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A12980 The churches lamentation for the losse of the godly deliuered in a sermon, at the funerals of that truly noble, and most hopefull young gentleman, Iohn Lord Harington, Baron of Exton, Knight of the noble order of the Bath, and his Maiesties lieutenaunt of the county of Rutland, at Exton in Rutland, the last day of March 1614. Together with a patterne of piety, and the power of godlinesse expressed in his life and death, who yeelded to nature the 27. of February, 1613. when he wanted two moneths of 22 yeeres of his age. By Richard Stock, pastor of Alhallowes-Breadstreet in London. Stock, Richard, 1569?-1626. 1614 (1614) STC 23273; ESTC S117806 48,046 145

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Though the foole die yet may not the wise man liue euer z Eccles 2.16 How dieth the wise man as doth the foole saith the Preacher but though the subiect die yet cannot the Soueraigne put away death with his Scepter a Psal 82.6 I haue said ye are Gods and ye all are children of the most high but ye shall die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others But though Prince and people die yet are not the Prophets excused b Zach. 1.5 Your fathers where are they and doe the Prophets liue for euer Examples of other times experience of our owne teacheth vs that all of all sorts die and are gathered to their fathers Yea c Etiam muta Clamant cadauera Basil the dumbe and dead bodies cry this aloud to vs. As Basill of Seleucia saith of Noah hee preached without preaching euery stroke of the Arke was a reall sermon of repentance so euery corps wee follow and accompany to the graue preacheth really this truth to vs. And this truth hath certaine ground Reason 1 First because the Lord of life and death hath so decreed it d Heb. 9 27. It is appointed vnto men that they shall once die The decree was made Gen. 3.19 e Gen. 3.19 Thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne If it be his decree it must needes haue a certaine effect the decree is certaine the euent is ineuitable f Psal 115.3 Our God is in heauen and he doth whatsoeuer hee will g Vol●isse fecisse est Cypr. de Duplici martyr Gods will is his deede as Cyprian saith if he haue once willd it it is as good as wrought if he haue decreed it it is as certaine as if it were done Reason 2 Secondly because all of all sorts and conditions are made of one mould and one matter h Iob 4.19 made of clay and earth whose foundatiō is in the dust which shall be destroied before the moth Hence the Apostle calleth mens bodies i 1. Corinth 5.7 The earthly house of this Tabernacle It is true that as there are difference of stars though al made of th same matter and difference of mettalls some are gold some siluer some lead some tinne but all made of one earth so are there difference of bodies some more excellent then other and made of a purer earth but yet all subiect to corruption as the matter whereof they are made is It being the body then that dieth and seeth corruption one must die as well as another Reason 3 Thirdly because all haue sinned and all haue sinne k 1 Iohn 1.8 9 10. If we say we haue no sinne we deceiue our selues and make God a liar The holy and beloued Apostle ranketh himselfe with others and confessed that he had still sin in him He i Qui se inculpatum dixerit aut superbus est aut stultus Cypr. de oper Eleem. that saith he is without fault is either proud or a foole saith Cyprian Then must all be subiect to death for saith the Apostle m Rom. 5.12 As by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer all for as much as all men haue sinned Sinne the only cause saith one which enlarged deaths dominion and made all the world to become his tributaries for had it not been for sinne death had neuer entred into the world n Si Adam non peccasset mortem non gustaret Aug enchirid cap. 104. If Adam had not sinned he had not tasted death as Austin speakes And the Lord said o Genes 2.17 In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death not actually but potentially become mortall Now that which is true in the root holdeth in the branches Reason 4 Fourthly because sinne which brought in death might be destroied againe by death this viperous damme by such a daughter this beast by such a brood had it not been for sinne death had neuer entred into the world and were it not for death sinne would neuer goe out of the world As Basill saith p Deiu mortem non fecit sed nosmet ipsi ex mente praua nobis ipsis etiam sponte attraximus quam Deus minimè prohibuit ne immortalem in nobis morbum conseruaret Basil serm 9. quod Deus non est author malorum God made not death but we our selues by our wicked minds of our owne accorde wee haue drawne it on our selues which God did not at all forbid lest it should keepe in vs an immortall disease And as Epiphanius bringeth in Methodius disputing with Proclus the Originist q Instar medicamentariae purgationis mortem Deus bene inuenit quo sic omnino inculpabiles in noxij inueniantur c. Epiph. haer 64. c. methodio God as the true Physitian hath appointed death to be a physicall purgation for the vtter rooting out and putting away of sinne that we may be made faultlesse and innocent and that as a goodly golden image saith he sightly and seemly in all parts if it be broken and defaced by any meanes must be new cast and framed againe for the taking away of the blemishes and disgraces of it euen so man the Image of God being maimed and disgraced by sinne for the putting away of those disgraces and the repairing of his ruines and decaies must by death be dissolued into the earth thence to be raised vp againe perfect and without default Vse 1 But what vse may we make of all this First it is a care that euery one ought to haue to know they must die and they cannot auoid it the decree is gone out against them from the highest court of Parliament and that from the most highest what contempt were it not to take notice of it eury one ought to labour to number his daies and truely to know his mortality the greatest as well as the meanest the wisest as the simplest for if any one then all and if any more then other the greatest for they are not the least but rather the most subiect to this as they challenge themselues to be of the finest of the common mould so they must know that they are not by that exempted from the common law of nature and force of Gods decree but as the finer the mettall or the purer the matter of any glasse or earthen vessell the more subiect it is to breaking so they to mortality And therefore both they and all must labor for this spirituall Arithmeticke To number their daies which is a religious meditation and sound consideration of their frailty and mortality A thing worthy euery mans best disposed thoughts and intentions for seenig euery man must die and hath a course to finish which being finished he must away it is speciall wisdome to learne to know the length of his daies as it were the length of his lease for as hee hath vsed himselfe in his
expectation of death though diuers thought nothing lesse till a day or two before his dying day therefore hee addressed himselfe thereunto and besides his meditations hee called often for others to pray and often vsed praiers himselfe confessing and that often both his sinnes and his faith and vndoubted hope of saluation by Christ and with great alacritie he professed that he feared not death in what shape soeuer he came He brake forth often into heauenly speeches expressing his desire to be dissolued and to be at home with his God and Father professing not two howers before his death that he still felt the assured comforts of his saluation by Christ so finished his life in peace and ioy of the holie Ghost vttering neere his death these longing words O that ioy O my God when shall I be with thee Which ioy he vndoubtedly enioyeth and is with his God in glory and euerlasting happinesse Thus honorable and beloued you see by these things the worth and excellency of this deceased person honorable both by nature and grace the more his worth was by these naturall and spirituall endowments the greater our losse and the greater his gaine and the more cause haue we to sorrow for our selues though to reioice on his behalfe The whole hath cause to mourne and bewaile and many particulars to bewaile a part His honorable mother whom God hath depriued of hir sonne hir only sonne of such a sonne such ā staffe and stay of her age and such a ioy of her life His honourable sisters from whō the Lord hath taken such a noble worthy brother who would haue been not only a crowne of their honor but a furtherer of them in the way of piety and godlinesse to the crowne of glory His kindred and aliance who are depriued of such an honor of their house and such a glory of their name His kinde and familiar friends who are bereft of such a true harted Ionathan one that was very kind vnto them whose loue vnto them was wonderful specially to him whō he termed in his Wil his deare friend Sr. Ed. Harwood His seruants that haue such a master taken frō their heads the ground of al their future hopes And not these only but more generally others haue cause to mourne and bewaile as the Church who hath lost so hopefull and noble a Theophilus that would haue defended her truth and doctrine such an honorable Obadiah that would haue hid and protected her Ministers The common wealth and specially this little Shire whereof he was L. Lieutenant that hath lost so hopefull a Nehemiah who would haue set himselfe for the publike good and giuen example and encouragement to keepe the Sabboth and haue charged them so far as his power had extended to haue carefully obserued it and so gouerned them that he would not only not oppresse them himselfe but haue to his vtmost power prouided that they should be free from the oppression of others And here I will not omit that which may make the losse the greater something since brought vnto me by his deare friend of two purposes he had for experiēce to adde to the former grounds of his study the better to haue enabled himselfe for his Countries seruice The one by a voyage to sea into some places the knowledge whereof for war by sea would haue been most vsefull another by land into one of our neighbour countries fittest to haue enriched his mind in the knowledge of land-seruice Thus is there both generall and speciall cause of mourning and lamentation in respect of our selues but see what great cause we haue of reioycing for him What cause of reioycing and thankfulnesse hath his honorable mother though she hath lost her heire yet to speake in Chrysostomes words vnto her o At haeredem bonorumque successorem non habes quid malebas eum tuorum an caelestium haeredem fieri Quid vero cupis eum pere●ntiae suscipere quae paulo post esset dimissurus an permanentia immubilia non haeredem eum hab●isti sed ipsum prote Deus habuit Chrys hom 69 ad pop Ant. But you haue no heire nor any successor of your goods well and had you rather he should be inheritor of these of yours then of those heauenly What doe you desire he should enioy perishing things which within a small while he must cast away or permanent and immoueable Nay you had not an heire of him but God had him for you His honorable sisters in their sorrow may reioice ouer him for though as Chrysostome saith p Propriorum non fuit fratrum cohaeres sed Chr●sti constitutus est Chrysost quo ant He was not coheire with his priuate brethren yet he is made coheire with Christ And that not in hope but in present possession he now at his full age they but in their nonage as yet How may his worthy friends roioyce for him when we can say to them as Hierome to Heliodorus comforting him ouer the death of his Nephew Nepotian who died in his youth q Intelligeres illum non emori sed emig●are mutar● amicos non relinquere Hier. epist 3. Thou shouldst vnderstand that he doeth not die but decease And only change his friends not leaue them So they should be informed that he is not dead but translated hath not left his friends but changed them for far more honorable and glorious then they and so to reioyce in respect of him lest they may seeme to enuie his happinesse What cause of reioiycing hath the Church for him so deare a child of hirs that hath left the militant but is possessed of the triumphant Church that hath left the state of Militancie and warfaring and is in the state of triumphancy and victory How may the Common-wealth and this Shire reioyce ouer him that is taken from an earthly gouernment to an heauenly regiment from ruling with men to raigne with Christ and hath left these few corruptible ensignes of honor but now possesseth true honour and an immortall crowne Finally how may we all reioyce for him and change our note as much as may be forgetting our owne losses and thinking of his gaine As Bernard of his friend Gerard r Et meum faleor luctum poene in cantum conuertit dum intentus gloria ecius propriae ferè misoria obliuiscor Ber. super Cant. 26. And I confesse it turnes my mourning almost altogether into singing wholes being intent vpon his glory I forget almost my owne misery And now honorable and beloued to draw towards an end If for all this his losse and the want of his presence bee drieuous to you and that either in generall or particular you desire his presence and to see him let me speake to you as Chrysostome to some that were like affected ſ Ipsum cernere de sidera● eandem cum eo vitam viue sacram ocius illam accipis praesentiam Ch●ys hom 69. ad