done the next week as others do or a day of idle talk about this worldly business or that or about this person or that or about this fashion or that or about this mans matters or that or about this pleasure or that or about this profit or that or about this mans calling or that or about this Gossips Tale or that c. All such persons are prophaners and no sanctifiers of the Lords Day I have been the longer upon this particular to confute and recover those Christians who give their tongues too great a liberty on the Lords Day Now in these fourteen particulars I have shewed you how the Sabbath is to be sanctified O Sirs as you desire to see London rebuilt as you desire to see London in as great or greater prosperity and glory as she hath been in as you desire to see her once more the Bulwark of the Nation As Psa● 48. 12 13. Cant. 6. 4. Isa 60. 15. you desire to see her a shield and shelter to her faithful friends at home and a terror and dread to her proudest enemies abroad As you desire that she may be an eternal excellency Zech. 2. 5. a joy of many Generations As you desire the Lord to be for ever a wall of fire about her and a glory in the midst of her M●ke conscience of sanctifying the Sabbath in a right manner Make it your great business and work to sanctifie the Sabbath according to those fourteen Rules which I have now laid down I know there is a desperate opposition and contrariety in the hearts of carnal men to the strict observation of the Sabbath When Moses had first received a Commandment Exod. 16. 25. 31. concerning the observation of the S●bbath his Authority could not so prevail with the Jews but that some of them would be g●dding abroad to seek Manna on the Sabbath day contrary to an express prohibition yea when it was death Chap. 31 13 14 15 16. to gather sticks on that day yet in contempt of Heaven it self one ventures upon the breach of the Law How sadly and frequently the Prophets have lamented and complained of the breach of the Sabbath I have in this Treatise already discovered and therefore need say no more of it in this place The horrid prophanation of this day in France Holland Germany Sweden and in th●se three Nations England Sc●tland and Ireland and among all Protestants every where else is and must be for a sore lamentation The Sabbath in all Ages hath been more or less crucified between prophaneness and superstition as Christ the Lord of the Sabbath was crucified between two Thieves When the observation of the Sabbath came to be more sacred and solemn in publick performances which was about Nehemiahs time as is conceived presently after Satan stirred up some Hypocrites who ●un into such an extream of superstition that they held that they might not stir out of their places nor kill a flea and a thousand such like fooleries Yea some dangerous fooleries they laboured to distill into the people as that they might not draw a Sword to defend themselves in a common Invasion c. For a close remember this that there are no Christians in all the world comparable to those for the power of godliness and heighths of grace holiness and communion with God who are most strict serious studious and conscientious in sanctifying of the Lords day Such as are careless remiss light slight formal and carnal upon the Sabbath day they will be as bad if not worse on every other day in the Week The true reason why the power of godliness is fallen to so low an ebb both in this and in other Countreys also is because the Sabbath is no more strictly and conscientiously observed in this Land and in those other Countreys where the name of the Lord is made known The Jews were never serious in the observation of their Sabbaths till they smarted seventy years in Babylon for their former prophanation of it And who can look upon the ashes of London and not see how dearly the Citizens have paid for their prophaning of the Lords day And Oh that all these short hints might be so blest from Heaven as to work us all to a more strict serious and conscientious sanctifying of the Lords day according to those Directions or Rules that I have in this Treatise laid before you And thus I have done with those Duties that are incumbent upon those who have been burnt up by that late dreadful fire that hath turned London into a ruinous heap I come now to those Duties that are incumbent upon those whose habitations are yet standing as monuments of divine Wisdom Power and Grace O Sirs the flames have been near you a devouring fire hath consumed many thousand habitations round about you and you and your habitations have b●en as so many brands pluckt out of the fire O how highly doth it concern you seriously and freq●ently to lay to heart the singular goodness