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A79165 A glimpse of eternity Very useful to awaken sinners, and to comfort saints. Profitable to be read in families, and given at funerals. By Abr. Caley. Caley, Abraham, d. 1672. 1683 (1683) Wing C291; ESTC R226192 159,519 230

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begotten Son and perhaps some of the friends of God of whom Christ speaketh I call you no more Servants but friends for all that I have heard of the Father I have made known to you such as are Gods friends know more of his mind than others The se●ret of the Lord is with them ●hat fear him (x) Psal 25.14 The Papists say of Bonaventure that being asked by Aquinas out of what Books he had those heavenly expressions that were in his writings he pointed to the Crucifix saying that is the Book which prompts to me what I write being prostrate at the feet of that Image I receive more light from Heaven than from all the Books I read if what they ascribe to the Crucifex we transfer to Christ himself it will hold for a sound truth They looked to him and were lightened (y) Psal 24.5 We find the bodily sight is much strengthened by looking upon suitable objects when the eye is dimb if it be fixed a while upon some green Meadow or flowry bank it much helpeth the sight Artificers after long poring upon some dark work finding a dimness in their eyes are wont to take some Emerald or some other green thing by the verdure whereof their eyes may be refreshed and their sight strengthened it will hold as true in spiritual sight the light of knowledge and understanding is much increased by looking upon the unseen Eternal things in Heaven 14. It would sweeten death and that nothing else can It was an usual speech among the Heathens that only Christians were contemners of death the Philosophers especially the Stoicks made it their work to furnish themselves with arguments and get their hearts into such a frame that they might be above all passions might not fear any evil that could befall them no not death it self and though in other things they went far even to the shame of most Christians yet when it came to death they fell short of what they propounded to themselves Socrates is thought to go as far as any other whatsoever evil befell him he was yet the same man no alteration appearing in his carriage insomuch as another Philosopher Antisthenes said If the Gods would grant him what he desired he would desire nothing else but to have the spirit of Socrates and this was so much the more remarkable because that equanimity he attained to was quite contrary to his natural temper There came on a time a fellow to Athens who pretended great skill in Palmestry that by the sight of mens hands he would tell what disposition they were of and having guessed shrewdly in many he was at last brought to Socrates looking upon his hand he affirmed him to be of a froward peevish disposition the people began to hout him having had so long experience of his meekness and moderation but Socrates said do not blame the man for the truth is such a one I am by nature only I have cured the intemperance of nature by the practice of Philosophy yet this man who was so far able to master himself and his passions in other things was not able to master the fear of death though at first he seemed undaunted yet when the cup of Poison was reached out to him he looked as pale as ashes the like it was with others Plato discoursing highly of the contempt of death was answered by one he spake beyond what he lived Tully was well versed in the writings of the Stoicks and thought himself fortified against the fear of death but when death came complained I know not how it comes to pass but so it is the remedy is too narrow for the disease Though while men look upon death at a distance they may hope by the improvement of Philosophical arguments to master the fear of death yet when death cometh in good earnest when all the senses the ports of the soul are beset with the ambushes of death when death mounts up all her batteries and beateth down one hold after another driving the soul from one part of the body to another till at last the soul be forced to quit her former habitation when a man comes to feel what he never felt before to do what he never did before nor is ever to do a second time when he cometh now to have the last cast for an Eternity either of happiness or misery to cease any longer to be what he was before and to enter upon a new but never ending condition when it cometh to this they must be better and higher arguments than can be learned in natures school that will be able to afford support and comfort to the departing soul As soon may a man think to gather Gr●pes of Thorns and Figs of Thistles as by the sole improvement of these to grapple with the terrors of death Lypsius lying upon his death-bed when a friend that stood by said It would be in vain to suggest any arguments of consolation to him who was so well acquainted with the writings of the Stoicks he is said to turn himself towards Christ saying Lord give me the true Christian patience whereas the Believer whose mind is taken up with heavenly things being already dead to the world findeth it no hard matter to part with it as that Martyr Julius Palmar said to them that have their souls linked to the flesh like a Rogues foot to a pair of stocks it is indeed hard to dye but for him who is able to separate soul and body by the help of Gods spirit it is no more mastery for such an one to dye than for me to drink this cup of Beer having before-hand sent his heart to Heaven he looketh upon death as a favourable wind to carry him sooner to his desired Haven Moses converseth with God as a man converseth with his friend and when God bad him go up to the Mount and dye there Moses maketh no more of it he went up into the Mount and died according to the word of the Lord the Jews say that his soul was sucked out of his mouth with a kiss he who now converseth in Heaven when he dyeth only changeth his place but not his company removeth to a higher form but continueth at the same school while he liveth he is like the Bee which converseth amongst sweet flowers or like the Birds of the fortunate Islands which they say are all their life-time nourished with perfumes and when he dyeth he dyeth like the Phoenix in the sweet odours of an heavenly conversation 15. It would give us after death a wide and large entrance into Heaven They that look here to things Eternal shall after this life have possession of them shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven when others who ●ook no higher than things temporal shall be called the ●east in the Kingdom of God Heaven like the Hal●ions nest will hold nothing but its own bird the Apostle blesseth God because he had made them meet
Precept studying what Arguments and Motives to use making choice of such as are most taking and prevailing with their hearts to Arguments they add Intreaties beseeching men by the love of God and love to their own Souls and whatsoever may be dear and precious to men that they would not neglect so great Salvation they leave no imaginable means unattempted become all to all men if they may by any means save some desiring nothing more than to see of the Travel of their Souls when they see they cannot prevail that Israel is not gathered they go away discouraged crying with the Prophet My leanness my leanness wo is me I can do no more good (e) Isa 24.16 and are sometimes ready to resolve with the Prophet Jeremy I will Prophesie no more in the name of the Lord as fearing lest God hath sent them as he did the Prophet Isaiah to make the hearts of people fat and their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they should hear and see and understand and convert and be healed for alas whereunto may I liken the men of this Generation they are like unto Children crying one to another we have piped to you and ye have not danced we have mourned and ye have not wept Ministers may be then said to pipe when they sound the Silver Trumpet of the Gospel publishing the glad tydings of peace and Eternal Salvation then to mourn when they are constrained to ring in mens ears the doleful knell of their everlasting misery but people generally are as little affected either with the one or the other as if they were but meer fantasies as if Heaven were but an Idea like Plato's Agathopolis or Mahomet's Paradise or Moore 's Utopia as if Hell were but a scare-crow set up to put an awe upon more credulous spirits Ministers out of their several Pulpits cry out Eternity Eternity Eternity and yet cannot prevail with men to take the least care about their eternal condition How many be there who have lived thirty or forty years under the powerful preaching of the word and have heard many hundred Sermons the main drift of which hath been to exhort them to this one thing necessary and yet it is to be feared the time is yet to come with a great many that ever they spent one serious hour in making provision for their everlasting estate like those They come and sit and bear the word and seem to be affected with it as if they heard some pleasant song (f) Ezek. 33.31 but they do it not they are no more prevailed upon as to any serious care and endeavour after things Eternal than the very stones they stand on When Bede was old and blind yet he would take all occasions to preach the unhappy boy that led him on a time led him amongst a Company of Stones telling him there were a company of men assembled and he preached to them and indeed as good preach to Stones as to stony-hearts there is almost as much hope to prevail upon hard stones as upon hard hearts it was a strange expression Bonaventure used upon that promise of God I will take away the heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh Lord saith he I will none of this promise none of this heart of flesh let me have my heart of stone still I read the Altar at Bethel clave asunder at the words of the Prophet when Jeroboams heart continued hard the stones rent in pieces at the death of Christ when the hard-hearted Jews were not affected let me rather have a heart of stone than such a heart of flesh and indeed it is true in his sense no stone so hard and unmalleable as the stupid heart of man and that is the reason of those frequent Apostrophes in Scripture whereby God turning from a stubborn people applyeth his speech to the sensless creatures Hear O Heavens and give ear O earth Hear O mountains the Lords controversie and ye strong foundations of the earth (g) Isa 1.12 Micah 6.2 implying that as soon may the heavens and earth hear as soon may the mountains and foundations of the earth tremble as a stupid sottish people whom it most concerneth And that men that are so often and earnestly called upon should be so little affected and wrought upon this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation this is one aggravation of that stupidity which is in men 2. If we consider how soon men may enter upon their eternal condition though at present we be in health and strength yet our strength is not the strength of stones nor our flesh of brass we are frail mortal creatures our foundation is in the dust our life is in our hand our breath in our nostrils we carry about in our bodies the matter of a thousand deaths and may die saith Calvin a thousand several ways each several hour as many senses as many members nay as many pores as there are in the body so many Windows for death to enter in at Death needs not spend all is arrows upon us a Worm a Gnat a Flie a Hair a Stone of a Raisin a Kernel of a Grape the fall of a Horse the stumbling of a Foot the prick of a Pin the pairing of a Nail the cutting of a Corn all these have been to others and any one of them may be to us the means of our death within the space of a few days nay of a few hours we may be well and sicken and die and forthwith enter upon our Eternal estate Death being the Door of Eternity forthwith transmitting us to an eternity either of joy or torment and truly one would think that this consideration should prevail with men to make some timely provision for their future estate Cato had many times moved in the Senate that Carthage which had been so offensive to them might be destroyed but could not prevail being still opposed by Scipio On a time he brought a Fig with him into the Senate telling them that that Fig was three days before growing in Carthage and that for ought they knew an Army from Carthage in as short a time might arrive at their Gates upon which the Senate considering the suddenness of the danger they might be in gave order for the demolishing of it Though we seem at present to be fresh and flourishing like fruit growing in a fruitful ground yet we do not know but in a short time perhaps within the space of three days we may be cropt off by death and transmitted into another world and therefore should be so wise as to make provision for our future estate both by dying to sin which otherwise will be the death of our Souls and by the use of all other means conducing thereunto but that notwithstanding this great uncertainty men should live as if they were to live always should put off the thoughts of death as if they should never die should content themselves to live in that condition in
which they dare not die or in which if they should die they should be eternally miserable this argues as great a folly and stupidity as the nature of man is capable of Thou wouldest be troubled if thou certainly knewest thou wert to live but one month longer and art thou not affected when perhaps thou shalt not cut-live one day (h) Fleres si scires unum tua tempora mensem Rides cum non sit forsitan una dies Eliphaz speaking of a Vision he had saith A thing was secretly brought me and mine ear received a little of it (i) Job 4.12 13 14 15 18 20 21. He sets it out by the time when it was made known to him in thoughts from Visions of the night when deep sleep falleth upon upon It is further described by the strange effects of it fear came upon me and trembling which made all my bones to shake He goeth on to shew the terror this Vision brought upon him A Spirit passed before my face the hair of my flesh stood up Hitherto is described in what manner this secret was made known to him but what was this great secret which made such an impression of fear upon him that is partly laid down and proved by the fall of Angels that much more man whose foundation is in the dust must consume by little and little and must at last in a short time perhaps less than from morning to evening be cut off by the stroak of death but wherein as one descants upon it lyeth this high point of secrecy for man to die and that oftentimes suddenly is no such rare thing as seemeth here to be pointed at surely that wherein that great mystery chiefly consisted lyeth in this that though man must die and many times dyeth suddenly yet all this is little laid to heart either by others They are destroyed from morning to evening they perish for ever without any regarding it nor yet by themselves doth no● their excellency go away they dye even without wisdom and that mens time should be so short their life so uncertain as many times to be taken away in the space of one day and that neither others should lay it to heart nor men themselves should learn wisdom to make any suitable preparation this is spoken of as a strange remarkable thing a thing to be justly wondred at that there should be such prodigious sottishness in the hearts of men 3. If we consider how many things there are that seem to mind us of death and of making provision for another world Are not our boots shoes gloves made of the skins of dead Beasts Our hats cloathes stockings of the hair or wool of dead creatures Is not our food chiefly upon those creatures that first die before they become our nourishment and yet behold another ensuing death these cloaths we wear soon wear out these meats we eat are soon cast into the draught and nature calls for a fresh supply If from hence we look upon things about us the Vine feels as many deaths as winters and notwithstanding all our pruning and care seldom lasts above sixty or seventy years The like may be said of the Trees of Pears Apples Plumbs and other fruits which though carefully looked after do not usually continue above fifty or sixty years whereas Oakes and other Trees which last long commonly grow further off from our Habitations The sensitive creatures that live amongst us do not long continue with us the Horse seldom out-lives twenty years it is much if the Dog liveth so long the Oxe if not slain before usually dies by fifteen or sixteen the Sheep by nine or ten many other Creatures in a shorter time And how many Creatures are there which are but of one daies continuance the same days Sun which gave them life at its uprising takes it away at its setting And when there are so many things to mind us of our latter end think what a stupidity it is to make no preparation for it as Seneca excellently Whence is it we should no more think of Death when there are so many Deaths about us Or if from other Creatures we cast our eyes upon other Men Job saith of the wicked man (l) Job 21.32 33. He shall be brought to the grave and shall remain in the Tomb and every man shall draw after him as there are innumerable before him Death is the end of all flesh the Grave the house appointed for all living there are few weeks pass over our heads but we either hear the knell of Death ringing in our Ears or have some spectacle of Death presented to our eyes and when others ars snatch'd away by Death the living should lay it to heart (m) Eccl. 7.2 when Amasa's dead body lay in the way the people made a stop at it in like manner when we see or hear of the death of any we should consider what befalleth them and must e're long befall us Jonathan shot Arrows to admonish David of Sauls intent to kill him when God causeth the Arrows of death to fall on the right hand and on the left we should look at them as so many Arrows shot from Heaven to warn us But how few be there that consider the works of the Lord the Psalmist saith of wicked men like sheep they are laid in the Grave (n) Psal 49.14 the old Translation reads it they lye in Hell like sheep Sheep that are put into a fat pasture though the Butcher comes and taketh out first one then a second after a third and fourth and carrieth to the shambles yet the rest not knowing what is become of their fellows feed securely and with much delight skip up and down in the green pastures till they also are fetched away and carried to the slaughter There is a bird in Ireland they call the Cock of the Wood they fly together in thick Woods so as it is hard to find them but being once found they are easily killed if one or two be shot the rest fly no further than to the next tree where they sit staring upon the shooter till the whole Covey be destroyed in like manner it is with the secure besotted sinners the Arrows of Death light on this and that side now one is snatch'd away and goeth to his long home soon after a second a third some perhaps are take● away in the midst of their sins and go to their ow● place having scarce time to call upon God for mercy yet the survivours are little affected with these examples but do as they used to do Dine and Sup● at their aceustomed times go to Bed and Rise after their wonted manner Sleep according to their old compass suffer life to slip from them and death to steal upon them and Judgment to overtake them without taking any care to make provision for their future estate and that Gods hand should be lifted up and men not see that the rod should speak and they not
calleth the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen (t) Heb. 11.1 though we must distinguish between faith of Adherence and Faith of Evidence between the first Act of Faith whereby we believe and the second Act or as some call it an act flowing from faith (u) Actus a fide emanans between the work of Faith which is Believing and the fruit of Faith which is Assurance A Christian may have faith in the Seed and not in the Harvest the fire of Faith may warm his heart yet not flame forth in Assurance he may have the direct act of Faith both a Negative exclusive act whereby he renounceth all other ways and means of Salvation a Positive exclusive act whereby he rests wholly upon Christ for Eternal life yet not have the Reflex act whereby he knoweth that he believeth and that Salvation belongeth to him yet where Faith is called a Believing to Salvation (w) Heb 10.39 and Salvation is said to be the end of Faith (x) 1 Pet. 1.9 4. Love The joys of Heaven are said to be prepared God for those that love him (y) 1 Cor. 2.9 Ambrose in his Funeral Oration for Theodosius describing his religious death brings in the Angels Arch-angels hovering about his departing Soul to carry it to Heaven And asking him what Grace it was he here practised on earth that gave him so ready an admittance into Heaven He replyed I have loved I have loved Love is as strong as Death the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement Flame z In the flames of this fire it is that the devout Soul ascends to Heaven as the Angel once in the flame of Manaoh's sacrifice 5. Humility As the Philosopher being asked What is the first thing required in an Orator answered Pronunciation what was the second what the third answered still Pronunciation Pronunciation So saith Austin I● I where asked what is the readiest way to attain Truth and so Happiness I would answer The first the second and the third thing is Humility Humility as often as I were asked I would say Humility Humility doth not only entitle to Happiness but to the the highest degree of Happiness Whosoever shall humble himselfe as this little child the same is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven (a) Cant. 8.6 6. Heavenly-mindedness There is no one thing so much hindereth the attaining eternal life as Earthly-mindedness there are some Fowls they call Polysurchoi which though they have wings like other Fowls to fly with yet they have such heavy ponderous bodies that they seldome flye higher than the stub of some Tree but live most-what like beasts upon the earth worldly-minded men like these Fowles who though they have intelectual immortal fouls by which they should have converse in Heaven yet they are so eaten up with the world that they have no time and less mind to look after Heaven Chrysostome observeth that other beasts thoug● they are made so as they look down to the earth ye● sometimes especially in their extremity they lift up their heads towards Heaven only the Camel is so depressed with the bunch of flesh upon his back that he is alwayes poring upon the earth and is never observed to look up toward Heaven To other beasts he compareth other sorts of sinners who though great strangers to Heaven yet sometimes have some thoughts of God and Heaven only the covetous worldling like the Camel is bowed down to the earth that he liveth as if there were neither a God to be served not a Heaven to be looked after this sin therefore we must in a special manner take heed of it is not more impossible for the same eye at the same instant to look downward toward the Earth and upward toward Heaven than to have the hearts both upon the World and Heaven if we desire and hope for Heaven we must be Crucified to the world must set our affections on things above not on things on the Earth we must never expect Heaven when we die if we be strangers to Heaven while we live In Physical transmutations the form is introduced in an instant but there are some antecedent qualities some previous dispositions that preparethe body for that change though the soul in the instant of death quits Earth and mounts up to Heaven yet it must be prepared for Heaven by conversing there before-hand such as novv live strangers to Heaven shall never intermeddle vvith those joyes b 7. To these vve must add the grace of perseverance some have seemed to begin well yet ended miserably others have begun ill but ended happily perseverance is all in all other graces run the race but only perseverance receiveth the Crovvn Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a Crown of life (c) Rev. 2.10 Solomon saith better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof (d) Eccles 7 8. The grace of the Comedy lyeth chiefly in the last Scene it is the evening that Crovvneth the day Seneca saith the last day judgeth all the precedent happy are they whose last dayes are the 〈◊〉 dayes vvhose works are more at last than at fi● vvheras vvhen men seem to begin vvell and aft●●vvard turn from the holy Commandment it had 〈◊〉 better for them never to have known the way of Righte●●●ss (s) 2 Pet. 2.21 Among other Prodigies vvhich vvere 〈◊〉 bout the time Julian came unto the Empire t● vvas one after a plentiful Vintage there vvere w● grapes appeared upon their Vines vvith vvhich ma● Wise men vvere much affected looking upon it 〈◊〉 ominous When men seem to abound in the fruits 〈◊〉 Righteousness and aftervvard bring forth the w● grapes of sin and disobedience it is a sad Prognosti●●●● of their eternal ruine as the falling of the lea● is the forerunner of vvinter so the falling away men in this life presageth that winter of 〈◊〉 wrath vvhen the storms and tempests of Div● vengence shall for ever beat upon them havi● then put our hand to the Plow vve must ta● heed of looking back again the promise of eter●●● happiness is made to such as persevere He th● endureth to the end shall be saved (t) Matth. 10.22 FINIS
b Mat. 10.25 Christ himself drank of the brook in the way c Psal 110.7 and all his followers must drink of the same cup that he drank of But though this hath been the Lot of all Believers yet the dreggs of this cup have been usually prepared for the Dispensers of Gods Word d Mat. 20.23 the Standard-bearers of this bloody band as if to Preach were nothing else but to stir up the rage of men e Luther There is no rank or sort of men that hath been exposed to so much contempt and suffering If I were saith Jerome a Basket-maker or a Garland-weaver or any low Trade that would make me sweat for the bread I eat no man would maligne me no man would traduce me but now I give my self to the study and interpretation of Scripture now I am a Preacher a Writer I am blotted with the obloquies of men As long as Christ was working at his Fathers Trade and was employed as Justin Martyr expresseth it in making Beadsteads and Ploughs f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no man opposed him but when he was Baptized and went out to preach the Gospel presently he is tempted by Satan and persecuted by wicked men as long as the Apostles were mending their Nets and following their fishing trade none troubled them but when of fishers they were made fishers of men they are forthwith made a spectacle to the world and Angels and men and so the Apostle expresseth it verse 11. We which live are alwaies delivered to death for Jesus sake there were but few of them left alive but were by the rage of Tyrants put to cruel deaths those that survived though they had not yet resisted unto blood yet daily expected when they should be offered up as a bloody sacrifice and were at present under great sufferings bearing about in their bodies the dying of the Lord Jesus ver 10. But did they hereupon repent of their engaging in the work of the Lord or sink down under discouragement and dispondency of Spirit Nothing less ver 16. for which cause we faint not * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifieth to shrink back as cowards in warre to sink down as a Porter under an overheavy burden As one man by the help of an Engine is able to lift up a heavy weight which ten or twenty men might in vain attempt by their own strength so the Apostles went chearfully under that pressure of Affliction which would have sunk the stoutest spirits not supported by Divine Grace For which cause we faint not if you would know for what cause what it was that supported them there are two causes rendred one respecting the Corinthians to whom he writes that is partly laid down ver 12. So then death worketh in us but life in you we dye that you might live by our death we suffer that you may be strengthned by our sufferings and partly verse 15. All things are for your sakes all the streights we are put to turn to your advantage if we dye it is to confirm you by our sufferings if God shall deliver us and restore us again to you it is for his glory and your good that the abundant grace might by the thanksgiving of many redound to the Glory of God and that is one cause why he fainted not he counted not his life dear to him so as he might be helpful to their Faith The other cause respects the Apostles themselves their great sufferings made both for their present spiritual good and for their future happiness 1. Their present Spiritual Good The cold Blasts of Persecution beating upon the outward Man by a Spiritual Antiperistasis augmented the Heat of Grace within for which cause we faint not for though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day He was three times beaten with Rods five times received he forty stripes save one * 2 Cor. 11.24 c. But as they say the Bear is made fat with blows and the Ass battens with pricking and beating so it was in a spiritual sense with our Apostle he was once stoned but † Per tot lapides petrae conjungitur ●●i by those stones he was knocked nearer to Christ the corner-stone he thrice suffered shipwrack but like Noah's Ark was lifted up nearer to Heaven by those floods of great waters he was in Journeyings often but every time his salvation was nearer than before 2. Their future happiness verse 17. Our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory For Affliction there is Glory for light affliction a weight an exceeding a far more exceeding weight for short affliction that lasts but for a moment an eternal weight of Glory And this it was they had chiefly in their eye so in this Verse While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen Things seen and not seen are I conceive the same with what elsewhere he calleth things present and things to come a 1 Cor. 3.22 and things above and things on the earth b Colos 3.1 and things of the life that now is and of that which is to come c 1 Tim. 4.8 and so the Apostle explaineth himself in the following words the things that are seen are temporal but the things that are not seen are eternal The whole Verse falleth under a twofold Consideration 1. Relative as they are a Reason why they fainted not under their present troubles as Moses chose rather to suffer affliction with the People of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin because he had an eye to the recompence of reward 1 Heb. 11.25 26. and our Saviour Christ for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross and despised the shame 2 Heb. 12.2 so the Apostles having their eye upon things invisible and eternal made light of all their present Sufferings and Persecutions 2. Absolute and so they shew what the Apostles made their Aim and End that is implied in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to look as the Archer doth at the Mark he shooteth at There were some things they made their great business which was the mark they shot at the great End they propounded to themselves and what they were is first specified then more fully explained First Specified and that 1. Negatively what they look'd not at things seen 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things of this Life which are things visible to the eye 4 Objecta sensibilia 2. Affirmatively shewing what were those things which they made the matter of their choice the great objects of their desires and endeavours things not seen 5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things of another Life which are objects of faith and not of sense things not visible to these fleshly eyes onely apprehended by faith which is the evidence of things not
sighing shall flee away (g) Isa 35.10 Whereas if this happiness were not eternal there would be cause for both first the Saints would be in fear of losing this happiness and where there is fear there is Torment in that fore-named Text and this fear must needs be productive of sorrow were it not for the eternity of this happiness it would be hard to say whether there would be the more joy or sorrow in Heaven we may probably think there might be as much sorrow arising from the fear of their future loss as there is joy from the apprehension of their present enjoyment and that there should be either fear or sorrow in Heaven is not only contradictory to the fore-named Text but utterly inconsistent with the blessedness of that estate In summe if we Believe what the Scripture speaketh of the greatness of this happiness we must needs grant it to be eternal And this Aquinas maketh Use of as the strongest Argument to prove the eternity of this happiness The like is to be said of the torments of Hell which could not be so grievous as they are described if they were not eternal were they to last a thousand thousand years there would be some hopes they would end at last and this hope will administer some kind of ease and comfort when some thousands of these years were expired it would be some comfort that there were so many already past and by so many the fewer yet to come and so forward the further decreasing of the time would add a proportionable encrease to their hope and comfort whereas that Cup of Wrath the Dregs of which they shall wring out and drink is without mixture * Psal 75.8 without any mixture of hope ease comfort or any thing which might alleviate their misery and that which chiefly maketh it uncapable of these is the eternity of this misery it must be indeed confessed that the Torments of Hell are intensively most grievous Bernard saith that the least punishment in Hell is more grievous than if a Child-bearing woman should continue in the most violent pangs and throws a thousand years together without the least ease or intermission An ancient writer mentioned by Discipulus de tempore goeth much further affirming that if all the men which have been from Adams time till this day and which shall be till the end of the world and all the Piles of grass in the world were turned into so many men to ●ugment the number and that punishment inflicted in Hell upon any one were to be divided amongst all ●hese so as to every one might befall an equal part of that punishment yet that which would be the portion but of one man would he far more grievous than all ●he cruel deaths and exquisite tortures which have been inflicted upon men ever since the world began But though they be thus dreadful in themselves yet that which mainly and indeed infinitely adds to the greatness of them is because they are eternal as one said If Hell were to be indured but a thousand years methinks I could bear it but for ever that amazeth me Bellarmine [i] De arte bene moriendi out of Barocius tells of a learned man who after his death appeared to his friend complaining that he was adjudged to Hell-Torments which saith he were they to last but a thousand thousand years I should think it tolerable but alas they are eternal And as it is the eternity of these sufferings which chiefly maketh them so great so the greatness of them proveth them to be eternal otherwise they could not be so great as they are described 4. A fourth Argument to prove the point may be taken from man himself who is [k] 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an immortal Creature [l] Wisd 2.23 God created man to be immortal and made him an Image of his own eternity though he be not eternal and immortal as God is who is therefore said only to have immortality [m] 1 Tim. 6.16 and therefore Divines distinguish between the eternity of God and the sempiternity of man God is a whole eternity both backwards and forwards from everlasting to everlasting man's onely a half eternity forwards but not backwards to not from everlasting God's is a simple eternity he can no way cease to be man's only in some respect because he may be annihilated by God's power God's is an uncreated man 's a created eternity God's causal man's derived God's independent being onely from himself man's dependent and limited but though he be not eternal as God is he is truely and properly an immortal Creature There are two essential parts of man the soul and the body and in regard of both these he is immortal First the soul is an immortal substance and that not only by the grace and favour of God as the body of Adam was in the state of innocency and as the bodies of the Saints shall be at the Resurrection but by its own nature having no internal principle of corruption so as it cannot by any thing from within it self cease to be neither can it be annihilated by any thing from without (r) Math. 10.28 Fear not them which kill the body but are rot able to kill the soul Gregory observeth there are three sorts of Created Spirits the first of those whose dwelling is not with flesh or in fleshly bodies they are the Angels the Second of those which are wholly immersed in flesh the souls of beasts which rise out of the power of the flesh and perish together with it the third is of those which inhabit bodies of flesh but neither rise out of the Power of the flesh nor dye when the body dyeth and these are the souls of men when the body returneth to the earth as it was the Spirit shall return to God who gave it (s) Eccles 12.7 From this immortality of the Soul we may inferr the eternity of mans future condition The soul being immortal it must be immortally happy or immortally miserable I shall not stand to enumerate those many arguments that are brought to prove the souls immortality but whatsoever Arguments are or may be used to prove this they will all undeniably conclude the eternity of mans future estate A further proof of it may be taken from the body which though it be subject to death yet not to dissolution Simo Stenius Professor of the Greek Tongue at Heidelberg being visited by the Minister lying upon his Death-bed amongst other Discourses the Minister asked him if he desired with Paul to be dissolved and to be with Christ rendering the word after the vulgar Translation he answered with some kind of indignation that that was not the proper signification of the word (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by the Apostle which properly signifies to depart to be unloosed not to be dissolved Death is only a change not an annihilation After a Creature is once in being it is never
wholly annihilated Birth is a River saith Heraclytus which never drieth up but is continually supplyed by an accession of fresh waters though the Body be subject to death and after death to a thousand transmutations as men cast away at Sea may be devoured by Fishes those Fishes after eaten by men possibly some of those men devoured by wild Beasts those Beasts by Dogs those Dogs eaten up by Worms those Worms consumed to dust that dust scattered upon the Earth yet after all these revolutions and transmutations there is something remaining and God is able to make those dispersed pieces of dust like those scattered bones Ezek. 37. to come together one to another take twenty several sorts of seeds and mingle them together in the same vessel a skilful Gardiner is able to sever them one from another mingle the filings of Steel or Iron with so much dust that the filings are not perceived yet by the help of the Load-stone you may separate the filings from the dust according to their first quantity They say some exact Chymists are able out of the same herb to draw out the several elements by themselves That men can do this it is because God teacheth them as the Prophet speaketh of the Husbandman (w) Isaiah 28.26 And he that teacheth men knowledge shall not he know (x) Psalm 94.10 He that first made man out of nothing can much more repair him out of that something yet remaining Augustine hath a good meditation to this purpose Think saith he with thy self how old thou art whether twenty or thirty years old before that time what wast thou Where wast thou In the Grave whither thou goest there will be dust or ashes or something to be found toward a man whereas before that time there was neither dust nor Ashes nor any thing to be found towards thy Nativity God who at first made the body out of nothing can and will remake it out of something pre-existent and when it is thus re-made it shall be made Immortal and incorruptible So the Apostle * 1 Cor. 15.42.53 It is sown in corruption it shall be raised in incorruption This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality We read Levit. 14. If the Plague of Leprosie were in a house they must scrape the walls and pull out the stones and plaister and put other plaister in the room but if the Leprosie brake out again they must pull down the house with the stones timber and morter thereof There is in every man the fretting Leprosie of sin In the work of Conversion God as it were takes out the Timber and Stones and putteth others in their room while he worketh a thorow change in the soul but still the Leprosie of Sin continueth till at last God sends Death which pulleth down the house with the timber and stones and thereby takes away both the Leprosie of sin and that mortality and corruption which sin bringeth As a Watch being battered or clogged with dust is taken in pieces pulled joynt from joynt and wheel from wheel to the end it may go better than before or as some goodly Statue of Brass being defaced is taken down pulled in pieces put into the Fire but all this is that it may be put together again and made a more goodly work manship Or if we arise and go into the Potter's-Field and behold his workmanship is not the Vessel made of Clay that was marred in the hands of the Potter * Jer. 18.4 yet he either maketh it the same Vessel so as nothing is wanting but its former deformity or if he pleaseth a m●re honourable vessel than before In like manner the body being by Adam's sin made liable to Death and Corruption God seeth good to take it in pieces by death that being put together again at the Resurrection it might be freed from this corruptibleness and put into an estate of immortality and incorruption To what end is the Body made thus immortal if not to continue in an eternal immortal condition From all this we conclude if man be an immortal Creature both in regard of his Soul which is immortal in its own Nature and in regard of his Body which shall be made Immortal by Gods Power his future condition must of necessity be immortal and eternal whether he be admitted into Heaven or doomed to Hell his condition is eternal and everlasting CHAP. III. Of Scripture-Proofs of Eternal Happiness Consisting in Sight Love Joy Praise with created Accessories and Eternal Misery Expressed by Wrath Worm Fire Prison Darkness Burning Torment HAving endeavoured to demonstrate the point from Arguments I proceed to prove it from Scripture though it be unusual in the method of Preaching to bring Arguments before Scripture-proofs yet it is frequent in Argumentation to reserve the strongest Proof till last Ruffinus reporteth that at the Council of Nice a Godly man of no great learning was the means of Converting a learned Philosopher whom the Bishops with all their Arguments could not perswade the person brake forth into this speech Against words I opposed words and what was spoken I overthrew by the art of speaking but when instead of words power came out of the mouth of the speaker words could no longer withstand truth nor man oppose the power of God Possibly what is spoken by way of Argument may not be so convincing to some who will seek to elude the strength of one Argument by another whereas proofs from plain places of Scripture silence all cavils and exceptions that therefore I have reserved for the last proof There is a twofold Eternity one of Happiness the other of Misery the Scripture is abundant in the proof of both I begin with the Happiness of Heaven The Schoolmen distinguish of a two-fold happiness one they call the essential happiness which they make to consist in the enjoyment of God the other accidental consisting in the enjoyment of those glorious things which God together with himself giveth unto his people Others say to the same purpose that there is an uncreated reward which is God himself I am thy exceeding great reward (a) Gen. 15.1 and a created reward consisting in those good things which God hath created to make his people happy both these the Scripture describeth to be Eternal 1. The great Happiness in Heaven consists in the enjoyment of God God is the happiness of the Saints in Heaven not only Efficiently as he is the author of it nor only finally as he is the end of it but objectively as being the object of this blessedness he is both the Giver and the Gift the Rewarder and the Reward the Crowner and the Crown it is God who both bestoweth the happiness and is himself the happiness of the Saints Whom have I in Heaven but thee (b) Psal 73.25 God shall be all in all (c) 1 Cor. 15.28 as this will hold in some other particulars so in this and as
(m) Eccles 7.14 When Dioclesian resigned his Empire he pretended this as the reason As the Planet which hath its exaltation in one sign hath likewise its counterpoise in another s● if there were any thing that afforded him any content it was accompanied with as much vexation our silver is mixed with dross our wine with water Neither is it thus only in temporal but in the Spiritual enjoyments of Believers who are here like the Nightingale sitting upon thorns or the Halcyon upon the trembling waters Doth the Christian serve God it is with fear doth he rejoyce it is with ●rembling doth he rejoyce in that Grace God hath given him as Paul Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ yet he cannot but mourn under the remainders of Corruption with the same Apostle O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death and when he compareth that little grace he hath with that Original purity he lost in Adam he ●annot but mourn as the old men did (n) Ezra 3. who had ●een the former Temple in its glory is it matter of Encouragement to him when his heart is enlarged in Gods service as it was to David when he and the people offered willingly to the Lord (o) 1 Chron. 29. Yet it is a matter of sorrow that he is able to do God no better service his greatest joy is not without some mixture ●he women after Christs Resurrection departed from ●he Sepulchre with fear and great joy (p) Mat. 28.8 The Disciples walked in the fear of God and the comforts of ●he Holy Ghost (q) Acts 9.31 Whereas in Heaven there are ●ll things that are desirable and rare and precious ●ithout any mixture of contraries r There is per●ection without mixture of imperfectness When that which is perfect is come that which is imperfect shall ●e done away (s) 1 Cor. 13.10 There is perfection of holiness without the least sinfulness The sin of Jacob shall be ●ought and there shall be none (t) Jer. 50.20 Perfection of happiness without any kind of misery there is joy without sorrow They shall obtain everlasting joy and gladness and sorrow and sighing shall flee away (u) Isa 35.10 Rest without Labour Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord they rest from their Labours (w) Rev. 14.13 In sum there is life without death attending it Light without darkness peace without trouble ease without pain a full enjoyment of all desirable good and freedom f● all imaginable evil 2. On the other hand In the eternity of Hells p●nishment there is all that is evil without the least mixture of any thing that is good The same shall drink ● the wine of the wrath of God that is poured out witho●● mixture (x) Rev. 14.10 That Cup of wrath that is said to be f● of mixture (y) Psal 75.8 that is full of all the woful ingredien● that can be put into it is here said to be without mi●ture that is without the mixture of any thing tha● might alleviate their Torments I shall onely instan● in three Particulars 1. Without any mixture of Mercy Here man● times God corrects with Judgment not in Wrat● (z) Jer. 1● last or if in Wrath yet in Wrath he remembreth Me●cy (a) Hab. 3.2 But there is all wrath without any mercy in the Sacrifice of Jealousie (b) Num. 5.15 God ordereth th● there should be no Oyl or Frankincense put to it b●cause it was an offering of Jealousie an offering o● memorial to bring iniquity to remembrance in li● manner in Hell there is no oyl of mercy to lenifie the sufferings no Incense of prayer to appease Go● Wrath he that made them will not have mercy ● them he that formed them will shew them no ●vour the day of Grace and Mercy is then past t● door of mercy is for ever shut up against them W● once the Master of the house is risen and hath shut the do● and ye begin to knock at the door saying Lord Lor● open to us He shall answer and say I know you ● whence you are (c) Luk. 13 1● When God hath shut up the do● of Grace and Mercy as he doth in Hell thoug● they beg and cry for mercy they shall receive no ●ther answer than a peremptory denial the fooli● Virgins deferred to get oyl into their Lamps till was too late and when they went to buy the Brid●groom came and the door was shut and when they begged Lord Lord open to us he answered verily I say unto you I know you not * Mat. 25.10 and what will a poor ●reature say or do in this dreadful exclusion Have you ever seen a prisoner at the Bar with what importunate out-cries he begs mercy and with what de●ection and despair he goeth away when he cannot ob●ain it think then what horror canfusion and Everlasting despair shall surprize the Souls of those lost undone creatures who find themselves drenched in a sea of wrath and vengeance and cannot hope to have ●o much as one chord of mercy thrown out to them ●nd that is another addition to their misery it is not onely without any mixture of Mercy at present But 2. Without any hope of mixture for the future In this life though men be under great troubles they are ●eldom without hope the Prophet Daniel heard the ●oice of an Holy One crying Hew down the tree and ●estroy it yet leave the stump of the roots in the Earth ●nd thus it is usually with men in this life saith Am●rose though the tree be cut down and the branches ●opt off all they have taken from them yet some of ●he root is left their hope is not quite cut off as ●ong as there is life there is hope to him that is ●oyned to the living there is hope † Eccles 9.4 And this is some ●upport to men in their present troubles but in hell ●oth root and branch and all hope are quite cut off Bede observeth that God hath made three places and ●n each of them hath placed two things in Heaven ●e hath placed Verity and Eternity on Earth Curio●ity and Repentance in Hell Misery and Despair and ●s Hell is the proper place of despair so this despair is ●ithout the least mixture of hope what hope hath the hy●ocrite when God taketh away his soul * Job 27.8 the Hypo●rite of all other wicked men is usually most confident making no question and thinking much that any other should question his title to Heaven but whe● the hypocrite shall be turned into hell with all the peop● that forget God all his hopes will be quickly confuted what hope hath the hypocrite when God taketh awa● his Soul could a man speak with such a Son of confidence after he hath been some time in hell and ask him whether he were as confident a● before Oh what a sad and doleful answer would he return how would
Diagoras The occasion was this he had made a book of Verses but before they were set out one stole them away he suspecting the person brought him before the Magistrate the man denyed it upon oath and so was quit and afterward set them out in his own name Diagoras because he was not for his theft and perjury struck with a present Thunder-bolt forthwith turned Atheist concluding that there was no God nay we find this to have stumbled the best of the Saints Job startles at it Jeremy and Habakkuk expostulated with God about it David was ready to conclude that he had cleansed his heart in vain that there was no profit in the service of God Whereas if we go into Gods Sanctuary we may understand the end o● both these sorts of men wicked men though they flourish for a time yet their end is sad when the wicked spring as Grass and all the workers of iniquity do flourish (b) Psal 92.7 it is that they shall be destroyed for ever the righteous though they suffer at present yet their end is happy Mark the just behold the upright man the end of that man is peace (c) Psal 37.37 Some express this by the familiar comparison of the Hawk and the Hen the Hawk is often transported from forreign Countries bought at a great price carried upon the Fist fed with choice dyet and hath all things prepared for her accommodation but being once dead she is thrown out of doors cast upon the dunghill and no more care taken of her the Hen on the other side while she is living is little accounted of she is forced even to lodge abroad in the open air exposed to the wind and stormes of the Winters night constrained to range abroad for her sustenance pecking here and there a little to satisfie her hunger if she comes into the house expecting some crumbs falling from the Table she is driven out with clamour and little care taken of her but when she is dead is cook't and drest in the best manner served up in a Lordly Dish and the greatest Persons make of her flesh part of their Royal entertainments These two creatures not unaptly resemble the two sorts of men the righteous and the wicked the Hawk resembles wicked men who commonly prosper in the world and flourish like the Bay-tree and therefore pride compasseth them about how lofty are their eyes and their eye-lids lifted up they carry themselves as if they had got a monopoly of happiness as if the Sun shined only in their Cell as the Bernardine Monks boasted but when death hath put a period to their lives there is an end of all their happiness and eternal misery like Pharaohs seven years of famine devoureth the former years of plenty rendring their misery the more grievous by the remembrance of the happiness they once enjoyed On the other side good men who are fitly resembled by the Hen usually meet but with course entertainment in the world are looked upon as the filth of the world and off-scouring of all things their souls are exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that be at ease and with the contempt of the proud but having once finished their course they are bound up amongst Gods Jewels their bodies go down with hope to the Chambers of Death their souls are bound up in the bundle of Life and put into a present possession of eternal happiness so that though in this life wicked men be the darlings of the world when those of whom the world is not worthy are des●tute afflicted tormented yet if we believe there is another life after this in which the righteous shall b● eternally happy and wicked men everlastingly miserable this will abundantly clear the equity of Gods proceedings in those tomporal dispensations it is the end that crowneth all all is well that ends well Solomon saith The end of a thing is better than the beginning of it (d) Eccles 7.8 and wise men esteem of things acco●ding to the last end A man that hath a suit at Law upon which his estate dependeth though in his journey up to th● Term he be ill-horsed meets with bad way and for weather and homely lodging yet if he succeed in his suit he thinks this makes a sufficient recompence whereas let a man in his journey have never so man● accommodations as good way fair weather goo● chear merry company yet if he be cast in h● suit and loseth all he hath it will give him but littl● content to reflect upon the pleasure of his journey Chrysostome in one of his Homilies to the people o● Antioch tells of himself That he was invited t● dinner by a Gentleman ●●e City but not knowin● the way to his house had a guide to conduct him the guide to gain the shortest way carried hi● through By-lanes and Allies where they met muc● dirt and unsavoury smells at last they crossed a fa● stre●t the goodliest street in the City where the met with a man accompani●d with a great number ● people going to his execution coming to the hou● whither he was invited and finding there goo● Cheer and hearty entertainment How much bett● is it said he to go through dirty lanes to good Chee● and good Company than to go through the fairest stree● to the place of Execution The Application is easie Good men while they are in their journey meet with any difficulties and discourteous usages but are going to a place of happiness and shall sit down with Ahraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven whereas wicked men though they go through a fair pleasant way where the Devil seems to pave their way for them that they might not so much as dash their foot against a stone yet they are going to execution having spent their days in mirth in a moment they go down to Hell where they must suffer the vengeance of Eternal fire and if so there is little reason why we should either think much at the present sufferings of the Saints or envy the temporary prosperity of worldly men 1. There is no reason why we should think much at the Saints troubles Austin moveth this question whether ●t were better to eat a piece of fish that were made bit●er by the breaking of the gall or to endure the tormenting pain of the tooth-ach or stone or gout several daies together without any mitigation or intermission of the pain This question saith Drexelius may ●eem a ridiculous question for how much better were ●t saith he to eat such a whole fish which could do ● man no other hurt but leave a bitter tang upon the ●alate for a time than to suffer any of these torments ●ut the space of one hour all the troubles of this life ●re but like eating such a piece of fish which though ●itter for the time yet are soon over and it is much ●etter to endure this for a short time than to be exposed to endless and eternal
it is rather a pre●ervative from dangers and temptations there are ●wo sorts of temptations the Devil maketh Use of ●●mptations on the right hand when by things prospe●ous and pleasing to us as the honours profits and ●leasures of the world he seeks to draw us to what 〈◊〉 evil and temptations on the left hand when by the ●ear of suffering and persecution he laboureth to de●er us from what is good whereas he who hath things ●●ernal in his eye is little moved with either of these ●●e is not so much taken with the first as for gain of ●hem to lose a good conscience When Basil was ●empted with preferment he bad them offer such ●●ings to Children it was not for a Christian Bishop ●o be taken with them Luther when he received ●y Tauhenheimus a hundred pieces of gold sent him ●nd fifty by Scartus said I begin to fear God will ●●ve me my reward here but I have earnestly protested I ●●ould not be put off with these things and this his con●empt to the world was not unknown to his enemies When the Pope would have taken him off by gifts ●he said That German beast doth not care for Gold and ●or troubles and sufferings he doth not so much fear ●hem as to commit sin to avoid suffering When Basil was threatned with banishments torments and death he answered I fear not banishment I have no home but Heaven no native place but Paradise and the whole world I look upon as the common banishment of mankind for torments I defie them for what can they do to me whose body is so worn out that there is nothing but bones without flesh for them to work on and for death I fear it not which can but restore me sooner to my Creator He that hath his eye upon Heaven is neither moved with the frowns nor flatteries of the world as he said He equally contemned the favour and fury of Rome neither the desire of the one nor the fear of the other is able to remove him from his stedfastness The like is to be said of other sorts of temptations which are happily resisted by conversing in Heaven Bonaventure when the Devil told him that he was a Reprobate and therefore perswaded him to enjoy a● much of the pleasures of the world here as he might because he was excluded from the pleasures with God in Heaven answered Not so Satan If I must not enjoy God after this life let me enjoy as much as I can of hi● here whatsoever temptations Satan suggests the● are more easily overcome by him who maketh it hi● business to converse with God and Heaven 3. It is a good help against those roving wandring thoughts which so often haunt us in the performance of duties and cast so great a blemish upon our bet● performances When Abraham offered sacrifice the fowls of the air lighted upon the sacrifice (o) Gen. 15.11 Thes● fowls resemble vain thoughts which much trouble the best of men in their Approaches to God Jero● complained of himself when he was at prayer he wa● in his thoughts walking in some Gallery or telling o● some summe of money in like manner Bernard confesseth that troops of unruly thoughts were wont to flock into his heart like people when some spectacle is to be seen complaining when my body is i● the Church my mind is about the world I sing one thing but think another I utter words but regard not the sense and matter and concludes woe is me I sin then when I should get victory against my sins and truely there is scarce any one thing that a Christian doth so much groan under as the frequent a volations he is subject to in Gods service and it is not without just cause that he should so sadly resent them When Pharaoh's Baker dreamed that the birds of the air took out of his Basket the baked meats he prepared for Pharaoh Joseph told him that this was a signification of his ensuing death When we come to present our services to God as he his baked meats to Pharaoh if the birds of the air idle thoughts intrude into our minds though it doth not absolutely presage the death of the soul yet it prognosticateth the death of that service that it is no better than a dead service unpleasing to him who is a living God Now there is no better way to suppress these thoughts than having our minds taken up with heavenly things the mind cannot be at the same time intent upon different objects as when a Dictator was created at Rome there was a suspension for that time of all other offices so when the mind is taken up with the thoughts of some remarkable thing it giveth a supersedeas to other thoughts If thou wouldest forget other things saith Seneca think upon Caesar serious thoughts upon our Eternal condition would be like those Por●ers Jehojada set at the doors of the Temple would secure us from the intrusion of other objects 4. It would work in us a holy indifferency toward ●ll temporal things it would moderate our esteem of ●hem our desire after them our delight in them our grief for the want or loss of them I shall instance in ●hese several particulars 1. It would moderate our esteem of them wordly ●hen think all their happiness is bound up in these crea●ure-enjoyments they judge them the only happy men who have the largest confluence of these outward comforts whereas he that hath his eye upon eternal things hath a low Esteem of these things when a man stands upon the top of a high mountain things below in the valley seem small and inconsiderable in his sight they say to them that stand upon the top of the Alps the great Cities of Campania seem but as small Villages or as a man who hath for a time gazed upon the Sun when he looketh downward upon darker objects is scarce able to see any thing In like manner he that hath his eye fixed upon heavenly things counts these things as dung and dross he esteemeth all these riches in the world not worth one daies conversing in Heaven he valueth Heaven though but in reversion before the world in present possession prefers his interest in Heaven to the gaining of the whole world if God please to secure heavenly things to him he hath a holy ind●fferency towards other things if God casts Them in he is thankful if not patient if he hath them he knoweth how to use them if not he hath learned to be without them he is like the deep running River which glideth silently by those green Meadows and flowry banks those goodly things that other men admire and keepeth within his own banks of moderation and content till at last he falls into that deep Sea of divine Sweetness to which he is hasting Moses having an eye to the recompence of reward slighted the greatest honour it Egypt he refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's Daughter (o) Heb. 11.24.25