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A13996 A discourse of death, bodily, ghostly, and eternall nor vnfit for souldiers warring, seamen sayling, strangers trauelling, women bearing, nor any other liuing that thinkes of dying. By Thomas Tuke. Tuke, Thomas, d. 1657. 1613 (1613) STC 24307; ESTC S100586 74,466 126

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Hugo is his good pleasure his will is his operation and his will is his permission Sixtly doth not God will contrarie thinges if he doe will those things which he doth in his law forbid Yea saith Perkins if hee should will that the same thing should come to passe and not come to passe in the same respect and manner but God forbiddeth sin as it is an euill and doth will it should come to passe as it hath respect of good Here vpon Thomas Aquinas saith Deum velle mala sieri Deum velle mala non sieri non opponuntur contradictoriè cum vtrumque sit affirmatum this is no contradiction to say that God doth will that euills should bee done that God doth will that euils should not be done seeing both the propositions are affirmatiue Seuenthly doth God make men sinners or doth he onely order them Saint Austen saith God makes men iust and orders them peccatores autem in quantum peccatores non facit sed ordinat tantum but God makes not sinners so farre forth as they be sinners but onely orders and disposes them And againe as God is the best Creatour of good willes it a malarum voluntatum iustissimus ordinator so is he a most righteous orderer of euill willes Eightly is it iniurious to God to say that hee drawes good out of euill and vseth euills as a wise Phisitian doth poison vnto good Clemens Alexandrinus saith it is a point of diuine wisedome vertue and power not onely to doe good things but also to bring the deuises of the wicked to some good and profitable end vtiliter iss quaevidentur mala vtatur and to vse those things profitably which seeme euill Austen saith Deus quasdam voluntates suas vtique bonas implet per malorum hominum voluntates malas God doth accomplish certain good wils of his by the naughty wils of naughty men And Fulgentius saith De malo opere cuinslibet non desinit ipse bonum operari that God ceaseth not of euery mans euill worke to worke that which is good But tell me yet againe though God put no corruption into any mans heart yet doth hee not incline the will to sinne by offering a man obiects and by leauing him to himselfe as a Shepheard stirres vp his sheepe to eate by setting Hay or Grasse before it or as a Huntsman stirres vp his Greyhound to a course by shewing him the Hare and letting the slip goe Manifestum est c. It is manifest saith Saint Austen that God doth worke in the heartes of men Ad Inclinandas corum voluntates to incline their willes whither he pleaseth either to good things for his mercie or to euill things for their deserts sometimes verily with his open iudgement sometimes secret but alwaies iust And Bellarmine saith that by a figure God exciteth men to sinne As an Huntsman setteth the Dogge vpon the Hare by letting goe the Slip that held in the Dogge If these things then which are spoken of sinne in generall be applyed vnto the particular sinne of Murder it will appeare that euery Murderer doth as it is said of the Murtherers of our Sauiour Whatsoeuer the hand and counsell of God had fore-determined to be done and that God doth permit limit and order him as it seemeth best in his holy wisedome Now wee haue seene how God is the Ordainer and Inflicter of Death But further wee must know that death comes by Sinne as the Apostle sheweth and before sinne there was no death at all For death is the wages of sinne Quoniam mors non naturae conditio ised poena peccati sequatur necesse est poena peccatum Because death saith Saint Austen is not the condition of nature but the punishment of sinne it is necessary that the punishment should follow the sinne For it is most certaine that God hath not made death as though be were in loue with death for it self sake neither hath he pleasure in the destruction of the liuing but vnrighteousnesse bringeth to death and man by forsaking God hath procured his owne death And although as saith Siracides Life and Death come of the Lord yet not vpon the same ground For vita is a donante Life is a gift of God that giues it but Mors is a vindicante Death is a punishment inflicted of God auenging as Saint Austen teacheth But let vs heare Saint Paul By one man saith he that is by Adaem sinne entred into the world and death by sinne And that wee may briefely dispatch the causes of Death we must vnderstand that as Death is of God For sinne so it comes by diuers meanes as hath beene toucht afore all which from the greatest to the smallestare determined ordered and directed by the Lord so as that none of them come to passe but according to his most holy prouidence And thus wee leaue the causes of death and come vnto the Subiects thereof Albeit Iesus Christ the Sonne of Mary dyed yet wee must know it was not by his owne desert for hee knew no sinne he was no Sinner but because it was his will to dye that by his death hee might deliuer vs from eternall death and sanctifie our death to be the doore of life vnto vs. And although Adam dyed yet it was not because hee was a man but because he was a Sinner For if Adam had neuer sinned Adam had neuer died because God had granted him this grace Vt posset non mori si eius mandatis obsequeretur as to bee able not to die if he did obey his precepts This then I say All the children of Adam by reason of sinne in which all but Christ are conceiued and borne are all without exception subiect vnto death By one man saith Saint Paul sinne entered into the world and death by sinne and so death went ouer All men The law of sinne saith Austen is that whosoeuer shall sinne must die The Law of death is whereby it is said to Man Thou art earth and vnto earth thou shalt returne Out of it we spring because wee are earth Et in terram ibimus propter meritum peccatiprimi hominis And to earth we shall returne for the first mans sinnes desert But you will say How is it that Infants of a day olde doe dye seeing that they commit no sinne I answere Sinne is either the corruption of nature or any euill which proceedes as the fruites thereof or thus sinne is either originall or actuall the former is in Infants though not the latter For euen Infants are conceiued and borne in sinne being naturally vncleane and guiltie of Adams first transgression The stame of the roote corrupted is so propagated diffused through all the branches which arise thereout that as Saint Austen truely speaketh Nec infans quidem
know that God both is and that he is iust and therefore hee will punish wicked sinners and by that meane declare his iust iudgement against vicious wretches The deseruing cause of death of sinne as ignorance of God disobedience of the truth especially of the Gospell of Christ Iesus and obedience of vnrighteousnesse as the Apostle sheweth as also want of charitie and charitable behauiour towardes the poore and needie members of Christ Iesus as hee himselfe doth teach vs. Neyther are these sins only meritorious of death but euen euery sinne though the smallest want of that which the law requireth is in it selfe odious and deadly For the wages of euery sinne is death The persons subiect to this death are all the Sons of Adam is as much as all are Sinners yet all of them shall not die this death namely they that are redeemed by the bloud of Christ who by his death hath deliuered them from this death by them through sinne deserued Those then shall die this death that were reprobated of God and who by their wickednesse and hardnesse of heart which could not repent haue treasured vp vnto themselues wrath against the day of wrath Depart from me ye cursed saith Christ into euerlasting fire The cursed then are they that must die this accursed death I neuer knew you saith Christ Depart from me ye workers of iniquitie They that shal die this death are such as Christ knew not owned not neuer acknowledged for his and such as whiles they liued were very hypocrites nourishing some sinne or other in their bosomes though they did many glorious and good works as preach baptise eiect diuels cure diseases and were perhaps of great account with men The Apostle saith that the Lord Iesus will render vengeance at his appearing vnto them that know not God and obey not the Gospell So that all which are ignorant of God and which disobey the Gospell of his Sonne shall die this death This then I say All impenitent sinners shall be damned all that beleeue not in Iesus Christ as Mahometaus incredulous Iewes and all other Infidels and all that professe Christ in name but denie him in example All these liuing and dying without sound repentance shall die this death And I proue it thus Except ye beleeue saith Christ that I am he you shall die in your sinnes but the Iewes beleeue not that Iesus the sonne of Mary was the Messias foretold therefore they shall die in their sinnes Hee that obeyes not the Sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him but neyther Iewes nor Mahometans obey Christ Iesus Therefore neyther of them shall liue but die Peter being full of the holy Ghost said that Christ is the Stone euen the fundamentall stone of mans saluation Neyther is there quoth he saluation in any other for among men there is giuen none other Name vnder heauen whereby we must be saued All therefore that either denie him or beleeue not in him and do not know him whether Iew Turke Persian Moore Indian American or who else soeuer all such shall bee damned cannot bee saued For by his knowledge shall my righteous seruant Christ Iesus Instifie many And we which are Iews by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles know that a man is not iustified by the works of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ God saith Saint Iohn hath giuen vnto vs eternall life and this life is in that his Sonne Hee that hath that Sonne hath that life and hee that hath not that Sonne of God hath not that life But Mahometans Iewes and Infidels haue not that Son therefore they haue not eternall life in spe and shall not haue it In Re but so continuing shall vndoubtedly die the damned death of the wicked for ought that man can tell I say further that those which professe Christ in word and in shew but denie him by their deeds addicting themselues to wicked lusts as whoredome pride drunkennesse auarice idlenesse epicurisme those I say shall vndoubtedly perish without mature and true repentance Know ye not saith Saint Paul that the vnrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Be not deceiued neither fornicators nor Idolaters nor adulterers nor wantons nor buggerers nor theiues nor couetous nor drunkards nor raylers nor extortioners shall inherite the kingdome of God But among Christians there are offenders in all kinds of the sinnes aforesaid therefore if they shall die in them they cannot possibly scape damnation Our Lord saith that The fearefull and vnbeleening the abhominable and murtherers whoremongers sorcerers idolaters and all lyars wherewith the Christian world aboundeth shall haue their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death And finally S. Iude speaking of sundrie wicked Epicures cept into the Church saith that for them is reserued the blacknesse of darknesse for euer Thirdly I say that all they which professing Christ doe notwithstanding adde vnto the faith of Christ and coyne articles which they doe propose as necessarily to be beleeued to saluation all such I say by this their presumption do cut themselus off from Christ and shall vndoubtedly perish except they shall repent In like manner they that doe take from the faith any essentiall point and needfull absolutely to saluation they also are subiect to damnation which without repentance they cannot scape Ye shall put nothing vnto the word which I command you neither shall ye take ought therefrom It was twise at least giuen in charge by Moses When Moses was now dead and the gouernment cast vpon Ioshuah God gaue him the same lesson in effect Thou shalt not turne away from it to the right hand nor to the left In like manner Agur saith Put nothing vnto his words least he reproue thee and thou be found a lyar I protest saith Christ to euery man that heareth the words of the prophecie of this booke If any man how precise how pure how holy how austere how sanctified soeuer he seeme or how learned soeuer he be and wit tie in the iudgement of men shall adde vnto these things God shall adde vnto him the plagues that are written in this booke and if any man shall diminish of the words of the booke he meaneth the true sense and substance of the words of this prophecie God shall take away his part out of the booke of life and out of the holy Citie and from those things which are written in this booke If any subiect or subiects shall presume to repeale the lawes of the kingdome or to make new lawes and to vrge men to receiue and obey them the king in the mean time vnacquainted with their proceeding or disliking it they shew themselues busie bodies rebellious turblent and taking vpon them as kings they incurre the displeasure of
and die most wickedly but theirs is counted most odious and infamous who either murder themselues or else die by Law for their outragious villanies Bias being asked What kinde of death was euill answered Quod legibus constitutum est That which the Lawes ordained meaning that which men haue deserued for their wickednesse as treason murther robberie In like manner hee in Plautus saith So I die not for my faults I care not much though I perish heere Qui per virtutem peritat non interit He that dies for well-doing doth not die 24. Why doe not men know the very time that is appointed for their deathes Saint Austen shall answere Latet vltimus dies vt obseruentur omnes dies A mans last day is kept secret that all daies might be obserued Ad hoc fortè nescis quando veniet vt semper paratus sis therefore it may be thou knowest not when he will come that thou mightest be alwaies prepared I suppose saith Plutarch that Nature knowing the confusion and shortnesse of our life would therefore haue the period of our life vnknowne to vs for it is cōmodious for vs. For if we should forknow it many would pine away with vntimely mourning would preuēt death with death he means the feare of death would kill thē wheras otherwise by course of nature they might haue liued longer 25. Whether is a man worse at his death or at his birth Peiores morimur quâm nascimur we die more euill then we are borne saith Seneca But this is our fault not natures if we consider it simply without relatiō to corruption Indeed we are borne in sinne but that sin is not acted of vs but by propagatiō deriued to vs but before we die if we liue the age of a man we die after the commission of many actuall transgressions Neuerthelesse by the grace of God in Christ a mans death may be better then his birth much more comfortable For to be borne is a worke of nature but to die with Christian faith fortitude either for Christ or in Christ is a work aboue nature I haue read of some that are said to die or to sleepe in Christ but I read of none that is borne in Christ re-borne and borne a new in Christ we may be said but not borne In briefe There is no man borne iustified and absolued But a man may die iustified and absolued Now it is better to die iustified then to bee borne a sinner It is better to die the child of Christ then to bee borne the sonne of Adam This then I say an old man dying if we regard him by himselfe is worse then an infant newly borne but if we consider an Infant without Christ an old man in Christ certainly it is much better for him to die with many sins forgiuen in Christ then fot the other to be born though but with one sin out of Christ so to die in that estate 26. Of all kindes of death considered simply without respect of grace or sinne which is the best Iulius Caesar said that sodaine death was best and a sodaine death befell himselfe But as I take it a sodaine death except it be by the course of nature without violence is not the best For that doubtlesse is the best which is most agreeable vnto nature now a naturall death is not simply sudden because it is not without messengers and signes foregoing yet sometimes it comes on the sodaine that is in a trice or before a man thinkes or while he thinks he may liue a while longer or when he thinkes not of it sometimes whiles he sleepes sometimes whilst he is awake as a mellow apple which drops of whilst a man sometimes is lookng on it 27. Whether is it lawfull for a man to pray that God would tell him directly when hee shall leaue the world and die I would not say it is altogether vnlawfull by reason of some extraordinarie occasions But vsually and ordinarily it is not expedient For reuealed things belong to vs but not the secrets of God such as are hidden seasons locked vp within Gods breast as the day of our death the day of Christs comming And as it is no way fit to pray to know the day of iudgement the verie time of the Iudges cōming so neither is it to pray to know the certain houre of death For though our end may be good yet that is not enough to make a prayer good but it must be made in faith according to the will of God But the curious inquiring into such things hath a checke in the Scriptures And though Dauid pray Lord let me know mine end and the measure of my daies what it is and let me know how long I haue to liue yet he meanes as I take it not to begge the knowledge of the verie point article of his death but desires God to giue him grace to acknowledge consider and duely to acquaint himselfe with the shortnesse and frailtie of his life as to me it seemeth by considering the words ensuing and by comparing it with Psal 92. 12. But howsoeuer it be we know Legibus viuitur non exemplis that good and obedient Christians must liue by lawes and not by ensamples But I demaund why wouldest thou know the verie moment of thy death That thou mightest prepare thy selfe the better for it Thy meaning may be good but this thine ayme is of litle moment Know this thou art a man die thou must this verie day may see thy death prepare thy selfe this day Thou maist die any day to day to morrow next day be therefore prepared euery day to day to morrow next day any day euerie day Miserable man why dost thou not prepare thy selfe euery houre Thinke of thy selfe as if thou werst now a dying for thou knowest thou must die It is not for thee to know the times or the seasons which God hath put in his owne power If God will not haue thee know them then desire not to know them It is enough for vs to know wee must die how soone or when it skils not it cannot be long to for we are but fome and fume 28. What honour ought the liuing to performe vnto the dead I answere they ought moderately to be touched with the losse of them they ought to giue them honest buriall they ought to commemorate and imitate their vertues they should praise God for his graces giuen them and for receiuing them to mercy out of a miserable mercilesse world they ought to maintaine their credits they ought not to misuse their bodies neither speake euill of them if the deafe ought not to be euill spoken of much lesse the dead for who deafer then a dead man who further off Who lesse able to answere for himselfe Hauing thus ended these questions concerning death and dead
which saith that the Begger died and was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome the Richman also dyed and was tormented after his death in Hell For where should the soules of men be after Death but either in Heauen with Christ or in Hell with the Diuell Non est vllus vlli locus medius vt possit esse nisi cum Diabolo qui non est cum Christo There is not any place for any man to be any where but with the Diuell who is not with Christ saith Saint Austen There are two receptacles for mens soules Heauen and Hell Tertium penitus ignoramus a third place we are vtterly ignorant of saith one The Scripture speaketh of no moe then two Thus wee haue seene what Death is to wit a disiunction of the soule from the bodie and not a dissolution of the Soule with the bodie the soule remaining vncorrupt and In aeternum as Lactantius speaketh Death though for the Nature of it it bee but one and the same to wit a temporarie diuorce or separation of the soule and body which were married or vnited by God himselfe yet in respect of the state into which men are by it admitted it is double and in regard of the meanes or waies whereby it is effected it is manifold for as Seneca truely speaketh Mille ad hanc aditus patent there are a thousand waies to bring a man to Death In respect of the persons dying and of that estate which they are let into by death death is twofold a death of the godly and a death of the wicked a sanctified and comfortable death a miserable and vnhappie death Of the former Balaam speaketh in his wish Let me die the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his and Dauid in the Psalme Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Of the latter our Sauiour speaketh in the parable when he saith O foole this night will they the diuels he meanes fetch thy soule from thee And againe The rich man also died and was buried and being in hell tormented c. Furthermore death we said was manifold for the waies or meanes thereof For albeit death bee the common way of all flesh Omnibus est eadem lethi via non tamen vnus Est vitae cunctis exitijque modus yet all men goe not the same way vnto death Mille modis lethi miseros mors vna fatigat Death meets with vs a thousand waies As into a great Citie or into the maine Sea so vnto death there are many waies It is as the center wherein all the lines doe meete a towne of Mart wherein many waies from contrarie coasts doe end Hos bella hos aequora poscunt His amor exitio furor his saeua cupido Vt sileam morbos Some are eaten vp of warres some are swallowed vp of the Seas The old world was drowned the Sodomites were burned the disobedient Prophet was killed of a Lion the mocking children were deuoured of two Beares Senacheribs Armie was killed with an Angell Herod Agrippa was eaten of wormes Pherecides of lice a King of Epirus was killed with a tile a King of Israel with an arrow and of France with a dagger some haue beene swallowed vp of the earth some haue beene killed of Serpents some haue beene eaten of Wolues one was killed of rats some by the fall of towers and trees some by one meanes some by another But we will bring them to some heads yet heere we promise no accuratenesse There is therefore an ordinarie way of dying which is vpon ordinarie causes and is common to all the sonnes of Adam since their transgression or there is a death by causes more rare and extraordinarie as by pestilence samine battell opening of the earth wilde beasts and the like Or thus there is first a naturall death which is when nature is spent when her forces are exhaust A light will go out of it selfe when the flame wants oyle waxe or tallow to feed on A mellow apple will fall of it selfe and through-ripe corne will shill without shaking O' this death Eliphaz speaketh Thou shalt goe to thy grane in a full age as a ricks of corne commeth in due season into the barne and such a death Iob and Dauid died of whom it is said they died in a good age and full of daies Secondly there is a ciuill death which is inflicted by the ciuill Magistrate Who is the Minister of God to take vengeance on him that doth euill Such a death died Achan vnder Ioshuah and the two theeues vnder Pilate But it may be asked if the magistrate may lawfully take away the life of an offender seeing no man is absolute Lord of the life of man but only God To the soyling of this doubt if any be wee must know that the Magistrate is Gods Lieutenant or God in office according to the Psalme I haue said yee are Gods and as Iehosophat saith hee executes not the iudgements of men but of the Lord whose creature he is and whose person he represents and who beareth not the sword for nought but for the protection of the good and for the terrour and suppression of the wicked Those therefore that are cut off by the Magistrate as he is a Magistrate or the Minister of God as S. Paul doth stile him they are not cut off by Man but by God in as much as the authoritie is Gods by which they bee cut off And although we be all as one by Christ yet is it in respect of the Communion of the Spirit and not by reason of any politicke or worldly parilitie And albeit Christ hath made vs all Kings yet we may iustly say with Christ Our Kingdome is not of this world though begunne in this world and our regalitie may very well stand without wrong to Caesar or his sword But to returne Ciuill death is double iust or iniust A man dies iustly when he dies for some wickednes committed or for some notable villany as high treason intēded and plotted though not performed Thus Ioab was slaine at the commandement of Salomon as also Shimei both of them by Benaiah In like maner Bigtan and Teresh were both hanged for intending seeking to lay violent hands vpon their King Ahashuerosh Thus iustly died those Powder-Papists that most barbarously plotted with one blast to haue blowne vp this whole Church and State vnder the wings whereof it is protected Praise be vnto Christ for euer who hath honoured vs with this saluation and let all good people say Amen Againe a man dies vniustly when he dies vndeseruedly Thus died Naboth vnder Ahab S. Iohn the Baptist vnder Herod the Martyrs of Christ vnder Tyrants and Christ himselfe vnder Pilate For though that Christ his death was most iust in
subtle readie to take all aduantages and because without repentance men may not looke for pardon and because as death doth leaue vs so the latter day shall finde vs therefore least we should be taken vnprepared it is fit and needfull for vs to pray that God would not take vs away vpon the sodaine or if it shall seeme good vnto him to remoue vs sodainly that hee would be pleased not to take vs away vnprepared for him but that whēsoeuer he doth remoue vs he woud pardon accept vs be pleased to smite vs whiles we be either in some holy worke of his seruice as preaching prayer meditation or the like or else in some honest worke of our honest calling or at the least in no euill plot nor about any euill act Now finally of sodaine deathes some are by the distemper of the passions as the death of such as die of feare sorrow or ioy Thus died that good old Poet Phileman who being neere an hundred years old and seeing as he lay an Asse eate figs fell into an extreme laughter and hauing called his seruants he bad them giue the Asse some drinke after his figges and laughing very earnestly so died Plutarch also writeth of one Polycrita who with ioy conceiued for that her life was granted whereof it seemes she was not a little fearefull fell downe sodainly and so died Againe some that die sodainly are taken away by the extraordinarie hand of God as Dathan and Abiram whom the earth opening her mouth by Gods command deuoured thus also two sonnes of Aaron Nadab Abihu sodainly were killed by fire sent out from God Nabal also the Lord sodainly smote and slue not long after his churlishnesse toward Dauid Others haue died by the special permission of God though by the meanes of the diuell himselfe as Iobs children who were sodainly slaine with the fall of the house vpon them which was blowne downe with a sodaine storme raised doubtlesse by the power of the diuell Others haue beene sodainly dispatcht with their owne hands as Lucretius the Poet some haue beene sodainly killed of others as Eglon whom Ehud slue with his dagger or as the Princes and people of the Philistins on whom Sampson with the sorce of his armes pulled downe the house in which they were assembled or also as Sisera whom Iael slue with a naile driuen into his head as he was sleeping in her Tent but all these perished without treason but some others haue been sodainly dispatcht by treason as Senacherib whom his owne sous slue as he was in his Idols temple as Elah whom his seruant Zimri kild as he was in his drunkennesse and thus with inhumane barbarity shold our noble king with many mo haue died in the Parliamēt house by the malice of wicked Iesuits and their bloudie schollers had not God from heauen deliuered them Whose name be praised for euermore Amen And thus from the kinds of death we passe vnto the causes The first and highest Ruling cause of death is Almightie God Dauid saith to the Lord Thou hast made my daies as an hand breadth Hezekiah saith Thou wilt make an end of mee to whom said God I will adde vnto thy daies fifteene yeares By which it appeareth that God is vitae necisque arbiter the Author and Ordainer of life and death Yea the Lord by that commination vnto Adam In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die doth plainely shew that in his hands is the power of life death Finally he saith I forme the light and create darkenesse the light of prosperitie the darknesse of aduersitie the light of life the darknesse of death I make peace and create euill the euill not of sinne but of sorrow of troubles bloudshed famine pestilence death To all things saith Salomon there is an appointed time a time to be borne a time to die who hath appointed this time but GOD who hath put times and seasons in his owne power as our Sauiour teacheth And surely if God number the verie haires of our head doubtlesse he hath numbred the daies and houres and minutes of our life and hath set downe the periode of our age And if a poore Sparrow cannot light on the ground without his will surely then no man can fall into the ground but by his will Euen the wiser heathen knew this therefore Hector saith in Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that God did call him vnto death Tertullian another Doctor saith Deus vniuersa vtique disponendo praescituit praesciendo disposuit that God hath foreknowne and disposed all things if all things then the liues and deathes of men Saint Ierome saith What good things or euill things soeuer be in the world Non absque prouidentia fortuito casu accidit sed Iudicio Dei not one of them comes to passe by chance and without prouidence but by the iudgement of God if nothing then not murthers manslaughters killing Finally Saint Austen saith Voluntas Deiomniū quae sunt ipsaest causa that the will of God is the verie cause of all things that are and to conclude with the Prophets speech Who is he that saith It commeth to passe and the Lord commandeth it not It will be thus perhaps obiected If God be the Author of death then it seemes hee delightes in the destruction of his creature for by death life is put out and the bodies of men are corrupted I answere thus Death is a punishment or at the best and to the best a triall a correction a passage to a better life now God ordaines and appointes death not simply as it is a destruction but eyther as it is a punishment of wicked men or a correction and triall of the godly and as a meanes of deliuerance to his elect from worldly and wicked miseries Euen as a wise potent and iust King appointeth places of execution executioners and the death of grieuous malefactors not as though hee delighted in them but for the maintenance of iustice the punishment of vice and for the good of the Commonwealth Or as a Father who maketh and vseth rods not because he taketh pleasure simply in whipping or in roddes but because hee desires the good of his children and that they might be afraid of euill Or finally as a Landlord that puls downe his Tenants house not because he delightes simply in pulling downe of houses but for that he purposeth to cure it of all rottennesse and ruines and to build it for him new and faire againe It may againe bee thus obiected If God appoint and ordaine euery mans death then if a man murther himselfe or if he be killed by another or be vniustly put to death by a Tyrant God you will say appointed and ordained that mans death which you will say is harsh I answere and let my words be well obserued
vnius diei a culpâ sit primae praenaricationis alienus indeede an Infant of a day old is not free from the fault of the first transgression But it may bee asked how Infants can become guilty of that they did not giue consent to I answere The fall of Adam and Eue is the fall of all their Children begotten after the common order euen as the righteousnesse of Christ is become the righteousnesse and saluation of all his Children because as Christ so Adam was no priuate person but represented all Mankinde which vvas now within his loynes Because saith Anselme the whole nature of man was in protoplastis in our first formed Parents and nothing thereof was out of them the whole nature was weakened and corrupted As therefore if it had not sinned it should haue been propagated such as it was of God created it a post peccatum qualem se fecit peccando propagatur so since it hath sinned it is propagated such as it hath made it selfe by sinning Fuit Adam in illo fuimus omnes perijt Adam in illo perijmus omnes Adam was saith Saint Ambrose vpon the Gospell of Saint Luke and in him wee all were Adam perished and in him we perish all In him because wee were all in him because we are all of him and he as our Head and Representer receiued and lost for vs all But it vvill bee obiected that Infants baptised haue no sinne it beeing taken away in baptisme how happes it then that Infants baptised die And how is it that the best Beleeuers die seeing that their sinnes are vvashed away in the blood of Christ I answere with the Augustane Confession out of Saint Austen Sinne is remitted in Baptisme non vt non sit sed vt non imputetur not so that it should no longer bee but that it should not bee imputed It is destroyed saith Anselme not as if it were made nothing sed vt non cogamur ei seruire but that wee might not be compeld to serue it But to giue a full answere the reason why the Lord inflicts death on them that are baptised and doe beleeue is not as if their sinnes were vnforgiuen for they are for Christ forgiuen fully neither yet is it to be supposed that they should haue dyed though they had not sinned for death is not the condition of Nature but the Daughter and desert of sinne neither yet doth God take away their liues as intending thereby to punish Them for if sinne be forgiuen them as it is indede then also all the punishments due to sinne which followes sinne as the shadow doth the bodie God therefore inflicts death vpon his Elect not as a Iudge offended with them for hee loues them most dearely and their death is precious in his sight but as a Father a Friend or gracious King who by death doth humble try amend and deliuer them from worldly miseries sinfull diseases and earthly discontentments and brings their soules into heauenly Canaan to the fellowship of Christ and those blessed Spirits of Men and Angels that tend vpon him in the Heauens To returne therefore to the point a fresh Euery child of Adam is subiect vnto death It is appointed vnto men that they shall once dye saith Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Death is a debt that all men owe. I goe the way of all the Earth saith Dauid that is I draw neere to death which is the common course of all men liuing vpon she earth Moriendum est omnibus All men must dye saith Tully Tendimus huc omnes met am properamus ad vnam Omnia sub leges mors vocat atra suas To death saith Ouid wee doe All of vs goe it is the marke wee hast to shee causeth all to bee in thrall her lawes vnto Omnes vna manet nox calcanda semel via lethi Omnes eôdem cogimur Death waites for all the way thereof must needes bee once trod Thither we are driuen All saith Horace There is no writ of priuiledge to exempt vs her eyes are pitilesse her heart is inflexible and her hands will hold no bribes Pietie vertue goodnesse cannot put by her stroke Hector in Homer is reported to haue said vnto his wife that no man could kill him before the time of death destinated vnto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but as for destinie and such a thing is death he tolde her that no man neyther good nor bad could scape it Nec pietas moram Rugis instants senectae Afferet indomitaeque morti Pretie saith the Poet will cause no stay to death Abraham Moses Ioshuah Iob Dauid were godly men but yet the Scripture saith of them all they died Strength is not able to withstand death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hercules was a strong man yet the strength of Hercules yeelded vnto death which ouercame him Milo was renowned for his strength of bodie yet Milo was weaker then death Sampson was stronger then euer any mere man was yet was he ouercome of death Fortitude and valour of spirit cannot out-stand death but the most couragious that euer liued yeelded vnto death Dauid and his Worthies were valiant men yet all of them are dead Abstulit clarum citamors Achillem Achilles famous for his courage was taken away by death Wisedome is a most excellent vertue yet it is vnable to conquer death Salomon the wisest King that euer raigned is of death dispatched Wise men die as well as Fooles and goe whensoeuer death calleth them Eloquence is not able to charme death but the most eloquent men that euer liued haue also died as Tullie Demosthenes and the rest Noblenesse of birth and royaltie are vnable to encounter with death and ouermaster it Alexander Iulius Caesar and the most victorious Princes that haue euer raigned haue stooped vnto death which subdueth all men Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas regumque turres Death can finde way into Princes pallaces into the courts of Kings as well as into the peasants Cottage Magistrates are Gods in office but yet as mortall as their subiects I haue said yee are Gods but ye shall die as a man and ye Princes shall fall like others Agamemnon Cyrus Nebuchadnezzar and Augustus Caesar were mightie Monarches but yet death hath preied vpon them all Old age is venerable youth is stout and lustie swiftnesse and actiuitie are commendable but death reuerenceth not the gray hoires of the aged it respecteth not the greene lockes of the young neyther is there any by swiftnesse of foote or dexteritie of hand able to out-runne and out-match death Mista senum ac iuuenum densantur funera Old and yong die in heapes together Death will not die vnder any Magistrate neither wil she be ouer-awed with the hore-head or graue behauiour of any aged father Both old and young are a