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A46825 A sermon preached at the funeral of the right honble the Lady Frances Paget, the religious consort of the right honble William Lord Paget, (eldest daughter to the right honourable Henry Earl of Holland, who was beheaded for his loyalty to this King) in the parish-church of West-Drayton in the county of Middlesex, on the 12th of Nevember, 1672. By Jehu Jenny, M.A. and Vicar of Harmondsworth. Jenney, John, d. 1697. 1673 (1673) Wing J673A; ESTC R220733 15,009 28

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do that every man must labour in some calling or other if you bring up this levelling humour where 's the Gentleman was not he born like that Leviathan Job speaks of only to take his pastime in the World But a Reverend and modest † The Author of the whole Duty of Man Author hath made it out to be no Soloecism to assert a Gentleman to have a Calling the orderly disposal of his Family the preserving what in him lyes peace among his Neighbours the influencing all he converses with by a good example will not suffer him to be an exception to this general rule that every man in the world hath a Calling and to be diligent in it is every mans duty and that which is highly justifiable for the husband-man to be at his plough the trades-man in his shop the schollar at his book is to be so doing But here we must observe a double caution 1. That our general and particular Calling do not justle out or enterfere upon the duties of each other The wise Steward renders to each his portion in due season It is a sin for me to be in the market or in a worse place when I should be at the Church and on the other hand an indiscreet zeal must not make me neglect my Calling and to provide for my family such a profession renders me worse than an infidel 2. We must be sure keep within the bounds of our particular Calling for which we have an express command 1 Cor. 7.24 Let every man wherein he is called therein abide with God He that holds the plough must not touch the Ark the Apron and the Ephod the Shop and the Pulpit are distinct unless our Mechanick Preachers can confute St. Paul who saith that all are not Prophets nor all Apostles nor all Teachers The motion of a Christian must not be excentrick he must keep within bounds No man can climb the Throne or the Pulpit without a warrant from God lest it be said to him as the Egyptian to Moses Exod. 2.14 Who made thee a Prince a Judge over us who made thee a Preacher for No man taketh this honour unto himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron Heb. 5.4 Thus have I with all imaginable brevity gone through the several parts of mans duty shewed him what it is the Lord doth require of him to do justly to love mercy to be sober and temperate and walk humbly with his God So that by way of Application you will easily infer with me 1. That 't is not nihil agendo doing nothing Idleness is the Devils anvil on which he hammers us into any shape of vice or wickedness 't is a tempting of the Tempter a giving him the opportunity of throwing a temptation in our way and therefore it was St. Hieromes advice to be alwaies busied to prevent the Devils having this advantage over us Semper boni aliquid operis facito ut Diabolus te semper inveniat occupatum Had David been in the Camp or at Council-table when he walkt on the battlements of his house Bathsheba had washt her self without defiling uriahs bed Man is of an active nature if he be doing nothing he will quickly be doing something he should not Nor 2. Is it nil boni agendo doing that which is as good as nothing To spend a morning inter speculum et pectinem our eyes would ake and our hands grow weary should a Prayer-Book be our entertainment but a third part of that time the comb and the glasse take us up One meal consumes as much of our precious time as Luther spent of the whole day in prayer which was three houres Stratonitus said of the Rhoudians that they built houses as if they were immortal but feasted as if they were to live but a little while we who dwell in houses of clay feast as if we were immortal no life beyond this as if the indulging our sensual appetites were the highest satisfaction of our reasonable nature and the hoc agere of a Christian An empty visit wherein our entertainment is an idle and uncharitable censure of the actions of others and a debaucht Theatre share the rest of the day Than these the Emperours pricking of flies will be found a busie idleness more innocent Nor 3. Is it male agendo doing that which is worse than nothing doing evil committing sin This is the Devil's work and as he sets them to work from him they must expect their wages which what it is the Apostle lets them know beforehand Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is eternal death This will not pass in the account it will not be well our Lord should find us so doing if he doth we shall have small thanks for our pains Which minds me of the third general of the text 3. The account will be taken of him the Lord of the family will come to take it himself though it be intimated that the time when he will come is very uncertain Here we must know that there is a particular and a general coming of our Lord to Judgement His particular coming to Judgment is on every one in particular at the hour of death Eccl. 12.7 Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it Where by the return of the soul to God we must understand its giving up an account of all its actions done in the flesh whether good or evil as certainly as the Body at death returns to its earthly Mother to be dissolved so assuredly the soul returnes to its heavenly father to be judged The general coming of Christ shall be at the last day when the dead bodies shall arise out of their graves and both soul and body receive the sentence of absolution or condemnation John 5.29 All that are in the graves shall come forth they that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation This latter is a ratification and publication of the former and a more full collation or infliction of reward or punishment Each of those Advents of our Lord are certain but the time of them very uncertain 1. His particular coming to Judgment is certain which is at the hour of death There is a Decree for this past and sign'd in Heaven Heb. 9.27 It is appointed for all Men once to die And you know what follows that And this Decree is irreversible like the Laws of the Medes and Persians Deaths vast spoils and large triumphs sufficiently prove its universal Empire 'T is not to purpose to insist upon this when there 's scarce any man living will shew himself so little a man as to question whether he be mortal The wise and the fool the King and the Subject the Pastor and his Flock the Honourable and the vile Person the Rich man and the Beggar all mustly down in the dust and make their bed as Job speaks in