Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n bear_v day_n zion_n 22 3 8.3378 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
A30588 The seaman's spiritual companion, or, Navigation spirituallized being a new compass for seamen consisting of thirty-two points : directing every Christian how to stear the course of his life through all storms and tempests : fit to be read and seriously perused by all such as desire their eternal welfare / published for a general good, but more especially for those that are exposed to the danger of the seas by William Balmford, a well-wisher to seamen's eternal welfare and recommended to the Christian reader by J.F. ; to which is prefixt a preface by Benj. Keach, the author of War with the Devil. Balmford, William. 1678 (1678) Wing B609; ESTC R28344 69,700 162

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

And would perswade thee there 's no greater tre●su● To be enjoy'd the senses now invites The flesh to taste which draws in these deligh● Like as a leak draws water at the Seas And sink the Ship so do such leaks as these Draw in this worldly pleasure until they Be fill d so full the Vessel 's cast away And Lading lost which is the worst of all And by this means came our first Fathers fall Eve's eye beheld the Fruit and so admir'd Presents it to the flesh the flesh desir'd Man being made of earth by nature weak Not minding as he might to stop the leak He lost his Vessel as he well deserv'd Although it s hop'd his Lading was preserv'd This leak sunk Achan his eye-delighting pleasure As by a leak did let in such a measure Of Avarice that using no endeavour To stop that Leak his Ship was lost for ever And in a word the naked truth to speak Most mischiefs makes their entrance at this leak The sense of Seeing first doth act its part Presently brings the object to the heart The heart whose office 't is to stop the leak ●f it neglects its part these waters break ●nto the Ship runs in without controul And sinks the Ship and overthrows the Soul Then keep thy heart with diligence and care Let not thy eye nor ear thy heart ensnare ●fe'r thine eye invite thine heart to pleasure Think how uncertain is this earthly treasure What true content what solid joy can I Take in this world alass I am born to die ●uppose I find some pleasure for too day ●oo morrow death tells me I must away ●o earth from whence I came the grave must keep My mouldring body till I wake from sleep I leave my pleasure and I leave my sorrow I sleep too day and shall awake too morrow And when I shall awake I shall be hurl'd Immediately into another world And then shall live again and stand before The judge of heaven and earth and die no more This state shall be a state of joy or pain From which I never shall be mov'd again If for this worlds uncertain pleasures I Should lose that joy that lasts eternally How costly would these pleasures be What rat● Should I pay for these toys whose longest dat● Admits no longer measure then a Span Whose largest confines is the life of man Such serious thoughts as these they will no doub● Stop all these Leaks and keep vain pleasures out The third resemblance that there is between Mans Body and a Ship may thus be seen It s not the empty Ship that men so prize But for the sake of its rich Merchandize And as a Ship contains within his hould The Merchants treasure so mans precious Soul That is far richer than the Golden Ore The Merchant fetches from the Indian Shore Is in his Body wherefore man beware Of Soul Ship-wrack use Diligence and Care To keep thy Lading safe Slack not thy pain For that once lost thou'lt never find again Thy Lading being lost there 's no indeavo● Can save thy Vessel but it sinks for ever Into a burning Lake a Lake of fire Whose torments ceases not nor flames expire O man be careful whilst thou hast a day Thy want of care will cast thy Ship away The Carcass of a Ship when all its store Is buried in the sand is of far more Esteem and value than the Body when It s precious Soul is gone from thence for then The Body 's nothing but a lump of Clay Sleeping in Dust until the Judgment Day When all must wake to joy or else to sorrow Unto a dismal night or joyful morrow A Ship at Sea is liable to harms As well by Rocks and Sands as sudden Storms A Chrstian while upon these troubled Seas He hath his Rocks and Sands and upon these He sometimes runs aground and sometimes hits Upon these Churlish Rocks until he splits His slender Vessel which with great indeavour Is hardly sav'd from perishing for ever Sins and temptations is a Christians Sand On which sometimes he runs aground and stands And cannot move the sins of Christians heels Like red sea sands takes off their Chariot wheels Weakens a Christians Faith he scarce can know Whether he moves one step for Heaven or no. A Christian that is with his Sin defil'd He 's at a stand scarce thinks himself a Child It is but faintly that he calls him Father But like the prodigal he chuseth rather The name of Servant unto such a stand Doth sin put sold Sons lost on such a sand And other sands there be of no less danger To which a Christian must not be a stranger They are temptations of every kind That oftentimes do much afflict the mind As when a Christian sees Blasphemers flourish While Righteous ones is rather fit to perish It runs the soul on ground he scarce can say That he is in the right and perfect way This sometimes made the best of men mistrust And judge the generation of the Just That soul that runs himself on such a sand Is often times put to a perfect stand 'T was this made righteous David thus complain Surely saith he I 've wash'd my hands in vain O soul beware this is a dangerous sand This put good David unto such a stand That till the spring-tide of Gods love did flow Into his Soul his faith was grown so low He there stuck fast in danger to miscarry Until he went into Gods Sanctuary Whose holy streams Did give his soul such strength That he got off that dangerous sand at length Christians have rocks as well as sands and they Do seldom miss to cast the Ship away I 'll mention two but they shall be the Chief And yet but two because I will be brief Presumption and Despair on these two Rocks Whoever runs with violence and knocks If on the first of these his soul but hit 'T is very seldom but the soul is split When men presume to sin and yet will dare Presumptuously to promise equal share With best of Saints in everlasting joy How many thousands thus themselves destroy It is a sign saith the Physician Who when he minds his Patients disposition Finds him so stupifi'd he doth not know Whether he be distempered or no Though every one about him gives him over And leaves expecting that he will recover The dying man feels nothing hath no fears Whilst his relations dews his bed with tears And sees him dying though he sees no danger Sees death approaching while the man 's a stranger Unto the thoughts of death presumes all 's well And thus presumptuously some goes to Hell Laughing at sin while others under deep Sad apprehensions of their state can weep Beholds him dying that sees no such thing Sees death hath stung him though he feels nothing The choicest Christians floating on the Seas Of swelling pomp may run himself with ease Upon this Rock he is not fiercely driven By any storm or tempest sent from
North. ● is by Christ our mercies is increast ●e's next the Father Christ stands for the East ●om East to South the Sun doth make its way ●riving at the South 't is perfect day ●e next to Christ that Christians must possess ●is the Spirit South point is Holiness ●oliness is our South and Christ is then ● height in Christians when most holy men ●ext to the South is West whither the Sun ●akes haste and sets and then our day is done ●eath is our Western Point doth terminate ●r day and put a period to its date ●ese be the Four Points all men must eye ●orth East South West then man prepare to die Now see our Scripture grounds for this allusion ●r upon that we 'll bottom each Conclusion ●s a Notion generally receiv'd ●d as unquestionably it believ'd That fair Jerusalem that famous Town Israels Metropolis the worlds renown Was plac't i' th midst o' th earth and hence it wa● As most conclude it all was came to pass All places bear their true Denomination As they were plac't or stood for scituation Relating to that City whose great name Did fill the earth with its renowned fame Jerusalem thus for the Center ey'd I will remember that on its North side The City of the mighty King was plac't The mount of Olives also on the East Which mountains as it first did entertain Our blessed Lord so when he comes again Zachary the Prophet gives a full accompt His feet shall stand upon that Eastern Moun● And on the South-side did mount Sion stand The sacred mountain of that holy Land Mount Calvery the place of Death this mou● Was scituate on the VVest on this account I am incourag'd to make this allusion Scriptures not contradicting this Conclusion ●hat East should stand for Christ and Stouh ●le● ●ithout excepting stands for holiness And VVest for death will never be denied But why the North is unto God apply'd May at the first to some seem not so clear But that the truth thereof may still appear Mark what good David saith observe the wor● Of that most faithful Servant of the Lord. When David sets Mount Sions Beauty forth She is saith he the joy of all the Earth She 's beautiful saith he for scituation Which he makes out by this clear de●●nstration The mighty King saith David doth ●eside ●n fair Jerusalem on the North side Of sacred Sion to whose glorious King The Nations shall their wealth and glory bring Hence 't was that speech concerning Lucifer Who would exalt himself above the Stars Of God Almighty Esay adds besides ●s further Demonstration of his pride That Lucifer presum'd himself so great That he would make the side o' th North his seat ●ut he whose high aspiring thoughts did swell ● ' usurp Gods place is tumbled down to Hell ●he North which if as some suppose to be ●he Mount Moria it will well agree That Sacred Mount in Canaans Holy Land ●id also on the North of Sion stand ●hat still the North in Scriptures is appli'd ●o God alone as properly his side ●hese words of David next I 'd have you mind ●hich you in Psalm the 75 may find David excluding both West South and East ●rom giving honours making not the least Mention o' th North saith honours do proceed ●rom God alone as if it were agreed ●nd taken for a grant on every hand ●hat for Gods proper place the North doth stand Sith then the language of Gods holy word With this our notion doth so well accord I hope I may presume without offence With awful fear and holy reverence To make a serious and divine inspection Into the Sacred Art taking direction From Holy Writ which we will make our guid Not on the right or left to turn aside And now with seriousness we will conclude The North with God most fitly doth allude 'T is God alone we first must seek to know The Word and Spirit will direct us how When first therefore thy Vessel launcheth forth Into these troubled Seas upon the Earth Assure thy self thou art not like to make A happy Voyage if thou undertake To stear thy Ship to fair Emanuels Land Before thou know and rightly understand God thy North Star whom thou must alway● eye When thou sets forth towards eternity Know God is first 't is he first gave thee breat● And he is last and hath appointed death That fatal messenger to call thee hence To give accompt to him for each offence Know God is merciful and just also He sees thy ways and did thy secrets know Let no such foolish thoughts possess thy mind To think there is no God be not so blind The Heavens are his witness day and night Do speak throughout the World their beams ● ligh● ●ills every place By this the Nations know There is a God whether they will or no. The very Heathen do the same confess ●y light of nature they can do no less ●is acts of providence bespeaks the same They all set forth the glory of his name ●is mighty hand that framed every Creature ●oth in the Earth the Air and in the Water Gives food as well as being unto all Of every thing he 's the original He feeds the Ravens when to him they cry He is and was from all eternity ●his knowledge although true is not alone ●e is not onely God but he is one ●lthough there be Gods many saith St. Paul ●o us there is but one he 's all in all God must not onely thus be understood ●ut we must know him for our chiefest good That good thou dost or ever shalt enjoy Comes from himself alone he 'll not destroy His handy work Mans ruin doth proceed ●rom man himself 't is man that doth that deed T is in and by the Lord we must obtain ●ternal Life Life doth in him remain ●his thing is needful to be known by these That sail for Heaven on these troubled Seas To know God thus is of as great concern ●s for a Seaman his North Point to learn ●nd in the third place thou must learn to know ●od in his Holy Attributes also His Attributes of Power Mercy and Of Justice also thou must understand We read when God Almighty did proclaim His ever honoured and his Name In Exodus the thirty fourth we find His Name is gracious merciful and kind In him long suffering patience doth abound Sin pard'ning grace in him is to be found Reserved mercy is laid up in store For such as love him grace for ever more As thou must know he 's merciful thou must Know as he 's God Almighty he is just To those that hate him he will be severe A guilty Conscience he 'll by no means clear Though Heavens in his right hand is as rewar● To such as do his righteousness regard Yet in his left hand is a flaming fire Consumes the wicked in his burning ire His wrath once kindled he that reads his nam● Must read him then
they sin their very Lives away But that they cannot For God did create Man in a pure good and perfect State And God who of Man's Life was the first Giver Appointed means that Man might live for ever And gave to him the Tree of Life to eat A sacred Fruit a Life-preserving Meat Man did procure his Death at second-hand By wilful breaking of the Lords Command But God not willing to cast Man away Prepared for his Life another Day Christ by the Name o' th' Woman's Seed wa● give● That Man who dy'd on Earth might live in Heaven If after this Man stubbornly Rebell Though Man shall live yet it shall be in Hell A Place prepar'd for Satan's Punishment Yet must Rebellious Disobedient Be sharers with him live in endless Woe His Life being purchased it must be so Wherefore mind this Point well that so yo● may Steering by Compass rightly find your Way West South-West Beholding Death as it at first came in As the deserved Wages of our sin It hath a dreadfull Sting that none can bear The Approach of Death doth fill Men's Heart with fea● 'T is call'd The King of Terrors well it may And therefore Man from Death would fly away It is the Holy sanctified Man Yea such a One it is that only can Say unto Death Where is thy Sting O Grave Where is that Victory thou' rt wont to have True Sanctity is such a precious thing Makes Death all Honey takes away the Sting● 'T is not devouring Monsters of the Seas Nor Sword nor Fire by Land 't is none of these Nor Hell inraged Cruel tortures can Make Death be stinging to a Holy Man Death only stings with Poison such as give Way to their Lust and do corruptly live ●hat Man that lives and dyes in wickedness Death stings his Soul with Horror and Distress ●o live in hatred of thy sins is best Which brings us very near unto West West by South And that thou might the better be directed ●o learn this Point let nothing be neglected That may informe thee how to stear aright ●et Earthly things seem empty in thy sight ●'s the vain Pleasures of this World intices ●o frown on Vertue and to smile on Vices 'T was Acan's Golden wedges Beauty did ●tice him to do that he was forbid ● was his Babylonish Garment gay ●hat made both Eyes Heart Hand to stray ●et not the World delude thee with its pleasure And thereby rob thee of Eternal Treasure When Men's affections are so strongly plac't On Earthly things which is but for a blast ●nd Death comes suddainly to call him hence How bitter is it Man would not dispence With Death's sharp Summons but with might and main ●trive to make Death call back his stroke again How loath to bid those present things good Night Which are so sweet and pleasant in thy sight Gardens and Orchards with rich Treasure an● Fair sumptuous Houses joyning to the Land When Death the tydeings of departing brings O saith that Man that loves these present things Shall I now close mine Eyes and lose the sight Of these Enjoyments wherein I delight And sleep in Dust until I rise again And know not whether into Joy or Pain O Death forbear to strike me now and give Me time t' enjoy these Pleasures here and live Thus bitter's Death to those that are in Love With Earthly things and not with things above If therefore on this Point thou wouldst stea● righ● Then let thy Heart by Earthly things set light Love not this World in which thou must no● stay But love that Treasure that abides alway So wilt thou be with holy Paul resolv'd 'T is better be with Christ and be dissolv'd Than live on Earth where Sorrows never cease So shalt thou go unto thy Grave with Peace West Three Quarters of our Christian Compass past It now remains that we unfold the Last We are past the North the East the South an● no● We 're come to West our Sun grows very low The Evening of our pleasant Day is come Our Sun is set and we are hasting Home ●nto the Grave the Earth from whence we came ●or Dust we are and must return to th' same ●arth is our Home our very Home indeed ●ecause from Earth at first we did proceed ●nd though we there a season do remain ●et from the Earth we must return again ●om West to North From Death we go to God ●nd there takes up our Everlasting Bode ●he Body being dead the Earth must have it ●he Spirit doth return to God that gave it ●arth is our Home but not our longest Home ●o Earth we be yet first from God we come ●d thither 't is we must return again ●nd from that time unchangeable remain ●ter the Judgment 's past and Sentence given ●ur constant Home must be in Hell or Heaven From North to East Again we now must pass ●om God to Christ who now appointed is ● be our Judge who will uprightly deal ●d from his Judgment there is no appeal ● Righteous Judgment he will have regard ● give to every one a just Reward ● those that in well-doing seek for Glory ●ernal Joy in Heaven 's prepared for ye ●t unto those that stubbornly Rebell ●ernal Wrath with damned Souls in Hell ●thing but anguish trouble grief and sorrow ●hose dismal Night will never find a Morrow But forasmuch as now we 're come to th' We● We will divide this Quarter like the rest Into eight several Points which we 'll lay dow● All very necessary to be known And forasmuch as now we understand We sail by West unto the Holy Land From the first minute that we draw our Breath We 're sailing towards West draws on to Dea● Let 's mind each Point in this last Quarter w● That in our Knowledge we may there excell It is of absolute necessity For spiritual Seamen that they learn to dy● This needful Lesson Balam understood He knew it was both excellent and good To learn this Lesson O saith he that I Were like th● Righteous when I am to dye O that my later End like his might be Such Good in dying well did Balam see To learn this Lesson well this Rule I 'le gi● If thou would learne to dye first learn to live Then take Directions from this sacred Truth Remember thy Creatour in thy Youth Begin betimes the Morning of thy Dayes Is the fit Season to reform thy Wayes Give God thy strength serve him whilst tho● you● Thy Senses quick thy Understanding strong Defer not thy Repentance untill Night Or Evening of thy Dayes but with Deligh● Let Child-hood learn to live and Youth likew● So wilt thou find sweet Comfort when thou d● ●od calls betimes and if thou dost delay ●o hearken to his Voyce while it is day ●n unexpected Storm may suddainly ●end thee away unto Eternity ●ithout th' advantage of another Season ●onsult then with Flesh or fleshly Reason ●hy Flesh will tell thee that thou
could make the World to bear his Yoke Must in a Moment ●eel the direful Stroke Of Death which will remove him from his Treasure And in a moment level mighty Caesar With Beggars that upon the Dung-hill lies So swiftly this conceited Substance flies Where 's now the Man that 〈◊〉 so lately seen Subdue the Earth He 's as he had not been The seeming-Substance in the which he boasted Is like a Shaddow fled and he has lost it Then happy 's he that on this Point doth stear His Course aright he has need to fear The Threats of Death his Sins are all forgiven And his enduring Substance is in Heaven Where he shall need no Sword to keep his Right Or Watch-man to secure him in the Night Where Tears shall never more offend his Eyes And where he never more shall hear the Cryes Of Souls opprest where Wickedness shall cease Where all his Sorrows shall be turn'd to Peace Where Sighing shall be turn'd to singing Praise Where Nights are chang'd into perpetual Days Where wicked Men shall never lay more Hands On such as do delight in God's Commands Where all their threatning their cruel words Where-with they ●ex Christ's little Flock like Swords Shall pierce their Souls with Sorrow and their Heart Shall never more be freed from the smart Whose haughty Looks the Lord will then abase And they with Horror shall behold God's Face They that to Mercy would not be inclin'd Shall beg for Mercy and no Mercy find But they who shall in Heaven receive a Place Happy are they that are in such a Case O happy are those Souls whose God 's the Lord Who 've squar'd their Lives according to his Word Blessed's that Man in Death who in his Life Hath loved Holyness hated Strife Then Stear thy Course aright on West by North Where Treasures lye whose excellence worth Cannot be measured by me nor can Its Height and Depth be valued by Man It is indeed Man's Duty to inquire Into its Worth believe and so admire THus in our Christian Compass we have past From North to East to South to West at last We 're come to North again Our longest Day On Earth is measured to us by the Stay Of Heaven's great Lamp of Light the glorious Sun When it stayes longest in o●● Horizon But now our Sun will never lose its Light We never more shall see a Cloudy Night If while thou art on Earth thou makest sure This sacred Treasure thou lyes down secure And free from Fear no Darkness will arise To hide this sacred Glory from thine Eyes Who then would make this World 's uncertain Treasure The Object of their Comfort Joy Pleasure Lay Treasure up in Heaven that may be From Thieves and Rust from Death and Danger free The height of Earthly Glory 's like a Bubble Fill'd with the wind but tost about with Trouble It 's at no certain speaks thee fair To-day And of a suddain it makes hast away The P●rsian Monarch once could make his boast His Branches spread themselves in every Coast Throughout the Universe and in one Story The World agreed to Crown him with their Glory All People is contented he shall have What e'r his Eye could see or Heart could crave The Enjoyment of all this the Reason why We cannot call it true Felicity ●●its Uncertainty Man has no Power To keep himself in this Estate an Hour The momentary Dangers that attend him He cannot scape though all the World be friend him Sorrows as well as Pleasures do abound On every Hand D●ngers besets him round His Enemies beholds him and admire His prosperous State and secretly conspire His suddain Death hoping a Change in State May make an Alteration in their Fate But if through Servant's watchfulness and care He be preserved and escape that snare ●here's other Dangers that be incident To Man as such Care never can prevent The Sorrows that this Monarch doth sustain As the true Product of some grievous Pain Sometime is in less somtime in greater measure Bereaves him tho a Prince of all his Pleasure Death so impartially doth throw his Dart Makes Prince Pesant from his Pleasures part The Kings of Egypt making of their Feasts Fit to accomodate their Princely Guests Did serve Death's-Head as the last Course whereby They were inform'd of their Mortality Thus at the end of all their Dainty Chear They by Death's head of Death admonisht were This is the Counsel therefore that I give To such as do in full Enjoyment live Of Princely Pleasures know for certainty You are but Men tho Princes you must dye You are but Clay Death will dis-robe you quite And bury all your Glory out of sight Naked you shall arise and stand before The Judge of Heaven Earth have no more Advantage than the Beggar All shall have One common Resurrection from the Grave And no Respect of Persons will be there No notice will be taken what you were In Men's Esteem whether you were the Head Or such as was constrain'd to beg their Bread But what your Works have been O happy He Tho Rich or Poor of high or low Degree Whose VVorks shall be accepted He or they Shall stand in Judgment at the Judgment-Day All those whom Death finds in the Lord are blest They cease from Labour enter into Rest Thus have we run our Christian Compass round And if our way Canaan we have found Thorow the raging Seas of VVorldly Trouble Our Labors then will be rewarded double If we have learn'd to scape the Rocks and Sand And every Point o' th' Compass understand And upon every Point can stear aright Whether in pleasant Day or stormy Night If we each Point do so exactly learn That whether we be at Mast or Pump or Stern We can behave our selves in every Place Like Men accomplisht Happy is our Case OUr Compass being finisht one thing more Is necessary to be known Before Our Christian Compass we begin to con We must erect the Point it turns upon An Enlivened Conscience THe PIN on which our Christian Compass turns which giv's quick Motio to our lifeless Urns It is a Conscience touched with God's Word That 's quick sharper than a Two-edg'd Sword Which entereth into the very Soul And doth direct thine Eye unto the Pole God's Word 's the sacred Load-stone therefore The Conscience toucht therewith will ever more Gently be moving upon thy Affection With fixed Eyes to God for true Direction VVhen as the Seaman's Compass is erected And on his Part no Labor is neglected But that he dayly cons his Compass over Tho neither Sun nor Moon he can discover Minding his Compass he knows how to stear And knows when either Rocks or Sands be there Christians that do erect their Compass right Though they be Storm beset or in the Night Can find their way their Compass being laid Upon the Conscience but when no use is made Of Conscience in the things we undertake
impression leaves a pleasant savor Makes them in love with goodness lets them se● The foolish madness of Impiety Men truly brought unto a sight of sins Soon sees the danger of it and begins To take up resolutions to forsake it Hear now this Counsel O my Soul take it Be like the Sea-man who while he make sure To save himself doth all the rest secure Yet by the way this one thing must be knovvn While thou seeks others good slight not thin● own● 8. From these unconstant various mutations Which Sea-men daily see these Meditations Which under this eighth circumstance doth she● It self is here presented to our view How do calm Evenings many times deceive The too secure Sea-men who believe Perhaps because they see no present Storm Before the Sun goes down there will no harm Suprise their quiet rest but that they may Lye down in safety sleep till brake of day But now behold before the Night is spent A sudden Tempest is from Heaven sent That doth awake them they are dispossest All of a sunden of their quiet rest Their Evening's Calm's turn'd to a Night of sorrow In great distress they cry out for the Morrow Hoping the Day when come will bring Relief But Day Alas doth still increase their Grief O sad disastrous Accident most strange O great Mutation unexpected Change Who would have thought but some few Hours past Those Calms would usher in so great a Blast The Day is come but yet no Hope remains They call and cry but yet their fruitless pains Goes unrewarded till the dismal Night Comes on puts their slender Hopes to flight Their Hope is at an end their Day is done Their sable Night has now obscur'd the Sun And now they are expecting every Minit Their Ship should sink with every thing that 's in it But of a suddain as the Night came on The Tempest ceases all their Fears are gone They that were now with fear of Death possest Can now dispose themselves to quiet Rest They whose perplexed Thoughts the Storms did fright Who were in dread of a Tempestuous Night Can now lye down in safety sleep secure These strange Mutations Seamen do endure Thus stands the Case my Soul The same Mutation Dayly attends upon Soul-Navigation How calm sometimes an Evening doth appear The Soul goes on in sin and doth not fear He sins and sins again without relenting And not so much as dreams of his Repenting While others fear the losing of their Souls He sins and meets with nothing that controuls Can laugh at Vices and can play with Sins So great 's the Calm But suddainly begins An unexpected Alteration and He now begins to see and understand That God's an Enemy to Sin and will Not clear the Guilty but in wrath will kill All the Ungodly such as do rebell He will cast down into the Pit of Hell Where Sinners shall be Subjects of his Ire And live Eternally in Flames of Fire O what a Tempest is there now begun His Joy is over and his Peace is done Now every Sin seems like a mighty Wave He now cryes out with Peter O Lord save A miserable Wretch that am undone O may I see the Morning may the Sun Arise and fill my darkned Soul with Light And free me from the Terror of the Night Thus with Soul-melting lamentable crys My soul did long to see the Sun arise But when the Morning came alas my grief Seem'd rather more than less and my relief Seems farther off the Sun did shine so clear That now my sins like Armies do appear I saw Gods Love in Christ indeed most plain And understood that he for Sin was slain Yea furthermore I also understood T was for great Sinners that he shed his Blood But yet withall I also did perceive That such as did the Benefit receive Were real Converts such as did repent But I beheld my self Impenitent ● disobedient Rebell With Delight Have I committed sin both day and night ●or could I see a Reason to expect ●hat which was only due to God's Elect. Thus in the Day the Tempest did increase ●he more I saw the further off from Peace ●he Tempest thus continued till the Light ●as quite obscur'd and a dreadful Night ●ame fast approaching on my Watchful Eye ●ees nothing now but Death Eternally Behold My Sorrow 's now at height extream ●ow all the World for one refreshing Beam ●ut when I thought this dark and dismal Night ●ould sink my Soul I saw by Candle-Light spotless Dove bringing a Branch of Peace ●id to the Seas Be still Their Rage did cease was the sacred Candle of Gods Word ●at did this precious Beam of Light afford ●lainly saw from thence that Christ was sent ● save the sinful disobedient I saw from thence God never past Deaths Sentenc● On any Man till he refus'd Repentance I saw from thence God never did respect Any Man's Person nor did he reject The worst of Sinners that were but content To leave his sins and truly to repent I saw from thence God's Universal Love To every Man This sacred Light did prove That God loves all Men from his first Creation And from this Light I saw his great Compassio● Unto his Creature Man whom he did make In his own Image for which Creature 's sake He made a gracious Promise of Redemption Unto his Creature Man without Exemption I saw my self from thence as one of those That God out of the whole Creation chose To bear his Image hence I knew likewise If any one that bears his Image dies 'T is not because the Lord before hath said This Man whom I have in my Image made Shall dye Eternally he shall not have Sufficient Means allowed him to save His Soul from Death But 't is because he chu● To walk in Paths of Darkness and refuses That sacred Path of Light and Life that 's giv● Wherein all Men may stear their Course for H●v● All these bright Beams of glorious Light Divi● Forth from the Candle of God's Word did shine Even in the Night the stormy Wind did cease Which fill'd my Heart with Comfort Joy and Peace 9. How beautifull's the Ship when under sail Having th' advantage of a pleasant Gale With how much Pleasure Ease Chearfulness Do Seamen then attend their Business How pleasant is their passage when no Storm Puts them in fear of an approaching Harm When neither Wind nor Weather interpose How well all matters in their Voyage goes How beautiful's the Soul when its Affections Is wholly guided by Divine Directions When holy Breathings makes th' Affections swell With Love and Zeal for God and to excell When sacred Breathings thus possess the Mind He 's like a Ship that runs before the Wind Upon the smooth-fac'd Seas when never a blast Is sent to interpose O then what hast The Soul doth make for Heaven when it's Corruptions Is all subdu'd and makes no Interruptions How pleasant O my Soul and with what ease Thou dost
all things to obtain a Crown That never fades but will indure forever When Daies shall cease to be Wherefore indure In sailing on this Point of Holiness Upon the Law of Christ to lay the stress Of all your Holiness on that Foundation Who ever build shall never miss Salvation South South-East This fifteen Point o'th'Christian Compass here Is South South-East on that th' art now to stere Christ is thy Eastern-Point let him Him possess Thy Heart as Author of thy Holiness 'T is not enough to have Christ in thy Head Brain Knowledge will not stand in any stead If in thy heart Christ as thy King abide To Rule and Reign thou wilt be sanctifi'd 'T is Christ in thee the hope of Glory can knocks Make thee a holy and a happy Man Behold he 's at the door he stands and He calls and waits till thou unboult these Locks That hinders his Admittance 'T is thy Part To open first His to possess thy Heart If in thy heart he finds Admittance he Will enter in and will abide with thee He 'll sup with thee O Rich and bounteous Guest That thus invites Himself and makes the Feast He that so sweet a Guest doth entertain Will find his Interest trebled back again For thou shall sup with him the King of Kings Will entertain thee where the Angels sings Sweet Hallelujahs to the God of Heaven To whom all Honour Laud and Praise be given Make sure of Christ therefore use diligence To have by thee in store good Evidence That thou art Christ's and he hath firme Possession Within thy heart 'T is not a bare Profession Will witness this but if thou wilt insure Know where Christ truly dwells the Heart 's made pure No Love there is to any Sin at all Though in Appearance it seems very small If Sin through weakness such a Soul surprize There 's nothing under Pardon satisfies He 's not contented till his Peace be made With Christ whom he has griev'd He 's now afraid Of sinning any more Every offence Produces from him double Diligence In temporal Merchandize we use to say It is a low and undervaluing way Of Trading to insure But in this Case It is dishonourable low and base Not to insure They most this Trade advance That is the deepest in Assurance South by East This sixteenth Point i' th' Christian Compas● here Is South by East when ever thou dost stear Upon this Point thou must with Care endeavou● To learn this Point i' th' Compass right If ever With safety thou arrive at Happiness As East's by South know Christ by Holiness So nearly's Christ to Holiness related That by no means they can be separated Esteem such Principles as do profess To set up Christ apart from Holiness But frothy Notions vain and fruitless folly None can Love Christ that loves not to be Holy Holiness is Christ's Essence Oh! how then Can he be served by unholy Men Forms without Power is but empty things Meer Shaddow that no satisfaction brings Stirs up Contention and continual Strife 'T is Acts of Piety that is the Life Of all Religion God charges Israel With wickedness yea while they did excel In all Eternal Forms of Worship and Exact Obedience unto each Command Observing all their Festivals likewise Observant in their dayly-Sacrifice And in their solemn Meeting Ne'rtheless The Lord esteems not this for Holyness For all this while Equity was neglected And with the Widdow's Cry they 're not affected The Poor and Needy still they do oppress And are unmindful of the Fatherless The Hungry also did refuse to feed Nor cloth'd the Naked when they stood in need To Sick and such as did in Prison lye They shew'd no Pity in their Misery And while they cry The Temple of the Lord Their Prayers and Sacrifices are abhorr'd Their solemn Meetings finds no Acceptation Their holy Incense is Abomination And for this Cause because they lay the stress Upon these Forms apart from Holiness Unholy Persons knows not God aright Nor are their Pray'rs accepted in his sight But Christ and Holiness must go together They 're inconsistent one without another Take heed I say thou be not one of those That vainly think and foolishly suppose That if for Ordinances they appear Christ of necessity must needs be there Although they be unholy Persons and Do daily in the way of Sinners stand And some there are again as full of Folly Who vainly do suppose if they be Holy Christ in his Ordinance may be slighted But know this Point that Christ is so united Unto his own Appointments that whoever Shall undertake Christ and his Laws to sever Shall miss that Port to which they did intend To Sail at first and lose their wished End Christ's sacred Laws is not within the reach Of Natures Teaching Christ in his School doth teach His own Appointments Wouldst thou stear arigh● Upon this Point 'T is Christ must give thee Light Half of thy Compass thou hast now past over Where Sixteen Points thou fully may discover To every Point thou hast a brief Direction Untill thou comes at South where Sol's Reflection Most powerfully doth heat the barren Earth By which it is made fruitful and brings forth Fruit in abundance to all such as dwell Upon the Earth So such as do excell In Holiness hath Christ full risen there And in his greatest splendour shineth clear The Southern-Sun doth cast his fair Aspects Upon the North who back again reflects So God in Christ beholds with great Delight The holy Man as perfect in his sight The holy Man from this so sweet Reflection Beholds the Face of God with true Affection I have saith David set the Lord before My Face I shall behold him ever more As my Salvation my Redeemer and He is saith he alwayes at my Right-hand True Holiness fixes our sight upon No other Object but one God alone The Southern Sun did never yet send forth His pleasant Beams more strongly to the North Than sanctify'd Souls do cast an Eye Unto God's Heaven enthroned Majesty The Soul is then exhalted in it's height When God is kept directly in its sight South by West Two Quarters of our Compass we have past And to the Third we are arriv'd at last This Point we 're now upon is South by West As needful to be known as all the rest The Sun full South makes Noon 't is then at height But South by West gives notice that a Night Will quickly follow The Sun will now decline Till 't come at West then 't will cease to shine That Death 's thy Western Point do not forget Thy Southern-Sun 't will have a time to set There 's none that lives and shall not tast of Death The Holyest of Men must yield their Breath 'T is the deserved Wages of our Sin It was Transgression that first brought it in Death comes with such an Universal Stroke The Holyest of Men must bear its Yoke Abram that faithful Man expires and
dyes And so doth Jacob and his Sons likewise Moses and Joshua and good Samuel Elisha David all which did excell In Holiness yet Death must act his part Impartially must throw his fatal Dart Pains are the Messengers that Death will send Sickness and Weakness brings thee to thy End Yet when we look on Death Coelestially In such a case a Christian cannot dye He only sleeps his Death is but a Night The Trump will wake him in the morning light The holy Fathers all are said to sleep Their Graves as in in a sacred Bed doth keep Their breathless Bodies which must there remain Till God restore both Breath and Life again Yet with respect to Man this is a Death Because all Men surrender up their Breath To God who unto Man at first did give A comely Form and Breath to make him live Yet wicked Men oft take away by force That sacred Breath contrary to the course That God appoints If here you do not mind To stear aright although against the Wind Your weather-beaten Vessels may be driven Upon the Rocks and split but God hath given Such true Directions that thou needs not fear For Holiness directs thee how to stear Upon this dangerous Point and not miscarry Though Waves be rough and Winds be quite contrary South South-West Seventeen Points already is exprest This Eighteen Point draws nigher to the West An useful Point and needful to be known By all that do the Christian Compass own Death is the King of Terrors doth arrest All sorts of Men spares not the very best ●t is not Holyness that will excuse When Death sends forth his Summons Men may use Means to prolong their days but yet they must Direct or indirectly come to Dust Directly all Men tast of Death we know ●ecause the Lord hath said it shall be so ●ut holy Men do often yield their Breath ●t Tyrant's Pleasures who conspire their Death Abel a holy Man and yet must dye ●y Cain's inraged causless Cruelty wicked Man cannot endure the sight ●f him that 's Just because he brings to light ●is wicked Deeds and secretly reproves ●hose sinful Lusts his Soul so dearly loves ●nd for this cause did Herod lay his hand ●pon John Baptist and at his Command ●e holy Prophet must be put to Death ●d to the Cruel Tyrant yields his Breath ●r my Names sake saith Christ you shall be hated ●en of those to whom you stand related As Natural Brethren in the Flesh or rather As Children dear unto a tender Father Yet these Relations being wicked brings Their Children dear before the Face of King And Governours who with their Rulers will Imprison some and other some they 'l kill Thus did the best of Men by wicked Force Ere God's appointed time of Nature's Course Be fully spent This Point well understood You may ride safely on the raging Flood Of earthly Troubles but without Endeavou● To learn this Point you may be lost for ever Both Ship and Lading Holyness will guide y● Upon this Point no danger shall betide you For Holyness prepares the Soul for Death When God directly takes away thy Breath And frees thee from the fear of Death likewis● Which wicked Men maliciously devise South-West and by South South-West and by South Behold how t● Point li● This Point you must be sure to learn likewise Death is a Terror it can be no less When 't is not usher'd-in with Holyness If thou would dye in perfect Peace be sure Thou persevere in Holyness Indure Faithful to Death and thou shalt surely have A Crown of Life on th' other side the Grave But if upon this Point thou stears not right Thy hope't-for Morning will be turn'd to Night Thou wilt by storm beset and fiercely driven On Rocks Sands and never come to Heaven South-West South-West's the 20th Point o' th Compass and Even between the South and West doth stand ●his is an useful Point and therefore thou Must labour to be skill'd therein And know Tho Death with his impartial Sythe cut down The best of Men that ever yet was known Yet to the Saints Death's but an Agent sent On an Embassage and to this intent To tell the Saint That now the Sun grows low And Night draws on and now 't is time to go To his desired Bed where he must rest From all his Labours Such a Saint is blest Who while he lives all Filthiness abhorr'd And when he dies Death finds him in the Lord. Store up therefore before you go from hence Some solid and well-grounded Evidence That thou art in the Lord and when you dye Then take this Cordial that thou hast laid by One dram thereof will stand thee in more stead Than all the World Then Blessed are the Dead Will be a sweet and comfortable Sound And make your Joys though dying to abound Oh what a Comfort is it now to dye VVhen Souls can rightly to themselves apply The precious Promises God doth afford VVithin the Volumes of his holy VVord Even this Promise that the Lord doth grant To Man as Terms of the New Covenant Their Sins and their Iniquities no more Shall be remembered as heretofore In the first Legal Covenant they were Still called to remembrance every Year That Soul that sees himself by Christ remitted And also knows he freely stands acquitted When others mourn he can rejoyce and sing The worst that Death can do is but to bring ●im Tydings that he 's going to lay down An Earthly to enjoy a Heavenly Crown He freely in his arms can Death embrace O happy he that dies in such a Case The happy Tydings that grim Death doth bring To such a one doth take away the Sting Death only is a Terror unto those That do themselves to Righteousness oppose When such a one doth look Death in the Face O then he cryes out for a longer space But all too late Death will not be deny'd The Day of Grace is past thou 'st mist thy Tyde Well to this Point I now shall say no more But only this Get Evidence in store That thou art in the Lord that Death may be A Messenger of Joy and Peace to thee South-West and by West South-West by West this Point must also be Well taught and also learn'd by every He That Launcheth forth upon each raging Wave ●n hope he shall a happy Issue have Oh let me lodge this Errand in thy Breast Now thou art drawing near unto thy West Know that as Righteousness will not excuse A holy Man from Death So they that use To spend their Hours in wickedness and strife Shall not thereby prevent another Life For live they must Man's Life is purchased By Christ's dear Blood that on the Earth was shed Yea tho their Lives have been so vilely evil That they have striven to exceed the Devil ●n Wickedness yet shall not that prevent That Life in order to their Punishment Could Wicked Men by Sin prevent that Day How would