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A43796 The providence of God in sudden death ordinary and extraordinary vindicated and improved in a funeral sermon for Mrs. Mary Reve, wife to Mr. Nicholas Reve, merchant : first preached to the English Church in Rotterdam, January 14, 1685, and since enlarged / by Joseph Hill. Hill, Joseph, 1625-1707. 1685 (1685) Wing H2002; ESTC R12820 47,318 58

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with clear circumstances there we may judge of the chief reason or cause though there be several others concurring that we may make better use of examples as Scripture teaches us 1 Cor 10 5-10 Otherwise we must take heed of rushing into God's Secrets which belong not to us and only eye the general ends to make use of his Providences accordingly As where great and crying Sins goe before and the end is demonstration of Justice there we may see that 's the chief cause especially in extraordinary Punishments whereof we have many examples in Scripture And where also such Sinners are threatned there also truth appears in their being Punished as the Egyptians first born Ahaziah Joram Ahab Jezebel c. So when the Sin is clearly visible in the Death a Haman's Agag's and innumerable others that shed Man's Blood and accordingly have their own unexspectedly shed Or when destruction follows at the heels of great Sins as the three thousand Israelites slayn for the molten calf Exod. 32. and while the flesh was between their teeth the wrath of the Lord was kindled against them Numb 11. and Herod immediatly simitten and eaten of worms Acts. 12. And yet when the vindication of Gods laws and ordinances is manifested to be the end its hard to say whether his love to the truth and ordinances of his institution be not the chief reason thô justice be more discernable for we must not judge all those that are simitten and destroyed even by God's immediate hand to perish eternally And therfore it is observable that as God never appeard so terribly as at the giving the law from mount Sinai so his wrath was never so hot nor such severity used as against the first trangsgressors to assert the honor of his laws and make them more regarded afterwards As in the first idolatry after their promulgation Exod. 32 10. At the first burnt-offerings when Nadab and Abihu offered strange fire that is common and not from the altar there went out fire from the Lord and devoured them the punishment suting to their sin Levit. 10. As afterwards Numb 16. when Corah and others descended from Levi endeavoured to make the priesthood common to all the Levites v. 10. and Dathan and Abiram Reubenites and others the politick power of Moses and the seventy elders newly establisht by God Ch. xi common with the rest the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up v. 32. and fire from the Lord consumed the two hundred and fifty that offered inconse v 35. whose censers God commanded to be used for a sign and memorial thereof v. 38. and 40. and for the peoples murmuring at this dispensation fourteen thousand and seven hundred of them dyed of the plague v. 49. So when God appoynted the punishment for presumtuoussins the first offender the man that punishment sticks on the sabbath day is by God's appoyntment stoned to death Numb 15. Thus God vindicated the honour of his ark with smiting the Philistines and after it's returne above fifty thousand of the men of Beth-shemesh shewing thereby that the ark was the same thô it had been among the uncircumcised and the effects of feare were answerable 1 Sam. c. 5. and c. 6. and after that Vzzah for his rash taking hold of it thô as seems to us for a good end for the oxen shook it so that David was affraid and we may suppose the people much more 2 Sam. 6. And thus allso God vindicated the honor of Christianity at the first planting of the Gospel in smiting Ananias and Sapphira so that great feare came upon all the Church and upon as many as heard these things Acts. 5. But where no notorious crimes preceed and other particular ends than justice appear there sudden death is the Occasion and God's love to his truth and messingers that declare it or servants that profess or suffer for it the chief cause and reason thereof As the widow of Sarepia's son raised to life by Elijah by which he is acknowledged a man of God and the word of the Lord in his mouth truth 1 Kings 17. the Shunammite's son by Elisha whose miracles resembled his master Elijah's 2 Kings 4. So Lazarus's as Christ declares to the messinger his sisters sent to him This sicknes is not unto death thô in its nature and next end it was yet not irrevocably as they feared but for the glory of God that the son of God might be glorified thereby intimating that this of Lazarus should be used as a means of glorifying God and his son in miraculous raising him again to life and therby confirming his office of Messiah and Doctrine of the Gospel as we read it did most eminently J●hn 11. And the noble army of Martyrs whom God brings forth as his Champions for the truth shewing the power of his grace and their sincerity that they doe not serve God for wordly things as the devil slanderd Job but love him their Savior and his truth above their own lives and making their death which their enimies count ignominious honourable to him religion and themselves and using it to quite contrary ends than their persecutors design namely the increase and confirmation of his Church and people I have been the longer upon these extraordinary examples both to cleare the truth in the general and the several kinds of sudden death and allso in the ordinary cases that now follow to be more particularly spoken of For by a parity of reason it will follow that as God makes different use of like providences suting them to different ends and making them occasions and means of different effects in wonderful variety according to his infinite wisdom and power so he hath accordingly particular reasons that are just and weighty for his dispensations thô unknown to us except he discovers them as his justice in extraordinary punishments for enormous offences or his goodnes mercy and other causes when it is otherwise So that where no sins or ends and effects more than common there we are not able nor ought we to judge of God's reason why these rather than others are suddenly taken away either by diseases as apoplexies convulsions and the like or by pains as women in travel or by wars fire water and other accidents these things falling alike to all for if the kinds of death or any temporal punishments were infallible signs of God's hatred and temporal blessings of his love we could never reconcile God's word we are bound to believe with the works of providence which are but the fulfilling of it and the execution of his purposes In such cases therefore when God exercises us as Job who is set forth to us as a pattern of patience in dark providences prayed shew me why thou contendest with me c. 10. and waited for the end of the Lord so should we God many times dealing with us as Christ said to Peter what I do thou knowest not now but thou shalt know hereafter As any one hearing Solomon's
with this world especially the healthful and those that wallow in pleasure and prosperity that they have neither list nor leisure to think seriously and prepare for the next As if they were priviledged from the like stroke and had a protection from death's arresting them or when it doth could bride it off for some time or make such a covenant with hell as will secure them So great is the security and stupidity of most that they regard not these warnings nor think themselves longer concernd when once the funerals are over Therfore that we may make better use of them 1 Suppose the like or worse may befall thee or thine whilst secure sinners still suppose the best Not to disquiet thy selfe with groundles fears but to prepare for all events of providence which are so never the neerer thee but thou much fitter for them unexspected crosses of all others being the hardliest born Say then what befalls others may befall me allso by this supposition as a prospective bring thy own and thy friends death neer thee think of it frequently and converse with it familiarly that so neither may surprize thee Exempt not thy selfe or thy Relations from that which frequently befalls others How many are the acute diseases that quickly snap mans life asunder How many the casualties and accidents whereby men of all ranks and conditions have perisht in all ages and places unexspectedly * Plin. l. 7. c. 53. de mortibus repentinis Val. Max. l. 9. c. 12. Zuinger Theatrum l. 18. To reckon those recorded by authors and known to our selves would take up our whole time 2. Flatter not thy self that thou and thine shall live long and die leisurely Oh the vain and deceitful hopes that most have of living still on and on they know not how long The younger that have death on their backs think they must of course live to be aged the old that have death before their faces and gray hairs not only here and there upon them but all over them hope still of holding out yea when sicknes is entred and death at the door we still hope that we or ours shall escape with life I have seldom met with one so old that hoped not to rub aut som years longer and never with any to whom their years past and to com did not seem of a different length Looking backwards on many years past they count them but a short time and usually their work therein litle but looking forwards on a few before them reckon them long and what a deale of work they shall doe therein so casily doe we deceive our selves in numbering our days and measuring our work that will not be deceived by others in any accompt that is of concernment 3 Reckon life by days not years seing none know what hour the son of man will com and call for them Thus the best and wisest of men reckoned their lives as Jacob Moses Job David and Solomon Gen. 47. v. 9. Ps 90.14 Job 14.5 Ps 39.5 Eceles 8 15. This right numbering our days would make us apply our hearts to wisdom by improving our present time and opportunities in the day of grace cutting off our vain hopes of future uncertainties and looking on every day as a new gift of God for his work Lam. 3.23 If Horace a heathen could say Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum much more should a Christian believe and live every day as his last because it may be so and if it be not it is more than any one knows Our Lord having wisely and mercisully conceald both the time and place of our departure from us that our lives might not be spent in continual madnes of mirth and vanity in our former and of fears and melancholy in our later days but might be restrained from sin and quickned to duty not delaying our preparations for death but living in a constant exspectation thereof nor presuming of future time not in our power but rightly improving our present with our Apostle dying daily and as a good man said that of twenty years he had known no morrow This divine arithmetick of numbring our days Moses and David begd of God and much more need have we to make our hearts so sensible of our frailty from these examples that we may get ready to follow and may not be only unwilling to live as many through the troubles of life but willing to die which grace only enables us to when prepared 4 Set these examples before thee so as they may affect thy heart and make it restles till they be duly improved by serious consideration That when others are destroyed from morning to evening or every hour of the day it may not be without any regarding it Job 4.20 Say how soon may this befall me or mine How uncertain is our time here and how certain death and eternity hereafter How doe I loyter whilst time flies and my glas perhaps ending and how litle of that work don which must be don or I am lost for ever Am I fit to look death in the face or a just and holy God in judgment have I not delayed long enough allready and is there not danger in these delays Is my soul and eternal salvation of so litle consequence that my heart should still deceive me in disregarding them Is it not wisdom to doe that first that is of greatest consequence and necessity Is not all my time litle enough for so great a work as preparing for eternity and shall I lose more Have so many of God's servants that have taken so much pains so long time in Religion fasting weeping praying hearing c. confest themselves unready for death what shall I be that have don so litle How dismal will death be to me if no better prepared for it Will Christ stay any more for me then he did for the foolish virgins was it not only they that were ready that entred in with him Or will he when once the door of mercy is shut open it for me alone No no I cannot exspect it and therfore will take his counsel and watch not knowing the day or hour wherein he cometh 5 Make sure to be habitually prepared at least for death by being reconciled to God through Christ Acquaint therfore thy self with him and be at peace and take heed of living in that state wherein thou wouldst be loth to die See to the soundnes of thy repentance towards God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ and the sincerity of thy obedience as ever thou meanest to secure the better part thy soule and thy future happines in eternity And labor after assurance that when this earthly house of thy tabernacle is dissolved thou hast an house eternal in the heavens as ever thou desirest to die comfortably The want of this makes death so dismal to those that are sensible what it is to die How many that live under the Gospel and know no more than the heathen Adrian
or complaining because God did it Ps 39.9 Peter looks only at Christ's enemies and quarrels Christ at God and submits to death the cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it J●b 18.11 If Epictetus could say I have yielded my desires to God how much more should we that are Christians 2 Be sensible of thy sins and deserts for them so wilst thou more willingly accept and better beare the punishment of them Wherfore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sins Lam. 3.39 I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him saith the Church Micah 7.9 Those complain most that least know themselves and their sins 3 Compare our sufferings several ways and we shall see small reason for impatience under them of what kind soever they be As 1 with our sins The Church complaind there was no sorrow like hers yet after acknowledges it is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed and thou our God hast punisht us less than our iniquities deserve Which is true of the greatest punishments on this side hell For if we had our desert in stead of weeping here for wives or children and as Rachel will not be comforted because they are not we might be howling there in despaire in a state for ever uncable of the least comfort 2 With our enjoyments Many mercies for one affliction many spiritual mercies for one temporal affliction 3 With the suffering of others What are any of ours to Job's and many of God's best servants whom he often strips not of one only but of most or all their earthly comforts at once If all men or especially God's people should bring their miseries together and lay them in a common heap none of us should have our share by much 4 With the good we may gather by them As to fins for the discovering them to us and making us search and try our wayes and turne again to the Lord. For the curing them in us as security pride hypocrisie worldlines doting on creature comforts unprofitablnes under the means of grace c. And for the preventing sin from us Which otherwise we should he apt to fall into if God did not hedge up our way with these thorns So in reference to graces Afflictions being as fire to refine and purify them and make for the exercising improving and quickening of them as our faith hope love zeale patience experience humility heavenly-mindednes prayer c. And in regard of more communion with God here and more glory in heaven hereafter The loss of friends is abundantly made up in more enjoyment of God which his people experience frequently who never enjoy him so much as when they enjoy the creature least May not Christ say am I not better then all these These all die away but God and Christ remain the same A good woman when her friends died would often say well however my God lives at length her husband dying she lamented bitterly that her child askt her Mother is your God dead at which she took up blaming her self for her impatience And the Apostle declares That our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us not meritoriously but occasionally and instrumentally when sanctified a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 4 Let faith and patience have their perfect work in you Faith in God through Christ and the promises for a holy use and blessed effect of these sad providences it being He that teaches you to profit by them making you partakers of his holines and them to yield the peaceable fruit of righteousnes Patience to bear them aright in a holy submission and compliance with Gods will in the greatest crosnes of events when you have rekond comforts and are arrested with sorrows If the vertue of patience be as Seneca faith a salve for all soars much more the grace which thô it make not miseries none yet keeps us from being miserable by them In our duty it is good to doe that of choice we must doe of necessity Quarrel not therfore with God for this is but like the wild and ignorant Indians that shoot their arrows at the sun when it scorches them which fall back upon their own heads Nor repine at his dealings for this will but double the affliction not remedy it Say not I could beare any cross but this For you doe but deceive your self in this plea for your impatience being most sensible of the present having forgot former and not knowing or much regarding future as we are allways most sensible of the present weather And were it so as you think it is not for you to choose your own crosses no more than your comforts Check your selves and indulge not impatience which discomposes and unfits you for your duty both towards God and men as we see in Jonah whose prayers in that temper are nothing but quarrelling with God Be not so sinfully selfish as to wish them so much to their loss as to be with you again who have finished their course past the fears and pangs of death left this troublesom world and got rid of their sins and Satan's temptations and crowned with righteousnes in eternal life Envy not the early happines of thy wife that is gon to a better husband nor of thy child that is gon to his heavenly Father But prepare thou to follow and be with Christ and them in heaven where there will be no more parting Now that God by the clouds gathering so thick and black about us threatens us with a dreadful storm we have reason to count them more than ordinary blest and happy that are got safe home to their father's house and those heavenly mansions out of the reach of men or devils God's smoking us out of these houses of clay by these particular providences allso may and justly should make our eyes water but not be filld with tears or our hearts with sorrows too much either in degree or duration for those gon before us who might say to us as Christ to the daughters of Jerusalem weep not for us but for your selves and your children that are left behind in the days a coming in a troublesom world And that none should sorrow for this our sister as others which have no hope I might shew more largely if I had known her longer Who thô taken from us in an hour we thought not yet we have reason to believe neither unthought of nor unprepared for by her not only in regard of the hazardous condition she knew she was to pass thorow but the tenure of her life which was vertuous and unblamable her conversation having been answerable to her pious education The certainty of death and uncertainty of the time is not more commonly said than abused by the most who in stead of being allways ready because they know not the time are less ready at all times but the godly wise have not so learned Christ who have been taught by him to watch because they know not what hour he will come To speak of that good in her which she held in common with all other Christians is needles In these loose and declining times she kept her integrity and was at more than ordinary pains for the injoyment of the publique ordinances both in season and out of season as God afforded opportunity How should her early rising to them shame most of us for our sloth if we had any shame in us She redeemed the time in these evil days for her private devotion not vainly spending it in pleasure as too many doe but improving it for eternity making God's word her companion and counsellor Her converse and carriage was modest and prudent guiding both her tongue and affairs with discretion Never speaking evil of any or censoriously judging of others as the unbridled and licentious tongues of many that run at random who feare not to speak evil of dignities and spare not uncharitably to censure all and often better than themselves because they are not of their way In brief she was a Mary in God's house as well as a Martha in her own Finally for her eternal salvation she was nether presumtuously confident as the ignorant nor fearfully diffident as the unbelievers but in a way of duty reposed her soul on Gods mercy and the merits of her Savior being wont to say the feared death but not to be dead Who seemed to be heard in that she feared God removing death as it were out of her sight by those apoplectical or convulsive fits that seised on her and made her senseles wherby death became less terrible to her at least if it was any terror at all And for a Christian sensible of sin and future judgement and eternity not to be affraid to be dead is to me an argument of more than ordinary faith in Christ and more than most of us I feare if we were put to it can truly say For such a one as Epicharmus whom Tully * L. 1. Tuscul Quaest Emori nolo sed me esse mortuum nihil aestimo q. d. mortem horreo idque natura verum ubi fuero mortuus nihil amplius faciam quia nullus ero Pagnini Scholia mentions who neither believes the immortality of the soul or a future state to say so is no wonder but for a Christian that believes both is rare Let 's then comfort our selves that she sleeps sweetly in Jesus and get ready that at what hour soever he shall call for us we may not have our work to doe and both fear death and to be dead but may be fitted to give up our accounts with comfort and be ever with the Lord. FINIS
ventilated they were not judged necessary at the interment there being neither precept nor precedent in Scripture for more than decent buriall with lamentations nor any reason why they should not be made for the godly poore of exemplary lives and deaths as well as the rich whose purses generally procure them Yet upon occasions it was judged very necessary on the Lord's day or in weekly lectures to admonish the living of their mortality direct the sorrowfull Relations in their duty and stir up all to immitate laudable examples and prepare for following those departed in the faith Seing then it is not material whether we have the corps in a coffin before our eyes according to the custome in England or it be coverd with earth as here so that we have but the Deceased's life and death in our minds and memories for our betterment I shall proceed to shew you the agreablenes of this portion of Scripture to the present occasion Vers. 16. Shews where Jacob and his family were viz. but a litle way from Eprath whither they were going How exactly doth God in his providence set the bounds of journeys as wel as habitations the places and times of our lives and deaths And what befel them there Rachel travailed and had hard labor The best of women may have the bitterest pains in child-birth and the saddest remembrance of God's sentence In sorrow thou shalt bring forth child'ren Gen. 3 16. Vers 17. The midwife incourages her in her pains and fears with having another son i. e. besides Joseph she had allready But all in vaine she regards it not as in the like case Phineas wife 1 Sam. 4 20. Earthly comforts signify litle to dieing persons Vers. 18. Rachel who was not satisfied with Joseph alone but desired another son Gen. 30 24. now when she haith him calls him Ben-oni the son of my sorrow It is dangerous not to rest contented with our present injoyments When we desire creature comforts immoderatly God may grant them so that they not only proove comfortles but bitternes to us Numb 11 4 33. and Ps 78 29 30 31. The time when she thus named him was as her soule was in departing whereby her death as all others is set forth to us which the following words for she died declare Souls die not with our bodies They goe to God that gave them to be judged by him Eccles. 12 7. The union of our souls and bodies being life and their parting againe death 1 Kings 17 21 22. therfore dieing Stephen prays Lord Jesus receive my spirit Act. 7 59. But Jacob lost that name should be a continual renovation of his sorrow calls him Benjamin the son of the right hand denoting his affection to him Ps 80 17. It is wisdom to suit names to occasional providences Vers 19. In the Text we have I. Rachel's death II. Burial III. Place of both I. Rachel died Beutiful Rachel Jacob's dearly beloved Rachel dies whilst blear-eyed Leah lives The more we love any creature person or thing the more danger we are in to lose it God often times crossing our inordinate affections for our good in taking away our beloved comforts and sparing those that are despised Rachel that so passionately desired children that she said unto Jacob give me children or else I die Gen. 30 1. now dies by having them Our immoderate desires many times cost us very deare II. And was buried The most beloved alive when they are dead we desire to have buried out of our sight as Abraham said of Sarah Gen. 23 4. A decent burial of the dead is the living Relations duty Yea somtimes memorials of the deceased may be expedient when free from ostentation and superstition as we see in the following verse Jacob sets a pillar upon her grave as a standing monument of his affection and her desert III. In the way to Ephrath which is Beth-lehem Renowned for our Savior's birth called Beth-lehem Ephratah Micah 5 2. and of Judea Math. 2 1 5 6. to distinguish it from that in Galilee and the city of David Luke 2 4 John 7 42. for his birth and education as Zion was for his building and habitation 2 Sam. 5 7 9. c. which is by interpretation a house of bread and so most fitting for Christ's birth who was the Son of David according to the flesh and the true bread of life as he inculcates at least 7 times on one occasion Iohn 6 About a mile as some say that have seen the place short of this Beth-lehem Rachel dies in the way distant from her own and husbands friends in an unsetled condition without habitation We all may know where we were born but none knows where or in what condition they shall die And is there buried If we live the life and die the death of the righteous it matters not much where we are buried nor at what distance from the rest of our friends How delicate soever the body may be the carcas is not curious in what bed of dust it sleeps and the souls of Gods people find as neare a way to heaven from any one place upon earth as other Many superstitious people now adays would think themselves happy to die so neare Beth-lehem that they might be buried there But Jacob well knew that burial places are not of religious consideration but any fit place pointed out by providence might serve well enough for the best of his family Thô he and his son Joseph likewise that died in Egypt would have their body and bones buried in Canaan yet that was to testify their dieing in the faith of God's promis of that land ●o their posterity and to assure them of their return thither and therfore is otherwise of no consideration to us It is but of later times that any were buried in Churches or cities but allways abroad as all scripture and other Histories and laws allso witnes When the opinion of Purgatory and holines of places prevailed at first men would be buried nigh the Churches that they might be remembred in the prayers and oblations of those that met there and afterwards in them because they thought them more sacred which tho opposed by * V. Durantus de ritib. Ecclesiae l. 1. c. 23. Gerhardus de morte §. 78-88 many laws civil and Ecclesiastical and writers ancient and modern by some as an innovation others as superstitious and many as dangerous to the health of the living especially in times and places of infection yet all in vaine the tyrant custom hath so prevailed that it s grown too strong for all contradiction But I have deteyned you too long from that I chiefly designe which is not so much to speake of death and mortality as such a surprising death as this Scripture speaks of clearly to the occasion and to vindicate God's providence therein and shew what improvement we should make thereof D. God takes from us our dearest Relations and creature comforts sometimes suddenly when we least exspect
whither they shall goe at their death is lamentable to consider Get thy self allso as much as possible actually prepared by keeping up thy assurance evenning thy accounts daily with God walking with him as Enoch having thy conversation in heaven whilst on earth and thy fellowship with the Father and his son Jesus Christ so shall death never surprize thee or affright thee much less hurt thee changing only thy place not thy company opening the door for thy entrance into life and being ever with the Lord which then thou wilt find bejond all thy present faith and hopes infinitly better than being in this world Lastly prepare allso for thy Relations leaving thee Our seldom thinking of this before hand makes it difficult for us to beare Be sensible of and thankful for God's giving and continuing them to thee seeing he denies them som and takes them from others use them as his left hand blessings but enjoy them not as thy portion depend on him for comfort from them resigne them to him from whom thou receivedst them doe thy duty towards them whilst thou hast them so shalt thou have comfort when thou losest them 4 Let this caution us from rash censuring and judging of these kind of providences seeing in the text God's taking away unexpectedly a good Rachel from Jacob one of his best servants 1 Not the just and holy God for them In denying him and his providence with the Atheists Who seeing often the vilest of men spared as Diagoras did a perjur'd person and better taken away as Cotta his friend Drusus and Ovid his Tibullus open their mouths against heaven in denying a God and his providence in the world Or 2 in judging him unjust and cruel For he delights not in death as it is the destruction of his creature but as it is the exercising of judgment and righteousnes in the earth Jer. 9.24 His works are wondrous that though a wise man as Solomon think to know them yet shall he not be able Eccles 8.17 The most inquisitive run but into a labarynth wherein they lose themseves at last For how can we possibly be able to judg of his proceedings who are wholy ignorant of the grounds of them It is God only that knows mens intentions and his own designs that he hath to accomplish and all the links in the chaine of providence so that where he manifests not these we are in the dark and incompetent judges Our profoundly learned Contry-man Bradwardine * De Causa Dei L. 1.0.31 hath a remarhable story to this purpose of a devout man tempted to blaspheme providence to whom God sent an angel in humane shape that commanded him to follow him And leads him to the house of a good man who entertaind them very kindly that night from whom he secretly took a cup he valewed highly and going thence to a wicked mans house the second night who treated them not so well gives him the cup at their departure Having been the third night most curteously entertaind in the morning he threw the mans servant off a bridge and drowns him and coming the fourth night to an honest man that made them heartily welcom slew his litle son that cryed and sufferd them not to sleep Then he acquaints his follower why he did these so strange things saying he was sent of God to satisfy him I took the cup saith he from the first a good man for his good because he lov'd it too much and gave it the second a bad man that he might receive his reward at present I drowned the servant of the third because he had resolved the next day to slay his master whom I preserved from death and his servant from committing murder that he might be less punisht in hell The fourth before he had a son and heir was very charitable and after grew penurious therfore I took away the cause of his covetousnes and conveyd his sons soul to paradise So true is that of the Psalmist Thy righteousnes is like the great mountains thy judgments are a great deep Thy foot steps are not known and therfore cannot be traced by us poor ignorant mortals Ps 36.6 and 77.19 Nor 3 must we judge when we see the righteous and wicked taken alike away that God's Providence goes blindfold to work as the Heathen think the fates doe and sweeps away one and another hand over head for so we shall neither eye God in nor make a right use of his dealings with us We cannot indeed make or discern the difference as to us sicknes and sword devours one as well as another but this is fallacia sensus both scripture and reason teaches us that there is a very particular direction in all that befalls us from the hand of God Every disease that happens every bullet that flies every wave of the sea and every casualty have their commission from God before they can touch or destroy any If a sparrow falls not on the ground without him much less a mans life and if the very hairs of our head are all numbred much more our days are so determined Math. 10.29 30. Job 7.1 and 14.5 14. Prov. 16.33 Nor lastly must we imagin that righteousnes will exempt us from sudden destruction in common calamities with the wicked As Abraham seems to judge in his pleading for Sodom Gen. 18.23 24 25. For thô God will rather spare the wicked for the righteous sake as he there declares and in extraordinary cases where he hath past his particular promise doth so as God gave Paul all that sailed with him Acts. 27. and makes a distinction as Ezek 9.4 5 6. Mal. 3.17 18 yet in ordinary it is not so but the green and dry tree denoting as it follows the righteous and the wicked perish together Ezek 20.47 and 21.3 And no wonder for usally the good are infected with or one way or other guilty of the sins of the times and places where they live and if they partake in sins its reasonable they allso partake in plagues Rev. 18.4 Or if not yet being mixt with the wicked in an ordinary way it cannot be otherwise as experience shews us in wars famin pestilence inundations shipwracks and the like Especially earth quakes wherein many cities have been wholy swallowed up and many with the inhabitants in a great patt destroyed the histories whereof would fill a volum Passing those of old 12 cities of Asia say Pliny and Tacitus 13 saith Ensebius in our Saviors daies in one night Coloss Laodicea Hierapolis in the year 63.3 in Cyprus in 77.4 in Asia and 2. in Greece in 105.3 in Galatia in 109. Antioch Nicomedia and Nice several times Nicopolis and Caesarea in 128. Smyrna allso and Corinth afterwards and 10 in Crete in one year so 20 in Germany in later times besides many others these being sufficent for my purpose in most of which multitudes of Christians as well as others perisht And as God takes them away as he sees good
Ezeh 16.50 so when som are extraordinarily delivered that is allso ascribed to his soveraignty and befalls the wicked as wel as the righteous as scripture shews us I have overthrown some of you as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah and ye were as a firebrand pluckt out of the burning yet have ye not returnd unto me saith the Lord. Amos. 4.11 So that the experience of all ages verisies Salomon's words which ate interpretative not exclusive of providence and shews how things goe ordinarily under its conduct when he saith all things come alike to all there is one event to the righteous and to the wick●d Eccles 9.2 The same manner of afflictions and death materially befalling the one as the other By which unseeming providence God secures his people from the rage and malice of Sathan and wicked men in this world which would not be habitable for saints if they were certainly known and keeps off the scandal of Religion none knowing who are sincere or only hypocritical and mens coming to him for base ends whereby we should have more professors but worse Christians It being sufficient for his people's security that he knows them perfectly and makes a difference between them and the wicked of the world in the same providence where we can make none in his fatherly affection to them therein in his intention direction and ordering thereof for their good and in his issuing all in their eternal salvation 2 As we must not judge amis of God's proceedings so neither must we rashly judg of those so taken away Either of the cause like the Barbarians that judged the Aposte Paul a murderer from the viper fastning on his hand thinking he would fall down dead suddenly of which I have spoken in the reasons or of their eternal state and condition For if the life be good no manner of death is bad and if the life be bad the death is seldom good no evil of punishment but only of sin abates God's fatherly affection to his children but rather increases it or any way lessens their interest in his favor witnes Abel and all the Prophets to Zacharias slain between the Temple and altar Stephen and all the Apostles and Martyrs and best of men in all ages I know but one place of scripture that looks like judging mens eternal state by temporal judgments and that is of Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities about them suffering the vengeance of eternal fire Jude 7. Which yet is not meant of the next world in hell thô being the worst we read of and not ten righteous amongst them are damned most of them as Christ that knew intimates when he saith Math. 11. it shall be more tolerable for them than Corazin at the day of judgment the degree implying the kind but only the duration of the judgment in this world and as an emblem of the day of judgment when God shal bring a diluviam ignis as Irenaus calls it or rain hell out of heaven upon the world that now is and of the punishment of the wicked as the Psalmist alluding therto tells us this shall be the portion of their cup Ps 11.6 Learne we then to goe no further than scripture that speaks sparingly of mens eternal state and never that I know of concludes damnation from God's punishments here but allways from mens sins unrepented of and let us make no conclusions upon such false grounds nor presume to ascend Christs tribunal in condemning any to eternal punishments Pererius and others are too bold in asserting all the old world that were drowned except infants were damned For not to mention their number that world in all probability being as populous as the present and granting the generality were even of the sons of God that had corrupted their ways yet scripture speaking only indefinitly it is not for us to make it universal that all had or that nome repented upon the flood 's approaching allbeit God only establisht covenant with Noah and his family as afterwards with Abraham and his as the best in their generations Nor lastly must we censure the Relations of any suddenly taken away as if it were for som extraordinary sins that God so deals with them Which was the fault of Job's three friends For the devil whom God ordinarily restrains of his will more than wicked men in regard of his great malice and power and his being in termino or condemnd thô not fully executed whereas men are here only in via or probationers in reference to their future judgment having accused Job falsly and being by God extraordinarily permitted his pleasure on all he hath for the tryal and exercise of this noble champion begins with his estate knowing Job would have valewed that less if he had before lost his children then destroys them allso suddenly sparing the wife that was in his power who it should seem was none of the best for his second in this combat And his friends knowing these things and seeing his bodily sufferings allso to be very great allthô the loss of his children seems his greatest outward affliction his personal being greater in his inward troubles of spirit than bodily for thô he was greivously sore and pained yet not heart-sick or in dainger of death they in stead of comforting him add affliction to the afflicted censure him as unrighteous and think to prove him so by this argument That he that is sorely afflicted of God is either an open sinner or secret hypocrite this Job denies and disputes it with them and Elihu moderates determining God's favor and afflictions to be consistent which God confirms and shews his displeasure against the others Let this example of these good men's censoriousnes keep us from playing the Criticks in such cases and to judge nothing before the time either of God or men rashly lest he deal with us after our folly but stay till this dust that blinds us be blown out of our eyes and then shall we see clearly the reason of all at the day of the revelation of the righteous judgment of God Rom. 2.5 5 For Application to those especially concernd in the loss of their deare Relations that they bear it Christianly I need say the less of this because many have said so much tho the practise of most is not answerable and especially those that are surprized For the suddennes thereof discomposes our minds makes us inconsiderate and laying aside the rule both of scripture and reason comply with present sense quarelling with God as Jonah for the loss of his guord or any thing next us as the cause thereof as Job's wife with her husbands religion and the good widow with Elijah for the sudden death of her son 1 Kings 17. Briefly therfore 1 Eye God as the author and orderer of all that befalls us His soverainty power goodnes justice wisdom c. in the kind manner measure time and issue of afflictions David was dumb in silence opened not his mouth in murmuring
in us such is the wretchednes of our hearts that usually the better God is to us the worse we are to him and the more enjoyment he gives us of earthly friends the more we forget our heavenly father When we want and desire husbands wives children friends or any earthly comforts that we cannot obteine we seek God for them and when he threatens to take them from us we cry to him to spare us them but when we enjoy these even when he denies or takes them away from others and have most reason to eye and own him in them depend upon him for them and use them as encouragements to serve him that gives and continues them to us we are apt to forget him set these up in his room make them our God and take up with them as our portion so that he is then litle regarded of the most and less than he ought by the best When he therfore blows upon these blessings it is to bring us to set them in their due place and keep them so in subordination to himself and make us mind him more for the future and them less than formerly lest these streams of creature comforts that should lead us to him should draw us from him and drown us in perdition For now that reason through sin hath lost its soverainty over us sense lying so near us usually sways us and brings the soul not only to comply with the necessities of our present state in these Relations for the comfort of this life which is lawful being God's institution in innocency but to such a condescention to the body which only skils sensual things that for the most part men live a meer animal life without God in the world not like men capable of enjoying him much less like Christians How happy were it then that as by experience we learn the worth of these things by the want of them so we would allso their worthlesnes in comparison of him who is our only happines thus should we gain more by our parting with them than by our enjoying them com to make a happy exchange These providences duly considered and rightly used would recall us back again from the creature to God awaken conscience and make every one turn preacher to himself that God may have the prevailing choice Saying I see husband or wife parents or children are soon gon all of them but vanity miserable comforters are ye all I said I shall die in my nest my beloved yoke-fellow shall comfort me this son will be the staf of my old age that friend will be my support but how quickly am I disappoynted of one and may be of all these perishing comforts I still thought and hoped satisfaction would arise from these things I had a mind to liked and loved but find my self continually deceived I will therfore seek it no more in these houses of clay where it is not to be found but in the living God in whose enjoyment it is only to be had and then I may hope contentment with the portion of these he gives me will allso dwell with me which hath been all along so great a stranger How have I foolishly forsaken the fountane of living waters of salvation and been hewing out to my selfe one broken cistern after another of creature comforts when I stil found as fast as I made them they will hold no water I have too long dabled in these nether springs that only feed the winter brooks which dry up on a sudden when I most want them I will betake me to the upper springs of grace that flow continually which can only quench the thirsty desires of my soul Lord whom have I in heaven but thee and there is none upon earth I desire in comparison of thee all these faile me but thou wilt never faile me therfore I choose thee for my portion who wilt be so for ever Ps 73. And lastly from our dependence upon them for support and comfort Man fallen from God affects a self-sufficiency and finding the shortnes thereof in himself in stead of looking above and returning to him looks about him and cries who will shew me any good and fixing on such earthly blessings as he either hath or hopes for rests on them so that God is but a cypher and his blessings the figure with him till he see his mistake God indeed hath the name and profession of our faith but sad experience shews us how ready our hearts are to depart from him and to make the creature our confidence and if our projects and exspectations faile us therein to sit down in despondency as if there were no remedy Even the best of men are apt to over-reckon themselves in their hopes over-act their reliance on creature comforts and leane too much on these sensible supports till God lets them see what broken reeds they rely upon and upon what sandy foundations they build vast hopes which with the least puff of his displeasure fall to the ground Then the hearts of foolish Nabals die within them and holy Davids drawn to comfort themselves in their God Thus the Church forbidden to trust in a friend or those most neerly allyed and finding the disappoyntment of such adherence resolves I will look unto the Lord. Micah 7.5 6 7. Thus the wife depending on her husband when he is taken from her and she a desolate widow trusts in God 1 Tim. 5.5 Thus the child of whom we say as Lamech this same shall comfort us being taken away shews us our folly in reckoning so long before hand and on such uncertainties These providences as well as the word calls to us and saith Let not the wise man trust and glory in his wisdom seing unexspected events daily confound the wisest nor the strong man in his strength which every sicknes or small accident destroys nor the rich man in his riches which on a sudden take to themselves wings fly away out of his reach nor husband and wife parents and children friends and acquaintance in one another which die and perish we see daily but all in the living God at all times who it the only rock to be relyed on all these being unstable as water the Father of mercies when all these becom miseries and the God of all comfort when these can yield us none at all Jer. 9.23 Ps 62.8.2 Cor. 1.3 3 This shews us the necessity of being allways ready for death and prepared for the death of ours that we may not be surprised how suddenly soever either shall happen The double example this day before us summons us to this duty seing then we have lost the comfort of their lives le ts not lose this benefit of their deaths If the warnings of God's word hath not awakend us let these alarms of his providence doe it All grant it necessary to provide for this great change of time with eternity and yet how wofully is it for the most part neglected Men are so taken up