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A55553 A sermon at the funeral of the reverend Mr. Thomas Grey, late Vicar of Dedham in Essex preach'd in the parish-church of Dedham, Febr. the 2d. 1691/2, with a short account of his life / by Joseph Powell ... Powell, Joseph, d. 1698. 1692 (1692) Wing P3064; ESTC R3154 24,894 36

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lively and full of vigour but may not our Constitution soon be broken and we cast upon a Bed of Sickness grapling with Pains or crying out under extream Torture We enjoy Liberty and have a quiet Possession of the Blessings of Life but is it impossible that ever we should fall under the Yoke of some of the mighty Nimrods of the World the Hunters of Mankind Job 7.15 When as Job expresses it we should choose strangling rather than Life i. e. If we were at our own dispose the worst of Deaths would be far more desirable than such a Life When Xerxes viewing his numerous Army bemoan'd it that within a little more than half an Age there would not be a Man of them left alive one of his Captains reply'd Sir Let not this trouble you for they are like to endure so great fatigue and so many hardships that the greater number will in all probability wish themselves dead a long time before they shall be so happy as to die And thus the Roman Orator comparing the Great Pompey's Sickness at Naples where he had like to have died with his last End concludes That it had been much better for this Great Man to have died when he had the Command of the Arms of Rome and was the darling of the World for this had prevented the Bloody War with Caesar the loss of his Army his flying with Disgrace his being slain by one of his own Servants the presenting his Head to his Father-in-Law his Children turning Fugitive and the Consiscation of his Estate but he had dyed in Honour and never known any of these Evils neither himself nor his Family And upon this account was that wise saying of Solon to Croesus who had cause enough afterward to remember and acknowledge the Truth of it That he must first see him die before he judged of his Happiness it being a Point of the Grecian Wisdom to account no Man happy before his Death 3. A view of Death with respect to the Good and Evil of this Life 'T is true Death deprives us of all those which are properly called the Goods of Life But as these are not over Considerable so it is our present want of them that renders them of any Consideration at all If we did not need them their absence would be no injury to us in this Life the true Notion of Riches being a sufficiency to answer our Conveniencies beyond which all is but meer imagination and attended with the increase of trouble Since therefore Death puts us in Circumstances that we cannot want them and perfectly takes away their use what trouble can it be that it removes us from them To look upon it as a very uncomfortable thing to be cast into Circumstances where we cannot use these Goods is to be so drowned in sensuality that we are thereby become fit for nothing beyond this World and hardly fit for this But then Death takes us also from the Evils of Life which are more in Number than the Goods and much over-balance them in respect at least to the generality of Mankind A bare enumeration of the Evils of Life does sufficiently in Tully's Opinion commend Death which puts an end to them He tells us of one who writing a Book in the praise of Death did therein only describe the Calamities of humane Life On this Account Death has been sometimes interpreted as a Reward for Eminent Piety The very Heathens seemed to have looked upon it under this Notion Thus when those who built the Magnificent Temple of Apollo prayed that what was best for Man might befal them the third day after they were found dead which was reckoned upon as a Reward of their Piety Agreeably to this Isaiah 57.1 the Prophet Isaiah speaking of the Death of Good Josias says He was taken away from the Evil to come 4. The Universal Law upon humane Nature that all who are born must die It has ever been accounted a great part of Wisdom to bring our Minds quietly to comport with what is not in our Power to avoid By this Consideration we bear up under all the disasters of Life this brings us into Temper when we have royl'd our selves never so much upon the death of our nearest Relations or dearest Friends And the same Thought ought in common Discretion to bring us at least patiently to submit to our own Deaths whenever they come This is the great Argument that runs through all the Books of the Moralists A Pilate says Plutarch cannot in a Storm command the Billows or calm the Winds or by Hectoring cause the Storm to cease he at last therefore commits himself to its Fury pulls down all his Sails by the Board and expects the sinking of the Leaky Vessel and thus must we when Life grows painful and uneasie and Death approaches wait our Dissolution according to the Common Law of Nature since that which is unavoidable ought to disturb us as little as is possible This is the Principal Argument of all Seneca's Books of the Brevity of Life and the Tranquillity of the Mind and his Discourses of Providence That it is a very unbecoming thing to struggle with the Laws of Fate and not to be carried willingly whither we must go whether we will or no. But far greater reason have we for this who are taught what a Vertue it is and how capable of Reward chearfully to submit to the Wisdom of God in disposing of our Lives and these are such Arguments as are proper to induce a Wise Man not to be over fond of Life and to know when he has enough of it and at least quietly and calmly to entertain the Message of Death when it is sent to him But then a Pious Christian has Arguments beyond all these to do not only thus much but a great deal more to be perfectly above any fondness for Life and to rejoice at the Thoughts of his Dissolution and with submission to the Will and Providence of God heartily to desire his Dismission and they are these following I. A General Consideration of the Religion we Profess which has chiefly a respect to a future World II. Our Knowledge that the Sting of Death is pulled out III. The Thoughts of being absolutely and perfectly freed from Sin IV. The enlargement of our Faculties and Perfection of our Vertue V. The immediate Possession of Happiness at Death VI. The Completion of this in Body and Soul at the General Judgment 1. A General Consideration of the Religion we Profess which has chiefly a respect to a future World The Christian Religion Promises us very little or nothing that respects meerly this present Life In this it differs from God's Ancient Covenant with the Jews that it secures us of nothing of this World absolutely but requires us to refer all things to God's Wisdom and Providence to appoint them to us as they shall best tend to the making us wise and good and to the sitting of us for
much uneasiness to him and so often put him in hazard in this Life 4. The Enlargement of our Faculties and Perfection of our Vertue How short Humane Knowledge is they best understand who have spent the longest Time and used the greatest Pains in improving it they who know almost nothing may perhaps esteem themselves very great Clerks If by chance they light upon a thing which every one does not know they presently have a very great Opinion of their own Understanding and like the Son of Syrach's Description of a Fool That he travelleth with a word are very big to let other Men see how very wise they are of a sudden grown whilst those who know the most things knowable in this State have very different Thoughts of themselves and though they avoid such a Scepticism as to doubt of every thing yet are they very sensible how many things there are which they know not and how far they are from perfectly understanding very Common things So also a little Pharisaick Piety makes a very fine shew and a mighty noise and bluster in the World They who are got no further than this empty Form of Godliness are highly opiniated of themselves and apt to despise all others as meer Sons of the Earth not worth regarding Whereas a truly Pious Christian is always a Humble Christian he has a very mean Opinion of himself and is very ready to entertain a good one of other Men he is sensible of the Imperfection of his Vertue and what low Degrees of it he has attained to and his greatest Comfort is grounded upon his Sincerity and that he hopes and trusts that his Heart is right towards God Now who would be fond of this Life which is so dark and so imperfect a State Who would not be willing to die that expects the enlargement of his Knowledge upon his Dissolution extending to a clear view of all the Works of God and looking into the Secrets and unfolding the Mysteries of Providence to the near Contemplation of the Divine Nature seeing God as he is and comprehending his Perfections as much as Angels do and to the Fathoming the Wonders of our Redemption by Christ Jesus things so far out of the reach of our Understandings in this World where also he shall arrive at Degrees of Vertue infinitely above what he is ever capable of coming to here And in one word shall be in all things like unto the Angels of God which are in Heaven and how happy may he conceive himself then to be who considers that he owes the chief pleasure of his present Life to the small Attainments he has been able to make in Wisdom and Goodness 5. The immediate Possession of Happiness at Death Indeed if all Pious Christians some few only excepted were to enter immediately upon Death into a Place of the most exquisite Torment differing very little from Hell saving in the infinite duration of it and there to abide none knows how long even to the Day of the Great Judgment some of them it would be very unreasonable for any Man to desire Death unless it were by Martyrdom by which he might escape this Purgatory Fire and the thought of dying would be the most dreadful one that a Man could have in his whole Life But this is a meer Fiction brought into the Church by Ignorance and Superstition and maintained for Reasons well known and has no Foundation neither in Scripture or Primitive Antiquity defended by some even of the Roman Communion only as some other Doctrines are because Decreed in Councils and so not to be let go for fear of shaking a Pretence that is not to be parted with The Scripture is in this Point very clear and express and assures us that immediately upon Death there is an admission to Bliss To day says our Saviour to the Thief on the Cross shalt thou be with me in paradise Luke 23.43 Phil. 3.23 And St. Paul mentions his being with Christ as an immediate consequence of his Departure These are so plain Proofs that to evade the force of them they must be exempt Cases and the Thief and St. Paul and some few more never went to Purgatory But this shift signifies little for the Scripture speaks of all that die in the Lord that is in the Faith and Obedience of the Gospel as being at rest which is a Jewish Idiom and imports a state of Bliss And St. Paul takes notice that living here keeps us from Christ and therefore assigns this as a Reason why we should be willing and desirous to leave this World that we might go to Christ 2 Cor. 5.6 8. Knowing that whilst we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord We are therefore confident and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord. 6. The completion of this Happiness in Body and Soul at the General Judgment Though good Men are admitted to immediate Happiness at Death yet not to a full Participation of it or to all that Happiness God has designed them by way of Reward This is reserved for that Great Day so often made mention of in the Holy Books when Christ Matth. 25.31 to whom the Judgment of the World is committed shall come in the Glory of his Father in Triumph and with great Splendor attended with an innumerable Host of Angels Acts 1.11 1 Thess 4.16 to render to every Man according to his Works Then shall those who sleep in the Dust awake and the Dead shall be called out of their Graves by the Voice of the Son of Man and the Sound of the last Trump These Bodies of ours shall then be raised up from Mortality and Corruption to an Immortal and Incorruptible State A wonderful thing to be effected by that Power alone which first made all things out of nothing A Truth knowable only by Revelation and received by Faith and being united to their proper Souls together with them who shall then be found alive and remaining on the Earth we shall be caught up in the Clouds 1 Thess 4.17 to meet the Lord in the Air and so shall we ever be with the Lord. This is that great Day the Apostle speaks of 2 Tim. 4.8 when Crowns shall be put upon the Heads of all the Faithful even all those who love his appearing This is the Day when the whole World shall have its last Period and Consummation when Death it self shall be Eternally destroyed and God's Kingdom shall be set up over all Revel 20.14 and his Saints shall Reign with him for ever and ever And these I take to be good Reasons for every Pious Christian to be indifferent to Life and very willing with submission to God's Wisdom in Disposing of him to have his Dismission Now the Use of this Doctrine is 1. To endeavour to reduce it to Practice I mean to carry our selves with all that indifferency towards this World and Life
A SERMON AT THE FUNERAL Of the Reverend Mr. THOMAS GREY Late Vicar of Dedham in Essex PREACH'D In the Parish-Church of Dedham Febr. the 2d 1691 2. With a short Account of his LIFE By JOSEPH POWELL A. M. Rector of St. Mary on the Wall in Colchester LONDON Printed for Thomas Speed at the Three Crowns near the Royal Exchange in Cornhill 1692. St. LUKE CHAP. ii VER 29. Lord now lettest thou thy Servant depart in peace IT is related in the Sacred History 1 King 19.4 of the great Prophet Elijah that he was perfectly cloy'd with Life and pray'd for a dismission he went a days Journey into the Wilderness and came and sat down under a Juniper Tree and he requested for himself that he might die and said It is enough now O Lord take away my Life for I am not better than my Fathers This looks like a Fit of Melancholy occasion'd by a Reflection on the unsuccessfulness of his Ministry and the rage of Jezabel against him and seems rather to be mention'd as an Instance of the Imperfections that stick to the best of Men in this Life than to be propos'd for our Imitation or to be drawn into Example by us Job 7.16 The like Account the Holy Books give us of another Man very Eminent for his Piety in the Age he liv'd in that he loath'd Life and was very desirous an end might be put to it The Objection against this Example also is that Holy Job breaks forth into this Expression in the anguish and vexation of his Spirit and that it was the mere effect of the pressure of that load of Troubles and Evils under which he labour'd Neither can this be deny'd for the Holy Man seems hereupon both to ground and to excuse his desire of Death as will be easily discern'd by any who will be at the pains to consult that Chapter of which give me leave to give you a short Paraphrase so far as concerns this his Complaint of Life and earnest desire of Death Let me ask you says he to his Friends these Questions Is not Death appointed by the Soveraign Lord of the World to every Man And does not Man spin out his short Life on Earth in trouble and toyl like an Hireling his Day And doth not such an one wearied out with the Work and Labour of the day naturally desire the approach of the Night to give him ease and refreshment And is not this my Case or rather is not my Case much worse For both day and night are alike uneasie to me you cannot but be sensible into how miserable a State I am fallen you who have seen my former Prosperity unless you have quite put off Humanity it self must pity my present Condition and which is to me a very sad Consideration you are never like to see it better for I shall enjoy no more good in this Life my Body is already over-run with Worms and I am become loathsom while I live and you cannot but be sensible how very difficult I find it to maintain my Temper of Mind in this Condition Since therefore God has assign'd Death as the End of all these Miseries can you blame me that I pray God to hasten it I know that 't is my Duty to refer my self wholly to God's wise disposal of me but assure your selves if God would give me leave to make my own choice I would much rather desire to die than to live And I cannot but look upon this desire as proceeding from Wisdom and a right Judgment of things But notwithstanding the special Circumstances attending both these Cases there seems to be something in the Requests of those great Men very agreeable to the desires of the best Men whilst under these wisest and most compos'd Thoughts and the happiest and most promising Advantages of Life A due Reflection upon the Vanity of Humane Life in its best State with a stedfast Faith of a future happy State to succeed the determination of the short Period of our days here on Earth are enough to dispose us not to be over fond of living any very long time here and with submission to the Will and Providence of God very chearfully to receive our Dismission when ever it shall be sent us We so sensibly find that there is no perfect Happiness to be met with on Earth that nothing needs to be said to confirm our Experience nor are we ignorant of the result of dying and the Rewards that befal the Righteous when once this Difficulty is overcome Happiness is the thing that all humane Nature is reaching at and who would die struglingly and with reluctancy whilst under the vigorous expectation of that great Declaration and Assurance given by our Religion Rev. 14.13 And I heard a Voice from Heaven saying unto me Write from henceforth i. e. from the very time of their Deaths blessed are the Dead which die in the Lord yea saith the Spirit which denotes the undoubted certainty of the thing that they may rest from their Labours and their Works do follow them The Scriptures therefore have given us other Instances less liable to these Exceptions and which represent the desire of Death not as a rash unadvised impatient or melancholy Request but as the effect of great Piety high Attainments in Vertue and Goodness and a very lively sense of a future World disposing those who have thus rais'd themselves above this World and enlarg'd their Minds by the Principles of Religion easily to part with all things here below and to be under Wise and Pious and Devout Desires of Death and Dissolution Such is the Instance of the great Apostle who expresses his longing to be gone Phil. 1.21 and concludes peremptorily that it was much for his Advantage to die and though he was content to live this was upon no other score but his being useful and serviceable to others And he Pronounces this as the common Desire of all the Apostles and very proper to be embrac'd by all Wise and Pious Christians 2 Cor. 5.1 We know that if the earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolv'd we have a building of God an house not made with Hands eternal in the Heavens For in this q. d. for this Reason we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our House which is from Heaven And to mention no more this was the Case of good old Simeon a Just and Devout Man as the Evangelist gives his Character who had liv'd in the Faith and Hope of Israel the expectation of the Messias to come and by the Account given of him seems for some time to have been waiting both for the fulfilling of this Hope and for his own Dissolution For he had receiv'd a Revelation that he should not die till the Messias should come and he see him In submission therefore to the Will of God and in expectation of this Promise he still liv'd not fond of Life but chearfully waiting for Death