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A30665 The danger of delaying repentance set forth in a sermon preached to the university at St. Mary's Church in Oxford on New-Years-Day, 1691/2 / by Ar. Bury ... Bury, Arthur, 1624-1713. 1692 (1692) Wing B6193; ESTC R4405 13,117 31

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for the odds is come over to the other side In the midst of Doctors and Nurses and Languors this is no less properly a sudden Death than that which strikes with Lightning Yea nor can it be denied to be in a fatal sense Sudden though Expected For though the man know himself dying yet III. A third Danger is that the same Disease which must shortly deprive the Man of Life hath already deprived him of all Power to do that which too late appeareth both Necessary and Impossible Moses had a Zipporah to help him but this spiritual Circumcision cannot be performed by Proxy nor so easily as the fleshly There are indeed that talk as if it were much easier It is no more but be Sorry and Absolved The former Nature will perform and the latter the Priest and the Death-bed is the most proper Season for both He that can do nothing else can grieve for what is past nor can that more Naturally or more Passionately be done than at sight of approaching Judgment Body and Mind are best disposed for this performance when disabled from all others When old age shall stoop my back then will my head naturally hang like a Bulrush when my head shall be full of Rheumatick Clouds then will my Eyes easily rain plentiful showers of Tears when my Palate can no longer relish Wine or Banquets nor any other parts of my Body feel pleasure then will it be easy to be sick at remembrance of my surfeits Or if I die by an acute Disease the pain will force me to howl upon my Bed But alas What is all this to saving Repentance The Psalmist promiseth that they which sow in tears shall reap in joy and immediately explaineth it he that now goeth on his way weeping and beareth forth good seed shall shortly return with joy and bring his sheaves with him It is the good seed not the showers without it that produce the sheaves he that soweth nothing but Rain cannot hope to reap any thing but Dirt. This Spiritual Circumcision is not like the Fleshly one short act but a constant course of life not performed by a few drops though of blood It is no less than a Death unto Sin but it is more a Resurrection to Newness of Life Old habits are not easily destroyed yet must this be done and that by new habits of contrary Vertues the one and the other are works of time and constant industry they require the best of a man's powers and the assistance of greater We cannot be too frequently admonished that this is the great design of the Gospel that all our Lords Actions and Sermons Precepts and Promises Death and Resurrection relate to this as Enconragements and as Emblems and must be answered by the Duties they represent His Birth by our Regeneration his Circumcision by our putting off the sins of the flesh his Death by our mortifying our old man his Baptism and Burial by our spiritual burying deep our mortified Lusts and his Resurrection by our New and better Life Let the malicious take notice I deny not with the Socinians That Christ died to purchase Pardon for penitent sinners but I deny and all the Apostles deny it with me That any shall have benefit of his Purchace without participation of his Holiness Yea I may further add That the Apostles are more frequent in declaring that he redeemed us from the Dominion of sin than from its wages And our Church Catechism teacheth us that by Baptism is signified a death to sin and a new birth to righteousness whereby we are made members of Christ and this sure is no easy or short Work nor wrought in a small or busy Time It requireth a Chamber but a Council-Chamber not a sick man's The Psalmist prosseth it with a Selah Psal 4.6 Stand in awe and sin not commune with your own hearts and in your Chamber and be still Selah Here is a weighty Affair to be setled a long Account to be stated and a steddy Course to be stablished To this end a solemn Conference to be held all Parties heard all Objections debated all Pleas fully heard that final Sentence may be given between God and Sin Let therefore the Rabble be excluded all Noise supprest all Disturbances prevented And can no privater Chamber be had than the sick man's No other wherein to be still but that which of all other is most troublesome How many Diseases are there that make any Consult impracticable The Fever by its Fires the Lethargy by its Waters the Colick by its Gripes and most other Diseases by their proper Torments give the Patient business enough to employ his whole mind and if he can bear them he doth all that is possible for humane nature And those Diseases which do not utterly disable the mind do certainly disorder it If they do not make the Consult utterly Impossible yet they make it more Difficult than in the day of Health when all Faculties are free and all Powers entire yet shun the work as too hard to be undergone Let us now suppose the man so happy as to enjoy the concurse of all the circumstances of Death which without warrant he promised himself He dieth not a violent Death but in his Bed He is not deluded with vain hopes but knoweth his Disease to be mortal It is not a disabling Disease but a gentle lingering one which alloweth him full exercise of his faculties and he employeth them all in the work which through the whole course of his life he cut out for this time He is upon due consideration so sensible of his past Follies and present Danger as to be firmly resolved that if God be pleased to grant him longer life he will make it a new one no less industrious in his service than he hath formerly been in that of his lusts These are the weak and dying Man's Resolutions And whether they be not weak and dying like himself at another time may be questioned General Experience telleth us that the Resolution which is brought by fear departeth with it and the former Life returneth with the health of the sinner But this Danger since it hath no place in my Text shall have none in my Discourse but I pass by it to IV. The last but not least Danger is that God will not pardon the impenitent upon his late Repentance as he did Moses upon the late performance of his neglected Duty What hope there is for a wicked Man's repenting upon his Death-bed is a question more disputeable and more worth disputing than any yea than all of those wherein we weary our selves and think them most Learned that can speak most of them to no purpose Let me admonish and request you to be so kind to your selves as to allow some serious thoughts to this most important Question which you cannot study in vain and do not rashly take every thing for Orthodox that is Vulgar The Question is not concerning God's secret but his declared Will not