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death_n adam_n sin_n sin_v 19,442 5 9.9710 5 true
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A05279 The Christians vvatch: or, An heauenly instruction to all Christians, to expect with patience the happy day of their change by death or doome Preached at Prestbury Church in Cheshire, at the funerals of the right worshipfull Thomas Leigh of Adlington Esquire, the 16. of February anno 1601. By William Leigh Bacheler of Diuinitye, and pastor of Standish in the countie of Lancaster. Leigh, William, 1550-1639. 1605 (1605) STC 15422; ESTC S108412 42,071 96

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worlde to the porte and paradice of your God For no blessed life without a blessed death and no blessed death without a blessed life and then are we blessed in both when we stand vpon our guard and are found watchfull 1. Now for the first I say with the Psalmist What man liueth and shall not see death shal he deliuer his soule frō the hand of the graue no no the decree of death is an imperial lawe acted in paradice vpon Gods fayrest Creature where sinne no sooner seizd but death entred and hath euer since like the lawes of the Medes and Persians bene irreuocable And though happily from the first death there lye an appeale to a better life in the prerogatiue Court and high consistorie of our Christ dead for our sinnes but risen againe for our iustification yet is there no repeale of that first lawe by any latter acte I say no parliment to disanull the doome of death No place priuiledged no person exempt no time to interrupt the decree therof but like an omnipotent Queene and regent of al the world where sinne hath kist she euer killeth There is no safetie any where If Angels in heauen sinne downe they must If Adam in Paradice transgresse out he must If Iudas faile at the side of Christ away hee must where is a practise of sinning there is euer a necessitie of dying without either priuiledge of place person or presence for thorow enuie of the Deuill came death into this world they that hold on his part shall prooue it I say then dare avouch that the matter of our sinning is the cause of our dying and that needes must needes shall Must thou needes sinne then surely shalt thou die sinne and death are hereditarie they dwel in one house like Hipocrates twins they laugh togeather they weepe togeather they liue together they die together And so shall till time bee no more for no time of sinning no time of dying In the interim our Fathers haue eaten a sower grape and the Childrens teeth are set on edge the Ceders are fallen how can the shrubbe stand the Patriarches before the Flood the Patriarches since the Flood the holy Priestes and honorable Kings of Iudah and Israel haue all sinned and are all dead And why should we liue Ieremiah cryed and so may I O earth earth earth heare the word of the Lord young earth old earth middle earth faire earth strong earth rich earth heare the cry your moulde is earth your flesh is sinfull and your condition is mortall Ye Kinges of the earth ye are but kinglie earth sinne is your shame death is your due you honorable mē you are but honorable earth you Gentlemen you are but gentle earth you learned men you are but learned earth you meane men you are but meane earth I say of you all sin is your shame and death is your doome and when the graue hath it due then treade out the ground giue me the difference who is Princely who is honorable who is poore base and beggerlie It may be your Tombes Hearses and Sepulchers doe set out your state and shine to your praise but vnder within what 's your rottennes better then others what 's your dignitie aboue the meanest This Augustin sawe with his Mother Monicha standing by Caesars Tombe at Rome whē vpon the view he said I beheld the Corpes of Caesar as he lay in his Sepulchre there and loe they were blackish and fallen to rottennes I looked vpon his belly burst swarmes of wormes issued out In the hollowes of his head where once stood his christal eyes two hungry Toades were feeding The locks of his head were fallē his teeth appeared but his lippes were wasted the gristle of his nose being consumed the very ground thereof was discouered This when I saw I said deare Mother where is now the beautie of Caesar where is the worlde of his wealth where be the troupes of his Nobles Knights Barons where are the armies of his fighting men Where is the prouision of all his delights his hunting dogges his coursing Steeds his chaunting Birds his guilt Palace his Iuorie bed his Princely Throne his royall Wardrobe where where are his goulden Lockes and his faire feature long it is not O Caesar since all men dred thee all Princes feared thee all Citties did honour thee yea all the world did thee homage Ubi nūc quaeso sunthaec omnia quo abijt tua magnificentia Where I pray thee now are all these honors whither is thy puissance gone To which my deere Mother answered with all pietye and reuerence O my sonne all thinges fayled him when life left him And now his possession is heer in a Tomb of three Cubits long with corruption and rottennes in the kingdome of darknes Such my deer bretherē no better is the condicion of all flesh The meanest the mightiest as you see are al of one molde there is no difference in the graue and as of men so may I say of Cityes Kingdomes and Monarchies of this worlde They had their pride and they haue their period for goe ye as saith the Prophet to Calneh and see and from thence goe you to Hamath the great then goe downe to Gath of the Philistims look vpon Ioppa behold Tarsus wonder at Niniuie the pride of Assur gaze vpon Babilon the beautye of all the Chaldees honor and as you passe by cast your eye vpon the ruines of Ierusalem that virgin daughter Syon and when you haue viewed them al tell those renowned places of the worlde tell them that euen they are mortall that sinne hath sackt them and therefore they are fallen likewise in their decayed places yea and withall say that the very best thinges of this worlde so desired of all are but vaine and vile for what 's your golde and siluer other then as one termeth it terrae immundicia the slime filth of the earth what are your rich Furres of Sables Budge or Ermins but the skinnes of sauage beastes what 's your softe veluet silke and sattin but the excrements of vyle wormes what 's your sweete muske and Ciuet but the ordure of vermin what are your perpetuityes of fayre houses Castles Honors cal'd after your names but Nimrods Statues and monuments of former future confusions Of all which when ye haue most then haue ye least and neuer so freed as when you are loosed from them and can say with a perfect heart as did the Apostle I counted all thinges but losse and did iudge them to be doung that I might winne Christ. But leaue we a little these dead carkases of elder times with the cause of their ruines which was their sinne come we neerer home euen to that which wee feele in our bones and finde in our flesh as harbengers of deathes approach and deeper printes of our mortalitye You that are of yeeres olde