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B07982 A direction to death: teaching man the way to die well, that being dead, he may liue euer. Made in the forme of a dialogue, for the ease and benefite of him that shall reade it. The speakers therein are Quirinus and Regulus. Perneby, William. 1599 (1599) STC 19766.7; ESTC S94700 255,346 516

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mans words were these Psal 39.4 Lord let me know mine end and the measure of my dayes what it is let me know how long I haue to liue The second these 90.12 Teach vs so to number our dayes that wee may apply our heartes vnto wisedome The third these Tob. 3.6 Deale with me as seemeth best vnto thee and commaund my spirit to bee taken from me that I may be dissolued and become earth for it is better for mee to dye than to liue For this therefore should we both labour and pray a worke of nature it is not to bee prepared for death but a worke of grace must proceed from God not from man That which proceedeth from God must by prayer be asked of God That man therefore may meditate of his death he must craue grace of God to enable him to frame himselfe to death that so he may not altogether be vnprouided for death and thus you see by what a man may be induced to thinke of his death which is the first thing that he is to regarde in his life that he be not taken vnawares by death Q. I doe so and I remayne your debt our therfore But now hauing seene what was there well worthie to bee seene I will craue that we may passe to the second that there I may also see what meete is to be seene R. Your will be done Q What therefore may be the sting of death which you sayd he was daily to take from death which was desirous in life to prepare for death R. Nothing else but sinne For as the Apostle Paul saith 1. Cor. 15.56 The sting of death is sin Q. But why is sinne compared to a sting R. For the likenes that sinne hath with a sting For as those things which haue stings do wound by their stings so doth death by sinne For death entred into the world by sinne Rom. 5.12 Had not sinne been death could neuer haue done hurt Againe as those things which haue stings can do no hurt if their stings be out for a man may cary a snake in his bosome the sting being out so no more can death if her sting be out sinne being gone death hath no more dominion Q. But how shall a man get this sting out R. By two meanes 1. by humbling himselfe in the time present for all his sinnes past partly confessing them against himselfe with the prodigall child Luk. 15.21 and partly crauing pardon of them at Gods hands with the poore Publican 2. 18.13 by turning of himselfe vnto God for the time to come euer carying as in him lies a purpose resolution and endeuour in all things to reforme both heart and life affection and action will and worke according to the direction of Gods most blessed word Q. Are you sure of what you sa yt R. I were else to blame so to say For it is written Deut. 27.18 Cursed be he that maketh the blinde goe out of his way And he maketh the blinde goe out of the way that teacheth the ignorant contrary to the right way Q. Can you make it to me to appeare R. I verily if you will see when it doth appeare Q. I pray you do it then for I will see it if you doe it R. And I will do it that you may see it For the first therefore thus saith Salomon He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper Pro. 28.13 but he that confesseth them and forsaketh them shall haue mercie Psal 32.5 Thus also saith Dauid I acknowledged my sinne vnto thee O God neither hid I mine iniquitie For I thought I will confesse against my selfe my wickednes vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the punishment of my sinne Selah Therefore shall euery one that is godly make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou maiest be found surely in the floud of great waters they shall not come neere him Rom. 10.13 Selah Thus also Paul Whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued And I thinke by the vndoubted testimonie of these three that very thing doth appeare which I would haue to appeare for where two are enough three will well serue But to proceede because I must not dwell where I am Ezek. 18.21 for the second Ezekiel sayth thus If the wicked will returne from all his sinnes that hee hath committed and keepe all my statutes and doe that which is lawfull and right he shall surely liue and not dye all his transgressions that he hath committed shall not be mentioned vnto him but in his righteousnes that he hath done he shall liue Haue I any desire that the wicked should dye saith the Lord God or shall he not liue if he returne from his wayes Againe When the wicked turneth a way from his wickednes that he hath committed and doth that which is lawfull and right he shall saue his soule aliue because he considereth turneth away from all his transgressions that hee hath committed he shall surely liue and shall not dye And Daniel counselling Nebuchadnezar the king how to escape the wrath which he feared and saw threatned saith thus Dan. 4.24 Breake off thy sins by righteousnes and thine iniquities by mercie toward the poore loe let there be an healing of thine errour Besides by these meanes the Prodigall sonne tooke away the sting of his death the Publican the sting of his death and Zacheus the Tribute-taker the sting of his daeth the one had no sooner said Luk. 15.21 Father I haue sinned against heauen before thee am no more worthy to be called thy sonne but his father saith to his seruants bring forth the best robe and put it on him and put a ring on his hand and shoes on his feete and bring the fat calfe and kill him and let vs eate and be mery For this my sonne was dead and is aliue againe and he was lost but he is found againe The other had no sooner sayd 18.13 O God be mercifull to me a sinner but it was said of him this man departed to his house iustified The third had no sooner said 19.8 beholde Lord the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore If I haue taken from any man by forged cauillation I restore him fourefolde but Iesus againe said vnto him this day is saluation come into thine house for asmuch as thou also art become the sonne of Abraham By the same meanes also some others did the like By their doings others also may learne For what was effectuall in them will not be vnfrutefull in others so others be as faithfull as they For as the Apostle saith Rom. 15.4 Whatsoeuer things are written afore time are written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope But it may be I haue spoken enough of this matter and you haue a good minde to heare somewhat of some other Q. You are to vse
to sleepe hee that dyes knowes not when he beginnes to dye Man knowes not his end He that sleepes rests from al the care and labour he had while he waked he that dyes resteth from all the care and trouble he had while he liued Apoc. 14.13 He that sleeps liues while he sleepes Mat. 22.32 he that dyes when he is dead For the soule is immortall And God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Yet when Abraham and Isaac and Iacob were dead God said I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac Exod. 3 6. and the God of Iacob He that sleepes dreames either of things pleasant or things pestilent he that dyes and is dead Luk. 16.22.23 enioyes either things ioyfull as the ioyes of heauen or things painefull as the paines of hell he that sleepes Iob. 19.25 sleepes in hope to awake againe he that dies dies in hope to rise againe And therefore the Iewes call the churchyarde the house of the liuing because they which there sleepe shall thence in the last daies rise He that sleepes is stronger when he awakes than before he that dies is better when he rises againe than euer he was before He rises in incorruption he rises in power 1. Cor. 15.42 43. Mat. 19.26 1. Cor. 15.25 He that sleepes may easily be waked he that dies may easily be raised The trumpet shal blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible To come to some point now what should a man feare either the laying downe of a burthen or the taking vp of a sleepe being weary hee desires both the one and the other Being wearied with the cares and crosses of this life what should he then feare death no man feares to be cast into a sleepe neither should a sicke man feare much to die As Seneca saith Senec. in prouer Epist It is a foolish thing to be delighted with sleepe and yet to abhor death when as a continuall sleepe is the imitation of death againe Through the feare of death we make vnto our selues an vnquiet life and so great is the madnes of men that some are driuen to die by the feare of death We are to be strengthened least we too well loue our life too much hate our death And we must be perswaded when reason thereto perswades to ende our life but not to feare death A valiant and couragious man ought not to flie but to goe out of his life For himselfe and of himselfe he saith otherwhere It repenteth me not to haue liued because I haue not so liued Senec. lib. de senectyte that I should thinke my selfe borne in vaine And so depart I out of this life as if I departed out of an Inne not as if I departed out of an house for nature hath giuen vs an Inne to stay in but not an house to dwell in Thus by his example he shewed what he himselfe did and by his reason what others after his example should doe if either his example be worth the following or his reason worthie the beleeuing for his reasons sake and after his example he that is sicke and therefore not farre from death should neither immoderatly feare death nor negligently expect death How fearefull soeuer death is if it be looked vpon in the glasse of the law yet is it not so being looked on in the glasse of the Gospell In the one it hath a sting and that a sharpe one in the other it wants a sting and therefore it is no wondrous fearefull one Saith Gregory What is this mortall life but away and consider my brethren what a thing is it in the way to be wearied and to nill that the way should be ended He that trauailes desires to be at his iourneies ende what should he that liues be afraide to die death is the ende of his ●ourney Euery thing reioyces in the ende What should the sicke man feare death death vnder the Gospell to him that beleeues ●s The passage to life not to destruction For be which beleeueth in Christ dieth not Ioh. 5.24 death hath no power ouer him but he passeth from death to life The death of those that beleeue hath another Epitheton than hath the death of those that beleeue not Pretious in the sight of the Lord saith Dauid is the death of his Saints Psal 116.15 Sap. 3.19 Bern. in quadam ep●●co but horrible saith Salomon is the end of the wicked generation Pretious is the death of the Saints pretious truely as the end of their labours as the finishing of their victorie as the gate of life and the entrance to perfect securitie And againe in the same place saith he The death of the righteous is good for the rest that followes it better for the newenes of that rest best of all for the securitie that is in that rest that both followes it and is new For as the same Bernard otherwhere saith Bern. ser 25. paru serm Three things there are which makes the death of the Saints pretious 1. Rest from labour 2. Ioy of the newenes of that rest 3. Securitie of the eternitie of the same rest But on the contrary part the death of the wicked is most vile It is euill truely in the loosing of the world for without griefe they cannot be seuered from that which they loue it is worse in the seuering of the flesh For their soules are puld from their bodies by wicked spirits it is worst of all in the double suffering of the wormes and the fire For the worme euer stingeth and the fire alwaies burneth neither euer cease to torment Much what to the like effect doth Chrysostome write of the death of the one and the other Although they die at home Chrysost hom 66. in Genes de morte peccator both wife and children being present familiars and acquaintance standing by if yet they want vertue their death is but euill So although he be in a strange countrey though he lies vpon the pauement and what say I though he be in a straunge countrey although he falles into the hands of theeues although he be deuoured of beasts yet if he be indued with vertue his death shall be pretious As Anselmus writeth Anselm It hurts not those which are good whether they be murthered or taken away by sodaine death For they neuer die sodeinly which euer thought they were to die Whether therefore they be slaine with the sword or torne in peeces of beastes or burned with fire or drowned by water or hanged on a tree or haue their legges broken or die by some other misfortune yet euer is the death of his Saints pretious in the sight of the Lord according as it is At what time soeuer the righteous dieth his righteousnes shall not be taken from him And so death hurteth not but profiteth much If therefore he that is sicke or any other doth beleeue he needes not ouermuch to
of all men R. Euen asmuch as I would desire and more then so much as you did require For what did I desire or you require but to know what God did in euerie mans Death whether he determined of the time or not and whether he fore-knew what he had determined And now whether of these is it which is not here manifested and explained the first or the last surelie surelie neither of both Not the first because he determined the time of Christs death and what agreed to the head agreeth with the parts but Christ is the head and those of the Church are his members If therefore the Death of Christ the head to the whole bodie were fore-seene as fore-seene it was the Death also of euerie member of his mysticall bodie is also fore seene and ordeined also by the speciall decree and appointment of God Neyther yet the seconde because he determined not onelie the time but also the place and manner and ende of Christs death togither with other circumstances thereto appertaining and belonging and he determines nothing which he did not fore-knowe for his fore-knowledge is conioyned with his decree If therefore he so dealt with Christ it cannot be but that so also hee dealeth with others for as the Apostle saith Those which he knew before Rom. 8.29 he also predestinated to be made like to the Image of his Sonne Thus now you see that the Death of Christ is asmuch to the Death of all men as either I desired or you required Q. But you said it was more R. If so I did say It is not otherwise then now I doe say for the more comprehendeth the lesse Q. But yet the more is neuer the more prooued R. Why say you so seeing I euen nowe said that in the death of Christ there was not onelie time when place where and maner how but also persons by whom fore-seene and preappointed by God that in his owne euerlasting Counsell and decree doth not that proue what you latelie saide was vnproued Q. Yes if that were proued R. Neuer if at the matter the saying of the Apostle Peter in the fourth of that Actes latelie rehearsed in the verses 27. and 28. doth sufficientlie proue that for there it is said Herode and Pontius Pilate and the Gentiles Act. 4.27.28 and the people of Israel gathered themselues together against Christ Iesus to doe whatsoeuer the hand and Counsell of God had determined to be done Now it is well knowne by the historie of the Gospell written by the Euangelists Mathew Marke Luke and Iohn what was done Nothing therefore of that which was done vnto him at his death in his death or concerning his death was either vnknown and vnforescene or vnappointed and vndecreed by God himselfe Q. Admit that may we not therefore make a doubt touching the death of other men R. No surelie we ought not Q. And why R. For the resemblance that is betwixt Christ and his members Q. What then affirme you that the death of euerie man is not onelie fore-seene but also fore-appointed of God so as Death can neither come sooner nor later in respect of God but iust at the time appointed by him R. Yea that I doe and more too Q. More too what 's that R. That the very circumstances of death as the time when the place where the manner how together with the beginning of the sickenes the continuance in the same with euerie fitte and the ende thereof with euerie pange are all particularlie set downe in the Counsell of God Q. This more is much and more by much then before you spake of R. Whatsoeuer it is It is no more then I may as truelie as boldelie speake For our Sauiour Christ saieth Mat. 10.30 The verie haires of our heads are numbred and a Sparow lighteth not vpon the ground without the wil and prouidence of our heauenlie Father And if God hath care of haires and Sparowes he is not careles of those things which betyde his Seruants eyther in Death at Death or about Death For things are greater thē the numbring of haires and the lighting of Sparowes Psal 139.15 For this cause Dauid saith in the Psalmes My bones are not hid from thee though I was made in a secrete place and fashioned beneath in the earth thine eyes did see me when I was without forme for in thy booke were all my members written which in continuance were fashioned when as there was none of them before For the same cause may euerie one in sickenes say this is thy doing ô Lord heere is no more then thou imposest vpon me thy pleasure it is that thus and thus I should be tormented and afflicted Q. But doth this necessarilie follow of the former R. What else for why should not a man be patient in his sickenes when hee knowes the Lord to be the cause of his sickenes For what man may resist his will Or why should a man immoderatelie feare Death when he knowes God to be the worker of his Death what should he feare that which is both fore-seene ere it comes and fore-appointed when it comes I held my tongue and said nothing Psal 39.10 saith Dauid because thou Lord diddest it Loe the Lords doing was the cause of his patient abiding the Lordes doing also in each mans Death should bee the cause of each mans patient suffering and expecting of Death Psal 135.6 Mark 7.37 For as he doth euerie where whatsoeuer pleaseth him so doth he well anie where whatsoeuer he doth Q. That which you say should be as you say but it will not be R. That is the iniquitie of man and not the infirmitie of this truth What it should be it will be if it be well thought vpon For what should man feare what the Lord will haue to be No man can resist his will euerie man praieth that his will may be done Matth. 6.10 Now when no man can resist his will euerie man praieth for the accomplishment of his will what should anie man immoderatelie feare what he cannot possiblie auoide and what he dailie praieth may betyde It is follie it is vanitie it is iniquitie so to doe When yong Samuel had tolde old Elie all that the Lord had threatned and was purposed to bring vpon his house for the wickednes of the same this was olde Elies saying to yong Samuel It is the Lord 1. Sam. 3.18 let him doe what seemeth him good When faultles death hath seised vpon fearefull man this should bee his saying It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good his will it is I should dye his will I cannot resist his will bee done August sup Psalm 35. It is the Iustice of God that some time thou beest well and sometime thou beest sicke If when thou art well the will of God be sweete and when thou art sicke the will of God be bitter thou walkest not with a right heart Wherefore because
any physicke it will cause their worke to haue the better successe For oftentimes the impenitencie of the sicke is an hindrance to the physitions It causeth that the physicke by them giuen will not worke either as in reason it should or by hope they expect it would Secondly after they haue ministred any physicke they are to pray vnto almightie God that he in mercie would vouchsafe to giue thereto happie and prosperous successe for as the Prophet saith Except the Lorde doth builde the house Psal 127.1 they labour in vaine that build it except the Lord keepeth the citie the keeper watcheth in vaine So heere may I say except the Lorde doth blesse the Physicke the physitions doe giue it in vaine If they any thing doubte whether this duetie doth ly vpon themor no they may consult with Iesus the sonne of Syrach touching it and he will teach it then out of doubt These are his wordes They also shall pray vnto the Lord that he would prosper that which is giuen for ease and their physicke for the prolonging of life And I thinke they giue asmuch as I either aske or seeke Whether they doe or no I will not spend either more time or further labour in proouing of it For they will readily graunt it without gaine saying if they be as they should be For why it is the part of the Godly man at euery turne to pray and one thing that he is to pray for is that God would blesse him in his labours and giue successe to that he takes in hand Dan. 6.10 Psalm 109.164 Rom. 1.9.10.2 1. Thes 5.17 Daniel saith that hee prayed thrise a day Dauid saith that he prayed seuen times a day Paul saith that hee prayed without ceasing And Luke saith that Cornelius prayed continually And Paul willeth the Thessalonians and in them others to pray continually And he that prayed himselfe without ceasing and taught others to doe the like prayed also that by some meanes one time or other he might haue a prosperous iourney by the will of God Rom. 1.9 thereby teaching what others in the like cases are to doe But I will not stand vpon this It is apparant enough of it selfe that as they are to pray ere they giue that they may giue so they are to doe when they haue giuen that good may be done by that which is giuen that so they may acknowledge the blessing by giuing to be Gods aswell as they doe the power to giue To proceede Thirdly if either before or after their giuing they see any certaine and manifest signes of death in the sicke they are to certifie their patients thereof and to tell them plainely in what perill they are For this as it will bereaue the sicke of all confidence in earthly thinges as those thinges which are vaine and transitorie so will it make them to put all their affiance in the meere mercie of God as the safe and sure anchor of their soules For as once the Apostle said of himselfe and his like 2. Cor. 1.9 we receiued the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead So then they may say of thēselues we receiue the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth vp the dead and therefore is able if he will to raise vs vp againe and set vs vp vpon our feete For easier it is to restore vs to health ere we dy than to raise vs to life when we are dead Q. There is no doubt of the effect of that which you say but of the office that in so saying you lay vpon physitions For physitians make it a question whether this that you say doth belong vnto them yea or nay R. It is more than they neede if they so do For when Hezekiah was sicke the Prophet spake plainly vnto him and said Isai 39. ● Set thine house in order for thou must die And of him they may learne it Q. How so when as Isaiah was no phisition but a Prophet R. His being a prophet hinders not but they may learne of him asmuch as I say For I thinke not but without offence I may speake it heere Isaiah plaid the part of a phisition aswell as of a Prophet For as at his first comming to Hezekiah being sicke he said Set thine house in order for thou must die So his departure againe from him or at least his last leauing of him he said Take a lump of dry figs and lay it vpon the bile Isai 38.21 and hee shall recouer If he plaid only the part of a prophet in the first I see not but hee plaid only the part of a phisition in this last But if any man will say he might play both the Prophet and a phisition in this last because he might be aswel a physition a Prophet as Samuel was a Prince and a Priest I see not but I may also say he plaid both in the first because he might aswel say as a phisition set thy house in order for thou must die as a Prophet For as it is not the Prophets part alone to moue men to make their willes but others may do it aswell as they so is it not the phisitions part alone to tell men they shall die but others may doe it aswell as they Yet as the Prophets are especially to moue men to make their willes because they best know how they should be made so the phisitions are especially to tell their patients they shall die because they best know the most certaine and infallible signes of death Others may see some but they can see moe And as they can see most so they can Iudge best And as they can Iudge best so they can tell soonest And as they can tell soonest so they may tell first Q. Tell let them then because you will to tell haue them But if they see no certaine signes of death what will you that they shall then doe R. As the Prophet before named did Apply phisicke according to the nature of their patient and the qualitie of his disease And that being done as the wise man counsels them to doe Pray vnto the Lord Syr. 38. 14. that he would prosper that which is giuen for ease and their phisicke for the prolonging of life Q. And after what sort shal the sicke take it R. After that sort that euery sicke man is to take it as the ordinarie meanes that the Lord hath ordeined for the recouery of health empaired and decaied Q. But how in more particularitie is that to be taken R. First with preparation to it Secondly with sanctification of it Thirdly with consideration of the vse and end thereof Q. And why with the one and the other of these R. With the first because he that is to take phisicke must not onely prepare his bodie as Phisitions doe prescribe but his soule also as Diuines
with the riches of iniquitie R. As before I haue shewed Q. But are not they the riches of iniquitie that are gotten by iniquitie R. Yes but they are not therefore onely called the riches of iniquitie because they are gotten by iniquitie but also because to many they are the cause and occasion of iniquitie also as Augustine saith because the world which lieth in iniquitie iudgeth these things to be riches which in deede are not Q. And may not a man make him friends with the riches of iniquitie whether they be therefore called the riches of iniquitie because they are gotten by iniquitie or because they are to many the cause and occasion of iniquitie R. Yes that hee may if so hee will and thereto he applies his endeauour Q. Why say you then am ●n may not in his will bequeath them to whom he will R. Because you euer speake not of one kinde of riches of iniquitie But one while you speake of the riches of iniquitie which are gotten by iniquitie another while you speake of the riches of iniquitie which are therefore so called because vnto many they minister the matter of iniquitie Q. Of which soeuer I speake may not a man giue of either R. Yes he may But neither when he will nor where he will nor to whom he will nor what hee will not as hee will neither yet asmuch as he will Q. If ye ty him to all these while he giues he shall not giue much when he giues R. As much as reason religion allowes him in the last kind of riches of iniquitie so he euer hath an eie to the thing that he giues the time when he giues the place where he giues the person to whom he giues and the manner how he giues Q. And what may he giue nothing of the first R. I yet said not so but when it comes that of them hee may giue hee must neither giue what himselfe will nor to whom himselfe will nor as himselfe will Q. What 's the reason I pray you that you mince this matter thus R. You need not aske me againe for I haue tolde you it long since Q. I haue forgotten it then R. That 's much hauing remembred it so oft but once more I will put you in mind of it that euer heereafter you may remember it my reason is this because I would haue him first make restitution of all that hee hath vniustly gotten Q. When when his will is in making R. Yea euen then if he hath not made it before Q. Why then R. Because that auncient Father Augustine saith Augustine The sinne is not pardoned that in ill getting is committed vnles the thing ill gotten be restored Q. As the saying is that is but one Doctors opinion R. That will not serue to shift it off for it agrees iust with the chiefe Doctors religion for whē good Zacheus vpon that it pleased Christ to look vpon him to dine with him cryed Behold Lord Luk. 19.8 the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore and if I haue done any wrong to any man I restore him fourefolde then and thereupon Christ againe said vnto him This day is saluation come vnto this house As though till such time as either restitution were in deede made or a resolute purpose conceiued to haue it made Saluation had beene a stranger to him and his house too Q. Yet one would thinke there were some difference betweene these two doctours for the one speakes of remission of sinnes the other of the saluation of soules R. There is neuer the more difference in their doctrines for that whatsoeuer there was in their persons for the saluation of soules with Christ speaketh of consisteth in the remission of sinnes which Augustine speaketh of Luk. 1. saith Zacharie of his sonne Iohn Thou babe shalt be called the Prophet of the most high Luk. 1.76 for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his waies and to giue knowledge of saluation vnto his people by the remission of their sins Psal 32.1 And Plal. 32.1 saith Dauid Blessed is hee whose wickednes is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered Now if saluation be knowne by the remission of sinnes as Zacharie saith blessednes not denied him whose sinnes are forgiuen as Dauid saith I hope I may wel say that the soules saluation consisteth in the sinnes remission so no difference betweene Christ the chiefe doctor and Augustine an inferiour doctor Q. And what then R. That good it is for him that is sicke about to make his will euen then to make restitution of that he hath ill gotten if before that and then he hath not done it Q. How fetch you that about R. As I should and ought by reason of the saying of the one doctor and the other neither dissenting in doctrine one from another for I would not haue the sicke to misse his sinnes remission for lacke of restitution as it is perilous to misse the former so it is ieopardous to lacke the latter for the former will not be except the latter also bee if so the latter at all maybe Q. No meruaile then though you be earnest for restitution R. You would say so if you knew all Q. Why is there more yet to bee knowne this I thinke is inough R. Whatsoeuer you thinke it is true that I say Q. But what is it you say R. That the gift that is made of goods ill gotten will neuer benefite them to whom it is made for the euill committed in getting wil creepe also vpon those that shall after haue the same in keeping and being gotten on it will cleaue so fast to as neither the receiuers shall prosper with their gifts receiued nor the things receiued with the receiuers For one way Paul the Apostle saith Rom. 1.31 Not onely they which doe euill but also they which consent thereto are worthie of death and therefore wel that which I speake off for worldlie aduersity is lesse then death And an other way experience teacheth vs that goods ill gotten by the parents makes no long stay with the children often in the next generation they passe away it is a wonder if to the third they make their stay Hence it is that one saith incontinent vpon the death of the infamous Romaine Princes Caligula and Nero the Senate prouided that all their riches and household stuffe should be burned and buried in welles least that in their tyrannicall goods there might be hidden some euill fortune by the couetousnes whereof Rome might bee lost and the common wealth imprisoned Hence also should it bee that men in their sicknesse and at the making of their willes should rather restore what they haue vniustly gotten then bequeath any part thereof to any for who that wise is would giue that which being giuen will neither benefite him to whom it is giuen nor any thing profit him to whom it is giuen Q. For my part I think
also I finde That olde Tobit no sooner remembred that hee had wished for death Tobit 4.2 but hee said wherefore doe I not call for my sonne Tobias that I may admonish him before I dye as though when a man were a dying it were his duetie to admonish his sonnes and those of his familie to doe those things which are pleasing vnto him which gaue them life and may at his pleasure take it againe from them And therefore when he had called him he sayd My sonne after that I am dead burie me and despise not thy mother but honour her all the dayes of thy life and doe that which shall please her and anger her not Remember my sonne how many dangers she susteyned when thou wast in her wombe and when she dyeth burie her by me in the same graue My sonne set our Lord God alwaies before thine eyes and let not thy will be set to sinne or to transgresse the commandement of God Doe vprightlie all thy life long and follow not the waies of vnrighteousnes for if thou deale truely thy doings shall prosperouslie succeed to thee and to all them that liue iustly and so forth as followeth in that place Now by all this which I haue found this is the conclusion which I make to wit that what good thing soeuer men know touching God and godlines they are not to keepe it to themselues but to teach it their children and families not onely in their life time but also at their death that so God may be glorified of them both while they liue and also when they dye And the third thing that induces me thereto ouer and aboue the precept of God and the practise of good men of which I haue now spoken is the speciall commendation God himselfe giues to Abraham the father of the faithfull for the doing of the same for when he was to discouer vnto him the destruction of Sodome and Gomorhe he made this the reason of his so doing Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham that he will commaund his sonnes and his householde after him that they keepe the way of the Lorde to doe righteousnes and iudgement And what a singular commendation this is hee that hath but halfe an eye may see It is a very good thing to be well spoken of by men Senec. de Reme fort The good opinion of men is safer than money An honest report is a second patrimonie Id. in Prou. Yea saith Salomon A good name is to be chosen aboue great riches and louing fauour is aboue siluer Prou. 22.1 Eccl. 7.3 and aboue golde A good name is better than a good oyntment But it is a better thing to bee well spoken of by God himselfe as hee better knoweth what is in man so hee better iudgeth what is done by man as he also is greater than man so is his commendation better than mans Mans is hardly got and easilie lost Gods once got is euer hardly lost as hee knowes what hee speakes ere he speakes so he speakes surely when he speakes As Balaam said to Balak God is not as man Num. 22.19 that he should lye neither as the sonne of man that he should repent hath he said and shall he not doe it And hath he spoken and shall hee not accomplish it As Peter saith The word of the Lord endureth for euer As Christ himselfe saith 1. Pet. 1.25 which was and is God Mat. 24 35. Heauen and earth shall passe away but my words shall not passe away As therefore he that is sicke is desirous to haue the praise of God before the praise of men because of all praise it is the best so is he to be carefull of that which God himselfe commaundes to all and commends in Abraham hee commaunds it that it may bee obeyed hee commends it that it may bee regarded hee commaunds it and commends it that in the time of sickenes and before the houre of death it may not be neglected Q. But what is the reason that he that is sicke should in his sickenes be carefull of that you speake of It may be in his health he hath often before done it R. That hinders not but that then also he must doe it It is a duetie that lyes vpon a man not onely in the time of health but in the time of sickenes also though therefore in his health he hath neuer so often admonisht all those of his familie to feare God and keepe his commaundements yet then in his sickenes he is not to cease to admonish them still ofte had Moses and Ioshua admonisht the Israelites to serue the Lord and walke in his waies ere euer the time of their departure drew nigh yet did they not therefore cease to doe it euen then when the time came that they were to depart No more should he that is sicke and at the poynt to dye you aske here what is the reason he should then doe it but you might better aske what are the reasons thereof for they are many more than one One is because it is the last and best worke he can then doe and the Apostle saith Desire you the best gifts And againe 1. Cor. 12.3 Gal. 6.9 2. Thes 3.13 Bee not wearie of and in well doing for in due season ye shall reape if yee faint not Another is because it is euery mans part to seeke the propagation of Gods glorie as well when he is dying as while he is liuing For therefore the Lord created him Esa 43.7 I created him for my glorie Esa 41.7 And againe verse 21. This people haue I formed for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise Rom. 14.8 The Apostle also saith Whether we liue or dye wee are the Lordes and therefore while we liue we should liue vnto the Lord and when we dye we should dye vnto the Lord. And because liuing we should liue vnto the Lord and dying dye to the Lord both liuing and dying we should admonish others to liue and dye vnto the Lord. Liuing because the Apostle one where saith Exhorte one another and edifie one another euen as yee doe 1. Thes 5.11 14. and verse there the 14. Admonish them that are vnrulie dying because the same Apostle other where saith 1. Cor. 10.31 Whether yee eate or drinke or whatsoeuer you doe doe all to the glorie of God and therefore this for this makes much to the glorie of God Steuens vehement exhortation to the Iewes before his death made some turne vnto God after his death Saith Augustine in one of his bookes de ciuitate Dei Augustinus de ciuitate Dri. If Steuen had not prayed the Church had not had Paul the Doctor of the Gentiles Through the many good wordes which Christ vsed as he went to be crucified some were either conuerted or confirmed the theefe was conuerted the Centurion was confirmed by both God was glorified the theefe said Luk. 23.42.43 c. Lorde remember mee
for Christ He hath left him an example 1. Pet. 2.21 that he should follow his steppes It is more for his profit so to doe than he is aware Who would be an enemie to his owne good he cannot cease to sinne except he die why should he be vnwilling to escape so great an euill he shall neuer come to the true life where felicity both ioyfull and eternall is except he die why should he neglect to attaine so great a good he shall neuer haue the fruition of Gods maiestie and the blessed company of heauenly spirits except he die why should he not pray daily to be deliuered from this present euill world vppon condition he might once come to enioy the most glorious presence of the almighty The very heathens which knew not God aright but only dreamed of the immortalitie of the soule as those that look'te for a better life after this though they knew not what that life was or might be both wished death ere it came and died valiantly and ioyfully when it came and shall he being a Christian one which knoweth both God and his word and hath the promise of ioy hope and comfort after this life both abhor death ere it comes and refuse to vndergoe it when it comes oh fie for shame that it should be so If an Ethnicke said thus Cic. lib. 1. quest Tuscul Oh immortall God how is that pleasant and ioyfull iourney to be wished for which being once done and past there remaineth no sorow no care no pensiuenes ô that goodly and pleasaunt daie when it shall be my hap to leaue this filthy and troublesome world and come to their companies that inhabit the heauens Id. de senectute If God would suffer me that I being of this age might become an infant and sucking childe againe I would vtterly refuse it neither would I by any meanes call the race that I haue runne backe againe that I might againe be young For what pleasure and commoditie hath this life yea rather what displeasure incommodity paine trauell and trouble hath it not but let it be graunted that it hath pleasures certes yet hath it either saciety or measure And nature in this world hath giuen vs a place to tarrie in for a while but not to dwell and continue in for euer What should a Christian say to him should death be much better and lesse bitter than to an heathen Of him therefore should death be better accepted than of any heathen But it is a world to see the world the heathen writers in their monuments call death a chaunging for a better life a quiet sleep are-mouing frō mortalitie to immortalitie from trouble to quietnes from the shadow of a life vnto a very perfit and vncounterfet life from sorrow to ioy from euill to good and hauen of rest a solace of the minde and end of all euill and wickednesse and a beginning of all true ioy felicitie and pleasure and therefore they were vnwilling to liue The Christian professours acknowledge all this and more too and yet they are vnwilling to die What must follow heereupon but that they must therfore be their iudges It is said that one once hauing read a little booke of Platoes touching the immortalitie of the soule did therefore make a way himselfe being thereto incensed by too great a loue to eternitie a better life How much more should he that hath read the whole booke of God touching the happie estate of soule and bodie after death be willing well to welcome death when God doth impose and lay the same vpon him 1. In Gods booke of life there are better reasons found to perswade by thereto than in Platoes booke of the immoratlitie of the soules there are any to enforce the making away of a mans owne life 2. God hath more authoritie ouer the soule of man to recommaund it againe to himselfe at his pleasure than man hath ouer his life to deceiue himselfe of it when he will God is the first giuer and therefore should be the first receiuer Man is the sole recaller therefore should be the safe keeper But not longer than the first doner is content he should enioy such a gift All good men haue euer desired to depart with it when God was purposed to recall it And what should not he that is sicke doe the like either his sicknesse hath made him good or it ought to haue made him good For sickenesse is euer sent for good and Gods great mercy it is that he warnes with sickenesse ere euer he strikes with death If it hath made him good why is hee vnwilling to lay downe his life when God doth call for his life if it hath found him good why would he longer detaine it life than he may If it be to make him good why doth he hinder the working of it be he good or hath he a minde to be good it is not his part to be vnwilling to die So farre from being vnwilling to die haue sundrie of the godliest wights that euer were in the world been as earnestly they haue longed wished desired and prayed for death That Princely Prophet Dauid cryeth out and saith Woe is me and sorie am I for it Psal 120.5 that I must yet longer abide in this world like as the hart desireth the water broookes Psalm 42.1 so longeth my soule after God My soule is a thirst for God yea euen for the liuing God when shall I come to appeare before the presence of God Psalm 84 1 And againe O how amiable are thy dwellings thou Lord of hostes my soule hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh reioyce in the liuing God Blessed are they that dwell in thy house they shall alway bee praysing thee One day in thy courts is better than a thousand I had rather be a doore keeper in the house of my God than to dwell in the tents of vngodlinesse In another Psalme he prayeth after this manner Psal 142 7● Deliuer my soule out of prison that it may come and praise thy name That good olde man Tobit Tobit 3.6 made thus his prayer vnto God and said O Lord deale with me according to thy will and 〈…〉 commaunde my spirit to be receiued in peace For more expedient were it for me to die than to liue How desirous of death the holy Apostle Paul was these his wordes doe manifest Christ is to me life Philip. 1.21 23. and death is to me aduantage And therefore againe he saith I desire to be loosed and to be with Christ What should I speake of that auncient and godly father Simeon whose historie is knowne laid down in the second of Luke how did he desire to die as soone as he had seene Christ in the flesh and know him to be the Sauiour of the world Was not this thereupon his present saying Lord now lettest thou thy
to be a liuing man for so Christ feared it when he sweat water and blood in the garden herevpon said My soule is heauie vnto death Mat. 26.38 Secondly as it is an hurt to the church or common wealth for often by death the church and commonwealth are depriued of those which either were then indeed or might haue been in time a great help stay and comfort to either Q. Otherwise than thus would you not haue him to feare it R. No. Q. And why R. For many causes First because it is vnto him an abolishing of sinne For he that is dead Rom. 6.7 is freed from sinne he then ceaseth to offend God any more as hee hath done Secondly because it is a bettring of his bodies condition for whereas before it was sensible and so perplexed with many miseries it is by death made insensible and therefore freed from all calamities whereas before in life it was both an actiue and passiue instrument for sinne it is then after death neither of both Thirdlie because it is the way for his soule to come to rest life and glorie For they that die in the Lord rest from their labours enioy life and remaine in glory Rest from their labors Apoc. 14.13 Enioy life Mat. 22.32 remaine in glorie Rom. 2.7.10 Dan. 12.3 And they that come to these things must die ere they come at them As one saith There is no other way to come to heauen by but death Q. And what conclude you thereupon R. That which I should viz. that hee which hath faith in Christ should not so feare death as therefore he should be vnwilling to leaue this life Cyprian in serm de mortalitate For as Cyprian saith It is his part to feare death which hath no will to goe to Christ It is his to haue no will to goe to Christ which beleeueth not he shall beginne to raigne with Christ God saith he hath promised to thee departing out of this world immortalitie and eternitie and doest thou doubt this is not to haue known God at al this is with the sinne of incredulitie to offend Christ the maister of all beleeuers this is being set in the Church not to haue faith in the house of faith Let him bee afraide to die who not being borne anew by water and the spirit is mancipated to the fire of hell let him be afraide to die which is not marked with the crosse and passion of Christ let him bee afraide to die which from this death must passe to the second death let him be afraide to die whom the eternall flame shall torment with euerlasting paine so soone as hee departes this world let him be afraide to die vpon whom this by his long stay heere is bestowed that during his abode heere his punishment is deferred but let him neuer bee afraide to die that knowes himselfe to be heere a Pilgrime and stranger that beleeues the resurrection of the bodie and the life euerlasting that loues the Lord with all his heart As the forenamed writer saith What stranger is he that hastens not to returne into his countrey Wee make account that Paradise is our countrey now we haue begun to haue the Patriarkes our Parents Why do we not make hast and runne that wee may both see our countrey and salute our parents A great number of our deare friendes doth there expect vs a mightie traine and troupe of parēts brethren and children now sure of their owne immortalitie and yet carefull for our safety doth wish vs to come vnto their sight and companie what ioy is it in common both to them and to vs What pleasure there without feare of dying and with certaintie of liuing How great and perpetuall felicitie Againe who would be afraide to dye that beleeues the resurrection of the dead For as one saith The most sure trust of christians is the promised resurrection of the dead from aboue And no meruaile when Christ himselfe saith This is the will of him that sent me Ioh. 6.40 that euery man which seeth the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and I will raise him vp at the last day And againe I am the resurrection and the life he that beleeueth in me although he were dead yet shall he liue and whosoeuer liueth and beleeueth in me shall neuer dye Lastly who would be afraide to dye that loues God sincerely For it is the propertie of him that loues to adioyne himselfe to the thing he loues and to wish that he might enioy it and to grieue at that which doth hinder his enioying of it It is a token therefore that he loues not God as he should that is either afraide or vnwilling to dye for other way to come to God to heauen to immortalitie than by death there is none he that dyeth not commeth to neither And who if hee might would not come to all Except the wheat corne fall into the ground and dye it bideth alone so except a man fall into the earth and dye he bideth alone Eccl. 4.10 and woe saith Salomon to him that is alone but if the wheate corne die it bringeth forth much fruite so if a faithful man dye he attaineth to much fruite He commeth as I said to God to heauen to immortalitie And who would not if he might come to all these None surely that is wise that is godly that is faithfull and beleeuing for to come to God is to come to the fountaine of liuing waters which who so commeth to shall neuer more thirst to come to heauen is to come to the hauen of euerlasting happines which who so commeth to shall neuer more faint to come to immortalitie is to come to eternall life which who so commeth to shall neuer more dye none therefore that is wise that is godly that is faithful that is beleeuing should be afraide and vnwilling to dye for dye any when he wil that is so qualified death shall not hurt him death shall haue no power ouer him death shal be game not losse vnto him Q. I but whensoeuer he shal dye death will be painefull vnto him R. And what then Let him be neuer the more vnwilling to die for that for why the Apostle saith Act. 14.20 By many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God By many and therefore he must be willing to haue the paines of death some we must enter into the kingdome of God and therefore neuer be vnwilling to die for the paines of death for as the same Apostle saith Rom. 8.18 All the afflictions of this life are not worthie of the glorie which shal be shewed vnto vs and therefore the few afflictions in death are vnworthie thereof The paines that are suffered are but temporal but the ioyes which are to bee enioyed are eternall and who wil not be content to suffer a short paine for a long pleasure He is not worthie of any sweete which came away with
onelie begotten sonne of God And againe he that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life and hee that obeyeth not the Sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him and againe Verilie verilie I say vnto you he that heareth my words and beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life And what is hereupon to be gathered but that the soules of the righteous at their departure from their bodies goe vnto God in heauen and not vnto fire or water in purgatorie for they goe vnto that which they had ante seperationem before their seperation and not vnto ●hat which they neuer had in expectation and what had they before their seperation but life Ioh. 5.24 He that beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life neither may haue nor shall haue but hath and where is that life but with God Colos 3.3 With thee is the well of life saith the Psalmist and your life is hid with Christ in God saith the Apostle Whither then must they go when they go but vnto God who was and is their life and with whom their life is Whether also I see not in this heir life when and while they heere liued they neuer so much as once dreamed of going into purgatorie after death but of going into heaue● some of them both write and speake We kn●w saith Paul 2. Co. 5.1 that if our earthlie house of this ●abernacle be destroied we haue a building giuen of God that is an house not made with hands but ●ternall in the heauens For therefore we sigh des●●ing to be clothed with our house which is from heauen Neuerthelesse we are bolde and loue ra●her to remoue out of the bodie and to dwell wi●h the Lord. And againe Philip. 1.21 22.23 Christ is to mee both in life and death aduantage and whether to liue in ●he flesh were profitable for me and what I do I know not for I am greatlie in doubt on both sides desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all Newes quoth Oecolampadius to his friendes who came vnto him a little before his death I shall be shortlie with Christ my Lord. I pray thee my Lord Iesus Christ saith Luther receiue my poore soule my heauenly father though I be taken from this life and this bodie of mine is to be layd downe yet I know certainlie that I shall remaine with thee for euer neither shall any be able to pull me out of thy hand Returne ô my soule vnto thy rest quoth Babylas martir of Antioche When his head was to bee chopt off because the Lord hath blessed thee because thou hast deliuered my soule from death Ps 116.7.8 mine eies from teare and my feete from falling I shall walke before Iehouab in the land of the liuing Furthermore in a generality these are the sayings of the auncient Fathers touching this point August lib. 13. ca. 8. de ciuitat dei The souls of the godlie being seperated from their bodes are in rest and the soules of the vngodlie ●oe suffer punishment vntil the bodies of those do rise againe vnto life euerlasting and the bodies of those vnto eternal death which is also called the second death so saith Augustine I is most certaine that the soules of the right●ous being loosed from the flesh Greg. lib. 4. Dialog c. 25 are receiued into heauenly seates and that the very trueth it selfe testifieth saying where the corps is there the Eagles will resorte So saith Gregorie Of these sayings I gather what all this while I went about to gather to wit that presently vpon the departure of any out of this life their soules goe straight waies either vnto God in heauen or else vnto satan in hell For as Augustine saith August in his serm of Time the 232. serm There are but two places and as for any third place there is none at all he that reigneth not with Christ shall perish with the diuell without any doubte Againe there bee two habitations or dwelling places August de verb. apost serm 18. the one in the fire euerlasting and the other in the kingdome that neuer shall haue ende the first place the Catholike faith by Gods authoritie beleeueth to be the kingdome of heauen August lib. ● hypog the second place the same Catholike faith beleeueth to be hell where all runnagates and whosoeuer is without the faith of Christ shall taste euerlasting punishment as for any third place we vtterly know none neither shall we finde in the holy scriptures that there is any such Now for mine own part sith there it will not be found it shall not any other where bee sought For as Theodoret saith Theodoret. lib. 1. cap. 7. The Euangelists and Apostles writings and the sayings of the olde Prophets doe cleerely instruct vs what iudgement we ought to haue of the meaning and will of God Q. What then What though also you will take no further paines to seeke a third place doth it therefore follow that therefore there is none Augustine I can tell you vpon whom you so much stand is very doubtfull in the case for sometimes hee denies as you say sometime he affirmes as others pretend and sometimes againe he doubtes as himselfe declares he denies in the places by you named hee affirmes De gen contra Manich. lib. 2. c. 20. de vera falsa poenit c. 18. lib. 21. de ciuit Dei c. 23. c. 26. Non redarguo saith he quia forsan verum est I reproue it not because it may peraduenture be true that some after this life suffer temporall punishment Hee doubtes in his Enchiridion cap. 69. Item de fide operibus cap. 16. in quaestione 1. Dulcitij Tale aliquid post hanc vitam fieri incredibile non est vtrum ita sit quaeri potest It is not incredible that after this life some such thing may bee and wh●ther it bee so or no it may bee demaunded R. Whatsoeuer Augustine is I much passe not for I stand not so much vpon him but that I can follow him or reiect him Neither herein doe I him any iniurie at all For this is his owne saying August in proem lib. 3. de Trinit Be not bound vnto my writings as vnto the canonicall scriptures But when thou shalt finde in the scriptures that which thou diddest not beleeue beleeue it without any doubting or delay but when thou findest that in my writings which thou diddest not know certainelie before except thou shalt certainelie vnderstand it doe not stiffelie affirme it August epist 198. ad Fortunatum And againe We receiue not the disputations or writings of any men be they neuer so catholike or praiseworthie as we receiue the canonicall scriptures but that sauing the reuerence due vnto them we may well reproue or refuse some things in their writings