Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n aaron_n appoint_v israelite_n 18 3 9.2646 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29912 Twenty five sermons. The second volume by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ralph Brownrig, late Lord Bishop of Exeter ; published by William Martyn, M.A., sometimes preacher at the Rolls.; Sermons. Selections Brownrig, Ralph, 1592-1659.; Martyn, William.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691. 1664 (1664) Wing B5212; ESTC R36389 357,894 454

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

there is no recovery then all thoughts perish all hands fall no work or counsel or purpose any more 3. Is Mors exitus Is Death a departure Provide and forecast for a place of refuge Death is like a cruel Landlord turns us out of dores What folly is it not to provide a place to receive us This Christ commends in the Parable of the Steward Make to your selves friends that when ye fail they may receive you into everlasting habitations Luk. xvi 9. This was our Saviour's comfort I leave the world and go to the Father Ioh. xvi 28. This was the perplexity of men without Christ. The wisest of them knew not what became of their spirits Animula vagula blandula Quae abibis in loca whether upward or downward as Solomon speaks They that are Christ's are assured of a place after their departure We know if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hand eternal in the heavens vers 2. For in this we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven This made Lot willing to forsake Sodom that he had a Zoar to retire to and the Israelites to leave Egypt that they had a Canaan to go to It was a judgement upon the false Prophet that he should go from chamber to chamber to hide himself 1 Kings xxii 25. That 's the second Natura Conditio Mortis Thirdly Here is Susceptio Conditionis It is called an accomplishment or fulfilling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is Active not Passive not to be fulfilled upon him but by him he himself to accomplish Christ's Death as appointed by God was unavoidable and necessary as inflicted by his enemies it was violent and enforced yet he himself voluntarily undergoing and performing of it it is his action and fulfilling Christ's sufferings were not bare sufferings but voluntary performances He was Lord of his own life No man takes it from me I lay it down That which gave merit and acceptation to Christ's suffering was his willing and free and active undertaking of it And as in Christ so in Christians their sufferings their deaths they are active in them not patients onely A wicked man Death gnaws upon him he is snatch'd to Death a Christian willingly admits of it When God calls he offers himself as Christ did Quis tam facile dormivit I lye me down and rest Egredere ô Anima Non repetent animam ego reddam Now this under-going of death it is called an accomplishing a fulfilling 1. In respect of God's counsel and ordination Christ's death was appointed from eternity he had purposed and forelayd it Act. iv 28. To do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done He is the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world in God's wisdom appointing it in his truth promising it in faith believing it only his actual suffering that accomplish'd it Ought not Christ to suffer these things and so to enter into his glory This makes Christ so studious to admit of death else how should the Scripture be fulfilled This consideration makes the Saints suffer all things Death it self naturally willingly This commandement received I of my Father The end of my times are in thy hand To God belong the issues of death Ps. lxviii If chance or violence only appears Flesh and Bloud may struggle but God's appointment that makes us submit I held my peace because it is thy doing Moses when God expressed his resolution he must die importunes no more goes up to the Mountain layes down his life S. Peter layd down his life as the Lord had shewed him The will of the Lord be done 2. Death is called an accomplishment or fulfilling of our departure because that is but the closure and ending All our life 't is a beginning and progress to our end As all Christ's life it was a pro-passio to his Passio his sufferings were all Viae ad mortem so our life it is a progress to death We no sooner come into the world but we begin to go out We die daily in this sense That part of our life that is gone it is Morti deputanda it runns upon the score of Death Indeed eternal life it is tota simultanea possessio vitae 't is vita in statu fixed but this is in fluxu as waters alwayes flowing Youth 't is the death of Child-hood Man-hood the death of Youth Age the death of Man-hood then Death closes all Philosophers say motus and terminus are but one thing really so our passing and consummation of life it is but one continued-death That 's the third Susceptio conditionis Fourthly Here is Circumstantia susceptionis the place of accomplishment Hierusalem Conceive the purpose of it in three Expressions 1. It is Locus singularitèr designatus a place singularly designed All the Circumstances of Christ's death were fore-sett and appointed The time of it was foretold and calculated by Daniel the manner of it was prefigured and foretold by the Prophets the place all the occasions and instruments and circumstances were designed As the Paschal-Lamb was not onely commanded to be slain but on what day in what place it was to be dressed in what manner to be eaten And as it is so in Christ's death so likewise in ours Our times are set and fixed the period of our life the circumstance of place all occurrents fore-layd Thus God appoints Moses and Aaron both time and place to die in Thus Elias must now and in such a manner be assumed Thus S. Peter was fore-warned by what manner of death he must glorifie God So Agabus shews S. Paul how he must be bound It must settle our hearts Our lives are in God's book set that time is fixed as was the Exodus of the Israelites the self-same day It must make us resigne up our selves our deaths the whole carriage of them to God's wise disposal 2. It is Locus typicè praefiguratus Hierusalem that was foretold and prefigured as the place of Christ's death This was prefigured in Isaac's Offering on Mount Moriah On this Hill David Offer'd to cease the Plague This place he appointed to build the Temple on There was no Altar we know allowed but this of Hierusalem Here the Passeover was to be slain and eaten Thus the Apostle Heb. xiii 11. The bodies of those beasts whose bloud was brought into the Sanctuary by the High Priest for sin are burnt without the Camp v. 12. Wherefore Iesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own bloud suffered without the Gate It must seal up unto us the fulfilling of all our Redemption Every Circumstance was prefigured and is now accomplished Now was the great Jubilee when Christ dyed now the whole Burnt-Offering was tendred up to God 3. It is Locus moraliter praefigurans Ecclesiam Christ must die at Hierusalem that is his death it is proper to and effectual for his Church
the Wiseman hath it O Mors quam amara Ecclesiastic xli 1. O Death how bitter is the remembrance of thee to them that are at ease in their possessions The thought of Death it should be like that Stimulus carnis that Thorn in the flesh to S. Paul lest I should be pufft up with abundance of Revelations Thus the Apostle exhorts Brethren the time is short Let them that rejoyce be as though they rejoyced not and they that use the world as not over-using it for the fashion of the world passeth away 1 Cor. vii 29 30 31. Thus Abraham admitted into conference with God cryes out I am but dust and ashes Gen. xviii 27. And Iacob being in honour in Egypt saith Few and evil have the days of my life been Gen. xlvii 9. Thus Ioseph of Arimathea made his Grave in his Garden Christ puts himself into this premeditation of Death 2. As a condition of his future Glory This Transfiguration it was a glimpse of his after-Glory into which he was to enter a pawn and pledge of the full Possession But yet as knowing that through sufferings and death he must enter into it he premeditates and considers of his Death and Passion Thus he must suffer and enter into his Glory Luke xxiv 26. No certainty or evidence of Glory and Salvation must make us forget nay it ought daily to re-mind us of the means and conditions of our glory Rom. viii 17. Ioynt-heirs with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we also may be glorified together Our hope of heaven like the discourse of the Spies Oh it is a good land should incourage us to endure any thing Let us arm our selves say they and fight for it and win it with the sword If I be Predestinate I shall be saved live as I list it is the voyce of an Atheist No Having these Promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. vii 1. Let us work out our own salvation with fear and trembling Phil. ii 12. Use. This should teach us to be frequent and abundant in these thoughts of Death to season all our meditations and actions with that deep consideration It hath a manifold virtue and use in our whole lives 1. It hath a virtue of abating the glut and surfeit of all wordly pleasures it will damp those vain lusts that boil in our hearts Let the Adulterer know that his body must one day lye in the grave it will make him tremble at the defiling of it Let this thought appear like the Hand-writing on the wall it will make the Cup fall out of the hand of the Drunkard Let the Covetous man hear of Stulte hac nocte Thou fool this night shall thy soul be taken from thee and he will moderate his craving thoughts 2. It hath a virtue of perswading to Repentance and Reconciliation with God and preserving of such a Conscience that may not affright but refresh and comfort us in our last need 3. It hath a power of abating the fear and horror of Death when it approacheth Death's face is dismal acquaint thy self daily with it view it look upon it forecast it in thy mind it will not seem terrible when it approacheth to thee 'T is good to bear this meditation in thy youth That 's the first Colloquium de Morte Secondly Here is Natura Mortis Conditio 't is Exitus exodus A departure It looks two ways 1. Respectively to this Life 2. Respectively to Death 1. Respectively to this Life so it is Negatio Durationis It tells us This life it is not a state of perpetuity and continual duration Exodus here is never used but in the people's leaving of Egypt in their departure from thence Their being there was but a sojourning in a strange Land as God calls it Egypt was no perpetuity This the faith of all the Saints professed Heb. xi 13. They confessed they were strangers and pilgrims upon earth they had no abiding place dwelt in tents as strangers and travellers laid no foundations sought an after-City Thus our life is called the time of a souldier the stay of a wayfaring man the age of an hireling all terms of flitting and expiration an Apprentiship a Stewardship all limited and determining 2. Respectively to Death so it is Negatio Annihilationis Death is a departure therefore no destruction and absolute cessation Were we of the faith of the Sadduces Death were no removal departure passage but a quenching of the life a destruction of the soul an annihilation of the spirit No our Souls die not but depart onely Solomon calls it A returning of the soul to God Eccles. xii 7. Immortality is a part of that Image of God which remains indelible S. Paul calls Death A dissolution or separation not a destruction and annihilation The light of Nature taught it the Heathen and the light of Scripture assures it us If in this life onely we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable 1 Cor. xv 19. The very Philosophers discourse of the regions of souls and world of spirits and places of aboad even after this life Use. 1. Is Mors exitus Is Death a departure It must make that word sound in our ears Migremus hinc fix not your rest and aboad in this world The Saints profess they belong to another City Indeed David calls the wicked The men of this world Psal. xvii 14. They settle here make this their heaven But this must assure us this life is but an Annuity it is not a Perpetuity The fashion of this world passeth saith S. Paul The world passeth away and the lusts thereof saith S. Iohn Sedemus hic juxta flumina Babylonis omnia transeunt Look upon all things here as such that must be left He who is to remove from a Farm takes not that care as if it were his own 't is not mine Inheritance Engage not your selves too deeply build not too strongly The Rechabites expecting Captivity built no houses but dwelt in tents 2. Is Mors exitus Is Death a departure Then see thou finish all thy work Quia decedendum What thou hast to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisdome in the grave whither thou goest Eccles. ix 10. Might we stay as long as we list or return again when we please then we might presume but Statutum est semel mori It is appointed to men once to dye Heb. ix 27. If we were to return and die again we might recover our omissions but we must accomplish all now for if Death once comes there is no return from the grave It is otherwise with our Exodus then with the Israelites they carried their dough upon their shoulders they had not prepared for themselves any victuals Exod. xii 39. but they did it in their passage But if our departure find our work unfinished
in affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers It was Luther's speech Schola Crucis Schola Lucis And it is the great aggravation of wicked King Ahaz 2 Chron. xxviii 22. In the time of his distress did he trespass yet more and more against the Lord this is that King Ahaz that 's his brand as if he should say Here is a sinner whom Affliction will not tame 'T is to great purpose that Solomon advises us Prov. iii. II. My son despise not the chastening of the Lord. Gentle Corrections must not be despised nor slighted And David his father counted it an happy thing to get good by such chastening Psal. xciv 12. Blessed is the man whom thou chastisest and teachest him out of thy Law He shews it will prevent this same Occideret That thou mayest give him rest from the days of adversity until the pit be digged for the wicked verse 13. Happy chastisements that prevent slaying To do as Isaiah speaks chap. xxvi 16. Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them No this wrought not with them Quando castigavit So then here is the unworthy servile baseness of their Repentance no time would serve but quando occidit when he slew them never till their heads were on the block Yes this is Pharoah's Repentance he stood out many a stroke but when it came to a destruction then he seeks to Moses O I have sinned save me from this death onely We condemn it in Pharoah and wonder at it here in the Israelites and yet upon examination we shall find it is the case of many of us Take it 1. Either more collectively and largely for our national Repentance Or 2. More privately and personally for each mans particular 1. Let us look abroad not to censure and descant upon other mens estate but yet we may soberly consider the sins of the times and lay them to heart Have we not passed all the former Quandoes the Seasons of Repentance with small Amendment 1. Not when we sinned God knows many sins stand upon the Score uncancelled by Repentance 2. Not when he blessed us with Deliverances with Peace Plenty Freedom from Annoyances yet small fruits upon it Evidentibus Beneficiis ingrati 3. Not when he hath by his word invited to Repentance Nay that Mannah comes out at our Nostrils we begin to loath it Ye begin to question whether God speaks by us 4. Not when he hath chastised us in measure shot off warning Pieces rather then murdring Cannons Commotions and Plagues and unnatural Discontents we despise those Chastisements 5. When he comes to slay us then we will bethink our selves When the Kingdom is on a light fire and Invasions of Enemies or intestine Rebellions begin to destroy us then it is to be hoped we will repent 2. Let us take it more privately and personally and then ask your hearts what time you set for your Repentance It is cum occidet when we are on our Death-beds and no hope of life when God sends his last Executioner to cut us off from the land of the living then we resolve to repent Well 't is possible you may do so De nemine desperandum quem patientia Dei sinit vivere Yet consider 1. It is Infamis Poenitentia here is a brand set upon it by the Holy Ghost 2. It is Incerta There is small encouragement the Scripture gives to it rather rejects it See what entertainment such Seekers are promis'd to find at God's hand Prov. 1. 26. Because I have called and ye refused I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded verse 26. I will also laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear comes when distress and anguish comes upon you verse 28. then they shall call upon me but I will not answer See what encouragement such early Seekers have 3. It is Suspiciosa Poenitentia there is great cause to suspect the goodness of such Repentance which is forced from us cum occideret when the fear of death surprises us A man may deceive himself in judging his Repentance In great affliction he may promise fairly and think he hath good and honest purposes to forsake his sin that he is mortified to it because 1. That lust which reigned in him is nipp'd and forc'd back by his affliction 't is like the sap of a tree in Winter all shrunk to the Root Sorrow and sickness and any great affliction is like Winter-Weather it nips the Branches hinders our Corruption from sprouting and so we think 't is dead but the Root holds life and sap Warm Weather of Prosperity will make it spring again like Iob's tree chap. xiv 8 9. Through the sent of waters it will bud and bring forth boughs like a plant 2. In the fear of death or any sore affliction we may take our selves to be mortified because afflictions will justle out temptations of sinful pleasures he hath lost the relish of them for a time As sick men can find no sweetness in meats which otherwise they delight in because their taste is for a time embittered Let them recover health and they will fall to again 3. In sickness many take themselves mortified not because sin is weakened in them but nature is infeebled that withdraws her strength by which sin was active recover nature and sin will recover As a 〈◊〉 in a tree let the tree spring and that will spring too 'T is not the body of sin that is mortified but the body of nature is infeebled Put not thy Conversion then upon such hazardous adventures stay not till he comes to slay thee by death It is an infamous 't is an uncertain 't is a suspicious Repentance thou mayest be mistaken in it Come we to III. The third defect of their Repentance that 's falsness and dissembling it was a flattering unsound hypocritical Repentance Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth and they ly●…d unto him with their tongue All their conversion and turning to God was but flattery and falshood And this Flattery and falshood will appear 1. In their Professions 2. In their Promises Flattering Professions and false Promises 1. Flattery is seen in Professions 1. A Flatterer will profess a great esteem of goodness and worth in the Person whom he applies himself to ready to ascribe much unto him So did these hollow Converts In their Affliction they acknowledged God was their rock and strength and the high God their Redeemer verse 35. Thus the Herodians flattered Christ Matth. xxii 16. Master we know that thou art true and teachest the way of God in truth and regardest no mans person Christ discovers them Why tempt ye me ye hypocrites Such are the soothings of unsound repentance when affliction presses us Oh! then we will acknowledge God and his goodness As Benhadad did with the King of Israel O the Kings of Israel are merciful Kings but
of it He that raised up Christ from the dead shall quicken your mortal bodies That is God the Father he will be the Author of our Resurrection Divers Reasons and Congruities there are for this truth 1. The first Founder of life must be the Repairer and Restorer of it to us As he first breathed life into us so he will send forth his Spirit and renew us and recall us back again The interest he hath in us by our Creation gives him the right to atcheive our Resurrection Iob observed that chap. xiv 14 15. If a man die shall he live again Yes yes Thou shalt call and I will answer thee thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands That hand which created us shall again raise and restore us Mine own I will bring back again Psal. lxviii 22. 2. The soul in death returns to him that gave it It is in his hand and power and custody and so none but he can return it into the body and re-unite it Dives in Hell confessed this truth Father Abraham send Lazarus to my brethren He hath the keys of hell and of death and of all the Chambers of the grave Rev. i. 18. 3. He is the Restorer of life in the Resurrection as being the supreme Disposer of all Rewards and Honours and Retributions As the King is the Fountain of all civil Dignity and Honour and he must dispense it so all the Dispensations of Glory are at his disposal The Preferments in Heaven are given to them for whom they are prepared by the Father Matth. xx 23. Now this Author of our Resurrection is specified not barely by the mention of his name or person but represented under an expression of much hope and assurance He that raised Christ from the dead that gives footing and fastning to our faith that he will raise us also That great work makes our Resurrection possible and hopeful and certain too There are many Praeludia Resurrectionis many miraculous works in Scripture that did sweetly prefigure our Resurrection but none like this of raising Christ. 1. Enoch's Translation that he saw not death Gen. v. 24. God delivered him from the power and possession of death That which was to him Gratia praeveniens shall be to us Gratia subvenieus He who exempted him from death can rescue us 2. Elijah's Rapture and Assumption in a fiery Chariot he likewise was exempted from the necessity of death his exaltation was a type of our resurrection 3. Aaron's Rod a dry dead piece of wood made to bud and flourish and bring forth ripe fruit that argues a possibility that we shall revive and renew our strength again 4. The Garments of the Israelites for forty years though used and worn yet decayed not He who can preserve our Garments from wearing out sure he can preserve our Bodies from perishing 5. The three Children cast into a fiery Furnace yet preserved no smell of fire was upon them that 's a great assurance that the Furnace of the Grave shall restore us to Incorruption 6. Ionas cast up again when the Whale had swallowed him the Prophet slain by the Lion but yet not devoured by him both Praedae suae custodes and hopeful and comfortable Assurances of our Resurrection All these are sweet Resemblances and Arguments of our rising again but none like this He that raised Christ from the dead shall Christ's Resurrection 1. Argues ours possible S. Paul argues strongly from it If Christ be risen again how say some that there is no Resurrection 2. It makes ours probable and easie Death is now vanquish'd by Christs Resurrection When the Prison door is set open it is easie to escape 3. It makes ours necessary If the Head be risen the Members must follow after Christus non potest habere membra damnata The living Head must not be united to dead Members We have seen the Author Thirdly What is the Action He shall quicken our mortal bodies Mortal bodies Why not Our dead bodies That seems to be more Mortuum sounds more then mortale No purposely the Apostle uses this expression in this point of the Resurrection Mortale is a great deal more then ●…ortuum To be raised à Mortalitate is a great deal more then to be raised à Morte It expresses three Excellencies of our Christian Resurrection 1. It frees us à possibilitate mortis it takes away the necessity nay more then so the possibility of death Death shall have no more dominion over us Not onely death shall be swallow'd up in victory 1 Cor. xv but mortality shall be swallow'd up of life 2 Cor. v. 4. Our Resurrection shall be according to the power of an endless life as the Apostle speaks This Resurrection far exceeds the Resurrection of Lazarus and those others in Scripture They were rais'd à morte but not à mortalitate The fit was rather removed then the disease cured 'T is a rule they have Qui comitialem morbum habent nè quidem diebus quibus morbo vacant sani dicuntur They who are troubled with the falling-sickness upon their good dayes are not counted whole Now Mortalitas it is Morbus caducus our Resurrection cures us of that the core of death is consumed the root and fibrae of death all stub'd up Nay our Resurrection sets us in an Immortality beyond that of Adam He was endued with an Immortality but not like this of ours As was his liberty from sin so was his immortality and freedom from death Prima libertas fuit non peccare and so Prima immortalitas was posse non mori He might not have sinned that was his Liberty he might not have died that was his Immortality But the liberty from sin in heaven is Non posse peccare there they cannot sin so is our immortality Non posse mori that we cannot die it takes away possibilitat●…m mortis 2. This Expression of quickning our mortal bodies it brings with it a second excellency a freedom from infirmities diseases and weaknesses they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sprowts that grow from this root of death It will free us from all the sad sequels of mortality No infirmity or deformity or indecency no pains or diseases Lame Mephibosheth shall leap blind Isa●…c shall see clearly and ulcerous Lazarus shall be whole and sound 3. It brings a third Excellency it will free us à miseria Miseries and afflictions and vexations they are the concomitants of our mortality this resurrection shall exempt us from them too Saint Iohn assures us of it Rev. xxi 4. God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shall be no more death neither sorrow nor crying nor any more pain all these are passed by I come Fourthly To the last thing that is the ground and reason of all Because his Spirit dwells in you The inhabitation of God's Spirit that 's the ground of our Resurrection And the force and evidence of this reason may be deduced into these
branches it self into manifold members so here is multiplicitas donorum the Spirit diffuses it self into manifold gifts Effundam Spiritum meum not a drop or two but a plentiful showre of all kind of graces here are healings languages miracles and all comprised in my Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all kind of graces That 's the first Varietas donorum Plenty and variety 2. A second thing remarkable in the body is disparitas membrorum all are not alike useful none equally beautiful so here is disparitas donorum This holy body herein is like to that abominable image in Daniel The arms of silver the thighs of brass the legs of clay and mean composure The graces of the Spirit though none are superfluous yet some are more useful and of special Improvement That 's included in the other branch of my Text in this Comparative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That 's the second choice and disparity 3. A third thing in the body is Excellentia unius membri some one hath the preheminenoy above the rest is more vital and useful more beautiful and comely like that Head of gold Dan. ii 32. So here is Excellentia doni that 's in the first and chiefest branch of my Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saint Paul preferrs Charity before Faith and Hope and all other Graces That 's the third thing observable Preheminence and Excellency The Words are the Apostle's direction for a fitting enablement to the work of the Ministery and it consists upon three Particulars 1. Here are tria objecta the Apostle propounds and commends to them three Objects 1. Charity 2. Spiritual Gifts 3. Prophecy 2. Here are tres actus three acts he preswades them to tending to these objects 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An act of Prosecution 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An act of Emulation The next is implied in 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And that is Eligite an act of Choice and Election 3. Here are tres gradus he orders them into three degrees answerable to their true worth and opposite to the erroneous esteem of these Corinthians Amongst these three Charity Spiritual Gifts Prophecy they did set the chiefest price and most doted upon the least profitable Miracles and Languages All would speak Tongues and work Miracles but little account was made of Prophecy Like those Sons of Sceva Acts xix they would work miracles themselves leave preaching to others We adjure you by Iesus whom Paul preacheth And even those who did prophesie did it in strife and much contention puffing up themselves not building up others All their gifts were void of Charity no thought had of that The Apostle inverts this order like the Master of the Feast Luke xiv displaces those that had got the highest room preferrs the lowest sets Charity in the first place Follow after Charity next after it preferrs Prophecy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 leaves the third and last room to Tongues and languages Thus as Christ in the raising of Iairus his daughter to life so S. Paul at Corinth in the converting of a sinner 1. He puts out the Minstrels an unlikely means to recover life again displaces Languages which S. Paul Vers. 7. compares to Minstrels a dead sound of piping and harping Then 2. He brings in Prophecy that is a quickning word like Christs word to the Damosel that fetches her to life again Then 3. He brings in Charity like the Parents of the Damosel to feed and nourish her that feeds and maintains and strengthens her Come we to the First Object Charity that is the principal and the chiefest Grace and the Observation hence is briefly this that Charity and Compassion to the Church of Christ above all other graces is a principal gift required in a Minister Look upon Aaron the High Priest in his holy attire and then ask David the morality of all that Ceremony As the precious oyntment upon the head that ran down upon the beard even Aarons beard that went down to the skirts of his garment Psal. cxxxiii 2. without which it was death to serve in the Temple so comely and necessary in the office of a Minister is charity and compassion to the Church of God S. Paul preferrs it before faith and hope and all other graces Though not for personal and private use yet for service and benefit to the Church of God it exceeds them all 'T is a fundamental preparative and disposition for all other graces and enablements and that in these three respects 1. Ut habeat It fits and enables him for the receipt and obtaining of them In this case it is with the working of the Spirit as with his Being As naturally he proceeds per modum amoris so graciously he inspires and sanctifies per modum charitatis Multa remissa many sins forgiven because she loved much and so multa concessa many graces infused if we love much This was represented in the first effusion of the Holy Ghost The Apostles were in one house and in one mind in a charitable union and then they received those cloven tongues Of which S. Aug. speaks alluding to those two descents of the Holy Ghost they had first Spiritum unitum in columba before divisum in linguis He descended in the appearance of a Dove the Emblem of Charity after that In linguis divisis in tongues and languages They were together in one mind and in one house combined in charity As Origen observs of Iob's children Mark saith he their charitable affection Satan could sooner kill them all together then by any breach of love make them fall out and live asunder This Chrysostom notes in S. Paul's Conversion and Call to the Ministery God observed his zealous affection to the Synagogue how strongly he loved his Mother-Church Christ would especially gain him to his service As a Captain who sees in his enemies Camp a valiant and resolute Souldier for the good of his Country labours by all means to work him on his side and furnishes him with his choisest armour so God calls S. Paul and enables him with his richest graces That 's the first thing observable Ut habeat it fits and enables him for all other graces 2. Ut Ecclesiae habeat When they are infused Charity stirrs them up and improves them to the use and advantage of the Church of Christ. Other gifts without charity rest in the person into whom they are infused charity disperses and conveys them to others See this express'd in S. Paul's Similitude The whole body is compacted by that which every joynt supplies and makes an increase of the body unto the edifying of it self in love Other graces without charity as meat received into the body without the natural warmth lies clogging the stomach but Charity like the vital heat concocts and conveys them to every member it makes a supply to every part Eph. iv 16. That 's the reason that of all other graces God requires our charity to be bestowed on his Church
the hatred of the whole Kingdom was upon him he was a man whose life was imbitter'd with sorrows 'T is one blessed end and issue of afflictions they wean us from the desire of life Prosperity glues us to this life Afflictions loosen us O mors quàm amara How bitter is death when we are at ease O mors quàm jucunda How pleasant is it when we are in torments These minores mortes fit us for the great Death S. Paul's fightings with beasts at Ephesus made him willing to grapple with this When the soul of man finds no footing on outward things then it wishes it had the wings of a Dove that it might fly away and be at rest Happy afflictions that fit us for death 2. Grief for the miseries of the Church That goes nearer In private sufferings a Christian can be more contented when it goes well with the publick but if the Church lies under misery that makes an Elias to call for death Old Eli who digested well enough his private sorrow yet when the Ark was taken He fell off from the seat backward and he died The Saints are loth to see evil days to outlive the prosperity of Gods people The Lord shall make thee see Ierusalem in prosperity all thy days 3. Sensus impotentiae An apprehension of an inability to do any more good Elias was tired and wearied-out with the gain-sayings of Idolaters he had conflicted with their obstinacy Ahab is hardned Iezabel enraged Baal restored Gods Prophets are persecuted he sees no success of all his pains he is weary of his life As the soul in the body if it be hindred of action it forsakes the body presently so the spirit of Elias finding he could not prevail it desires to relinquish an ungrateful world and to retire to Heaven 4. Praegustus coeli The anticipation and feeling of those joyes of that rest and bliss whetts the appetite of Elias to desire possession and fruition of them If there be so much comfort in lumine Prophetiae how much more is there in lumine Gloriae If Mount Carmel and the Visions there be so ravishing what is Gods high and holy Mountain and those Revelations No question Saint Paul's rapture bred in him an high measure of heavenly-mindedness If the assistance of one Angel feeding the Prophet was so ravishing what will be the society of innumerable Angels If Communion with God upon Earth be so gladsome how unspeakable will Communion in Heaven be Si bonus es Domine animae quaerenti quanto magis invenienti These were the grounds and occasions of Elias his willingness to die But 3. What evidences of this willingness to die will appear in Gods children and what is the strength and power of it 1. It will appear in encouraging them against the forethoughts of death the thoughts of death are not ghastly to them Their frequent meditations and desires of it make them acquainted with it and familiar to them Nemo timet facere quod se novit benè didicisse Gerson 2. It will free them from dismayedness at the approach of death make them willing to entertain it Gods calling them to death they presently hear Non clamores tantum sed susurros divinos statim percipiunt The very beckning of Gods hand makes them hasten to him It was no more 'twixt Moses and God but Go up and die Thus Saint Paul tell him of bonds I care not for death saith he 3. It will bear them out in the conflict and onset of death Makes a Christian smile at the face of it How peaceably died Iacob Aaron Moses and Simeon As Saint Bernard of Christs yielding up the Ghost Quis tam facilè quando vult dormivit 4. It makes them triumph over the most tormenting and cruel deaths The three Nobles in Daniel slighted the furnace Martyrs kissed the stake they would not accept of deliverance like valiant Souldiers that are desirous to be put upon desperate Services That 's the first Optat Elias wishes to dye so willing is he to it II. Orat He makes his prayer that he may die That imports more 1. Prayer is a deliberate desire Sudden wishes vanish and die in us Many have some pangs of mortification and leaving the world as Balaam had but would be loth God should take them at their word like him in the Fable No Elias and a Saint goes further it is their deliberate wish All things considered they judg it best for them they exercise their hearts towards it waiting with Iob groaning with S. Paul begging with Simeon their dissolution 2. Prayer it is a religious desire a matter of devotion and holy supplication tendred to God framed into their prayer A natural man or a wicked man may have wishes to die and deliberations So had Achitophel and Iudas but they presented not these desires in prayers to God The Saints die like Ioab at the horns of the Altar by prayer sacrificing their lives to God like old Simeon brought by the Spirit into the Temple and there praying for death 3. Prayer it is a restrained desire Prayer extends the will but restrains the power He is willing to die Oh that I had wings like a Dove but is not the disposer of his life to part with it at pleasure Were our lives our own we need not beg leave of God to lay them aside His Petition 't is a real Confession that our time is in Gods hand not in our own We may be waiters and suiters and in desires hastners but not executioners of our own death As Gregory saith we must like Elias be in ore speluncae or in ostio Tabernaculi with Abraham ready to receive death not to hasten it to us In preparation we must hasten not in execution Our hastning must not prevent Gods coming Hastening to the coming of our Lord Iesus 2 Pet. iii. 12. not before his coming That 's the second Orat. III. Resignat Take away my life it is an act of resignation He directs and tenders and resigns it up to him and that upon divers Reasons 1. Ob jus dominii He yields up his life to God as the Lord of it No man lives to himself and no man dies to himself whether we live we live to the Lord whether we die we die to him whether therefore we live or die we are the Lords Rom. xiv 7. placed here in our stations The issues of life belong unto him We are not Masters of our time or life David served his time according to the counsel of God Old Simeon begs his dismission 2. Ob fidem depositi He commits his life to be kept in the hands of God The Saints in their death do not utterly relinquish and for ever depart with life but they depositate and intrust God with it Thus Tertullian Our life is in deposito apud Deum per fidelissimum sequestrem Dei hominum Iesum Christum Those things that I have committed to him he will keep Our lives