Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n body_n fear_n soul_n 4,913 5 4.9957 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A45343 A sermon preached at St. Botolphs Aldersgate, at the funeral of Robert Huntington, Esq., who died April 21 and was buried April 30, 1684 by Timothy Hall ... Hall, Timothy, 1637?-1690. 1684 (1684) Wing H443; ESTC R11203 24,130 48

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A SERMON Preached at St. Botolphs Aldersgate At the FUNERAL OF ROBERT HVNTINGTON Esq Who DIED April 21. and was BURIED April 30. 1684. BY TIMOTHY HALL Rector of Alhallows Staining London LONDON Printed for Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and Three Crowns at the lower end of Cheapside near Mercers Chappel 1684. TO THE Worshipful and my much valued Friends Esquires Sons and Executors of the Deceased ROBERT HVNTINGTON JOHN FREIND THOMAS BRVMPSTED And to Mr. TIMOTHY DOD And to their Worthy and Religious Consorts Mrs. ELIZABETH HVNTINGTON Mrs. ANN FREIND Mrs. MARTHA BRVMSTED Mrs. ELIZABETH DOD FVnerals may well be stiled with Sacraments Visible Sermons because they teach by the Eye and outward Senses The Dead speak aloud to the Living and as it were in a Glass represent to them what their condition in the circulation of a little time will be Shortly we shall be in the place of Silence with them When we see others fall before us how easily and naturally is it infer'd that our standing cannot be long after them Yet how apt are we to flatter our selves with the spinning out of our Thred of Life to a great length A man would wonder that in the Wilderness where so many Thousands died Moses should then pray Lord so teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom Psal 90.12 If they who had so many dying Objects continually before them needed to be stirred up to pray in this manner surely much more have we to whom such spectacles though many are more infrequent To Correct this folly and madness which possesseth the hearts of men while they live Eccles 9.3 Who turn away their Eyes from their Sepulchre and divert them with more pleasing prospects I have ventured to comply with your Requests in Publishing this Sermon I am equally surprised That you should desire and I permit so thin a Discourse to appear abroad I expect to be Censured for distributing a Trifle amongst so many of you I take you all joyntly in the Dedication because on this occasion to have addressed to one might have been interpreted a disregard to the rest Besides it being Preached by your Order and by the same influence being now made Publick I engage you to be accountable with me for all the rude strokes in it I know your design was to keep up his Memory but such an hasty Monument Erected to it cannot long preserve it I had neither Art nor time to build one The Errand this Discourse comes on is not to desire you to remember your Father It would be a rudeness to request that he might live in your thoughts I am sensible you will do that without my being your Remembrancer but I beg That nothing which was Exemplary in him be Buried with him and sealed up in his Grave That you would improve what was delivered at his Funeral to the best Spiritual advantages that you may live as strangers in this World and persons belonging to a better That it may prove effectual to the furtherance and joy of your Faith shall be a considerable part of the hearty Prayers of Yours to Serve you TIMOTHY HALL Heb. II. 15. And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage THE Apostle in the former part of this Chapter having asserted the nature and necessity of the Incarnation and Death of Christ he now in my Text and the preceding Verse to it acquaints us with the ends and uses of it All the Host of Heaven stood amazed at this great Mystery expecting what would be the issue of this great Trial. Men and Devils could not fathom the depths of God's design in this dismal Tragedy They verily concluded That the Captain of our Salvation would now be conquered and that they should hear no more of him when once he was humbled to his Grave Can he save others who cannot save himself Can he bring life to others by his own death After this Sarcastical manner the Heathens upbraided the Christians and the Apostle tells us That this Death and Cross of our Lords was a stumbling-block to the Jews and folly to the Greeks 1 Cor. 1.18 23. And thus indeed it well might have been had not that All-wise God who brings light out of darkness and meat out of the eater by his unsearchable counsel and wisdom over-ruled this matter so that the Death of Christ like to that of Sampson's should issue and conclude in the utter rout and overthrow of his and our greatest Adversaries Whil'st they bruised his heel he brake their head Thus by his wise disposal he made Suffering to be Saving Death Victorious and the Stripes of his Son to be Medicinal and Healing to us One end was to destroy the power of Satan to break the head of that Serpent stilling this enemy and self-avenger Psal 8.2 Leading captivity captive Psal 68.18 Binding the strong man Matt. 12. And dividing the spoil with him Isa 53. Thus this great destroyer was quelled and conquered and at the Sign of the Cross thus used by faith in his death I mean we may at any time put the Devil to flight and cast out the Prince of this World The other end is mentioned in my Text to deliver them who through fear of Death c. Which words acquaint us with a double subjection of the Servants or Children of God as they are called in the foregoing Verse 1. A subjection to Death 2. A subjection to Bondage upon account of Death From whence I gather these Propositions Prop. 1. God's own Children those for whom Christ dyed may be brought and kept under the fear of Death Prop. 2. The fear of Death is a state of Bondage Prop. 3. The onely deliverance from this fear is by the Death of Christ I shall make the first the subject-matter of my Discourse at this time and in treating on that shall comprehend the other God's own Children those for whom Christ died may be brought under nay kept under the fear of death and this fear may be so great and pressing that it may be a heavy burthen it may gall them much and deeply affect their Souls to their great disquietment so that they may have many uneasie hours and doleful complaints it may bring them into an Estate of Slavery and Bondage And this trouble may not onely be heavy and great for its nature but long and continued for its duration it may run Parallel with the longest date of their time and not come onely by way of Paroxism and Fit but hold them all their life long So that in the best the fear of Death is not wholly destroyed and removed Grace doth not extinguish Nature and the Christian doth not cease to be Man There is a double fear of Death 1. Natural and inseperable from our present condition There is implanted in Man a desire of Self-preservation and this is Natures aversation to its own dissolution This is an innocent and guiltless infirmity and
no more culpable than weariness sickness and many other natural imbecillities inseperably annexed to the condition of Mortality 2. There is a sinful fear of Death a fear of Death more than as it is natural viz. as it is Poenal and an issue of the Curse as it brings Men under the Devils power and may prove a dreadful inlet and passage to Everlasting Burnings Now the Children viz. of God and of the Promise in some measure have conquered this last sort of fear but it is impossible for them while they are cloathed with this frail and tattered Humanity wholly to rid and divest themselves of the former Death is the King of Terrors and therefore may command dread and fear even in the best Plentiful are instances of this kind and they easily occur to us Thus Jacob feared to die by the hand of his Brother Esau and studied how to meet him in Peace and prayed to God to stay his Hand and turn his Heart The Man after God's own heart cries the sorrows of death compassed him Psal 116.3 And tells us how his soul came to be full of trouble Psal 88.3 because his life drew nigh to the grave and he was counted with them that go down to the pit How industrious he was to save his Life will appear from his Counter-plots to save himself when Saul pursued him Good Hezekiah could not receive a summons to the Grave with dry Eyes the Message made him chatter like a Crane and mourn as a Dove Isa 38.3 14. Good old Hilarion was frequently chiding of his Soul with an Egredere O Anima for being so loath to leave a crazy body in which it had been a Tenant upwards of Fourscore Years Nay our blessed Redeemer himself in whom there was no Sin to imbitter his dissolution to him yet we find him greatly affected at the approach of his departure hence his soul was heavy unto death He entred not the Lists with that last Enemy without a heavy Spirit Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me It was the saying of Reverend Mr. Greenham page 15. of his Works I like as well of them that measurably fear death as of them who joy at it In another place he tells us He never dared desire to dye however his continual Crosses did afford him small desire to live It is true we sometimes meet with Christian Heroes of St. Paul's temper whose song ever since he had been in the Third Heavens was to return thither again who are so much exalted above the fear of Death that they court and crave it and make it the most desirable of desirables Phil. 1 23. They never sing a loath to depart but chearfully chaunt out with old Simeon their nunc Dimittis Luk. 2.29 Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace With Elijah they are satisfied and full enough of days and crave no further time 1 Kings 19.4 Nay so fervent and earnest was the desire of the Primitive Christians after Immortal Glory that they groaned earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with their House from Heaven 2 Cor. 5.2 They seemed not onely to be contented but rejoyced with their departure and in the mean time they did rather accept of Life than affect it and endured it more than desired it Great is the number of Christian Pilgrims who in St. Bernards Phrase desire Repatriasse to return home and loose from the shore of Life and to Launch out into the Ocean of Immortality looking for that blessed Hope and the glorious Epiphany of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ Titus 2.13 At the news and tidings of their Lords approach their Faith Eccho's back their hearty Amen Even so come Lord Jesus But here we must take notice that our desires may be looked upon in a double capacity either as natural and connate or rational and elicite according to the Principles of Reason and Grace A man that hath a gangren'd Member hath a natural desire to keep it in the Body but his Rational desire makes him willing to part with it Thus our Saviour told the Apostle Peter He should be bound and carried whither he would not John 21.18 To be girded and pinion'd he would not according to his Natural will but according to his Renewed and Sanctified will he was ready joyfully to go to the place of Martyrdom Thus my Spirit may cry Come Lord Jesus Come quickly when the Flesh may say Master save thy self and pray that the cup may pass from it On the other hand They who have the greatest reason to dread it may sometimes defie it and knowing not what it is to dye brutishly seem to slight it Thus in these low running dregs of time an Atheistical crew of Men living in Brutish Ignorance fall blindfold into their Pit and Grave they shut their Eyes and are never awakened till those Infernal Flames flair about them and lend them Light to read their folly They are not out of danger but onely without the knowledge of it Their hardiness proceeds not from the knowledge of their good Estate but their ignorance of their bad one like Passengers that are asleep in a Ship that is sinking They Revel and Hector on the very Pits brink and their joy is like to that of those who are stung with the Tarantula which is not the Effect of Mirth but Madness and though they have no bands in their Death yet Death hath dominion over them Pleasant Company Wine Feasting Musick divert their thoughts from that formidable prospect of their End couzening themselves as far as they can with that vain Opinion That the way to escape the sting of death is not to think of it It is Risus Sardonicus a deadly joy The end of their mirth is heaviness Prov. 14.13 Like those silly Fishes which swim down the sweet stream of Jordan into the dead Sea where they perish Some indeed there are which please themselves with vain hopes of deliverance and flatter themselves with ungrounded presumptions that they shall escape the bitterness of Death Oh the foolish and helpless shifts that besotted sinners cling to How many perish at the very horns of the Altar What ungrounded hopes have they from their own Fictions How sadly do they abuse the best Doctrines and suck Poyson from the extent of God's Mercies and Christ's Merits They suffer their own innate Light to be Extinguished and resist all means of Conviction from that which is Revealed Thus you see that the Proposition is irrefragable notwithstanding we Read some good Men have desired it and some bad Men have not dreaded it In further prosecution of this Truth 1. I shall lay down some Propositions that tend to the clearing and confirming of it 2. I shall inquire into the grounds and causes of this fear of Death 3. By way of Application I shall lay down some Directions as proper remedies and cures of this fear 1. Propositions tending to the illustration and further defence of this
Tribe of Judah from whose Death as from a plentiful Breast we may suck abundance of sweetness His Sepulchre is the most fragrant knot in Joseph's Garden your thoughts cannot be dyed into a richer Colour than the meditation of Christ Crucified As St. Paul always did bare about in his Body so do you in your Minds the dying of the Blessed Jesus Assure your selves the pale face of Death will look ruddy when you cast this blood of sprinkling on it This should arm the Heirs of Life against the fear of Death We read Cant. 3.7 8. The valiant of Israel have their swords on their thighs because of fear in the night Night strikes men into fears especially the Night of Death but gird this Sword on thy Thigh get a living Faith in thy Heart and all the fears of Death will not dead it This should teach us to give Praise and Thanks to our Lord and Master How did the Philistines rejoyce when they had got Sampson in their hands Judg. 16.23 24. Then the lords of the Philistines gathered them together for to offer a great sacrifice unto Dagon their god and to rejoyce for they said Our god hath delivered Sampson our enemy into our hand And when the people saw him they praised their god for they said Our god hath delivered into our hands our enemy and the destroyer of our country which slew many of us What Lebanon is sufficient to burn Or what Cattel on a Thousand Hills for a Sacrifice What Hecatombs of Praise and Service are due to our great God and Saviour Who hath delivered the Destroyer both of our Souls and Bodies into our hands and us out of his who hath slain not onely many of us but either hath or will make havock of us all heaps upon heaps and that far more and greater than ever Sampson did of the Philistines Not unto us O Lord not unto us but to our most mighty and merciful God and Saviour be all the praise and glory given who hath translated us from under the power of sin and death into the kingdom of his dear Son HAving finished one Text it may be expected I should speak on another viz. Our deceased Brother who is the doleful occasion of this days solemnity I acknowledg I have not been much used to Funeral Encomiasticks and when I consider that this kind of Work is not without much hazard I do the more unwillingly engage in it Relations will think too little is spoke others too much The task is hard when on one hand I may be censured to give a faint and mean Character and on the other hand I may be thought to over do it and be Parasitical I acknowledg it and shall endeavour to avoid it That it is too common on these occasions to Saint all at their Death who expressed little of sanctity in their lives It was said of Julian Idoneus erat dicere Panegyricum diabolo He was fit to Canonize the Devil and I have read that Bruno an Italian did it This should make us wary in Discourses of this Nature But where there is real worth and deeds praise-worthy are to be found to deny the scattering a few flowers on the Hearse of such a Person would be injustice both to the living and the dead There is a generation of men whose eyes are mostly fixed on the dark sides and blemishes of their Brethren and chuse to represent them to be such always as possibly they once might find them to be in some particular circumstance of their lives Concerning such I shall say no more than that there are in the world such things to be found as Envy Pride Detraction evil Surmising Malice and Rancour which like smoak is always driven upon the fairest Faces I am not so partial as to believe our deceased Brother to have lived without his Humanities and Frailties let such who have escaped them throw Stones at him yet God kept him from the immoralities and gross pollutions of the times and places wherein he lived Good and wise men have generally determined That it is more pardonable to praise a worthy person even beyond his merits than to be always rakeing with the nail in the sores of others who may justly deserve our reproof and correction They are two equal guilts to detract from an enemy and to lavish and be prodigal in the commendation of a Friend I hope there is no one here that scruples the commending of the dead tho our Age abounds with many of that humour who little scruple the calumniating both dead and living I am in a streight betwixt two having much to object both against speaking and being silent yet I must not deny our Brother the Justa defunctorum the rights and dues of the dead I shall say but little and that as near as may be within the compass of my own Knowledg and Observation Sorry I am to be an Actor in this mournful Scene it might better become and better be done by some other but providence has made it my task to perform this last Office of love We are met to solemnize the Funerals of ROBERT HVNTINGTON Esq a Gentleman as generally beloved as known who lived much desired and dies much lamented My business is not to tell you he descended from an ancient and worthy Family that is the work of the Herald not of the Preacher and those Escutcheons on his Hearse sufficiently tell that my task is to blazon a more noble Coat and to give you those good grounds of hope which we have of his new and better Birth which are these following He was not only a Frequent but a Reverent hearer of Gods Word not easily detained from the publick Ordinances as we sadly observe in this profane Age many are who question the Gentility of that man who goes to Church more than once on Gods day reckoning him the best bred and most modish who is for three Meals a day in his own house and either none or but one at most in Gods O sad and deplorable Age we live in that by how much the lesser any man lives like a Christian to be reckoned so much the better Gentleman If this be the Character of one well bred and well born I am sure our Brother must not have it for he with his went to the Habitation of Gods Holiness and the place where Gods honour dwelleth He was an Honourer and Encourager of a Religious Ministry I have often heard him speak of such who were diligent and faithful in that sacred Office with great Testimony of respect and veneration as well knowing the bringing their Persons and Function into disrespect was the ready way already attempted by the Debauchees of this Age to bring their Doctrine into contempt He valued those most who preached most to the Hearts and Consciences of a Sinner and never disliked a good Sermon because it did not keep time with the glass With much sense he expressed his dislike of seeing the Pulpit
Truth 1. Prop. Man in his first Creation was not made Mortal or Corruptible Adam fell into a dying condition in the day that he Rebelled against the Crown and Dignity of Heaven I know the Question is much controverted Whether Adam were made Immortal or no This were to make Death necessary before Sin which the Apostle contradicts when he writes Rom. 5. That by one mans sin death came into the World and Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death Death is the fruit and effect of our Disobedience and passes upon all inasmuch as all have sinned Rom. 5.12 2. Prop. All men are now subject unto death as it is poenal The first Sentence reaches all Mankind Gen. 2.17 Most men look on Death as the common lot and condition of Mankind resulting from their frail condition and the jarring and warring Principles of their composition which for want of poise destroy one another They think it belongs onely to our Natural and not at all to our Moral Capacity reckoning it to be the consequent of their Being and not the demerit and punishment of our Guilt It is very true though the principles of our Nature are subject to Dissolution yet if we had not declined from the Law of our Creation we had not inclined to the Grave or Corruption but God had made our Life commensurate with our Holiness and prolonged our Time with our Obedience But alas Death now is not more Natural than it is Poenal All Mankind is Condemned as soon as Born Life is a Reprieve and short suspension of the execution of that Sentence which in the day of Adam's Transgression was pronounced on him and his descendants And oh miserable we if we improve not this small scantling of time to sue out our Pardon and make our peace with this incensed Judge of Heaven and Earth who though he be a Serene yet withal is a dreadful Majesty and will infallibly Execute the severity of the Sentence on every Offender who doth not timely accept and comply with those Terms and Articles of Peace which in the Preaching of his Gospel are tendred to them 3. Prop. Fear and Bondage are inseparable attendants on such a sinful and poenal state It cannot be avoided but that the expectation of Death in such a condition must be very troublesome This is a strait Yoak and will pinch the Necks of all the Sons and Daughters of Adam though some wear it more easily than others This will perplex our minds raise storms within and sink us frequently into deep despondencies for we know not how to cast it off in vain are all attempts to slip the Neck out of this Collar we are unable to deliver ourselves no man can free his own Soul We are in God's Chain and it is impossible to break it all our strivings will contribute nothing to its Removal but onely gall and torment us more 4. Prop. Whatsover bitterness and gall there is in Death it is from Sin that makes it more terrible than otherwise it would be 1 Cor. 15.56 The sting of Death is sin So many Sins as thou committest so many stings thou puttest into thy Death to render it more dreadful to thee Could a man dye and have no Sin laid to his Charge though there might be some pain yet there could not be Terror in his departure out of this World Well may Death be called the Terrible of Terribles when there is not onely an apprehension of the dissolution and divorce between the Soul and Body but there interposes and starts up the guilt of many Sins which confront the Sinner and stare him in the face nay those sins that had a gaudy and tempting dress will then be strip'd of all their feigned Beauties and appear in all their dreadful Circumstances agitating and terrifying the Consciences of men with the expectation and dread of future Evils When the Sinner dare not die yet cannot live what Convulsions must there needs be in his Breast which must terrify him like the cracks of a falling House What a calm and well-natured Death might a man have far beyond that Euthanasia which Augustus wished for himself if Sin and Hell and approaching Judgment and a gnawing Worm within did not drive him into Agonies and Despair Alas when nothing is in view to him but these things and the conclusion of the whole matter will with him be nothing short of hideous Darkness and a tormenting Fire having Heat but no Light gnashing of Teeth late Remorse incurable Wounds Self-hatred and all imaginable distresses even to be hated of God and to hate him for ever He must needs turn away his Face in the anguish of his Soul from beholding such distracting Objects These things our Sins procure for us and fill our Souls with all the anticipations of Hell 5. Prop. The Death of Christ applyed by Faith is the onely Soveraign Remedy to deliver us out of this estate of Fear and Slavery Our Heavenly Elisha hath cast Salt into those bitter Waters and so healed them Death to a Believer is a Serpent without a sting He hath fortified us against these Fears two ways 1. By giving us the example of his Dying His tasting of Death before hand keeps it from being a Cup of Trembling and wonderfully will this animate our Spirits under all dejections That our Lord walked in this dark Valley before us 2. By affording us the merit and efficacy of his Death This is very operative to this purpose to consider That our Redeemer and the Captain of our Salvation undertook our Deliverance by his own Death so that now there is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 For being justified by Faith in the Death of Christ they have peace with God and in themselves Rom. 5.1 Thus has Christ changed the nature of Death that it should be more desirable than dreadful to a good Man being like Josephs Chariot sent for dying Jacob to carry us to the place of our hope and desire This made the Apostle ring that sharp and shrill Note in the ears of Death and send that bold and brave Challenge to the last eneny 1 Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Death is swallowed up in Victory It is not now so much an Outlet of Temporal as an Inlet of Eternal Life Well might the Apostle write insultingly as a man offering Sacrifice for Victory and singing a Triumphant Song while his Feet stood on the Neck of his Enemy We know now to whom to have Recourse when our Spirits droop at the apprehension of our Decease not to Saints or Angels not to the Blessed Virgin her self but to her Son who is the Lord of Life that Brazen Serpent we are to look upon when that Fiery one of Death puts out his Sting and we are sufficiently Antidoted against all the Poyson that is spit at us Thus we see the Children though they cannot escape the stroak yet they are freed from
be working while it is called to day Fear is an Affection which quickens to Action Noah being moved with fear prepared an Ark Heb. 11.7 They that fear not Death grow desperate their Language is Let us eat and drink for to morrow we die but they that are armed with this well-guided and bounded fear infer much more wisely saying Let us pray read hear repent believe obey for to morrow we die Thus you see great advantages may be made of this Natural infirmity and we may learn how to turn our Water into Wine to make those thoughts of Death which at some times lie very cold at our Stomachs to become very cordial and reviving against all sinful and immoderate dread of it Grace though it do not extinguish yet it corrects and regulates Nature and by the ways above mentioned mortifies this fear that it prove not a Temptation to Sin Stoicism hath attempted to do this but Christianity onely can and hath effected it In the School of Christ is best taught the right Cure of all our amazing and distracting fears 2. I come now to inquire into the grounds and causes of this fear As before I distinguished this fear it self so now I shall the causes of it into Natural and Sinful 1. Natural Causes Death on this account is dreadful because it is a future unavoidable evil to Nature As a future possible good is the object of hope so a future possible evil is the object of fear and much more it is to be dreaded when it is a certain futurity as death is which no ways can be declined Nature looks upon Death as its Enemy whose design is to divorce and separate Soul and Body two ancient Comerades no wonder therefore that it shun it when it knows it shall one day fall by the hand of it Memorable is the passage of that Martyr to the Executioner driving the Staple into the Stake Pray friend knock it in fast for Nature will be working And that this fear is greater in some than others from the very constitution and temperament of the Body is every days observation Our very natural Complexion renders us either more bold or fearful This is a natural Passion which though it may be Corrected and Sanctified yet it cannot be totally Conquered for Religion changes not the temperament of the Body Good men who are of this fearful temper and melancholy disposition and experience the tyranny of this Natural Passion have need to pray for the Sanctification of it I never thought Religion did depend upon the temper of the Body but I am sure the acting and exerting of it very much doth But these fears so far as they are Natural they are Lawful for they are not Transgressions of any precept and though they may be reckoned amongst our infelicities and weaknesses yet they come not into the number of our Sins and Crimes 2. There are sinful grounds of this fear of Death these chiefly are to be regarded and they are very many some I shall name and can do little more than in the gross produce them leaving you to enlarge on them and I am sure any man of thoughts may be very Copious on this Subject his own inward sense of things strongly will attest all to him This sinful fear proceeds 1. From the want of a holy fear the fear of the Great God As the fear of him is the less the fear of God in our Lives is the ready way to cast us into a slavish fear of Death It was one of the Judgments Threatned Deut. 28.58 65 66. If thou wilt not observe to do all the words of this law that are written in this book that thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name THE LORD THY GOD Then neither shall the sole of thy foot have rest but the Lord shall give thee a trembling heart and failing of eyes and sorrow of mind and thy life shall hang in doubt before thee and thou shalt fear day and night and shalt have no assurance of thy life 2. From the want of faith in the death of Christ springs this fear of our own death Even the children holy and religious persons who live soberly righteously and godly are sometimes beset with these uncomfortable apprehensions of Death being now and then plagued with the remainders of an unbelieving heart as if still Death were not subdued as if Death had conquered Christ and not Christ Death The Disciples were terrified and frighted and unbelieving thoughts did arise in their hearts Luk. 24.37 38. Fools our Lord calls them and slow of heart to believe ver 25. We trusted that it had been he which would have redeemed Israel v. 21. Here their Faith flag'd and hang'd the wing extreamly their Buckler was much battered and stood in need of beating out again Weakness of Faith gives strength to our Fears and doth both greaten and multiply them upon us Faith is not without its Conflict with sadness of Spirit and carnal fears Amalek sometimes is too hard for Israel and the House of Saul frequently prevails over the House of David 3. This Fear proceeds from want of serious meditation on Death and due preparation for it Our negligence and sloath in not finishing that Work which God has put into our hands to do way well make us loath to come to an account with our Lord. Bad Stewards are afraid of a Reckoning and Death coming thus suddenly puts all into Confusion Suddenness and fear are joyned together Prov. 3.25 Suddenness of Destruction is the description of a doleful and fearful Estate When men have laid in no Antidotes and Cordials against Death then like Nabal their Hearts die before they do This was Davids Case Psal 39. ult O spare me Stay a little that I may get strength to combat with this Adversary The best are too backward in their preparations for this Encounter with this grim and gastly Enemy and therefore are not without their fears But oh who can express that great fearfulness which needs must surprise Unregenerate men who are clapping many Stings into their Deaths by their repeated and continued Sins they take pains to make their End uneasie and with their Vices dress up Death in a terrible Vizard to affright them What ease can they live at whose Souls this Night may be turned out of their soft Beds where now they lye securely snorting into a Bed of Flames one would think these Men should eat their Bread with trembling and the thoughts of their danger should keep them waking There is no wonder that a sinful Cause should produce a sinful Effect and that Mens Terrors should be increased with their Offences Every wicked man must look Death in the face with pale cheeks It was a Copy of Julians countenance but not of his dying one when he said Vitam repescenti naturae tanquam debitor bonae fidei redditurus exulto What Solomon speaks of Prophane mens merry living That even in laughing their heart is sorrowful Prov.