Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n appear_v life_n sin_n 4,010 5 4.7063 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57353 A sermon prech'd in the cathedral church of Norwich, at the funeral of the Right Reverend Father in God, Edward, Lord Bishop of Norwich, who departed this life, July 28, 1676 by B. Riveley ... Riveley, Benedict, 1627 or 8-1695. 1677 (1677) Wing R1548; ESTC R14652 19,829 38

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

endure and that he was to honour the Sovereign of his Life and Death as well by tarrying his leisure as by bearing his hand His repeated Prayer to Heaven was that in his utmost extremities he might not be provoked to speak dishonourably of God and when through some fierce exacerbation of his disease he was constrain'd to make some noise and outcry he would presently subjoin Though he did roar yet he did not murmur Every Fit he was wont to call a Storm and in the intermission he would smile and discourse and pray as if he were providing his tackling against the next Assault His Patience was of the right stamp not stoical and sullen but purely Christian and grounded upon right principles By the grace of the Gospel his Soul was set above the miseries his flesh lay under and Moses like he endured as seeing him Heb. 11. 27. that is invisible He knew with holy Job in my Text That God would bring him to death at last and so give him a Writ of ease and with the same holy Man elsewhere he knew also that his Redeemer lived and would be his exceeding great reward 4. Furthermore as the complement of all therest there was in this worthy Prelate a generous and extensive Love He was come to the top of St Peter's 2 Pet. 1. 7. Climax Brotherly Kindness and Charity No man could say his Prayers with a better Spirit for he was full of Love and empty of Wrath and Rancor He could give and forgive both at the same rate Toties quoties that is as oft as there was need He was not like that Bishop I have somewhere read of That would part with his blessing but not with his money for his pardon and his peace pass'd from him to those that stood in need with equal freedom and chearfulness His universal Charity in reference to the Persons and Souls of Men was so conspicuous that the world could not deny it but was forc'd to miscall it Compliance All the doubt may be concerning his Charity to the Poor and Needy with reference to their outward estates because the excellency of this virtue lies in the secresie of its practice according to the great Masters Rules whereof as near as he could he was a strict observer He was for giving of Alms Matth. 6. 1 2 3 4. but not with a Trumpet He was for laying up his treasure in Heaven with him that sees in secret and rewards openly and not in the eyes and ears and tongues of men Chests that have neither locks nor keyes to secure what is put into them He was not for damming up his waters quite till death should break the bank and cause them run down at last with a greater noise and torrent of ostentation but he was for their silent pure and uninterrupted motion in a constant though narrower Channel into broken Pitchers and empty Vessels Daily and hourly were the emanations of his Charity while he lived but most of them running like streams under-ground till he was dead Many were the Gifts he scatter'd to the bringing up of poor Children to School to the maintenance of poor Scholars in the University to the supportation and encouragement of ancient foundations of Piety and Learning to the relief of visited places in his Diocess in the time of the great Plague to the supply of the wants of poor Ministers Widows to the augmentation of small Vicarages in his Gift not very much less than 300 l. per annum being upon the Kings Letter by him setled to that use And if to these you add the several shares that Southampton the place in which he entred the world Merton Colledge in Oxford the place of his first Preferment Northampton the place of his first Ministerial employment Norwich the place in which he departed the world I say if to the foregoing Accounts you add the several shares which these places have had of his bounty you cannot want a sufficient evidence of his being rich in good Works and abundantly Charitable nor can any hereafter doubt of it excepting such as lookt upon his revenues with an ill eye and so could not look upon his disbursements with a good one Thus far it appears he was an extraordinary person in his Life and now that he might no less appear so in his Death we may observe that therein God was pleased to do him an extraordinary kindness and make that which us'd to be to others a part of the punishment of their sin to be to him a part of his excellent reward The great Augustus's wish was his enjoyment an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a civil and well-natur'd death The last Sand in the Hour-glass falls not with less difficulty than he expired with There were no Noises Groans Convulsions Cramps distortion of the Looks staring with the Eyes gnashing with the Teeth in the last Scene of his Life His passive Fortitude had been abundantly try'd before and his active Graces demonstrated and therefore the less need of either now His meek Soul glided from him in a fine imperceptible Vehicle and he dyed much after the rate of the Rabbins talk concerning Moses Osculo Oris Dei as it were with a kiss of Gods mouth In sum the description of old Enoch's life and death fits him well He walked with God and he was not for God took Gen. 5. 24. him By this time I have finish'd a plain Monument unto the memory of a good and excellent Person our present deceased Diocesan now to rail it in and make it the more intemerate and inviolable to the most audacious hands I shall beseech you lastly to consider This was the Man that bore the heat of the day for us This was he that came to us in our gore and rubbish This was he that entred our Augaean Stable in its filth and reduc'd it to that degree of cleanliness wherein you now find it This was he that carried us through the Wilderness and has brought us to the brink of Jordan Norwich was his Nebo to this Mount he came and here he dyed And I shall beseech you also to join in this Prayer That the Spirit of the God of Elijah may be doubled upon Elisha That a Joshua may arise unto us after this our Moses one that may perfect Gods workupon us one that may carry us over the River one that may conquer the Canaanite for us one that may see us setled in the promised and long expected Land viz. in Uniformity of Practice in Peace of Mind and in Prosperity of Condition FINIS
A SERMON Preach'd in the Cathedral Church of NORWICH AT THE FUNERAL OF THE Right Reverend Father in GOD EDWARD LORD BISHOP of NORWICH Who Departed this Life July 28. 1676. By B. Riveley one of his Lordships Chaplains and Preacher in the said City Of whom the World was not worthy Hebr. 11. 38. LONDON Printed for Sam. Lowndes near the Savoy in the Strand and William Oliver Bookseller in the Market-place in Norwich 1677. A Sermon Preach'd in the Cathedral Church of Norwich at the Funeral of the Right Reverend Father in God Edward Lord Bishop of Norwich c. JOB XXX 23. For I know thou wilt bring me to death and to the house appointed for all the living NO Book of Scripture better furnish'd with Funeral Texts than this of Job and no Funeral could better deserve a Text out of Job than this being the Funeral of a Man fearing God and eschewing Evil a Man perfect and upright in his Generation a Man patient and holding fast his Integrity to the last But intending his just Encomium at the end of my Sermon I shall say no more of Him now The words are doubly considerable to us in their dependent and in their abstracted sence That they have a Coherence easily appears by the Illative Particle For by which they are tack'd to somewhat said afore But to spend any of my time in giving you the various Conjectures of Expositors about their Connexion would be hugely unjustifiable knowing my own mind of not handling them at all under this Consideration only this may be obiter observable to us That Job was at present in sad case The dayes of Affliction had taken Ver. 16 17 18. hold upon him he was diseased in body and restless through pain and sickness as out of the foregoing Verses may be learn'd and he thought this a fit season wherein to contemplate humane frailty and to consider his own dying He knew no Man at best was far distant from a Crave or could entertain hopes of living alwayes much less could he do so that was at the brink of that place already 't was an easie and short remove he knew for God to send him from his weary Pallet and sick Bed to his long and last Home And possibly this was the Argument of his patience that in all likelihood he had but a little while longer to endure He was sure if nothing else could his own Mortality at last would give him a Quietus est The Grave is a period as to all earthly Comforts so to all worldly Crosses and Perturbations and to this period Job Knew all must come and himself among the rest For I know thou wilt bring c. But it is the entire and abstract sense of the words that I would come to and I take them to contain in them a right comfortable profitable and practical Nation of Mans Mortality in general and of thine and mine in particular I know thou wilt bring me 〈◊〉 death and to the house appointed c. 'T is the speech of a Job that was not only a good Man himself but an Exemplar of such and so refer'd to in the * Jam. 5. 11. New Testament and therefore when he saith I know 't is as much as if he had said I would have others to know it too That God will bring them every Mothers child of them to death and to the house c. Let us then carefully observe what the holy Man professes to know here and how and thence draw Rules and Documents for our own present instruction and regulation of future practice As I. He knows the Grave under the Metaphor of a House that is he hath a comfortable Notion of that sad solitary dark silent place for doubtless that is it he means by the House of all Living The Allegory is the very same Chap. 17. 13. If I wait the Job 17 13. grave is mine house From whence we may know thus much too That Doct. 't is in the power of Religion and the grace of God to frame in a Mans mi●● most comfortable and amiable Idea's even of dying and being laid in the Grave things otherwise most formidable and terrifying He that sayes here I know that I shall dye had said before I know that my Redeemer liveth Job was a Job 19. 2● Christian by Anticipation and embraced the promises afar off as the holy Men of the Old Testament are said to do Hebr. 11. 13. His fearlesness and hope in his own death sprung from his faith in Christs Resurrection and whoever they be that can plead a title to that victory of Jesus as well à posteriori as à priori Hebr. 13. 8. for he is the same to day that he was yesterday have a sufficient foundation for the like courage and comfort in and about dying that he had Without a Christ I can't excuse any one from looking upon Death as a Ghastly thing the King of Terrors the greatest of Temporal Evils the dissolution of Nature the revenge of the Law for sin but there is a reverse of this prospect in the Gospel and by the virtue of Christs Religion Here you may behold the Son of God as the great Lover of Souls and Captain of their salvation marching out of his glorious Tent into the Enemies Country on purpose to deliver them Hebr. 2. 15. that through fear of death were all their life-time subject to bondage Yea here you may behold him setting his foot upon the neck of this Goliah and disarming 1 Cor. 15. 55 56. him of all his weapons as St Paul represents him Yea here you may see him an actual Triumpher and weighty Conqueror girt with a golden Girdle and the Keyes of Death and Hell hanging at Rev. 1. 13 18. it as in St Johns Vision Now Death is abolished so the Apostle speaks that is as to its deadliness 2 Tim. 1. 10. poyson ugliness enmity Now the Serpents sting is pulled out it can but lick and glide it can't pierce and wound like a Worm it can only feed on the dusty part the baser mold but the precious Soul is out of its reach Now Hell is dismounted from behind him that sate on the pale Horse and though he Rev. 6. 8. may chance to look big and threaten still yet he cannot kill and damn at the old rate Yea Death is now not only disabled but reconciled Treacle is extracted out of this Viper Honey is found in this Lyons Carkass the Devils Cudgel is beaten to his own head what he design'd for mischief is over-ruled into an instrumentality for the greatest good and whom he had set on work to be the worlds Butcher proves the Christians Priest to send up his Soul a Sacrifice to God and to preserve his Body awhile in the Ashes below By the admirable grace of the Redeemer of the most shun'd Foe is made a kind Friend of a grisly Worm a familiar Confident an amiable
ruddiness is put into Deaths pale Cheeks since the effusion of Christs blood by his being made a Curse Death becomes a blessing that which was the punishment of Vice proves the security of Virtue which was the instrument of Justice the token of Mercy which was the dissolution of Nature the completion of Grace Now Death is no longer the Saints loss Phil. 1. 27. but their gain it turns to great account 't is put into their Inventory among their riches Death is yours 1 Cor. 3. 21. 'T is no longer the grim Serjeant of their Judge but their humble Servant their officious Black and Slave to hold by the Hangings on their Clay Wall till their Princely Spirit enters the Presence Chamber of the great King the Grave is no longer their Prison but their House their resting place from their labours their hinding place from the storm yea 't is Janua Vitae Porta Coeli their only passage into the eternal state of bliss and glory This is the victory of Christ This is the effect of Christianity it doth not quite kill Death but it makes that Death shall not kill us * There is a killing with death threatned Rev. 2. 23. it does not cause us not to dye but it certainly keeps us from being damned it wo'nt prevent our coming to a Grave but it will mightily chear us in our passage thither and so embalm us when we come there that not a hair of our heads shall everlastingly perish O Sirs I let us be able to know Death and a Grave Vse after this comfortable rate not foolishly to presume with Agag but groundedly to hope with holy Souls That the bitterness of Death is past Let us approve 1 Sam. 15. 32. our selves living Members of the great conquering Head Jesus Christ and so his victory will be our victory We shall be Conquerors too through him that loves Rom. 8. 37. us and Death shall have no more dominion over us than it had over him Let us endeavor an hearty and universal performance of the conditions and terms of the New Covenant which are Repentance from dead Works and Faith in Jesus Christ that we may thereby assure to our selves the said promises and priviledges of the same Covenant This way the Saints of God have alwayes come by their courage against and their comfort in a dying hour This hath carried them to their Graves with the same unconcernedness wherewith they pass to their Beds every night This made a holy David not afraid to pass through the valley of the shadow of death This made Psal 23. 4. a holy Job to claim Kindred of the worms and rottenness I have said to Corruption Thou art my father and to the Worm Thou art my mother and my sister Job 17. 14. And to speak as familiarly of his going to the Grave as if he were a going to his Home I know thou wilt bring me to the House appointed for all Living So much for the first sort of Notion which Job here professes to have of his own Mortality viz. comfortable and chearing pass we to the next kind of Notion thereof which is reflexive and applicatory I know thou wilt bring me to death and to c. II. Job not only has a general Notion of Death as the way of all Flesh and of the Grave as the House of all Living but he has a particular Notion of both referring the case to himself He knows that as none can no more can he put in Plea or Barr against his coming to the Dust and being ere long a Tenant in that dreery Habitation yet common repository of the Grave From whence we may please to know thus much too viz. That Good and Holy Men are not only convinc'd Doct. and knowing of other folks dying but particularly of their own To know that all must dye is a Lesson that few are ignorant of he is a very dullard that is not come so far This Nature teaches Law obliges to common Experience and Observations ratify and confirm There were but two that we read of Enoch and Elijah and they upon extraordinary priviledge not for ordinary example that balked the Grave in their passage to the other World All others have laid their Heads down upon a green Turf and dwelt with Worms and such like creatures of an Equivocal Production The Sons and Daughters of their own Flesh and Bones in a House of Dirt and Rottenness And there is a Must for this as that wise Tekoite said We Must needs dye there 's necessity for it thus 2 Sam. 14. 14. far from the original Law of our Nature and from the consequential Law of our sin so that if God and Nature can hold us to conditions we must needs dye I. Supposing Man innocent he was yet mortal in his Nature he was an excellent creature as he came out of Gods Hands but yet but a Creature 't was never put into his Nature that if he fell he should not break he was a mixture of Heat and Cold of Dryness and Moisture compos'd of corruptible qualities and materials only there was a possibility of not dying through the Divine Favour and the Almighties supportation He grew upon an immortal Root there was his security but cut off from that by his own degeneracy he soon wither'd and shew'd what he was II. In which laps'd condition if you further consider him Death is made his Doom as 't was his Nature before and as to the stroke of it there is now no remedy though as to the sting of it there be ' T is appointed for men once to dye 't is now Stature-Law Hebr. 9. 7. and has been executed through all ages and will be so to the end of the World Your Fathers where are they and the Prophets do they live Zach. 1. 5. for ever that is in this world where is Abraham the Father of the Faithful and David the Man after Gods own Heart and Lazarus the Friend of Christ the Patriarchs and Apostles Men of all sorts under both Oeconomies of the Old and New Testamant have long since tasted Death If ever there had been any dispensation from dying I suppose Christ would have brought it along with him but I find no such thing in the whole Gospel Charter 'T is said there is no condemnation to them that are in Rom. 8. 1. Christ Jesus but 't is not said there is no Death Just as God dealt by the Serpents in the Wilderness so did Christ with Sin and Death in the Gospel-state he did not presently destroy all the Serpents but took care that whoever was stung with them should be healed No more did Christ make Sin to be no Sin or Death to be no Death but he provided Pardon and Salvation Balme and Cure in his own Bloud he did not keep Men altogether from dying because he could do his Redeeming-work better without it for it is more to the honour